Cover for No Agenda Show 1438: Trips of Clump
March 31st, 2022 • 3h 51m

1438: Trips of Clump

Transcript

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

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

0:00
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.
0:00 0:00