Cover for No Agenda Show 1424: Guidepost
February 10th, 2022 • 3h 5m

1424: Guidepost

Transcript

The transcripts of No Agenda are automatically generated and therefore, not fully accurate. Discretion is advised.

Click the text to start playing from that position in the show. Click the timestamp to copy a direct link to that position to your clipboard in order to propagate the formula.

0:00
They're giving away crack pipes. Adam curry Jhansi Devora
0:05
February 10 2022. This is your award winning get my nation
0:08
media assassination episode 1424. This is no agenda straight
0:14
out of quarantine. broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas
0:18
hill country here in number six in the morning, everybody. I'm
0:21
Adam curry
0:22
and from Northern Silicon Valley where we've got a heat spell
0:26
probably hit at Jhansi Dvorak.
0:33
That's nuts, man, we just think about it. You're gonna hit 80.
0:35
And we're at 31.
0:38
Yeah, well kinda raise the warming. Yes, indeed. Here.
0:43
I typically wouldn't mention this never really have done in
0:47
the 15 years have been doing the show, but it's relevant today. I
0:51
caught the Cuf Yeah. You better mask up, John. I'm breathing on
1:00
your right now.
1:03
You got that? Cuf?
1:05
I did. It's very hard. Yeah, this was unexpected.
1:10
We were talking about over dinner last night, I was eating
1:13
it with J and she has taught me and Mimi was on the phone. We're
1:17
discussing the fact that when J caught it this last time, she
1:21
spent most of her time like, you know, in close proximity to me
1:26
and it was still kind of odd. I never got it. I may have had it
1:31
as a as a what do you call it? You know, flu, flu? Just it
1:36
would be known as demand demand. Demand.
1:41
Let me just tell you my experience real quick. Yes,
1:43
we're listening. Monday night or Tuesday morning like three I
1:48
wake up. I'm sweating. I got I have my back hurts. Like,
1:53
whatever. Oh, yeah. Then I got up Tuesday morning. And now like
1:58
I don't feel good. And I'm running a fever. Like, they
2:01
really now I have this. No problem with taste or smell
2:05
throat not itchy, but totally flew feelings off. This is so
2:11
obvious. I had hair pain if you ever had hair pain. Where the
2:16
like, if you touch
2:17
I've never even heard where you touch your scalp. Now in your
2:21
case, I can see it happening.
2:23
You touch your scalp and every follicle hurts. Oh, maybe that's
2:27
just me. So what do you do in that case? Right away, bam. Pop
2:33
that blister pack Verto kit to the rescue. So I spent Tuesday,
2:39
kind of lethargic. Yesterday. I even slept during the day I
2:43
watched the entire third series of Lost in Space. Totally can
2:47
recommend. Like, Hey, man, anyone who grew up watching lost
2:52
in space will appreciate this. But you should watch I grew
2:56
up watching the original losses. Yeah, but you shouldn't. I don't
2:59
know if I ever really liked it because that guy who played the
3:02
evil character. Yeah. Dr. Smith, there was yeah, there was
3:06
something about it was one of those things where you're
3:09
constantly screaming at the TV. Can't you see that? This guy's a
3:14
bad guy.
3:16
He was also extremely gay ish.
3:19
You think?
3:22
So that's played by Parker Posey. She's really good. So
3:25
female Dr. Smith anyway. Um,
3:29
and she's played evil characters in movies before she's good.
3:32
So I I keep I got a fever. I just it's a low grade fever like
3:36
100 100.5 101 kind of varying back and forth. I really only
3:41
took Advil once. Like think Tuesday morning since then. Not
3:46
really it's like I let my body fight it and I woke up and of
3:49
course I had more night sweats and last night I woke up for an
3:53
hour before I get up anyway. drenched and shivering to really
3:57
today no fever. I got aches but not horrible stomach's a little
4:02
wishy washy and then like the hair pain is gone. I think the I
4:09
think this Verto kit probably averted all disaster.
4:15
But you may have been on your way to averted averting disaster
4:20
with or without the kit. You know
4:22
that but it was fun to do. I'm like, Alright, emergency Yeah.
4:25
But open discussion.
4:28
The ivermectin pills in the in the blister pack. Have a very
4:33
pleasant taste.
4:35
Oh, well. No one's reported on this. They pink you know, your
4:40
pills before you eat? No,
4:41
no, you put I put it in my mouth and immediately it starts it
4:44
started to taste.
4:47
Huh? Yeah. Well, you won't let this put it this way. At least
4:51
you won't have worms. Yeah, exactly. So I'm sorry it had to
4:59
happen. that episode.
5:01
Um, yeah, well, me too. But on the other hand, you know,
5:05
natural immunity would be nice. That's cool to have.
5:10
And take a test.
5:11
Today I get a couple tests in. And I'll know for sure.
5:18
Yeah, you may have just had a random poof Yeah,
5:21
I don't put much faith in the tests at all.
5:26
Was nice had the test on record because then you can make Well,
5:29
yes,
5:30
that's my point. That's why I have six tests coming. I'm just
5:33
gonna keep trying until I do like get one. Record. Yeah, of
5:38
course. It's exactly what I want. And Tina, you know, she's
5:41
like, Alright, I'm not gonna kiss you. But she's not unless
5:45
you want me to quarantine she said from now. Oh, so she
5:52
coasted through it. She hasn't had it. And I think we went out
5:56
to dinner and sat at the bar
5:58
of Well, fine Monday night to get dissolute life, the way I
6:01
see it. dissolute. Yeah, that's what I always say. I can we
6:05
haven't gotten because I don't leave a dissolute life. That's
6:08
what
6:08
that would be me. She sees it work amongst the public for four
6:13
times a week. Yeah. And she's she's been in the public since
6:17
you know, after the original salute
6:20
life. That's the problem. Does meet Raj the drinking. Oh,
6:24
rousing. That's me. That's me. Yeah, that's what I said.
6:29
Okay, it makes total sense. Ah, anyway. So if anything else
6:36
happens, I'll report it. I am weary though fatigued and weary.
6:40
But long COVID No, please don't get me started with any of that.
6:45
Everyone I hear is like, Oh, my God took me two weeks before I
6:47
felt better my people months, because, you know, we got a
6:52
Nashville meetup coming up on the 14th.
6:56
So Oh, yeah, that's right. I'm gonna go by then you already
7:00
find seems to be sound good, John, but I will be part of it
7:04
as John. John, the guy was on his deathbed. Still sounding
7:09
good.
7:10
But in general, that's why I said typically, I don't say I
7:14
feel like crap. We just do the show. So no, and I don't think
7:19
I've ever missed a broadcast in 40 years. So Anywho. There's a
7:24
lot to talk about today. Because it's over. They've capitulated,
7:29
the the retreat has been blown, I guess.
7:35
We'll of course the Canadians, as we've talked about in this
7:38
show, occasionally, but at least my take on history is that the
7:43
big difference between the Americans and the Canadians is
7:45
that when we get into a jam, we start shooting. Yes, without
7:50
asking and revolting. And when the Canadians get into a jam,
7:55
they start complaining, yes. And they do it so well that it
7:59
eventually wears down the enemy.
8:01
I have a like a one minute report which sums up I think,
8:04
where we are in quite nicely the state of emergency north of our
8:07
borders and autos from ABC,
8:09
with protests over COVID restrictions that bridge from
8:11
Detroit into Canada still closed in one direction, as some
8:14
provinces set to scale back COVID rules, Travolta's there in
8:17
Ottawa. Good morning, Trevor.
8:20
Good morning, George. So it's about 10 degrees Fahrenheit
8:22
right now in Ottawa. And if anything, these protesters have
8:25
simply further settled in, they brought in a whole lot more
8:27
signs of support. Here we've seen people repeatedly picking
8:30
up their food from food stamps, they brought in porta potties to
8:33
and in fact, we've seen some people drying their hand wash
8:36
clothes on a makeshift clothesline between these
8:38
vehicles. Not to mention all of those spin off demonstrations
8:41
that are happening elsewhere. The Ambassador Bridge still shut
8:43
down from Detroit heading into Canada that is a major lifeline
8:46
for trade. We're talking about hundreds of millions of dollars
8:48
a day. And these demonstrators say they are ready to be out
8:51
here until all of Canada's COVID-19 mandates and
8:54
restrictions are lifted. In fact, some provinces are walking
8:58
back some of their policies, Alberta is now lifting their
9:00
vaccine passport mandate. Saskatchewan is going to be
9:03
doing the same thing on Monday and they're also looking at
9:05
lifting their indoor mask mandate to but Canadian
9:07
officials insist they're not making these changes because of
9:10
the demonstrations. They say they're able to do it because
9:12
the vaccines are working cases are going in the right
9:15
direction. And these policies have served their purpose.
9:18
There it is. We did it everybody. You can thank us
9:20
later. The vaccines are working. You're free to go. Or not yet.
9:26
They will be so Bogut IV. Hey, did I lose you already? Dude,
9:37
bro, that Hello? Yeah, you were gone. You were silent.
9:45
They had to reboot the thing. A clear feed.
9:50
Did you hear the clip? Yeah. Okay. Respond.
9:55
Couple of things. One, uh, they kind of soft pedaled it yeah our
10:01
news coverage of this is a big deal
10:04
yeah well that
10:07
was the American news coverage soft petals it because we don't
10:10
want to give anyone any ideas
10:12
well it's it's it's twofold I think the right now everyone is
10:17
starting to live mandates you know we we have oh stay with the
10:20
truckers for a moment but I think that this is going to be
10:23
used now in Canada as well but you know, they really have to
10:27
remove everything and all things and they continue both Canadian
10:32
and US media just continues to to spread the memes the one that
10:38
that we caught that you actually educated everybody on with the
10:42
so called Freedom convoy. Yeah, that wasn't an isolated incident
10:46
the so called
10:47
Freedom convoy north of the border, so called Freedom convoy
10:50
in Ottawa, so called the Freedom convoy, the so called Freedom
10:54
convoy, a so called Freedom convoy, and the so called
10:57
Freedom convoy episode called Freedom convoy, the so called
11:00
Freedom convoy, the so called Freedom convoy so called Freedom
11:04
convoy of so called Freedom convoy he self described freedom
11:07
convoy
11:08
self described I think is actually valid you can use that
11:13
Yeah, I think you can but you shouldn't use any of it because
11:17
they're if you call it the freedom convoy in your in it Why
11:20
are you calling so called Yeah, it doesn't make any sense self
11:24
described as your rewrite. Unfortunately you can get away
11:27
with that
11:28
but you actually said that using this as a very bullcrap
11:33
journalistic tactic or technique or Shrek Tracy propaganda trick
11:37
there you go. Not even well, journalism.
11:39
It's not journalism. It's propaganda. That's all that's
11:41
going on right now. This this latest stuff I'm looking at CNN
11:44
is like, now that they're scrambling because Malone's on
11:48
his way, well,
11:49
well listen to this about you know, because we are the analog
11:54
between January 6, and what's happening in Ottawa is is so so
11:58
obvious that the news media cannot leave it alone. Probably
12:03
on purpose, but holy crap, listen to this supercut
12:06
edition insurrection a threat to democracy?
12:10
Right off the bat. Are you kidding me? They're using all
12:13
the same terms.
12:14
Addition, insurrection, a threat to democracy, the city is under
12:18
siege.
12:19
They are now calling it an occupation alarming situation.
12:21
They're in Ottawa police chief is calling it a nationwide
12:24
insurrection driven by madness. This is kind of our insurrection
12:29
by air horn moment. It's I think it's part of the globalization
12:32
of Trumpism Canadians know where I stand. There
12:35
hasn't been as much violence as some had perhaps projected, but
12:38
that does not necessarily mean that it has been peaceful
12:40
reports
12:41
of severe vandalism and criminal behavior. Streets are clogged.
12:45
The honking is incessant and definite is pandemic has sucked.
12:49
For all Canadians residents that I have spoken to who say they
12:53
feel terrorized.
12:54
intimidated, residents say they feel like hostages residents in
12:58
that area say that they're being held hostage that this freedom
13:01
has essentially its freedom convoy, as they call it has
13:04
essentially imposed a lockdown on them.
13:07
Some protesters harassed a soup kitchen, these anti vaxxers
13:10
actually took food from the mouths of the homeless hungry
13:14
yeah, because
13:15
there's so put upon there have not been any violent outbursts.
13:18
However, horns have been honking for 12 to 21 hours in it. Small
13:23
fringe minority of people who are on their way to Ottawa or
13:29
who are holding unacceptable views that they're expressing
13:34
many of them are holding Confederate flags. And swastikas
13:40
we've seen the Confederate flag, we've seen a flags with Justin
13:44
Trudeau, our prime minister and news. Lots of Donald Trump flags
13:47
as well people. Let's go Brandon, actually one of the
13:50
rare times in history you're gonna see swastikas and yellow
13:53
stars at the same protest. A few people shouting and waving
13:57
swastikas does not define who Canadians are. Ottawa is being
14:03
besieged by a group of anti do anything about COVID truckers
14:07
called the Freedom convoy so called Freedom convoy, so called
14:11
Freedom convoy of truckers, yes, a call. Yes, it is we protocol
14:17
the nationwide insurrection threat to
14:20
democracy and insurrection sedition. This
14:23
is a moment for responsible leaders to think carefully about
14:26
where they stand and who they stand with. Okay.
14:31
There it is the Sedition occupation insurrection. Yeah,
14:37
it's an it's another
14:39
species that media is out of control. Lawrence O'Donnell, you
14:44
could hear him in a Yeah, what a creep
14:47
wasn't, you know, the we've been looking at the 1919 flu pandemic
14:51
and, you know, we have a timeline. Things are still a
14:56
little bit early, what's happening now. So in order to
14:59
hit the that April. I think it'll go slow. But there was
15:03
there's an analog to this Ottawa protest as well. The 1919
15:10
Winnipeg general strike
15:14
Hey, I'm glad you know I'm glad you keep coming up with little
15:18
discoveries that keep backing up this thesis is a beautiful
15:23
beauty I had really did not know this.
15:26
So check it out. So this was the Winnipeg general strike the
15:30
largest most influential strike in Canadian history. Let's see
15:36
angry at this and then you had of course you had strike
15:40
breakers angry the strike breakers
15:44
that's interesting to strike but this is interesting because to
15:47
the way I see it. Today's strike breakers is the media.
15:54
Well, then they better be careful because angry at the
15:58
strike breakers hired to operate the transit system in place of
16:02
the striking employees several people in the crowd began
16:04
rocking. This is a trolley car from side to side unable to tip
16:09
it over entirely. They set it on fire. And soon military
16:14
personnel from Fort Osborn barracks arrived along with
16:17
machine gun units who marched into the melee
16:21
at the end to peep now that's that's a match That's unusual
16:25
for the Canadian that day
16:26
became known as Bloody Saturday. Two people died 35 to 40.
16:32
Is the student of the week had a right.
16:40
Also, there was it was a convoy that came towards Winnipeg,
16:45
Ottawa. And most of the people didn't even make it. They just
16:49
broke down on the way.
16:52
Yeah, those are the days yeah,
16:54
but this, there are photos of this. You know what they had?
16:58
They all had cool hats. Everybody wore hat back in the
17:02
day, ma'am.
17:03
Yes, they did was that it was a period where everyone wore a
17:06
straw hat
17:08
in America or everywhere, everywhere, really? So that was
17:11
just a worldwide fashion trend.
17:13
Hmm. Yeah, it was in the I think it came after the first hat to a
17:17
dead dude wearing hats all along. And then they there's
17:19
this very short trend. I don't know how long it lasted.
17:23
Somebody might know but but you could find pictures of Times
17:26
Square. Winners lay some big event and there was crowded in
17:30
there and it's like, endless straw hats. Um, it's weird.
17:38
This police chief in Ottawa is interesting. His name is Peter
17:44
slowly S L O L Y. And someone tipped me off. One of our
17:51
producers actually tipped me off to this guy. Check this guy out.
17:55
He's got quite the resume. Apparently he left in 2016 and
17:59
came back and people weren't even that much of a fan of him.
18:02
But if I just look at his his Wikipedia page. He was he had
18:09
FBI training. Let's see educated. Let's see Bachelor of
18:16
Arts sociology. Pippa Baba, where is it here? Criminal
18:21
Justice certificate from University of Virginia. Incident
18:25
Command System certification from Justice Institute of
18:28
British Columbia and graduate of the FBI National Academy. The
18:37
real hard ass and he has connections he hired a crisis
18:42
management firm right away. You see if I could find the name of
18:47
this thing. Navigator. Never heard of them. Navigators
18:52
navigator and ilina inexpensive crisis management firm. And I
18:57
think it's a business. Oh, yeah. I think this guy is quite
19:02
dangerous to the Canadian people. As he tells everybody
19:06
what's going to happen no matter what happens with this protest
19:09
when everybody's gone. It's not going to be over again. Shades
19:13
of January six, we have increased ability to identify
19:17
and target protesters and supporters of protesters who are
19:22
funding and enabling unlawful and harmful activity by the
19:28
protesters themselves. Investigative evidence gathering
19:32
teams are collecting financial, digital vehicle registration,
19:39
driver identification, insurance status, and other related
19:43
evidence that will be used in prosecutions. Believe me geo
19:47
fencing, everyone's phone has been tracked.
19:51
Well this is good. This is good because this will be this guy's
19:55
gonna have to butt heads with it. If they finally give in
19:59
complete which they sounds like they are in the process of
20:02
doing. He's gonna butt heads with these guys because they
20:06
can't do this. You can't. You can't say okay, okay, you guys
20:09
when we're going to end all this and then start going after,
20:11
after people in a vindictive way like that this guy's bad news.
20:16
It sounds like,
20:17
also we got reports, you know, back to the 1990s that there's
20:20
all kinds of machine guns and assault rifles going into
20:24
buildings.
20:28
Back to 1919
20:29
Yeah. Where they had machine guns and they had bloody
20:31
Saturday. Oh, back in the day. Yeah. Back in the day. So that's
20:35
that's being reported is now they're everywhere. And you're
20:39
right. The debt Whitehouse certainly desperately trying to
20:44
downplay what's going on here, which includes blocking the
20:49
bridge to Detroit. And what's the other one? We have another
20:54
border that's been blocked one
20:56
down in Montana. I think he's been blocked completely. But
20:59
that bridges that 25% of all import exports goes over that
21:03
Windsor bridge.
21:07
Truckers in Canada last night, shut down the Ambassador Bridge,
21:10
which carries about a quarter of US, Canada. Wow. Were you there?
21:14
Did you hear all this ahead of time
21:16
trading? Is no this.
21:18
What's the administration's response to this action? And
21:21
what steps are being taken to ensure the free flow of goods
21:24
and also, any preventative steps be taken to address a possible
21:28
blockade on the Michigan side of that bridge? Well, let me first
21:31
start by saying I know there's been some suggestion not by
21:34
reporters necessarily at all, but that this congestion is
21:38
related to the vaccine requirements,
21:40
congestion. This is just congestion,
21:45
not by reporters necessarily at all, but that this congestion is
21:49
related to the vaccine requirements. It's not I mean,
21:52
I'm saying I'm going to get to the protests. But the protests
21:55
going on across Canada, which has spread to a bridge are
21:58
leading to sporadic congestion and blockages. Just to go back
22:02
to
22:03
congestion and blockages is what did they have a sniffle point I
22:06
was trying to make is that across what we've seen with
22:09
these requirements is across industry range of industries
22:12
vaccine vaccination requirements have been implemented with no
22:14
disruptions have helped increase vaccinations these requirements
22:18
help protect more people from COVID. And there's been zero
22:20
indication across these industries that they would lead
22:22
to disruptions including on this policy. We of course support as
22:27
you know, the the right to freedom of speech and protest.
22:30
But we see some of these conditions due to processes it's
22:34
clear that these disruptions have broadened in scope beyond
22:36
the vaccine requirement implementation. We beyond that
22:40
we are of course in touch with our Canadian counterparts. But I
22:43
don't have any updates in terms of specific steps.
22:46
Love though this should it should have asked her where to
22:49
dose it. She's done that but I have an offbeat clip. You
22:55
probably have it. But on some odd podcasts, Justin Trudeau
23:01
those step brother. Oh, I
23:05
don't have this. I was COVID. Man.
23:08
This is about okay, it's about COVID But But, but it's not
23:12
about no
23:13
I'm No I'm saying I have COVID I didn't see everything I normally
23:16
do.
23:17
You had quotes I didn't know about judo, but then you might
23:21
have missed it. Yes. So this guy who's the newest ever heard of
23:26
him? At least until now? His name is Kyle camper.
23:32
And that's that's his what
23:34
his name is Kyle. No, no.
23:36
How is he related to Jesse's brother? His
23:39
his mom. The heart of the harlequin Harlequin one who had
23:45
sex with Fidel Castro. And Mick Jagger. Apparently allegedly.
23:50
There's a I think Mick Jagger said so. But there was a slew.
23:56
She got Pierre Trudeau divorced or she got married to some other
24:00
guy. Then she had some kids with that other guy and this is one
24:04
of them. So they're related that way and saying mom, okay, and I
24:09
guess they never I don't know. But I just thought this is a
24:12
little off the watch this sub clip of a longer clip was
24:14
yakking away on a on a zoom call or something is where the
24:18
background is kept changing from downtown, some skating rink to
24:22
some flag and it's just like, horrible to watch. But this is
24:27
kind of interesting, but it's nothing that we've already not
24:29
discussed.
24:30
Justin is you know, the leader of the Liberal Party, and
24:35
everything that's coming out of his right now out of his mouth
24:38
right now is written all of his tweets are being produced by a
24:43
team. All of his statements he is he is the face and like you
24:48
know, the the the lead spokesperson for the Canadian
24:53
government, but the policy and the initiatives that are driving
24:57
it and that are driving his Like, you know that this
25:01
narrative that he continues to push which in my opinion is
25:03
decidedly anti Canadian and anti freedom is like coming down
25:08
from,
25:09
you know, the higher ups from you know, groups like, like,
25:13
like the World Economic Forum like the Council on Foreign
25:16
Relations like Bilderberg, etc. Hmm. Well
25:24
not surprising. It's like, Duh, of
25:26
course we you had some clips recently that just said these a
25:29
stooge he doesn't have a
25:32
relationship manager. Yes, exactly. Yeah, that's what he
25:35
does job. Yeah, it's okay. But that's interesting that he put
25:39
it out there. There was on the podcast, though. It wasn't. It
25:42
wasn't any evidence getting a lot of it's like, it's like
25:45
Barack Obama's brother.
25:49
Remember that? Proko I forget. I'm grinding away thing of
25:53
Brock. Obama's all of that.
25:55
Brother. His brother's fantastic. He's like, Yeah,
25:58
Brock's like, his name is Barry. He's all kinds of stuff.
26:03
Huh? Well, yeah, that brother must have been a thorn in his
26:07
side, too. Maybe still is. But nobody, your immediate isn't?
26:11
Yeah, they don't do so well ignore. They're told to ignore
26:15
you got marching orders. Let's just go ahead with what we're
26:17
doing? Well, I
26:18
think we're all pretty convinced now that the media is not
26:22
working for any of our interests, which is why we have
26:25
this little podcast, that the real turning point came from the
26:30
main messenger for the United States, unless you have more on
26:35
Canada? I don't think so. No, I don't have anything else. And
26:41
she was there at the Boston bombing. She's been with us
26:43
throughout the pandemic, and she's here, she's been thrown
26:46
out to change the narrative. Dr. Lena, when do you agree with the
26:51
move?
26:52
I do, there was a is a time in place for pandemic restrictions.
26:57
But when they were put in, it was always with the
27:00
understanding that they would be removed as soon as we can. And
27:03
in this case, circumstances have changed. Case counts are
27:07
declining. Also, the science has changed. We know that very well
27:12
against Omicron, which is the dominant variant. Everyone five
27:15
and older have widespread access to vaccines. And we also know
27:19
about one way masking the idea that even if other people around
27:22
you are not wearing masks, if you wear a high quality mask,
27:25
that also protects you the wearer, too.
27:28
We didn't know this previously. And so in
27:30
this case, I'm not saying I don't think anyone really is
27:33
saying that no one should ever wear masks, but rather that the
27:36
responsibility should shift from a government mandate imposed
27:40
from the state or the local district or the school. Rather,
27:43
it should shift to an individual responsibility by the family who
27:47
can still decide that their child can wear a mask if needed.
27:52
Let you got this clip. Because I know about the clip I got by me.
27:56
But yeah, this is part of the scheme. So breathless, how can
28:01
you you know?
28:05
Well, and you know, what was in there was the science has
28:08
changed.
28:09
Oh, yeah. Science changes. You know,
28:11
she just she just changed. And the science and the science has
28:16
changed. Regarding maths we now know, we now know that one main
28:20
one way masking works. Yes, you convert your signal without
28:24
annoying everyone else by making it aware of the mask. That's
28:27
great. But holy crap, that's a turn around. I think the general
28:32
consensus is this was some polling for the midterm
28:35
elections like okay, we got to turn this around pretty quick.
28:38
And this whole thing is failing. We're not rolling anything out
28:41
in time the vaccines are duds. The QR never came up with a QR
28:46
platform for the for the passport that's falling apart.
28:50
The UK pulled out, you know, this is over this particular OP
28:54
is over it. I mean, they'll still go linger on for years.
28:58
Here's more of lino when you know,
29:00
K New Jersey, the case in New Jersey, for instance, their new
29:03
case average is just over 4000. Is that an acceptable number to
29:08
do this? Or or are they projecting out to March seventh
29:11
at this point?
29:13
I don't think we should be looking at case counts at all,
29:16
at this point, especially when
29:17
we're after, after two years of it being full one center on the
29:21
right hand side of every single screen that case counts, case
29:25
counts, case counts, sciences changed to march 7 at this
29:29
point.
29:30
I don't think we should be looking at case counts at all at
29:33
this point, especially when we're dealing with a milder
29:36
variant. And when so many people were exposed to Omicron and
29:39
therefore have have at least some level of protection either
29:42
through vaccination or immunity. The key number that we should be
29:45
looking at is hospitalizations. If our ICUs and hospitals in
29:50
that particular region are not overwhelmed if they're not over
29:53
capacity, we can set a number for example, 75% or 80%. Foam,
29:57
then we should be able to relax. All right restrictions and I
30:00
actually believe that we should be starting to with the first
30:03
restriction removed should actually be the restriction on
30:06
children. Because while for adults, you could say, well,
30:09
what's the harm of adults masking when they go into a
30:12
grocery store, there actually is a harm that we should be
30:15
discussing of children continuing to mask. That doesn't
30:18
mean that masking doesn't have its place for children when they
30:20
are high rates of hospitalizations. If we get a
30:23
new bearing in the future that children are particularly
30:26
susceptible to, we may want to bring masks back. But we should
30:29
also be intellectually honest and say that Matthew has had
30:32
where was
30:33
this? We have to be intellectually honest, all of a
30:37
sudden, I can't
30:39
some best. There are some basketball players that can
30:42
actually run down the court backwards, as fast as they can
30:47
forwards. This is the best backpedaling this part of the
30:51
clip I didn't have. I didn't have this one is just
30:54
astonishing in the back peddling. And
30:56
it's unquestioned BY JOHN BERMAN, whatever his name is
31:00
from CNN unquestioned. Okay, I got the memo. You're here to
31:04
announce it. Okay.
31:05
Yeah. Yeah, let me think I'm, I'm, I'm doing this interview,
31:09
and I'm hearing this for the first time. Uh huh. And I'm not
31:13
a gas, asking, wait a minute. No, didn't you? Why so quick,
31:19
why don't you there's too many things you can ask. But you can
31:22
tell that this is a script, because he's gonna be Yeah, he's
31:26
not flip flustered
31:27
now that children are particularly susceptible to, we
31:30
may want to bring masks back. But we should also be
31:33
intellectually honest and say that masking has had a cost,
31:36
especially for the youngest learners. In people with English
31:39
as a Second Language children with learning disabilities,
31:42
there has been a cost to them. So the risk benefit calculation
31:45
has really changed.
31:47
The rest the risk benefit calculation, I thought the
31:49
science changed.
31:51
Oh, it's changed to Everything's changed. In for keeping up,
31:57
reports are that the mental health damage could last a
32:01
generation?
32:03
Oh, yeah, I think so. Yeah. And
32:05
really mission accomplished. If you think about it, if you
32:07
wanted to kill enough people and make enough people sick longer
32:11
term, we already have lower birth rates than we need. I
32:14
think China had 50% of what they had two years ago. They're
32:18
freaking out.
32:19
Yeah. Well, they got used to the one child thing. And that was
32:22
that then then then guess what, but also, you in the United
32:27
States, Europe, everyone's fertility rate is is by dive
32:33
bombing?
32:34
Yes, actually, the sperm counts go way down, which is
32:39
exactly what Bill Gates wanted. And he would do it through
32:42
vaccines. I mean, that's, that could be from years of
32:46
vaccinations. I don't know. I don't want to come across an
32:48
anti Vaxxer have had vaccinations. But this thing is
32:52
gonna list already.
32:54
Oh, well. We'll get to the list. We'll get to the list. You know,
33:01
we might as well since we heard from him hyping this whole thing
33:04
for two years, we might as well listen to Pfizer board member
33:08
and former FDA. commissioner, Commissioner, Scott, Doctor,
33:14
I'm guessing he must have an agent at this point. Dr. Scott
33:18
Gottlieb,
33:19
and we're hearing from governors, there was a
33:21
bipartisan group of them that met with President Biden just in
33:24
the past few days saying they want guidelines, guidelines
33:28
moving from pandemic to an endemic stage here. And yet
33:32
we're at 2400 deaths a day. That doesn't feel like we're close to
33:37
the end. No, it doesn't feel like that we're not close to the
33:41
end right now, depending on how you measure that I think that
33:43
this is going to be a long struggle. This is a virus that's
33:45
going to be persistent. We're going to have to take continue
33:47
to take measures to protect vulnerable people. I think what
33:50
governors are agitating for is some clear guideposts that
33:53
define why on an off ramp. We start to roll back this mitigate
33:57
everything and move them
33:59
guideposts that are movable Exactly.
34:02
I think what governors are agitating for is some clear
34:05
guideposts that define what the on and off ramp is for this.
34:08
When do we start to roll back this mitigation. And we don't
34:10
have a agreed upon set of nomenclature and metrics for
34:14
measuring that if you look at CDC right now, many state
34:16
authorities and public health authorities talk about 10 cases
34:19
per 100,000 people per day being a metric that rates you being in
34:23
sort of a low level of spread. If you look at CDC guidance,
34:26
they talk about 10 cases per 100,000 people per week. So
34:29
that's 1.44 cases a day. That's a level of spread a sufficiently
34:33
low level of spread that we've never been, at any point is
34:37
defined a low level of spread.
34:39
Remember, his job is to sell vaccines, so he just needs to
34:42
talk a lot of gobbledygook until he gets to the pitch,
34:46
throwing numbers left and right then he's also backpedaling as
34:49
fast as he can, yeah, to kind of cover somebody's bases and he's
34:53
making stuff up and he's going by goalpost
34:56
guy. Governor's guideposts. No. less
35:01
good name for a show
35:02
low level of spread that would justify removing masks, for
35:05
example, in schools and so I think what governors are sensing
35:08
is that we need to we need to agree upon a set of metrics when
35:10
we're going to start to roll back these mitigation steps.
35:13
Give people a light at the end of the tunnel. What is that
35:16
point when this stuff gets turned off?
35:18
Oh, no, no, it's not. It's not that governors are looking for
35:22
guideposts. They want to give everybody guideposts. They need
35:25
to get everybody back on in line and on the same timeline.
35:29
This guy's got so many cliches that was a record setting and
35:33
clip.
35:34
Wait, we have more can mask mandates be lifted in most
35:38
schools? Look, I think you're gonna see Governor start to do
35:41
well, I think we're out we've seen prevalence come down
35:44
Connecticut, their mask mandate is expires on February 15. I
35:48
would expect that that's not going to be renewed and schools
35:50
in the state of Connecticut will very quickly lift mask
35:53
requirements for students, I think you're gonna see the same
35:55
thing in New York, New Jersey, other states were omachron has
35:58
come down. With vaccination rates are especially high, I
36:01
think you're gonna see states do that. And we're at a point we
36:04
can safely contemplate that that doesn't mean that this isn't
36:07
going to continue to spread. But when prevalence is low, you have
36:10
a lot of people who've been infected who have some level of
36:12
immunity for a period of time, and you have high vaccination
36:15
rates, we can start to lean forward and take a little bit
36:18
forward and try to at least more risk students in schools have
36:21
some normalcy for this spring term. A lot of kids haven't
36:25
really known a normal school day for two years now. So we want to
36:28
we need to try to lean forward aggressively to try to restore
36:31
that reclaim it when we can
36:33
what did you think this is a new one lean forward? Will we see
36:35
that pop up somewhere and
36:37
lean forward twice? For some I know what does it mean?
36:44
What does it mean? It's stupid.
36:46
The only mean the only way I can see being used lean forward is
36:50
so that your head crosses the finish line before the others
36:55
who but I don't really know if lean forward is the thing lean
36:58
in is the is the Sheryl Sandberg thing. Yeah. Lean forward. I
37:04
don't know is that is Oh, is that maybe progressive lean
37:08
forward?
37:09
I have no idea is July no is this guy is off the rails with
37:14
cliches and bromides. And all these
37:18
goddesses such he's got to keep keep it moving as much as he
37:21
can. And no worries. No worries. Remember all that money that you
37:26
could get if you had a vaccine consultancy? You get up to a
37:31
million dollars in Texas. Oh, that's you remember that? No, I
37:36
don't. Yeah, well, that program is still going
37:39
the Biden ministration is allocating 10s of millions of
37:41
dollars to groups across the US who are working to build
37:44
confidence in COVID-19. Here's NPRs, Selena Simmons, Duffin,
37:50
Secretary of Health and Human Services have your viscera says
37:53
it's important for people to hear from trusted messengers
37:56
about vaccines,
37:58
whether that trusted messenger is your school teacher or your
38:03
pastor or your barber.
38:05
He says this funding allows those trusted people to guide
38:09
you on very important decision to get vaccinated. For example,
38:12
since they received their first stop,
38:14
just realize what I heard here. Okay. Again, this is money going
38:21
to groups, undefined groups. Thanks for reporting on that
38:24
groups. And listen what they say about the groups Sure, or go
38:29
back a little bit further scenes. Whether that trusted
38:32
messenger
38:33
is your school teacher or your pastor,
38:37
or your barber, barber, pastor and barber This is targeting
38:42
black Americans. That's where the money is going to get black
38:45
Americans a das particular to take the vaccine when you
38:49
say barbers and pastors trill thing with barbers and barbers
38:53
and pastors now this is code is another one. This is code.
38:56
This funding allows those trusted people to guide you on
39:00
very important decision to get vaccinated. For example, I
39:04
received their first funds last June Dr. Sue MOFA Soha of the
39:07
rise coalition says groups have learned how to reach migrant
39:11
farm workers through carefully timed radio spots. She says the
39:15
new round of funding will allow the coalition to build on what
39:18
they've learned and get more people vaccinated.
39:20
Holy crap we are idiots easy exit strategy we could have
39:26
easily written up a grant and said look we're gonna convince
39:30
crackpots to get vaccinated we might not work but I think we've
39:34
learned a lot so far during this program so you should up the
39:36
money. This is we're ready for another we've had learning so
39:40
let's try it again and do some more. That was easy money, John.
39:44
There's probably You remember that guy Lesko.
39:49
Now why do I Why Does that ring a bell?
39:51
Let's go does he's the guy who used to wear a suit, a tailored
39:56
suit that had dollar signs all over
39:58
it? Yeah, you Yeah. infomercials, what is the
40:01
infomercial guy?
40:02
Yeah, it was in it and he sold a book called, you know, it's like
40:05
free money from the government.
40:06
Grab this now we're going back to the 80s with this,
40:09
whatever happened to that guy and whatever happened to that
40:12
book, but it was a guy.
40:13
I think he died.
40:15
Robert I think is Robert Lesko. Look
40:17
maps Matt Lesko. Matt Lesko.
40:20
Was it Matt Lesko. It was a B, Mark. Whatever the case it's it
40:24
this was it was all about is like, you know, some sharp
40:28
operators and you heard things like the rise coalition, all
40:32
these you know, so one of those groups. Yeah. Sharp operators
40:37
that are have a nose for government money. And it's just,
40:41
it's just stealing from the taxpayers. Yeah, we could
40:44
probably do that. If we had a mind to. I used to love Tality
40:49
for it. He's still he's still alive. I
40:50
used to love his show. He's still alive. He's 78 Show. The
40:55
other show that was a show, man. He's getting free money from the
40:59
guy lands and bring his head right into it.
41:03
Boy, we need to bring that guy back. I'm sure I'm sure. I'm
41:08
sure there's some great YouTube. You Oh, my goodness, he made so
41:13
many different books. And I Ah, man. I'm glad you brought him
41:17
up. That's funny. Court reversed his decision. Let me see. Where
41:27
is it on Pfizer and federal judge restructures the timeline
41:36
for FDA to release FOIA of the Pfizer trial vaccine documents.
41:44
And they've now back loaded the schedule so that only 20,000
41:49
pages will be released through April of how many pages were
41:54
there, like, half a million or something?
41:57
It was I know it was over 300,000 or even no, I think it
42:01
was in the millions or does that
42:03
really? Yeah, it was probably the millions. Yeah. And And
42:09
coincidentally, Pfizer has now added some language to their to
42:17
their financial earnings report for their I guess this is for
42:22
how they did in Q must have been q4 people have gone through
42:30
their filing. Yeah. And see Pfizer added new language risks.
42:36
So this is about their
42:39
I think the stock has gone down I think because of this risk
42:42
associated with further information regarding the
42:45
quality of preclinical clinical or safety data including by
42:50
audit or inspection. The I'd say they they Yeah, they tried to
42:58
cover that pretty well. It
42:59
trying to cover their ass. Again a couple of clips I wanted to
43:03
just for the last show I didn't get to use this is the beginning
43:07
of the end I think for some of these guys but they did gun
43:11
after the guy who runs the Missouri Health Department and
43:13
they're starting to go after these health guys.
43:15
Who was always they was they the public? Oh good. We just said
43:21
not very Oui oui oui oui.
43:23
I think this is the beginning of this kind of thing. And because
43:27
I've noticed an NPR and other places they're trying to soft
43:30
pedal the the good work that the health professionals have done
43:34
and is too bad that it didn't work out and it's bad because
43:39
they're good people that are in so here we go with this Mo.
43:46
Health the part one,
43:48
Missouri's acting health director because out of a job
43:51
another public health official facing backlash over COVID-19
43:55
prevention measures. strong opposition came from
43:58
conservatives Sarah Kellogg of St. Louis public radio
44:02
reports. It was in July that Republican Governor Mike Parson
44:05
announced that Don Carroll would serve as the Director of the
44:07
Department of Health and Senior Services karaf came out of
44:10
retirement after serving as the Assistant Director of the
44:13
Illinois Department of Public Health. He started the Missouri
44:16
job in September, care of said a clear solution for reducing
44:19
Missouri's COVID rate was to increase the state's vaccination
44:22
rate. But he was also against vaccine and mask mandates. It's
44:27
a physician care for PETA during his hearing this past week to
44:30
make his appointment permanent.
44:31
I've said it before. You know a lot of people in my position.
44:34
They try to vilify those that aren't vaccinated. I'm not going
44:37
to do that. It's their choice. Do you have the correct
44:39
information in the site not vaccinate? I respect that
44:43
because karaf began his job in the Missouri Senate was not in
44:46
session. He was able to serve as director but had to receive
44:49
approval within 30 days after the Senate reconvened in
44:52
January. But just hours before he sat down to answer senators
44:56
questions, more than 100 residents gathered in the
44:59
Missouri car capitol rotunda to protest his nomination. They
45:02
claimed he was not conservative enough. Many more stickers will
45:06
care of his name with a no symbol in front. Others brought
45:09
signs reading stopped care off mandates and stop communism
45:12
Missourians want medical freedom?
45:14
So he but he sounds like he wasn't pro mandates.
45:19
They soft pedal the story that must
45:21
have because they had mandates.
45:25
Yeah, so man mandate. Part two of this finishes it.
45:31
John karaf is another example of a public health figure who has
45:34
faced vitriol from both lawmakers and the public during
45:36
the pandemic. Lawrence Gostin teaches global health law at
45:40
Georgetown University. He says what happened in Missouri has
45:43
been playing out all across the country.
45:45
I've seen public health professionals picketed threaten
45:50
their families threatened
45:53
and literally hounded out of office. And while we've got 10s
45:58
of 1000s of people who who should be in public health and
46:03
aren't more or leaving every day,
46:06
since the pandemic began, legislators in a number of
46:08
states have limited the powers of health officials. Gaston says
46:12
those actions have consequences that will last after the
46:14
pandemic,
46:15
the COVID pandemic should have made it public health empowered,
46:20
more flexible, more nimble, more resources. And instead, it's
46:26
been the opposite.
46:27
Well, I hate to sound like a dick, but I'm all for them going
46:31
after these people. Every single one of them needs to be on trial
46:35
eventually, either for incompetence or downright evil.
46:41
Most will be deemed incompetent, but that's okay. I mean, this
46:45
whole this whole class that that controlled everybody, huh?
46:52
Yeah, yeah, I agree. We didn't do a good day. They got carried
46:56
they got full of themselves. They thought they were God.
47:00
Well, that's not over, they still may think that quick
47:04
update on that. You brought the clip of the Department of
47:08
Defense. When they're de med. They're the military version of
47:13
the vaccine adverse event reporting system, and which, you
47:18
know, showed this incredible increase in all kinds of of
47:21
issues. And as we know, everyone got vaccinated pretty much in
47:26
the military. And now and that came from a whistleblower that
47:31
didn't come near the Department of Defense didn't say, oh, look
47:33
what we found that came from a whistleblower. Yes. Now it
47:37
appears that the Department of Defense is adding all kinds of
47:41
numbers and data to the de med for like previous years.
47:46
Yes, they're phoning get back. The back numbers. Yeah,
47:51
they're trying to make it look like it isn't such an incredible
47:53
strikeout.
47:55
We have a letter raise a letter from the guy
47:57
No, I don't know. I don't
47:59
Oh, we had a letter from a guy who just sent in a I don't have
48:03
I thought you were going to read it.
48:04
No, I mean, I've several articles read it. No, no, no, I
48:07
didn't. I don't even know if I saw it. I have COVID Man I don't
48:10
didn't read
48:10
everything. That's right. I keep forgetting because you just
48:12
don't seem like a COVID type by the
48:14
way. Thank you to the clip custodian who saved my ass with
48:19
a nice helpful of clips today. Exactly what I was looking for
48:23
as usual. Looking for the letter
48:29
Yeah, I can get it's from there. It came into notes at no agenda.
48:34
And Eric forwarded it to us both of course he didn't do it under
48:41
his normal name. Well
48:45
Oh, that's why it probably didn't show up in mine either.
48:48
Because I haven't going to a special
48:51
way does that. It makes no sense. Anyway, I'll look for it.
48:55
We'll read it later.
48:57
Yes, let's see. We have some numbers here I think oh yeah,
49:03
there you go. They've actually they've made 2016 2017
49:10
yet because it's because every hire has to fire now the five
49:13
year average is all about the five year average episode they
49:17
had to phony you know,
49:19
but if you look at the chart, look at the chart you see 2016
49:23
is higher than 2021 which is the big spike at 2017 is higher 2018
49:27
is about the same 2019 is all is like 30% higher than 2021
49:35
Okay, let's see I got the note John, thanks for covering deem
49:39
it on no agenda can you please also cover how the clown world
49:42
sell outs are trying to explain this away if you cover this I
49:46
missed it. Claimed weird covering it now. Yeah, claiming
49:49
a very selective computer glitch. Oh, yeah. It was five
49:56
years prior to 2021. It was a glitch And then he has a link to
50:02
a Steve kirsch@substack.com. And people can go to Steve
50:07
kirsch.substack.com It is probably this column at the top.
50:11
And this Steve Oh, man, I are
50:14
I need I need a clip of I need a clip of someone saying if
50:18
someone's saying that glitch glitch.
50:22
He was number two. I'd like to point and I'm not sure this is
50:26
we'll just say he is a army, a major in the army. I would like
50:32
to point out to the attached Marine Corps Response to
50:34
Representative Eisah. He also has a list of this because ISOs
50:38
bitched about this and he was making them do what was this
50:42
work shows that there is no intention to grant religious
50:46
exemptions. The only religious exemption is granted stated here
50:51
are for three Marines who are underway out anyway. The DoD
50:56
will of course, adhere to the narrative of how safe and
50:59
effective the injections are, while ignoring the reality of
51:02
fully injected servicemembers continuing to get COVID
51:06
Meanwhile, many of us who refuse to blindly follow this ill logic
51:11
have remained COVID free for the last two years. Yeah, please
51:16
keep me anonymous. I use this email to show that I'm real.
51:19
Many of us are standing firm against clown world, but there's
51:22
not much we can do,
51:23
of course, and he's and he's military. He's military. God
51:27
bless you, man. If you don't have anything else, I have a
51:31
small presentation to make. on vaccines. I'm I'm all ears. So
51:38
you want to answer your phone first? I mean, let's just
51:41
see now if he does, is he able to sneak over there. Now?
51:45
I want you completely focused on the clips. I don't want. I don't
51:48
want to just answer it. Let's see who it is. It's got to be
51:51
some douche.
51:52
Let's check it out. Hold
51:53
on a second. I'll turn off the noise gates. So we can follow
51:56
along with the antics of John C. Dvorak and the scam caller if my
52:01
web browser didn't freeze on me for some reason. This is great.
52:04
Here we go.
52:07
Oh, hello. Hello.
52:14
Young up. Yeah, yeah. Lemo. Lemass? Yeah, pretty soon they
52:22
just were like, Hey, man, if you call this guy, this number you
52:26
get on the no agenda show.
52:30
Well, I used to take the phone off the hook, but I'm not that
52:33
popular. So alright, I'm all ears now. And attention is drawn
52:38
to your presentation. Yes. We've had eclipses this
52:42
depends. We've had. We've had the bat theory, which was
52:48
launched immediately. We had the lab theory. We had versions of
52:52
bio weapon and stuff like that, and we liked it. We've talked
52:55
well, then you'll probably like these clips. Ron uns, you know
53:03
him? No. He is. I think he's like a silicon, silicon valley
53:11
guy or he was early days. He has some kind of software, firm
53:18
accounting, accounting software, but he also ran the 90 for the
53:23
California gubernatorial election. And for us, senator in
53:27
2016. We you see, the guy's like he's, it's creepy looking. Now,
53:32
kind of Jamie Raskin esque, in a way is pretty Yeah, that
53:37
explains it. Right. But except he's, he's, I guess, registered
53:44
Republican. And the ADL hates him. The Southern Poverty Law
53:48
Center hates him. But he comes across as a really sane guy. And
53:54
he had this presentation on a podcast, of course, which
53:59
introduces the third theory outside of the bat versus the
54:03
lab. And its bio weapon, but not the way you think it might be.
54:06
Then the third possibility is that it was a deliberate bio
54:10
warfare attack. In other words, the virus was biologically
54:14
engineered to be moderately lethal, but extremely, extremely
54:20
contagious. And so in effect, it was designed to be an anti
54:24
economy by war by weapon, not an anti personnel by weapons in
54:28
that new with the fatality rate of about point five to 1%.
54:33
Obviously wouldn't wipe out a population, but it would kill a
54:36
sufficiently large fraction of the population. And it was so
54:39
extremely contagious. That countries that were infected
54:43
with it would have to take drastic measures that would
54:47
disrupt their economy to control it. And that's exactly what
54:49
happened in China. In other words, when you're looking at
54:52
the details of the original incident in China, the virus
54:56
appeared in Wuhan, China. According to all All the best
55:00
estimates towards the end of October are towards the
55:03
beginning of November, that was patient zero. Now that would
55:07
have allowed exactly the right amount of time for the virus to
55:11
become an unstoppable epidemic. Around the time of the Lunar New
55:16
Year travels in China. In other words, Lunar New Year is a
55:19
tremendously important holiday in China. It's the equivalent of
55:23
Christmas, New Year's a number of other things put together
55:26
with 450 million Chinese traveling. Wu Han is a key
55:31
transit hub. So to the extent that the virus became widespread
55:36
in Wuhan, invisibly, before the government notice what was
55:40
happening, and during the Lunar New York travels, it would have
55:43
affected the entire country and had a devastating impact on
55:46
China's economy.
55:48
Hence, the severe lockdown. So I was interested when this guy was
55:53
kind of bringing back that timeline, because, you know, has
55:56
been so long, we've talked about it so much, like, oh, yeah, it
55:59
was Chinese Lunar New Year, and that and then that's probably
56:02
why they locked everybody down so tight, we couldn't have
56:04
everyone traveling around. But then he brings out the timeline
56:09
of the Trump administration, the tension with Tutton with China
56:13
at the time, and his timeline is pretty impressive. Now,
56:18
the virus appeared exactly at the peak of America's global
56:23
confrontation with China. And the suspicion that you know, the
56:28
two events connected is really fairly obvious one. Furthermore,
56:31
when you look at some of the details of what had been
56:33
happening in China, the previous two years, in 2018, there was a
56:38
mysterious viral epidemic that devastated China's poultry
56:42
industry. In 2019, there was a mysterious viral epidemic that
56:47
appeared in China in destroyed 40% of China's pig herds. Its
56:52
primary meat source, so the virus
56:57
these were not mysterious. We knew what they were we knew what
57:02
caused them. Okay, we talked about a lot on this show. Yes.
57:05
Is that African swine flu fight for pigs so that it really any
57:10
devastate he's right about the devastation part, but the
57:13
mysterious part I don't like him using
57:14
hyperbole I agree is unnecessary because and we track the the
57:19
pigs swine flu specifically.
57:21
But we we did a pretty good job probably better than anybody
57:24
else on tracking that particular disease.
57:26
But I do like that he had the timeline of the 2018 to 2019.
57:30
Yeah,
57:30
I'm into his timeline. I just don't like I got
57:33
no, I agree, I agree. And we'll tell them that dipshit stop
57:36
doing that
57:37
30% of China's pig herds its primary meat source. So we're
57:42
talking about a virus appearing in 2018, attacking his food
57:46
supply, a virus appearing 2019 attacking another source of food
57:51
supply, and then a virus appearing in at the end of 2019.
57:56
That could have devastated China's economy in exactly that
57:59
sort of way.
58:00
Okay, so that the timeline, gets your interest up. He also has an
58:05
actor who we can talk about, holy crap, Robert CAD luck.
58:10
Now, as it happens, when we look at some of the other events that
58:14
really would make anybody very suspicious. In 2017, before
58:19
these viral epidemics began, a man named Robert Cadillac was
58:23
brought into the Trump administration. For decades,
58:26
he'd been one of America's leading biowarfare experts, an
58:30
advocate of bio warfare as being a very useful and plausibly
58:35
deniable means of damaging or severely disrupting an
58:39
international adversary. So he was brought in in 2017. And then
58:44
2018, and 2019, these food supply viruses appeared that
58:49
inflicted a tremendous amount of damage in China. Furthermore,
58:53
when we look at the events of 2019, and we're talking about
58:58
really ridiculous things, I mean, from January to September
59:02
2019, Robert Cadillacs department ran something called
59:07
the Krimson contagion exercise, which was a federal state
59:12
planning process as to how America officials would guard
59:17
America from suffering any damage, suffering infection from
59:22
a respiratory virus that might suddenly appear in China. So
59:26
we're talking about Robert Cadillac, America's chief
59:28
biowarfare expert, running this exercise from January to August
59:34
2019. And two months later, exactly. That sort of virus
59:39
appeared in China. I mean, the coincidences are really
59:42
absolutely ridiculous. And you know, we're talking about when
59:45
something is called the Crimson contagion exercise. It sounds
59:48
like a bizarre conspiracy theory that you know, was invented on a
59:52
corner of the internet. The way I found out about it is there
59:56
was a front page story in The New York Times describing Get in
1:00:00
all the details. So what we're talking about are basically a
1:00:03
tremendous amount of circumstantial evidence pointing
1:00:07
towards America, elements of the American national security
1:00:11
establishment, inflicting a viral epidemic on China for very
1:00:16
obvious reasons. In other words, China right now has one of the
1:00:20
fastest growing world economies. And in fact, by most measures,
1:00:23
it already surpassed America's economy in size several years
1:00:27
ago.
1:00:28
Now, remember, his assertion is that this was an anti economy by
1:00:33
a weapon attack. And so the claim that he's making here's
1:00:37
this, this Cadillac figure, which is quite he went into
1:00:41
BARDA, remember, there was all that crap about BARDA and one
1:00:44
guy get thrown out. Yeah. So this guy comes in. And the
1:00:47
assertion is, hey, you know, this guy, set it all up. And
1:00:50
they tested with Krimson contagion, which it's right in
1:00:56
the New York Times the whole thing, and then what they
1:00:57
learned if insufficient federal funding sources for severe
1:01:00
pandemic confusion on how to apply the defense production
1:01:03
act, current medical supply chain, and production capacity
1:01:07
would not meet demand. I mean, all this stuff was all known.
1:01:09
Interesting, they still didn't do anything about it. And then
1:01:13
he makes another assertion, which, by his timeline is pretty
1:01:17
logical.
1:01:18
Soon after the outbreak of the original Wuhan virus in Wuhan.
1:01:22
That virus suddenly jumped 5000 3000 miles to the city of
1:01:29
GM in Iran, the holy city of Goma, which was the center of
1:01:32
their religious and political elites. Now, you know, if you're
1:01:36
talking about a virus spreading from Wuhan, China, the most
1:01:40
logical places you'd expect it to go next would be the other
1:01:43
East Asian nations bordering China. And that's exactly where
1:01:46
a few outbreaks did occur. But the virus then suddenly jumped
1:01:50
all the way to Iran. And in fact, the headline in the New
1:01:53
York Times described Iran as being the second epicenter, the
1:01:56
second global epicenter of the virus. Not only that, but it
1:02:00
specifically targeted Iran's political elites. 10% of the
1:02:06
Iranian parliament ended up being infected, some of the top
1:02:09
Iranian officials ended up being infected and a number of them
1:02:12
died. So we're talking about a virus epidemic that occurred in
1:02:16
Iran. Just a few weeks after America had assassinated Iran's
1:02:22
top military leader.
1:02:26
What do you think so far?
1:02:28
Actually, I've stuff I can get an add some dimension to this
1:02:31
when you're done. It's pretty good. Okay. So the obvious
1:02:35
question has popped out at me when you hear this. Alright, so
1:02:38
the
1:02:38
obvious question is, it was this Trump's operation all along, to
1:02:43
screw China, to hurt them economically, by shutting down
1:02:48
all of the country. They tried with, you know, Wuhan spreading
1:02:51
out to everyone at the Lunar New Year, and therefore getting back
1:02:55
at him and then pulling a Oh, China attacked us. Well, he has
1:02:59
an answer for that.
1:03:00
But one thing I should say is that once the virus spread to
1:03:04
the United States, then the reaction of the Trump
1:03:07
administration was so incompetent, and so lazy and
1:03:14
incompetent and ignored the whole problem. And I think it's
1:03:17
extremely unlikely that Trump himself was aware of what had
1:03:21
happened. In other words, he basically claimed the virus
1:03:24
didn't exist, it wasn't a problem, it would vanish by
1:03:26
itself. He was so lackadaisical that we ended up having a
1:03:30
massive outbreak in our country. And, you know, from that point
1:03:33
of view, I think almost entirely rules out the possibility that
1:03:38
he himself had authorized the attack. Now, with most
1:03:42
administrations, most countries around the world, the notion of
1:03:45
the top leader of a country, having not been involved in a
1:03:49
major bio warfare attack against the country's leading
1:03:53
international rivals, would seem utterly absurd. But America is
1:03:57
not a normal country these days. And the Trump administration was
1:04:02
a very strange administration. If you've read some of the
1:04:04
accounts that have come out, Trump's top aides and advisers
1:04:09
would often run circles around him, they would in some cases,
1:04:12
they would hide his own executive orders, hoping that he
1:04:15
would forget that he planned to issue them. So under those
1:04:19
circumstances, it's easy to imagine some of the top national
1:04:23
security officials in the Trump administration deciding to deal
1:04:27
a body blow to China, America's leading geopolitical rival, and
1:04:32
perhaps also Iran attacking Iran in leadership, and doing so
1:04:36
without Trump's authorization
1:04:38
to this to me of a bunch of nutjob intelligence people
1:04:45
pulling this off. Yeah, and then having Fauci in on it, and
1:04:51
possibly Fauci saying, Hey, guys, this is going to happen.
1:04:55
Finally, we get to do the mRNA crap. Come on. partai this is
1:04:59
what we've been waiting for. And of course, horror is
1:05:03
where it kind of falls apart. Well, it turns into it turns
1:05:08
into a Trump hit.
1:05:10
No, no, no, no, no, it's not a Trump pitch. No, no, no, he's
1:05:13
would you don't think it was a trumpet when he says Trump was
1:05:16
an incompetent bonehead?
1:05:19
He's just you can it depends on how you view it. Trump an
1:05:24
incompetent bonehead? No. What happened was the media
1:05:28
discredited everything he said he was not getting proper
1:05:31
advice. He was not getting advice on therapeutics, that was
1:05:35
all that was all being denied, and, and swept away. And
1:05:40
honestly, if you have a bio weapon that is an anti economy
1:05:45
bio weapon, the last thing you want to do is say oh, by the
1:05:48
way, get some zinc and, and, and horse paste, and you're good to
1:05:53
go. Don't worry about it. So they had this, if if this theory
1:05:56
is what it is, then they had to keep everyone certainly Trump in
1:06:00
the dark. And if he came up with these things himself, because he
1:06:04
did his research, then you have to discredit that. And that made
1:06:08
him look like a bumbling fool. But don't think this guy is out
1:06:11
to hit Trump, he's out to tell you that it was the national
1:06:14
security intelligence apparatus, my
1:06:18
own speculation or informed speculation would be that all of
1:06:21
the elements of the attack probably came from America's own
1:06:26
national security establishment. In other words, the virus had
1:06:29
probably been developed at Fort Dietrich or some other bio
1:06:33
warfare facility, the virus was probably taken to China by
1:06:38
elements of American special forces or CIA operatives, or
1:06:42
something like that. And all of those individuals believed that
1:06:46
they were acting with the full authorization of the top
1:06:50
American government. While on the other hand, the people
1:06:53
actually involved were one notch down from Trump probably small
1:06:57
group of officials who decided that they needed to strike a
1:07:00
deep blow against China. And they basically authorized the
1:07:04
pack on their own, with all of the lower level officials,
1:07:07
assuming that it had Trump's authorization, which it didn't.
1:07:11
And then, you know, once the attack then caused massive
1:07:14
blowback in the United States. I mean, By most estimates,
1:07:16
probably about a million Americans have already died.
1:07:19
It's the worst disaster to hit the United States since the
1:07:22
Great Depression. It's the worst worldwide event, the most
1:07:26
important worldwide event since the Second World War. So you can
1:07:30
easily imagine those officials who were involved in at the
1:07:33
time, assuming that they did not intend for to have blowback
1:07:37
inside the United States would now be very, very concerned that
1:07:41
they're all might be fun. And so you'd never get them to talk
1:07:44
about it. I mean, a million Americans have died from it,
1:07:47
or with it, or whatever. But I don't know. I like it. I like
1:07:52
this theory, the deep state bunch of CIA bullcrap people
1:07:56
doing this, for whatever reason.
1:07:59
I have some issues with it. But I have some other thoughts. All
1:08:02
right. The issues I have involved. Well, of course, this
1:08:05
is the reason and anyone who was smart enough to be at the
1:08:08
position where they were involved with this sort of
1:08:10
testing and creation of this dangerous biological weapon.
1:08:16
They always know that the problem with it is that it gets
1:08:19
into it goes bad, do you can't stop it.
1:08:23
They had just one they had event 201 And Krimson contagion, they
1:08:27
were supposed to be ready, they completely failed, they had all
1:08:30
the shit that will go wrong, and they couldn't handle it.
1:08:34
So let's look at it from some, somebody might be able to
1:08:38
uncover the basis for this, who is the most protected person
1:08:44
that we see as a spokes men and he has been doing his job
1:08:49
forever in a very high up position and is in control of
1:08:53
the billions and billions of research dollars that are
1:08:57
involved with developing things. So Fauci is not narrow is
1:09:02
untouchable and he's got that he's got a kind of a Cheshire
1:09:05
cat look on his face that say that there we're going to go
1:09:08
ahead with this and let's say that it was our people that
1:09:11
poison the Chinese chickens and the Chinese pigs because like
1:09:17
somebody said, If we I can remember a lot of the details on
1:09:20
that pork swine problem is that that they think you can eat a
1:09:25
ham sandwich and toss it to the pigs because they'll eat the ham
1:09:29
sandwich and they get this disease and once it start
1:09:33
spreading, it spreads really fast. It's one of the fastest
1:09:35
spreading diseases because of cannibalism. Well, they just eat
1:09:39
a ham sandwich just yeah, they would eat just eat their own.
1:09:42
That's horrible. A ham sandwich so and we're going to decide
1:09:50
that well this didn't do didn't do the job it was does it give
1:09:54
our farmers an upper hand in selling pork to the Chinese and
1:09:58
so this is good for balancing Trade, although they've never
1:10:01
seem to be too concerned about that. And now if you want to get
1:10:05
Trump out of the picture, let's this may be part of the scheme
1:10:08
to get rid of him too, because the intelligence community
1:10:11
doesn't like Trump, because he's threatens them in some way or
1:10:15
other well, so he has to go. And this got rid of him by the way,
1:10:19
it got rid of him, but but also, I, in my mind, tie this into
1:10:23
perhaps a desire from the financial markets to do this.
1:10:27
That's my whole thing. I won't belabor it. But boy, that would
1:10:31
be great if you could screw China's screw the supply chains
1:10:33
that stops the whole world economy, and it went even better
1:10:36
than they could have hoped for
1:10:38
getting by low. So Fauci then is given the assignment so Fauci
1:10:44
dreams up to it has to be the guy that
1:10:46
dreamed up the scheme? Well, he has all the the gain of function
1:10:49
we've got,
1:10:50
he listened to this, this thesis. Okay. All right. So
1:10:54
they're working on this gain of function thing at Fort Dietrich,
1:10:57
we're gonna keep that Archer, and but they can't do it
1:11:01
anymore. So he says, We got to spread, somehow, we're gonna,
1:11:04
we're not gonna be able to just make it here and then drop it
1:11:07
off somehow, by Special Forces, why bother doing any of that
1:11:11
complicated stuff? We know the record of all the biological
1:11:16
labs in the world and the leakiest. One was always the
1:11:19
land lab. Let's just give them the assignment of them the money
1:11:26
assignment, yeah, give them the assignment of working on this
1:11:29
thing, get it up to par, it'll just leak out on its own. It
1:11:33
will get out of the lab within six months to a year because
1:11:36
that lab is leaky,
1:11:38
right? Well, irrelevant, whether they they triggered it purposely
1:11:41
or they knew it would happen eventually, I think such an
1:11:44
operation, you'd probably want to be a little more prepared and
1:11:46
have some kind of detonator and not leave it up to chance. So
1:11:51
but they had people inside the lab, anything could have
1:11:53
happened. Now I'll just take this home.
1:11:56
There's anything but the point is, is that is still came out of
1:11:59
that lab? Sure. I mean, it's an interesting, fun theory, if you
1:12:05
want to call that kind of thing fun. That it has a few holes in
1:12:10
it, but it's not out of control. And it's believable that they
1:12:14
would circumvent, you know, Trump, if but there was a way it
1:12:19
was it had to be Trump. I mean, why specifically Trump at this
1:12:21
point in history, would it? Would they have done the same
1:12:24
thing to Hillary? Would they pull the same stunt which had
1:12:28
been more involved?
1:12:28
Yes, yes, I believe they would have done the same things that
1:12:31
Hillary would have been in on it. It would have been her plan
1:12:35
and it probably would have gone much better and
1:12:37
to begin with, it might have gone much better. Maybe this was
1:12:40
Hillary's plan possible. Yeah. Well,
1:12:48
the timing got messed up for sure. Because this retreat is is
1:12:51
not what they wanted. Not is not what they wanted. No.
1:12:58
Well, that's we can't do these things. This is also really
1:13:01
rude. Somebody under debt is a deathbed thing. It's really
1:13:05
it's really rude to you know, to do this to people. So no, yeah,
1:13:09
it's not so cool. deathbed thing. And when you people how
1:13:13
many times we had some CIA guy or Russian guy on his deathbed
1:13:18
admitted to everything the moon landings fake. We did JFK CIA
1:13:22
hit job. And no one ever cares. deathbed stuff is no good.
1:13:28
It's better than nothing. Yeah. Which is what you've got.
1:13:33
Better than nothing.
1:13:35
Yeah. Yes. Good. There. I like it.
1:13:38
I'm, I mean, feeling what I feel now I'm not even convinced. You
1:13:42
get your your clips. No, no, no, no, no, this was I was actually,
1:13:48
I think it's ama from the Netherlands sent me this link,
1:13:51
and it's his YouTube and I only got through half of it. Just
1:13:56
download it. Yes, you can do that. Now on YouTube. You can
1:13:59
click the download. I didn't know that there was a download
1:14:01
link. That seems to be new.
1:14:05
That seems to I have a download link to but it's actually a it's
1:14:08
a it's a third party product. No, I
1:14:11
don't have a third party product is just popped up. today. I'd
1:14:15
never noticed that before. So yes, of course, I've downloaded
1:14:18
that. This guy is not that fringe. I mean, he's hated but
1:14:23
he's not that fringe. Anyway. Again, I'm I'm still not sure
1:14:28
this isn't just a pandemic of dumb testing. And the flu. Who
1:14:32
knows? I do know that the way I felt Tuesday and Wednesday, if I
1:14:37
was completely freaked out, like oh, COVID Oh my god. Yeah, I
1:14:44
could see what you could make yourself feel really, really,
1:14:46
really bad. No doubt
1:14:49
that. It was definitely everyone's pre programmed to. I
1:14:55
mean, I remember in the first few days of this thing back in
1:14:58
the 2120 or 20. There was a I was at the Grocery Outlet and
1:15:05
and this guy there was masked up and they're all freaking their
1:15:10
standard dude, you don't that's when you would walk down the
1:15:12
street and people give you a wide berth. Yeah, remember that?
1:15:17
Yeah, sure. So this guy starts yelling at his wife for touching
1:15:21
a loaf of bread. It may have been touched, touched, and he's
1:15:25
just yelling and screaming going nuts because she's touched this
1:15:29
thing. And she didn't have gloves on. And this the number
1:15:31
one was blue neoprene gloves. Yeah, people
1:15:34
were washing all of their food.
1:15:38
It's unbelievable.
1:15:40
It's sad. It's evil, what has been done to the people of the
1:15:44
world. And it's the it's the ruling class, not even the
1:15:50
elites, but well yet the ruling class is the middle management
1:15:54
of your cities. They hate the middle class working people hate
1:16:00
them. And I figured out that's also Rogan's problem. Rogen
1:16:06
represents the guys in the in the Dire Straits video, you
1:16:10
know, moving the refrigerator and your color TV looks
1:16:13
like one up. Yes. The same says riches. That guy is he looks
1:16:17
like a working class stiff and muscle bound
1:16:19
because he is that's his, his attitude is that and they hate
1:16:24
it and they hate that there's 11 million people to have these
1:16:27
degenerates these middle class workers. tuning in, and oh,
1:16:34
look, they he talks to elites. He had he can't be on that
1:16:38
level.
1:16:40
telling you they hate their desk. Definitely an issue.
1:16:43
hate hate them. They hate they hate us, John. They just hate
1:16:46
us. They hate middle class working podcasters podcast. Oh,
1:16:52
yeah. Well, we should probably just discuss this briefly then.
1:16:56
Man, did you see this DHS bulletin?
1:17:01
Oh, yeah. Yeah, I should post it. And I put a link to the next
1:17:04
news there. I was gonna post it on the
1:17:06
summary of terrorism threat to the US homeland. Yeah. And just
1:17:12
to mention the key factors contributing? Well,
1:17:15
the way you explain what it is you're gonna read it to you? No,
1:17:18
no, but I'm being explained what it is you're reading so people
1:17:21
can get it's
1:17:21
a bulletin from the Department of Homeland Security, which I
1:17:24
just said, it's a it's a national terrorism advisory
1:17:28
system bulletin. And they have a summary of terrorism threat to
1:17:33
the US homeland. And this will last
1:17:36
i to be sure you read it. This reminds me remember, during this
1:17:39
era, where, again, during the Trump I think it's during the
1:17:42
Trump era, or, or even maybe before at night, I don't have
1:17:46
the time where there was another one of these bulletins came out
1:17:49
and said, somebody carries the Constitution with them. They
1:17:52
have a Liberty or Death bumper sticker. These are all
1:17:57
terrorists.
1:17:59
I'd like to remind everybody that as far as I can recall,
1:18:02
Department of Homeland Security was created after 911 Was it not
1:18:06
part of the Patriot Act? Yes. And and the promise was, don't
1:18:11
worry. This is only for al Qaeda, ISIS, Islamic terrorists,
1:18:19
everything from the outside, we're going to be protecting you
1:18:22
in America. We'll never never never use it on Americans. I'll
1:18:27
read a little bit from this, as long as I just give you an one
1:18:29
are not going to read this long but the whole thing is lengthy.
1:18:33
A couple pages. The United States remains in a heightened
1:18:36
threat environment fueled by several factors, including an
1:18:41
online environment filled about how about that for some
1:18:45
hyperbole. The online environment is filled to the
1:18:50
brim to the brim to brim with false or misleading narratives
1:18:55
and conspiracy theories and other forms of MIS DIS and Mal
1:18:59
information also known as MDM, I liked
1:19:02
that Miss DIS and notice the smell Saki has been saying Miss
1:19:11
Oh, she's missing Miss indice. Well, she's not she's not used
1:19:15
mal yet,
1:19:16
but she better get on board because that's the that's the
1:19:19
new direction is Miss dis Mal and they am this this definition
1:19:27
was put in on January 31. Anyway, let me continue here. So
1:19:37
the online environment filled to the brim with false misleading
1:19:40
narrative conspiracy theories, other forms of MIS DML
1:19:42
information introduced and or amplified by foreign and
1:19:47
domestic threat actors threat actor. These threat actors seek
1:19:53
to exacerbate societal friction and sow discord and undermine
1:19:57
public trust in government institutions. To encourage
1:20:01
unrest, which could potentially inspire acts of violence. And
1:20:09
let's see, silent, you're violent, you're silent, you're
1:20:13
violent. That's true. Here's the key factors contributing to the
1:20:19
current heightened threat environment. They include the
1:20:21
proliferation of false or misleading narratives which sow
1:20:24
discord or undermine public trust in government institutions
1:20:27
colon, for example, there's widespread widespread, what
1:20:32
happened to filled to the brim? Now it's widespread, it's filled
1:20:35
and wide online proliferation of false or misleading narratives
1:20:39
regarding abstain unsubstantiated, widespread
1:20:43
election fraud, and COVID-19. Now there's a reason those two
1:20:49
are in the same sentence. You're against. You're against Vax
1:20:52
vaccine mandates mass mandates you question COVID-19? You're no
1:20:56
better than an insurrectionist? Do you read it that way?
1:21:01
Absolutely.
1:21:02
Grievances associated with these themes inspired violent,
1:21:06
extremist attacks during 2021. So and this just goes on and on
1:21:13
and on and questioning question here, even domestic extremists,
1:21:19
domestic violent extremists have also viewed attacks against us
1:21:23
critical infrastructure as a means to create chaos and
1:21:26
advance ideological goals, and have recently aspired to disrupt
1:21:30
us electric and communications critical infrastructure,
1:21:34
including here comes by spreading false or misleading
1:21:39
narratives about 5g cellular technology, bro, that's why you
1:21:44
were hired. That's why you were calendar you were fired. That's
1:21:47
why you were fired. It's
1:21:48
true. Um,
1:21:51
this is this is not okay. And so they have their own little unit.
1:21:56
They have the domestic terrorism unit inside DHS. So what
1:22:02
happens? They just come and knock on your door? Hey,
1:22:03
podcaster. And what can they do is, yeah, if they show up, and
1:22:07
what do you do? Seriously, I'm asking you a serious question.
1:22:12
Now.
1:22:12
Tell me to get the fuck out. Now, this is not going anywhere
1:22:17
this is and you'll be taken apart and congressmen and if did
1:22:21
the thing that's the giveaway, there's a giveaway in here. If
1:22:25
this is all true, and all this is going on? Why does this
1:22:28
document have an expiration date of June 7 of this year? What is
1:22:35
the point of an expiration date? Does the terrorism to domestic
1:22:39
terrorism all disappear on June seventh? Oh, which is
1:22:42
coincidentally the day of the primaries for the midterm
1:22:45
elections. Is it? Yes.
1:22:51
Wow.
1:22:54
So what does that mean?
1:22:56
It means this shake things up the best we can to get people to
1:22:59
not vote Republican. And when the primaries happened, that
1:23:03
this won't be this is over this is going because now we're in
1:23:06
the real race for bring out the big we'll do something even
1:23:10
better. I have to do something because we these Republicans are
1:23:13
going to take over Congress and we can't have that. This is the
1:23:17
most political thing I've ever seen. And I hope that the the
1:23:21
Congress or the Republicans stand up and do something about
1:23:25
it.
1:23:30
I love how you're like, I'm an optimist. When you're like, oh,
1:23:34
yeah, people should do something. But yeah, Republicans
1:23:37
might do something about it.
1:23:39
Yeah, you watch Tucker Carlson? No,
1:23:42
I don't watch Tucker Carlson for any of that. I keep telling my
1:23:46
own very own wife to Well, man, I hope the Republicans really
1:23:49
sweep this set for what to have more shenanigans and bullshit
1:23:53
douchebags screwing us over. It's
1:23:55
a disgrace one douchebag taking the place of another Exactly.
1:23:58
That's my point.
1:23:59
I'm not arguing that. But the point is still this is still
1:24:02
political crap. Yes. Well,
1:24:04
they're not going to get rid of the Department of Homeland
1:24:06
Security or any of the 70,000 intelligence organizations.
1:24:13
That's the only one I don't say they're not because they're a
1:24:16
holes and the intelligence community has six ways till
1:24:20
Sunday to get back at you. These guys have a lock on it. They
1:24:24
have a lock on it. They have a lock on them. People are
1:24:28
great. It's unfortunate but true. Is
1:24:31
corrupt to the core and until though it FBI certainly
1:24:35
and see oh, the FBI is out of control. It's dangerous. These
1:24:39
guys are a menace to society. Yeah, not all of course, but in
1:24:45
general, the unit the whole organization is not pro America.
1:24:51
Produce
1:24:56
pro China
1:24:57
No. And with that, I'd like to thank you for coming urgency in
1:25:00
the morning to you the man who put the sea in the Crimson
1:25:02
contagion ladies and gentlemen, Mr. John C. Morag.
1:25:07
But in the morning to you Mr. Adam curry and Mary 70 Is your
1:25:10
magic recipe Dr. Saba dame's nice out there
1:25:12
what happened to your Echo machine ma'am I
1:25:14
didn't end well
1:25:15
in the morning to the trolls in the troll room troll room.io is
1:25:22
where you can join the trolls on the live show. Should we give
1:25:24
them a count today? We've been up on these numbers recently.
1:25:27
Hey, trolls hands out scurry away Oh, not bad not a little
1:25:34
lower than our previous record 24 Even 2400 Even was 2408 I
1:25:40
think wasn't it
1:25:42
on the record the actual record yeah that we had last was
1:25:47
28 2809 of us right Wow.
1:25:53
We lost a whole bunch of trolls.
1:25:55
I know this
1:25:56
you have posted note
1:25:58
I have a sticker is a little round stickers one of those
1:26:01
round ones nice and I put it up it's right on the paint
1:26:05
do you need to you need on the paint?
1:26:08
Yeah, they said they got a shelf here and I just stick it right
1:26:11
on there and is permanently attached
1:26:14
its interest that's how we also run the donations for the show.
1:26:18
Similar system hey you can listen to the shows live no
1:26:23
agenda stream.com Or if you want you can also get it through
1:26:27
troll room.io Troll along listen to all the live shows on no
1:26:31
agenda stream comm which has been going along almost as long
1:26:33
as the show itself and there's entire communities of podcasts
1:26:38
and shows that all circle kind of congregate around no agenda
1:26:43
stream.com and the troll room and no agenda social which you
1:26:47
can use to follow me Adam at no agenda social calm or Jhansi
1:26:51
Dvorak at no agenda social calm it truly is an oasis of rest and
1:26:57
calm in the oh my god so I use Twitter as an inbox I look at
1:27:03
the what is the notifications and that's pretty much it but if
1:27:08
you go to your maybe this has always been this way but you
1:27:11
know um so of course I'm I'm on my back I'm feeling crappy and
1:27:14
like I want to go through the the home timeline of Twitter
1:27:17
This is not who you follow if you follow someone Yeah, it
1:27:21
might show up but every other tweet that I get is based on
1:27:26
your timeline but it just stick and Pete random people in
1:27:31
now they put just random crap in the in the time but it's now
1:27:35
it's
1:27:35
it's every other every other tweet that I might be following
1:27:38
someone they throw in. It's just like useless now. And it's it's
1:27:42
vile now what it was? Yes. I think I think that's uh, I don't
1:27:49
know if this is new but it's a gross mistake. And it's gross in
1:27:54
general.
1:27:55
I have I have my use for it is to for direct messages to
1:28:01
certain people that I seem to only be in contact with on
1:28:04
through via Twitter. A and B is to plug the show.
1:28:10
Yeah, I only retweet pretty much anyway, so if you're not on the
1:28:16
mastodons, you got to get cracking on that because that's
1:28:19
where all the cool kids are. We're We're awaiting Trump's
1:28:25
trump the true truth Yes, coming out, you
1:28:27
bring it up. It cracks me up.
1:28:28
It's coming out in March it's coming out in March. It turns
1:28:31
out now it may be a Pleroma instance which is compatible
1:28:36
with with the mask bless you which is compatible with the
1:28:41
fediverse but seen by many is superior to the basic Macedon
1:28:47
setup and
1:28:48
I PLO Roma Exactly. So that you know that every time
1:28:55
pretty much so that's no agenda social.com Now let's take a look
1:29:01
at the artwork for assay MSI
1:29:05
Pleroma it sounds like a disease. Oh, he's got PLO Roma
1:29:11
What is he gonna live
1:29:15
there's a lot of developers out there who look who think this is
1:29:17
very funny all you're doing here for sure. Now what the heck man?
1:29:22
Why am I why can I not get to the just annoy balls and annoy
1:29:29
balls?
1:29:30
I for some reason can't seem to get to the show notes for 1423
1:29:35
That's weird
1:29:36
show notes. Yeah, I just could go to the art page.
1:29:40
Well, but do you remember what the name of the show was? No.
1:29:43
Okay, so there's my point. This is why I exist everything's
1:29:47
frozen here. Why did my pillow
1:29:49
Roma No, no. Well, anyway, it was episode. You're not helping
1:29:53
to get a kick out of the art. It just came in episode.
1:29:56
I can't get anywhere now. Oh, you poor
1:29:59
thing. Okay no agenda show.com
1:30:03
Why don't you tell me what the episode was and who did the art
1:30:06
okay
1:30:08
let me just type in no agenda show up Tolan
1:30:11
baby Steelers already have it baby Steelers and cash is taking
1:30:17
forever homeless going on today they're already on to me John
1:30:20
they're trying to slow down my Miss DIS and Mal information
1:30:25
we're having trouble finding that site
1:30:29
is literally literally no,
1:30:31
no I got non agenda show that
1:30:35
non agenda show is there a non agenda show.com That's right.
1:30:40
Anyway, so it was titled baby Spiel Steelers Thank you Tom to
1:30:43
nail for Taunton, Neil, as we would say in America for the way
1:30:48
thought perfectly hilarious image of Jeff Bezos in his new
1:30:52
Dutch built super yacht. There was a lot of perfect things in
1:30:56
that.
1:30:59
Especially in the including one that I missed. Well, it's a you
1:31:03
the orange line, the orange balloon with orange, blue, and
1:31:06
hello, and it's a Dutch. It's a very typical Dutch design of a
1:31:11
boat that you might see on the canals. X canal boat, kind of a
1:31:15
canal boat type, shorthand. Yeah, so am I supposed to see so
1:31:18
I
1:31:18
guess legs come out of the bottom of it. Two Phases can
1:31:23
walk along the bottom of the canal.
1:31:25
Were there other things that we were looking at? There was a lot
1:31:27
of Go. Blue Origin.
1:31:30
Yeah, a lot of
1:31:31
stuff on there. Let's see what else
1:31:35
like freedom convoy, but you couldn't see no agenda on there.
1:31:40
It was a lot of good art. There was. It's see. Well, now they
1:31:47
say now there were I think it was it was like the Canadian
1:31:51
goose on top of the truck, but you didn't like that. I like
1:31:54
Viva la Liberte. Hong
1:31:56
Excuse me. The Canadian goose on top. Oh, yeah, I thought the
1:31:59
goose was too small.
1:32:00
Yeah, you said the goose that was to me. It was fine. Ness
1:32:03
works Viva la Liberte just below that was quite good. I like
1:32:07
the no agenda effective safe mRNA like the safety trigger
1:32:13
from Gabe Gabe Grider
1:32:18
Yeah, you didn't like that? I didn't get it that much. I like
1:32:22
to honk with the boat with the Mack Truck logo which is kind of
1:32:26
nice there's a there's a lot of usable art but there was no
1:32:34
nothing he had jarring impact now I base those in the little
1:32:39
boat
1:32:39
I laughed at the no agendize or battery spin for power but
1:32:44
which one was that? It's the big battery oh the battery
1:32:47
because you know you were spinning your batteries trying
1:32:50
to get them to work ah and your keyboard or whatever
1:32:54
yeah cuz I was one of your story. I also liked in this
1:32:59
corner the vaccinated by Dame Kenny Bender it's a muscular guy
1:33:03
you know it's just a nice piece it would have been if would have
1:33:06
popped a bit God save the body double like that.
1:33:11
Where's that oh keep calm it's it's the body no no
1:33:15
not to keep cool keep calm with his body double debt to below
1:33:18
that is the kind of punk rock looking oh
1:33:22
god save the body. Oh yeah, the Sex Pistols Never Mind the
1:33:25
Bollocks type thing.
1:33:26
That's a tad tanta. Neil you using her skills as a modern
1:33:33
graphic designer
1:33:35
Well we're very happy with the Beezus boat I think it it it
1:33:41
showed very well what we're all about and and and I don't know
1:33:45
Do you think she enhanced his eye or is that just as regular
1:33:47
guy
1:33:48
I you can look at a million pictures of basil and often his
1:33:52
his left right is almost dead closing his left eyes bulging.
1:33:58
Devers no enhancement needed.
1:34:02
It's fun to laugh about people's physical issues.
1:34:05
Yeah, especially when they when they're the richest person in
1:34:07
the world as snuffed out in a second.
1:34:12
Right. Thank you very much Taunton and thank you to all the
1:34:16
artists for doing fantastic work always entertaining us and
1:34:20
everybody can enjoy it, you can go to no agenda art
1:34:22
generator.com And you can see the entire the entire collection
1:34:26
we have over close to 30,000 images, and multiple of the
1:34:30
number of episodes we done. And also if you'd like to help
1:34:34
protect, preserve and embrace, extend podcasting to enhance it,
1:34:39
get a modern leave the legacy apps get a modern podcast app
1:34:43
new podcast apps.com You can see all of these images flying by is
1:34:48
one of the many new features of podcasting 2.0. And let us thank
1:34:54
our executive and Associate Executive producers for today.
1:34:57
1424 Now we got a lot of Some longest notes I see. And right
1:35:05
off the bat, like holy crap what is going on here? Michael Minton
1:35:09
is in Louisville, Kentucky. Do we have a term for this number
1:35:13
of threes?
1:35:15
A row of how about I'm gonna get about this he maybe
1:35:22
$3,333.33 Here's his note. Thank you by the way, when the going
1:35:32
gets weird the weird turn pro kindest regards are all mittens
1:35:37
of a world distance. PS dames nights and douchebags like Don't
1:35:41
be this didn't have a world distance. That's what I said of
1:35:44
a world distant. PS I said, I'm sorry. PS dame's nights and
1:35:49
douchebags like Don't be a stranger at the Nashville skate
1:35:52
Ranger. See all soon. I'll be there. Rona. At all.
1:36:01
No kissing.
1:36:03
No, definitely. No. Unless you want it.
1:36:08
So what he's got no, jingles? No, no, no, nothing. Good, man.
1:36:14
That's pretty crazy. Jason Abbott. Apt. A BT is what it
1:36:20
says. SR $96.96 from verwacht Veronica, Veronica veracross.
1:36:29
Gotta be that Wisconsin. ITM guys love the media
1:36:33
assassination in the sanity it gives us I donate 69696 plus 50
1:36:40
which I set up as a monthly donation. These donations total
1:36:44
74696 that makes me a night. Alright, that doesn't make him a
1:36:47
night but the bookkeeping I saw does make him night he's been
1:36:50
donating the 15 for a while actually. Please Knight me sir.
1:36:55
Iceman jingles get the jab No. Shut up, slave pewpewpew little
1:37:01
go yay.
1:37:02
Get back. No
1:37:10
couple of his cute couple of programming notes. There is yes,
1:37:16
for the producers. If you want a jingle please do not be cutesy
1:37:22
with get the jab. Because I looked for quite a while for a
1:37:25
get the jab ISO until I realize you want to get vaccinated. And
1:37:31
again, I just have to be harsh. The next person who sends me a
1:37:36
screenshot without a link, I will personally come to your
1:37:40
home and beat your ass. I am so tired of this. And people love
1:37:45
the show notes. Man. We can research everything. It's easy
1:37:48
to search. Not if you're sending me screenshots of articles you
1:37:52
just read. Ah, so for that, okay. I'm really mad about that.
1:38:01
Program note. Adam has COVID
1:38:05
Yes, exactly. Stephen King. from Grand Rapids, rapids rapids,
1:38:10
Grand Rapids, Michigan. 3808. I like that. It's like a three
1:38:17
boob 380 dot O eight. Out here we go in the morning first time
1:38:22
donor longtime douchebag please rev up the deed douching
1:38:26
machines.
1:38:28
You've been D deuced.
1:38:32
F. I tried to keep this note succinct, but if Too Long John
1:38:36
can entertain himself by reading it in a disparaging voice. Now
1:38:39
I'll do that. I'm good at that. This donation is for three 8008
1:38:44
Is the alien three boobs donation. See I got it for
1:38:47
anyone into more exotic views. No boobs. That's it. I mean, how
1:38:56
many dogs have only three. Normally, I would put something
1:39:00
like this on a subscription model but designed to cover that
1:39:03
executive producer credit left me hanging. My workaround was to
1:39:06
set aside a little bit each month and then send it all over
1:39:09
in one big lump sum. Well, thank you. That's very cool. I presume
1:39:12
the sustaining donations will be preferred to have a more stable
1:39:15
income, so perhaps some kind of other recognition would help by
1:39:17
quite sure what you meant. Regardless, no agenda is clearly
1:39:21
the best podcast in the universe and my main source of news you
1:39:24
will want to diversify. alongside other value for value
1:39:28
podcast like congressional dish and Mo facts have not tried DH
1:39:32
unplugged yet, but probably will at some point. No agenda helps
1:39:35
keep things real, keep it real, and avoids falling into mental
1:39:39
traps on both the right and left as someone who was disposed to
1:39:43
lean far in either direction and he was had struggles with more
1:39:46
radical outlooks than the Insell movement. The whole agenda helps
1:39:50
me see a real human connection is key to it all. In my eyes,
1:39:54
male and female relations in the West art and all time low on the
1:39:57
M five M seems to refuse to cover anything related to Such a
1:40:00
media blackout will be fit for deconstruction, though the lack
1:40:03
of clips does make things a bit harder for the show curious and
1:40:06
how you and John feel about it. About men and women not getting
1:40:13
into relationships at the typical age.
1:40:16
No, the I think he's what he said specifically, if you want
1:40:21
to deconstruct it, he wants to know how we feel about the fact
1:40:25
that that media has not covered this. Oh,
1:40:28
all part of the plan. Why do we do that? We don't want to alert
1:40:31
anybody to the fact that we're not having babies or anything
1:40:34
like that, or even having four bags. We don't want any of that.
1:40:37
So that's how we feel about it. Trying to kill us all. That's
1:40:40
Hello, is this is what the whole show is about how they're trying
1:40:43
to kill us all. Lastly, could I get a dose of relationship karma
1:40:48
to get my single ass out there to mingle, as well as the most
1:40:51
obscure jingle? You can dig up? Yes, I'll get the most obscure
1:40:56
jingle I can dig up because whenever I asked for it, or
1:40:58
never to ask for I can never find it. Oh, there's no
1:41:01
winning. We don't like to foster a competitive atmosphere. But we
1:41:05
laugh a lot. Now everyone share a secret.
1:41:08
You've got karma. That's obscure. Love is lit and he says
1:41:13
By the way, love is lit. Thank you.
1:41:16
You remember where that was? clipped from?
1:41:22
No, I think it was years though. Yeah.
1:41:25
It was clip from the spin OSH spin OSH spin offs of Family Guy
1:41:30
American Dad
1:41:32
Oh right which lasted what a season
1:41:34
it's still on No really? Yes Wow. On cable Oh wow. Oh wow.
1:41:41
Did you say oh wow, I
1:41:42
just said Oh, wow. Ah,
1:41:43
and I didn't catch it. Idiot. Cam Warren 33333 I gotta get
1:41:51
back on the Oh, wow. Oh, wow. Oh, wow. Far out man. Guru.
1:41:58
Don't big message rights. Cam Warren came in 33333 No big
1:42:04
message. Thank you. Just keep seeing that number over and
1:42:07
over. Since we're about to go on a quick vacation. I thought I'd
1:42:09
better donate and ask for some karma. I would like to call out
1:42:13
Susan as a douchebag. She's a friend that I hit in the mouth
1:42:19
over a year ago and I know she loves the show. So
1:42:24
no jingles just the karma. Keep up the good work. You can you've
1:42:29
got karma. Richard Harris is in Provo Utah. Now another perfect
1:42:34
333 33 help. He says I need help. I need medical dispensary
1:42:41
job karma and some relationship karma. They might be able to
1:42:45
come together Wouldn't It Be Nice thanks for the twice weekly
1:42:49
reality check maybe a D douching. Since it's been over a
1:42:52
year
1:42:54
you've been d do
1:42:56
jobs jobs and jobs let's go for jobs are my time limits on the D
1:43:06
deuced? William wild in Baltimore Maryland. Three Three
1:43:13
another perfect donation it I'm John. I'm watching old computer
1:43:18
Chronicles episode and saw the one where you take apart the IBM
1:43:22
PS two a classic classic Did you ever get that thing put back
1:43:29
together? Yes I did. It was very modular machine was extremely
1:43:33
interesting from an engineering perspective. Keep up the good
1:43:36
work Adam and John I need some goat karma today. Well, we can
1:43:41
do that. Hey, go you've got karma
1:43:52
that wasn't mentioned. I'll give you this one. I'll take this one
1:43:56
chap Williams that came in with 33333 from Edmond Oklahoma and
1:44:00
this is a bank cheque that came in from the those bank payment
1:44:04
systems we get lots of those and it shows no note you can even
1:44:09
attach them so I was expecting email and I said this is the
1:44:12
second or third time chap has sent in this donation so thanks.
1:44:17
But I have no we have no communications at the moment.
1:44:21
Oh no comms calms her down. No.
1:44:23
Comms are down.
1:44:27
Hey, he's gum gummy nerds. Everybody knows gummy nerves are
1:44:30
down calms her
1:44:31
down. Which by the way, sounds a lot like calms her down.
1:44:38
I like calms her down. I like calms her down it's it sounds
1:44:46
okay. Here we go. Gummy nerds who doesn't know gummy nerds.
1:44:51
3311 from Green Bay, Wisconsin in the morning darling crackpot
1:44:54
and deer is buzzkill thanks to your continued efforts to no
1:44:57
agenda show remains the best podcast in the universe. As many
1:45:00
of our stalwart producers are aware, Mr. Adam curry visited
1:45:03
Dutch troops in Iraq during February of 2004. This was the
1:45:07
same month I arrived in Kuwait, Kuwait to begin a year long
1:45:11
deployment with the US Army's first infantry infantry division
1:45:14
as an infantry men assigned to the first battalion 26th
1:45:17
Infantry Regiment, the blue spiders poop. This past October
1:45:22
two men I served with created their own podcast they call
1:45:24
their show before I forget to quote from this shows
1:45:28
description before I forget his two US Army combat infantry
1:45:32
infantry men telling their perspectives pre and post 911
1:45:35
and their experiences in Germany and events during the early days
1:45:38
of Operation Iraqi Freedom and life after the war. These two
1:45:41
gentlemen were gracious enough to invite me to be a guest on
1:45:44
the show. I was honored to speak with him a bit giddy, I must say
1:45:47
because I had not spoken with him and more than 16 years, the
1:45:49
first part of our conversation was published. You mean the pod
1:45:52
was dropped? This past Monday February 7. Knowing the kindness
1:45:55
generosity and humanity of our no agenda tribe, I would like to
1:45:58
ask something of our show's producers please give a listen
1:46:01
to before I forget. Oh, and before I forget, may we have
1:46:04
some combat karma for all people who have been touched by war?
1:46:08
And one jingo please have pod fathers choosing love is lit and
1:46:12
such. Um,
1:46:16
well, you're digging that out. I would have like, go ahead. I
1:46:19
just wanted to ask him to just get so gumminess Did you plug
1:46:23
the no agenda show where you're on the other podcast?
1:46:25
Oh, because if you if you didn't, there will be.
1:46:29
I'm sure he did. Cuz he's, he must have it would be
1:46:33
crazy to think he didn't. Thanks gummy nerds. That sanded all
1:46:38
hell is gonna break loose and you're gonna need a Bitcoin.
1:46:43
You've got karma. She had to read the next one because this
1:46:48
one goes right off the edge of the spreadsheet into oblivion.
1:46:51
Yeah, I actually looked at this and I am able to redact it on
1:46:56
the fly. This is from Frank sito. In Los Angeles,
1:47:00
California. This is his first donation. He says he's ready for
1:47:03
a D douching.
1:47:06
You've been reduced.
1:47:09
And it is clearly it's the first donation because this is
1:47:12
probably the longest note anyone's ever sent. And we'll
1:47:15
we'll we'll skirt from the beginning to the end because he
1:47:18
has a whole report here. I started listening to no agenda
1:47:21
very recently, after your previous not most recent
1:47:24
appearance on the Joe Rogan experience. Your analysis of the
1:47:27
news provides much needed sanity and clarity as the M five M is
1:47:30
hell bent on creating a simulated reality. I recently
1:47:33
found myself a fulfilling new job. And I'm happy to say that
1:47:36
I'm no longer an English teacher. I believe all the jobs
1:47:39
karma helps. Now I finally have enough extra money to give some
1:47:43
value back to you and Adam and John. I'm a millennial producer.
1:47:46
I've been living in South Korea since the start of the pandemic.
1:47:50
So here's a well overdue boots on the ground report. And I can
1:47:54
skip around through this, the government seemingly did a good
1:47:57
job keeping cases down at first with curfews and restrictions on
1:48:00
gatherings as well as mass testing with contact tracing.
1:48:04
But when the winter months arrived, it became obvious that
1:48:06
the virus was well out of control of any policy.
1:48:09
Nonetheless, restrictions were increasingly tightened over the
1:48:12
months until the government could shift the narrative to
1:48:14
vaccinations or to save face for their failed policies that
1:48:17
damage so many small businesses. Yeah, sounds pretty much like
1:48:22
everybody they're now going to. There has been there's been
1:48:30
pushback, I want to make God it doesn't even fit on the I need
1:48:35
to like another Excel just to be able to get this out. There's
1:48:40
been some pushback from the people, a group of doctors,
1:48:42
lawyers and brilliant high schooler named young Darien that
1:48:47
have sued the Ministry of Health due to them trying to force the
1:48:49
jab on minors, small businesses have been protesting and
1:48:52
organizing as best they can. Tragically, some owners have
1:48:55
tried to take large loans to say financially solvent, others have
1:48:58
taken their own lives due to financial burdens of the
1:49:00
restrictions to their business. Yeah, this is bad. You have to
1:49:03
scan your QR code wherever you go will loudly announce if
1:49:06
you've been vaccinated. How about that?
1:49:09
Oh, please.
1:49:10
That's cool. So you scan your code, vaccinated, a good human
1:49:16
resource or just plays adult melodic beep if you're not
1:49:20
jabbed. Be the businesses need to foot the cost of having this
1:49:27
QR infrastructure of course. Furthermore, the government
1:49:29
doesn't acknowledge foreign vaccinations so this had caused
1:49:32
some foreigners to get an unneeded additional job.
1:49:34
Needless to say that terrible, horrible life has been
1:49:39
increasingly tiresome with the policies from the government
1:49:41
here my girlfriend I are both unvaccinated. So we cook at home
1:49:44
every day and have been expanding our culinary
1:49:46
repertoire. Yes, we are making the best of things since we
1:49:50
really cannot go out anymore. We're looking to get out of this
1:49:53
dystopian hellscape and I want to move back to Hungary and she
1:49:56
wants to come with me. I want Ashiya Korea Curious, she is
1:50:01
applying to university in Budapest and we request some
1:50:04
goat karma for her round of interviews coming soon. And then
1:50:07
hopefully her admission to uni as the start of a new journey in
1:50:11
life. Wow.
1:50:12
I mean Hungary is what a contrast as say anger is a very
1:50:18
open and free normal place.
1:50:22
Yeah
1:50:25
it's nice they're actually performing their bankers kid
1:50:28
went down from vacation a couple of couple of weeks ago he
1:50:30
say he loved it is supposed to be clean. It's like it's just
1:50:34
really gussied up.
1:50:37
See that boy is really really pretty. He's like, What 19 or 20
1:50:42
and immediately all these people like hey, you know all you can
1:50:45
have dinner over my place. Girl guys all the girl Oh, yeah, he's
1:50:50
definitely one of those.
1:50:51
That was reminds me of a 30 rock episode where a Jon Hamm played
1:50:56
this good looking boyfriend and a part of Tina face and
1:50:59
everywhere they went, they got in free.
1:51:02
Of course. Thanks for all you do. I look forward to reaching
1:51:06
my knighthood and seeing you all at the roundtable Lastly,
1:51:08
requesting a vocal fried jingle. Okay, well, luckily, I have that
1:51:12
set of,
1:51:13
you know, obviously, I read I read The New York Times, like
1:51:17
all day long, mainly on my iPad.
1:51:23
You've got karma. Alright. Thanks. Thanks, Frank.
1:51:28
I believe next on the list is Carl Leipold in Arnold,
1:51:34
Maryland. To $6,260, Associate Executive Producer as I prepare
1:51:41
for my 65th revolution, entering the medical care age on February
1:51:46
9, I look to further pursue my quest towards knighthood. With
1:51:50
this donation I am halfway there no jingles job karma for lo and
1:51:55
behold, poor Mo. And many thanks for the best podcast in universe
1:51:59
Carl lipu. i As someone who has gone through this, the Medicare
1:52:03
thing, I have a recommendation for people up there coming up on
1:52:07
this. And it's a good one. In some areas, in most areas of the
1:52:12
country, there's a social security office where you can go
1:52:15
in and you take a number you wait, you know hour, and you go
1:52:19
in and start going into the DMV. But disclose what you just wave
1:52:23
just described already sounds incredibly appealing.
1:52:27
I know that sounds like okay, I'm not arguing the point.
1:52:32
That's what you would think but then when you go to this guy's
1:52:34
these guys, to tell you the truth are so helpful. There's a
1:52:40
bunch of different little toggles and stuff that they can
1:52:43
fix and check off. So you get your you get maxed out benefits
1:52:48
to to an extreme you'd never be able to do this yourself.
1:52:52
You have to go to the Social Security office. Yeah.
1:52:55
And you run into these bureaucrats are more than happy
1:52:58
to help do
1:52:58
they paid for your No It sounds weird. No, no. So your eye
1:53:02
surgery all that stuff was completely covered everything
1:53:05
I had to pay extra for it was elective? No, my No. The eye
1:53:10
surgery was paid for. Yes, it was paid for. I had an upgrade
1:53:15
job. That's right. The bionics I had the bionic eyeball put in
1:53:20
that that cost me cash money
1:53:22
is that the business version is bigger now. I
1:53:26
didn't get the business version otherwise I wouldn't be doing
1:53:28
this show. I'd be rich.
1:53:31
Thanks, Carl. Hey, there's Jackie green no note but you
1:53:34
know who doesn't know Jackie green?
1:53:36
I looked him up I looked for notice. I didn't see anything.
1:53:39
Jackie green is famous. Jackie green is famous. Yes, yes.
1:53:44
Jackie
1:53:44
green is famous to two to 33 from Orangeville California
1:53:47
Thank you Jackie. Jackie green famous Jackie green. No, no,
1:53:50
he's so famous like man just don't need to know I don't need
1:53:53
a note. On your note man. I'm Jackie green Jackie green.
1:53:57
Jackie green. Mike Robinson in Salem Oregon comes in right
1:54:01
after Jackie Greenwood road ducks tu tu tu tu tu ITM sir
1:54:06
furry furry gives a call out to all get mo nation citizens in
1:54:10
the Willamette Valley including our can be real estate gal and
1:54:16
Millennial Mel join our meetup at sparkies brewing in Salem
1:54:22
Saturday, the 19th trivia and prizes in the offing.
1:54:27
Wow that's a cool way to promote your Promote your Meetup.
1:54:33
I think so. Excellent.
1:54:35
Baron anonymous cop. He's in San Carlos California and a row of
1:54:40
ducks or geese? I think we should call it geese still
1:54:42
decently drinkies John Adam in the morning donation of tu tu tu
1:54:46
tu tu from the unofficial tactical patch supplier of the
1:54:49
no agenda show i Yes. I'd like to announce a discount code at
1:54:53
the 41 patches California shop on Etsy in celebration of the
1:54:56
upcoming tu tu tu tu tu tu tu tu Palindrome with five dollars off
1:55:00
the purchase of $15 or more with the code ITM to to to get to the
1:55:05
end of the month should help get some of these off my hands and
1:55:07
into the wild. These are these are very nice. Patches by the
1:55:11
way. Very nice patches. I have some stickers coming out very
1:55:14
soon be John big fan of the stickers. You've always been a
1:55:18
fan of stickers. Now you just walked away. If you didn't hear
1:55:25
you'd literally walked away.
1:55:27
I had to go grab this note off the desk.
1:55:29
I know. I have some stickers coming out very soon, which will
1:55:32
be perfect for slapping on a laptop on your local street
1:55:35
light nor your kid sister along with the last patch for a while.
1:55:39
Oh this the last one 3.0 coming out in March just for teaser.
1:55:42
It's tactical AF involves black and gray along with the words
1:55:47
Consulting Group on it. Okay. Oh I can't wait for that one. Yeah,
1:55:53
consulting group. Yeah, the tactical consultant, whatever I
1:55:57
look forward to perfect for the spook go bag or tack vest.
1:56:02
Imagine a bunch of like, CA guys just have these. Oh, man, a man.
1:56:07
It's cool. I'd like to extend a heartfelt thank you to all the
1:56:10
producers who have purchased items and are showing off the
1:56:12
goods to help propagate the formula. Finally, I'd like to
1:56:15
request some dog karma for the truckers and producers in Canada
1:56:18
fighting the good fight. Stay safe. Take care all Baron
1:56:22
anonymous COP of the Bay Area
1:56:34
Yeah, I don't know if this came from a Barisan Baron anonymous
1:56:37
cop or someone else but someone and I thank you. I unfortunately
1:56:41
lost track of specifics. But somebody sent me some what was
1:56:46
called collectible stickers for the Biden I hate Biden if Biden
1:56:50
all that kind of stuff. But he also had these stickers. Which
1:56:53
I'm not going to save because they're just too great. I got
1:56:57
the Donald a little bitty Donald Trump pointing his finger saying
1:57:00
Biden did that. And the Biden won. You seen these pictures of
1:57:04
these things? The Biden when were Biden's pointing his finger
1:57:07
saying I did that and you put him on gas pumps? Yes, yes. Yes.
1:57:11
Yes. Yes. I've seen the price point the price thing or at the
1:57:14
total or whatever you
1:57:15
call yourself a Greta one isn't there? Greta?
1:57:17
I didn't get it. Right one. But, but to me, and I know exactly
1:57:22
where I get my guessing when I go put one of these stickers up
1:57:25
and it's away from the you know, there's no way they can see me
1:57:28
doing it like a vandalism. But it's vandalism, but it's funny.
1:57:32
vandalism. I did that. I did that. You know the price is 775
1:57:38
bucks for half a tank of gas. In California. Yeah. Yeah. Well,
1:57:43
California. Yeah. Weird. 524 premium to go to call. Yeah. And
1:57:48
we also are our gasoline producers in this state. So
1:57:52
yeah, we're paying the most Are you kidding me? No. Anyway, all
1:57:55
this photo man again. Yeah. Dakota coal in Pineville.
1:58:01
Princeville Princeville, Oregon. 222 22. Hello, fellow
1:58:06
degenerates. Thank you for what you both do. I look forward to
1:58:11
when your podcast comes out. Please de douche me.
1:58:16
You've been de deuced
1:58:19
and I'm calling out. Riley arrival. I know our why Ellie's
1:58:24
at Riley rial I don't know for being a douche. Give me jobs
1:58:30
Carmen, a dealer's choice. Put. This does an interesting day
1:58:32
today. With all these.
1:58:34
I'd like to make another point of personal privilege and a
1:58:37
production note. dealer's choice is not cool. Just request your
1:58:44
jingles. Because if I say dealer's choice and John
1:58:48
dealer's choice, dealer's choice, John dealer's choice
1:58:52
what is it watching? Go?
1:58:53
Greg. Yeah,
1:58:55
exactly. See, the show comes to a screeching halt dealer's
1:58:59
choice
1:58:59
it's called the jingles yourself put put this toward my
1:59:02
knighthood he says which is of course as you do the bookkeeping
1:59:04
you can put it towards your knighthood. Exactly.
1:59:08
Jobs karma for you of course jobs,
1:59:10
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs. I have an idea. For jingles
1:59:20
choice. Just do nothing but play the word that No.
1:59:25
Every time from now on no.
1:59:28
If you do it every time people will stop asking. Yeah, and
1:59:31
how do we get people to stop sending screenshots without a
1:59:33
link? Just keep going. Just keep
1:59:35
no send him. No.
1:59:38
No, just send it send them I know. Michael day is in Fuquay
1:59:43
Varina North Carolina row of geese for you. He says credit
1:59:47
this donation to my wife Kelly switcheroo. Okay. Kelly. Kelly
1:59:54
got it. The first South Wake County resist we much meet up
1:59:59
with was a success. We ended up with 13 folks coming out to a
2:00:04
local brewery and picked up a couple of onlookers that we hit
2:00:07
in the mouth excellent work that's that's rare doesn't
2:00:11
happen that often. No, it should happen more often. It should and
2:00:14
I think a lot of bar staff definitely start to hang out
2:00:18
with our people. These guys over here cool. It's nice to network
2:00:22
with seeing folks these days yes community and human contact is
2:00:26
what it's all about good conversations about the usual
2:00:28
stuff in a judgment free zone. One person mentioned it was nice
2:00:32
to know that she wasn't alone in her line of thinking these days
2:00:35
it's refreshing to know that other people out there actually
2:00:38
understand your perspective and concern looking forward to the
2:00:41
next one jingles resistive you much and ooh. And you have a
2:00:45
truck horn somewhere in your audio files give a blast to our
2:00:49
friends up north. I have something for me. We must we
2:00:56
must and we will much about that. Be committed to Okay,
2:01:10
listen to that horn best I could do. flying by the seat of my
2:01:14
pants here.
2:01:16
Onward with Sir Matt of the growing tree and bend soup club
2:01:23
in Bend Oregon I say nice to 1183 ITM John and Adam, I was
2:01:28
hit in the mouth after Adam stored Rogan appearance and
2:01:31
haven't missed an episode since my smokin hot wife was hit in
2:01:35
the mouth soon thereafter, and we hope to hit our good friend
2:01:39
Evelina in the mouth. With this very episode, please de douche.
2:01:47
You've been de deuced
2:01:49
my donation of 211 got a three is an honor of my partner slash
2:01:54
wife of almost 17 years. Deborah Couzens 39th trip around the sun
2:02:00
tomorrow on 211 Would you please add her to the birthday list?
2:02:05
That's Deb. Deb boar. Ah, Deborah, ah, not Deborah or
2:02:10
Debbie.
2:02:11
Deb Bora. Do we say to Bora or Deborah?
2:02:15
Deborah? Deborah. I've heard to Bora Bora. Okay. Make it the
2:02:20
board. No, I
2:02:21
want to do it right. So you know he's already now he's made it
2:02:23
worse. Well, yeah. Or up Deborah. Okay. Is this dashes
2:02:29
Deborah? Hello, Deborah. Or Hello, Deb. Ora? Hey, Deb or Ah,
2:02:36
okay. We got it.
2:02:37
Add cousins pronounced cousins. We got that. Got it. Nailed it.
2:02:42
Jingles are Please don't eat me Bo Jaiden You're so scary.
2:02:46
Obama, you might die and goat calmer for all of our central
2:02:50
Oregonian comrades. Thank you, Mr. Matt of the growing tree and
2:02:55
Ben superclub.
2:03:01
You might know you've got up next Maria Cole to 1113 33 I
2:03:12
should say New York New York birthday donation for myself.
2:03:15
First donated last year but forgot to ask for D douching.
2:03:18
was left off of the birthday list. Wow. That's no good. Thank
2:03:22
you for keeping this sh M. of three Sham. No, no, it's S A is
2:03:33
single. Some of
2:03:34
us some
2:03:36
Yeah, it's an acronym John S H M which is single American human
2:03:43
mother. How the hell am I supposed to know what that is?
2:03:48
And it's a mother of three sentences very bad.
2:03:52
I don't know. single adult human male
2:03:56
Ah, there we did you look it up.
2:03:58
No, I just dreamed it up. No, you
2:04:01
know I think you read the classifieds. single adult human
2:04:06
male
2:04:08
classifieds
2:04:10
karma for all New York City parents fighting their human
2:04:14
resource there. Ah ours Yes. I gotcha. Sharpton jingle Sharpton
2:04:19
jingle. We should do a resist then. I didn't see that. Not a
2:04:25
resist respect. That's what we want. Oh my god, I have Corona.
2:04:30
Say no.
2:04:32
I've coviz got Corona. That's why I must slow
2:04:36
COVID COVID Wrona ESP AIC Gothic Oof. There we go. Java Since
2:04:45
none, I'm sorry. No, I said John Lesinski for mu Wellington,
2:04:49
Florida to 1058. Greetings Adam and John. I make this donation
2:04:53
on behalf of my father Michael Lesinski. In honor of his
2:04:59
birthday today, I hit him in the mouth back in 2016. He's been an
2:05:02
avid listener since I request the de douching for him as well
2:05:06
as goat karma.
2:05:10
You've been you've got karma nearing the end here we've got
2:05:20
Rebecca Joka I think from Salt Lake City, Utah to 1019 in the
2:05:26
morning, John madam Happy anniversary to my smokin hot
2:05:28
boyfriend Steven Streeter, February 10 marks three years
2:05:32
together, and they never had a fight. Steven, I love you madly,
2:05:37
but I've got to call you out as a douchebag still gotta call it
2:05:45
as a douchebag for listening so long without donating please de
2:05:48
douche me. Oh, yes, of course.
2:05:51
You've been de deuced
2:05:54
Wait a minute, then credit half of him half the donation to him
2:05:57
and dee doo Shem. I'll do it. But I think you should keep that
2:06:01
douche all over versus D deuced. How it should really go. Stephen
2:06:07
hit me in the mouth some time ago on one of our many road
2:06:09
trips. Unfortunately, he didn't turn me on to the show before
2:06:12
COVID. So I was temporarily swept up in the lies of MSM.
2:06:16
Thanks a lot, baby. But it wasn't too long after the world
2:06:19
went crazy. That introduced me. And after a few episodes, I was
2:06:22
hooked. If the show falls on a travel day, we promise each
2:06:26
other to save it for the car. Nah. Ah, thank you for supplying
2:06:31
us with the entertainment and conversation topics during our
2:06:34
long drives. By the way, my 14 year old son also enjoys the
2:06:37
show. Of course, he's been it's been very good for my kids to
2:06:39
learn how to spot the lies in the media and at school. Wow, we
2:06:44
never had that before, did we John, where the kids had to spot
2:06:47
the lies at school?
2:06:49
Probably they're just all lies.
2:06:52
This is a must for kids these days for helping us with this.
2:06:55
Thank you very much. I'm so grateful. Jingles Boom shaka
2:06:58
laka little girl China's a whole get vaccinated and new
2:07:04
requirements to go with that. shaka laka
2:07:11
No, no.
2:07:14
Now we go on to Joseph Sternhell in John's town, Pennsylvania.
2:07:20
I'm gonna skip that because I can't find his email but it's
2:07:22
$200 from him and we'll look for it. This is Deaton in Dayton.
2:07:27
And he got a handwritten note here or hand typed this type of
2:07:32
an old machine I suspected to be an Olympus or something along
2:07:36
those lines. Please accept this cold hard cash donation in
2:07:40
support of no agenda its hosts producers in the value for value
2:07:44
model as a concept. The pandemic has highlighted how important it
2:07:48
is to have a community This prompted me to start digging
2:07:52
deeper into the no agenda nation and finding his outstanding
2:07:54
denizens waiting for me I encourage everybody listening to
2:07:57
check out the highly highly then he's got a crossed off high
2:08:03
quality podcast to be found in the no agenda stream the SS
2:08:07
missing and join their associated chat rooms and he
2:08:11
goes on. I would also like to mention my smokin hot wife mousy
2:08:16
bears delicious and nutritious wellness gummies he makes them
2:08:21
by hand with only essential ingredients elderberry and honey
2:08:24
you'll find no wood pulp.
2:08:26
Oh how disappointing I always like to
2:08:29
Genda to 10% off
2:08:34
a gummy usually filled with wood pulp
2:08:37
noises a joke is we're always talking about hamburger meat and
2:08:41
ah mostly wood pulp.
2:08:45
I believe it I believe though like that I believe it I believe
2:08:50
people put wood pulp into our food
2:08:52
yeah is good for you if you're a beaver Oh orders he was in the
2:08:59
morning is the code discount code in the in this mousy MOU
2:09:03
spy bear.com And so he I don't know how to have a viable kind
2:09:08
of viable business these are shipped with the dry ice these
2:09:12
gummy bears. Oh, and they're quite tasty. I don't know what
2:09:15
they cost but you can go to my superior.com and check it out
2:09:18
and use in the morning as a code you get some some 10% off. So
2:09:22
that's your plug. And they're Tate they're good. They're
2:09:24
elderberry. gummies I don't know why. Yeah, they
2:09:28
sent them to us. I haven't picked them up yet. Or the
2:09:30
pendant Oh, they're
2:09:31
gonna be melted into a gob know that
2:09:33
the P O Box. They're safe. It's air conditioned. Okay, hey, I've
2:09:38
COVID Okay, yeah, you have COVID Be nice to me.
2:09:42
You just say you could use is that just use that constant I'm
2:09:48
using it on you. I know be nice to be nice to me getting
2:09:51
beat up.
2:09:52
I got COVID Man Nice.
2:09:54
Oh you poor thing.
2:09:55
We do have we did get a wonder Do you remember the
2:09:57
blisters? I said I told my had COVID it Oh, you okay
2:10:04
yeah, you know what? So Tina because we were supposed to do a
2:10:07
show yes they teen up posts like oh yo Adams podcasts are down
2:10:11
Adams got the got the Rona and instead of people like, oh man,
2:10:15
are you okay? No. Instead I get a million goat gifts. Goat gifts
2:10:20
on the Twitter screaming goats. No one asked you if you're okay
2:10:25
anymore with this stuff?
2:10:26
No, none of our members will do.
2:10:29
What they're not stupid.
2:10:30
It's a weak point and they should be more concerned.
2:10:33
I got COVID Man. So we got a late donation from Sir dude. Why
2:10:38
he's not a dude yet, but he will be this mic. And this came in
2:10:46
this morning. Do you remember what we're talking about here?
2:10:49
John? Just checking.
2:10:51
Yes, the donation came in at 845. The show really begins at
2:10:56
8am. Pacific time you're supposed to send these notes in
2:11:01
before midnight tonight before you don't send them in during
2:11:05
what what amounts to during the show and expect them to be read.
2:11:09
I just happen to catch it by accident. And I asked Adam if
2:11:13
you wanted to read this no, because it is a knighting. And
2:11:15
it could it would have normally been pushed off to the next
2:11:18
show. And it came in with a $50 donation. And it was just it was
2:11:22
I mean, I realized that we haven't bitched about this
2:11:26
midnight deadline for probably six months. Yeah,
2:11:30
people need to know they need to know give and give everybody
2:11:34
these notes. Can you please give everybody the guideposts?
2:11:38
The guidepost is when the clock strikes 12 in Pacific in the
2:11:42
pacific time region midnight that's it it's over we the show
2:11:46
is already does put to bed,
2:11:47
you're done. You're done yeah. But it was he becomes a night
2:11:52
today and so we thought that would be the right thing to do
2:11:55
in the morning gents. I'll please ask for D douching. Since
2:11:58
I've never asked for one okay. You've been d do check it out.
2:12:04
I've been listening since John was still welcome on twit
2:12:08
pool what
2:12:11
Wow man, I sage thank you guys for the 14 years of sanity
2:12:15
here's to many more I wish to be known as Sir dude named Mike
2:12:18
have not that Paris and I humbly request double doubles and
2:12:23
Belgian triple at the round table you got a man love His
2:12:26
lips are dude named Mike though he'll be sir dude named Mike
2:12:29
have not that Paris and you want a couple of jingles whole load
2:12:32
Fauci wheeze and Lady Mugdha
2:12:35
I'm gonna give you the whole loan today.
2:12:38
So I mean that is the land of unconfirmed Yes, we came we saw
2:12:43
he died you've got karma
2:12:55
and that's it. I think that's all we have thanked everybody we
2:13:00
need to thank these people, our executive producers and
2:13:03
Associate Executive producers of episode 1424. These are credits
2:13:09
that are real they are if you go anywhere where credits are
2:13:13
recognized, these will be accepted. Just look at IMDb and
2:13:16
look up no agenda executive producer, you'll see how many
2:13:19
Hollywood bigwigs actually have been awarded these titles and
2:13:22
it's something you could put onto your resume.
2:13:24
It's not really an award. It's something you've earned.
2:13:28
Awarded. Yeah, okay. earned. Yes, I'm sorry, earned. Good
2:13:32
point. If you do would like to earn this. Go to this website to
2:13:38
learn more vo rack.org/and A thank you all for bringing your
2:13:43
time talent and treasure to Episode 1424 Our formula is this
2:13:49
we go out we hit people in the mouth
2:14:05
so harsh.
2:14:07
So I have a biting clip going in and I have this some information
2:14:11
about the America COMPETES Act. What's that
2:14:14
America COMPETES Act?
2:14:16
It's an American. Well, from the sounds of it. It's obviously
2:14:20
something that will take away our competition
2:14:23
or sounds like something that will strengthen our competition
2:14:26
by making us crap. Yeah.
2:14:30
Okay, let's go but first, I want to do these Biden because
2:14:32
because still bothers me as you know, that I am irked by Biden's
2:14:38
just casually saying not a job. Yes, exactly. And so I gotta go
2:14:47
first. Let me play this clip. So this is about Biden in this
2:14:49
competition. I want to make some comments on this before I get
2:14:52
into the no joke and then the American competition. This is a
2:14:56
short clip. 29 seconds. Biden made in America. We've heard
2:15:00
this, this clip came out last week. And I want to say some
2:15:04
something about it.
2:15:05
There's a law that's existed for a long time. There's too many
2:15:09
exceptions like this one had. And that is that by America, as
2:15:14
President knighted states, I award contracts. And I'm now
2:15:18
making the case and was working is one reason those jobs are up
2:15:23
is unless the product I'm purchasing for the American
2:15:27
people was made in America. And all of its component parts are
2:15:32
made in America weighing fine.
2:15:38
You see the problem here?
2:15:40
Can I insert one little thing about that before you please?
2:15:45
The tests that you ordered probably have not received yet
2:15:48
from the government the free test. Right? Yeah, you didn't
2:15:53
get them yet?
2:15:54
Did you know No, still?
2:15:56
Do you know what these tests are? I have no idea made in
2:16:00
China. I'm not. So if the government sends you something
2:16:05
to stick up your nose, and it comes from China, How stupid do
2:16:09
you have to be?
2:16:13
Well, I would take what brought was brought to mind by that
2:16:17
clip, when he said it is that was another clip we played
2:16:22
probably, I don't know, two or three shows ago, moaning and
2:16:26
groaning about the semiconductor shortage. And we were told that,
2:16:31
as of now, only 10% of all the semiconductors in this country
2:16:36
are made in this country. So how does everything have to be made
2:16:42
in this country, when we only make 10% of the semiconductors,
2:16:45
which are in everything? semiconductors are in the cars
2:16:49
that for refrigerators, everything's a smoke screen, the
2:16:51
radio is your alarm clock that computers I'm using here,
2:16:55
everything's got semiconductors, except for a stick of wood or
2:16:59
round ball, and that probably took a semiconductor to make. So
2:17:04
how does that work?
2:17:05
It's a smattering. You know what I'm telling you, it's a
2:17:08
smokescreen to pretend to prep courses, bull crap, when I'm
2:17:12
doing we have nothing to buy. We barely make anything sadly.
2:17:16
Right. But that's just one thing. Before I, before I get to
2:17:20
the long version of this same came from the same clip, but
2:17:25
this is where and I was saying what do I have to do to make
2:17:28
these clips make sense? I'm going to have to sweeten them by
2:17:31
hand. So it makes some sense when you listen to the flow of
2:17:35
things. And this is the example I've put together, I'm going to
2:17:38
probably start doing this routine that you tell me if you
2:17:40
think I shouldn't do it. Ready? Yeah.
2:17:45
Is unless the product I'm purchasing for the American
2:17:50
people was made in America. And all of its component parts are
2:17:55
made in America weighing fine. We're just simply not buying it
2:18:00
what's gonna happen here. Not a joke. To fact, it's not a
2:18:07
violation of international laws either. We're talking about
2:18:11
here, with three exceptions I won't bore you with and they're
2:18:14
highly unusual. With three exceptions. Every single project
2:18:21
we're talking about is paid for federal dollars and as a federal
2:18:25
project, it's going to be union jobs. Every single one so many
2:18:33
exceptions. I think only 1920 jobs are gonna be 1000s 1000s
2:18:39
people put to work not a joke. I mean, this is serious. And guess
2:18:46
what? The American public could be safe. And it's gonna be
2:18:51
cheaper.
2:18:53
Well, since it's your actual peeve about him saying not a
2:18:56
joke, yes. Okay, but
2:19:00
what as you get a better laugh that's a cartoon laugh. Yeah,
2:19:03
it's like a I read good to get thought maybe a woman
2:19:07
needed variety. Okay, how about camera but camera was laughing
2:19:13
there now that's a laugh.
2:19:14
Oh, listen, interesting thought. Okay, I'll work on it. I will
2:19:19
improve
2:19:20
this. So do we have the these exceptions if you have any info
2:19:23
on that? We're
2:19:24
not yet but you know what they are? Yes, I know exactly what
2:19:27
anything that is not made in this country
2:19:30
impractical or inconsistent with public interest, non
2:19:33
availability or unreasonable cost. Yeah, there you go. Which
2:19:37
is everything is everything, of course total bullcrap once
2:19:41
again. So let's
2:19:42
go to the American Competes Act and understand what this might
2:19:47
be about this part one new exam, a
2:19:49
house today approved legislation that lawmakers say will help
2:19:52
ease the supply chain crisis and curb mass retail thefts.
2:19:56
The measure is called the America COMPETES Act if passed
2:19:59
it would require online marketplaces to verify the
2:20:02
identities of sellers and collect information from them
2:20:05
like a government ID and techshow require sellers to
2:20:08
attest that their products are authentic and would hold them
2:20:11
liable for certain violations.
2:20:13
Wow. Do we get to request the same from our representatives?
2:20:18
Make sure no one's sleeping with China? Or has China driving them
2:20:23
or in their office?
2:20:25
I'm asking you what what is this got to do with competition?
2:20:30
American Competes Act is we want your ID.
2:20:33
Yeah, we want your ID and by the way, Etsy. You got an Etsy
2:20:40
you're gonna have to prove show your ID. Yeah. Nice eBay. This
2:20:45
is control. It's a critical control mechanism. Oh, no, it's
2:20:48
for competitions
2:20:49
competitive act. If this is the part two of this
2:20:52
legislation also takes steps to try and ease some of the supply
2:20:55
chain problems and shortages caused by the pandemic, the bill
2:20:59
puts $45 billion towards strengthening supply chains and
2:21:02
52 billion to boost manufacturing of semiconductors
2:21:06
in the US, a shortage of computer chips, most of them
2:21:09
made overseas is led to higher prices for electronics, cars and
2:21:13
medical devices. But House bill would also put tariffs on more
2:21:16
Chinese goods, eliminating an exemption for products worth
2:21:20
under $800.
2:21:25
Okay, I still don't see. So
2:21:26
it's a giveaway. There's some money because you know, the
2:21:28
semiconductor companies? And have you checked out the price
2:21:31
of the stock price of AMD, which went from $3 to $100? Sure. It's
2:21:37
let's give them some money. So they can build some fabs over
2:21:40
here, because they don't have any money. They can't build
2:21:44
their own fab on their with their own dime. So let's give
2:21:48
them 50 million 50 billion sorry, dollars to help build
2:21:52
semiconductor please
2:21:54
these guys and and that takes forever. Yes, it does. It takes
2:21:59
you don't just pop a fab out of the ground or, you know, they're
2:22:02
building one here in Texas, not not far from us think it's the I
2:22:06
want to say Samsung. So they do semiconductors that Intel? Yeah,
2:22:10
they do.
2:22:11
They're one of the leading semiconductor makers, they make
2:22:14
non volatile memory, they're the almost the flash drives the hard
2:22:18
disk they
2:22:18
are, they are, in essence, almost taking over the tiny town
2:22:23
of Taylor, which is better. I'd say from my husband hour and a
2:22:29
half, you know, it's probably about 45 minutes, north of
2:22:34
Austin. And there that's where their new, the new fab will be.
2:22:38
$17 billion semiconductor plant
2:22:44
didn't wait for the government money.
2:22:47
Maybe they had more knowledge. Yeah, of course.
2:22:52
Honestly, the third part of this clip
2:22:55
COVID 19 pandemic taught us many hard lessons, including that we
2:23:00
are far too dependent on other countries like China, for
2:23:04
critical goods and our national security. Just 30 Some years
2:23:09
ago, we were producing upwards of 40% of the world's chips. And
2:23:12
today, it's hovering almost at 10%. The Senate passed its own
2:23:18
economic bill on China eight months ago. And now the House
2:23:21
and Senate will have to resolve differences between
2:23:23
the two.
2:23:25
So these bills are competing. So So yeah, so get your check ID
2:23:32
that's gonna debts a supply chain issue. If you don't check,
2:23:35
Id check your ID slay major supply chain dining, and then
2:23:39
give money away. There you go. They fix the problem.
2:23:43
So Tina comes home the other day? And she says, Yeah, this
2:23:47
monetary, modern monetary theory, like what? And she knows
2:23:51
who first introduced this, and she's done all this research.
2:23:55
And she says, I have a question about this. And I said, You know
2:23:58
what, I'll ask John this because John is a fan of modern monetary
2:24:01
theory correct.
2:24:03
A huge fan.
2:24:05
You've always said, we need to be pouring money in it doesn't
2:24:08
seem to you said just on the last show. seems to be going
2:24:11
fine. Everything's good.
2:24:12
I have taken that that stance. Yes.
2:24:18
So she says, if we can create all these trillions and
2:24:22
trillions of dollars, and this is a very normal question. Why
2:24:27
are we still paying taxes? Why are our taxes so high? And her
2:24:33
conclusion is, it's Ctrl. Yeah, and I have to say yes, there's
2:24:39
absolutely no reason we should be paying taxes. I mean, you
2:24:41
could give you could fix the whole racism, debate debate.
2:24:45
Here's $1,000,000,000,000.08 us we got more. Hey, let's take tow
2:24:53
let me just seriously what is the point of taxation when you
2:24:57
can and it is accepted? fiscal fiscal policy. I think fiscal
2:25:02
policy is monetary, modern monetary theory. You can just
2:25:05
keep making the money and put it in. How does that jive with
2:25:09
taxes? It doesn't. It's his right is purely for control.
2:25:13
Yep. Well, that's disappointing. Why we're getting disappointed
2:25:19
getting screwed by our government.
2:25:21
This need to be controlled. Let's face it. Oh, yeah.
2:25:25
I really need to be control this true. That's true.
2:25:29
All right. The Olympics, check out some of the Olympic stuff
2:25:34
here.
2:25:34
Have you watched any Olympic stuff? Yes, I have. Cuz I've
2:25:38
watched literally three freestyle jumps yesterday. And
2:25:44
that was it. And it's just it's so hilarious to see
2:25:47
they have watched the best of the Olympics. Like, what's so
2:25:51
hilarious
2:25:52
is to see that you know, the freestyle guys and then you look
2:25:56
off to the right and there's these the nuclear stacks. The
2:26:00
complete barren ground behind it, they really didn't do
2:26:03
much at first. This is the first winter olympics in the history
2:26:08
of the games, where all the snow is artificial.
2:26:13
Wow, that's pretty good snow.
2:26:15
Well, I don't know if it is because I've seen people's, you
2:26:18
know, expert skiers not you know, doing as well as they
2:26:22
should have though. Or was Shiffrin or whatever name is
2:26:24
that our superstar ski or is fallen down twice, right? Yes,
2:26:29
crappy snow.
2:26:30
But the whole thing is. It's pretty sad. I mean, there's no
2:26:34
ratings. No one cares. There's no one talking about it. Have we
2:26:37
even won a medal? Yes, we
2:26:40
finally won our first gold
2:26:41
out of the Dutch doing was with speed skating. I haven't seen it
2:26:45
that you've won more
2:26:46
medals than we have. But they do speed skating. The Russians are
2:26:49
the ones kicking gold and the Russians are kicking their wins.
2:26:52
They're not even rushes anymore. They're the Orosi
2:26:57
they're not allowed to say Russia. It's still the Olympian.
2:27:01
Oh, geez.
2:27:03
Now ROIC, which I think is the Republic of China. But you know,
2:27:06
they're not going to do that. In the end. These games are Oh, C
2:27:09
stands for the Russian Olympic Committee. Yes. Correct. They
2:27:12
can't be a Russian. Yes.
2:27:13
That's unbelievable. Why did they even show up? I'm like, You
2:27:17
know what? Screw you. We can't We can't even be called Russia
2:27:21
in these games. I did watch. I did watch a little curling
2:27:26
yesterday. I have to be honest, childish
2:27:27
child.
2:27:28
I do like the curling.
2:27:30
I like curling pusillus this into the this is the NPR is the
2:27:33
indicator which is one of their little specials that are got the
2:27:38
squeaky voice Millennials giving us the news.
2:27:41
No offense to our millennial producers.
2:27:44
Well, no offense to the ones that aren't squeaky voice here.
2:27:48
Here's not an NPR indicator. On the Olympics,
2:27:52
the games are happening. But this is a really unusual year
2:27:55
and not just because of the pandemic, China, which is
2:27:59
oh man, you're so right. This is this. It's not the squeaky
2:28:03
voice. It's the read is the intonation. It's the up and down
2:28:07
to kind of it makes it cutesy. cutesy is that it? That's kind
2:28:11
of the games
2:28:12
are happening. But this is a really unusual year. And I'm not
2:28:17
just because of the correctness
2:28:19
of it talk to you. This is really unusual here. Not just
2:28:23
because it's
2:28:25
China, which is hosting the Winter Games in Beijing is
2:28:28
facing a lot of criticism for its human rights record. Its
2:28:32
restrictions on the press censorship of everyday citizens,
2:28:36
and especially its treatment of weekers and use of MSG and their
2:28:40
food. The USD Department says the Chinese government is
2:28:43
carrying out genocide, forcing people to live in detention
2:28:46
camps, forcing weaker women to undergo abortions and forcing
2:28:51
them to undergo sterilization.
2:28:53
And because of that a number of countries including the US,
2:28:56
Britain and Canada have declared diplomatic boycotts. And it's
2:29:00
against this tense backdrop of politics and human rights
2:29:03
issues. That businesses you know, the Olympics, corporate
2:29:07
sponsors, they're trying to keep a low profile. Usually when you
2:29:11
watch the Olympics on TV, there will be tons of ads. But this
2:29:14
year has been relatively quiet. Sponsors are caught between a
2:29:18
rock and a hard place. If they owe up their sponsorship, they
2:29:21
risk alienating some American consumers. And in fact, last
2:29:24
summer a congressional hearing called on American businesses to
2:29:27
withdraw their sponsorship of the Olympics.
2:29:30
On the flip side, if businesses speak out against the Chinese,
2:29:33
they risk losing China's almost one and a half billion customers
2:29:36
which is like about for America's blind chips. And I'm
2:29:42
Adrian Ma. Today's indicator is $200 million. That's around how
2:29:46
much it costs to become an Olympic sponsor. Today on the
2:29:50
show, how do you navigate when you know no matter what you do?
2:29:54
You're gonna lose.
2:29:56
Wow. $200 million What a gyp? They didn't get it. They didn't
2:30:04
get any of that value this time around.
2:30:07
Who are the sponsors?
2:30:09
at Nike FC Nike logos, that's about it. Probably
2:30:12
Coca Cola, Coca Cola. And they said later is a guess or some
2:30:17
sort of one of these kind of extortion deals is that you know
2:30:21
about these where you said no, well, you could if you drop out
2:30:24
of these, I know it's costing you money, maybe not get your
2:30:26
money's worth, but then you won't be able to get any other
2:30:28
ones in the future. And so they pull that stunt, right. This is
2:30:33
reminiscent of the of the Jay Leno brought to us out in one of
2:30:37
his car shows about how Ferrari is now at the point whoever's
2:30:41
managing the company that you can't buy the Ferrari you want
2:30:44
until you own a couple other junkier ones. Oh, yeah,
2:30:48
you have to be in the club. You have to be a valued customer.
2:30:53
Yeah. So this is I don't know if you want to listen anymore.
2:30:57
These Sure I do. Okay, let's go with part two. And if this one
2:31:01
doesn't, jet Jack Jack up a bit, I'm gonna kill it.
2:31:05
For athletes. The Olympics is one of the biggest events in the
2:31:08
world. And you know what, it is the same thing for advertisers.
2:31:12
You're talking about one of the most recognizable brands in the
2:31:14
world. Scott Rosner
2:31:15
is an industry consultant. And he's advised brands from adidas
2:31:19
to the NFL. And he says, to get ready for the Olympics, brands
2:31:22
have signed deals, written contracts, and spent hundreds of
2:31:26
millions of dollars on rights and ad campaigns.
2:31:29
Okay, we know what you get if you're an athlete, and you win
2:31:32
the Olympics, undying glory, an amazing medal, maybe the best
2:31:37
feeling in the world. But what do you get if you're an Olympic
2:31:41
sponsor?
2:31:41
At its baseline, what you're talking about are those five
2:31:45
interlocking rings, you're talking about the right to call
2:31:49
yourself an official sponsor of whatever games you're talking
2:31:54
about, right? You're an Olympic sponsor. And those in and of
2:31:58
themselves, while some people you know, will snicker at that.
2:32:01
Those are incredibly valuable pieces of intellectual property.
2:32:07
Yeah, we're not talking about like a small local events,
2:32:10
right, we're talking about one of the biggest sporting events
2:32:12
in the world. Games only happen every four years, and
2:32:16
practically the whole world tunes in at some point, so
2:32:19
sponsoring the Olympics can cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
2:32:23
But it can be worth it. Coca Cola has been a sponsor since
2:32:27
1928. And it's back again this year. And you've also got
2:32:30
companies like Panasonic, Toyota and visa,
2:32:34
but this year sponsors are faced with making this impossible
2:32:37
choice. Who do you keep happy,
2:32:40
it's hard to to be a global brand and avoid China. Scott
2:32:45
says on one side of the equation, there's America. And
2:32:48
in within that you've got three groups of people that you're
2:32:51
trying not to upset, do you risk angering some of your American
2:32:56
customers who are maybe questioning your ethics. But you
2:32:59
also don't want to anger customers who would be furious
2:33:02
if you pulled sponsorships for an event that supports hard
2:33:05
working American athletes.
2:33:07
I kind of liked this, this topic because it goes along with the
2:33:12
destruction of Hollywood and influencers and how broadcast
2:33:17
television is falling apart. I would say advertising
2:33:20
interrupted content, which is what the Olympics is, unless you
2:33:25
have the peacock, so you're paying for it's a peacock. So
2:33:28
some other way. Radio shows that all the multi channels like they
2:33:32
used to, I believe the Olympics will never recover. I think
2:33:35
people are sick of this shit. They're sick of the dumbness.
2:33:38
They're sick of the everything about it. They're sick of it.
2:33:41
They're sick. Sick of professional sports in general,
2:33:47
just because no one wants to watch live television anymore
2:33:50
with ads. Unless it's like the Super Bowl, I think that would
2:33:54
that to me truly is where the ads are the star. The ads for
2:33:58
the Olympics are not stars and not like, oh my god, did you see
2:34:02
that ad? No. You know what I mean?
2:34:06
I know exactly what you mean. I'm not in full agreement with
2:34:09
it. Because I think people can be talked into anything. But
2:34:15
these ads, just just complaining about them, I think is I don't
2:34:21
know why anybody goes to a live event to watch professional
2:34:25
sports. You go to a live event and they stopped to show at the
2:34:32
event. They'll show you the ad.
2:34:36
They stopped so the ads can run and they stop everything stop
2:34:39
play.
2:34:40
Yeah, yeah. And so you're sitting there and you wonder
2:34:44
Wait a minute, this game was getting pretty good. Why or why
2:34:48
certain ones for dentists not just for 30 seconds for a 32nd
2:34:52
ad it's for a two minute block. And first you got to get out of
2:34:56
the into the block so that stops play and then they get And then
2:35:00
they play the ads to two and a half minutes where the ads where
2:35:04
you sit there doing nothing twiddling your thumbs then they
2:35:06
bring the players back under the court because the ads are over
2:35:10
and they got to start playing again. It's like it just ruins
2:35:13
the game. I mean I've been to football games where I've got I
2:35:16
won't go to a professional if people have asked me hey, I got
2:35:19
some seats over here at the game you want to come but no
2:35:23
football team the football play stops I thought it's like
2:35:26
timeouts and stuff but if they're not back from commercial
2:35:29
then they hope that they keep the plate suspended
2:35:34
know what they do they have a is called official timeouts and
2:35:37
they have the there's one referee supposedly on the field
2:35:40
and he has a yellow flag or semi holds it up is never shown on
2:35:44
the television. But once he does that, and it's usually between
2:35:47
plays. Normally you stop the game from commercials after a
2:35:50
punt after a kickoff. But if there's no punter, kickoffs and
2:35:57
the games going on too long and no use you can also stop it when
2:36:00
one team calls a timeout. Those are all Okay, great. This is
2:36:04
great work
2:36:05
so there's a ref who you never see on TV who can call a timeout
2:36:09
when they need it for the commercial break. Exactly. I
2:36:13
always wonder what Matt Lauer was doing these days.
2:36:18
All that route drives to Tipperary.
2:36:27
No agenda, imagine all the evil Oh yeah, that'd be fun.
2:36:38
We have a few people to thank starting with Colleen Garrett
2:36:40
and Cary, North Carolina for $100 Kevin fogger Berg Fager
2:36:46
Berg. fahcsia Berg, I'm not sure in Lincoln, Nebraska. 100 brob
2:36:51
Van Dyck as Sir Rob 100 It's in Holland. Michael Gaston 100.
2:36:56
Adrian Danna Meyer in Boston, Massachusetts. 100 Pete Federici
2:37:03
in Dallas, Texas. 808. Which brings us to tour Kevin
2:37:08
McLaughlin, the Duke of Luna and lover of American lover of
2:37:11
boobs. Yes. in Concord North Carolina. 808 also Kevin Primo.
2:37:20
I'm guessing in New Port Richey, Florida eight. Oh and
2:37:25
listen to what he says because it's contagious. I love your
2:37:27
show. Love the boob gut Luth love the boob guy and I love
2:37:30
boobs. My wife and I have listened for the past year don't
2:37:33
bother reading on air okay.
2:37:38
He loves the boom. Boom guys. Sir Kevin McLaughlin. You
2:37:41
got the lover of America and boobs and you've got the lover
2:37:45
of the guy who's the lover of America and yeah, I guess you
2:37:49
call it recursive. Something I don't know
2:37:52
exactly a curse a recursive skinny recursive. Adam re in
2:37:57
Labrador, Queensland. 566 or Tom Darian de force Wisconsin. 5510.
2:38:04
Dame Nancy of the confused she's. She thinks she's in San
2:38:09
Bruno California. She doesn't know 5244 Teresa is stod Haim in
2:38:16
Plymouth in Minnesota nuts 5150 Mike Sisk 5050 Kyle Hendrickson
2:38:25
in Carpentersville, Illinois 5033 Zane Peterson in Monte Utah
2:38:32
at 50 and a whoa these are all $50 donors name and location if
2:38:36
I have it. Brent of being stun in Kearney, Nebraska,
2:38:42
Christopher Rivera in Nederland, Colorado. And Matt rest rest
2:38:49
Lake. Sounds like a list in Fort Wayne, Indiana. Greg firerock
2:38:57
are for AQ Fr. Ira K in Chicago. Jonathan Meyer in Xenia, Ohio.
2:39:04
Margaretha venden hood, in orange Vale, California. Michael
2:39:10
painter in Paris, California. David a show Winninger in
2:39:16
Woodbridge, Virginia. See what he says there? He's got Chris.
2:39:19
He's about the normalization of teenagers having heart issues.
2:39:23
This is the new thing. It's on buses. It's everywhere. You
2:39:26
know, teenagers get heart attacks all the time. It's
2:39:29
always been that way. Nothing new but we just want to let you
2:39:32
know now that you know it. Don't worry if your kid has a heart
2:39:35
attack. It's normal.
2:39:39
Yeah. I remember when I was a kid. Everyone had nobody had a
2:39:45
heart attack. Okay, you
2:39:48
had a heart attack. You died on the job at your union job. Yeah.
2:39:52
You died with a hammer in your hand paying union jobs. Yeah,
2:39:55
not not from just going to school.
2:39:57
Jesse Hall in Friendswood, Texas. is Edward Mazurek Sir
2:40:02
Edward in Memphis, Tennessee, Ashley Ferreira, who's also got
2:40:06
a birthday coming up. Steve Abbott and I think he's come up
2:40:11
in the conversation before in verwacht Ba ba ba ba, Wisconsin
2:40:16
and Jason deluzy. Oh sir Jason in Miami Beach. William dole gay
2:40:22
and Bristol Ville. Ohio is our last guy. And we want to thank
2:40:27
all these people for supporting show 1424 and making it all
2:40:32
possible.
2:40:33
Yeah, we have a couple of make goods people try to get your
2:40:35
notes in properly because it just slows everything down. This
2:40:39
is past Patrick master. Masterson was think exact on the
2:40:44
executive producer on the four on the pre comp speaking Dutch
2:40:47
on the previous episode. I have COVID John, I'm getting towards
2:40:52
the end here. In the morning, gentlemen from notice. From the
2:40:56
frozen wasteland of Kentucky Stan where Beaver and moose rule
2:40:59
with an iron fist. I was punched in the mouth by my brother in
2:41:02
law Ryan in the summer of 2020 had been riggers listening
2:41:04
rigorously twice a week ever since. I would like to like a
2:41:07
deducing for myself. You've been de douche Tana douchebag for
2:41:14
Ryan? A Your show is my informational advantage in a
2:41:18
world gone mad. Thank you for your courage. That's a good one.
2:41:22
And we also have Sir Richard Garrett. My note should have
2:41:30
said F. Maple Leaf emoji UK Trudeau law and Thunder Bay is a
2:41:36
17 hour drive northwest of Toronto. Definitely not a
2:41:40
bedroom community Keep up the great work, Sir Richard Garrett.
2:41:43
And that was also from his note for 1423. Thank you all very
2:41:46
much came in
2:41:47
F. Because he deconstructed set. It stands for some game play
2:41:52
where you've got f there was this?
2:41:55
It was just an F but the emoji killed the rest of the sentence
2:41:58
in the Pay Pal trans transcription or something?
2:42:01
Yeah. Be
2:42:02
careful with what you put in these notes in general,
2:42:06
emojis in the subject line of an email. Get you in the same
2:42:10
department as people who send screenshots without links to
2:42:15
emojis in the subject line?
2:42:17
I do it all the time. Yeah, well, why do I do it? Why do you
2:42:21
do it? Why do you do it? John? I've tested it.
2:42:25
Tested what?
2:42:27
I've tested it a B comparison test and it as a couple points
2:42:30
to the open.
2:42:32
Oh, yeah. Um, so you're talking like one emoji?
2:42:35
That a Christian? Yeah, how many? Oh, John. Oh, I get I
2:42:39
can't use a bunch of emojis I get like not right. Like you
2:42:43
fist up, hand clap, wave hug. You know, eggplant, all that
2:42:48
stuff is too much. It's just too much. But thank you to these
2:42:52
producers. Also everyone who came in under $50 to remain
2:42:55
anonymous, but also our multiple subscription options that you
2:42:58
have that is for sustaining, sustaining donations, and
2:43:02
they're very much appreciated. Thank you to everybody. And of
2:43:04
course our execs and Associate Executive Producers find out
2:43:07
more over here. VO red.org/and Make sure everybody has the jobs
2:43:13
they need the car jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's vote. Karma
2:43:30
here's our list for today and with the mid valleys is helpful.
2:43:32
Happy Birthday do a smokin hot sweetie Dame Draya Ashley
2:43:36
Ferreira Happy Birthday to Ryan Hendrickson celebrated on the
2:43:40
eighth car on Les Paul 65. Yesterday Happy birthday man.
2:43:45
John loves sinky Happy Birthday to his dad Michael sinky
2:43:48
celebrates today dude named Ben named Brian 39 years old
2:43:52
tomorrow. Matt Cousens cousin sorry. Happy birthday to his
2:43:55
wife, Deb or cousins 39 tomorrow and Maria Cole celebrates
2:44:01
tomorrow as well. Happy birthday for everybody here the best
2:44:03
podcast in the universe. So we have now a second we have two I
2:44:12
didn't put them in SE I knew I would mess it up where's that
2:44:16
other night note here is this is Mike. Okay, yeah, we got it we
2:44:24
got it all set up here. Do you have a blade we got to play with
2:44:27
two guy
2:44:28
got this special Deb or Ah? Oh lay
2:44:31
nice is that not that she's becoming a dame or anything but
2:44:39
we have a sword for her. Jason and Mike. Like the guy who came
2:44:43
in early this morning late last night step up on the podium
2:44:46
gentlemen both of you have reached the podium at the
2:44:50
lectern it is time tonight you as knights of the no agenda
2:44:53
roundtable proud to pronounce to Kate the as Sir Iceman can sir
2:44:57
dude named Mike have not that Paris for you. We've got hookers
2:45:00
and blow rent boys and shark named double doubles in a
2:45:03
Belgian triple we also have diet soda and video games fish pine
2:45:06
fellatio harlots and how dough we got. Redhead and rise we got
2:45:10
two Brazilian hotties and Kasha also we got ginger ale and
2:45:14
dribbles ball hits and bourbon the meat is right there for you
2:45:18
as well all of that here for the Knights in danger the no agenda
2:45:21
roundtable go to no agenda nation.com/rings And we'll make
2:45:26
sure that we get everything out to you as soon as possible.
2:45:29
Thank you again for your unwavering support of the best
2:45:33
podcast in the universe. It's really appreciated. Report from
2:45:46
the Fraser Valley slaves meetup from Sir dude named Kelly and
2:45:50
Dame Sarah of the Fraser Valley. The meetup in Abbotsford British
2:45:54
Columbia on January 29, was a huge success. We doubled our
2:45:58
numbers from the last meet up with 14 slaves in attendance.
2:46:01
The group included a dame three knights and the Baron of British
2:46:05
Columbia. Hello. That's you got the trifecta there. Many
2:46:10
attendees have been longtime listeners of the show thank you
2:46:12
to all who attended with a special shout out to Erica for
2:46:15
the longest distance traveled. How long does she travel?
2:46:19
Everybody had a great time and we're all looking forward to the
2:46:22
next one. Thank you for all your courage and to Adam and John for
2:46:25
keeping it real. To do named Kelly and Dame Sarah of the
2:46:29
Fraser Valley. We also have a report from the February 6
2:46:32
tucson arizona meetup
2:46:34
what's shakin, Gizmo Nation? I'm here in Tucson from Philly
2:46:38
vibing with my tribe at the old father in my old neighborhood
2:46:41
where I went to high school. Here's the crew.
2:46:45
I'm Ryan keep it real. Hashtag Vince's mom. This is David
2:46:50
hanging. Hey, Adam. F Ricky Rachman and John F. Laporte.
2:46:56
Certainly mofos stay dangerous. This is Amy from Eva Valley. All
2:47:03
right. Nice. I was good to have everybody hanging out together
2:47:07
for a meet up and you can do that on Friday tomorrow. The
2:47:10
11th at the north Idaho emergency meetup 5:30pm. At the
2:47:14
house of Scott in Post Falls Idaho. On Saturday the
2:47:18
crossroads of America ITM tribal gathering three o'clock at
2:47:21
bearing bear injures Tavern in Indianapolis, Indiana. On
2:47:25
Monday, the Valentine's Day skating meet up of love six
2:47:28
o'clock at Rivergate skate Center in Madison, Tennessee.
2:47:32
The Duke of the South Sir Patrick Coble, he's arranging
2:47:35
and the Korean the keeper or cufon the keeper will be in
2:47:39
attendance. I will let you know if I'm negative. And you
2:47:44
probably don't want to kiss me anyway. Not that the keeper
2:47:48
likes that thing happen and general reliably informed. We
2:47:54
also have a ton of meetups for the rest of February and already
2:47:57
into March. You can find all of this at the producer organized,
2:48:02
no agenda meetups.com website it is a great place for you to
2:48:06
connect with human resources wherever you are in the world.
2:48:10
That's the best part of it. You need that human contact and
2:48:13
community especially in these days. It's a complete judgment
2:48:17
free type of deal. You'll love it. You'll have a good time.
2:48:20
It's always like a party. If you'd like to find one go to no
2:48:23
agenda meetups.com If you don't find one there start one it's
2:48:26
easy. Sometimes you want to go check it off everybody okay, I
2:48:50
do have a couple of ISOs
2:48:53
I have some from my guess. Best source. From your what? Best
2:49:00
source?
2:49:01
Oh, your best source. Okay.
2:49:04
Laietana Okay, well, let's do it. I got
2:49:07
one that your best source is that Sophia show? Yeah. Like
2:49:13
this slap me daddy. What's it called?
2:49:16
No, no, that's the that's the old show. Her show is just
2:49:18
Sophia with an F. Oh, okay. All she talks about is well, yes.
2:49:23
Yeah. I try ISO state dumb. You're trying to make a
2:49:29
statement and it just looks dumb
2:49:31
too long. I like the millennial sound but it's way too long.
2:49:36
Let's go with a show. Hi, yo.
2:49:40
Hey, everyone. Thank you so much for being with us this week. No,
2:49:45
no, these are too long Johnny. We need snappy shit.
2:49:48
Oh, okay. Well, let's go short.
2:49:50
Oh, see you set me up for this. Didn't you give them the boots?
2:49:54
Show them the sneakers and now will you make me buy the pumps?
2:49:57
Here we go. I so sad. ad sad.
2:50:02
blatantly sad and embarrassing. Yeah. Also Okay, also a tad
2:50:08
long.
2:50:09
It's two seconds. Okay, let's drop it to one second Dan. Dumb
2:50:17
Olga. Energy just looks dumb. Oh, okay.
2:50:24
Let's see if you'd like any of mine
2:50:30
astounding. Mom. Come
2:50:33
on. It's not bad. We have this one and it's so juicy. Come on,
2:50:40
man. These are good.
2:50:42
Wait, we have more debt. Last one reminds me of how does this
2:50:45
guy? What's his name? The Intern? Ross, the intern. Oh,
2:50:52
where
2:50:53
is Ross? The intern what he's working
2:50:55
full time on the show with what's her name? The the one of
2:51:00
the daytime talkers. Woman what's her last name? She's got
2:51:03
to faint Barrymore. She's on. He's on the Drew Barrymore show.
2:51:07
Being Ross, the intern talking about Hollywood
2:51:10
Gossip. Drew Barrymore has to show.
2:51:13
Yes, she's had a show for a couple years. Man is it actually
2:51:18
is it's not one of the best daytime talkers. But it's funny
2:51:22
because she's so predictable. She's just like in tears. We
2:51:25
just have to talk.
2:51:27
Alright, so that I think that's a contender. So juicy. more from
2:51:31
that like, yeah,
2:51:32
the other one is actually better the astounding. Play that one
2:51:35
again.
2:51:35
Oh, I got more, but I'll play astounding for you. Astounding.
2:51:40
That's pretty unique from Amy. But wait a minute. I have a
2:51:42
couple more. Love it. And then and then the one that that oops.
2:51:50
Got it. Jack that sound up here. Ha second. What happened to my
2:51:53
levels? People check this out. The science has changed.
2:51:58
Yeah. So I like to juicy the best coffee to
2:52:03
double check and it's so juicy. Come on, man. That's
2:52:07
a winner. Usually you win. You actually have three you beat all
2:52:10
mine. I'm sorry.
2:52:12
Yeah. He's like okay, I have one clip. To one last clip for me. I
2:52:22
have lots but
2:52:23
I have I have a bunch of clips, but I'm gonna I want to play two
2:52:26
of them. Okay, because I'm really tired now. Yeah, you are.
2:52:29
So I just want to get this out of the way because even Mimi was
2:52:32
all over this. Oh, my God. The Daily Mail. They're giving away
2:52:36
crack pipes.
2:52:39
Yes, this is a this is quite the the meme bubble mission. They're
2:52:44
on with this one. Yeah,
2:52:45
I think there's some truth to it. But they but that there's an
2:52:47
official denial and this is it.
2:52:50
Oh, what's the clip I'm looking for crack pipes. That would make
2:52:56
sense.
2:52:57
The White House wants to make it very clear. A new grant program
2:53:01
aimed at lowering drug overdose deaths does not include the
2:53:05
distribution of crack pipes and bears. Isa Rosco reports the $30
2:53:09
million program will provide items such as fentanyl test
2:53:12
strips and clean syringes along with support for medical
2:53:15
services to
2:53:16
drug users.
2:53:16
White House press secretary Jen Psaki says that some reports
2:53:19
about the grant program have been inaccurate. She said that
2:53:22
misinformation has overshadowed the purpose of the grants. We're
2:53:26
losing an American life every five minutes to overdose. We
2:53:29
don't have time for political games. The President's focused
2:53:32
on saving lives through harm reduction programs. That's
2:53:34
exactly what we're talking about here. They work in red states
2:53:37
and they work in blue states. We know they save lives.
2:53:40
Some Republican lawmakers accused the White House of
2:53:42
encouraging drug use. Florida Senator Marco Rubio said he
2:53:46
plans to introduce legislation that will quote prevent the
2:53:49
federal government from supplying crack pipes or other
2:53:51
similar items. If I were to guess, I would say that the
2:53:57
crack pipe meme was very, someone created that someone in
2:54:01
a PR firm someone knew who knew what they were doing. So we said
2:54:04
let's turn this into this. Yeah, could be do we know the Genesis
2:54:09
though? Because it was I think Tucker
2:54:10
Carlson was allowed to hit like a ton of bricks.
2:54:14
Who did it who started with the cracker?
2:54:16
We don't know. Yeah, that that's, that's Oh, let me guess
2:54:20
who it was. It was the White House. Crack pies were in play
2:54:26
about that for a theory. And they backed off they backpedaled
2:54:30
How about that? Is that possible?
2:54:31
It's very possible. I like that. But the whole thing is, I mean,
2:54:38
even the White House, certainly in in less unless, ooh, how
2:54:42
about this? What if it's actually someone in the White
2:54:47
House? Who started this crack pipes? To furthermore give more
2:54:52
ammunition to the Republicans to call out the president son crack
2:54:56
pike Hunter Biden.
2:54:58
There seems to be some kind of because everyone who does the
2:55:01
crack pipe pipe story on Yeah,
2:55:04
of course always. There's there's under. Yep,
2:55:08
they bring Hunter into the picture. Yeah. And it could be
2:55:11
White House personnel because I think a lot of them don't like
2:55:13
Hunter, or the fact that he's hanging over there, everyone's
2:55:16
had this like, we're not going to get the Democrats themselves.
2:55:21
Look, we're not going to do very well in these midterm elections
2:55:24
if we don't do something about this 100 thing. Let's fess up
2:55:28
and get it out of the way. You got to do it sooner than later.
2:55:30
You can't let it just sit there and fester. Maybe some by
2:55:36
something,
2:55:36
but for sure. You know, when you see that going around, and like,
2:55:39
Okay, why don't you show me where it actually says crack
2:55:42
pipe? And of course, it doesn't say that
2:55:44
No, Rubio is the one who said it. Yeah.
2:55:48
I have something about the White House that may or may not play
2:55:52
into this. This is a report from Bloomberg. It's not like not
2:55:55
great. But we have something that seems to be a changing,
2:56:00
I feel like this is legislative whack a mole that we're playing
2:56:03
today. But honestly, that's what it feels like in Washington DC
2:56:05
with the Democrats and the various issues that you're
2:56:07
trying to cater to. And this brings us to where President
2:56:10
Biden's gonna be today at 2:30pm when
2:56:12
he actually meets with the head of utilities to try to talk
2:56:15
about build back better. I mean, come on what's going on? Are
2:56:18
they actually going to break this off and do something with
2:56:20
it? Or is this just another one of the issues to put into whack
2:56:22
amole Congress? So Lisa, I doubt he's even going to utter the
2:56:26
words build back better? I think there's been a tactical shift at
2:56:29
the White House to not actually use that term anymore,
2:56:33
but just talk about issues. No, I think it's true.
2:56:37
I'm gonna reckon it
2:56:39
well, there's all kinds of reports that they're they're
2:56:41
softening back on build back better, they don't want to use
2:56:44
that they want to, I don't know if they're gonna rebrand it, but
2:56:47
I think it's true that they're, they're backing off a bill back
2:56:51
better because the whole thing failed. It was supposed to go
2:56:55
into total destruction of everything so they could build
2:56:58
back better.
2:56:59
And the potential chunks that were originally supposed to be
2:57:02
part of that legislation that they can see get through because
2:57:05
Senator Manchin has said how many times that legislation as
2:57:08
one cohesive piece of legislation is dead.
2:57:11
I think that's really so build back better than that's that's
2:57:14
how it has to get killed because that's what the bill is, what
2:57:17
are you drinking?
2:57:18
Pellegrino Urantia. And FICO India post is at the you know,
2:57:27
the
2:57:27
build back better bill is dead, and so they have to pull that
2:57:30
apart and they've tainted their own bill.
2:57:33
And no, I agree with that. I'm not arguing that point. I'm just
2:57:36
doubting that Biden has the wherewithal to stop saying it.
2:57:40
Oh, well, that'll be embarrassing. Joe is called New
2:57:47
Horizons if we changed it from Bill,
2:57:51
back horizon this no joke.
2:57:55
Anything else you say? Yeah, two clips.
2:57:57
I just this is a kind of a just an informational clip about the
2:58:00
cassette business is booming. Did you know that
2:58:03
the cassette business No.
2:58:05
Between the streaming services and digital downloads, there are
2:58:08
so many ways to listen to music in quality. So why would anybody
2:58:12
still buy cassette tapes? They're known for being scratchy
2:58:15
and hissy and way less cool than vinyl.
2:58:22
That fast forward sound. That's what happened to the cassette
2:58:25
tape business. Right now we're selling every inch of tape we
2:58:29
make before it comes off the line
2:58:31
that Steve step of the national audio company in Springfield,
2:58:33
Missouri, we are the largest manufacturer of the raw cassette
2:58:37
tape, and have duplicated audio cassettes in the world.
2:58:47
By movie Guardians of the Galaxy help the cassette tape come
2:58:50
back. It featured Chris Pratt blasting alien bad guys while
2:58:53
listening to an old mixtape. But the cassette market was already
2:58:57
trending upward by that and sales have increased by double
2:59:00
digits every year since 2017. Step says his company sold about
2:59:04
25 million cassettes last year,
2:59:07
and the market is not one that you would suspect. It isn't old
2:59:11
geezers like me. It's the under 35 age group buying audio
2:59:15
cassettes now. Right beside
2:59:17
me I have tapes, tapes, tapes, tapes, that's Lars got rich of
2:59:22
NPR music. He's one of those young old people who's a fan of
2:59:25
cassette tapes.
2:59:26
His home is stuffed full of them. So this is a lady affair.
2:59:30
She is Oakland based rapper. This is a Polish black metal
2:59:36
artist whose name I can't pronounce.
2:59:40
He thinks cassettes are appealing because you can hold
2:59:42
them in your hand. A whole new generation has embraced these
2:59:47
little spools of sound and tie about Generation Z. This is the
2:59:51
generation after me. And the way that I think Generation Z thinks
2:59:56
about nostalgia is not something that has passed but is something
3:00:00
that can be claimed for the first time so it is still
3:00:03
incredibly fresh to them
3:00:05
Ah wow that's cute and it's
3:00:10
exactly the right response I never thought of it is cute
3:00:16
and it's interesting because you know I have the wall of fame
3:00:19
with Tina hung up all my stuff yeah every single gold or
3:00:24
platinum record I have includes a gold or platinum cassette tape
3:00:30
Oh in the in the actual award so it's it's the album then a
3:00:34
little cassette tape. So now I'm hip again. Right everybody? Hey,
3:00:41
kids are like this cassette tapes. I got gold ones. That's
3:00:46
right. Collect them all. Alright. Sunday we'll be back. I
3:00:55
will have another Rhona report but I think it'll be okay. Just
3:00:58
weary
3:01:01
and
3:01:02
be good. You should be good by tomorrow.
3:01:04
Yeah, no, I think so too. On Live the blister pack man goes
3:01:08
Verto kid no matter what, what it is that help. And coming to
3:01:15
you from the heart of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region
3:01:18
number six in the morning everybody. I'm Adam curry.
3:01:22
And from Northern Silicon Valley where it's becoming quite nice
3:01:25
out 7080 degrees maybe if we're lucky and this wish everyone
3:01:33
else getting this kind of weather and Genesee report
3:01:35
coming up next no agenda stream calm up is down episode 123 End
3:01:40
of show Mixer from Jeremy Cartwright and Tom Starkweather
3:01:43
who now has a podcast melodious owls on value for value
3:01:47
podcasting 2.0 Check that out and remember us at DeVore
3:01:50
ak.org/na And till Sunday, adios. Such we know the way
3:02:06
through this pandemic is by getting everyone vaccinated.
3:02:18
Small fringe minority following the science horn thing all day
3:02:26
long.
3:02:29
Yep, protesters are demanding to be heard. Driver crazy. The
3:02:39
sound is deafening. All day long. all hours of the night. I
3:02:51
haven't been three days. We know the way through this pandemic.
3:03:02
When the government mandates when you want to change
3:03:07
something in history, there's always going to be some
3:03:09
uncomfortableness involved in that. Someone makes a different
3:03:23
choice about whether or not they are vaccinated. That's the
3:03:26
right. And this government is going to respect that right.
3:03:30
It's time for us also to heal the divisions in our communities
3:03:33
over vaccination. Those divisions are in our families
3:03:36
there. They yes, they're in our communities, but they're across
3:03:39
our province and they're across this nation. Let's not judge our
3:03:41
neighbor, because they may be vaccinated or because they may
3:03:45
not be vaccinated. It's time for each of us as individuals now to
3:03:48
make a conscious effort to treat everyone in our daily lives that
3:03:51
we encounter equally. It's also time for the proof of
3:03:54
vaccination mandate and so effective at midnight this
3:03:58
Sunday, February the 13th, all provincial proof of vaccination
3:04:01
requirements will end. Let's work together to heal some of
3:04:04
the divisions. Let's understand that we can forgive our friends
3:04:08
or family members, maybe even ourselves, if that is necessary.
3:04:13
As we move forward, and we truly want to get back to normal. We
3:04:17
shouldn't be dwelling or focusing in on you know, what
3:04:21
other people's decisions are. We all need to make an extra effort
3:04:24
to to understand and respect everyone, everyone's right to
3:04:28
make their own decision. And there's been divisions in our
3:04:31
communities, the convoys came up. Oh, you know, we have
3:04:33
convoys literally in every province. I'm from my
3:04:36
understanding across the nation, we have borders that are being
3:04:38
blocked it and multiple, multiple areas. And these are
3:04:43
for in a large part, people that want these divisions ultimately,
3:04:47
to go away. The only thing that would prevent us from achieving
3:04:51
all that we can be is for us to be arguing amongst ourselves.
3:04:56
Let's come together as friends. Let's not lose a friend due to
3:04:59
this virus. Let's come together as family. Let's not lose a
3:05:02
family relationship regardless of what conversations have
3:05:07
occurred over the last number of months, as we look ahead, let's
3:05:10
come together as a communities within a great province and
3:05:14
achieve what we know we can achieve. It's the opportunity is
3:05:17
there force?
3:05:26
mopho.org/n A and it's so juicy
0:00 0:00