0:00
We're not like everybody else.
We're gonna tell Russia to eat
0:02
pound salt. Adam curry, John C.
Devorah. It's
0:06
Thursday, March 31 2022. This is
your award winning keep our
0:09
nation media assassination
episode 1438. This is no agenda.
0:15
Bringing bell bottoms back and
broadcasting live from the heart
0:18
of the Texas Hill Country here.
Number six in the morning,
0:21
everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:23
from Northern Silicon Valley
where the hypocrites rain I'm
0:27
Jhansi Dvorak.
0:32
It's it's raining hypocrites.
0:35
It's, I can't do the rain and
hypocrites.
0:38
Hallelujah. Really?
0:41
Why? It just this? Well, Chris
Rock's a good example.
0:46
Oh, man, this is this is a media
deconstructors dream.
0:49
Well, it's my I loved this.
0:54
This was perfect. It's so many.
These things work so well, when
0:58
when so many different parties
could potentially benefit from
1:02
the controversy.
1:03
You bet you should at least give
a quick overview of what
1:08
happened.
1:10
Yes, I can give an overview. I
also do have some thoughts on
1:13
the matter. Okay, so I hope so.
Yes, of course. Of course. I now
1:20
I'm sure everybody by now has
seen the clip of the slap that
1:24
went around the world the snap.
Remember the last lap that went
1:27
around right around the world is
this snap? This last lap lap was
1:31
share? Snap out of it.
1:34
But what happened to share?
1:36
Don't you remember share in the
movie Moonstruck patch slap snap
1:39
out of it? I think that was this
was also that was in the the 80s
1:46
was that it was another slap
pill heard around the world. So
1:49
Chris Rock is presenting some
piece of the Oscars. And does
1:58
the typical Hollywood thing.
Hey, everybody, how you doing?
2:00
Hey, good to see you. Good to
see you. Hey, Jada. That's Will
2:03
Smith's wife. Does see you
getting ready for gi Jane to
2:09
can't wait for it. And there's a
little bit of laughter. And then
2:14
Will Smith saunters up on the
stage and slaps Chris Rock and
2:19
then goes back to his seat and
yells keep my wife's name out
2:25
your fucking mouth. And he does
that twice. And, and then he was
2:30
it was MF in mouth I think.
2:33
Oh, yes. Yes, yes, you're right.
Um, no, I don't think it was MF
2:38
N. I think was just Effen. Which
point I think the audience
2:44
thought that this was a gag that
as I started out, I thought it
2:48
was a gag. And then you but when
the minute the audio went out
2:51
away? Hmm, not so much a gag.
And of course within seconds,
2:56
people knew that the Oscars were
actually on television that
2:59
night.
3:02
Now, well.
3:07
It was weird because
3:08
as Chris cuz Will Smith thought
it was funny. And then he saw
3:12
his wife wasn't laughing. So and
we were earlier in the show. It
3:17
was believed that it was an Amy
Schumer gag are one of the two
3:20
women comedians that were up
there that made some comment
3:23
about the open marriage of Will
Smith and his and his wife,
3:27
which is not an open marriage.
If only one party's taking part,
3:32
well having an affair.
3:34
Should we look at the so we look
at what's possibly going on here
3:38
I have a number of a number of
things. And this again was so
3:41
good. And by the way, the most
important thing is that no one
3:45
cares about maternity wards
being bombed anymore.
3:48
Millionaire actors well done
3:52
slapping each other. Yeah, I'm
not one.
3:54
I think I'm actually uniquely
qualified for it to deconstruct
3:57
this for a number of reasons.
One, I've been in show business
4:00
in Hollywood show business two I
have met and work with Will
4:04
Smith, three, my ex interim wife
had the alopecia. And I in fact
4:12
myself in an allo Petia phobe?
So I'm well positioned. All you
4:17
would be yes, yes. Yes. Now,
well, before
4:19
you before you do since you have
the D history. I have a clip to
4:23
set this up. Okay. Just to show
you where we're coming from
4:27
here. A couple of things. First
of all, I want to mention that
4:30
most people who have alopecia at
the level that she has it, don't
4:35
wear it on their sleeve, they
wear a nice wig, a nice
4:38
expensive wig and you wouldn't
know they had it. I
4:41
just got to say one thing about
alopecia just so we know because
4:45
I know a lot about it. Alopecia
is just a term for hair loss. It
4:50
is not a cause it's not an
illness. You can't be a victim
4:54
of it. A man who is bald has
severe alopecia. So it's not a
5:01
sickness or something. This is
this is what what people don't
5:04
understand.
5:06
All right, well, let's play this
clip though from 1991. Here is
5:10
Will Smith. Will Smith is on the
Arsenio Hall Show. And he and
5:16
there is a bald bass player in
the band. Kevin.
5:19
Yeah. Kevin. Kevin, the band
leader.
5:22
I don't know this is the bass
player. This was not Kevin
5:24
Kevin. Kevin Eubanks was not on
the Arsenio Hall Show in 1991.
5:31
Okay, it doesn't matter.
5:34
It was a bass player. And he is
pointing the finger and mocking
5:38
him for his bald head. And then,
and then backing off and the guy
5:43
gets a little irked by it. Here
we go.
5:45
You can't do that in this world.
They got rules. They got rules
5:48
like he has a rule. The big
player he got a rule you got to
5:51
watch his head Every Morning Joe
Come on. You got to into the
6:03
characters and got hurt.
6:09
Yeah, so back in the day, he
could make the joke and it
6:11
worked. Of course it was Matt.
Oh,
6:12
come on. It was a joke. Come on.
All right. Well, I wouldn't be
6:16
so annoying if it wasn't Will
Smith who got upset by basically
6:22
this is less of a joke. In fact,
it was fairly lame as everyone
6:28
you know, analyzes it, I thought
was pretty lame, too. Oh, yeah.
6:31
Well, it was okay. But it was
that was
6:35
it unfunny it was just not. It
wasn't something that chairs at
6:40
someone's soul.
6:42
No far from it. Okay, so we've
we've talked about what alopecia
6:47
is. We'll get to that in a
second. Now, there's one thing
6:52
I've learned from doing over 70
episodes with Moe. You do not
6:58
ever Nobody. Nobody makes jokes
about black women's hair. It is
7:03
the third rail. It is you just
don't do it. There's no no
7:07
comments. No jokes. No nothing.
It's a big big deal. Now about
7:14
Jada Pinkett with her alopecia.
I mean, she could do and I'm
7:18
just going to touch the third
rail, she could do exactly what
7:21
all black women do in
entertainment, and she could
7:24
just continue to wear wigs. Now
it's lots of people suffer from
7:29
this. Lots of women solve it in
different ways. But she being a
7:33
Hollywood narcissist needed to
bring all that attention to oh,
7:37
I have alopecia. Okay, you're a
victim. Good. So now just the
7:41
obvious deconstruction, although
I worked with him in the 80s.
7:47
And I saw no, absolutely no
evidence of this. Will Smith
7:52
could just be one of those
really aggressive guys. There
7:56
are men out there and I and you
know, I know him. And you say
8:01
you even look at their wife in a
way they don't like and all of a
8:04
sudden they change like Dr.
Jekyll and Mr. Hyde. You know
8:07
what I mean? OJ Simpson. Thank
you. You know, well, I don't
8:10
want to not OJ Simpson. But Tiko
Taurus from Bon Jovi when we
8:15
went to Moscow, I remember it
was Jennifer's, his fiancee, his
8:18
wife, or his girlfriend, and
yeah, we're on a big plane with
8:21
all these people. And so I'm
chatting to her. And then we're
8:23
off the plane, I'm still
chatting, he comes up to me and
8:25
he says, hey, yeah, you know,
he's just he's kind of like
8:27
making fun. But as he's saying,
and he's like, he's punching me
8:30
in the shoulder and it's
starting to hurt. And I realize
8:34
Holy crap, this guy thinks I
must lean on his woman. And it
8:38
was really scary, especially,
you know, a drummer, like Tiko
8:41
Taurus is like, could beat me up
in a heartbeat. So it's
8:46
possible. I heard Piers Morgan
say that he did an interview
8:50
with Jada Pinkett Smith 10 years
ago, and Will Smith came in,
8:55
just before the interview
started and sat in the corner
8:58
and said, Don't upset my wife,
you won't like me if you upset
9:02
my wife. That kind of sounds
like one of those guys, which is
9:05
surprising. However, as you
already alluded to, there's
9:10
clearly a lot of dysfunction
going on in the Smith household
9:14
and certainly in their
relationship. And what you
9:17
discuss there's when it's an
open relationship, but it's not
9:21
and she's, in essence, cheating.
Key is a cock. He is a cock and
9:27
he and what I saw possibly as
one, one thing that happened
9:31
here, he's so desperate to win
her back, and to make her not
9:35
hang out with her and have sex
with her son's friends. He lost
9:40
his mind. He just lost his mind.
And in the time, it happened, he
9:45
didn't even know what he had
done. So that's the obvious I
9:48
think is possible, then, oh,
boy, everybody's a
9:52
deconstructionist? Yes. It was
sponsored by Pfizer, everybody
9:56
sponsored by Pfizer,
9:58
a standing ovation to the crew
To bring magic to the screen
10:02
biontech and Pfizer are proud
sponsors of the Oscars
10:05
this year back at the Dolby
Theatre. And of course, someone
10:09
dug up and alopecia phase three
trial from August last year.
10:14
That's it. It was a commercial
for Pfizer. Hmm. What do you
10:19
think, John? Seems seems like
that seems like a bit far
10:22
fetched to do the extra ad for
the alopecia medication in phase
10:27
three trial, which, you know,
out there, people have alopecia
10:31
from radiation from cancer
treatment. But okay, so
10:35
everyone's like, Oh, this is
clearly a Pfizer setup. Your
10:38
thoughts on that?
10:39
That's bullshit.
10:40
Thank you. Exactly. Now, what we
did know we talked about it on
10:44
Sunday before. Before all this
came down. We knew that
10:48
President Lenski of Ukraine was
in negotiations with the the
10:54
Academy for to make an
appearance. And we know this to
10:58
be true, because there's
reporting everywhere in the
11:00
Hollywood press. They were
apparently they were down to
11:03
negotiating if it would be live
or would be something pre taped.
11:07
And we had Sean Penn threatened
threatened the entire
11:11
establishment of Hollywood, from
his perch in Poland, Ukraine,
11:16
saying if they don't let him
talk, I'm smelting my Oscar.
11:22
Have we heard anyone call for
the smelting yet? No,
11:28
I think we should. We should
call him out. Where's the smell?
11:31
We want to watch
11:32
but this is this is key. And
there was almost nothing about
11:37
Ukraine in the entire speech.
They could have at least thrown
11:40
in. Think of the children of
unborn children who were bombed
11:44
in the maternity ward. Come on.
This was a setup for that he was
11:47
ready. No, absolutely nothing.
So war is over. Maybe, you know,
11:54
was this a a new cycle reset.
Now the next theory, oh, PR
12:00
ratings. This is not how ratings
work. Of course, they got a bump
12:04
in the in the in the plus one
plus two, which is Video on
12:09
Demand where people watch it
after the actual live event. But
12:12
this is not a ratings booster
for an annual show. But it did
12:17
completely completely reset. The
new cycle blew everything off.
12:22
There was no COVID there was no
war in Ukraine. There's no
12:26
inflation that all it is is was
it really wasn't not real. How
12:30
did this so I started looking
back in history. Has this ever
12:34
happened before? Has the new
cycle been interrupted by
12:38
something on the Academy Awards?
And yes, it turns out in 1976
12:46
there was a streaker who came
out just before Elizabeth Taylor
12:51
came out to present an award. Do
you remember?
12:54
And you? Yes, I actually I do.
And you should note. It was the
13:00
70s off the wall.
13:02
Believe me, believe me. There's
so much 70s In today's show.
13:07
This was interesting because if
you look at the PR angle 1976
13:12
was the first year that ABC took
over broadcast rights from NBC.
13:17
And of course they continue to
broadcast them today. So could
13:20
that have been a setup to get
people more interested in the
13:24
Academy Awards while possible?
Could it have been a detractor
13:29
from something? Well, let's take
a look. So I put in the search
13:35
engine 1976 Headlines newspaper
headlines the first one that
13:43
pops up you ready for this? Flu
Shot scare 11 deaths reported
13:49
city programming trouble nine
states call a halt that was kind
13:55
of interesting to me. They they
might have wanted to in 1976
14:02
detract from people dying. We've
played this this series of clips
14:07
many times.
14:08
But yeah bogus, a completely
bogus virus and a bogus vaccine.
14:14
So as it comes to the cycle
repeating Pfizer again maybe
14:19
possible could be it certainly
didn't hurt. This is what I like
14:22
so many people benefit. But I
know exactly what happened here.
14:27
This was a show of power. I'm
always looking for the
14:30
Illuminati angle on the shows.
There's always someone with an
14:33
all seeing eye sign or there's
someone doing devil's horns or
14:37
there's some black and white
checkers meant to tripping. You
14:41
know to trigger people. This was
an obvious one. This is the
14:46
Coven, the Hollywood Coven show
their might showed how powerful
14:51
they are. These are women. And
it's Jada. It's Brianna. It's To
15:00
a degree even Megan Markel, they
all have Kuk husbands if they
15:03
have husbands at all. Oprah,
Oprah with a Stedman and this
15:09
was proof that they rule the
roost will was fine with the
15:12
joke until Jada wasn't we all
saw will laughing now what we
15:16
did not see in somewhere there's
an ISO, there was some look,
15:21
something Jada did and she
triggered him she has the keys
15:25
to his MK Ultra lock like nobody
else. And he this man was
15:30
acting. He was acting but
autonomously. P swaggered up
15:34
like we've seen him walk in the
bad boys movies. This is not
15:37
Will Smith, the guy that was a
Hollywood slap. This is real.
15:42
This is not not that they
rehearsed it. This is this is
15:45
muscle memory for him. A
Hollywood sloppy, he connected
15:49
it was real, but he knew what he
was doing. That's why you didn't
15:51
see Chris Rock immediately. Go
to his cheek like oh my god, you
15:55
knocked my teeth out. No. And
then he swaggered back, almost
16:00
immediately, she showed who's in
charge of Hollywood, Tyler Perry
16:06
and Denzel, were there right
away. Oh, man. Oh, calm him
16:10
down. Because he was triggered.
He didn't have to leave
16:12
security. Ask them Will Smith
just says no, I'm not gonna go.
16:18
And everybody wins, the Coven
proves that they're the most
16:21
powerful in Hollywood. Jada,
gets her victim card up. We'll I
16:30
guess we'll get something. And
the academy gets to reposition
16:34
itself as important. Because
we're going to investigate and
16:38
we'll have a hearing. And we'll
distract from more stuff going
16:42
on in the world. Other than that
the Oscars dead segment was a
16:47
piece of crap. I could not
believe what they did with that.
16:51
The width segment the dead
segment. You couldn't read that?
16:55
Oh, no,
16:56
you know, you can. I said the
exact same thing last year. If
17:00
you recall. The dead segment was
the same thing. You could not
17:04
read the names of the dead half
the time then they'd zoom in and
17:08
they'd zoom out show the whole
stage and the whole audience and
17:11
there's a dead guy up. Do you
know who it was? It was
17:14
terrible. I don't understand why
they didn't fix it from last
17:17
time.
17:18
It was completely worthless. And
for those
17:22
that had the tributes. Why What
was the point to that? They
17:24
never did that before. Like,
17:26
Bill Murray. Just walk in for
Ivan Reitman. Yeah, yeah. Now it
17:32
was it was weird. And for those
of you who emailed No, that was
17:36
not just Lane Maxwell at the
Oscars. That was very funny that
17:41
he that Diane Warren was at the
Oscars. And if you look at Diane
17:45
Warren Yeah, I can see where you
think, oh, but people emailing
17:48
me. She was a man. Look. Diane
Warren is a hit songwriter.
17:55
So I have two ancillary clips
about the Oscars. I think we've
18:00
done enough.
18:01
Yeah, I think I think we're
done.
18:05
And first of all, they had to be
they have this red carpet events
18:11
led they plays for hours is
terrible. But I had to record
18:15
this one, one bit, because they
had to try to promote the
18:19
Australasian of these Oscar
parties. And so they're sending
18:21
camera crews out to these
various places, and you end up
18:24
with segments. I don't know how
people could watch this. This is
18:28
the Oscars. I think in Atlanta,
this is the Oscars. I don't know
18:34
about that word in which in
Atlanta, Tim with Jim woods in
18:37
Atlanta. And I want you to
listen to this carefully because
18:39
you're going to hear the effect
of Hollywood on people's vocal
18:43
intonations. And you're going
to, you're going to have a
18:48
someone who sounds very familiar
but in turns. It turns out TED
18:51
is just some dimwit in Atlanta.
Listen, all right, we
18:55
have hopping around the country.
We're checking in on you guys
18:59
and how you're celebrating. So
let's now get to Georgia, where
19:01
I think I've got Natalie Burch
Hey, Natalie. Happy Oscar ladies
19:07
Oscars, ladies. Now I gotta get
let's get down to it. You. All
19:11
three of you look fantastic. How
are we celebrating? today? How
19:16
are you guys celebrating big
movie fans? Oh my gosh, wow.
19:20
We have a bunch of friends
coming over. And we're doing
19:25
some movie themed drinks.
Everyone's bringing different
19:28
drinks. And then we're also
casting ballots before. So yeah.
19:38
Yeah, well, if that's all you
hear on television, you're gonna
19:41
mimic it automatically. Yeah,
that's what they're saying.
19:44
They're mimicking I love that I
watched I watched ease red
19:47
carpet of course.
19:48
Love that. Something did crop up
which I have to play because
19:53
he's one of our producers and
friend of the show.
19:58
And you mean Have the pod.
20:02
Yeah, he's a pal of the pod.
Brunetti was a was a featured
20:06
character at the 2017 Oscars and
they caught him after the
20:10
slapping somebody. What if they
caught him slapping somebody?
20:15
No, he's not he's not a MK
Ultra. So Brunetti is, they're
20:22
asking him some questions
because they, I guess his name
20:25
was in the bin for maybe
producing the Oscars in the
20:28
future. Oh, I didn't know. And
so somebody asked him these
20:32
questions and ended it, you can
see that he fits right into the
20:35
no agenda grouped by his answers
to these particular questions.
20:40
Now he
20:41
is going to be co producing.
That is the job that you have
20:45
said, what interests you as
well? Yeah, there would never
20:48
have
20:50
a little more unpredictable, I
would say, but what would you
20:52
honestly like to see him do?
What would be the three things
20:56
that would make this Oscars the
best yet, get
20:58
rid of the dance numbers and
replace it with strippers. And I
21:02
always thought it was a problem
that you have to you know, it's
21:04
at the end of the night, or the
awards that everybody's waiting
21:08
for Best Actress, Best Actor,
Best Picture, Best Director, all
21:12
of those are attended tonight.
And then what happens is, they
21:14
get played off stage, they don't
get a chance to say anything,
21:17
and you know, nothing against
everybody else. But that's
21:21
really what people tune in for.
So that's two. How many do you
21:25
want? I want a third? strippers.
21:30
Thank you for coming.
21:35
Yeah, yeah, this is exactly why
we have no comp tickets to the
21:40
Academy Awards because of his
damn no agenda attitude. We're
21:44
not going
21:45
drippers to repair. So needless
to say he wasn't welcomed. He
21:49
wasn't invited back. No,
21:51
no, I can. I can imagine that. I
think we should dive into what
21:58
is leading up to an obvious 25th
amendment for the President of
22:02
the United States. He's being
hit from all sides. And I think
22:06
this is is beautiful to watch,
because it's it's quite obvious.
22:14
They're making him look stupid.
And I have well, here's here's
22:20
one very, very obvious example.
This is a staffer who you know,
22:26
Saki is still out? I think so to
have other people filling in
22:30
answering questions. And here's
someone from the press office,
22:33
talking about the President's
impressions, while watching the
22:39
the hearings for the potential
Supreme Court Justice Catan G.
22:44
Brown Jackson,
22:45
the President watched portions
of Judge Jackson's hearing
22:47
yesterday and today and is proud
of the way she is showcasing her
22:51
extraordinary qualifications,
her experience and her even
22:55
handedness, her dedication to
following the facts. The law and
22:59
our Constitution as an
independent judge is clear. He
23:03
was also moved by the grace and
dignity she has shown the
23:07
deference to senators and the
level of detail she is offering
23:11
reinforcing the value of her
experience. Her intellect and
23:14
the strength of her character.
23:16
Sounds pretty presidential.
Let's just double check with the
23:18
President asked him what he
thought while watching the
23:21
hearings.
23:21
And did you get any chance to
watch much of the Judiciary
23:25
Committee hearing he's gonna
choose any but
23:28
I didn't see any of it. Dude,
he's so fried. And now we have
23:36
the solution. Let America figure
it out for themselves. Let
23:40
America bring this to the
forefront let America call for
23:44
this poor man to be put out to
pasture. But first we have to
23:47
have a teaching moment.
23:49
Bruce Willis is stepping away
from acting after being
23:52
diagnosed with aphasia. The 67
year old family shared the news
23:55
on Instagram Wednesday, writing
in part that he had been
23:58
experiencing some health issues
before his recent diagnosis,
24:02
which is quote, impacting his
cognitive abilities. They say
24:05
with much consideration, Willis
is now stepping away from the
24:08
career that has meant so much to
him. This statement concluded
24:12
quote, As Bruce always says,
Live it up. And together we plan
24:16
to do just that. It was signed
by the actress five daughters
24:19
who range in age from seven to
33 years old. Plus his wife Emma
24:23
and ex wife Demi Moore. Willis
is known for a career in
24:26
Hollywood spanning several
decades, with roles in iconic
24:29
films like diehard Armageddon,
Pulp Fiction, the fifth element,
24:33
the sixth sense 12 Monkeys
insincerity over his career,
24:36
Willis has received numerous
accolades, including a Golden
24:39
Globe and two Emmy Awards. He
also has several projects lined
24:43
up for a 2022 release.
24:46
Okay, several products at the
end there, but notice the family
24:50
announces this. It's almost like
he's on his deathbed the family
24:53
so he's clearly he can't, he
can't tell anybody. It's gone
24:58
too far. And Asia now that we
learned this interesting disease
25:02
is a condition that affects your
ability to communicate. It can
25:06
affect your speech, as well as
the way you write and understand
25:10
both spoken and written
language. Aphasia typically
25:14
occurs suddenly after a stroke
or a head injury. But it can
25:18
also come on gradually from a
slow growing brain tumor or
25:21
disease that causes progressive
permanent dam damage. This was a
25:27
beautifully timed at Tina
doesn't like that I that I say
25:31
this is why it happened. She
thinks, oh, man, it's just
25:34
really sad for Bruce. Yeah,
we're learning about aphasia,
25:37
and I think they're going to
pull this on Biden. And everyone
25:40
will will will feel bad and oh,
yes, it's aphasia horror. He's a
25:45
victim. And then any comments on
this?
25:53
Yeah, I think they're going to
say that Biden has aphasia after
25:58
Bruce Willis has aphasia is a
bit you know, they can do better
26:02
than that. It's like too
coincidental. It's like, oh,
26:05
Bruce Willis has aphasia. Let's
get this all deal with aphasia.
26:09
By the way, there's a number of
there's a faint, very famous
26:11
artists as a form of aphasia,
which is the more interesting
26:14
one. animals get this sometimes
to where if you see somebody you
26:18
can't recognize them? A second
time you see him? Oh, really?
26:23
Yeah, this artist, Chuck Close
is a very famous artist who, who
26:28
has aphasia. And so if you, if
he looks at you, and he's
26:31
talking to you, and you say who
you are, he knows who you are.
26:34
But if you even turn your head a
little bit after he looks away,
26:38
he won't see the same person.
And I would think that's coming
26:42
disconcerning there's to be that
way, but it's the way he is. And
26:47
so that kind of thing is
interesting, but aphasia to be
26:52
have two people to have, I
think, I think there have been
26:54
pushing the dementia thing. So
hard that I don't know how
26:59
you're going to switch it over
to aphasia.
27:02
Okay, well, I'm just entering
this in the red book, because I
27:05
see this clear as day. Because
because of this Bruce Willis
27:09
announcement, I know, you think
it's coincidence.
27:13
No, they haven't done it. So I
can't say it's a coincidence.
27:16
But if they did it, I would say
that's unlikely coincidence. And
27:19
I think most coincidences are
not unlikely, but that that
27:22
Bruce Willis did have a face
that suddenly out of the blue
27:26
Biden has it? I don't think so.
27:27
No, no, my my theory, my thesis
is, people hear this, and
27:32
they're going to start saying,
hey, wait a minute. Maybe Joe
27:35
has aphasia. It'll it'll be a
story
27:38
already. I think it would the
doors been closed on that,
27:40
because I think everybody would
27:41
ever even heard aphasia. Well, I
have, but I know but you're not
27:47
typical. But I'm
27:49
just saying that every I think
everyone's already assumed that
27:52
he's got easy either has
Alzheimer's or just old
27:56
fashioned dementia. And I don't
think they're gonna be able to
28:00
switch it to. It's interesting,
man.
28:03
If we had a meeting, if we had a
meeting, and we had this option.
28:06
I'd be like, You're crazy. Let's
throw Bruce out there. Let's
28:09
prop it up. And then we'll have
them just people discovered and
28:12
we'll have a couple of clues.
We'll do we'll put a few weird
28:16
things in the teleprompter, and
I know
28:18
what you're doing. Yeah.
28:20
But I'm not You're not buying
it.
28:22
I didn't say, Oh, I
28:23
came so close. And now I've also
thought about what that means
28:27
because Cameron becoming
president, but I think if we
28:30
look at the actual plotline for
the television series Veep. It
28:36
would be perfect because she
would never be the first woman
28:38
elected president. And if you I
don't know if you if you watched
28:44
all of Veep,
28:45
I didn't watch much of it.
Actually. I find it to be a TD,
28:49
you
28:49
know, it got very tedious. Yeah,
it got tedious. In the line
28:53
familiar with the plotline that
you're, you're discussing? Well,
28:56
if
28:57
you follow this whole plotline,
through with the president
29:00
resigning, she becomes president
temporarily but also has to
29:04
immediately start running for
election. And then there's a
29:07
switcheroo in the Senate of the
of the VP candidate. It's I
29:13
mean, it's just something that
could happen. I don't know. Why
29:15
not. Why not? Anything can
happen now
29:19
I think is closer than me what
else could happen because
29:21
nobody's gonna really like Kamla
Harris as
29:24
well. No, no, but I'm just
saying she it would be okay for
29:27
her to be president. Because
Hillary could probably stomach
29:31
her not being the first you
know, her being the first female
29:35
president but not right.
29:36
I think you're dead right and
think is true is she's never
29:39
been elected president. Right.
In fact, from what I can tell
29:41
she's never been elected to any
now the state you he said where
29:46
she was shoot into the corrupt
state of California as as the
29:49
right yeah.
29:51
So here's the more likely
scenario as what we have been
29:54
talking about for a long time is
now mainstream news and we have
29:58
the pixie lady to fill us then
30:00
multiple sources tell CBS News
that the federal investigation
30:04
into Hunter Biden's business
practices is broader than
30:06
previously known. The probe is
exploring whether the younger
30:10
Biden and his associates
violated tax money laundering
30:14
and foreign lobbying laws.
business records reviewed by CBS
30:18
News and documents released by
Republicans in Congress indicate
30:22
multiple financial transactions
involving Hunter Biden, his firm
30:26
and a Chinese energy company
called CFC Republicans allege
30:30
that the company is an arm of
the Chinese government. In 2017.
30:34
The year after Joe Biden left
the vice presidency, a $1
30:38
million retainer was signed with
the Chinese energy company for
30:41
Hunter Biden's services as a
lawyer. His client, a CFC
30:45
official, Patrick CO, was later
convicted of international
30:49
bribery and money laundering
charges for unrelated work in
30:52
Africa. This week on the Senate
floor, Republican Chuck Grassley
30:56
presented financial records that
he said showed six figure
31:00
payments from the Chinese energy
company to Hunter Biden's firm,
31:03
Hunter Biden, and James Biden
served as the perfect vehicle by
31:11
which the Communist Chinese
government could gain inroads
31:16
here in the United States.
31:18
allegations about Hunter Biden's
foreign business dealings
31:21
reached a fever pitch during the
2020 campaign
31:24
after was being paid for access
to his vice president father
31:29
earlier this month. White House
spokesperson Jen Psaki was asked
31:33
about the current investigation,
31:34
I'd point to the Department of
Justice and Hunter Biden's
31:36
representatives I'm a
spokesperson for the United
31:39
States. He doesn't
31:39
work for the United States.
31:41
And attorney for Hunter Biden
did not respond to CBS News.
31:44
Last year, he told correspondent
Anthony Mason, the President did
31:48
not financially benefit. Have
you ever
31:50
given your father money from any
of your business ventures? No,
31:54
nothing, nothing? Directly or
indirectly, directly or
31:57
indirectly.
31:59
So this was CBS. And there was a
clue in there that told me this
32:03
is a takedown.
32:04
Did you catch it? No,
32:06
don't why would they use a clip
from Trump? implicating Hunter
32:11
Biden in their report? Unless
they want to take the man down?
32:16
Well, I don't see. I mean, the
question remains, why would they
32:21
use a trip of a clip of Trump?
Yeah, for any reason, but I
32:26
don't make the connection
between using a trip of a trip.
32:29
I keep saying trip of plus of
clump. A trip. Trump would say,
32:36
Take it. Why would you think
that that had to do with
32:40
anything other than just color?
32:43
Well, yes, of course. It's
color. That's my whole point. If
32:46
they were trying to defend the
man like they typically would
32:48
do.
32:50
Well do wait, wait, using a trip
of I'm not gonna get over
32:55
this show title now. Trip clump
trip of just trip of clump, it's
33:00
embrace. Would you use a clip of
Trump when it tends to trigger
33:07
people into the other direction?
So Trump makes it is a defense.
33:13
Okay, I'll take that as
possibility. Yeah, not how I
33:18
read it. And that's a good
point. It's a good point. Let's
33:20
listen to ABCs version
33:22
tonight reports that the Justice
Department's investigation into
33:25
the tax affairs of President
Biden's son Hunter is
33:28
intensifying sources telling ABC
News that in recent weeks, a
33:31
grand jury in Wilmington has
heard from a parade of witnesses
33:35
about payments Hunter Biden
received while on the board of
33:38
the Ukrainian gas company
Burisma and also about how he
33:41
paid his taxes in recent years.
Biden served on the Burisma
33:45
board when his father was vice
president. Something he's
33:47
admitted was a mistake.
33:49
Did I make a mistake? Well,
maybe in the grand scheme of
33:53
things. Yeah. But did I make a
mistake based upon some ethical
33:57
lapse? Absolutely mine.
33:58
Federal prosecutors are also
looking into how Hunter Biden
34:01
report money from business deals
in China. This hearing will come
34:06
to order in his confirmation
hearing Attorney General Merrick
34:09
Garland vowing to be
independent.
34:11
The President made abundantly
clear in every public statement
34:15
before and after my nomination,
that decisions about
34:19
investigations and prosecutions
will be left to the Justice
34:23
Department.
34:24
This investigation which has
been underway since 2018,
34:27
appears far from over sources
familiar with the case a no
34:30
final decision has been made
about whether or not to bring
34:33
charges with
34:35
Alright, Pierre, thank you. What
I find so interesting is that
34:38
all these details that are
coming out now we knew every
34:41
single one of them in August,
September of last year, no
34:45
before the election
34:46
of 2020 20 election months
before
34:49
we knew about Patrick whoa being
the spy guy being arrested
34:53
Hunter calling saying I got the
New York Times on my back all of
34:57
this stuff, all of it. So it's
yeah coming out now
35:01
why show? Yeah,
35:02
but is it coming out now?
Because Oh, now they've just had
35:05
time to vet it. Come on a bunch
of podcasters knew this year and
35:08
a half ago. This is this is this
is intentional. This is no look
35:16
at do you see Grassley with his
presentation with Ron Johnson.
35:21
And it's amazing what those guys
are presenting. I mean, it's all
35:24
stuff we know. But they do have
some extra documents and they
35:27
got the big blowup poster
boards, the big kids fantastic.
35:31
And it gets better. It gets
better remember this report,
35:34
the House Intelligence Committee
wrapped up its public
35:37
impeachment hearings on Capitol
Hill, but another story
35:40
continues to unfold surrounding
the sun and House Speaker Nancy
35:44
Pelosi. Well, the Ukraine
scandal revealed the Biden
35:47
family's ties to the country the
less told story surrounding Paul
35:51
Pelosi Jr. That's still
unraveling on the sidelines
35:54
following revelations that he
was a board member of the
35:57
Ukraine oil company, this coil
and executive for NRG lab on
36:03
America's Rachael ascent has
caught up with journalist
36:05
Patrick Cowley, who's been
covering the story of the House
36:08
Speaker Son, take a look. I
wanted to follow up with you
36:11
because you've been covering
this. Paul Pelosi Jr. Story. We
36:16
now know that two major
Democrats Nancy Pelosi and Joe
36:19
Biden have sons with business
connections in Ukraine. And we
36:23
just went through that public
impeachment hearing centered
36:26
around that Ukraine.
36:28
We don't have to listen to the
whole report. But you'll recall
36:30
he was promoting the World
Sports Alliance. And he was in
36:34
that in that report. They have a
clip of him of Pelosi Jr.
36:38
Talking about how crazy Ukraine
how great it is to help Ukraine.
36:42
And then yesterday we learned
that as a St. Claire, the close
36:46
associate of Paul Pelosi Jr. has
been convicted of wire fraud for
36:51
his role in running a scam
called the World Sports
36:54
Alliance, which Paul Pelosi Jr.
Represented in the country of
36:58
Ukraine. St. Clair now faces 20
years in prison when he goes up
37:02
for sentencing in July giving
him plenty of time to flip on
37:05
his associates. Ah this great
takedown Hunter dead? Well,
37:15
that's you'd expect that from
Hunter at this point.
37:20
Don't you think they're gonna
kill Hunter,
37:23
not gonna kill anybody. They're
going to try and get away with
37:25
it. But this does bring up a
nice short clip about what's
37:29
really going on. And certainly
the US government, but I'm sure
37:32
it's the same everywhere. This
is the new the new Congressman
37:37
Madison Cawthorne. He's the
young millennial handsome guy in
37:41
the wheelchair. So he he's out
doing the rounds, I guess he was
37:45
on I think it was on Tucker
talking about how he saw people
37:48
do cocaine and talking about
orgies in DC. But he went on a
37:53
podcast course any brought this
up, which is just as damning. So
37:58
we all kind of monitor that just
to see what's coming. But he's a
38:00
he's a freshman. He's a new guy.
So he's learning the ropes of
38:04
Washington, DC and politics. And
so
38:07
we all kind of monitor that just
to see what's going on. And I
38:09
noticed a lot of people in the
majority party were buying
38:13
stocks that had to do with some
kind of battery, some kind of
38:16
technology for electric
vehicles. And then what you know
38:18
it about a month or two later,
it was then announced Reg
38:21
700,000, electric vehicles to
the to the to the to the fleet,
38:24
and then all the stock prices
has jumped, whether you're
38:26
investing in lithium mines,
whether you're investing in the
38:29
people actually manufacture
batteries, whether you're
38:30
investing in directly to
companies that make electric
38:32
cars. And so that's the way
people can make money is through
38:36
the this kind of version of
insider trading that people can
38:39
do. But we are limited our
ability to have any kind of
38:43
earned income, you can have
passive income which can't have
38:45
any earned income. And so we
can't sit on a board and get a
38:48
salary for anything like that.
But what you can do is you can
38:52
have your spouse, put as
chairman of this company, you
38:55
can have your spouse saying that
she's going to be our he or she
38:59
is going to be a consultant to
this firm. And next thing you
39:04
know, they're getting a
paycheck. We're really not doing
39:06
anything. Could your son, your
son? Oh, yeah.
39:11
Roy could just undo that. Yeah,
that was cute. And then and so
39:16
amidst all these problems, Trump
the master of memes does this
39:21
time Janka Paulson,
39:22
we begin with former President
Trump's rare achievement on the
39:25
golf course
39:26
Trump is now confirming that he
hit a hole in one one of Trumps
39:29
coping partners recently posted
an image writing Trump just made
39:33
a hole in one. Some had doubts.
So Trump put the rumors to rest
39:38
telling you this guy does this
shit on purpose. He might not
39:41
have hit a hole in one he's
like, Well, everybody's down.
39:43
I'm gonna show him a winner with
my hole in one night.
39:46
He said is 100% true about the
hole in one and he shared video
39:50
of himself retrieving the ball.
Trump wouldn't say who won the
39:54
match because quote, then you
will say I was bragging
39:57
to those wondering he apparently
used a five iron on a 100 95
40:00
yard par three
40:03
guy has no shame. So yeah, I
know what I'll
40:05
do is I earned it the home with
a seven. Anyway.
40:11
Why is the five iron seems for
180 yard seems okay, so
40:15
too much. I think I think you
could drive a five iron way too
40:18
far that I don't know how you
got to get blocked to get a hold
40:21
on part three you want to use?
I'm guessing it I'd like to find
40:26
out now but I used to be able to
get about 170 yards with a nine.
40:33
So I don't know if you can't get
it strong man want to get it up
40:37
in the air for there. Hold on
one,
40:39
man. He's Trump. What are you
questioning?
40:43
And he's also a big guy right in
drive a five iron but I would
40:47
think 200 plus yards.
40:49
The well that's 180 with a five
iron. That's what he did. It's
40:54
okay.
40:55
It's bullshit.
40:56
Again, not buying it. You're not
buying anything. Can I sell you
40:59
anything today?
41:00
He's gotten up. I'm sure he's
had more than one hole and why
41:03
I want to sell you something
that you'll buy best price.
41:07
But I'll tell you this. You're
right. He's the master of
41:11
distraction. was a beautiful
thing. 100% true. And he's and
41:18
they have a picture of pulling
the ball out of the whole
41:20
course. Give me a break. Of
course. I could do that. Yeah.
41:28
According to the Dutch press.
Shops are reopening in Kiev.
41:34
They saw Kiev
41:35
Yeah. We'll keep they keep
everyone suppose someone does a
41:37
report from Kiev and
41:38
there's nothing going on there.
No. Seem seems pretty.
41:42
I haven't seen one thing
anything even hit? I don't die.
41:45
Oh, always it from the beginning
of this thing. I said that the
41:47
Russians aren't going to really
do much to Kiev because it's
41:50
their it's their home city.
That's where the Russian state
41:54
was was born in Kiev.
41:57
Should we check in with some of
the M five M and see what
42:00
they're reporting on? On the war
since? You know, they still do
42:04
some reporting despite the slap
leading the headlines
42:08
tonight. The presenter mentioned
that you know, I don't have this
42:11
clip. But the Sky News claims
that the whole slap incident was
42:15
to distract from Biden.
42:18
Yeah, okay. Welcome to the
party. Sky News.
42:21
Tonight. The President and his
top national security advisors
42:24
are skeptical that our Russian
pledged to scale back could mean
42:27
that the war in Ukraine is over
closer to being over. Oh no,
42:31
there was a positive development
today as negotiators from Russia
42:34
and Ukraine met in Turkey for a
day of peace talks aimed at
42:37
ending Russia's deadly invasion.
And an address tonight Zelinsky
42:41
said the talks were positive but
that that doesn't drown out the
42:44
sound of Russian attacks. The
Russian negotiator raised the
42:47
possibility of a meeting between
President Solinsky and Putin
42:51
that could occur after a draft
agreement was ready. And there's
42:54
this new development tonight in
the effort to target Russian
42:57
oligarchs we're learning tonight
that the British sees their
43:00
first super yacht a $50 million
ship. So that a lot of news to
43:04
get to tonight, but first,
right.
43:08
Well, I'll stop. I'll stop this
here. What right do they have is
43:12
kind of irrelevant. That you
know, they're grabbing these
43:16
ships. Do you remember that
Lloyd's of London said they're
43:20
no longer going to certify
Russian ships so they can't get
43:25
insurance. We had that we had
that clip. Yeah, that was there.
43:29
Remember that? Yeah. Well, here
comes this little news article
43:35
by Lloyds of London chief
executive John Neal is in
43:37
hospital following a bike
accident. Boat No. No, don't
43:45
say. I mean, how obvious is
this. You can't bike accident in
43:52
keep good
43:53
evening. Good evening, the
Pentagon confirms there has been
43:57
some movement by a small number
of Russian forces pulling back
44:01
from Kiev, but it's calling this
repositioning not a retreat and
44:05
the indiscriminate shelling of
cities to the south and east
44:08
continues. This may be the first
real sign of progress, but it
44:14
certainly falls short of a
ceasefire so desperately needed.
44:17
waterbrush li Russian negotiator
Vladimir Minsky said Ukraine's
44:22
proposal to remain neutral by
not joining any military
44:25
alliance would be put to prison.
But it's early days and their
44:30
skepticism in the US.
44:32
We'll see if they follow through
with their suggesting.
44:35
Yeah, this is over. This is
over.
44:39
Let's listen to but I agree with
you. Let's listen to NPR. They
44:43
have to date my clips on the war
not about the war but about the
44:48
ancillaries including the
negotiations and what's going on
44:51
in Germany. But let's listen to
Ukraine negotiations. One on
44:55
NPR.
44:57
Ukraine's top negotiator is
expressing some optimism about
45:00
the latest round of talks with
Russia. Russia's negotiator is
45:03
also sounding rather upbeat
saying the Ukrainians are
45:06
starting to meet core Russian
demands. In Washington. The mood
45:10
is more skeptical as NPR is
Michele Kelemen reports.
45:14
Secretary of State Wendy Sherman
says For now the US is taking a
45:17
wait and see approach. We really
45:19
hope that President Putin will
commit seriously to the peace
45:23
talks underway. But we are
focused on what Russian forces
45:28
do not what Russia says
45:31
the US is right to be skeptical,
says William Taylor, a former US
45:35
ambassador to Ukraine. And we
45:37
just really need to take our cue
and our lead from the craniums.
45:41
The Ukrainians have put forward
some ideas in talks with the
45:45
Russians. One is a referendum on
neutrality for Ukraine to give
45:48
up its NATO ambitions, as Russia
has long demanded. But for that
45:53
Ukraine wants security
guarantees. And Taylor speaking
45:56
via Skype says Washington needs
to consider that
45:59
if they're willing to go to an
Austria like neutrality. You're
46:02
a member of the EU, not a member
of NATO, giving up on those
46:06
security guarantees that come
with the collective defense like
46:10
NATO, then they would like to
have more than they got in the
46:15
Budapest Memorandum. That was
46:17
the 1994 agreements signed by
Russia, the US and UK offering
46:21
Ukraine security assurances for
giving up Soviet era nuclear
46:25
weapons. This time, Ukraine will
be seeking more concrete
46:28
security guarantees from various
countries. The British
46:32
ambassador to the UN, Barbara
Woodward says her country is
46:35
open to that.
46:36
And what we want to do is help
46:38
in any way we can to end the war
to secure the removal of the
46:42
Russian troops and invasion. And
we'd be happy to play a role in
46:47
that.
46:48
If we were asked by the
Ukrainian government. Yes.
46:52
No, there's a lot of talk, I
think maybe in a second clip
46:56
here might even have it in there
about part of the deal. This is
47:01
actually quite funny, is that
the Ukrainian Ukraine will join
47:07
the EU. But stay out of NATO.
And the Donbass may go to Russia
47:15
or not, but Crimea is out of the
out of the conversation. And
47:19
there is something to me because
47:20
it made me cry me it just stay
status quo stays.
47:24
Russia is rushing. Yeah.
47:26
Let's say this is all about DOM
boss. They want the DOM boss
47:29
they want the you know, they
blew up the dam for the river.
47:31
That's I think that's what they
want.
47:35
But they blew up the dam. I
think it was over in marrows
47:38
pool or whatever that places
where that area is. Yeah, but
47:40
it's a little bit pointless.
Point is that give having you
47:46
Christian. I mean, suckering, we
talked about this when we first
47:50
talked about why you don't want
Ukraine in the EU, at the nature
47:55
of the state and the corrupt
nature of Ukraine and lookers.
48:00
And
48:01
here's the thing, exactly. If if
you have a good thing going if
48:05
your kids can make millions of
dollars if you got weapons
48:08
smuggling through Ukraine to
Africa, you've got cyber
48:11
operations, you've got money
laundering, you've got human
48:14
trafficking. Why bring in any
any official people of any
48:18
organization? That's stupid.
There's
48:20
that that's it? That's it.
That's stupid. That's another
48:22
good point. But that but the
idea of getting Ukraine, the
48:27
Russians actually orchestrating
Ukraine going into the EU to
48:32
screw up the EU. It's hilarious
48:35
poison pill. It's a poison pill.
48:38
Like, yeah, and and the, because
the EU is so you know, into the
48:43
eye of this whole war more than
even we are because they're the
48:45
ones who called the shots on the
sanctions. Yep. They would have
48:49
to say yes. I'm telling you,
it's just
48:53
I think you're right about that.
And it's being spurred, of
48:56
course, from Putin's
perspective, fantastic. Let them
49:00
deal with all that bullcrap. And
of course, these guys, it'll,
49:04
it's the same people, the same
corrupt people in the EU, the US
49:09
United Nations different type of
corruption is a little, some of
49:12
them are the same people. But
when you have when you meld
49:15
those two groups and try to
bring EU parliamentary structure
49:21
to Ukraine, it's gonna be
hilarious.
49:24
It's going to be totally
hilarious if they think they had
49:26
trouble with Poland in Hungary.
They have no,
49:30
we cannot have an exit strategy
yet. We have to see this to its
49:34
conclusion.
49:35
And I think it's going that way.
Let's Play Part Two of the
49:38
negotiations.
49:39
What may be harder for
negotiators to resolve our
49:41
Russia's territorial demands is
Samuel Chair of the RAND
49:45
Corporation. Russia is insisting
that Ukraine recognize its
49:49
control over Crimea and the
independence of regions run by
49:52
Russian proxies in the Donbass
49:54
no Ukrainian government, I think
would ever be able to do that
49:57
and survive and this government
shows no indication of being
50:01
willing to do so. And frankly,
Russia hasn't even won the
50:06
territorial control piece on the
battlefield yet
50:08
sharp was speaking at an online
event organised by the Quincy
50:12
Institute for Responsible
statecraft, I think to add has
50:15
been promoting peace
negotiations. former ambassador
50:19
to Russia, Thomas Pickering told
the group that even though the
50:22
US is not a part of these peace
talks, it does have an interest
50:25
in seeing a negotiated
settlement soon,
50:28
the US has no interest in a
continuing war, particularly
50:32
given the fact that it continued
war heaps opened the door for
50:37
the potential down the road for
nuclear use. But me
50:40
and Washington want to do more
to punish Vladimir Putin and
50:44
strengthen Ukraine's hand in
these ongoing negotiations. That
50:48
means more military aid and more
sanctions, says Taylor of the US
50:52
Institute of Peace,
50:53
the sanctions have been broader
and more sustained, harsher,
50:59
more durable than anybody
expected. They are at least
51:01
certain probably, then Putin
expected. And we play a big role
51:04
in maintaining that
51:06
we're actually I wanted
sanctions relief as part of a
51:08
negotiated deal. Taylor says
that should only happen if
51:12
Ukraine agrees.
51:17
is great, great time to be a
podcast, right? Yes.
51:21
Peace that kills me.
51:23
The Institute of
51:24
Peace. You know, I picked up a
couple of kind of backgrounders
51:27
that are kind of ancillary clips
from the Donald McGregor are
51:32
Doug McGregor the colonel. Oh,
he's
51:35
he's still allowed to talk him.
Yeah, but
51:37
it was a really obscure podcast
from Dave Smith. And I tried to
51:42
get a hold of McGregor and Dave
Smith podcast is nothing like
51:45
ours, and they would they
snubbed me. And I find it
51:50
offensive. And I think that
McGregor is a is a asshole. Oh,
51:54
wow.
51:55
It wasn't his people are
McGregor himself. People. If
51:58
someone say you, you, you knew
you're no good. Is people what
52:03
are these people say that piss
you off?
52:05
They said he's not available,
52:08
even though he was on an obscure
podcast somewhere else?
52:11
Yeah. So he's available, but he
wasn't available to us. So let's
52:16
but but I still think he's good.
I'm not going to deny his his
52:21
his commentary, because it's
quite, it's is different enough
52:25
that it's always good. So here's
his musings. That is music.
52:28
These are both good. These are
two short and medium, medium
52:31
sized clips. But listen to this,
because I think it really nails
52:36
nails, a couple of points home.
52:38
So I went through the business
in Bosnia, then subsequently in
52:42
Kosovo. And then of course, in
2001, we had the Afghan business
52:47
and I was dragged in early about
Iraq. And it became clear to me
52:50
that, contrary to the original
plan, we wanted to stay in Iraq
52:55
at least is in perpetuity as far
as I could sell, which made no
52:59
sense to me at all, why would
you stay there if you only
53:02
wanted to change out the
government. And then again, we
53:05
went to this nonsense that we're
going to democratize the place
53:08
and make Iraq the first Israel
friendly Arab democracy in the
53:12
world. And the chances of those
things happening were, you know,
53:17
pretty low. So I was I was very
disenchanted. And then when I
53:20
saw a stay there, it became
clear to me it was going to be a
53:24
catastrophe. And I said, the
best that I can do is tell
53:27
people, this is a very dumb
idea. But as you know, Americans
53:32
are all too quick to becoming
emotionally involved in a cause
53:36
they know nothing about and they
join this sort of proverbial
53:39
Bombs Away club, they tend to
think that if we're bombing
53:42
someone somewhere, that our
greatness is being expressed to
53:46
the world. You know, both
assumptions are wrong. And here
53:51
we sit 20 years later, and what
have we got for our investment?
53:55
As Donald Trump said, whether
you like him or not, what do we
53:58
get for it? How did we benefit?
The answer? Of
54:00
course was No.
54:02
I just want to mention that a
lot of our listeners Yes. Who
54:08
have bailed on our show because
of our deconstruction of
54:11
reality. I just pet peeve Oh,
54:16
let me just say people will come
back they do come back when they
54:23
see the obvious but it usually
takes nine months to a year
54:27
before what we were saying turns
out to be the truth or at least
54:33
part of something that was
obvious to us and triggering to
54:37
others and it's okay. This it
you know, I was putting together
54:41
yesterday the since we were
taking to show it shows off best
54:46
of end of show mixes COVID
addition it's unbelievable. How
54:53
soon we were calling bullcrap
this whole I have to shorten it
54:58
because it's three hours and 45
I have minutes I could have done
55:01
eight hours. We have so much
material, particularly from
55:04
Rolando Gonzalez and Tom
Starkweather, where they do kind
55:08
of the thematic ways. Oh,
55:10
wait, let me get this straight.
You've got enough songs in the
55:15
show mix is a just about COVID
alone, only about COVID for over
55:19
three hours. I have enough
55:21
for eight hours of COVID only
COVID End of show mixes
55:25
owns my show, which will be the
show that running around my
55:28
birthday. Which is the day
after.
55:33
There's my when's your birthday
shot? Somewhere coming up?
55:37
My birthday is the fifth. Okay.
So we're taking off the what
55:42
we're taking off this coming
Sunday. And the Thursday after
55:46
that.
55:46
Oh, okay. Yeah. So the Sunday
show, which I'm still finishing
55:50
so
55:50
we can run the COVID thing first
on Sunday show if you need more
55:53
time? No, that's what I think it
would be like, Yeah, I
55:56
think so. But the but it's just
about COVID. The early year of
56:00
COVID. No, no,
56:01
it starts the first end of show
mix we had about COVID was
56:06
January 30 2020. And the what
and I did them in chronological
56:13
order. So you know, and so you
and you hear the progression of
56:19
not just the bullcrap, but our
understanding and you you
56:22
remember stuff. Oh crap. Yeah.
And there's Cuomo, we forgot all
56:25
about Cuomo. And then, and then,
you know, then we were all masks
56:30
off masks on three masks. And
near the end, this just the
56:35
parody songs are so incredibly
good. It is a mind blowing piece
56:39
of work, you will remember the
past two years, it will all come
56:46
flooding back to you. And you'll
just be smiling because like,
56:49
holy crap, we knew it all along.
We knew it all along. And it was
56:53
right. And it's in the art. It's
a beautiful piece. It's a
56:56
historical document. It should
go into the congressional
57:00
library it should go into it
should
57:03
promoting your own bit as good.
Hey, I'm gonna try to overshadow
57:08
my Sunday thing, which will
probably won't topic because it
57:11
doesn't have art in it. All
right.
57:13
Well, tell us about yours. This
is not a competition is
57:16
mine. Mine is yes, it is. Mine
is a is yesterday COVID clips,
57:23
it's what would they were being
taught how you got COVID where
57:26
it came from? Why you got this
flattening the curve flattening
57:29
the curve and be over in three
weeks, and all that stuff. So
57:33
and also in chronological order?
Yes,
57:36
yes, perfect.
57:37
But it's Well, there's two
things about chronological order
57:40
when you're doing this sort of
show. And the main thing is,
57:43
it's easier.
57:45
Oh, it's totally easier. But in
this case, it tells a story in a
57:49
fantastic way.
57:51
Yeah, well, I did the same thing
when I did the environmental
57:53
global warming show is pretty
much chronological order. Yeah.
57:57
Alright, so let's play part two
of McGregor. We're
58:00
going through something similar
right now with Ukraine and
58:03
Eastern Europe. And we've
involved ourselves in something
58:06
we could have prevented very
easily by simply steering
58:09
Ukraine away from confrontation
with Russia. Instead, we did the
58:13
opposite. We steered this entire
country, this nation of people
58:17
into a war with Russia. We
should have been interested in
58:21
avoiding that. But we weren't.
And now we haven't shown much
58:23
interest in bringing it to an
end. We seem to want to prolong
58:27
it, although I'm not sure that's
true for President Biden. But
58:30
certainly for the rest of his
administration and people on the
58:33
Hill, it seems to be the case.
Again, I don't see any benefit
58:36
to this. For the Ukrainians. I
don't see anyone in Europe
58:40
benefiting from it. I don't
think we benefit from it. So
58:45
let's play that. Oh, good.
Again, makes the point you made
58:47
earlier. Yeah. Which is Biden
may not be on board with all
58:51
this. Oh,
58:55
this is this, this is got to go.
This is a great quagmire. It's
59:00
really good. Yeah, we got a
boots on the ground report from
59:04
one of our producers in Germany,
which I'd like to share. And
59:09
that may fit into some clips you
have just looking at your list.
59:12
This is from Roland. He says
some insights from Germany from
59:17
afar. First of all, renting your
washing machine has been a thing
59:20
here for several years now.
59:23
Your washing machines are one of
the cheapest appliances
59:28
considering how rugged and how
well they work and what they do
59:32
to buy. Why would you rent one?
59:34
Because you'll be happy if you
don't own anything. Roland
59:38
continues Nevermind the housing
shortage we've had in Germany
59:40
since 2014 2015. When one to 2
million people enter Germany, a
59:45
country of 80 million that don't
mention the reasons for that
59:49
shortage. He's talking about the
migrants that came in in the
59:54
past decade but really 2014 2015
So he continues quite a few
59:58
Ukrainians are entering God
Germany and then from Africa and
1:00:01
Asia. I have seen Indian saying
they would be from Ukraine. Many
1:00:06
don't speak Ukrainian but happen
to have Ukrainian passport
1:00:09
something that no doubt can be
received easier than ever in the
1:00:12
fog of war. So these Ukrainians
are said to be college students
1:00:16
who are highly specialized
workers per the media. But
1:00:19
without being able to speak the
language of their country
1:00:21
strange. Many don't speak
English too well, either a
1:00:24
lingua franca that will be used
at college. Germany's foreign
1:00:28
ministers expecting 8 million
refugees coming to the UK from
1:00:32
Ukraine. And he has a link there
in the show notes and guess
1:00:36
where many might go right away?
Well, of course, where you get
1:00:40
the best benefits aka Germany,
the Netherlands to the German
1:00:45
Minister of the Interior has
stated that all Ukrainians are
1:00:48
welcome. They aren't even asked
to properly identify themselves,
1:00:51
they get support right away,
ride the bus and train for free,
1:00:53
get free health care. And if
they're in a car accident, the
1:00:56
German insurance companies will
pay for it all, as it cannot be
1:00:59
expected for them to pay for it
having escaped the war zone. The
1:01:02
refugees are slightly wary of
getting vaccinated, which the
1:01:08
German Minister of Health is
taking as a chance to make them
1:01:11
a vaccination offer, but most
don't take him up on it. This
1:01:14
will be interesting once the
mandatory vaccine laws have been
1:01:16
passed that are being debated
with lots of emotion and little
1:01:19
facts in Parliament right now.
They run the full hospitals
1:01:23
unvaccinated are holding his
hostile narrative again. Oh, and
1:01:26
the stores have severe flour and
salad cooking shortages. Many
1:01:30
stores don't allow you to buy
more than two bottles of salad
1:01:33
oil. The weird thing is that
lots of say olive oil comes from
1:01:37
Spain, Greece and of course
Italy. It's a mess real victims
1:01:40
on all sides. But that's the
update from Germany.
1:01:46
By the way, great update is
very, very good that we need to
1:01:50
get that from him at least once
every couple of weeks. Yeah.
1:01:53
Now. That is an interesting
little irony there, which is
1:01:56
that the olive oil, just comfort
it's all local. I know what
1:02:01
what's going on.
1:02:04
Mm hmm.
1:02:05
So you had some Germany clips?
1:02:07
Yeah, let's do some defects of
Germany. Or the fallout does
1:02:12
Ukrainian fall out in Germany is
kind of interesting, especially
1:02:15
on their economy. This is from
NPR, from Russia's war
1:02:19
with Ukraine and the
international sanctions that
1:02:21
followed have had massive
consequences for the global
1:02:24
economy. Case in point Germany.
The country relies on Russia for
1:02:29
around half its natural gas, and
German companies do billions of
1:02:33
dollars worth of business with
both Russia and Ukraine. As MPs
1:02:37
Rob Schmitz reports the pain is
already being felt on the ground
1:02:43
and higher and Foundry outside
Dusseldorf a crane holding a 30
1:02:46
tonne bucket gently tips it on
its side, releasing a torrent of
1:02:50
bright yellow molten higher
waves of heat rise from the
1:02:54
bubbling splattering liquid as
it shoots out sparks of
1:02:57
magnesium over workers dressed
head to toe and silver heat
1:03:00
shield the uniforms. Below them.
The glowing magma fills a mold
1:03:04
for what will become an iron
tile press machines as Dr. Guier
1:03:08
Managing Director of Zeebo camp,
the company that runs this
1:03:11
foundry,
1:03:11
it's like 1300 degrees Celsius.
That's what makes our business
1:03:17
so energy intensive.
1:03:18
It takes 50 gigawatts of
electricity per year to keep
1:03:22
simple camps induction furnaces
running equivalent to the
1:03:25
electricity needed to power a
town of 20,000 people. midsize
1:03:29
companies like simple cap known
as mittelstadt, companies in
1:03:32
German make up the backbone of
Germany's economy employing 60%
1:03:37
of the country's workers. And
they're highly susceptible to
1:03:40
the skyrocketing price of energy
caused by Russia's invasion of
1:03:43
Ukraine. For years, the pricey
bootcamp paid for one megawatt
1:03:47
hour was
1:03:48
I love how they say, because of
Russia's invasion of Ukraine,
1:03:52
energy prices have gone up. It
just blew right by that lie
1:03:56
in German make up the backbone
of Germany's economy employing
1:03:59
60% of the country's workers.
And they're highly susceptible
1:04:03
to the skyrocketing price of
energy caused by Russia's
1:04:06
invasion of Ukraine. For years.
1:04:09
Yeah, hold on. Ah, nice.
1:04:11
It's only Russia, Putin.
1:04:14
Yeah, it was it was the
sanctions that caused this not
1:04:18
and and inflation is part of it.
1:04:20
I mean, nation caused a bit.
Yes. There's no doubt about
1:04:22
especially here in the United
States. But to just ignore it,
1:04:26
just to blame it. Yeah. Just
blame it on Putin. Yes. Putin's
1:04:29
fault, NPR for
1:04:30
NPR 60% of the country's
workers, and they're highly
1:04:34
susceptible to the skyrocketing
price of energy caused by
1:04:37
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
For years, the price the
1:04:41
bootcamp paid for one megawatt
hour was around 40 euros.
1:04:44
beginning of last week, it was
nearly 300 years, nearly 10
1:04:51
times of what you saw before for
years and years before his war
1:04:55
in Ukraine and Europe's
retaliatory sanctions have
1:04:58
highlighted Germany's Reliance
On Russia,
1:05:00
Germany is very dependent on
Russian energy.
1:05:03
Claudia comfort is an energy
economist at the German
1:05:06
Institute of Economic Research.
1:05:08
It's not only gas over 50% of
our natural gas were importing
1:05:12
from Russia, but also coal while
50% of coal and oil is 36% Yeah,
1:05:20
so let's shut them off
1:05:25
we don't want your gas man we
want to pay 300 instead of 40
1:05:31
wrong with this. This is
Hurricane serious suicide in the
1:05:35
Netherlands. And we'll come back
to this in the northern part
1:05:38
thronging This is where Mark
void zero lives we'll have to
1:05:41
ask him about it. Yeah, then
cloning in the Netherlands has
1:05:45
the the the local government the
council and the mayor has struck
1:05:50
a deal with the vata butterknife
cloning which is the the
1:05:53
waterworks up there that anyone
to in order to save conserve
1:05:58
energy because of course, the
Netherlands is also using
1:06:01
horrible dirty ass Russian gas
and god knows what else is
1:06:05
horrible. It's Russia. We can't
have that. So when you take a
1:06:10
shower, after 10 minutes, they
will automatically lower your
1:06:14
pressure. They will just drop
the pressure on your house to
1:06:19
make you stop
1:06:20
taking a shower at mechanism. Is
this at work? Well, I
1:06:23
don't know. I'm trying to get
the details but they say in
1:06:27
collaboration with the the
waterworks and Cloninger the
1:06:31
City Council has worked out how
after 10 minutes of showering
1:06:36
automatically the water pressure
will be substantially reduced.
1:06:41
And it starts tomorrow at five
o'clock and it literally says as
1:06:49
long as we're still using
Russian gas the commies will
1:06:52
always win so we'll find out
1:06:57
what is Russian gas got to do
with your water pressure because
1:07:00
it
1:07:01
no because you're heating up the
water with gas
1:07:05
to take your shower, but if you
taking a cold shower,
1:07:08
no shower for you, bro. Good
point, though. Yeah, it's what
1:07:16
it is.
1:07:18
Yeah, it's good. This is a short
part of this part two
1:07:22
big announcement affecting gas
prices. Today President Biden is
1:07:25
expected to tap into the
nation's strategic
1:07:29
Iran clip I am crane Fallout
Germany
1:07:32
to sorry, she says finding
alternatives for Russian coal
1:07:36
and oil should be relatively
straightforward for Germany. But
1:07:39
the problem is Russian gas.
Germany receives it via
1:07:42
pipelines. And the alternative
to that importing liquefied
1:07:46
natural gas or LNG from other
countries like the US and Cotter
1:07:50
is tricky because Germany does
not have any LNG terminals and
1:07:54
it'll take years to build.
1:07:57
They don't they also they also
don't have a port in case nobody
1:08:00
noticed that landlocked,
landlocked landlocked these
1:08:03
idiots these stupid idiots. And
I'm just gonna say it Germany.
1:08:10
You didn't lose the war to be
treated like this. You deserve
1:08:15
better dictate play for Dean
Invesco Sefa. Dean and Besa
1:08:20
it's not that the debt anyone's
doing this to them know that
1:08:24
allowing it the German people
are just letting it go.
1:08:27
But there yeah, there are more
than allowing it. They're
1:08:31
promoting it.
1:08:32
They're what their leaders
that's my point. Oh, their
1:08:34
leaders are terrible. These are
the leaders and I Germans in the
1:08:37
street going this is great.
1:08:39
Now where's what was Merkel
doing in the Young World
1:08:43
Economic Forum a young leader
woman doing in there for so
1:08:46
long?
1:08:47
It's called Young massagers.
Okay,
1:08:51
part three. To make matters
worse, let's finish this off.
1:08:55
Okay, part three.
1:08:58
The German government has
scrambled to sign LNG contracts
1:09:01
with Qatar and camford says that
gas will likely flow to Germany
1:09:04
from terminals in other parts of
Europe. But it probably won't be
1:09:08
enough to replace Russian gas.
1:09:10
So the German government already
spent 100 billion for military
1:09:15
areas. But right now, I mean, we
need also money for the energy
1:09:19
transformation in order to
become less dependent on fossil
1:09:21
fuels.
1:09:22
And that could take years the
dependence is so big, it will
1:09:26
need time it's nothing we can do
over all within seconds are
1:09:30
within weeks.
1:09:31
And in the meantime, German CEOs
like Michael Visser are doing
1:09:34
what they can to deal with a new
reality. Visser heads the
1:09:38
company vis OG, which supplies
airports with security, cleaning
1:09:41
and catering crews. While many
German companies continue to do
1:09:45
business with Russia, Visser
went in the opposite direction
1:09:48
announcing that Vizag would cut
its business ties giving up
1:09:51
millions of dollars per year.
1:09:53
We all in the management thought
that we cannot support a regime
1:09:59
that is acting like the regime
is acting at the moment in
1:10:03
Ukraine just
1:10:05
depends on Russia for less than
2% of its revenue.
1:10:09
Oh, big talker, oh, we're
cutting ourselves off. big
1:10:14
talker Big Shot, they put him on
there. He's going, Oh, we're
1:10:17
cutting away. We're not like
everybody else, we're gonna tell
1:10:20
Russia to eat pound salt. And
meanwhile, he's got 2%. So he's
1:10:26
taken a big beating this this
kind of virtue signaling is
1:10:30
everywhere in the world, that
jerk.
1:10:33
Alright, let's get into some
energy unless you have more from
1:10:36
NPR at this moment.
1:10:38
That's No, I have more of an NPR
but not from okay. Not on
1:10:43
Germany.
1:10:44
So here is the crazy guy with
the crazy hair and moist. He
1:10:48
reappeared all of a sudden on
the scene and the Bill Maher
1:10:51
show two weeks ago, he played a
clip from him. And he's now he's
1:10:54
back. He worked for some think
tank that is supposed to
1:10:58
supposedly is trying to stop
nuclear war. But he was the
1:11:02
energy secretary under Obama,
wacky gas guy and he thinks
1:11:06
well, he thinks cheap oil is
coming back.
1:11:09
Well, oil and gas are a little
bit different. Lisa in terms of
1:11:12
oil, the Russians are clearly
having trouble now. Getting
1:11:17
buyers. Even so even though we
are not sanctioning, there's a
1:11:22
kind of a customer sanction
going on. And that is affecting
1:11:26
the ability of Russia to get oil
onto the market. They are taking
1:11:31
a big big discount $30 a barrel,
for example, on their oil. But
1:11:36
to be honest, I think in the
longer run, and I don't mean
1:11:41
years, I mean, a month or so I
think the oil markets will
1:11:47
basically recover in terms of
supply side. Again, Russia will
1:11:51
take a big discount. But a major
part in my calculation is that I
1:11:54
think with the very, very large
discounts, frankly, Russia will
1:11:59
begin to find customers taking
that that oil, China will
1:12:04
increase its its imports, India
is very interested in in a big
1:12:08
discount, etc. In addition, I
think we are making some headway
1:12:14
in terms of reestablishing our
relationship with the Saudis and
1:12:18
the Emiratis. They may push OPEC
to slightly at least somewhat
1:12:23
more, increase the pace. And of
course in the United States. I
1:12:27
think that the President meeting
with oil and gas company heads
1:12:33
and with the heads of major
financial institutions is very
1:12:37
important because you know, the
financial institutions have been
1:12:40
pressuring the oil and gas
producers to focus more on
1:12:45
returning cash to their
investors rather than expanding
1:12:48
supply. Well, right now we have
a supply emergency of in a
1:12:53
certain sense. And I think it's
time to do a little jawboning if
1:12:57
you like, and to, and have the
financial and oil and gas
1:13:01
executives come together and
recognize we do need some
1:13:06
increase in supply. Alright,
1:13:08
so the man has lost the plot. He
does not understand what's
1:13:12
what's going on. He doesn't see
the complete ESG D platforming
1:13:18
out of fossil fuels, but he's
hopeful. And so he's saying, Oh,
1:13:21
no, it's good. The President's
meeting with the oil and gas
1:13:24
executives and, you know, he
can, you know, can talk to them.
1:13:28
Let's get some ideas together.
But yeah, he's going to repeal
1:13:32
all of the all of the breaks.
All of the tax breaks, it's,
1:13:39
that guy's delusional.
1:13:40
Now, I want to I want to point
out something about his math.
1:13:45
Russia's having no trouble
selling their product, and
1:13:48
they're selling it to India.
Yes, he's right. They're selling
1:13:50
it at, like, 25%. I have a clip.
It will let me let me do the
1:13:56
math. And then you play the clip
to verify this. The math is as
1:13:59
follows. Before this invasion, I
believe oil was at 50 to $60 a
1:14:07
barrel. It's now at 100 to $110
a barrel it was going up, but
1:14:14
it's at least 100. So to sell to
India at a 25% discount gives
1:14:19
Russia $75 A barrel compared to
the previous 50 and $60. a
1:14:26
barrel price. How is this a big
beat beat down for Russia? They
1:14:31
gained $25 a barrel. Are you
kidding me? Yes, a discount. Oh,
1:14:36
here's your discount. Oh,
they're taking a beating because
1:14:38
they have to discount the price.
They're discounting the price
1:14:41
from this ridiculous 100 $110
Give me a break. Yeah, it's a
1:14:45
version
1:14:45
of saying we're cutting the
military spending and they
1:14:48
really just cutting in the
increase in the spending, right.
1:14:51
Yeah, we're cutting it by 10%
increases. It's
1:14:55
all marketing people. It's all
marketing. Now India is
1:14:58
interesting. India, of course.
You know, next door to Pakistan
1:15:01
hates Pakistan, the feeling's
mutual. Pakistan tight with
1:15:06
China. India was tight with the
US, you know, under Trump.
1:15:11
They've been technically tight
with Russia most of the
1:15:13
Yes. Well, and that is that
continues. Here's a report from
1:15:18
Bloomberg interviewing the Saudi
Minister of Oil
1:15:23
Minister, I am fascinated by the
view ease from Dubai and Abu
1:15:28
Dhabi to India, with all of your
remit for the Ziad family. Can
1:15:32
you please explain the India
response to this war in Ukraine?
1:15:38
There's such an interesting
relationship between the United
1:15:41
Arab Emirates in the please
explain to us the in the
1:15:45
approach that you see,
1:15:48
well, many, many countries have
have purchased from the our
1:15:54
looked at opportunities, and
some have seen a discount and
1:15:59
acted on it. And I think I think
that's the the sovereign right
1:16:05
decisions of these countries. We
don't have an oil and gas
1:16:09
sanctions on Russia and on
Russian oil and gas. So I think
1:16:14
many countries have elected to
go and purchase. Because there
1:16:19
is there has been a discount.
And then I think that's, that's
1:16:23
what we saw in the news, if
that's what you mean, and many
1:16:27
others are going to do the same.
So thinking of squeezing barrels
1:16:31
outside the market, when a
discount is there is just
1:16:35
illusionary in my view,
countries are going to go and
1:16:39
buy the cheaper, available crude
if it fits their refineries.
1:16:44
Minister, we have to leave it
there.
1:16:46
I find this I find this rather
interesting that they've got the
1:16:52
the the Saudi guy in there,
because the Saudis seem to be
1:16:58
kind of doing their own thing.
Moving moving away from or
1:17:03
possibly moving away from the,
from the petro dollar wanting to
1:17:08
sell stuff in riyals. I mean,
I'm just waiting for them to
1:17:10
come up with a digital digital
coin. But also, the thing is
1:17:17
UAA. They're sponsoring this
World Government Summit, which I
1:17:23
think is held in might be held
in Dubai, have you seen anything
1:17:26
of the World Government Summit?
1:17:29
I heard about it, but I haven't
followed up on it. Yeah. So the
1:17:32
I don't know anything about it.
1:17:34
Yeah, the World Government
Summit is, I guess it started in
1:17:38
2013. And the whole The whole
point is, let's, you know, it's
1:17:43
kind of like a World Economic
Forum, only then led by the
1:17:46
Saudis. And because they're
making their own moves. Here's
1:17:48
day one opening of this summit,
and the title of this session.
1:17:54
Are we ready for a new world
order? I mean, come on, come on
1:18:00
people. I love that. They're
making content for us. And Klaus
1:18:06
Schwab came in with a little a
little video message during the
1:18:11
World Government Summit.
1:18:12
We do not yet
1:18:13
knows the full extent and to
systemic and structural changes
1:18:19
which will happen.
1:18:21
However, we do know
1:18:24
that global energy systems food
systems and supply chains will
1:18:29
be deeply
1:18:30
affected. Here's what's very
interesting the Russian
1:18:36
oligarchs canceled bank banned
from everywhere, can't go
1:18:39
anywhere can't use their boats
can't use their planes can't
1:18:42
fly. Guess where they're all
showing up? They're showing up
1:18:48
at Dubai's Palm Jumeirah. You
know that that stupid
1:18:52
development that no one's like a
palm tree? It looks like a palm
1:18:56
tree that they constantly have
to bring bring sand in or dredge
1:19:00
because this is eroded eroding?
Yeah, so the Russian oligarchs
1:19:04
are now buying buying buying
places they as if these guys
1:19:09
knew it, I always wondered who
would be stupid enough to buy a
1:19:12
place on Palm Jumeirah? Well,
it's the Russians and they're
1:19:18
there. And so now I think we
need to do us
1:19:20
a place the Russians are just
always looking for a place to
1:19:23
party and spend money. Yeah,
Dubai gets the money instead of
1:19:27
instead of London, or Paris or
Santro pay right. I've heard
1:19:32
some fabulous stories about
these crazy Russians. Yes. It's
1:19:37
like instead of taking their
money and just okay, whatever.
1:19:41
We rouse them. Yeah, it out. We
don't want your money.
1:19:45
capitalise our way.
1:19:49
Through all this is taking
place, then we get the President
1:19:52
go. I'll fix that. We already
had this but it's 15 seconds.
1:19:55
So the big announcement
affecting gas prices today
1:19:57
President Biden is expected to
tap into To the nation's
1:20:00
strategic petroleum reserves to
release up to 1 million barrels
1:20:04
of oil per day, it's part of a
strategy to help bring down
1:20:07
prices at the pump, which
currently average for 23 a
1:20:10
gallon.
1:20:11
So that's our solution.
Meanwhile, everyone's waiting.
1:20:13
How many times weigh how many
times have we done this
1:20:16
supposedly done it? And where is
all this product is where is
1:20:21
there a tank farm somewhere that
I don't know about? underground
1:20:24
tanks? Where is all this?
Reserved versus stored?
1:20:28
Oh, that's a very good question.
I think we need to find out I
1:20:32
don't know I'm sure someone
will.
1:20:34
Sounds like a bookkeeping thing
to me. It sounds bull crap. Oh,
1:20:38
that's I like to know where it's
stored.
1:20:39
Even it's, yeah, that that makes
sense. Makes sense. I'd like to
1:20:45
release another billion a day
from the reserve. What reserve
1:20:48
eyes it's a whole both. Look, we
are. We're just as bad as Europe
1:20:54
where we're screwing ourselves.
We're screwing ourselves out of
1:20:57
food supplies out of oil supply.
Austin airport. They had a fun
1:21:03
little problem this past
weekend, as we know from our
1:21:07
professional airman, you in
these days of shortages, severe
1:21:11
shortages of flight personnel,
particularly pilots, you do not
1:21:15
want to book anything at the end
of the month, because you will
1:21:19
run into problems. That's why
we're leaving on April 1. And lo
1:21:23
and behold, April, I mean,
Austin airport Burke's room, not
1:21:26
only did they have lines out the
door around the block 3000 deep
1:21:32
at each TSA line, they had
people abandoning their rental
1:21:35
cars in the rental car line.
Yeah, I
1:21:38
heard this. I heard people just
leaving the cars all over the
1:21:41
place.
1:21:42
That's an Adam curry thing, old
la MTV days. But that was just
1:21:47
because I was a douchebag. And
the airport is warning they're
1:21:50
about to run out of jet fuel.
This is because of the diesel
1:21:53
shortage to diesel, kerosene
very similar. And so they're
1:21:56
warning that they're asking
flights to come in with enough
1:22:00
to continue on to the next
destination or return. And
1:22:03
because there's not enough fuel
to go around Nice. So we are
1:22:07
seeing the cracks. We're seeing
the cracks. And also, everybody
1:22:13
else is not being such a moron
about this Russia thing. And
1:22:18
they found all kinds of ways
around the so called swift D
1:22:21
platforming. And this is evident
in the Bloomberg Russia default
1:22:26
watch which one which one of our
producers now following for us?
1:22:30
Will they default on their
sovereign bonds? Will they be
1:22:32
able to pay? Well, everyone's
figured it out? No, the
1:22:36
financial world does not give
two shits about the political
1:22:39
part.
1:22:40
We've had a number of Russian
corporates that have
1:22:42
successfully made payments to
their creditors on their foreign
1:22:45
debt. And same with the Russian
sovereign, you know, so far, so
1:22:47
good. You know, they made their
coupon payments, they made 117
1:22:50
million mid month, they just
made another 100 and 2 million.
1:22:52
And then they actually started
wiring the funds on a $2 billion
1:22:55
principal payment, which is due
on the 31st. They've given
1:22:58
creditors the option to accept
payments and ruble. But
1:23:01
obviously no one's taking up
that option, at least no real
1:23:03
investor here in the US. So
shifting to the corporate side,
1:23:06
what's interesting today is we
have not one, not two, but
1:23:08
three, well, really two and a
half companies that have grace
1:23:11
periods expiring on coupon
coupon payments that were due.
1:23:14
What's interesting about all
three of these companies, those
1:23:16
being Russian rail, Euro cam and
shell pipe is that well, two out
1:23:21
of three Citi Group is the
payment agent. And Citi Group
1:23:23
has really toed the line here,
you know, they want to make sure
1:23:25
that they are not violating OFAC
sanctions that they are doing
1:23:28
everything by the book. And what
this doing in the case of
1:23:31
Severstal is there's a technical
block up and so they aren't able
1:23:35
to make payment, these companies
are unable to make payment
1:23:38
because they don't have all the
paperwork in place, Jonathan.
1:23:39
And so that's what these
companies are contending with.
1:23:42
And so it's not about capacity
or willingness to pay. It's
1:23:45
about the technical ability to
make that payment, which
1:23:47
matters. It's truly original,
isn't it to be thinking about it
1:23:50
that way.
1:23:51
It's just paperwork. Everything
else is in place. It doesn't
1:23:54
mean that much. Apparently, one
of our producers actually said
1:23:58
he had no problem sending money
to Russia through Canadian
1:24:02
banking services. Like this is
but we're acting as if it's as
1:24:12
if it's a fait accompli, you
can't Oh, it's all done. And now
1:24:15
that the wars ending of acid
many times, is there an off
1:24:18
ramp? Do we bring Russia back
into into SWIFT system? Do I do
1:24:24
other when when two companies
get the all clear? Will that
1:24:27
ever happen? I don't think so.
It's not intended to be that
1:24:30
way. And we go back to the World
Government Summit. Pippa
1:24:34
Malmgren PIPA, PIPA mon grin.
She is an economist, former
1:24:39
advisor to presidents around the
world, if she's on stage telling
1:24:44
us what's going down.
1:24:45
I remember talking to an
Australian diplomat at one point
1:24:48
about this break between the US
and China and said you know,
1:24:53
both sides are going to say
Whose team are you on? And he
1:24:56
said Our job is to make sure the
question never arises. But the
1:25:00
Question has arisen. And so I
think we have to go deeper. And
1:25:03
it's not about the US versus
China. It's about what underpins
1:25:08
a world order as always the
financial system. I was very
1:25:12
privileged. My father was an
adviser to Nixon when they came
1:25:15
off the gold standard in 71. And
so I was brought up with a kind
1:25:19
of inside view of how very
important the financial
1:25:23
structure is to absolutely
everything else. And what we're
1:25:27
seeing in the world today, I
think, is we are on the brink of
1:25:29
a dramatic change where we are
about to, and I'll say this
1:25:33
boldly, we're about to abandon
the traditional system of money
1:25:37
and accounting, and introduce a
new one. And the new ones. The
1:25:41
new accounting is what we call
blockchain. It means digital, it
1:25:46
means having a almost perfect
record of every single
1:25:50
transaction that happens in the
economy, which will give us far
1:25:54
greater clarity over what's
going on. It also raises huge
1:25:57
dangers in terms of the balance
of power between states and
1:26:01
citizens. In my opinion, we're
going to need a digital
1:26:04
constitution of human rights if
we're going to have digital
1:26:07
money. But also this new money
will be a sovereign in nature.
1:26:13
Most people think that digital
money is crypto, and private.
1:26:17
But I when I see our superpowers
introducing digital currency,
1:26:22
the Chinese were the first the
US is on the brink I think of
1:26:26
moving in the same direction the
Europeans have committed to that
1:26:29
as well.
1:26:31
Well, well, well.
1:26:32
I thought India was the first
1:26:35
I think it was actually Jamaica
or some weird place that did it
1:26:38
for some island that did it
first. India with the rupee and
1:26:43
and China. I don't even know if
those are those necessarily
1:26:47
blockchain. I think this lady is
just talking a little bit. But
1:26:52
something happened this week. A
bill was introduced by
1:26:58
Congressman Lynch, who was the
chair of the House Committee on
1:27:02
Financial Services Task Force on
financial technology introduced
1:27:06
hr 7231, the electronic currency
and secure hardware act. And the
1:27:14
acronym is very cute. E cash.
And it's been sponsored by a
1:27:19
bunch of tards, we got his Zeus,
Garcia Rashida to leave Ayana,
1:27:25
Presley, Alma Adams, these are
all they're all on the Committee
1:27:30
on Financial Services. And I
invite him I remind you, I think
1:27:33
the Maxine Waters is actually in
charge of all all financial
1:27:37
stuff. You know, we're
1:27:39
in big trouble now. But just the
names, you name those dumb,
1:27:42
those dummies those socialist
dummies. And so this is getting
1:27:47
the connection between socialism
and digital currency? Well,
1:27:50
I will tell you, because this
has nothing to do with
1:27:53
Blockchain. This is, and this is
within six months, I'm sorry,
1:27:59
180 days. There must be a phased
one ready to be implemented,
1:28:05
including software and hardware.
So they must have something teed
1:28:08
up. That will be a small test.
Oh, wait a minute, this day
1:28:11
there. Wait a minute, wait a
minutes followed by follow up
1:28:15
there optimist when you see the
description, followed by a
1:28:18
quote, large scale phase two
test. And so this is not
1:28:23
blockchain. They have some
fantasy that that this, it will
1:28:28
be equal to dollars, it will be
acceptable either way. So you
1:28:32
can give someone a paper dollar
or or a VESA dollar, and it will
1:28:37
be acceptable interchangeable
with this. It's a bearer
1:28:40
instrument. So they also think
that somehow they be able to,
1:28:44
you'll be able to hand somebody
some digital money offline
1:28:49
without anyone verifying that
this is a double spend. So that
1:28:52
that'll be fun to watch. But the
thing that got me the most is
1:28:56
how is this funded? How does it
work? That's the full legal. The
1:29:04
full legal description is
fantastic. I'll give you their
1:29:07
from their website, e cash.us.
The E cash Act establishes
1:29:13
permanent ongoing appropriations
authority for spending
1:29:16
undertaken in furtherance of E
cash with a specific amount to
1:29:20
be determined by the Treasury
Secretary on an ongoing basis to
1:29:24
the differences. This is not run
by the central bank, the Federal
1:29:28
Reserve so it's not a CB DC, it
is being issued by the Treasury.
1:29:34
So how is the Treasury going to
do this they will have a special
1:29:39
ring fenced overdraft account
for the Treasury for E cash at
1:29:44
the Federal Reserve with no
overdraft, no fees and no limit.
1:29:49
Furthermore, any money that is
created through that at the
1:29:52
Federal Reserve may not be
counted towards the overall
1:29:56
federal debt. And away we go. So
they literally are going to
1:30:04
create free money free in,
created by the Federal Reserve
1:30:10
and handed out to people in a,
quote, large scale trial within
1:30:13
a year from now. I don't think
they can create what they're
1:30:16
promising.
1:30:17
I don't think they can even come
close. But this I can now
1:30:20
understand why to leave and
these other bozos are involved.
1:30:23
They think it's an empty, yes,
1:30:25
this is a freeway. Yep, this is
a freeway right into it. You
1:30:29
just hate you need money, boom,
we'll just send it to you. The
1:30:33
trick here is that they doing it
from the from the Treasury and
1:30:36
not the Fed. And that's why no
one's looking at it.
1:30:41
Now, this is hilarious. Oh, it's
1:30:43
it's gonna be you should what
this whole website is fantastic.
1:30:47
They really are delusional in
what they think they can do.
1:30:50
Technically, I love the bad
enough. This won't be public,
1:30:54
these will be private
transactions. Well, the US
1:30:57
government will verify it, don't
worry well, and there'll be no
1:31:00
tracking, no tracking minimal. I
thought this
1:31:03
is got hackers unite quite a
bit.
1:31:06
Let me get I gotta read this.
Where's the will really be
1:31:11
private? Here we go. I'm
directing the treasury secretary
1:31:18
to preserve the primacy privacy,
anonymity, respecting and
1:31:21
minimal transaction data
gathering properties. It's just
1:31:26
minimal. It's just minimal. They
want to put it in a SIM card as
1:31:32
one experiment that was just
going to be great. So yes,
1:31:36
that's why these any of this is
the they even refer to the
1:31:39
digital dollar in this act. So
it's what Elizabeth Warren put
1:31:42
in with Bernie Sanders, revamped
when the very first COVID Bill
1:31:47
came out, when I thought we'd be
done in in like three weeks, the
1:31:51
first billion that they printed
up, remember that that's huge.
1:31:54
They wanted to go to a trillion
that that huge bill and the
1:31:56
digital dollar was in there,
too. They're just trying it
1:31:59
again. Well, this time, they
make it a little further.
1:32:03
So they're really trying to
crash the economy for good. Yes,
1:32:06
sir. Yes, sir. Sure. You are to
me, you are to me. I it This
1:32:14
isn't this isn't insane.
Madness. It's madness.
1:32:20
Especially when you hear what's
going on in the real financial
1:32:23
market
1:32:24
sell off in the bond market
continued today short, dated
1:32:26
yields hitting their highest
since 2019. The five year yield
1:32:31
top the 30 year yield and
technical jargon, the yield
1:32:35
curve
1:32:35
inverted yield curves inverted
for the exits, head for does
1:32:43
this happen? Often, the yield
curve
1:32:45
is about once every couple
years, but it happened is
1:32:48
supposed to create a recession
within six to nine months.
1:32:51
They have it here, it's 30
seconds left. That's said to be
1:32:54
a clear sign of a recession on
the way. Usually, if you buy US
1:32:59
government bond, you'll want a
higher return on your investment
1:33:02
if you're going to give your
money to the government for a
1:33:04
longer time. So the annual
return you get on a 30 year
1:33:08
treasury, aka its yield should
be higher than a five year
1:33:12
Treasury right? government's
taking my money for 30 years,
1:33:15
after all, the better sweeten
the deal. But today, for some
1:33:19
reason, the yield on the 30 year
fell below the yield on the five
1:33:24
year. Right. So that's the
inversion. Wait, if you
1:33:28
also call it crossover now, the
last time this happened, which
1:33:33
was we track this on DH
employment was about three years
1:33:36
ago not supposed to create a
recession within six to nine
1:33:39
months. And it never happened.
It just didn't happen. And it
1:33:44
more recently, we don't always
explain is that government is
1:33:48
screwed up the system so much of
this free money and printing
1:33:52
money and the MMT and all the
rest of it that they can't seem
1:33:55
to do so all the old rules don't
apply anymore. So this inversion
1:34:02
doesn't really mean anything. I
guess.
1:34:07
Well, just one more data point
of the change of the financial
1:34:13
system. And as the consultant
told us, the accounting, the
1:34:18
CEO, co founder of ripple, the
XRP shit coin, this is the one
1:34:25
that that you know, since the
beginning of the lockdown even
1:34:29
before the lockdown this XRP
it's the one Dubai that's what's
1:34:33
going to be the new Swift they
have cute quantum financial
1:34:36
system off world servers, this
is going to be it and indeed XRP
1:34:41
ripple the company does have a
lot of banks exchanging
1:34:47
financial data and I believe
payment or directly payments
1:34:51
with each other through XRP.
They have like 50 banks in it.
1:34:55
But this guy all of a sudden is
so worried about Bitcoin. I'll
1:34:59
just speak about That selfishly,
that he has started a campaign
1:35:04
with Greenpeace put the put 5
million Chris Larson is his
1:35:08
name, put $5 million into it. We
want Bitcoin to change the code,
1:35:15
not the climate decision. And
they're proposing a code change
1:35:19
to Bitcoin which of course would
make it completely not Bitcoin
1:35:22
what it is, but they're so
worried about the the perfect
1:35:27
money that Bitcoin is that
they're now trying to weaken it
1:35:31
and trying to have Elon Musk and
any other industry
1:35:37
representatives shill for this
change in the code to go from
1:35:43
proof of work to God knows
whatever, and it's pathetic. So
1:35:47
I think a lot of people are
running scared about what's
1:35:49
next. What are we going to use
in this Ecash chip man, if
1:35:55
nothing passes, can you imagine
a blank check? It'll it'll
1:35:59
steamroll over everything if
they can make it work. Move.
1:36:06
I don't know what to tell you.
Die. Seems like a disaster
1:36:10
waiting to happen. Yes,
1:36:11
yes. It's the great reset. This
is why we laugh about it. It
1:36:16
will be so good.
1:36:18
Great collapse. Well,
1:36:22
yes, yes.
1:36:24
going on. I do have one last
Ukraine clip. This is Zelinsky.
1:36:31
Ukraine Ukraine's the Lensky. He
wants more. He wants more stuff.
1:36:34
He wants more money from us.
1:36:36
There is calling for more
international sanctions on
1:36:39
Russia saying that will put his
country in a stronger position
1:36:43
to negotiate an end to the war
and be ours. Michelle Kalin
1:36:46
reports the US has also been
trying to strengthen Ukraine's
1:36:49
hand the Biden
1:36:49
administration has been
skeptical about Russia's
1:36:52
intentions and peace talks and
believes that President Putin
1:36:55
doesn't have a clear picture
about his country's losses in
1:36:58
Ukraine. Secretary of State
Antony Blinken was asked about
1:37:01
that during this top in Algiers,
1:37:03
one of the Achilles heels of
autocracies is that you don't
1:37:07
have people in those systems who
said Chili's?
1:37:10
Did he know tell?
1:37:12
Let's listen again, there's in
Ukraine. Secretary of State
1:37:14
Antony Blinken was asked about
that during this stop in
1:37:17
Algiers,
1:37:18
one of the Achilles heels. No.
He said we don't have people in
1:37:23
those systems who speak truth
1:37:25
to power or will have the
ability to speak truth to power.
1:37:28
And I think that is something
that we're seeing in Russia.
1:37:31
President Biden spoke to
Ukraine's president to get an
1:37:34
update on negotiations and to
offer $500 million in aid. The
1:37:38
White House says the US is also
looking into more sanctions,
1:37:42
more sanctions, more sanctions,
more aid,
1:37:45
more sanctions. Come on. Hey, so
let's let's just let's just talk
1:37:50
about let's talk about the
throwback to the 70s because
1:37:55
it's it's too good at this
point. The Economist came out
1:38:00
with a piece we what is wrong
with Europe? Don't you remember
1:38:05
the 70s people this is not a
problem. Why
1:38:08
is Europe not rediscovering the
spirit of the 1970s. Back then,
1:38:13
the European public was expected
to accept some discomfort and
1:38:16
inconvenience. Speed Limits went
from the exception to the norm.
1:38:21
Except on German autobahns. Of
course. Dutch and German cities
1:38:25
were among those that went
pedestrian one day a week.
1:38:28
France decreed public buildings
should be no warmer than 20
1:38:32
degrees centigrade. degrees
lower than today's European
1:38:35
average. Television Broadcasting
was shut off at 11pm an idea
1:38:41
that could usefully be revived
for social media. Oh yeah,
1:38:44
daylight saving schemes adopted
during the world wars was soon
1:38:48
revived across the continent.
Whatever it takes, involved
1:38:52
people dawning jumpers
1:38:55
wear sweater take and they're
already starting it take a 10
1:38:59
minute shower or we'll turn it
off. This is starting this is
1:39:03
the 70 year zactly the same I
haven't I have another 70s
1:39:07
reference for you that will blow
your mind.
1:39:12
As chaos engulf the Capitol
Building on January 6, President
1:39:16
Trump spoke repeatedly on the
phone with allies and
1:39:19
supporters, some urging him to
put an end to the violence but
1:39:23
none of those calls are
reflected in the 11 pages of
1:39:26
White House Records for January
six given to the House Select
1:39:30
Committee. There is a massive
seven hour and 37 minute gap and
1:39:34
calls
1:39:36
why Watergate tapes anybody
1:39:42
by the way, if anybody remembers
that era and has never seen the
1:39:46
movie deck I recommend it.
1:39:51
So explain the Watergate tape
missing record or or erased
1:39:56
recording the gap in the
recording?
1:39:58
Yes, there was during the Nixon
lead up to what they were going,
1:40:03
they were going to impeach me
finally be quick before they
1:40:06
began the hearings, but there
are Watergate hearings going on.
1:40:10
And Nixon had used the system
that had been put in place by
1:40:13
Lyndon Johnson or maybe even
Truman, but somebody had put up
1:40:17
a system in the White House,
John court all call everything
1:40:21
that was going on in there.
Yeah, Johnson, nobody knew about
1:40:24
it. It was recording every
meeting every phone call
1:40:28
everything that was going on in
the, in the Oval Office,
1:40:31
particularly
1:40:32
Johnson, particularly if Johnson
being incredibly racist, Dick. I
1:40:35
mean, that's
1:40:37
racist. That's the basis pig.
And in fact, you'd think if
1:40:41
those recordings were made
better known to the black
1:40:44
community, they'd vote
Republican, but that's, we
1:40:47
skipped that. Yeah. So So
Nixon's. They had all these
1:40:50
recordings, and Nixon talking
about talking tough, and he's
1:40:53
talking to his buddies and all
these things going on. And then
1:40:56
according to the, or the way
they put it this his secretary,
1:41:01
and I forgot her name. She had a
very famous name, and she was
1:41:04
the secretary private secretary,
accidentally erased because she
1:41:10
was looking for some blank tapes
or something. Some phony baloney
1:41:13
excuse and she actually erased
like seven hours rosemary,
1:41:17
Rosemary woods. Moo Rose Mary
woods. Yep. So rosemary,
1:41:22
accidentally erased seven hours
of tape some like that.
1:41:26
No, it wasn't it was it was much
less than I thought it was two
1:41:28
hours. It
1:41:29
was a lot. It was something
important dates late two and a
1:41:32
half minutes. 18 Okay, what was
an important two minutes, it was
1:41:36
all in only 18 and a half
minutes.
1:41:38
The beauty was, the beauty was
because I remember this my my
1:41:43
grandmother wifey Marilyn, she
would send my mom actual
1:41:47
cassette tapes. through the
mail. We were living in the
1:41:50
Netherlands at the time when
this was going down. That she
1:41:53
recorded next to the television
on her little portable you know
1:41:57
the the record the dictaphone
recorder, we'd have to press
1:41:59
down a little Olympus, or
whatever, Tandy Radio Shack. And
1:42:05
my mom would then play those
listening because you couldn't
1:42:08
get that kind of coverage in in
Europe at the time and she
1:42:11
listened to them. And my
grandmother, of course, jokingly
1:42:14
called them the Watergate tapes,
which she would she would send
1:42:16
to my mom. So I heard a lot of
this. And at issue was, and I
1:42:21
remember, might even seen some
video of this. They were trying
1:42:25
to figure out to prove that this
was bullshit. And so they said,
1:42:28
okay, so Rosemary woods, she had
to have her left hand over here
1:42:33
her right leg twisted under her
her left eyeball looking over
1:42:37
there you do you recall any of
that? It was crazy.
1:42:41
It was something they're trying
to prove. Even though anyone
1:42:43
who's had a tape recorder when
they were kids knows it wasn't
1:42:46
that hard to erase part? Of
1:42:48
course not. And there's even
pictures if you look at the if
1:42:52
you look at the Wikipedia of how
she was reaching and how that
1:42:55
because it was a footswitch
involved. So that's a total
1:42:59
throwback. I'm gonna do one more
just to completely nail the
1:43:02
coffin shut. We were talking
about 1976 Academy Awards. 1976
1:43:08
when we had the first ABC aired,
and for the first time, the
1:43:12
first big scandal of a streaker
onstage running around naked,
1:43:16
what was one of the biggest
movies of 1976
1:43:23
I don't have one of your things
are bad. Everybody knows things
1:43:26
are bad. It's a depression.
Everybody's out of work, or
1:43:30
scared of losing their job.
1:43:32
This is network and just listen
to a little bit of this iconic
1:43:36
speech how how history is
rhyming at us.
1:43:39
The dollar by the nickels worth
banks are going bust shopkeepers
1:43:43
keep a gun under the counter.
punks are running wild in the
1:43:46
streets. There's nobody anywhere
seems to know what to do and
1:43:48
there's no end to it. We know
the air is unfit to breathe and
1:43:53
our food is unfit to eat. We sit
watching our TVs while some
1:43:57
local newscaster tells us today
we had 15 homicides and 63
1:44:01
violent crimes as if that's the
way it's supposed to be. We know
1:44:05
things are bad worse than bad.
They're crazy. It's like
1:44:08
everything everywhere is going
crazy. So we don't go out
1:44:10
anymore. We sit in the house of
scoring the world we're living
1:44:14
in is getting smaller. And all
we say is please at least leave
1:44:17
us alone in our living room, my
toaster and my TV and my steel
1:44:21
belted radios and I won't say
anything. Just leave us alone.
1:44:24
Well, I'm not going to leave you
alone. I want you to get back. I
1:44:28
don't want you to protest. I
don't want you to ride I don't
1:44:31
want you to write do
1:44:32
there's also a thing about the
Russians in here. Maybe maybe
1:44:34
that got cut out somehow
1:44:36
Congress members I wouldn't know
what to tell you to write. I
1:44:38
don't know what to do about the
depression and the inflation in
1:44:40
the Russian There we go. First,
you've got to get maked you've
1:44:46
got to say I'm a human being God
dammit. My life has value.
1:44:52
tell you man. We are I love
being old now. This is great.
1:44:58
It's like Oh, I know exactly
what's Gonna go down. We've seen
1:45:01
this literally seen this movie
before.
1:45:03
Yeah, yeah, figure, remember
some of the details, you're in
1:45:06
good shape. So, yes, the 70s I
know and my list, I don't have
1:45:11
it in front of me, but I'll read
it off. And it's just like one
1:45:13
thing after the end is more, and
there's little subtle things
1:45:17
that I have not. You know, like,
for example, prostitution. This
1:45:23
hasn't reemerged in any real
way. The prostitution was
1:45:27
unbelievable in the 70s.
1:45:29
What about only fans? We just
have a different version? Ah,
1:45:33
you know, I'm trying to I don't
I can't see that it is a quite
1:45:37
the same as street walkers. And
when I say prostitutes, street
1:45:44
walkers and their wares,
Berkeley and San Francisco
1:45:47
around here. There was so many
street walkers. It's
1:45:50
unbelievable. I have not seen
it. Return to that, in fact,
1:45:54
just the opposite. They've been
cracking down anything some girl
1:45:56
shows up. Because it's human
trafficking. So there's like,
1:46:02
you know, that's, yeah. So that
hasn't reemerged in
1:46:05
Wall Street but streetwalkers
it's just we have modern
1:46:08
versions of it. Now. You don't
have to display your wares on
1:46:11
the internet.
1:46:15
Yeah, it just doesn't seem to
have the same impact the
1:46:18
internet.
1:46:19
I'm waiting for swallowing
goldfish to come back. Was that
1:46:24
the 70s?
1:46:26
I think that was way before the
1:46:28
60s Maybe? Yeah, yeah. No, it
had to be I was. Yeah, you're
1:46:32
right. Because my dad did that
in college like a dope.
1:46:35
Slowly swelled old fish that
didn't match up a few years
1:46:39
back. At least not in the 2021
era. But in the 2020 era. Tide
1:46:45
pod
1:46:46
Tide Pods? Yes. How about pet
rocks? Can we get pet rocks
1:46:49
coming by
1:46:49
dip pet rocks was from the 70s
and I have yet to see
1:46:53
an analogue of that spoon
bending with regular
1:46:56
spoon bending has not I don't I
think that was 60s. Maybe it was
1:47:01
maybe he peaked?
1:47:01
No, no, I remember oh wriggler
in the 70s he was all
1:47:06
right. Yeah, there's no full
baloney Majid CB
1:47:09
radios. Sorry, CB radios.
1:47:13
Yes, CB radios? No, there's
Well, I say chat. Maybe chat.
1:47:18
Internet chat slack and Slack.
Slack is your standard slack
1:47:22
slacks good. In fact, if you're
anybody who wants to be an old
1:47:26
timer in tech, they remember
when CompuServe was a big deal.
1:47:30
They had this CB simulator.
1:47:32
No, that was their chat. It was
called CB simulator. You're
1:47:36
right. And you have all kinds of
data go to channel nine if
1:47:39
you're an emergency, you'd have
a handle. Snowbird so Yeah, what
1:47:48
else was going it's there's so
much coming back from the from
1:47:51
the it's so odd. The fashion is
coming for sure.
1:47:56
Is a lot. Yeah, we'll name roll.
1:47:59
How about roller skates? Old
school roller skates.
1:48:03
That was actually the 70s where
the inline skates first came in.
1:48:07
Was that inline? Yep. Hmm. Okay,
well, nothing new there. Yo yo
1:48:14
yo Yos.
1:48:15
Yo Yos are pre 70. Mm
1:48:18
hmm. Frisbees.
1:48:22
Oh, Frisbees. I don't know about
Frisbees. When that came it
1:48:25
wasn't on my list of 70 stocks.
1:48:27
Well, we sent we go we send them
people Apollo mission was coming
1:48:31
up in the 70s There's so much
there's so much but we should be
1:48:35
really looking closer.
1:48:36
We're supposed to have a moon
launch in two years. Yes. Can't
1:48:39
wait. Artemis R is an Artemis is
going to be the moonshot or is
1:48:43
Artemis the Mars thing?
1:48:44
Now Artemis is I think Artemis
is the moon and yeah Musk's
1:48:48
thing is Mars.
1:48:51
Yeah, so so that would be
similar because the moon should
1:48:55
well really the 70s It all ended
with this was 60s 60s and early
1:49:02
70s And then it then the program
kind of waned didn't it?
1:49:07
That way they pull the plug.
Yeah.
1:49:11
Well is going is going to be
very interesting to watch
1:49:15
because that and again I I'm
happy now that I have some age
1:49:19
on me because like holy crap, I
really I'm waiting for the swing
1:49:22
Schwinn bike with the banana
saddle. I had one of those with
1:49:27
that with a monkey handlebars.
Mm hmm. Okay. Okay, with that
1:49:33
I'd like to thank you for your
courage say in the morning to
1:49:35
you the man who put the sea in
the trip of clump. Ladies and
1:49:39
gentlemen, Mr. John C. Devorah.
Back
1:49:44
to you Mr. Curry also in the
morning those sorts of secrets
1:49:46
in the grand fleet near
subsequent water. It all the
1:49:49
days and nights out in the
1:49:51
morning to the trolls and the
troll room. Hello trolls How you
1:49:54
doing? You said you were going
to throw some of those cans It's
1:50:00
become a hazard.
1:50:02
Yes, become a hazard and can be
careful
1:50:05
with the CANS man. People are
listening live to us right now
1:50:09
you can do that as well. All you
have to do is convert into a
1:50:11
troll. And on show days
Thursdays and Sundays 11,
1:50:15
Central Time. In Tejas, you go
to troll room.io And that brings
1:50:21
you right to a wonderful live
stream, we can listen to the
1:50:24
show live and all kinds of shows
24/7 no agenda stream.com And
1:50:28
then there's also a chat room.
It's a simple IRC based chat
1:50:31
rooms, you can even access from
any IRC client you might want to
1:50:35
use. It's old school, and that's
why it's a troll room. You just
1:50:38
go in there troll around, say hi
to everybody else. Troll. Troll
1:50:41
me troll whoever you want. And
let's count these trolls see how
1:50:44
many we have checking us out
today. Trolls Hands up. Hands up
1:50:48
their trolls. Very
disappointing. Very
1:50:53
disappointing. 2163.
1:50:56
Wow, that was less less than
last.
1:50:58
That's that's a that's a low.
That's a low.
1:51:02
Yeah, nobody wants to hear about
it. You don't want to talk about
1:51:05
they want to
1:51:06
they want to talk about the
slap. Oh, was it real? It
1:51:08
was a real slap but they don't
want to talk about Ukraine
1:51:11
because you know where it's too
triggering
1:51:13
is too triggering is triggering
is triggering. I don't want to
1:51:16
know the truth. I don't want to
know the truth. Let me be happy
1:51:21
with my Oscars. If you want to
if you want to converse with us,
1:51:29
outside of the troll room they
wanted to go to Mastodon you can
1:51:34
get a mastodon account almost
anywhere they're free. You can
1:51:37
set up your own server which is
preferable you can get one for
1:51:39
like eight bucks a month. You
can have your own community you
1:51:42
can control what's going on
there if you want however you
1:51:45
want to and you can federate
with the rest of the fediverse
1:51:49
and you follow Adam at no agenda
social.com Jhansi, Dvorak
1:51:53
endogenous social calm and you
will see all of our posts or
1:51:56
replies. Start with stuff will
start to flow over in your
1:51:59
federated tab. You'll see all
the no agenda social.com people.
1:52:04
It's a very cool system. And
it's worth trying out
1:52:07
particularly because there's no
censorship from us. There's no
1:52:11
algos, there's no flame wars
diet real quick and it's just
1:52:15
fun as a lot of very smart
people on there. It's no agenda
1:52:17
social calm part of the time
town and they're troublemakers,
1:52:21
and you can just block them if
you don't like it.
1:52:23
Yeah, you can. I've gotten
actually after i for the past
1:52:28
month or so I have had very few
reports. He said something
1:52:33
wrong.
1:52:34
Because no I don't think that
has anything to do with the
1:52:37
total number of violations it
has to do with the fact that
1:52:40
everyone finally has a clue that
the reports do nothing
1:52:42
corrects the reports. I read
them because sometimes there's
1:52:48
actual spam you know, you want
to get rid of a spammer that
1:52:51
happens. But otherwise No, it's
It's all pretty good. So it's
1:52:56
part of our time talent and
treasure the trifecta of the
1:52:59
value for value model which
we've been employing have
1:53:01
deployed for working on 15 years
now which means you produce it
1:53:06
you got to produce this show.
And we have great producers
1:53:09
people sending in things they're
expert in you hear even from
1:53:13
Germany, you hear we have boots
on the ground we have people in
1:53:16
all walks of life all
industries. Also we need people
1:53:20
helping with our servers with
artwork with with clips with
1:53:25
with everything and with money.
We can't pay the bills than the
1:53:28
show ends but it's been going
okay so far for 14 and a half
1:53:32
years. The artwork for episode
1437 Which of course we titled
1:53:37
Bruce force, how could we not
honor the President with that
1:53:41
was brought to us by Roger
roundy a resounding unanimous
1:53:46
pick for the Zelinsky and Putin
Oscar image a thing of beauty
1:53:54
lots of people really liked this
one
1:53:59
I liked it go we love actually
used I use the another roundy
1:54:04
piece two three had to eat it
was for the newsletter because
1:54:10
it was the color I wanted I was
looking for read and it
1:54:13
coincident it was read and he
also had deep slaps shown as we
1:54:17
go out and hit people in the
mouth right was tomb and then I
1:54:21
went and looked in Twitter and I
saw a couple of
1:54:25
have similar meanings.
1:54:28
One woman that's I don't know
why she's following me I think
1:54:30
I've ended up blocking her and
have her unfollowed you by the
1:54:34
way if you're on Twitter you
don't need somebody following
1:54:36
you because it just tracking
your round. You can you can turn
1:54:39
off their follow unbeknownst to
them
1:54:41
quite you can unfollow someone,
you can have them you can follow
1:54:45
you. Really? Yeah.
1:54:48
How do you do that? Little trick
will tell us the trick. This is
1:54:51
this is a great
1:54:53
little the little dots there and
you get a drop down menu so you
1:54:56
can before you block. On the
tweet itself you mean on the on
1:55:00
the
1:55:00
tweet on the person
1:55:04
it I think it shows up on the
tweet but on the person for sure
1:55:07
and you get the drop down menu
and on there says, unfollow it
1:55:11
is that this says something I
get to have to go back and look
1:55:14
right now for exactly the exact
wording but that's unbelievable.
1:55:17
Yeah and then and it makes
mention when you hit it says
1:55:20
your this person will not be
notified that you did this.
1:55:24
Wow. This is like some reverse
kind of weird censorship. Yeah,
1:55:30
very good. That's very
interesting.
1:55:32
The more you know, in the
morning
1:55:35
Thanks. Good tip. Good tip. So
of course, the slap had not
1:55:40
happened so that artwork could
not have been created yet. No
1:55:44
one was bitching that we were
racists you would
1:55:47
hold on a second these are the
people you need to engage start
1:55:50
DMing her Don't unfollow her oh
1:55:53
she has a bunch of blue wave Why
1:55:55
Why was she Why will we racist
why were cheat now by the way
1:55:59
she didn't tell me this She said
you're racist not me.
1:56:02
I'm doing a posted the
newsletter you didn't write so
1:56:05
you're racist. Am racist. So
what was the racist part? It
1:56:10
showed the two blue and black
guy slapping Oh That's
1:56:13
racist. Okay, I got it all
right, by the way. I just want I
1:56:17
forgot to mention one thing. If
there's another thing I learned
1:56:21
from mo taboo amongst black men
do not you do not want to be
1:56:28
captured anywhere on tape are
certainly not on live television
1:56:32
broadcast as the quote angry
black man. It is very, very
1:56:38
triggering very the black men
like Shoot man you do not you
1:56:43
don't make the jokes about the
black woman's hair and you never
1:56:45
want to come across as the angry
black man on TV. So we're
1:56:51
racist. Okay, got it.
1:56:55
Especially I just had her
unfollow me so that you know I'm
1:56:57
sad about that. Obviously didn't
she was not a listener of the
1:57:00
show. She followed me for Sue
who knows what reason got to be
1:57:03
because anyone who knows our
show knows what that was
1:57:06
referring to we hit people in
the mouth now is what it said
1:57:10
and it will refer to our your
tagline
1:57:12
how many followers did she have?
Zero.
1:57:14
She had quite a few. Oh, my God,
1:57:17
you you're kicking out audience.
1:57:20
Now. Let's look at some of the
user that she her. By the way,
1:57:24
my my wife, you know, I always
bitch about this. And I'm going
1:57:27
to go on my LinkedIn. By the
end. I want to mention a couple
1:57:29
of things. One, anyone who wants
to follow me on LinkedIn, just
1:57:33
ask for an invite. I'll take it.
But my daughter J DeVore. AK
1:57:38
just started a LinkedIn page and
she needs some people to in her
1:57:42
network. Go to your LinkedIn and
add her and see if she invited
1:57:48
her whatever. However you do it
and then she'll she'll tag it
1:57:52
and you'll get on hers. She's
got a Cimino. She got like one
1:57:57
me
1:57:58
well, you started her PSU she
has marked Wagner and she has
1:58:03
some other some other chicks
some other vague chick
1:58:06
who's a he Devorah j and this is
only one of them. So
1:58:13
okay, I'll be sure I hate
LinkedIn. Yeah, I refuse to
1:58:18
participate in it another net
one other network with a with a
1:58:23
million badges telling you how
many unread items you have
1:58:27
to take people that follow me on
link or connected me on LinkedIn
1:58:31
that have key pm on the top of
the thing. Or she her I just
1:58:36
find it so annoying. My wife
uses this but she uses she it.
1:58:43
Yeah, that's hilarious. I don't
get it.
1:58:46
She it Oh, I
1:58:48
get it. She slashed it. Okay, I
got it. Alright, other pieces of
1:58:55
art that were looked at and
considered, of course was the
1:59:01
Lenski the Tom Hanks of Ukraine
was pretty obscure. The smelts
1:59:07
your amygdala were a couple of
smelting things Sean Penn
1:59:10
smelting things by the way. We
need to hold that cook to it.
1:59:15
Good luck. Yeah. American Dream
smelting
1:59:19
anything? He's a please like
Barbra Streisand who's going to
1:59:22
move on to the country of George
Bush got elected. Not just
1:59:26
George Bush. No everybody and
wronged Republicans moving out
1:59:30
of the country Trump. Trump is
gonna move I'm gonna move out of
1:59:34
the country.
1:59:36
I like to Bruce force, but
nothing really everything kind
1:59:40
of paled in comparison to the
roundy piece. I thought the woke
1:59:46
wash was pretty good. Gabe
Grider. Put that together but
1:59:50
it's too small. These letters
it's never going to read just
1:59:55
too small. Mike Riley had a Sean
Penn Oscar melted, which I
2:00:02
remember saying, hey, that's
kind of cool.
2:00:03
Yeah, you'd like that one right
away. Yeah,
2:00:05
I did. The no agenda playbook. I
think it's lost on everybody.
2:00:13
See was anything on the next
page? I think that was
2:00:18
it. I did like Darrin O'Neill's
no agenda American Dream rent to
2:00:23
own.
2:00:23
Yes, that was good. We talked
about that.
2:00:27
He's always got the good
fallback pieces.
2:00:29
It's an evergreen, and it's also
kind of in the 70s vibe, which I
2:00:32
liked, even though doesn't have
the pure 70s color, but has kind
2:00:36
of the
2:00:37
Oh, yeah, I think it dayglo
orange would have been better.
2:00:42
Well, we highly appreciate what
Roger roundy put together. I
2:00:45
think Roger is going to be at
the South Carolina meetup when
2:00:48
we're there. So I'm excited. I
2:00:50
believe it's gonna be probably
you. Maybe he arranged an
2:00:53
auction off a quick small print.
2:00:57
You just want to piece by him,
don't you? Just tell me what you
2:01:01
want? And I'll tell him to go
I'm getting
2:01:02
a piece. Fine. Don't worry. Oh,
okay.
2:01:06
Thank you very much to the
artists for all artists who
2:01:10
always diligently bring their
time and talent. We appreciate
2:01:13
it so much. You can see these
images in a podcasting 2.0 app,
2:01:20
which you can find a new podcast
apps calm. I did want to
2:01:23
mention, we were not invited Of
course, John, but the big
2:01:26
podcast. evolutions took place
last weekend, last weekend in
2:01:31
Los Angeles. Anything about it?
Well, it's it's a big podcast
2:01:36
Conference, which is paid for by
the assholes of the industry.
2:01:41
That would be Spotify, Amazon,
Google, you know, YouTube
2:01:45
announced their podcast
initiative.
2:01:48
Oh, they must have had a big
special they must had a huge
2:01:50
discussion about the podcasting
2.0 initiative. And
2:01:53
interestingly, interestingly,
there were multiple sessions,
2:01:59
where podcasting 2.0 was
discussed based upon as surveys,
2:02:07
and podcast index and
podcasting. 2.0 sticks out above
2:02:12
Spotify, Apple, Amazon, and
Google head and shoulders in all
2:02:16
categories.
2:02:19
Well, it makes sense if you
think about it.
2:02:21
Yeah. Like, like innovation
responsiveness, you know,
2:02:25
getting shit done having all the
all the podcasts you want to
2:02:28
listen to. So yeah, it's
2:02:30
interesting. You bring this up.
I don't want to just sit here
2:02:32
and talk about this, because we
talked about it enough. But the
2:02:35
responsiveness thing can you
explain that? What does that
2:02:38
mean? And why is podcasting two
point pike se 2.0? If you post
2:02:45
there, it's, it instantly comes
up? Yes,
2:02:48
this is an innovation called pod
ping. And so typically, let's
2:02:53
just take Apple as an example.
But you know, the Spotify, let's
2:02:56
say you Spotify. The Spotify
needs to update the feeds to see
2:03:01
if there's something new. The
way this has been done for
2:03:04
almost 20 years, is you get a
whole bunch of servers and
2:03:07
they're looking at every single
one of the millions of podcast
2:03:11
feeds and polling it got
something new, got something new
2:03:13
copy got something new. Yeah.
Which is just screwing up the
2:03:17
internet very wasteful. So we
created pod ping, which is a
2:03:21
blockchain specifically built
for this purpose. Where the
2:03:25
hosting company says, Okay,
this, this podcast is updated.
2:03:31
It puts that on the blockchain.
So it's, it's immutable. It's
2:03:35
there forever. So you when you
want to see if something's
2:03:38
updated, you don't have to go
and pull millions of feeds. You
2:03:41
just talked to the pod ping
blockchain. In fact, the way
2:03:46
we've set it up is the
blockchain pings the app. So if
2:03:50
you upload to rss.com, or
buzzsprout.com, or there's
2:03:54
several more than an hour using
pod ping, the minute you post
2:03:58
within like 60 seconds, when I
say 90 seconds, it will be
2:04:03
available and notified as such
on podcasting 2.0 apps. And we
2:04:09
have lobbied to some degree that
this should all companies should
2:04:15
be doing this apple is literally
killing the climate. With these
2:04:20
computers, needlessly polling
this stuff all day long. Same
2:04:25
for Spotify. They're killing
polar bears. And anybody can use
2:04:30
it. They may be using it, but
they don't have to tell us it's
2:04:32
open and free. Anybody can use
it, and it solves a shitload of
2:04:36
stuff.
2:04:37
Pretty cool. lievable and the
point, so that brings me to the
2:04:42
other point. Sounds rehearsed.
2:04:44
Nice, nice. I'm surprised you're
going
2:04:47
the other point, which is why
weren't you invited to go
2:04:51
discuss this stuff in front of
this audience?
2:04:54
Because Will Ferrell was doing a
keynote brah
2:04:58
Oh, yeah, the major Yeah, yeah.
He's the pod father.
2:05:00
Yes, he is the pod father and
YouTube was making a big
2:05:03
announcement, which was not a
big announcement. So what's
2:05:07
happened is there's this capture
of podcasting by companies who
2:05:11
believe they will, they will be
able to figure out two things
2:05:14
discoverability and delay and
making money now, of course,
2:05:17
it's too late.
2:05:18
It's too late. You've already
screwed them. You single
2:05:22
handedly screwed their, their
plans for the future.
2:05:26
Yes, I hope that Thank you.
Thank you. I
2:05:29
think that's great. Somebody had
to do it.
2:05:32
I'm happy to be the guy. And
with that, let's thank some of
2:05:36
our very own value for value
producers who have come in to
2:05:39
help us with the treasure
portion of the three T's. We
2:05:42
start with our executive
producers for episode 1438 And
2:05:47
we start with Earl mittens of a
distance of a world distant.
2:05:52
He's in Louisville, Kentucky.
Screams right up top switcheroo
2:05:56
with screams out as well is the
donation $2,143.28
2:06:03
Is the dame Barrett to NES
Sunbury net to net Baronet this
2:06:08
let's read let's read please
credit executive producer ship
2:06:12
and the incident Baronet is hood
to marry Brett in celebration of
2:06:16
her birthday on March 28. I
would however, like to hijack
2:06:20
the suspension dispensation of
karma to all of the big hearts
2:06:25
and warm souls that populated
the February 14 Nashville meetup
2:06:30
including the aforementioned
birthday girl cheers gents. Earl
2:06:34
mittens of a world distance and
we'll throw this karma here.
2:06:39
You've got karma
2:06:41
now I need to say something
about Mary Brett because this is
2:06:44
I feel really horrible. Mary
Brett if I believe I'm right.
2:06:49
She was the one who was driving
in her van she kind of changed
2:06:53
her life and she's been doing
these music bass trivia games at
2:06:58
parties and she went to
Nashville she was driving to
2:07:01
Nashville to to be there and to
meet the keeper and myself and
2:07:05
of course I wound up having
COVID who couldn't go but she
2:07:08
has some pickles that she wanted
to drop off coming through
2:07:11
Fredericksburg on our way back
some pickles she put in a jar
2:07:16
yourself now I didn't see emails
because I doing something else I
2:07:19
don't read all the emails and
you know every single day after
2:07:23
go and clear out the box every
two days she apparently was
2:07:27
stranded with a with a broken
alternator about 20 miles
2:07:33
outside of town didn't have my
my number but she emailed me
2:07:38
slept in the van while waiting
for to find a someone who could
2:07:43
fix this bus. I completely
missed her. Oh yeah, I feel
2:07:48
really horrible about that.
Because I'm very sorry.
2:07:51
She had pickles. She has
2:07:53
some pickles that she want.
Yeah, she took them she wanted
2:07:56
to give them to us in in
Nashville she took them to the
2:07:59
Nashville meetup and was driving
back I think she
2:08:02
was there fermented Pickles the
whole thing could have could
2:08:04
have
2:08:04
exploded. You're You're always
one for a good gag. Jhansi
2:08:09
Dvorak. Anyway, I'm very happy
that she will receive her Insta
2:08:13
Diem Baronet this hood well
deserved and thank you so much
2:08:15
Earl mittens of a distant world
very kind of you sir.
2:08:19
Wow Yeah. Onward with normally
at the top analysts are on a
2:08:24
mission dark patch of lower sub
blow of their slobodian Wow. He
2:08:29
came in I was wondering he's
gonna make it in this month. But
2:08:31
he did 1720 which is a good
number. Great, but he gave like
2:08:38
recent notes. This was quite
quite lengthy. Oh, he's
2:08:41
usually quite short.
2:08:43
Yes, he's got something to say
once in a while. Okay, thank you
2:08:47
all producers to make who make
this program so enjoyable. I've
2:08:51
had quite a bit of beat in the
air and accumulate hmm,
2:08:56
accumulated an album of PCR
tests. Okay, here's my here it's
2:09:04
like a bunch of mementos one of
those you know what do you call
2:09:09
them when you clip clip and
stuff and saving it? I have
2:09:12
enough experience with testing
scrapbook yes scrapbook full of
2:09:17
tests. I've had enough
experiences with unwanted
2:09:21
testing that the deterioration
of process has become visible
2:09:26
hmm I wonder if that what he
means by that is that he's
2:09:30
noticing they don't do a good
job that's what I think he's
2:09:33
gonna tell us Yeah, yeah.
Preparing for recent test. I was
2:09:36
late for my appointment. At
another words this is all
2:09:40
theater now. Oh, it's
2:09:41
gonna get better.
2:09:43
I was late for my appointment at
a many times use location after
2:09:47
filling in my registration form
and paying my fee. I sat to wait
2:09:53
and 30 minutes later I received
it. Sorry. 20 minutes later. Oh,
2:09:59
yeah. 20 minutes. around that
point, I received an SMS with a
2:10:03
completed form and negative
result. Nine nose was never
2:10:09
violated and I boarded my flight
untested. But with a negative
2:10:13
PCR
2:10:14
well you were lucky you got the
randomized negative result.
2:10:19
Clearly that
2:10:20
bowl crap what he's
2:10:22
trying to do sounds like it
2:10:24
traveling between two countries
not the US with a negative PCR
2:10:29
test actual nose invasion this
time, I was required to take
2:10:33
another test upon arrival at the
new country. no notice of
2:10:38
results from the second test was
received. As I prepared to take
2:10:42
a PCR test to return to the US I
received received an SMS with a
2:10:46
link indicating the mandatory
COVID quarantine was over.
2:10:51
Apparently upon arrival, it was
a positive test, but I was never
2:10:55
informed. Wow, come on. As a
return PCR taken that day was
2:11:01
negative and I returned to the
USA scheduled as many know the
2:11:05
US quote unquote day before PCR
requirement can result in
2:11:10
reschedule flights. If the
testing firm is busy. Yes,
2:11:13
it's very anxious this kind of
shit. I'm just sharing
2:11:17
experiences of this made up
COVID testing world interesting
2:11:23
flattening the curve as in the
yield curve. There it is in the
2:11:28
new Fed policy, which
historically has eventually led
2:11:31
to sad economic times, as you
have discussed on your show, I
2:11:36
share the view that we are
rhyming with the 70s like this,
2:11:41
I expect expect the flattening
will be as successful as the
2:11:46
COVID curve flattening effect or
effort. We are rhyming with the
2:11:50
70s for we have a long hard road
ahead and this Ramadan fasting
2:11:56
may become a way of life for
many
2:11:58
we're all Muslim now. No food
for you.
2:12:02
As things begin to deteriorate,
I want to remind all producers
2:12:06
of saying Charity begins at home
with your family in your
2:12:09
country. I know us is not for
profits have suffered a terrible
2:12:14
impact. COVID Impact COVID In
terms of donations, and a
2:12:19
revival of the 70s economics
will make things harder for them
2:12:25
make things harder for them to
help your neighbor. Worse. Their
2:12:29
donation and service declines
have strengthened central
2:12:33
government's role in social
programs and their remaking of
2:12:37
our society. This Ramadan please
help as a person not as a
2:12:42
government. Master unmask
vaccines are unvaccinated. Our
2:12:47
enemy is not each other. No
jingles no karma
2:12:51
preach. Preach. Yeah. Now that's
true. You know, we support
2:12:57
Ronald McDonald House Charities
of course. Tina's alma mater,
2:13:02
it's been very difficult for
them to raise money. And people
2:13:07
have just turned into people
don't want to support
2:13:14
because all they're
2:13:16
seeing is huge. But
2:13:18
yeah, there's you know, by the
media, yes, well, with some with
2:13:22
some perhaps good reason.
synonymous of Dogpatch and lower
2:13:26
Slobo viewed as always a
pleasure to receive a note from
2:13:29
you. You always bring us so much
wisdom. When does Ramadan start?
2:13:34
Just Google it was
2:13:37
I think we should do I'd like to
participate in Ramadan this
2:13:40
year. Let me see. Let's Rama
Ramadan. 2022. Is that shift
2:13:48
around? I think it shifts around
right. April 2 ends May 1.
2:13:53
April 2 will be well, I got
April 1. It begins April
2:14:00
Ramadan. 2020. begins the
evening of April 1. Yes. Yeah,
2:14:03
that's right. That's when you
can eat it ends
2:14:05
on May as the evening of May 1
throughout the whole month of
2:14:09
April month man on vacation that
first week.
2:14:15
So can I
2:14:16
can I do Ramadan? After the
vacation?
2:14:20
You can start moving things
around your own schedule. Sorry,
2:14:25
maybe next year you can do
2:14:26
onward to serve Benjamin Unitas
Vikon of San Francisco who's in
2:14:31
San Francisco, California brings
in cert 613 34 And he says this
2:14:37
donation brings my giving level
ready to defer this to $7,000
2:14:42
total. That's some dedication
right there. Thank you. Thank
2:14:49
you. And with this you know what
you know we need we need to if
2:14:53
he's an Earl and we go Will URL
sound I would like to claim the
2:15:02
title URL or count of San
Francisco whichever the periods
2:15:07
committee will accept. It has to
be URL right do we have counts?
2:15:10
Yeah, well counts. I think it's
an optional one for I think it's
2:15:13
a substitute for URL. I have to
go look at the peerage listings
2:15:17
to figure this out. But I like
the idea of the count of San
2:15:21
Fran. I
2:15:21
like the counters. It sounds
kind of sinister. Yeah, I like
2:15:24
that a lot. Thank you both for
the conspiracy therapy please
2:15:27
play Chem trails. Yay. And a
fluoride in your cup
2:15:38
is fluoride in my church
2:15:43
All right, you got it?
2:15:45
Yeah, I can't meet him. Okay,
you're gonna He's gonna be
2:15:47
upgraded today. So that would be
good. Yes. All right. Onward
2:15:52
with Sir Brian, the Baron of
Tampa Bay for $100.33 from
2:15:57
Tampa, Florida. No jingles. Just
the biggest job calmer for all
2:16:02
of us tech slaves. dodging the
VAX mandates like Neo in the
2:16:08
Matrix. I am. The needles are
shooting by I am staring down
2:16:15
the barrel of 40. Soon on April
2. You're on the birthday list.
2:16:19
Thanks for all the amygdala
shrinkage as always, sir Ryan
2:16:22
Baron of Tampa Bay.
2:16:24
All right. Well, if he needs the
biggest job, karma, that means
2:16:26
it's this. Jobs, jobs, jobs.
Jobs you've got Carmack and we
2:16:37
hit Andrew Walker, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania 333 dot 89. Let's
2:16:42
see what's up with this. Dear
Adam and Chauncey this donation
2:16:51
is in celebration of my 33rd
birthday on March 30. And after
2:16:54
10 years of listening, I finally
achieved knighthood. I would
2:16:58
like to henceforth be known as
Sir Big Bro Mario Knight of the
2:17:02
NASCAR and Nintendo's and for my
pitstop at the roundtable, I
2:17:07
humbly request for fresh good
yours and I can have Sunoco race
2:17:11
fuel sounds like a breakfast of
champions to me. I will never be
2:17:15
able to thank you too. And I
found you guys at a pivotal time
2:17:18
in my early 20s when most of my
peers began to gobble up the M
2:17:21
five M's position. No agenda was
the antidote. I didn't know I
2:17:24
had found and over the next
decade, this show helped shape
2:17:27
me into who I am today. I cannot
understate the profound impact
2:17:31
you both had on me. Thank you so
much. We have clones John. We
2:17:37
are this weird the the Dolly the
dolly sheep of podcasters French
2:17:42
Bulldog karma from my mom Kathy
and my girlfriend Samantha and
2:17:45
some karma for this torn ACL I'm
currently dealing with love No,
2:18:03
that's
2:18:03
a 00 I want you to buy that
while I'm reading this no once
2:18:06
you get out a binary calculating
and see what this is a 00110001
2:18:14
sauce. Trina $33.43 And he's in
St. Peter's Missouri. He writes
2:18:23
ITM to Lourdes pot father and
buzzkill and the rest of the no
2:18:27
agenda family all caps. Because
the April 3 Show is an evergreen
2:18:33
I am donating today to wish Dame
g 33. Geese gears where K Geek
2:18:41
Squared a very happy and special
birthday, which will be this
2:18:45
Sunday on April 3. Today's show
on the 31st of March broken down
2:18:50
equals four over three so
numerologically The universe
2:18:54
finds a way okay, this guy's a
numbers guy
2:18:59
my my browser is like slowed
down really weirdly let me see
2:19:06
if I can find so it's a 00110 I
think the A has to go off
2:19:13
doesn't it the Adi Da
2:19:14
refers to some bait maybe this
guy I don't know a 001 We'll
2:19:18
just go with 00110001
2:19:22
Yes that's 49 in decimal 31 in
hexadecimal
2:19:31
don't know maybe nine? I don't
know. I don't know.
2:19:36
It might not have been worth the
exercise. I'm not sure. Okay,
2:19:41
now did you read all the French
stuff?
2:19:44
What French stuff?
2:19:46
French stuff with a Oh 1101
sauce. Oh, I'm sorry. Let me
2:19:53
read it because I speak French.
2:19:56
So I yes, no, I see it. I was I
didn't expand the bottom Yeah.
2:20:00
Please credit this donation to
her and here's the switcheroo.
2:20:04
Yes. Your name is Ayesha.
Ayesha, I'm gonna do my he wrote
2:20:10
it in friendship. I should as I
see that Tasha is your Tim buku
2:20:14
Oh see mushy is he have it, Eli
he Ozu to shore metal can
2:20:22
Liberte head to New to air
l'amour de Mavi I know that the
2:20:27
UI the love of my life. Okay, so
switch a roo so all of that.
2:20:32
Okay, Dame. So we do it for Get
Game geeks, where'd but did we?
2:20:39
Okay. All that all that that
that binary code was for not and
2:20:45
it's going to Dame Geek Squared.
All right. Thank you. Daniel
2:20:50
Abrams is an Irving New York
with our favorite executive
2:20:53
producer donation amount 3333 In
the morning Adam and John no
2:20:57
agenda nation no agenda nation
for 20 Rez bud is New York's
2:21:03
number one tribal member oh no
cannabis dispensary help us no
2:21:06
agenda nation your only hope
will trade time talent and
2:21:10
treasure join our epic saga
please email for 20 Rez bud at
2:21:15
proton mail or at Gmail OTG DTC
DT China asshole jobs and for 20
2:21:22
Karma. What did he just say? I
think he meant Donald Trump
2:21:29
don't just current don't trust
China as
2:21:32
a yeah d t China asshole. Yeah,
yes, Donald Trump got it
2:21:35
I got that part. And then he
wants some for 20 calm I don't
2:21:39
think we have anything
specifically for that but we can
2:21:41
certainly hook you up with some
some of the good stuff and don't
2:21:45
trust China China is as you've
got karma I wanted jobs, karma
2:21:51
darnest
2:21:53
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's go
2:22:03
Joshua Gridley, in Fountain
Hills, Arizona. 33333 ITM my
2:22:09
power went out and the clocks
are now flashing 333
2:22:14
s that'll tell you
2:22:16
as weird. Birthday knighting
donation for myself. I'd like to
2:22:20
be known as sir. jpg. Shout out
to Tony at the eBay shop. Thanks
2:22:26
for demolishing my face back at
the Mouse House. Loving light.
2:22:32
Okay, that's kind of creepy. Not
quite sure what those guys were
2:22:35
doing. But we always love Tony
at the eBay shop. And we'll see
2:22:39
you at the roundtable. Joshua
Very good. Scott Farley is in
2:22:44
North Tonawanda New York also
333 dot 33 Please accept my
2:22:48
donation for the latest show.
I've been listening since two
2:22:51
Rogan's ago haven't missed an
episode since I'll need to D
2:22:54
douching. As this is my first
donation. You've been D deuced.
2:23:00
You have to good work Scott
Farley Buffalo New York and he
2:23:02
says go bills go bills.
2:23:06
Okay, now I got where am I am at
sir recive. Hellgate in Grants
2:23:12
Pass Oregon 333 33. And now I
got to figure out which note
2:23:17
we're dealing with here, sir
Matt is the surmount No,
2:23:20
Sir Russ is Hellgate. I see it
right here. 330
2:23:25
Oh, I got it.
2:23:28
Keep up the great work.
2:23:31
kg says sir rest of Hellgate kg
seven Z PFS 73 nice note Rush is
2:23:38
the way to do it.
2:23:39
I don't think we have anything
from Simon Paolo Woda 333 30 350
2:23:45
Page five we do have a page do
we have a page five
2:23:47
assignment oh
2:23:48
here it is. I got it. Yes in the
Morning John Adam 333 33 Here's
2:23:53
my first a
2:23:53
very nice car decent yes
2:23:57
just my cheesy way of saying
thank you here's my first
2:24:01
hopefully of many executive as a
scan as weird executive producer
2:24:07
show credit I want to catch I
want to so catch troll I cannot
2:24:14
rely I ever original there Yeah,
I can't read this I I went
2:24:19
to see each trail achieve each
troll achieve says this value
2:24:27
for value of local one wants to
be maybe local one local once or
2:24:33
at least once. Okay, the value
for value at least one so the
2:24:36
plethora of 30 threes that have
been smacking me in the face
2:24:40
this winter cannot be ignored.
You should read along so you can
2:24:45
see what a great job I'm doing.
I'm going to start my 33rd trip
2:24:49
around the sun. I would like to
say thank you both. Thank both
2:24:53
of you, as well as Baron Bryan
of Connecticut River Valley for
2:24:58
the amazing health karma Back in
May, despite a few months in a
2:25:03
coma Oh yeah. No wonder you rice
like pie. I have had to skip a
2:25:11
show and have caught up through
October. Oh, okay. Please add me
2:25:16
to the wine email lists. The
mythical wine email list and
2:25:22
what my Yeah, well, you'll get
it eventually. And he clips he's
2:25:25
got Chris is asshole China's
asshole. But we won't be trumped
2:25:33
Yeah, net by Rosie O'Donnell and
Obama No, no, no. Stay safe.
2:25:39
Donald Trump don't trust China
China is as whoa we won't be
2:25:43
trying
2:25:53
No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
2:25:56
no, no, no, no, no.
2:26:02
That was kind of fun sequence.
That was an odd way. Austin B is
2:26:08
in Centennial Colorado. 333
Please accept this donation
2:26:11
honor of my smokin hot wife
Jessica B who will be making her
2:26:14
37th trip around the sun this
week. We are July 2021 JRE
2:26:19
converts first time donation can
I get her a D douching? Yes.
2:26:24
You've been D deuced. And also a
biscuit on her birthday always
2:26:30
give me a biscuit on my birthday
and a jobs karma coming up as
2:26:34
she's been chased by her
employer for months without with
2:26:36
a throbbing syringe and still
manages and still manages to
2:26:42
avoid the jab. I'm proud of her.
We won't we don't agree on
2:26:47
everything. But we always agree
on no agenda. Thanks for making
2:26:50
the greatest podcast in the
universe. And then he has PS
2:26:54
boots on the ground have worked
in healthcare staffing, mainly
2:26:57
nursing homes during the last
three surges. The pattern I've
2:27:00
seen is that a month ish before
it gets big on M five M CMS the
2:27:04
government organization that
controls health care build by
2:27:07
Medicare, Medicaid, sends out a
protocol requiring nursing staff
2:27:11
to begin at twice a week
mandatory testing. All of a
2:27:15
sudden, asymptomatic positive
start piling in leading to
2:27:18
quarantine staff leading to
staff shortage. No one seems to
2:27:22
acknowledge that capacity in
health care is relative to the
2:27:24
amount of staff you have your
bed count drops, when you lock
2:27:27
up all of your nurses and desk
capacity becomes overrun. Not
2:27:33
because of the number of
patients who because you can no
2:27:35
longer support the number of
beds you could before mandatory
2:27:39
testing crept in CMS increased
the testing protocol a few weeks
2:27:43
ago, I predict a media surge is
brewing attention these these
2:27:49
are the tips that are very
helpful. We've got a lot of
2:27:52
stuff stuff. And I think that
this is true because we have
2:27:56
covid.gov The President just
released we have a test test to
2:28:02
treat and we have the president
crying that there's no money to
2:28:06
fund all this. So yeah, yeah, it
would make sense to
2:28:10
have trillion dollars already
Ukraine. Yeah, but we
2:28:12
don't need that here.
2:28:16
All right. Next, yes, your Wayne
or possibly Dewayne, but
2:28:22
probably Dwayne 333, and he's in
Oregon someplace. And jingles.
2:28:29
He wants to get facts to the
head of Hillary cackle and no.
2:28:33
It's time for my annual birthday
donation turning 38 on a show
2:28:37
day today, March 31. I've been
listening since sometime around
2:28:42
show 75 When John casually
mentioned it on one of his old
2:28:46
Twitch shows that were only
interesting because of John
2:28:52
enough with the brown nosing
thank you both for everything
2:28:55
here's to no agenda strategies
working.
2:28:59
What's the no agenda strategy
that worked?
2:29:01
We don't have one. Just a
podcast is too important. Don't
2:29:05
drop that. Don't drop that T two
important part. Drew Wayne. Oh,
2:29:13
all right, Dwayne. And here's
your jingles. No. Miles Vernon
2:29:25
is in Vancouver, British
Columbia. $300 I'm suppose I'm
2:29:28
presuming those are dollar
redos. We do count them for a
2:29:33
week now we do regardless we
count them for full. Same with
2:29:36
Australia and New Zealand. I'd
like to call out keinen you
2:29:41
think kinda.
2:29:43
Yeah, Kanan Canaan taught? No,
2:29:45
it's just Tate. Tate keinen take
it I'm just wait I'm just I'm
2:29:51
wearing now of people getting us
to say names that are stupid.
2:29:54
Like Ben Dover Canaan
2:29:55
Tate. Yeah, kinda in a band.
Dover. Yes,
2:29:59
exactly. jingoes Trump Oh,
Colorado's a douchebag All right
2:30:03
kind of tape. Jingles Trump I'm
gonna come little girl Yay.
2:30:08
I'm gonna come
2:30:12
rather sick Hey Paul.
2:30:16
Mike Schwab in Brooklyn New York
to 4123 He's a first Associate
2:30:21
Executive producers and a good
segment today I want to thank
2:30:24
everyone for helping us as we
got to Evergreen is coming up it
2:30:28
will help. Thank you so much for
the show. It's stunning how a
2:30:31
big part of of life it becomes a
since I accidentally was
2:30:37
knighted in the switcheroo Oh
happened one of these. Yes. My
2:30:42
relationship with the Bentley
Ness or best Beatley Beatley
2:30:47
Beatley Ness. What that means
have no agenda nation has
2:30:51
deepened my my handsome human
resource skylo As do since we
2:30:59
might release you with the bent
Linus to beat Linus no
2:31:01
generation has deepened my
handsome human resource skylo is
2:31:05
the first two sentences are
impossible. Is the first
2:31:08
grandchild for the lipidosis
family. Who run the fest for
2:31:14
Beatles fans. Oh, I think this
was beast. Beatles. Beatles, The
2:31:18
Beatles. speediness Yes. Beatle
Enos for Beatles fans which
2:31:23
kicks off? Its 50th New York
area hotel extravaganza
2:31:27
tomorrow. That's interesting. I
hope some no agenda producers
2:31:32
can join us at the Hyatt Regency
Jersey City, April 1 second and
2:31:36
third noon till midnight for a
gathering that will feature
2:31:40
Peter Jackson, as well as many
friends and disciples of the
2:31:44
band Peter
2:31:45
Jackson. He's the he's the Lord
of the Rings. Director.
2:31:49
I think so he
2:31:50
didn't Yeah, he did the the
Beatles documentary. Oh, that's
2:31:54
right. That's right, which is on
that scan, which is on Disney
2:31:56
plus, which I refuse to be
there.
2:31:59
Yeah, come in anonymously for
under $50 to get the virtual
2:32:04
remote festival pass, or come
around back on the pier and look
2:32:08
for the psychedelic unicorn.
Unicorn named Glinda. The good
2:32:13
bus asked for the partial
agenda. And we'll hook you up.
2:32:21
Over this, I wonder what will
happen you get the minute you
2:32:24
say Hey, sis Glinda the Good
bus, partial agenda. Boom black
2:32:30
bag on your head. Your rosters
and your rusted into the van.
2:32:37
Can you remember hearing
anything on that drive? There's
2:32:41
Yeah, yeah, I heard a train
about it. To come in anonymously
2:32:46
for under $50 Get the virtual
remote festival pass or comma.
2:32:51
I'm going to just read this
again. Come around back on the
2:32:55
pier. And look for the
psychedelic unicorn name to
2:32:59
Glinda the Good buss asked for,
quote partial agenda and we'll
2:33:06
hook you up okay. And since we
are featuring remixes in the
2:33:11
Babbitt Tory any Beatles related
mixes of any kind can be sent to
2:33:15
Michelle Joanie via Instagram,
Joe and I. That's a mouthful.
2:33:22
Adam and John Thanks for always
replying to my emails. You know
2:33:25
how to make a guy feel special.
I promise to never send a full
2:33:29
clip without a timestamp again.
2:33:33
This sounds like something I
said.
2:33:35
Yo it's totally beetle maniacs
come meet me in Pepper land this
2:33:40
weekend. I'm sure I'll be quite
visible on account of my
2:33:43
progeny. Imagine all the people
who could visit the fest.com Oh
2:33:49
yeah, that'd be fab jingles
shape shifting Jews? Yeah, no
2:33:53
yeah, no yah yah yah yah yah yah
yah yah yah yah yah yah yah yah
2:33:58
yah yah NO NO
2:33:59
NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO NO
NO NO NO NO NO NO shapes ending
2:34:16
Jews shapes and things use
illustration
2:34:34
Yeah, all
2:34:35
right, then we rarely play the
whole thing but since it was a
2:34:38
Beasley request, we might as
well be
2:34:40
BB Lee a berry. You can read the
next few because I'm going to go
2:34:43
see what the dog want.
2:34:45
You got it. Danny Bush Bush,
Associate Executive Producer
2:34:51
ship with 208 33 North Wales,
Pennsylvania. jingoes. eat kale.
2:34:57
Troodos mom. This is been asked
before, we don't have Troodos
2:35:03
mom that I'm aware of. I mean,
just some stuff from her. But
2:35:07
there's no jingo someone's got
to send that to me if you have
2:35:10
something. Screw your freedom
and Right, right, right, right.
2:35:14
Right. Right. Right. I think I
have the right Right. Right.
2:35:17
Where's the right Right, right.
We had Right, right. Right. So
2:35:24
good, right? As too much right.
And how many rights there are.
2:35:29
I'll do my best. Chris Hayes.
Record Number was the Chris
2:35:33
Hayes record number saying
Right. Okay. Hayes. Huh? And
2:35:39
again, I can't find it. Sorry.
Respect. Oh, my goodness,
2:35:44
respect. But how many jingles Do
you want? You can't have that
2:35:46
many respect. We much can
replace if you can't find Okay.
2:35:50
All right. Respect. It's not
respect. It's ah, see, John just
2:35:57
left and it's I'm a mess. Now. I
can't do anything. It's not.
2:36:03
It's not respect. We must
resist. We must you confusing
2:36:07
me?
2:36:08
Oh, brother. Oh, I don't know
what to do. I'm the dog just
2:36:11
wanting to come into this.
2:36:13
Alright, I'm off the rails here.
I'm off the rails just. It's
2:36:16
like, asking for things we don't
have is a nightmare for me.
2:36:21
Yeah, it's a nightmare. Okay, so
you just get what I can find.
2:36:24
Hello, Joe. Great.
deconstruction is always in this
2:36:27
treasure of two way. 33
represents half of the remaining
2:36:30
account till I hit knighthood.
We'll be following up with a
2:36:33
second donation right before my
50th birthday on April 2. To
2:36:36
officially obtain knighthood,
status. Shout out to Hugh and
2:36:39
Isabel, who went out and hit me
in the mouth love is lit. Oosa
2:36:43
Danny bush. Screw your
2:36:48
freedom. Oh, so good. Resist.
2:36:51
We must. We must, and we will
much about that. Be committed.
2:37:01
There you go. Brian Sharon's
next on the list until the dog
2:37:05
wants to leave the room $200.01
from San Francisco another San
2:37:10
Franciscan. Now the Joe Rogan
muram Oh no. It's Joe Joe Romo.
2:37:15
Namo. Joe Romo. Joe Rando,
please. De douche. You've been
2:37:22
de deuced. I understand how late
this is. But please try to
2:37:28
include the clips link below and
Sunday second half of show. I
2:37:31
see a is voting on some
California is voting on some of
2:37:34
these bills this week. And it
seems like nobody even knows
2:37:38
those outside California may
think this won't affect them.
2:37:40
But if it passes, it could set a
precedent for other states. And
2:37:44
he's got a link to some
California bills. I'll look them
2:37:47
over. I add them. I didn't
attach the clips to this email
2:37:50
because it seems like anything
other than a PDF gets filtered
2:37:53
out by most servers these days.
Hence the link. always intended
2:37:59
to leave a humorous note when I
finally got my producer donation
2:38:02
in. But frankly, my amygdala is
pretty bad shape right now in
2:38:06
bad shape. If you can think of a
funny jingle that hasn't been
2:38:10
played in a while. That would be
great. If not, I think it's only
2:38:15
appropriate we direct our ire at
the California Legislature and
2:38:19
they deserve whipping him with
the cast the tution love is lit
2:38:23
Orion.
2:38:26
Whoop them. I think we do work
on let me i so i did not get
2:38:32
those clips, I will run down the
10 the 10 points of the bethink
2:38:35
one of them got voted down the
other day. This is a quick
2:38:40
summary. From our medical doctor
recently retired in California.
2:38:45
The age of consent to
vaccination shall be lowered to
2:38:48
12 years of age without
requiring parental consent.
2:38:51
COVID vaccination shall be
mandatory for all schools public
2:38:54
and private, regardless of FDA
approval. Anyone expressing and
2:38:59
I'm just reading the bills,
right? These are all set
2:39:01
hilarious. Anyone expressing
anti COVID opinion shall be
2:39:05
subject to discipline by the
medical board that would go for
2:39:08
doctors. Police will enforce
public health guidelines or lose
2:39:12
their funding. Schools will be
required to create long term
2:39:15
COVID testing plans and report
test results. No individual
2:39:20
organization will be allowed to
make public statements that
2:39:22
government deems untrue by any
means. Kyle, California school
2:39:30
personnel shall be authorized to
disclose student health
2:39:33
information to any third party
without consent of the student
2:39:37
to which the keeper went what
happened to HIPAA and I want an
2:39:42
immunization tracking system
shall be created to give
2:39:45
government agents access to
records of all persons. proof of
2:39:49
vaccination shall be required of
all independent contractors and
2:39:52
government workers to work in
California. That's the one I
2:39:55
think they voted down. And
finally, medical boards shall be
2:39:58
authorized to launch surprise
inspections of doctors offices
2:40:03
and search patient patient
charts without patient consent.
2:40:08
That's against the law. Of
course it's against the law
2:40:12
against federal law California
2:40:13
is unlawful. Now host the whole
thing and the whole state
2:40:24
Taylor costs is in Denver,
Colorado $200, Associate
2:40:28
Executive Producer ship in the
bag. My name is Taylor aka
2:40:31
tacos. My fiance John and I run
the Denver bi weekly meetups.
2:40:35
I'm sending this donation to
request some karma for John's
2:40:38
upcoming episode of the
millennial media offensive
2:40:41
podcast, which I've listened to
it's quite interesting. It will
2:40:45
air on no agenda stream right
after Sunday, April 3 show.
2:40:49
Okay, so that will be after the
Best of Show so very good and
2:40:51
they'll be live. I'm so thankful
John, hit me in the mouth
2:40:55
background episode 1200 took
several road trips and an
2:40:58
explanation of the karma process
for me to realize you guys
2:41:01
weren't total a holes. Just
minor. I truly thought you were
2:41:06
just brushing people's cancer
off by saying well, you're
2:41:08
a holes. Yeah,
2:41:10
we were in the minor league gay
holes. Listen to this, though.
2:41:13
This is interesting. Her
perception. I truly thought you
2:41:16
were just brushing people's
cancer off by saying well,
2:41:20
that's your karma. Powers.
That's interesting, isn't it?
2:41:25
That's how she took it. Then we
play an F cancer.
2:41:28
This is a this is one of those
people who takes things which
2:41:31
are this very common are out
here. You just take everything
2:41:35
wrong. But she's been saved.
That's like, yeah, yes, she has
2:41:40
been saved. But it's taking
everything wrong. And that's
2:41:42
what happened with it with the
with the newsletter art with
2:41:46
that woman who calls us racist.
No, just you is taking it wrong.
2:41:50
Yes, he's taking it wrong. I'm
looking to take it right.
2:41:53
Generally speaking, when you're
taking things wrong
2:41:55
consistently. You're looking to
take things from?
2:41:58
Yeah, well, that's all Yeah.
It's also bias, I guess. Anyway,
2:42:03
she continues, can you please
deduce me? You've been d do. Can
2:42:08
you call John out for being a
douchebag he has always
2:42:12
supported me and helps me edit
my travel blog, the traveling
2:42:15
tacos, calm. I felt this
donation was a way to give back
2:42:19
to him to help promote the
millennial media offensive. He
2:42:22
and his partner Dan have worked
so hard in the first baker's
2:42:24
dozen of episodes. Everybody go
check them out the media, the
2:42:28
millennial media offensive on
any podcast 2.0 app and stick
2:42:32
around Sunday stream to Listen
Live. We have that now in the in
2:42:37
podcast in 2.0. The app will
ping you when there's a Live
2:42:41
episode and you can open up the
app and you can listen to the
2:42:44
stream live and chat live. Can I
please have you played John's
2:42:49
and the show makes Biden's
whisper song at the end of the
2:42:51
show leading into theirs. It
makes me laugh every time I hear
2:42:55
it. Thank you The Traveling
tacos. Well, I'm going to play
2:42:57
it at the end of today's show.
Since we won't be here for the
2:43:02
the next show. And we'll and
that's all set up with COVID
2:43:05
song so we'll do that today. And
thank you very much. Taylor cos
2:43:09
traveling topcoats.
2:43:12
Austin constable in Orlando,
Ontario, Canada, but I'm sorry,
2:43:19
Ontario, Ontario, Ontario,
Canada. You're not going to read
2:43:23
this whole thing. 200. I'm going
to see what I can do. Do you
2:43:27
have you edited it so you can
read it?
2:43:29
Hi, guys. Thanks again. For
everything you do. I've been
2:43:31
listening for a while but this
is my first time donating so we
2:43:34
should get the D douching. Out
of the way straight off the bat.
2:43:39
You've been de deux I like many
if not only thoroughly enjoyed,
2:43:43
but have also some relied on
your commentary to stay sane
2:43:46
through this. But after donating
to both the convoy, GoFundMe and
2:43:51
Gibson go only to have both
refunded it only seemed right to
2:43:55
donate it to the incredibly
fitting best podcast in the
2:43:58
universe. I'll wear being on
that federal watch list as a
2:44:02
badge of honor for the rest of
my life. That being said, I've
2:44:06
recently had a very close and
unfortunate unhealthy family
2:44:08
member get COVID Eight weeks
ago. And what happened is worth
2:44:12
sharing. So this is a very long
story, but I can go to the next
2:44:19
paragraph. It's just long as
family members over 16 had
2:44:23
previously been hospitalized for
nearly five plus years ago,
2:44:27
before a year, a year five plus
years ago for a serious fungal
2:44:32
lung infection he recovered, but
with less than half of his lung
2:44:35
function and failing kidneys. Oh
my goodness. When his early when
2:44:40
his wife told me about his COVID
situation. He had already been
2:44:43
in the hospital for six weeks.
When I asked her what they had
2:44:47
done early on, it was the usual
we were all too used to hearing
2:44:50
absolutely nothing until there
was respiratory distress. To add
2:44:53
insult to injury, then a speech
pathologist decided he should
2:44:56
not be fed for five days because
of the slight risk he might
2:44:59
aspirate a morsel of food. His
wife was finally open to me
2:45:04
explaining to her how much
collusion went into demonizing
2:45:07
early treatments that could have
avoided all of this for her
2:45:09
husband. She's retired but used
to work at a major Canadian
2:45:12
University as a clinical
research administrator was only
2:45:14
willing to look at complete peer
reviewed studies. So she
2:45:18
basically schooled her and well
at 1.0. My goodness, she gave
2:45:24
her all the information. And I
can't quite this is where it
2:45:30
gets a little fuzzy. I don't
know if this information helped
2:45:34
her or husband but thankfully,
he's doing much better after
2:45:37
being bedridden for seven weeks.
But it's also been nice to see
2:45:40
that certain reasonable people's
opinions can still be changed
2:45:43
with reason regardless. Thanks
again for everything you do
2:45:46
shout out war mode and could get
a jobs karma for everybody. Yes,
2:45:51
thank you jobs, jobs, jobs and
jobs. Harma.
2:46:01
Okay, Carissa Mool, ha, Mulan
Mulan in Thaxton, Virginia 200.
2:46:10
This donation of 200 brings my
fabulous boyfriend Scott Manning
2:46:15
into knighthood. I donate in
honor of his 51st birthday show
2:46:20
Date March 31. He wishes to be
Deb sir Scott of The Mid
2:46:24
Atlantic solar winds and would
like to see sweet baby Ray's in
2:46:29
summer sausage at the round
table. You got it. I would like
2:46:33
to hear f cancer on behalf of
Scott's sweet sister Kathy will
2:46:37
get to see her first
granddaughter born on May as
2:46:41
long as chemo keeps destroying
those damn cancer cells.
2:46:45
Personally, I want to thank you
both for the best podcast in the
2:46:47
universe. And more specifically,
I want to thank Adam for being
2:46:50
truly dedicated to the no agenda
nation and declining irregular
2:46:55
spot on Glenn Beck. Why? Well, I
regularly question your sanity.
2:47:02
I never question your dedication
or loyalty to this genuinely,
2:47:06
genuinely ideal code communities
because of actions. So in other
2:47:11
words, let's, let's go Brandon,
2:47:13
in other words, thank you for
not taking the gig, you're nuts.
2:47:17
Do I understand that?
2:47:19
What she said is in essence,
sweet baby
2:47:21
Ray's by the way, if you want to
make some great barbecue, I
2:47:25
would say you can put sweet baby
Ray's on popery and it will make
2:47:31
it taste dynamite. Thank you
very much, Chris
2:47:33
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's
go for jobs.
2:47:41
Karma. And our final note comes
from Rick Sadler, and he wrote a
2:47:45
note in the Morning John and
Adam. This is $200 Our final
2:47:49
Associate Executive Producer for
today's episode. Well, that sad
2:47:53
puppy really did the trick.
Here's another donation for the
2:47:56
show. This will be our fourth
donation and we're happy to do
2:47:59
it. Please combine this 200 With
a previous donations. Yes, I'm
2:48:03
counting here toward the dame
hood of my lovely wife Patricia.
2:48:06
Trish. Petrit Petrit. I trust
you will do the math. No, we
2:48:11
trust you'll do the math. That's
how it works is the honor
2:48:13
system. You let us know when you
reach her when she does. And
2:48:16
we're happy about that. Good
Karma would be appreciated.
2:48:19
Thank you for your courage, Rick
and very nice little Snoopy.
2:48:22
Snoopy stationary. We appreciate
that here some goat karma. Thank
2:48:26
you. You've got karma
2:48:31
through that newbie, and he we
should mention this in Brighton,
2:48:34
Michigan.
2:48:36
Oh, yes, thank you. And that's
it our execs and associated
2:48:39
execs for episode 1438. As John
said, thank you good showing
2:48:43
today. We do encourage people we
do have a donation segment
2:48:47
during the next two shows where
we remind you to support because
2:48:50
typically if we're not live and
people do tend to forget but
2:48:55
will sending we'll be sending
out a newsletter promoting these
2:48:58
best jobs. And I think the
particularly the the COVID end
2:49:02
of show mix will be of interest
to people since you know there's
2:49:07
a I would say 35% of the
audience doesn't listen all the
2:49:11
way to the end, particularly on
the longer shows, but you're
2:49:14
really missing out on some
dynamite stuff. So if anything,
2:49:17
it's a promotion to listen all
the way to the end of every
2:49:20
single episode of the the no
agenda show. This also gets
2:49:25
usually
2:49:25
it's remarkable some of these
myths. Yeah,
2:49:29
there I put some in which were
great for the lyrics not
2:49:32
necessary the singing talent
somewhere concatenated ie
2:49:37
somewhere shortened but in
general is just massively great
2:49:40
work. These these producers just
heard they receive an official
2:49:45
credit the no agenda producer
credit executive producer for
2:49:48
this episode or Associate
Executive Producer. You can put
2:49:51
these anywhere, put them on your
put them on your IMDB or is that
2:49:55
your dog? Or is it are you
playing something that's your
2:49:58
dog is the dog Should go deal
with the dog and let people know
2:50:01
how they too can become
executive producers of the no
2:50:04
agenda show.org/and A thank you
again for your time your talent
2:50:09
and treasure, it is highly
appreciated. Our formula is
2:50:13
this. We go out hit people in
the mouth
2:50:30
the question burning on
everyone's mind is, what did the
2:50:34
dog answer when John asked the
dog what he wanted to
2:50:38
do? I think the dog answer
become part of the show or she
2:50:46
wants to go outside. So if you
just talk stop tape for one
2:50:48
second, I'll find out for sure.
2:50:51
So did the dog what did what did
what happened with a dog going
2:50:55
outside? And the thing is, I
think that she learned to go
2:50:58
outside before during the reads,
but heard you struggling with
2:51:01
that one note.
2:51:03
And she just just held it held
it until I was done with that.
2:51:06
Yeah. The dog. It's called a
2:51:09
pause, pause. Oh, pause, pause.
So that was a very long donation
2:51:17
segment. And which is crazy,
because it seems like we have so
2:51:23
much left to do. In particular,
we got to do some COVID stuff.
2:51:29
Yeah. Clips,
2:51:31
you don't sound very
enthusiastic.
2:51:33
I don't I have a lot of COVID
Tips. I'm not on it. And I have
2:51:36
to
2:51:37
I just have to. And this is the
one I wanted to this is I've
2:51:40
been waiting to play this. This
is from the British Medical
2:51:45
Journal, BMJ it's from their
very own YouTube channel. I just
2:51:51
took about a minute of it and
tightened it up. This is Brooke
2:51:55
Jackson, Pfizer whistleblower.
This is on the British Medical
2:51:59
Journal, YouTube channel.
2:52:01
My name is lies. I was fired in
September of 2020. For being a
2:52:08
whistleblower. I was working on
Pfizer's phase three pivotal
2:52:14
trial on their COVID-19 vaccine.
My first day on the job was the
2:52:20
eighth of September. And from
the very beginning, I noticed
2:52:28
irregularities, things that were
questionable, I would I would
2:52:35
bring up the concerns to my
managers. And it was always
2:52:39
we're understaffed. We're really
trying hard to, you know, make
2:52:44
this work. You know, at one
point when I was going through
2:52:47
emails, there were emails from
icon begging Vin Tabia. To
2:52:52
follow up on severe adverse
events that had been reported.
2:52:57
There were several emails about
mislabeled specimens, blood
2:53:04
specimens and the nasal swabs.
There were specimens that were
2:53:08
labeled with another
participant's information. It
2:53:12
was a nightmare.
2:53:13
Yeah, she goes on. She goes on
about samples being left open.
2:53:17
He sounds Yeah, but but the
point is, this is this and other
2:53:22
companies. These are the
companies that did the the
2:53:24
clinical trials on behalf of
Pfizer. And so it's no wonder
2:53:28
when they're asked to produce
the clinical trial results.
2:53:32
They're hemming and hawing.
Because it's a mess. Yeah, and
2:53:36
there's there's adverse events
and deaths all over the place.
2:53:40
Find in the shownotes I finally
have an unredacted copy of that.
2:53:45
of the I guess it's the the
leaked document. But it's it's
2:53:49
atrocious and and of course
because the the mainstream media
2:53:53
is picked, bought and paid for
mainly by pharmaceutical
2:53:57
advertisers. You will not hear
about the death and destruction
2:54:01
that these trials cause
2:54:03
is unbelievable. Correct. The
correct rubbish is my
2:54:06
interruption is out of control.
And so you got to listen, you
2:54:09
got to hear about a podcast.
2:54:14
Well, not only is it out of
control, but besides the fact
2:54:17
that they won't talk about any
of this if they're still trying
2:54:19
to scare us. Yeah. And listen to
this. Listen to this report.
2:54:23
This is about how deer are
getting COVID and it is possible
2:54:29
to do they can
2:54:29
have the story five times they
keep doing it.
2:54:33
This is the latest one is from
yesterday.
2:54:35
Wildlife experts say they're
still trying to determine to
2:54:38
what extent animals like deer
bear, moose and wolves are being
2:54:42
affected by the Coronavirus
pandemic. They say they found
2:54:46
increasing numbers of cases of
COVID-19 and deer and other
2:54:48
animals are looking at animals
and Minnesota's north woods in
2:54:52
hopes of finding some clues.
Scientists say one concern is
2:54:55
the virus that causes COVID 19
could evolve within animal
2:54:58
populations, potentially spot
Dangerous mutations that then
2:55:01
might jump back to people.
2:55:03
Ah. So this was new. This is a
brand new news report. Yep.
2:55:12
Okay, so now we go back to
February of this year February
2:55:17
3. I won't play the whole clip
but just for effect, scientists
2:55:20
have recently discovered what
they are calling a silent
2:55:23
outbreak of Coronavirus among
white tailed deer.
2:55:27
Now we go back to November
1820 21.
2:55:34
On the medical watch, it's deer
hunting season and COVID is
2:55:37
prevalent in
2:55:37
white tailed deer. So, and we go
back to four days earlier. Oops,
2:55:44
on a second, NPR. Again, this is
November of November of 2021.
2:55:53
Scientists have evidence that
SARS cov two is widely
2:55:56
circulating and deer across the
US reached Okay, so
2:55:59
what this is pissing me off now,
because I actually thought you
2:56:03
were going insane. Like he keeps
bringing these deer clips back.
2:56:08
What's wrong with my partner?
He's in a loop. But this but
2:56:14
this is the media. There's
something they're trying to do
2:56:16
with this. Hello, yeah, I
2:56:20
haven't figured it out. I mean,
they may hint at it in the last
2:56:23
clip, which is the saying, Well,
you know, it's going to pop back
2:56:25
out of the dare and there's
going to be a new variation. Is
2:56:29
this so
2:56:29
this is is this when when the
food when the food shortages
2:56:33
come we don't eat the deer? Is
that what they're trying to
2:56:35
don't eat the deer?
2:56:39
On? Yeah, I just I just I know.
I know. You're gonna run over
2:56:42
again. You're right. They've
been going on for almost a year.
2:56:45
And here it is, again. To
preface this they did preface
2:56:48
this clip that we've been
discussing this for a long time.
2:56:51
Yes.
2:56:52
I know. But it's it's it's
pissing me off. Now. Why are
2:56:55
they doing this continuously? It
seems like they're doing it for
2:56:58
a reason.
2:56:59
Is it the same? It's not the
same report? No, it's slightly
2:57:02
different. Everyone's varies a
bit.
2:57:04
But is it the same study they're
referencing? I don't know. Okay.
2:57:10
All right.
2:57:11
Here's a good clip. This will be
live because you never heard
2:57:14
this before. Here we go. COVID
second booster.
2:57:18
The Biden administration
authorized a second COVID
2:57:21
booster for people aged 50 and
older and those who are
2:57:25
immunocompromised so if you are
eligible, should you get a
2:57:28
booster and be our health
correspondent Maria Doyle is
2:57:31
here to help us think that
through Good morning. Good
2:57:34
morning, Steve. Let's start with
the officials. Why do federal
2:57:37
health authorities think this is
the time?
2:57:39
Well, the COVID vaccine booster
shots have proven highly
2:57:42
effective at preventing severe
disease and death. But immunity
2:57:46
does wane over time. And federal
health officials are concerned
2:57:50
about people considered to be at
highest risk of getting severe
2:57:53
COVID That includes people 12
And up with a weakened immune
2:57:57
systems. It also includes people
starting at age 50. Officials
2:58:01
are recommending a second
booster for both these groups if
2:58:04
they had their first booster at
least four months ago.
2:58:06
Thanks for that last detail. So
I should be thinking about when
2:58:09
did I get a booster how long ago
and trying to remember that? So
2:58:13
older people are at risk. But
why would the dividing line be
2:58:16
50 years old?
2:58:18
Well, here's Dr. Peter marks of
the FDA.
2:58:21
We know that people in the age
range from about 50 to 65. About
2:58:26
a third of them have significant
medical comorbidities
2:58:30
and by comorbidities he means
conditions like obesity lung
2:58:33
disease diabetes, which is
fairly common in this age group.
2:58:36
These can raise the risk of
getting seriously ill from COVID
2:58:40
or even dying
2:58:41
even dying.
2:58:43
Now of course we're not supposed
to these all the shots the first
2:58:46
two shots are get exposed to
keep you from dying and being
2:58:49
hospitalized. And by the way,
you think this was scripted a
2:58:53
little bit yesterday? Why is it
somebody 50 Well, I just so
2:58:57
happen to have a clip of this
one guy who is to have the
2:59:01
answer this is this is like so
rehearsed. So scripted is an
2:59:05
embarrassment it's probably
2:59:07
paid for by Pfizer because
they're marketing this that
2:59:11
they're marketing the heck out
of it. Go get your shit and
2:59:14
remember when it was all just a
funny conspiracy theory for five
2:59:19
shots. So the so so I'd like to
I'd like to welcome the people
2:59:25
back who tuned out from the
show. When we were joking about
2:59:30
four or five shots. Welcome
back.
2:59:34
We've been explaining you the
six shadow becoming so this is a
2:59:39
story I clipped this because I
never heard this. This is you
2:59:44
but this did listen to this clip
and tell me that you heard maybe
2:59:47
you heard this I sure didn't
military in Utah.
2:59:50
The final military medical crew
in the nation has completed
2:59:53
their COVID Clinical mission
today at the University of Utah
2:59:56
hospital. He wanted Martinez
remember station K you are in
2:59:59
Salt Lake City. Details.
3:00:00
Deploying the military medical
team was a part of a federal
3:00:03
approach to address the stress
from COVID-19. On hospitals, a
3:00:07
crew of about 20 healthcare
workers first arrived at the
3:00:09
University Hospital at the start
of March. Now they returned
3:00:13
home, they helped clear about a
quarter of 500 backlog
3:00:16
surgeries. Dr. Kenzie graves
works at the US hospital. She
3:00:20
says now the manage the best
they can as the team leaves,
3:00:23
though we've got what plans
3:00:27
but what we've learned and how
we apply that is what's more
3:00:29
important. Our nursing
leadership has taken some steps
3:00:33
to be able to secure the beds
that are open, and to keep us
3:00:36
moving forward. So for right
now, I feel great.
3:00:39
The departure cons as a state
removes major COVID testing
3:00:42
sites.
3:00:46
The military was brought in
3:00:48
Yeah, yeah, we heard about it,
but we didn't get much reporting
3:00:51
on it. Yeah, they were brought
brought in to replace stuff. I
3:00:58
do have our weekly what other
excuse can we come up with for
3:01:02
myocarditis appearing within
young people all of a sudden?
3:01:06
Yeah. What have we had so far?
Both heart attacks and other
3:01:11
heart issues can be the referee
whistle if you happen to be a
3:01:14
soccer player. It can be what
are the things that we learned
3:01:18
about they
3:01:19
just dropped like flies because
their athlete it's it's not a
3:01:21
lot of stress on their system.
We didn't
3:01:23
know this, but it's very common
amongst young people. Yeah,
3:01:27
calm, very calm, very calm. And
let's see what is the latest
3:01:31
reason you can get heart issues
chronic
3:01:33
dehydration could increase your
risk of heart failure. That's
3:01:37
the finding of a long term study
by the National Institutes of
3:01:40
Health MPRs ping Wang reports it
may be related to having high
3:01:44
levels of sodium in your blood.
3:01:46
More than 50,000 adults during
the long term and eight study on
3:01:50
heart health, collected over 25
years show that people who were
3:01:54
healthy but dehydrated in
midlife had a higher incidence
3:01:58
of heart failure later on. Not
drinking enough water leads to
3:02:01
high levels of salt in your
blood, which can put added
3:02:04
stress on your heart over time.
Natalia Dmitriev from NIH is
3:02:08
lead author on the paper
3:02:09
I'm doing the recommended amount
of liquids every day is
3:02:13
something very simple that
everybody can easily do. On
3:02:17
potential benefits are huge. She
says
3:02:19
drinking at least six cups of
liquid a day for women and eight
3:02:23
cups a day for men could lower
your risk of future heart
3:02:25
disease. The finding is
published in the European Heart
3:02:28
Journal.
3:02:31
What I don't understand. I've
never heard people saying and
3:02:34
drink this many cups. Used to be
ounces.
3:02:40
Glasses do you say glass
3:02:41
glasses? It'd be like you know
12 inch glass glass 12 ounce
3:02:44
glass of water. It's what I
remember. But I just
3:02:47
remember glass glasses. Okay,
well now it's cups. But a cop
3:02:50
has a specific amount that's
eight ounces.
3:02:52
Well if it but she didn't say
okay. A cup. Do you have to
3:02:58
drink? Six times?
3:03:03
48 ounces?
3:03:04
Yeah, sounds about right for a
whole day, I guess. Surprise?
3:03:07
Well, but if you don't you're
gonna die not from the vaccine
3:03:10
or anything. You're gonna die
from de height severe
3:03:12
dehydration. That will kill you.
Just let us just let you know,
3:03:18
and never heard this and I
suppose to drink water when
3:03:20
you're thirsty, that it does
help. It does help that you have
3:03:25
to drink you know, 48 ounces of
water.
3:03:27
Have you been following the the
latest FOIA documents that have
3:03:31
unearthed some more nastiness?
3:03:35
No.
3:03:37
As it turns out, the National
Institute of Health was deleting
3:03:43
COVID sequences, the original
the OG sequences they had from
3:03:47
their database at the same time.
Fauci and columns were saying
3:03:52
that this is impossible this
cannot be from a lab this has to
3:03:55
be from from the from the wet
market. And this is a scandal.
3:04:00
They deleted deleted actual
genetic sequences as you know
3:04:07
like the like the ones that
determined the vaccine. Yes,
3:04:10
determined the testing protocol
will the question is indeed for
3:04:15
what purpose to cover shit up.
Cover up what the fact that that
3:04:23
these sequences are not natural
sequences as you would expect
3:04:28
from the wet market these
sequences show that something
3:04:31
was created
3:04:33
to me what the what the French
guy the French Nobel Prize
3:04:36
winner said right off the bat
when he saw the original
3:04:39
sequences that guy did so they
did him.
3:04:43
Okay, and that's when they
started deleting the sequences.
3:04:47
Nothing to see here. Ah, yeah.
The level of corruption on this
3:04:52
whole scam is unbelievable. It's
3:04:54
everything that's that's what's
so nuts. Everything is corrupt.
3:04:58
I mean, a DA Oh my god,
everything's corrupt. But if you
3:05:02
say that for 15 years and then
it's like kind of like, you know
3:05:05
what it's and we're not just
saying this is true. The more
3:05:10
the more social more internet we
got, the more we learned. I love
3:05:14
I love it. I love it. I want to
talk just, I have a note that I
3:05:19
want to I want to read but it
goes along with what's happening
3:05:22
in Florida and what's happening
with Disney. And there's the
3:05:25
culture war has now migrated to
the state of Florida. And it
3:05:29
started of course with the don't
say gay bill.
3:05:33
Right. A controversial bill
became law today in Florida. The
3:05:36
Republican governor signed the
measure that bans lessons on
3:05:39
sexual orientation and gender
identity in kindergarten through
3:05:43
third grade. Critics call it the
don't say gay bill and say it
3:05:46
marginalizes LGBTQ plus people.
Governor Ron DeSantis and other
3:05:51
Republicans claim that the law
is reasonable
3:05:55
have the NPR report on this they
do the same thing you know if
3:06:00
you remember when the Freedom
Ride or whatever it was up in
3:06:03
Canada they kept calling so
called so called Oh yeah, the
3:06:06
so called freedom freedom convoy
on freedom calm they
3:06:11
never do that with the door
everyone has to use don't say
3:06:13
gay don't say gay when it does
not even the word gay is not
3:06:15
even in the bill doesn't is not
called the don't say gay bill.
3:06:19
It should be referred to by its
name not by somebody, you know,
3:06:23
propaganda. And NPR emphasizes
it to listen to this. This is
3:06:28
the don'ts. Of course I use it.
Don't say gay one.
3:06:32
Florida teachers are trying to
figure out how the parental
3:06:35
rights and Education Act which
opponents call the don't say gay
3:06:38
bill will affect their
classrooms. Governor Ron
3:06:42
DeSantis signed it into law
yesterday,
3:06:44
we will make sure that parents
can send their kids to school to
3:06:49
get an education, not an
indoctrination.
3:06:55
The law bans instruction on
sexual orientation and gender
3:06:58
identity from kindergarten
through third grade and PE ours
3:07:02
Melissa block reports.
3:07:04
Here's the question Paula
Stevens hears most from her
3:07:07
first graders in Clearwater,
Florida. Spoiler alert, it's not
3:07:11
about sexual orientation or
gender identity.
3:07:14
It's It's snack time,
3:07:16
Stevens is puzzled by the law.
After all, she says teaching
3:07:19
about sexual orientation and
gender identity isn't in the
3:07:22
first grade curriculum. But in
class, they do talk a lot about
3:07:27
kids families. So I'm with two
moms or two dads,
3:07:30
it makes me wonder when I talk
about families in my classroom,
3:07:34
am I going to be violating this
law? Because the children were
3:07:38
having discussions about what
their family looks like?
3:07:41
Yeah, I cut this short because
it goes on and on and on with
3:07:45
one teacher after another who
they dug up. Yeah, that's had
3:07:49
these complaints. And one of
them says, You did what you just
3:07:53
heard another one of very gay
kindergarten teachers is I the
3:07:57
kids, I don't know if I can talk
to the kids. Because they come
3:08:00
in, they asked me how my weekend
was. And then I was with my
3:08:05
partner. And all of these
complaints from all these
3:08:08
teachers, including that first
one you just heard. I was a kid.
3:08:11
Well, I'm a former kid.
3:08:13
And stop the press. No,
3:08:17
I'm a former kid. And I remember
some of this stuff. I have never
3:08:22
in the class in the school yard
or any place or especially in
3:08:25
the classroom. Asked about
people's families. How's your
3:08:28
family? That doesn't happen?
Kids don't talk about that. And
3:08:32
kids don't ask their
kindergarten or teach
3:08:34
kindergarten teacher. You don't
go up to the kindergarten
3:08:37
teacher and say, how was your
weekend? That's bullshit.
3:08:43
Yeah, and notice all the
problems they have is about
3:08:46
them. I heard another teacher
saying something similar. Well,
3:08:50
I have been you know, they see
me on social media with my
3:08:52
partner. I mean, how am I going
to explain that? Don't just do
3:08:57
the mean, look, I don't need to
wait in on on this. Don't say
3:09:01
gay but it just seems logical to
me that some things are meant
3:09:05
for the home, not for the
school. But that's really what
3:09:08
the core is. It's about it's
about what the power the power
3:09:12
that people want in educating
the children.
3:09:15
And you should note that a lot
of Democrats have come out
3:09:18
they're made up they're gonna
stand on this like a bunch of
3:09:20
idiots. Yeah, they say the
parents should not don't.
3:09:24
Education should not be up to
the parents leave it to the
3:09:27
professionals. That's us.
3:09:29
Right. That's and that's and
that's how they feel. And that's
3:09:32
a problem that has built up over
several decades is
3:09:35
how to control people do not
like this, right? So teach them
3:09:39
how to read it to teach them
math.
3:09:42
The math is racist. The
3:09:45
Yes, I get it. Forget about
math. So the
3:09:47
cultural, the cultural
battleground is Florida. And the
3:09:51
striking back comes through a
leaked zoom call of a bunch of
3:09:59
Disney Some executives,
certainly mid mid to higher
3:10:04
level executives in the company
are openly discussing how they
3:10:09
want to indoctrinate, or do they
want to put as much what they
3:10:13
would mainly call queerness into
Disney product as possible. And
3:10:17
this is being released publicly.
Not by mistake, obviously. So
3:10:22
there's there's a war going on
and I want to play a cup,
3:10:25
there's a lot of this thing is a
treasure trove there's tons,
3:10:28
tons of really clippable bytes
on this, you may have seen some.
3:10:33
So I think I have different ones
mostly. But then I also have a
3:10:37
note from Ali Jade the official
tranny of the no agenda show.
3:10:40
And she wants to give us a
little update a little
3:10:44
understanding of the difference
between transitioning when she
3:10:47
transitioned 10 years ago,
compared to apparently what
3:10:51
seems to be pretty easy these
days. So we'll start first with
3:10:55
Disney's activism partner, which
means that I don't think she
3:11:00
works for Disney, but she was on
the call Nadine Smith of
3:11:04
equality, Florida. And she
explains that this is nothing
3:11:08
new. I mean, obviously, there's
been meanings all throughout
3:11:11
history.
3:11:12
But the context is also who is
pushing it, what their record
3:11:16
is, and what the history is in
Florida. You know, you can go
3:11:19
back to the to the 50s, to the
John's committee where the
3:11:22
legislature was was actively put
together a task force whose
3:11:27
whole job was to root out civil
rights workers and any
3:11:31
homosexuals in the university
system. They destroy lives,
3:11:34
literally people committed
suicide behind the relentless
3:11:38
attack. And then you have a need
O'Brien and many of us are of an
3:11:41
age to remember a neat O'Brien
save our children campaign,
3:11:44
which was premised on the same
the same ideas that undergird
3:11:49
this bill. And because of her
campaign, that equated being gay
3:11:54
with being a pro child predator,
she was able to pass a ban on
3:12:00
gay people being able to adopt a
marriage ban. And then she took
3:12:03
that nationwide. And so when we
react to this, a lot of us are
3:12:07
reacting from the pain we
experience to being isolated and
3:12:10
stigmatized in school, or also
reacting from the reality that
3:12:15
when they can ratio when they
can criminalize your existence,
3:12:18
when they can demonize who you
are. The next step is to
3:12:22
criminalize you and take your
kids. And we're already seeing
3:12:25
that in Texas.
3:12:26
What
3:12:29
are we seeing this coming? I
mean, we're already
3:12:31
seeing this in Texas,
criminalizing you for your kids
3:12:35
and taking them away from you.
We're seeing this in Texas.
3:12:37
Well, you're in Texas, tell me
what's going on?
3:12:39
I don't I don't I don't see I
don't know what she's talking
3:12:42
about. You know, what she's
talking about
3:12:45
is to criminalize you and take
your kids. And we're already
3:12:48
seeing that in Texas. So the
slippery slope between these
3:12:52
ugly messages, you know,
emanating from legislative
3:12:56
leaders in our state, and then
amplified by our governor, who
3:13:00
spokesperson immediately began
calling everyone who oppose this
3:13:04
bill. groomers aka pedophiles
3:13:10
I didn't notice that group now.
It was didn't use groomers I
3:13:13
heard rumors, but it wasn't.
3:13:17
But this is a couple things. I
wish they would use one acronym,
3:13:27
because it's becoming very
annoying. Everyone's just
3:13:30
throwing some shit out there
adding community after it. But
3:13:33
when it comes to you know, who
do we really use? We use the G
3:13:37
in the LGBTQ AIP k plus the gays
and gay men. They're tired of
3:13:45
being abused like this for the
lesbians, or the trans toys all
3:13:49
don't say gay. I don't say gay.
They feel it's almost like Al
3:13:55
Sharpton speaks on behalf of all
blacks to the using only gay,
3:14:00
not lesbian. Only gay and G
comes before l How did they get?
3:14:03
How do they pop in the front of
the line of that acronym?
3:14:07
Well, originally, they were in
front of the line. That's right.
3:14:12
Used to be
3:14:12
GLBT you had the Gay Lesbian
Alliance? The GLA Yes. Right.
3:14:16
And then the lesbians pushed out
to gays. Yep. And put themselves
3:14:20
in front of the
3:14:21
line and started to abuse them.
3:14:23
Yeah, and so it looks like it's
totally
3:14:27
now but this is all good. It's
for good reason. And this is
3:14:31
spilling over into the parks as
it should because you know, that
3:14:35
Disney is is diverse and they're
inclusive. And Vivian ware is in
3:14:40
fact the manager of diversity
and inclusion.
3:14:42
Last summer we removed all of
the gendered gradients in
3:14:47
relationship to our life skills.
So we no longer say ladies and
3:14:50
gentlemen boys and girls, we
we've trained we've provided
3:14:54
training for all of our our cast
members and in relationship to
3:14:57
that so now they know it's Hello
everyone or Hello Friends, we
3:15:01
are in the process of changing
over those, those recorded
3:15:04
messages. And so many of you are
probably familiar when we
3:15:06
brought the fireworks back to
the Magic Kingdom. We no longer
3:15:09
say ladies and gentlemen, boys
and girls, we say dreamers of
3:15:11
all ages. And so I love the fact
that it's opened up the
3:15:14
creativity, the opportunity for
our cast members to look at
3:15:17
that. We have our cast members,
working with merchandise working
3:15:21
with food and beverage working
with with all of our guests face
3:15:24
areas where perhaps, you know,
we want to create that magical
3:15:27
moment with our cast members
with our guests. And we don't
3:15:31
want to just assume because
someone might be in in our
3:15:35
interpretation may be presenting
as female that they may not want
3:15:38
to be called Princess. So let's
think differently about how do
3:15:41
we really engage with our guests
in a meaningful and inclusive
3:15:44
way that makes it magical and
memorable for everyone?
3:15:48
Oh, I see the problem. Some of
our guests may not want to be
3:15:51
called Princess. So we can't say
that. Let's just say friends. I
3:15:59
think that's very presumptive. I
don't like it when Joe Rogan
3:16:03
says it either. Hello, friends.
That's it. That may not be my
3:16:07
friend. I appreciate ladies and
gentlemen. Okay. Anyway. So
3:16:13
that's what they're doing in the
park, but they're also doing it
3:16:15
in production. And this is a
this is Alan March, he is on one
3:16:20
of the teams that things for one
of the many animated programming
3:16:24
programs that they're doing. And
he's really doing as much as he
3:16:27
can to accentuate queerness in
Disney products.
3:16:31
Yeah, I've had the privilege of
working with the moon girl team
3:16:35
for the last two years. And
they've been really open to
3:16:38
exploring queer stories. And
part of I'm on the production
3:16:41
side. Part of the work that I
feel like I can put in is making
3:16:47
sure that we take place in
modern day New York. So making
3:16:50
sure that that's like an
accurate reflection of New York.
3:16:52
So I put together like a tracker
of our background characters to
3:16:56
make sure that we have like the
full breadth of expression.
3:16:59
Do we have like douchebag Wall
Street, people in the background
3:17:03
and a holes like that, and
criminals and people killing
3:17:07
people mugging thrown in front
of the train just for some
3:17:09
diversity.
3:17:10
And we got into a very similar
conversation Carrie of like, oh,
3:17:15
all of our like gender
nonconforming characters are in
3:17:19
the background. And so it's not
just a numbers game of how many
3:17:24
LGBTQ plus characters you have.
We got the further the, the more
3:17:31
centered a story is on a
character, the more nuanced you
3:17:35
get to get into their story. And
especially with like trans
3:17:39
characters, you can't see if
someone is trans, there's not
3:17:43
one way to look trans. And so
kind of the only way to have
3:17:47
these like canonical trans
characters, canonical asexual
3:17:50
characters, canonical bisexual
characters, is to give them
3:17:54
stories where they can like be
their whole selves.
3:18:00
Any thoughts before
3:18:01
it'll be entertaining?
3:18:05
I think what what really has
happened and this and that I'm
3:18:08
going to read this alley Jade
note in a moment, is it has
3:18:12
become way too simplified. I
mean, we're using any old
3:18:17
acronym LGBTQI chi a plus. This,
there's supposed to be peas in
3:18:24
there. It's it's just it just
just trans whatever. It's just
3:18:28
so easy. And it's really
accentuated by one of the one of
3:18:32
the corporate presidents of
Disney. This you may have seen
3:18:35
Carrie Burke, who really gets
emotional about the many, many
3:18:40
characters in their stories and
the many more trans characters
3:18:44
they want to bring to the
forefront because it's so
3:18:46
representative of a large group
of the population. But just and
3:18:50
I'll stop this after the
beginning because there's
3:18:52
something that irks me about
her.
3:18:53
I'm here as a mother of two
queer children actually. One
3:18:59
transgender child and one
pansexual child and and also as
3:19:06
a leader. And that was the thing
that really got me because I
3:19:11
have heard so much from so many
of my colleagues over the course
3:19:14
of the last couple of weeks, in
open forums and through emails
3:19:19
and phone conversations, and I
feel a responsibility to speak
3:19:25
not just for myself, but for
them. To all of us. We had a we
3:19:30
have an open forum last week at
20th Where again, the home of
3:19:35
really incredible groundbreaking
LGBTQIA stories over the years
3:19:40
where
3:19:40
aussagen is LGBTQIA Yes, she
just told us she has a P a
3:19:47
pansexual child why didn't you
put p in there? He's P the new Q
3:19:52
or the old Q? Hey, you're
talking to the wrong guy. She's
3:19:56
insincere. No but this this is
bullshit is insincere. She's
3:19:59
but she's a She's, she's talking
about self righteous. She Oh,
3:20:04
I've got two genders. You know,
a three year old who's now a
3:20:08
girl who was a boy and I got a
pan, a kid who's pansexual He's
3:20:12
probably in grammar school. I
think when I was in grammar
3:20:15
school, his pants ever
nonsexual? Who cares? You
3:20:18
weren't until you reach puberty,
which they won't even let these
3:20:22
kids do. You don't have any
sexual desires?
3:20:27
No. Let's read the note from
Allie Jade some information to
3:20:31
provide some details of
transgender medical practice
3:20:34
from 10 years ago when I went
through the whole situation in
3:20:36
North Carolina. So just compare
to the Cavalier pneus of these
3:20:40
people. First, you had to go
through therapy and
3:20:44
psychological evaluation for an
unspecified time when your
3:20:47
therapist evaluates you and
works with you to conclude if
3:20:50
you're suffering from gender
identity disorder, or have other
3:20:53
issues or problems in your life
or brain that is making you a
3:20:56
project, do you making you
project a gender issue? If they
3:21:01
and this is all in the past, if
they did find that you were
3:21:03
suffering from gender identity
disorder and no other factors
3:21:06
are present, they would require
the patient to start living as
3:21:09
the gender the person was going
to transition to along with
3:21:12
helping and providing details
and how to conform adopt to
3:21:15
blend in and become a good
member of society in the gender
3:21:18
you were transitioning to. It
was highly stressful, getting Oh
3:21:24
no, it was also highly stressed.
Getting on hormones does not
3:21:28
change all the years of male
hormones and puberty does not
3:21:33
reverse hair growth does not
change body structure. It does
3:21:38
not change voice tone does not
magically make you a woman. This
3:21:43
was stressed over and over again
by the doctor. The information
3:21:47
about the swimmer Leah Thomas
not having advantage is a
3:21:50
blatant lie. 10 years in and me
as a sysadmin not working out
3:21:57
still I retain some strength and
ability. They are a college
3:22:01
level athlete. They are a
college level athlete only
3:22:04
transition for one year, they
have all their abilities. So
3:22:08
she's saying 10 years later, I
still have dude like strength to
3:22:12
one year into this No way. He
does change skin, change skin to
3:22:18
softer eyesight and how your
brain is towards attraction and
3:22:22
emotion, body fat distribution
and everyone's favorite whoops.
3:22:26
After all those warnings they
move to the next step. So not
3:22:30
even there yet after working
with you when they find out you
3:22:32
are not suffering from a gender
disordered identity disorder
3:22:37
they would not provide the
letter needed from the next step
3:22:39
which is the endocrinologist,
the endocrinologist with an also
3:22:44
stressed with hormones can and
cannot do to the human body in
3:22:47
the medical risks you will be
taking on then you would be
3:22:49
required to come back twice a
year for follow up, which
3:22:52
includes blood tests and mental
stability check. It was seen as
3:22:55
a medical issue with medical
treatments, not a social
3:22:58
movement. Now they do not care
about any of these details. My
3:23:01
doctor of eight years retired
and I had to find another so I
3:23:04
went to Planned Parenthood to
get my regimen taken over come
3:23:07
to find out all that is based
all that is basically gone. You
3:23:11
answered a few questions from
Congratulations, you are a
3:23:15
transgender, you are wonderful
and perfect. I asked further
3:23:19
what all do they require to get
hormones now the answers, they
3:23:23
can do it all they do not
require the letters and mental
3:23:25
evaluations and therapy anymore.
It seems no therapy and medical
3:23:29
gate gatekeepers exist,
providing assistance to people
3:23:32
who may not actually benefit
from 10 transition and have
3:23:35
other underlying issues that are
the solution. That's why there's
3:23:38
a boom in transgender people. So
who changed all that? What, what
3:23:47
medical? What medical meeting
did we miss on these types of
3:23:52
things for some of the most but
I'm, I'm totally okay with
3:23:55
anyone changing whatever they
want. For whatever reason, I do
3:23:59
not give a shit. But when you're
talking about kids in the fifth
3:24:02
grade, and you're well, thank
you when you're indoctrinating
3:24:06
children with this. And and it's
one thing to I understand if
3:24:12
kids would need to identify with
who they are or whatever, you
3:24:15
know, teachers, I'm sure can
make exceptions. They're talking
3:24:18
about this. Don't say gays a
structural thing that is
3:24:22
forbidden now. But come on, you
can't have both these things
3:24:26
happening at the same time. We
need some nuance and little hold
3:24:29
back on. I mean, I think in
California, you can get hormone
3:24:32
blockers without your parents
permission at Planned
3:24:36
Parenthood.
3:24:41
Crazy,
3:24:42
not finished this clip of this
lady just sweet. So we heard
3:24:45
her.
3:24:45
And one of our execs stood up
and said, you know, we only have
3:24:48
a handful of queer leads in our
content. And I went What if that
3:24:55
can't be true? And I and I and I
realized, oh, it actually is
3:24:59
true. We have been Many many
many LGBTQIA characters in our
3:25:04
stories and and and yet we don't
have enough leads
3:25:11
without in show business. We've
always had wonderfully colorful
3:25:15
people. gay trans whatever.
Sammy Davis Jr, nuts, Little
3:25:23
Richard Richard Simmons I mean
we can go on with a million
3:25:27
different entertaining
wonderfully colorful people
3:25:29
always recognized as being
sexually oriented in different
3:25:35
ways than quote unquote
heteronormative and but it
3:25:38
wasn't like you were being spoon
fed this to become this way
3:25:42
almost by default as a as a
badge of honor spurred on by
3:25:46
adults. And then blame Texas
3:25:53
spurred on by adults and then
blame Texas just randomly do it
3:25:59
California they never blame us
for anything.
3:26:02
I'm gonna show my mood by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
3:26:06
all the people who could do
that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
3:26:15
know you have a long list again.
Here they were in a rat rat rat
3:26:19
rat through it. With Russia
starting with Rochelle Ridgely
3:26:24
in Metairie, Louisiana. She's at
the top of the list with two
3:26:28
with $100 Eric a Goodman son in
Mount Pleasant, Wisconsin. comes
3:26:34
in with $100 and happy birthday.
Ariel less nice. Michael Romano
3:26:41
and Sebastopol, California 808 A
TMT you both please de douche
3:26:47
and send some wedding karma for
my beautiful wife and myself a
3:26:50
sign. You've been de deuced and
here we go with her Kevin
3:26:57
McLaughlin, Duke of Luna lover
of America and boobs from
3:27:01
Concord North Carolina. 808
Zermatt of the growing tree in
3:27:05
Bend Oregon 7202 Sir OMA 7070
Happy Birthday Buzzkill. That's
3:27:10
me. $70 is the key. Donation.
Yes, this is for your last
3:27:17
birthday. show two now on the
birthdays on the fifth. Yes,
3:27:20
sir. Michael Anthony 7033. Happy
birthday, John. Now, I say docs,
3:27:26
I do docs to me a little better
know what he meant. Erica
3:27:30
redecker. in Great Falls,
Montana seven in the following
3:27:35
people are $70 donors. These are
all to celebrate my April 5
3:27:39
birthday. I thank each and every
one of them profusely for
3:27:42
helping
3:27:43
the show and you'll be sending
them all a thank you note I
3:27:45
hear. James Shaw starts us
3:27:47
off in Prairieville, Louisiana.
I'm thanking him right now. He
3:27:51
also says thanks for what you
do, John, someone needs to keep
3:27:54
Adam in check. Oh deed, please
de douche me. Been de deuced sir
3:28:06
Craig Porter, the ronin and
Carlsbad, California William
3:28:09
Taurus and Chesterton, Indiana
metal and lamb Park in
3:28:13
Milwaukee, Wisconsin. Her name
is in all caps for some reason.
3:28:16
Melcor Vonda Deccan in a bro.
Reno, Czechoslovakia or Czech
3:28:24
Republic? I'm guessing that's
what that is. A sir, calling the
3:28:30
deaf, dumb and blind night in
Prineville, Oregon. Hey, happy
3:28:35
birthday. Bobby brindle hoarse
in Mount Laurel, New Jersey.
3:28:42
John's Canadian voices sexy. A
joven Aleman and Bester shovin
3:28:52
Aleman in Baton Rouge Louisiana.
He's got a long note wants to
3:28:55
thank you. He's got a birthday I
think too. So Mr. Bebop night of
3:29:00
the frozen tundra right and
another 74 New Brighton,
3:29:03
Minnesota. Another birthday.
Just nice. Sure manila envelopes
3:29:07
in Den Haag, Netherlands. Happy
birthday, Adriana. Porto in
3:29:13
Hayward, California. Oh, Lydia
Terry domande le in Rochester,
3:29:19
New Jersey, Mike Rennaker. in
Dubuque, Dubuque, Iowa. Jonathan
3:29:25
Faris, in Liberal Kansas, Sir
Kevin McLaughlin. Whoa. Duke of
3:29:30
Luna lover of American boobs.
Yeah. comes in with 70 Just for
3:29:34
the birthday. Thank you to
Kevin. John L. barrini. And
3:29:39
Guerneville California. Well,
Walter Hill back in Essen
3:29:44
Deutschland, sir I'm sorry John
Metzger in Vernon, New York. Sir
3:29:50
Austin barren of the Puget Sound
and Dame Laura of the snowy
3:29:54
cascades in Sammamish. Summer
Hamish Washington, David Barton.
3:30:00
Bartlow in Lago Vista, Texas,
Justin price in Black's Burg
3:30:05
Virginia, John moot shink
maching. In Austin. He's trying
3:30:14
to buy a house he says they're
like nausea, Amy Molan in
3:30:18
Austin. Keep living the clean
life she says to me love is lit.
3:30:23
I'll see Dan in Bonora point New
South Wales Yancey summer hour
3:30:29
in Houston, Texas. That
concludes our list of specific
3:30:32
well wishes for my birthday and
I thank each and every one of
3:30:34
them Onra with Serge amo of
North Central Ohio and Lewiston,
3:30:38
Idaho, Idaho. I said Ohio 6933
Langston Smith in Portland,
3:30:44
Oregon 6666 Craig Kohler in
Evansville, Indiana. 6502 Jamie
3:30:49
Buell in Vista, California 606
small boobs, Julie Shepard 606
3:30:55
in Angola, Indiana. As she
requests some sanity jobs karma
3:30:59
would put put that at the end
for you specifically, Peter John
3:31:02
in Lakewood, Washington. 5510
Nancy Murphy 5244 from San Bruno
3:31:08
California, Kristin Brown and
Meadville, Pennsylvania 5151 And
3:31:12
the following people or $50
donors name and location, Claire
3:31:15
Thornhill in Toronto, Ontario
Dale Fitch in Henderson, new
3:31:18
North Carolina, Chris Goodman in
Leander, Texas, Lisa fauj or
3:31:23
fudge in Westminister, Colorado
and Tony Lange down the street
3:31:27
and Castle Pines, Colorado also
50 Sir smash over the lone
3:31:31
wolves and metal Netherlands
Yeah, metal Gil woods in Ocean
3:31:37
Grove, New Jersey Timothy more
in Arlington, Texas Jason Mauer
3:31:41
in Portland, Oregon, Robert PES
in Spring, Texas. Brent Chicky
3:31:48
Chicky in Lake Worth, Florida,
Paul Garin Garin Gearin, in
3:31:54
Toronto, Ontario, Shane Grubb in
Cleveland, Tennessee, Andrew
3:32:00
Watson in Fairhope, Alaska. That
concludes or that's Alabama,
3:32:04
Fairhope, Alabama. And that
concludes our well wishes
3:32:09
producers associate producers
are the helpers that produce
3:32:14
this show and also the people
wishing me a happy birthday and
3:32:16
I appreciate each and every one
of these donations.
3:32:19
And thank you to those coming in
under 50, for anonymity and also
3:32:23
on our sustaining donation
programs, which are smaller
3:32:26
amounts, but they're recurring
and automatically appreciate
3:32:28
that. Adam Eubank we didn't get
his note for the last episode.
3:32:33
His $50 donation sent him over
the top you'll be knighted
3:32:39
today. And he just wanted to say
briefly the community is
3:32:42
amazing. Y'all don't change you
do hard. You're doing great
3:32:45
given that the regional Burning
Man scene is veered into
3:32:48
authoritarian push them facts,
requirements, testing, etc.
3:32:54
Yeah, yeah. So much for the for
the hardcore Burning Man scene.
3:32:57
Hmm. I'm sure we love a great
campout it occurred to me that
3:33:01
it might be good idea to put
together a multi day camp out in
3:33:03
a sumo spirit but without tards
that get mo Palooza mega meetup
3:33:07
somewhere in middle America if
you will. Anyone wants to kick
3:33:10
this idea around hit me up on no
agenda? Social Ah, screw it. And
3:33:16
he wants to be wished sir fuck
you. That's why have the wild
3:33:19
loose commas. Hey, it's hot
rails and hallucinogens at the
3:33:25
roundtable and a healthy shot of
heart karma from my fantastic
3:33:28
pop so we can get back to
cycling his ass off an F cancer
3:33:33
from my friend's sister happy
belated birthday to my bro out
3:33:36
take acid and F shit up. Okay,
maybe a little less on the
3:33:42
hallucinogens. I wonder what the
hot trails are. Probably a lot
3:33:47
of that going on as well. Well,
if you thought these donation
3:33:50
notes were long wait until you
see the birthdays were out of
3:33:53
control here. And if you'd like
to help produce the best podcast
3:33:59
in the universe, here's a
website you can go to vo
3:34:01
red.org/and
3:34:04
A you've got karma
3:34:20
Julie Shepherd Happy Birthday to
her husband Max automate on the
3:34:23
27th on the 28th Earl mittens of
a world distant congratulated
3:34:27
Baronet this Mary bet we heard
her earlier heard about her
3:34:30
earlier. Mr. Matt 49 on the 29th
Andrew Walker turned 33
3:34:35
Yesterday Carissa Mulan Happy
birthday with her boyfriend
3:34:39
Scott Manning 51 Today the shill
our very own Eric does she'll
3:34:43
Happy Birthday to Evan Mackey 16
today went driving. Dwayne 38
3:34:49
today Ryan Benson 40 on April 2
Sir Ryan Baron of Tampa Bay will
3:34:54
be 40 on April 2, I guess that's
the same one Janee boost 50 On
3:34:59
the second Shelvin Alabama's 60
on April 2 A. Oh 1101 sauce.
3:35:06
Happy birthday to Dame Geek
Squared April 3 Sir bebop booth
3:35:11
night of the frozen tundra on
the fourth. Eric Goodman son
3:35:15
Happy Birthday to Ariel Simon
pelota is turning 33 Austin beat
3:35:21
Happy birthday it was smokin hot
wife Jessica BC turns 37 this
3:35:25
week and Joshua Gridley and of
course on the fifth Happy
3:35:28
Birthday to our very own
buzzkill, John C. Dvorak. Happy
3:35:31
Birthday everybody. Here's the
best podcast in the universe.
3:35:37
Change I don't want a title
change today for Benjamin
3:35:46
nitrous Vikon of San Francisco.
You heard him come in and top up
3:35:49
to another $1,000 Unbelievable.
And he will become the County of
3:35:53
San Francisco. He said Earl or
count but I think we decided
3:35:57
count is going to be good for
him and thank you very much sir
3:35:59
Benjamin. for your support of
the no agenda show another
3:36:02
$1,000 that keeps us going for a
while we do appreciate it. And
3:36:06
now we have a four nights to
bring up today. To go to the pre
3:36:12
pre pre vacation. knighting
3:36:15
don't we have a dame on there?
3:36:18
I see no dame.
3:36:19
But about Mary Brett. Well, only
one. Yeah. $143.28 from
3:36:25
Louisville, Kentucky. I don't
know you should talk to the back
3:36:27
office about that was the she
was the the Baronet test instant
3:36:32
Baronet tests.
3:36:34
Yep. And do we have a name for
her?
3:36:37
No. Just Mary Brett.
3:36:40
Okay. It's always so annoying
that that that doesn't get on
3:36:43
the list.
3:36:44
Yeah, it is. Yeah. Especially
when it's right at the top. Yes.
3:36:48
You think I think that would
make sense. Okay, so we do have
3:36:51
a dame Mary, we don't we don't
have a we don't have a dame
3:36:59
name. So I'll just what are we
just married
3:37:00
because Dame Brett? day she
could have some more information
3:37:06
for us. But second,
3:37:10
you got to paste all this in
now. Okay. All right, Dean.
3:37:14
Brett. Sounds good to me. What
do you look I've had this blade
3:37:17
out here. I'm just standing in
the wind. Could
3:37:19
you please my wife
3:37:22
Mary Brett, step on up along
with Andrew Walker, Scott
3:37:27
Manning, Josh Ridley and Adam
Eubank. All of you have reached
3:37:31
that level that brings you to
the roundtable the Knights and
3:37:34
Dames are very proud to
pronounce Kp is Sir big bro.
3:37:37
Mario Knight of NASCAR's and
Nintendo's sir Scott of The Mid
3:37:40
Atlantic solar wind surge. jpg,
sir, fuck you. That's why the
3:37:44
wild loose commas and damn
Baronet s marry bread for you.
3:37:48
We've got hookers and blow rent
boys and Chardonnay. We got four
3:37:52
fresh good years in the cannabis
Sunoco race feels sweet baby
3:37:55
Ray's and summer sausage
Rubenesque Lumina and Rosae vaca
3:37:57
Manila bong hits unbroken
sparklings is for ginger ale and
3:38:00
dribbles breast milk and Pac Man
Of course the button which is
3:38:06
always a favorite while you're
refreshing your wedding the
3:38:10
whistle with your meat go to no
agenda nation.com/rings and fill
3:38:15
out all the information we'll
get the night and Dame rings to
3:38:18
you as soon as possible and
thank you again for supporting
3:38:21
the best podcast in the universe
3:38:31
definitely got some meetup
business to take care of this as
3:38:34
the really is the core have no
agenda nation is completely
3:38:37
Proust producer organized and
supported. It's meetups that
3:38:41
happen around the world. People
get together and they have
3:38:44
community in common and it seems
to be a really good time. If
3:38:48
you've never been to one you
should definitely check one out
3:38:51
if you're in the Netherlands
here's a promo they put together
3:38:54
for their Mockingbird meet up
into Oberth maybe I strange and
3:39:24
strange.
3:39:43
freestall I'm sorry, not tilbyr
Freeze loans. I thought might
3:39:48
have worked better with video
and I should consider doing
3:39:52
that. I have no idea exactly
what was going on with that. We
3:39:55
do have some cool meetup reports
one from Sao Paulo, Brazil. The
3:40:00
first meetup was a complete
success is good news. Attendance
3:40:05
growth is up a phenomenal 100%
We absolutely lambasted our
3:40:09
previous long standing
attendance record of one
3:40:12
blasting it up to two producers.
That's right two producers
3:40:15
Brazil is on the map. Yes,
that's very good. Adam please
3:40:22
call up producer Thomas piers
the text for episode 1425.
3:40:26
Moving to Brazil. Let's get
Thomas pears may be pairs on
3:40:31
board for the next meetup in
June and honorary shout out to
3:40:33
Sir Rob alter the Baron of our
great state of Sao Paulo. Thanks
3:40:38
so much. You gave us sanity and
peace of mind in the brainwash
3:40:41
times. Thank you. Local 76 There
meetup.
3:40:45
What's shakin, gimel? Nation?
This is Sean from Philly, local
3:40:48
76. We're at Philadelphia
Brewing Company. We got a group
3:40:51
of 20 here today. Probably the
biggest I've ever hosted. So
3:40:55
that's very good. Here are the
people right now. Why do you
3:40:58
listen to no agenda?
3:40:59
Actually don't listen to no
agenda.
3:41:01
I listened to a portion of my
first podcast on the ride here
3:41:04
today.
3:41:04
And I love the douchebag by
associations into it
3:41:07
a couple times by myself due to
him get me onto the track and I
3:41:11
found it very interesting. And I
love the fact that they cover
3:41:14
pretty much everything. The best
part
3:41:16
of the 70s coming back is disco
came back with
3:41:19
why do you why do you listen to
no agenda? Five words less?
3:41:22
It makes me feel good
3:41:25
news because it makes sure I'll
feel good. I love Adam.
3:41:33
No bad words.
3:41:34
Throw away your television. I
meet really
3:41:37
cool people.
3:41:38
That's a good reason to like the
meetups. I take it best podcast
3:41:41
in the universe. Jhansi Dvorak
3:41:44
and Adam curry, my weekly
normality
3:41:48
because life is a scam. No thing
better to do. My boyfriend
3:41:53
listens to it. Argue with my
son.
3:41:58
Okay, and the final one from
Houston.
3:42:05
Houston, no agenda. Hi, this is
Dana. Sarah. We get our human
3:42:09
resources Maya and Alice here as
well. Small but intimate meetup
3:42:13
and we had fun.
3:42:17
Hey, guys, Andrea, and we're
having a blast. And we're so
3:42:21
excited that COVID is over. Yay.
In the morning, Adam and John.
3:42:25
We love you are number one
salad. Nation is supergrass.
3:42:33
Yes. John
3:42:38
Q definitely Alright, here's a
couple of dates coming up but
3:42:42
that Missy with the Portland
Oregon meetup that'll be April
3:42:46
1 530 Adickes primal burger on
the second Minnesota nuts in
3:42:51
Billings, Montana 333 Mountain
divide bar at divide Bar and
3:42:56
Grill and on the seventh place
to go California six o'clock and
3:43:00
there'll be at the organizers
home so contact Nelson through
3:43:03
no agenda meetup.com no agenda
meetups calm it is again
3:43:07
completely producer organized.
It is it is a sight to behold
3:43:12
you need to try one of these out
go ahead go to no agenda
3:43:14
meetup.com If you can't find
something near you move to
3:43:18
Brazil
3:43:19
sometimes you want to go hang
out with all the nights and days
3:43:26
you want to be triggered all you
want and everybody feels the
3:43:34
same it's like a bomb
3:43:39
yeah he's like a party man. All
right, we got to get out of
3:43:46
here. We still like we have to
do wrap arounds we got all kinds
3:43:50
of work coming up. You get all
kinds of work still to do today.
3:43:53
What do it for our shows are
fun. No ISOs
3:44:01
I have a remedy I have a couple
I have the fake laugh
3:44:10
okay.
3:44:14
And I wish I wish was on was one
of those NPR left I also have my
3:44:19
the one I've been using now I'm
going to start using as to be an
3:44:22
evergreen as the as the zombie.
So Oh, I
3:44:25
heard this in the report. Ah
where'd you get that from?
3:44:32
I got it by searching the sound
effects sites. I was looking for
3:44:38
a grown because of that. That
story about the deer and I and
3:44:41
this zombie clip was on there. I
took it okay. It's public
3:44:45
domain. And now the one I might
be good for the show is Wow
3:44:49
cool. Wow, that is so cool.
3:44:53
Huh? That's interesting because
I also have I have also a couple
3:45:02
of wires. Here's what I have.
Oh, wow. Which is Chuck Todd. I
3:45:09
think that's pretty damn good
with this. Oh, wow. Wow, that's
3:45:13
a huge problem. So we could
actually do wow that is so cool.
3:45:18
Oh, wow
3:45:19
wow that's a huge problem maybe
I'd like to first do this
3:45:24
problem that's a huge problem it
doesn't really fit show
3:45:28
doesn't it doesn't so I'm just
here these two wow that is so
3:45:33
cool. Oh, wow. We just do that
is so cool.
3:45:40
I like it the best. Yeah. And we
have used Oh, wow. once before.
3:45:44
Yeah, yes. But it's it's my 70
staple.
3:45:47
This is a better Oh, wow. When I
had this for sure, but put it
3:45:51
aside.
3:45:52
Yeah, I'll keep it in a band. So
as you would say,
3:45:55
in abeyance, yes.
3:45:57
All right, man. Let's get out of
here. All right, we've we've
3:45:59
deconstructed a lot. And
everyone is much smarter for you
3:46:03
can go ahead and tell all your
friends. Hello, the Will Smith
3:46:07
slab it was the coven. We all
know what's going on. I'm sure
3:46:11
you'll get some good looks with
that. So end of show mixes some
3:46:18
good ones. Am delicious. We got
Tom Starkweather Chad Marmot and
3:46:25
the traveling tacos. Yes with
the whispering Joe by request so
3:46:28
we're gonna play all of those
for you. Coming up next on no
3:46:31
agenda stream.com We have
unrelenting pulverized lemons.
3:46:36
It's sir Jean and Darrin doing
that show. And on Sunday you
3:46:42
will hear the best of end of
show mixes COVID style over
3:46:47
three and a half hours we'll
see. That's That's Thursday. Oh
3:46:52
so Sunday is what
3:46:53
Sunday is the rundown of COVID
clips for the first few months
3:46:59
of COVID
3:47:00
That's what I meant to say. Well
enjoy that everybody coming to
3:47:05
you from the heart of the Texas
hill country here in FEMA Region
3:47:08
number six in the morning
everybody I'm out of curry
3:47:11
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where I remain I'm John seed for
3:47:14
we
3:47:14
returned almost live on Sunday
meet us here for that William
3:47:20
until that adios mo photos and
such
3:47:35
a limit was to my life
3:47:38
I wrote on the environment
3:47:47
1.9 $1.9 trillion.
3:48:07
But I certainly am not a
spokesperson for the Kremlin. I
3:48:09
cannot speak to what Vladimir
Putin but across
3:48:14
Yeah, I agree complicating
everybody's
3:48:17
you can't speak for the Kremlin,
then you're saying he feels
3:48:19
misled by his advisors. It
3:48:21
seems like
3:48:23
there might be something going
on here. I'm not going to tell
3:48:26
you why when I tell you. They
don't run this state. They must
3:48:31
never run this state. As long as
I'm Governor.
3:48:34
We're told Smith could face
sanctions for his behavior.
3:48:37
Once you can walk back only
3:48:40
bite and decide what
3:48:43
I'm not going to tell you.
3:48:44
Why would I tell you? I didn't
write it but I could.
3:48:50
Look I think that's every single
solitary serious investigators
3:48:57
including your network and
others have looked at this have
3:49:01
said there's absolutely zero
basis to the accusation that I
3:49:06
act in any way inappropriately
or that my Sunday
3:49:16
years in federal prison Do you
think that everything that
3:49:38
happened was kosher? You know,
there's not one single bit of
3:49:41
evidence the federal system
3:49:58
well, it's kind of done To see
them sort of squirming around
3:50:02
trying to admit the obvious,
but, you know, if you're a
3:50:05
reader of the New York Post or
Fox News 16 months ago, you
3:50:11
didn't need the great New York
Times to tell you that it was
3:50:14
true when that date
authenticated emails we already
3:50:17
did that. West side
3:50:22
there are more deaths reported
to bears now, for these COVID
3:50:26
vaccines in 10 months, then two
times endometrial cancer is over
3:50:31
what I see on the mandate
miscarriages increased
3:50:34
by 390%. All to immune self
attack.
3:50:41
Neurological, over 1,000%
strokes, encephalopathy heart
3:50:46
arrhythmias, such as age are not
rare.
3:50:48
6220s people in their 30s and
40s people that wouldn't
3:50:54
normally be labeled as anxiety,
neuropathy, lung yawn Vare
3:50:59
syndrome. It's very
realistically a vaccine injury
3:51:03
mRNA vaccine. Does this look
like autoimmunity? Yeah, that's
3:51:07
the bodies are piling up
3:51:18
Bow Bow Bow red.org/and A Wow,
that is so cool.