0:00
And there'll be great slaves
working for us. Adam curry
0:03
Jhansi Devorah
0:06
2022 This is your award winning
keep on nation media
0:08
assassination episode 1449. This
is no agenda. We have lost our
0:15
minds and broadcasting live from
the heart of the Texas hill
0:18
country here in FEMA Region
number six in the morning,
0:21
everybody. I'm Adam curry. And
from Northern Silicon Valley,
0:25
we're wishing everybody a Happy
Mother's Day. I'm John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:30
Buzzkill.
0:32
Yes, indeed. Although I looked
at the donations, and I think
0:36
we're back to hating moms again,
as to what it looks like. I
0:39
mean, it's like during COVID You
know, everybody was like, Oh,
0:42
Mom, help me. Help me. Help me.
COVID over for now. And it's
0:47
like, oh, Ukraine, Ukraine.
Ukraine. Who cares about Mom,
0:52
it's Ukraine. Roe v. Wade.
0:57
America has lost its mind, John.
By Baadshah. Do you see all
1:01
these protests, counter
protests, all this
1:05
crazy stuff going on this
morning? There's not much going
1:09
on around here. No.
1:12
I mean, maybe I mean, no, not
really interesting.
1:18
You want to hit Texas you got
you can No, no, no, no, no. It
1:21
was just started it. No, here's
the Chicago local report and
1:25
abortion rights demonstrators
scream back and forth in Federal
1:28
Plaza in downtown Chicago.
Washington is a very important
1:31
issue because it is a direct
attack on the women. And
1:35
specifically the women of the
working class black brown. In
1:39
Chicago for abortion rights,
various groups and activists
1:42
call for Roe v Wade to be
codified into law that we won't
1:46
back down rally kicked off today
to defend abortion rights. This
1:49
rally comes after the leaked
draft of the US Supreme Court's
1:53
decision overturning Roe v.
Wade. I don't know who leaked or
1:56
what their motivations were. But
we have this information now. So
2:00
we have an obligation to speak
out regardless of what the laws
2:04
are. Abortion is going to keep
happening. And so our choice
2:07
really isn't? Do we want to have
abortion or not. But do we want
2:10
women to be safe? We want women
to have access to care, or do we
2:13
want them to have to take it
into their own hands?
2:16
Give us liberty or you give us
stuff? What does that mean? That
2:20
means that if you don't give
people with uteruses
2:24
the liberty to make their own
choices, then you're not giving
2:28
us a choice. We are not anti
women. We're not infringing on
2:31
women's rights. We are
protecting women. We are
2:34
protecting a woman's right
inside the womb. Organizers
2:37
today told me it took them four
days to play this to plan this
2:41
event. And they said they're
already planning the next one.
2:44
Pull it out. Oh, where was that
Illinois said Chicago.
2:49
It's legal in Chicago. What are
they complaining about?
2:54
It because they're activated.
This is political has nothing to
2:58
do actually with women totally
legal. You know, if you want to
3:01
get objective reporting, you got
to go overseas. Wow. Where they
3:05
don't know anything. Okay. Do
you have something? I actually
3:11
do? I have quite a bit. In fact,
included in there is a nice ask
3:15
Adam. Let's go to Roe v Wade F
24. From France. A draft ruling
3:20
in favor of being overturned was
leaked to the politico website.
3:24
It sparked fury among many Why
is there a British woman reading
3:28
on France 24 a lot a lot of
French people when they learn
3:33
English they learned from
abroad. Oh, you think this she's
3:36
a French native speaker speaking
a draft ruling in favor of being
3:40
overturned was leaked to the
politico website. It sparked
3:44
fury among many with US
President Joe Biden saying such
3:47
a decision could imperil a wide
range of other civil rights. A
3:52
decision on the draft opinion
isn't expected until later in
3:55
the year, leaving a divided
nation to debate and prepare for
3:59
a possible life without Roe
versus Wade as Monty Francis
4:03
reports.
4:05
As protests rage across the US,
the nation's Supreme Court is
4:10
set to turn back the clock on
abortion rights. draft decision
4:15
indicated that the court would
overturn the 1973 decision, Roe
4:19
versus Wade that for decades
secured a woman's right to an
4:23
abortion. precedent Biden warned
the courts reasoning on privacy
4:28
could lead to other setbacks.
What happens if you have state
4:32
changes the law saying that that
that children who are LGBTQ
4:37
can't be in classrooms with
other children? Is that is that
4:40
legit? Under the way the
decision is written? What are
4:45
the next things that are going
to be attacked? Yeah, this is
4:47
the talking point that they're
all spouting to hold this this
4:51
is just the beginning. What will
happen next? I like the way the
4:55
French F 24 France 24
4:58
picks up on an American
5:00
Talking Points. Yeah. Isn't that
interesting? Yeah, I find it
5:03
fascinating. Isn't that
interesting? Can I Can I just
5:07
roll media? I'm sorry. No
conspiracy. Yeah, no, I had
5:12
corroboration of this talking
point, but it's too long. Play
5:15
that later. You go Roe vs. Wade
to companies such as Amazon and
5:19
Citi Group, and many others are
offering to cover travel costs
5:23
for workers seeking abortions
across state lines. There are
5:27
also reports that the Biden
administration is considering
5:30
whether travel funding could be
made available through Medicaid.
5:35
Yeah, this is this they are
really freely doing everything
5:39
they can to activate their
voting base that was clipped to.
5:45
Yes.
5:47
Yeah, no, they are done. They're
doing everything they can in it.
5:50
You know, somebody pointed out I
was listening to the right wing
5:53
talk radio people. And they
pointed out
5:57
that the voting base is you
know, that people aren't
6:00
changing their minds over this.
Everyone's decided already what
6:03
you're gonna vote for. But it's
all about getting out to vote.
6:07
Yes. Activating. Activating is
what it's called. Now I got an
6:11
ask Adam here. Oh, this is where
Roe vs. Wade part three.
6:18
So they gonna bring an American
expert on to talk about this.
6:22
boots on the ground. Okay, would
you Who do you think it might
6:26
be? Why is it so the ask Adam is
before the before we play the
6:31
clip, that clip is the pay? I
believe I believe I made it that
6:35
way. Yeah.
6:38
It's play my jingle. All right.
So it's a guessing is more of
6:42
like,
6:43
I asked him as though it was a
quiz. Okay. All right. Can you
6:46
Can I have the question one more
time, please. Who is going to be
6:49
the American representing all of
the US all the women and
6:53
everybody in the United States?
Who is going to be to France?
6:57
24. Who's Who would it be? Just
just take a couple of guesses
7:01
and we'll go on to it. All the
women. Well, Michelle Obama's
7:05
too big a name.
7:08
Correct. Oh, man. Could it be?
7:13
Rachel Levine.
7:16
Come on. That was really close.
Thank you. Bruce Jenner, Bruce
7:21
Jenner. Caitlyn Jenner. You're
getting closer. Well, yeah, no,
7:27
I quite okay. So let's play this
clip. I'm Joining me now from
7:30
New York is Molly Jong fast.
7:34
The author of its newsletter,
right?
7:37
Yeah, she's she's out. Man.
She's out there. My junk.
7:42
That's very funny. Thank you. I
feel much better with my guesses
7:45
now. Yeah. Okay. Go to clip
four, we'll get this route
7:48
wrapped. What Molly, thank you
very much for your time. What
7:52
conversations have you been
having with your daughter, about
7:56
the fact that she will now have
less rights than either yourself
7:59
or her grandmother. So abortion
became legal with the passing of
8:04
Roe in 1973. So we've had this
right for 49 years. So my mother
8:10
actually grew up without the
right to choose. And then as she
8:12
got that, just I just have to
stop it for a second.
8:16
Fundamentally, that's just the
lie. That was not there was no
8:19
abortion. Right. That was given.
This is the this is the
8:22
fallacies that people are just
being what's being shoved down
8:27
their throat is what what you're
going to try to turn back to
8:33
turn back to tie the lies. Yes,
I just needed brought this up
8:38
before and you can bring it up
again, which is fine, because
8:41
you're right. It's not it's
about privacy. It's not about
8:45
any rights. And if anything, I
think you are just going to know
8:50
the reason I futility. No, it is
futile, but I want to bring it
8:55
up again, because I think it
behooves the government to have
8:58
this Roe v Wade overturned so we
can have federally mandated
9:02
vaccinations. So um, you know,
this privacy, right? If it if
9:07
it's for women, then it's for
everybody.
9:10
Unless it's not 73. So we've had
this right for 49 years. So my
9:16
mother actually grew up without
the right to choose. And then as
9:19
she got older into her 30s, then
abortion became legal. But I
9:24
wait a minute. So we might not
have had Molly Jong fast,
9:28
whatever her name is.
9:30
Is that what she's saying? No.
As you mentioned, she might she
9:34
know what she's Yes, she Oh, my
goodness. I'm sad. We didn't
9:37
have that the mother actually
grew up without the right to
9:40
choose. And then as she got
older into her 30s Then abortion
9:44
became legal. But I've talked to
her about it. And it's I think
9:48
it's quite shocking for all of
us. It's funny. In America, we
9:52
sort of saw this coming because
there was a Texas and there was
9:56
a Texas abortion ban called SB a
which
10:00
shot was put into effect in
August. And this Supreme Court
10:04
refused to overturn it. So we
sort of saw where the Supreme
10:09
Court was headed. And remember,
Trump did put these three
10:12
justices in literally, with the
goal of overturning roe. And he
10:17
even said it at the time. So I
don't know that this is a huge
10:20
shock, but
10:22
in the same way, also a huge
shock. So by heading in this
10:26
direction, Molly, America is
doing a complete U turn as other
10:29
countries liberalize their
abortion laws, such as Ireland
10:33
or Argentina. So what does it
mean for women's rights in
10:37
general? Remember, Mexico,
legalized abortion, Canada is
10:42
now saying American women can
come there to get abortions. I
10:46
mean, it's really dystopian,
what's happening here. And it's
10:49
really, really, really out of
step with the rest of the world
10:51
really, really have a, you know,
this is the highest court, and
10:55
the highest court is very
conservative. Now, it's and
10:58
that's going. I don't know what
that's going to mean. But I
11:01
think it will have a lot of
reverberations throughout the
11:05
rest of American life for
generations. Is it too late to
11:09
do anything? In your opinion?
11:12
Okay, do we have the answer to
that question?
11:15
Now, I'm just pointing the these
guys to all the clips I got on
11:19
today's show are from overseas
sources, I think reset for a
11:23
couple of laggards from previous
shows that didn't use and it's,
11:27
it's just more fascinating than
ever, how the talking points
11:32
that you pointed out. And you
could play that clip to prove we
11:36
know this. These talking points
are world wide. It's like the
11:40
way the shutdowns, a lock downs
and vaccines of Pfizer and
11:44
everything else. It's no longer
just local. No, it's global,
11:48
swirled wide and is lockstep.
And that in fact was the name of
11:53
the program that was published
called lockstep operation
11:57
lockstep get everybody in
lockstep with all the messaging
12:00
they've they've achieved this
accomplishment.
12:04
I think they have. Yeah, if I
could get the same exact clips
12:08
from Deutsche Vela
12:10
almost could get the same. I get
almost get the same clips from
12:14
from Chinese CGTN. Almost. But
okay, so that does take it one
12:20
more. I think one more one more.
Yeah, here's No, no, I don't
12:24
think it's too late. First of
all, the President has a lot of
12:26
power. And he could conceivably
do any number of things. I mean,
12:30
there are I mean, he, you know,
and the Senate could codify roe.
12:35
I mean, I don't know what that
would do. I mean, the President
12:38
could expand the court. I mean,
there are all sorts of things
12:41
that Democrats could do.
Democrats tend not to be that
12:44
aggressive, which is, I think,
very problematic. But there are
12:48
certainly always options. And
right now Democrats controlled
12:51
the Senate, the House and the
presidency. So yeah, they I
12:53
mean, they could add new
justices. I mean, it's not
12:56
popular, but they could do it.
12:59
The Hollywood executive and his
wife stayed overnight last
13:01
night. Yeah. And and he says
it's crazy. What he says every
13:07
every third email he gets at the
corporation is a memo about
13:13
this. Or about black male or
transgender or it's just it's
13:20
that's where it's all emanating
from
13:24
it's it's just put into the
media into our all our media all
13:28
that we consume sports
entertainment.
13:32
But where's it coming from?
Here's one of the origins
13:35
earlier today we sat down with
former Secretary of State
13:37
Hillary Clinton for her first
interview since that leaked
13:40
draft opinion oh my goodness her
first interview since that draft
13:43
opinion here we go on exclusive
CBS
13:48
I thought you were Oh, you're
right. Okay. She did this i By
13:51
the way, didn't get this clip I
should have and I was on my
13:54
list. But then if you notice I
have too many clips. You are
13:57
over clipped.
13:59
And I'm glad you got this clip.
She went and I this was the
14:03
first one then the next day just
for your so people can know
14:08
this. The next day Hillary did
an interview with Judy.
14:12
On on PBS. I swear to God, you
could take and take one woman,
14:20
Judy and then replace her with
Nora and then replace where Judy
14:24
back and forth back and forth.
And the interview would be
14:26
identical. Oh yeah. Same same
handler sitting next door. Same
14:32
script, same boring. Same
script, same handler. There's
14:37
the woman and the woman sitting
next to her nodding her head
14:40
constantly Oh, my head's going
up and down and something's
14:42
wrong with me. And yeah, okay,
so now you're on your way. And I
14:48
would like to say that. This is
a value for value podcast and we
14:52
have a lot of, in fact, none of
your listeners, your producers,
14:55
even though some of you are also
trolls, and neither of us got
14:59
this clip.
15:00
This was delivered by the clip
custodian who has taken a vow of
15:04
pain to sit through things like
this and grab this clip. She
15:07
says the consequences of
overturning Roe versus Wade
15:11
would go beyond abortion rights.
This is about trying women. This
15:15
is about turning the clock back.
Half the population of our
15:19
country in the 2016 campaign,
Donald Trump made it clear he
15:23
would nominate justices who
would overturn Roe vs. Wade, did
15:27
you imagine what happened this
quickly? I warned about it in
15:30
the campaign, I could see that
the man I was running against
15:35
would literally do anything to
get the votes of the extreme
15:39
faction of the Republican Party,
who were willing to totally
15:45
upend precedent and deny women
their rights. So I didn't warn
15:49
about it. But you know, it's
hard to warn in the abstract,
15:51
and I think a lot of people
would say, Oh, that'll never
15:54
happen. No, but nobody will do
that this opinion is dark. It is
15:59
readily dangerous. And it is not
just about a woman's right to
16:03
choose. It is about much more
than that. And I hope people now
16:08
are fully aware of what we're up
against, because the only answer
16:11
is at the ballot box to elect
people who will stand up for
16:14
every American's rights. And any
American who says look, I'm not
16:17
a woman, this doesn't affect me.
I'm not black, that doesn't
16:20
affect me. I'm not gay, that
doesn't affect me. Once you
16:23
allow this kind of extreme power
to take hold. You have no idea
16:29
who they will come forward now.
There it is.
16:34
Total Hitler Nazi reference.
First, the whole thing first
16:39
they came for this, then they
came for that. That's exactly
16:42
what it is. joke of it is also
to me reflects the famous Dutch
16:46
saying what I say you are what I
am exactly. But you're being
16:50
yourself and your corporate
health. And that's what she is
16:53
she would this is what she
wants. She wants to be Hitler.
16:57
Yeah.
16:58
She dies literally.
17:02
About literally, but yes. Well,
well, literally, it's impossible
17:07
because she can't be Hitler. She
wants to be a Hitler. Hitler.
17:11
turned back. So here are the
talking points turn back the
17:13
clock, the extreme faction of
the Republican Party, bright
17:19
arc, it's dark people's rights,
that it's dark. And then I'm not
17:25
I don't I'm not convinced that
she dreamed any of this up.
17:28
She's part she's part of the
she's part of the messaging.
17:32
Yes. Oh, yeah. But I'd like to
know who dreamed it up, because
17:35
it was almost like the whole
thing from the stolen document.
17:39
To the to the talking points,
and everything was presented as
17:42
a package, including their
protests. Yep. On both sides on
17:46
both sides. Both sides. Were
ready for this, John. It's
17:49
equal, although in the reporting
like the Chicago you heard,
17:52
well, the the pro choice rally
or the had some name for it, but
17:57
the other people it's not like
the pro life rally don't mention
18:01
that. And other just the
protesters, you see. But it's
18:04
it's both sides almost equally
as if that two was in my mind,
18:08
the way I see it. I think that
was engineered as well. I don't
18:12
know. I I'm not going to jump on
that bandwagon. Because I think
18:17
the reason I say this because
the overseas reporting reflected
18:20
none of Okay. All right. All
right. Good point. Let's, let's
18:24
just double check with our
president. Let's see what his
18:28
historical stance has been on
abortion 2006. I do not view
18:32
abortion as a as a choice in a
right. I think it's always a
18:37
tragedy. And I think that it
should be rare and safe. And I
18:42
think we should be focusing on
how to limit the number of
18:45
abortions. Oh, Joe. Oh, that was
that must have been 40 years
18:50
ago. That was 2006. Wasn't
yesterday math? Well, oh, well,
18:55
maybe not. So something years is
a long time.
19:01
I mean, 16 years is a long time.
But then again, maybe it's not
19:07
because they were going after
judge Cavanaugh has a sex life
19:10
when 50 years ago. So I suppose
that
19:16
big tech, according to Axios is
very worried if if Roe v Wade is
19:21
overturned, well, you know, then
they're afraid that they're
19:26
going to have all kinds of
19:29
legal requests for information.
Should these people you know,
19:34
did they communicate with a
doctor was a geolocation
19:38
somewhere near an abortion
clinic. This is a real story
19:42
about that. That's the reason
they're worried about big data.
19:45
I thought it was because most
big tech, big kick code is an
19:49
abortion itself. And that's what
I was. That was been my take.
19:54
Very good.
19:56
No, it's their big tech in
Silicon Valley.
20:00
is afraid that law enforcement
will just go rampant and just
20:04
swamped them with requests not a
control. Yeah, yeah. So we have
20:08
to activate the base, everybody
activate the base.
20:13
So that's all that's about.
That's all it's all about
20:16
activating the base, the only
thing
20:20
they're also I don't think this
is gonna get anywhere. But I
20:22
want to play these clips. These
are clips of from these I might
20:26
be from NPR.
20:30
NPR analysis, this is the
filibuster clips. And this is
20:35
talking about the filibuster, we
got it, you know, there's
20:38
explaining the filibuster angle
for people who don't understand
20:40
the filibuster, because we have
a lot of Europeans and Asians
20:45
and everyone all over the world,
Europe, Europeans.
20:50
Yeah, the filibuster is a huge
in Congress, you can
20:55
go up and waste people's time by
just talking and talking to
20:58
talking forever, and then
passing it on to somebody else
21:00
is going to talk forever, and
then nothing can ever get done.
21:03
It's perceived as a procedural
thing. It's a procedural thing.
21:06
So they came up with a thing
called a cloture, which is a
21:08
vote against it. And then they
came up, they had all these
21:11
things this went on for decades,
all these problems, because it
21:14
was a one little flaw in the way
the US Senate's operates. And so
21:18
they came up with this rule that
you can't pass anything without
21:21
60 votes instead of it's not a
simple majority it you need 60
21:26
votes, and that's called the
Philip. Now, it's called the
21:28
filibuster rule. And they name
it is misnomer in some ways. So
21:33
everyone's agreed the Democrats
and Republicans over for a long
21:37
time have agreed that this is
fine because you know, that way
21:39
we can't rank that way a
Republican or a Democrat, in
21:43
this case, a Democrat, you can't
have a democrat majority house
21:47
by one vote.
21:50
democrat majority Senate by one
vote or by or tied because the
21:53
vice president can be a
tiebreaker. And a president as a
21:57
Democrat because now you can
just run anything through as
22:00
fast as you can with any loss
only on the 60 vote majority
22:06
that's only on certain types of
votes. Correct. Other things
22:08
still aren't right? It was it
was for all votes. And then they
22:11
started making
22:13
exceptions. Oh, and the first a
big exception was for for
22:18
justices. Because when the cars
became as things became more
22:23
partisan, the supreme
22:25
Supreme Court confirmation was
getting ridiculous because they
22:30
couldn't agree on anything and
they would filibuster guys they
22:33
didn't like and it was getting
worse and worse and worse to the
22:36
point where it is now where
they're really having trouble.
22:38
So the filibuster was so they
could never get anyone to pass
22:42
so you'd have a Supreme Court
would be half empty if they
22:46
didn't pass this exception right
right. This was very good as a
22:51
more you know
22:53
seriously I'm playing in all
seriousness that so they're
22:57
having a lot of issues with
certain things like the like
23:01
they want to pass certain things
they can't get past like the
23:04
idiotic $3 trillion right? Spend
money on babysitters law which
23:10
they tried to do so they keep
wanting they won't let's just
23:13
wait let's get rid of the
filibuster and go back to the
23:15
good old days. Always bitching
about Republicans wanted to go
23:18
back to the old Republicans also
do that from time to time when
23:22
they're in power in the Senate.
They also come up with a fish
23:25
but they have never made a move
that I know of unless somebody
23:28
can cite one for me to actually
get rid of this rule right okay.
23:34
The Democrats keep trying and
the Democrats have two or three
23:36
smart Democrats like man shin
and that woman down in Arizona
23:40
that woman that was another that
woman
23:45
can you define woman for me John
So I understand who we're
23:47
talking about. Yeah, I can but I
won't opera. Cinema cinema
23:53
cinnamon. So she's down there
and but she's cuz she's in a in
23:57
a Republican state and she has
to be careful. And
24:02
and she's doing fine. So it
matches the same way he's in the
24:04
Republican state. He has to be
careful. So they they're not
24:07
going to let this happen. And so
then it's never gonna happen.
24:11
I mean, Romney will go to the
other way but that's about as
24:14
far as it's gonna go. Now.
24:17
They but they keep talking about
it. And then the funny the joke
24:20
of it is what they're talking
about in insofar as let's get
24:25
rid of the filibuster so we can
pack the court just and run just
24:29
federal Democrats so we can play
the same game. But
24:35
nobody thinks it's going to
happen but they keep trying to
24:37
help make it happen instead of
just
24:40
ending the filibuster for one
vote and voting abortion as the
24:43
as the as the law of the land.
Why don't they do that? That's
24:46
what Biden wanted to do in 86.
24:50
You know, make a you know, in
other words, codify Roe versus
24:53
Wade, in favor of abortion,
legal abortion for the entire
24:58
country. Yeah, we can do that.
25:00
Yeah, but that's not they won't
do it. There's not a
25:02
constitutional you can it's not
a law that Congress can write.
25:07
Yeah, they can. Because, as
mentioned, Roe vs. Wade, the
25:11
Constitution does not for bade
or it has nothing to do with
25:16
abortion is not mentioned in the
constitution. So it's not no
25:19
matter what you do, it can't be
unconstitutional. Okay. But also
25:23
Roe vs. Wade is not about
abortions. No, it's not. But you
25:26
could I know, it's true. But you
could pass an abortion law,
25:31
making abortion illegal for all
the states. And Congress can do
25:35
it and it wouldn't be
overturned.
25:38
This has been discussed a lot.
Yeah, they will do it. No. Now
25:43
in order to remove the
filibuster rule, you have to
25:46
have a 6060 majority. Yeah, you
have to
25:52
get past the filibuster to
cancel the filibuster. Okay.
25:55
Yeah, that will take some big
pay off some favors to get that
25:58
done. Well, it won't happen. I
don't think they're gonna bid
26:01
your moan about so let's listen
to some of the complaining. This
26:04
is the NPR analysis. filibuster.
This is the specious that clip.
26:09
The leak US Supreme Court draft
decision published by political
26:13
this week sent shockwaves
through people and politics. The
26:17
draft said that access to
abortion right, legally grounded
26:20
in privacy is not a
constitutional right. And that
26:24
this opinion holds it would
overturn Roe v Wade, which is
26:26
protected the right to have an
abortion without excessive
26:29
restrictions. For half a
century. President Biden said he
26:33
believed the reasoning laid out
in the draft decision would
26:35
challenge other privacy related
rights, including same sex
26:39
marriage and access to
contraception. We're joined now
26:42
by NPR senior Washington editor
and correspondent Ron Elving.
26:45
Ron, thanks so much for being
with us. Good to be with you,
26:47
Scott. When what the President
said sounded like alarms for
26:54
those who fought for causes like
access to contraception and the
26:58
right to same sex marriage. Is
this a rallying cry for
27:01
Democrats? And do they have the
votes? Yes, it is certainly a
27:05
rallying cry, and they will
respond to that Democrats, most
27:09
of them. But on your second
question, no, they do not have
27:13
the votes for legislation that
would protect abortion rights or
27:15
same sex marriage or any of the
other rights in the house. Yes.
27:19
But in the Senate, we are still
living with the filibuster. Lots
27:23
of rights are talking about
their
27:26
auto rights that don't actually
exist as written rights. Now
27:30
they're not written ricin. But
to think the joke is in there
27:33
they won't bring this up is that
is this is this modern Supreme
27:36
Court that was the conservative
Supreme Court not the one with
27:41
with Amy Coney Barrett, but
they're the ones who, who pretty
27:46
much legalized same sex marriage
for the whole country. So that
27:50
doesn't make any sense that
there would all of a sudden
27:53
change their mind? No, this is
just fear mongering tactics. Oh,
27:57
crap. Yes. But your Monday, I
would what I wouldn't be happy
28:00
with is Congress codifying a law
that says every individual has
28:06
bodily autonomy. That's one of
the talking points. And I would
28:09
like that I think that's
absolutely. Okay. And then if
28:12
you want to interpret that for
abortion, okay, that's up to the
28:16
state, I believe, but okay. But
also that would then go for
28:21
other types of medical
procedures that I have bodily
28:23
autonomy, autonomy over to have
or not have, like vaccinations.
28:29
So we could all win, we could
all win. Under clip two. It
28:33
still takes 60 votes to cut off
debate and proceed to a vote on
28:37
legislation. So there will be an
attempt to do that next week,
28:41
probably on Wednesday, it will
get all or nearly all the
28:44
Democrats, it will be opposed by
all or nearly all the
28:47
Republicans. There could be one
or two defections on either
28:50
side, but that doesn't matter.
They won't get 60 So it's moot
28:54
yet it's a chance for senators
to show their colors to stand up
28:57
and be counted maybe make
speeches maybe make videos to
29:00
show in their campaigns Yeah,
that'll value depends on voters
29:05
tuning in and engaging with
this. Many Americans don't and
29:09
won't
29:12
Yeah, that's exactly what they
want. And they want to drag it
29:16
out. As long as they you're
right last show you brought it I
29:20
popped it too soon.
29:23
Exactly popped it way too soon.
Look how short
29:28
they know that these things you
that's what it is October
29:31
surprises. Maybe there's some
last minute stuff that kicks ass
29:35
nice stuff. You do? Six months
in it. Okay, well hold on a
29:39
second. That's good. So they
can't keep this up for six
29:43
months. No, no way. October
surprised. They're not even
29:47
they're going to need something
in the meantime, but maybe
29:49
they're planning actively
planning an October surprise.
29:52
Who knows? Well, if that's true,
then good for them. Yeah, part
29:56
three, and we're done with this
round of this draft decision.
30:00
It comes about and roe is
overturned. Could that galvanize
30:05
the Democratic Party and voters
in the midterms? Well, Democrats
30:08
have said for years that
everything would be different if
30:11
the Republicans finally got
their chance to repeal abortion
30:14
rights and perhaps other rights
regimes as well to revisit the
30:18
struggles of the 60s and 70s and
reverse the perceived outcomes.
30:22
Now we're gonna see if they were
right. You know, with Friday's
30:25
robust jobs report, you can
begin to imagine a Democrats
30:28
bumper sticker for this fall it
says jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs,
30:33
jobs. Jobs, of course refers to
jobs, jobs, jobs, and what was
30:38
the what was the second part?
30:40
jobs jobs jobs?
30:44
Yeah, I know. That's what that's
the blank. Look. I was expecting
30:47
what the heck is that? Well, he
explains it. Okay.
30:52
But that's what when I first
heard that I said, What, blah,
30:55
who cares? adopts you know, with
Friday's robust jobs report, you
30:59
can begin to imagine a Democrats
bumper sticker for this fall it
31:03
says jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs,
jobs, jobs. Jobs, of course
31:08
refers to the jobs versus
Jackson women's
31:12
2018 Mississippi law that bans
abortions after 15 weeks lower
31:16
courts should rule to prevent
enforcement but wait so so NPR
31:20
is now making up the slogans for
for the
31:23
what their expertise shows.
31:27
bumper sticker that says jobs,
jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs jobs is
31:31
going to is the stupidest idea.
Imagine. Jobs, of course refers
31:36
to the jobs versus Jackson
Women's Health Organization, the
31:39
2018, Mississippi law that bans
abortions after 15 weeks lower
31:44
courts should rule to prevent
enforcement before it was
31:47
brought to the Supreme Court.
That's right. I'm talking in
31:50
Supreme Court code calling it
dogs but in this case, law or
31:53
federal courts had looked at
these cases and look to the
31:56
Supreme Court for new guidance.
You know, 50 years ago, when Roe
31:59
vs. Wade burst on the American
consciousness. At first no one
32:03
knew what those names meant,
either. But you know, it's hard
32:06
to find anyone who doesn't know
Roe versus Wade. Now, one day
32:10
that will be true of dogs. And
the recoverable Republicans try
32:15
and capitalize politically off
these results too. So we're
32:20
gonna play it down stick to
talking about inflation. That's
32:23
what consultants advise. But
command campaigns, especially
32:27
midterm campaigns are not so
much about persuading people in
32:30
the middle. They're about
motivating the people who
32:32
already agree with you. So look
it out to the polls. So the
32:35
Republicans will point to the
dogs decision in some cases and
32:38
say, See, we promised and we
delivered every vote to overturn
32:42
dogs was the Justice appointed
by a president named bush or
32:44
Trump.
32:46
Right, well, okay, so he too is
just admitting this is all it's
32:50
all political. It's about
getting the people who already
32:53
agree with you to get out and
vote. Yeah, instead of sitting
32:56
home to a lot of people won't be
able to get out and vote because
33:00
gas is too expensive.
33:04
And I'm wondering if the paper
shortage will be an issue with
33:08
with mailing ballots.
33:12
So but so by the way, so we had
a note from our our toilet paper
33:16
Yes, I'm glad you brought that
we learned a lot about toilet
33:18
paper.
33:20
Do you have it anywhere near you
so we can read it? Well?
33:24
It's from Baron nut nut Baron or
Baron yet but it's not as Sir
33:29
Munch nuts. And he used to work
at Charmin and he's the one who
33:35
sent me his big giant rolls.
Yeah, that was the freedom roll
33:39
wasn't what it was called. To
recall Tom Resham roll Yeah,
33:43
well, huge rolls of toilet paper
that was I don't know if I can
33:47
actually find it quickly. But I
do remember the takeaway the
33:51
takeaway was mind blowing. I
33:55
mean, he's he's anonymous enough
right?
33:59
Much nuts Yeah, I think so.
Unless his name is Munch nuts
34:10
to the CEOs office HR would like
to speak with you much not
34:16
it's very possible John I don't
know now. I'm wearing a
34:20
character name
34:24
Hold on a second. Let me let me
look it up because it's worth
34:26
looking for. But the takeaway
because I'm saying hey, man, I'm
34:30
the Charmin rolls dipping in
gross harshness or the cut of
34:34
the side of the toilet paper. He
answered all these questions and
34:38
also just discussed the various
grades of the of the various
34:44
Charmin 's and also by he should
get a bonus by the way from
34:47
Charlotte. Also, he
34:51
mentioned that the toilet paper
you get from that big giant
34:56
roll. You can get this comes
from the Minnesota Opera
35:00
issue that he has. It's slightly
different, probably a different.
35:03
Well, what he was saying is that
because I was I said, Look,
35:05
these things look a little
ragged on the edges what's going
35:08
on with that? And he said, Oh,
no, that's, they're they're
35:10
apparently sawing so much toilet
paper that they let the blades
35:14
go a little duller than normal
than they should. Yeah. But here
35:18
was the big I'm still searching
for his email. He was the big
35:20
one. He said, Well, you know,
you think that you have the
35:23
feeling that there's less toilet
paper or it's thinner, said no,
35:26
that's not the case. But we
actually shortened the sheet
35:31
length. So you still have the
marketing of you know, 500
35:35
sheets, but the sheets are
actually shorter.
35:39
That's your that's shrink
inflation. It's shrink
35:42
inflation. Yeah. It's really,
everyone's doing it. I mean, you
35:46
can't blame them. No, I'm not
blaming them, but your
35:52
employee Munch nuts. I'm sorry,
if if we outed you on that one.
35:58
There's a lot of interesting
things happening, you know, the
36:00
war is over, because it just
over we'll have some more stuff
36:04
to discuss, because lots of
people don't want it to be over.
36:07
But it's been overshadowed by
Roe v. Wade. It's the next
36:10
important thing that we're all
running around after and we're
36:13
starting to crank up some more
COVID fear. And Pfizer did a
36:19
just a masterful masterful job
of marketing. They need to get
36:24
all kinds of awards, where we
know the Pfizer document drop on
36:30
the same day. Now another part
of the document dropped showing
36:35
that they really covered up a
lot of adverse events in their
36:38
trials. And there's incomplete
and redacted data still, this
36:42
dropped on the same day as the
Supreme Court.
36:45
Opinion draft leak. So there
wasn't really a lot of
36:50
information. And you know, it's
kind of out there that hey, man,
36:54
some of these vaccines is
hurting people. So what did they
36:57
do that with their brilliance?
They blame it on Johnson and
37:00
Johnson and I was dutiful Hold
on a second. I have a sequence
37:04
here and back to the j&j vaccine
of the 17 million Americans who
37:08
got the shot. Nine people have
died. Yeah, nine people have
37:12
died or as we call it. First of
all, this risk is extremely
37:15
rare. We're talking about one in
2 million people ended up having
37:19
a really horrible outcome a
really horrible outcome.
37:23
It's called Dead. Death is a
horrible outcome. Here's the
37:27
Good Morning America report this
morning, the FDA limiting the
37:30
use of the Johnson and Johnson
single shot vaccine following an
37:34
investigation and reports of
rare blood clots, federal health
37:38
experts saying there are safer
options and now only those older
37:44
to a Pfizer or moderna vaccine,
or won't take them can still get
37:48
j&j Isn't had the j&j shot a
long time ago. There is no cause
37:52
for panic. This is a rare side
effect that happens in the days
37:55
and months after the shot. days
and months. Could you define
37:58
months, like months, two months,
three months, six months, you
38:02
don't know reason for concern.
You had the j&j shot a long time
38:06
ago, there is no cause for
panic. This is a rare side
38:09
effect that happens in the days
and months after the shot. But
38:12
even with that small risk, it
meant that the FDA would
38:15
acknowledge that overnight, GMA
spoke with Emma Berkey, who was
38:18
18 when she got the j&j vaccine
said just one shot as quick and
38:23
I just never in a million years
imagined something like this
38:26
happening a week after receiving
the shot. Emma says her life has
38:30
never been the same 13 months
ago, I was hospitalized for
38:36
about four months as a result of
having brain bleeds, blood
38:41
clots, four strokes, three brain
surgeries. And notice she never
38:47
really says because of the j&j
vaccine.
38:51
This is this is going to have
much deeper consequences. And
38:56
the media news media is not
investigating. Not going any
38:59
deeper than that just 109 people
were pretty sure it's a lot more
39:03
if you add in Pfizer adverse
events but what I'd like to know
39:07
is what are we going to do with
all of the pilots who took the
39:13
j&j the one and done remember
that oh, man, I gotta do this
39:16
crap. But I want to fly I want
to keep working and want to
39:19
provide for my family. I'll just
take the j&j and now we know
39:23
that
39:25
that this could be a problem. So
do you ground these pilots
39:29
dragging the air transportation
system into even deeper misery
39:35
Luckily, there's another Pfizer
product to save the day health
39:39
officials also reporting more
people are turning to the drug
39:42
packs lovin to fight COVID use
of 10 fold and recent Yeah,
39:46
that's interesting, because he
made a rhyme here. I thought it
39:49
was Pax livid.
39:52
That's that's how I understood
the pronunciation. I was so I
39:55
was Pax livid too. I wouldn't. I
would pronounce it like that. So
39:59
he says Pax Hello.
40:00
COVID to combat COVID Hey Matt
another Brian James Brown health
40:03
officials also reporting more
people are turning to the drug
40:06
packs Lovitt to fight COVID.
That sounds like a marketing
40:10
marketing slogan to me. That
must have that must its use of
40:15
10 fold in recent weeks. But
among patients who took the
40:19
pills, scientists are now
investigating some reports of a
40:22
relapse in COVID symptoms. After
taking the five day course. 63
40:27
year old Lauren Martin was first
thrilled when she started to
40:29
feel better and tested negative.
But a week later, those symptoms
40:33
came back like symptoms. Second
time around. Especially just
40:39
right from the from that first
day we're stronger than my
40:43
symptoms. The first time around
and clinical trials packs Lovitt
40:47
cut the risk of hospitalization
by nearly 90%. Despite some
40:51
reports of relapse, many health
experts still confident in the
40:55
drug benefits. That sounds
great. We're still confident
41:00
this is Oh man. And people are
still just say they just they
41:06
just want it. They want it they
want it they want to you
41:09
remember what's your name?
America Ferreira. She was like a
41:15
really hot Acuras for a worse
name. Yeah, right America in
41:18
America for our shows. She was
what was the name of that show?
41:21
It was kind of like a Devil
Wears Prada, only a sitcom. And
41:26
she was like, you know, the
homely Hispanic girl who came
41:29
in? Yeah, I can't remember. And
it was it was really big. And
41:33
then. Oh man, I wish I remember
what that was ugly. Betty Nago,
41:37
ugly, ugly, ugly, Betty. So she
is now out.
41:42
shilling on behalf of the CDC,
this is a CDC public service
41:46
announcement. I don't know if
this if she was paid for this.
41:50
But here she is. We can't wait
to either have a vaccine for
41:56
children under five, or for our
children to turn five. And my
42:02
son knows that on his fifth
birthday. If it doesn't come
42:05
sooner, his fifth birthday will
be a cupcake and a shot.
42:10
Oh god.
42:12
Right. Oh, my God, a cupcake in
a shot. How could you even?
42:20
Don't you know, your battles?
42:25
Yeah, so we've not actually
doesn't baffle me at all. We've
42:29
had
42:31
a couple of weird adverse
events, although they're not
42:35
being categorized as such. But
we have children globally.
42:39
Excuse me coming down with hep
hepatitis, not viral hepatitis,
42:42
but
42:44
in essence liver failure. Yes.
Which is hepatitis. And they've
42:49
been looking at you know,
they've been scratching their
42:51
heads. They can't figure it out.
I mean, it's, yeah, they really
42:54
are. They're, I'm sure there's
not one person in the world that
42:57
can't figure this out. Well,
coinkidink Well, let's go to the
43:01
CDC to to make sure that we're
that we're just conspiracy
43:04
theorists. Another health
concern tonight the growing
43:07
mystery outbreak of hepatitis
among children, the CDC saying
43:11
the number of cases has grown to
109 including five deaths across
43:16
25 states and territories. More
than half had an adenovirus
43:20
infection, but the cause remains
under investigation. The CDC has
43:24
ruled out COVID vaccinations as
a possible cause. So they just
43:30
ruled it out. So just forget
about it. I don't care what you
43:33
say it's ruled out CDC is shut I
just beat it's beyond me how the
43:37
CDC has not been just dissolved
by now. Well, they were close
43:42
they were going to do it and
then somehow they they they
43:45
dragged it back but listen to
this. The UK Health Security
43:49
Agency, which might be similar
to the CDC, here. They are on
43:56
the on the trail.
43:58
They of course also have
unexplained hepatitis, that
44:01
would be the liver inflammation,
very rare in children and they
44:05
have discovered something
44:08
70% of these children 70% of
these children have dogs.
44:18
So they are now looking at dogs
possibly being the problem.
44:23
Really, those are the problem.
What about the other 30% dogs? A
44:26
lot of people are without dogs
dogs investigated over possible
44:30
link to mystery hepatitis
hepatitis case among children.
44:34
relatively high numbers is what
they call that Johnson 2%
44:37
relatively high numbers of
affected children either came
44:40
from families with the pets, the
pets, or had the pets or had
44:45
exposure to them. report finds
How Does anyone not have
44:50
exposure to dogs? That means
everybody the pets, the pets
44:54
please? That woman the pet?
45:00
So yeah, this is this is very
disappointing. That it's not the
45:06
I mean, it's such a dino virus
that was, was that AstraZeneca?
45:11
No, no, that is Johnson Johnson
Johnson. Well, why don't think
45:14
it'd be actually I may be
AstraZeneca, too, is the
45:18
technique that was used to
develop the Ebola vaccine. And
45:21
it was very effective. It works.
But you know it. Dino viruses
45:25
are not unusual. And it's like,
45:28
when you say the word is
associated with Johnson and
45:31
Johnson, I think that's one of
the reasons they were they're
45:33
jumping all over them. I think
that was done as a ploy by the
45:38
experts. Where's Johnson and
Johnson's marketing people, by
45:42
the way? Well, then they get
their trampled are getting
45:45
steamrolled by by the Pfizer
folk. How does that work? I
45:51
think the the team was so busy
on covering up and blaming the
45:55
Sackler family on on all of the
opioids they had, they had other
46:00
problems. They had other issues
as a $25 billion, fine, but they
46:04
had to make had to make the
Sackler family with their $5
46:07
billion, fine. You're all in
they're all and they're all mom.
46:12
They're mobster like companies
are designed after the mafia.
46:17
It's horrible these operations.
Bill Gates back in the news did
46:21
a long form interview with the
anthy constitutionalist. Fareed
46:25
Zakaria, the globalist number
one he was also speaking in
46:29
Ukraine. He's on the Ukraine
train. Me. Yeah, he's probably
46:33
got some connections. Maybe he
was speaking at a big conference
46:37
paid in Ukraine before all this
for all this came down. How much
46:41
was he paid? though? That's the
question. I don't care. I don't
46:44
like him. Just making nobody
likes. He's creepy. He's creepy.
46:49
He's hates America. There's
somebody who hates America. Yes,
46:53
he hates him. He's on somebody's
on some bliss, that they keep
46:57
giving him work. How does he
even get any jobs? Yeah. Let's
47:01
start, shall we, with the get
three short clips from Bill
47:05
Gates here with his assessment,
and during the beginning of the
47:10
pandemic, the the foundation
experts assessment of what this
47:14
COVID-19 really is. It wasn't
until early February when I was
47:18
in a meeting that experts of the
foundation said there's no way
47:22
you know, this, there's been too
much
47:27
travel without diagnosis for us
to contain this. And then at
47:32
that point, we didn't really
understand the fatality rate,
47:36
you know, we didn't understand
that it's a fairly low fatality
47:39
rate. And that it's a disease
mainly of the elderly, kind of
47:43
like fluids, although a bit
different than that. So that was
47:46
pretty scary period, where the
world didn't go on alert,
47:52
including the United States
nearly as fast as it needed to.
47:57
There's letting some very
important information out there.
48:00
No elderly people very low
mortality rate, we didn't know
48:04
it. Okay. So can we just move on
with our lives then? And how
48:09
about those lockdowns, he
probably would have had to do
48:12
was, say a 45. Day lockdown.
48:16
I think we would have gotten
pretty good compliance. It says
48:20
the lockdown starts extending
out.
48:23
And, you know, the lockdown
hasn't dropped the cases to
48:27
zero. You know, so the
counterfactual of okay, how much
48:30
worse would it have been? If we
hadn't had this lockdown is
48:33
unclear. There was a lot of me
about, for example, schools
48:38
shutdowns. To this day. You
know, there's still arguments
48:42
about how many cases that
avoided it's pretty clear
48:47
because young people don't get
sick from the disease very
48:51
often, that we probably if we
knew everything we know today,
48:57
we would have shut schools down
a lot less than we did during
49:01
this pandemic. And yes, it's
tricky for the older adults.
49:04
It's tricky.
49:06
In a lot of ways, and what I
mean by that high school and
49:09
under Exactly, exactly going
virtual tends to work awfully
49:15
well. The infection levels are
49:21
no, it doesn't work at all for
college going. Virtual works.
49:25
This is a computer geek saying
that nope, it didn't doesn't
49:28
work at all. No, it did do by
the way. It did alert to parents
49:34
to the crappy education they're
getting from these these
49:37
socialist teachers. Well, what
he's saying here is that dad's a
49:41
plus he's saying that it did
work for college and university
49:44
students he said it worked
pretty well.
49:48
I don't believe that's true. I
don't believe it either. But
49:51
there you go.
49:53
In a lot of ways, and I mean by
that high school and under,
49:56
exactly. You know for college
going virtual
50:00
tends to work awfully well, the
infection levels are a little
50:04
higher as you get up into that
age group, but K through 12, we
50:08
have a learning deficit that
will take us a long time to
50:13
erase that. And sadly, it's a
deficit where the inner city is
50:17
where it's almost two years,
suburban schools last private
50:21
schools, in some cases, like
mine kid, almost no deficit at
50:26
all. Of course, not you elitist
prick. No kidding, elite just
50:31
prick. And what he's saying kids
here went to a private school,
50:34
they didn't would miss any
school and other right on track.
50:37
And the whole thing was designed
for that purpose. All the
50:40
elitist kids or all the people
that went to private schools are
50:42
good to go, the rest of the kids
are gonna fall way behind, and
50:45
there'll be great slaves working
for us.
50:49
Okay, that's the end of the show
everybody, once again, we've
50:51
made our message clear, it's
obvious where this is all
50:54
headed. But wait, but wait,
don't get too excited about
50:57
about these lockdowns not
working, we're still going to
51:00
need them. What new with your
freedom, what's wrong with you,
51:03
there could be more variants
come that would be
51:08
immune escaping because their
shape or their spike protein be
51:12
a little different. And sadly,
they could even have a higher
51:16
fatality rate, you know, I read
the chance of that is, you know,
51:20
maybe five to 10%.
51:23
But, you know, if you tell
people that risk isn't there,
51:27
then the whole idea of okay, you
know, throw your masks away,
51:31
don't get your boosters, you're
going to put people incredibly
51:34
at risk for now, we need to keep
boosting, particularly the
51:39
elderly. And if they'll have a
lot of cases, we don't have to
51:43
use masks.
51:45
You know, the public should be
ready and not view it as a deep
51:48
infringement of, you know, their
freedom that when you get local
51:53
outbreaks, which, you know, in
the fall, we'll have some of
51:56
that it helps a lot to to have
very high vaccination levels.
52:03
And in certain settings, mask
worm, should we be willing to
52:07
accept some restrictions on our
liberty apps? Absolutely.
52:11
Absolutely.
52:15
Absolutely.
52:18
Let's hear that, again, have
very high vaccination levels.
52:21
And in certain settings, math
scoring, should we be willing to
52:26
accept some restrictions on our
liberty abs? Absolutely. But you
52:31
know, the US that's not our
greatest strength, no making, in
52:37
some cases, sacrifice for the
collective. You see, we don't
52:41
care about the collective, you
know, the public should be ready
52:45
and not view it as a deep
infringement of, you know, their
52:50
freedom making.
52:53
In some cases, sacrifice for the
collective sacrifice for the
53:00
collective. Isn't that that's
got to be some kind of Marxist
53:04
term
53:05
sacrifice for the collective.
53:10
Well as a variation of some
class success, for sure. And
53:14
make no metal Make no mistake
Clip of the Day, by the way for
53:17
that just because of that part.
Oh, thank you very much. Well, I
53:21
did work hard on that clip.
53:24
I mean, most of us just deal
with a gag gag, but I have to
53:27
say bring it into this is like,
Screw your freedoms, is exactly
53:32
what it is. Absolutely, you
should have restrictions, even
53:36
though even though they don't
really work what you just said,
53:39
but make no mistake, there's a
new wave coming. We're up to
53:41
number six. Hey, Donna, good
evening. Here in California,
53:44
some counties are already on
their sixth wave of COVID
53:48
expectation is that after the
summer, there will be another
53:51
explosion of infection.
53:55
The White House is sounding the
alarm about a new COVID wave
53:58
this fall in winter, driven by
new Oh microns variants, IT
54:02
projects up to 30. Notice that
it's now omachron variants, it's
54:06
no longer variants, of which
Omicron was one but it's now a
54:10
variant of the Omicron. I guess
well, you know, if we could just
54:14
stop for a second and re
reconsider these graphs that we
54:17
saw that Omicron was created
like a separate entity from the
54:22
rest of them, right, like a
function like a vaccine, almost
54:25
as Bill Gates even himself said,
right? It was a different animal
54:29
completely. It's almost as
though the lab with this out
54:32
there to knock the other ones
out of commission, and wishes
54:36
what that would be, and it makes
us great, and I think we do have
54:39
another wave.
54:42
Darren O'Neill couldn't do the
Rock and Roll pre show. He has
54:44
COVID I think again, oh, I
should have given him an hour I
54:48
had
54:50
the one that is so he can have
some backup. Yeah.
54:54
Yeah, he can use it when he
feels like it. But Mimi has it?
54:57
She has the she still hasn't
it's not the normal
55:00
One. Yeah, it's like a nasty
one. Yeah, that's what Darren
55:04
said he had 102 Fever, but it
was coming up mean away. I mean,
55:07
he's been a week now she still
had fever and stuff.
55:10
Now it's what it happens is to
fatigue and yeah, oh, the dry
55:15
was dry cough that makes you
want to puke at a certain point.
55:18
I don't know about that. But
she, she, she gets tired. And
55:22
she doesn't like to do that. And
it's any words your backs off it
55:26
goes away goes almost gone is
almost gone. Oh, I'm sick as a
55:29
dog again. And it's that it's
kind of like kinda like the
55:33
original COVID. But it's doesn't
seem to be as deadly. But it's
55:38
but she is irked about it. Well,
yeah. Understandably. So. That's
55:42
not cool.
55:45
All right, here we go. The White
House is sounding the alarm
55:47
about a new COVID wave this fall
in winter driven by New
55:51
Democrats variants, IT projects
up to 30% of Americans could be
55:55
affected and is urging Congress
to pass billions more in COVID
55:58
prevention money now. CBS News
Medical contributor Dr. David
56:02
EGUs need to be on top of it.
There should be no more deaths
56:06
from this virus, about two
thirds of Americans are now
56:09
living in high or substantial
COVID risk areas, new
56:12
infections, and hospitalizations
are increasing nationwide.
56:16
What's the status of the
pandemic at this point, there's
56:19
a lot of immunity out there over
90% of the country has immunity.
56:22
And we have packs livid, which
is a failsafe if that of your
56:25
high risk and you can treat it.
So this is a new era of living
56:29
with rather than hiding from the
virus. Still, about a third of
56:32
Americans are not fully
vaccinated and only half have
56:36
been boosted. What's the impact
of not having everyone boosted,
56:39
the more people get the virus
and the higher your viral count,
56:42
the more chance of a new variant
coming, it's not changing to get
56:45
more deadly. But by luck of the
draw, there could be a change
56:48
that can make it more aggressive
or to evade the vaccines. And
56:51
then we're in trouble.
56:54
Here in LA most infections are
happening in offices and at
56:57
schools. Dr. EGUs says part of
learning to live with COVID
57:01
means that we have to change our
workplace culture. If you're
57:05
symptomatic. Don't be a hero.
Stay home. Don't be a hero.
57:11
Yeah.
57:13
You remember the
57:16
the International Health
Regulations, there was a big
57:21
meeting the World Health
Organization and we were sending
57:25
our delegates or US delegate
everyone sending someone over
57:27
there. Well, they came up with
some changes, they have changed
57:30
the pandemic rules, I put the
document in the show notes. The
57:34
biggest one I think is it really
gives seemingly gives the World
57:39
Health Organization more power,
they now no longer have to
57:42
consult with the member nations
in a health emergency, they can
57:47
just call it out and call it
whatever it is and have to wait
57:50
for everyone else's numbers to
come in and everyone to call it
57:53
individually before they call
it. Endemic pandemic, whatever.
57:59
Killer things to continue that
but as the I have a couple of
58:03
things to note about the who
when you're done. Go ahead. No,
58:05
go ahead. First of all, the who
now is 20% funded by governments
58:11
and 80% funded by individuals or
corporations. So they're now an
58:17
arm of Pfizer. Yes. And the
Gates Foundation still and one
58:21
of India gates for actually the
Gates Foundation, which is which
58:23
is fine.
58:26
And so meanwhile, there's a good
Sunday not being reported at all
58:30
here and my scanning the
international scene.
58:34
Oh, Pfizer marketing to the
rescue trying to cut us out eat
58:39
I'm sorry, you cut out on Pfizer
marketing scheme.
58:43
Coincidence? I think that there
is a beef, a huge beef going on
58:50
in India over the numbers that
there, Dan and the way that who
58:55
is treating India and I have two
clips from one of the Indian new
59:01
TV shows. And I think we'll
start with this is the COVID and
59:04
in and the first one would be
the COVID India numbers here.
59:08
Okay. Often the World Health
Organization announced that 47
59:11
lakh people had died in India,
due to the COVID pandemic, the
59:15
government has come out strongly
against the global bodies go
59:19
with deaths data, the Indian
government has rejected the
59:22
report at multiple levels
questioned the validity of the
59:25
model used by who this in a
sense, is sparking of a faceoff
59:30
between the World Health
Organization and the government
59:33
of India over excess COVID debt
numbers. Yes, I have I have the
59:40
Reuters story.
59:42
Where Reuters is saying World
Health Organization has almost
59:46
three times as many people died
from COVID. They've they've
59:50
skewed it to Yeah, because the
India reports have it 10x Oh my
59:56
goodness, but that's really
writers eyed about their shit of
59:59
course.
1:00:00
Yeah, well, they've got the
documents they be India's Indian
1:00:04
do have a health system that is
they have doctors that are great
1:00:08
and they come over here yeah,
they come over here and heal us.
1:00:11
We love this date and so and
they have a reporting system
1:00:14
that they consider to be
accurate and their number the
1:00:18
and I should mention this for
people who who listen to these
1:00:20
reports if they're out of India,
they use the word lakh 47 lakh
1:00:24
people and it's not a tribe or a
47 lakh lakh is is a factor is
1:00:30
100,000 Black means 100,002 47
lakh people is 4.7 million
1:00:36
Bitcoin like
1:00:38
what le K h what No, I was just
saying Bitcoin lakh Bitcoin
1:00:42
100,000 Bitcoin lakh Good luck.
So,
1:00:47
the
1:00:49
number the Indian say that is
the real number is 40 470,000,
1:00:54
they said a factor of 10 is
they're off by a factor of 10.
1:00:58
And wow, you know, you know,
we've our discussions here, and
1:01:02
in Canada, where they discovered
they went through all the death
1:01:05
records, and they found that,
you know, maybe you know, this
1:01:08
guy was the, is the COVID, died
with COVID or died after a COVID
1:01:13
test after he died in a
motorcycle accident COVID death.
1:01:17
And so, just 10 to one thing may
be accurate in more ways in more
1:01:22
countries than just India. But
let's listen to the second part
1:01:25
of this where this guy rants
about what he thinks is corrupt
1:01:30
who direct and indirect COVID
related deaths but there will be
1:01:35
those again, Professor
Mukherjee, who will just
1:01:37
question the credibility of the
World Health Organization, right
1:01:40
from the start of the pandemic,
the fact that they seem to delay
1:01:43
the warming the world that
they've been very soft on China
1:01:47
in particular. And here you've
got a situation where India has
1:01:50
been accused of hiding debts.
And we still don't know what the
1:01:53
actual numbers in China are, and
the who doesn't seem to be doing
1:01:58
enough. Instead, they seem to be
masking China's debt while
1:02:01
targeting India is one of the
concerns expressed by officials.
1:02:04
Yeah.
1:02:06
Wow. The Indian producers are
doing great work sending you
1:02:09
these clips, John.
1:02:12
Oh, wait.
1:02:14
They didn't know I got these
clips. Yeah. We have no Indian.
1:02:19
We have one or two I think
Indian producers. But that's
1:02:24
that. Yeah. Now these this guy
dug this one up from India
1:02:28
today. He has a broadcast and
they was actually part of an
1:02:31
interview. He was interviewing
some woman who was a professor
1:02:35
at one of our schools in
Madison, Wisconsin or someplace.
1:02:38
And she but she was Indiana. Of
course they have to keep it in
1:02:40
the family of course. And she
was the she was an apologist for
1:02:44
Pfizer and they who he couldn't
get past it.
1:02:49
Just condemning her left or
right. But she was she wasn't
1:02:51
budging. boots on the ground
report from Shanghai from
1:02:54
Professor JJ. He's been updating
me regularly blocked down like a
1:02:59
dog about a month ago, the model
that the local government cited
1:03:03
declared that cases would be
zero by the Third of May that
1:03:08
came in went, whereas they were
reporting 29,000 cases per day a
1:03:13
month ago. The latest numbers as
of May 7, are under 4000
1:03:17
positive cases with only about
180 being symptomatic.
1:03:23
So that's an important little
number there. So 4000 people
1:03:27
tested positive PCR no doubt.
Only 180 have symptoms. Since
1:03:34
January 2022. The government
says that Shanghai in Shanghai,
1:03:39
563 people have died with
Coronavirus, and all had
1:03:45
comorbidities and were elderly.
We anticipate grocery stores
1:03:49
will open and we will be able to
venture out of the compound by
1:03:52
next Friday, May 13, which I
think will now make it close to
1:03:56
eight weeks that people have
been locked down with limited
1:04:00
food and he doesn't luckily our
professor does not live in one
1:04:04
of the apartment complexes. So
he's actually able to get some
1:04:08
things that some fresh air. CBS
spent some time on let's let's
1:04:12
see if the numbers match up with
our boots on the ground report.
1:04:15
Elizabeth China's zero COVID
strategy has seen millions of
1:04:18
people locked down. Shipping and
manufacturing seriously
1:04:22
disrupted is the country's
leadership showing any signs of
1:04:26
modifying or changing course. No
was just mentioned their
1:04:33
very high powered meeting of the
committee of the communist party
1:04:37
where President Xi was present.
They kind of doubled down and
1:04:42
they said that the current COVID
policy this draconian lockdowns
1:04:47
nationwide are both scientific
and effective. You also
1:04:51
mentioned that they wait a
minute Bill Gates literally just
1:04:54
said it's not scientific
ineffective.
1:04:59
Did he not
1:05:01
I
1:05:03
don't know if you said it in
those words, but basically,
1:05:06
yeah, well, that's like the way
it is a substitute for safe and
1:05:10
effective, though. Yes, yes, it
currently didn't affect, you
1:05:14
know, this show is the fact that
it is safe, safe and effective,
1:05:18
smart and effective, like safe
and effective. For me, we just
1:05:22
safe. We're safe and effective.
Don't worry, COVID policy, this
1:05:25
draconian lockdowns nationwide,
are both scientific and
1:05:29
effective. You also mentioned
that they they had brought up
1:05:33
the fear of infections and
deaths. And in that that's
1:05:37
probably true. You know, China
has not got the best how best
1:05:41
health care system, it doesn't
1:05:44
cover everybody adequately. And
their vaccination program hasn't
1:05:49
been a massive success. For
example, only 20% of people over
1:05:54
80 years old had been boosted.
And so if the virus really was
1:05:58
allowed to rip through the
population, there probably
1:06:03
wouldn't be a lot of deaths. The
question is, though, whether the
1:06:08
end game the way to deal with
that is to keep these endless
1:06:11
rolling lockdowns that are so
disruptive and which are really
1:06:15
starting to annoy some people or
to come up with a better
1:06:20
solution. And certainly, the
West seems to have discovered
1:06:23
and proven that that is a better
vaccine.
1:06:27
Oh, a better vaccine. Ooh,
that's kind of dangerous what
1:06:31
she's saying there, because that
would be mandated. 11am on the
1:06:35
morning. Here's the follow up.
How was Shanghai doing
1:06:39
specifically? So give us the
state of things. Shanghai, I
1:06:42
think has been locked down for
about a month now. We had heard
1:06:44
longer, no certain
neighborhoods, they would allow
1:06:47
people to leave. But I don't
even know if that's really
1:06:49
happening. And then there's of
course, Beijing, right? Well,
1:06:52
there's a lot of confusion. So
broadly speaking, two and a half
1:06:57
million people in the very
center of Shanghai are still a
1:07:00
month in under hard lockdown in
their apartments. Another 16
1:07:06
million or so are in this funny
Limbo allowed out but often only
1:07:12
as far as the perimeter of the
garden or the you know, the
1:07:15
compound around these buildings.
And different parts of the city
1:07:19
are administering or enforcing
this soft lockdown differently.
1:07:23
So there's a huge amount of
confusion and frustration. There
1:07:27
are several million people,
Sikhs and change who have been
1:07:31
liberated in in the suburbs
around of Shanghai.
1:07:37
But they're complaining there's
nowhere to go because things are
1:07:39
still shut down. So it's a bit
of a patchwork is unarguable
1:07:44
that the number of zoos in
arguable unarguable in art. I
1:07:49
heard that too. I. I'm not sure
that, that that's not correct. I
1:07:55
can't say for sure.
1:07:57
I don't know. I caught my
attention. You're right. I don't
1:08:00
like this lady. She say it
again. He's about 6 million and
1:08:03
change. She's too glib. Get her
off the air. No, no, let's play
1:08:07
40 More seconds planning there's
nowhere to go because things are
1:08:10
still shut down. So it's a bit
of a patchwork is unarguable
1:08:15
that the number of new cases is
coming down. So for example,
1:08:19
months ago 25,000 and change new
cases? No, no, no, it was 29,000
1:08:25
not 25,000. And change lady. We
have the report on boots on the
1:08:29
ground a month ago 25,000. And
change new cases a day in
1:08:35
Shanghai. We're down to 4000
today correct. And the the
1:08:39
authorities say there's been a
like a real steady decrease from
1:08:43
the 22nd of April on so they
they feel they're making
1:08:48
progress. The question is
though, if they threw the city
1:08:50
open, will it rock it up again?
And unfortunately, there's only
1:08:54
one way to find out. Yeah, open
up doors. Let's Canadian lives.
1:08:59
Thank you very much. The
Canadian
1:09:03
advocating for opening up please
lady. She said progress.
1:09:07
Progress. She didn't say she had
another word in there didn't
1:09:10
mention the 199 arguable is a
Canadian way of saying yeah,
1:09:15
there you go. You're right.
You're right. You're right.
1:09:20
I think that's all I've got on
on COVID It's just they're gonna
1:09:24
push it again. They're gonna try
hard. They're gonna try hard and
1:09:28
can try those vaccines in the
warehouse in the freezer. Well,
1:09:33
actually, I was reading that,
you know, the
1:09:39
Pfizer has a whole like 100 and
million plus doses that are
1:09:44
sitting on the shelf that are
about to expire again, even
1:09:48
though they gotta get rid of
those. Gotta get rid of them. Or
1:09:51
as you heard in one of those
earlier clips, we need more
1:09:54
billions more billions for COVID
prevention. Now it's we know
1:09:59
what it's for.
1:10:02
Well, I don't have any more
COVID Close by do since you're
1:10:05
in China with your report. I do
have some stuff and you haven't
1:10:08
heard about this either because
it's not being reported about
1:10:11
the Hong Kong election. No, no
did not know anything now to
1:10:16
Hong Kong and the territories
next leader is going to be
1:10:19
confirmed on Sunday, John Lee is
assured victory, as he is the
1:10:23
sole candidate and will be
affected by the loyal democracy.
1:10:29
Dream brown reports now on the
man hoping to revive the
1:10:32
fortunes of Asia's financial
hub. John Lee's career has been
1:10:36
rooted in discipline, a career
policeman who went on to become
1:10:40
Hong Kong security chief.
1:10:43
During the turbulent spring and
summer of 2019, he directed the
1:10:47
response to anti government
protests. Now he's about to
1:10:50
replace Carrie Lam as Hong
Kong's next leader, at a time
1:10:54
when the territory remains
deeply divided, and exhausted by
1:10:58
COVID-19. It's been a short and
strange contest. Without even
1:11:03
token competition. It's an
unusual election because there's
1:11:06
just one candidate.
1:11:09
Because you'd have the the
election just open to everyone,
1:11:13
even though have only one
candidate we need we also need
1:11:17
to vote for them.
1:11:20
These only rally on Friday was a
small invitation only event that
1:11:24
included members of the
committee that will elect him.
1:11:31
In the coming five years, Hong
Kong will become a caring,
1:11:33
accommodating place full of
energy and hope. Let's do one
1:11:37
thing together, support the
election on May 8. Lee has the
1:11:42
central government's backing a
sign it wants a Hong Kong leader
1:11:45
with strong security
credentials. Chunkin Wah is a
1:11:49
political commentator who left
Hong Kong V England more than a
1:11:53
week ago, because he no longer
felt safe. He says Lee doesn't
1:11:58
have the right experience to
lead a global financial center.
1:12:01
You may look into the CV of John
knee, you know that he had no
1:12:06
experience in economic affairs,
international trade and all
1:12:10
major areas of social policy in
Hong Kong. Looks like he has
1:12:14
experience in cracking heads.
1:12:18
That his gig. So if you listen
to their gut, they will come to
1:12:23
the positive side. Just a couple
of guys that come in as
1:12:25
apologists and one of them says,
you know, we expect everyone to
1:12:29
vote. I mean, what's the point?
Well, hold on a second. Like, if
1:12:34
this was open elections, he said
it himself. You know, even if
1:12:37
there's one candidate doesn't
matter, people still have to
1:12:39
vote. Well, why don't we create
a vortex going for a position?
1:12:44
It's too late. Oh, it's already
done. They already had the the
1:12:49
elections today or tomorrow.
Crikey. Okay, let's just move on
1:12:54
to part two, which is makes it
as another kickers and other is
1:12:59
real eyeroll are and this is and
they're trying to make it seem
1:13:02
as though this is all okay. Lee
says his priority will be issues
1:13:07
like housing, not more democracy
or a free vote. He's also
1:13:12
promised additional security
laws and to increase patriotic
1:13:16
education. And he's very bright,
which is what I like about him.
1:13:19
So I really feel Hong Kong is
ready for this kind of change.
1:13:24
And plus he has the trust of
China. That is something very,
1:13:27
very important. Lee's campaign
suffered an early setback when
1:13:30
YouTube shut down his account,
citing compliance with United
1:13:34
States sanctions. That means he
can't visit that country, just
1:13:38
like the outgoing Chief
Executive of Hong Kong people
1:13:41
will have no say in this
election. That task falls to an
1:13:45
election committee drawn from
Hong Kong's business and
1:13:48
political elite, a committee
vetted by a panel that included
1:13:52
John Lee
1:13:58
Oh man, that's democracy. That
is democracy right there. That's
1:14:01
how it should be. When you when
you have the power you just
1:14:04
expand a little bit. I like it.
I look forward to talking about
1:14:08
some democracy in Ukraine. But
first, I'd like to thank you for
1:14:12
your courage say in the morning
to you the man who put the C and
1:14:14
the clock were turning back
ladies and gentlemen, Mr. John
1:14:17
C. Dvorak.
1:14:21
Mr. Adam curry. So in the
morning all ships and sea boots
1:14:25
on the ground feet in the air
and subs in the water the
1:14:28
dangers of the Knights out there
in the morning to the trolls in
1:14:31
the troll room, as new times
second show, let's have a count
1:14:35
hands up there trolls let's see
what you got. How many do you
1:14:38
have here with us? Oh, okay. 20
To 60 nines back on the up.
1:14:45
That's better.
1:14:51
He's very happy to see these
trolls everyone listening their
1:14:53
troll room.io no agenda
stream.com This is a great place
1:14:58
to hang out during the pre show.
1:15:00
Really 24/7 You can be even IRC
client, you can log in and just
1:15:04
be a troll and not even listen
to the stream. But it's more fun
1:15:07
when you do because that's what
everyone's talking about. It is
1:15:09
in fact one of the most
effective podcast networks in
1:15:13
the universe, because that's
where Gitmo nation does their
1:15:17
shows, they promote each other
they're on each other's shows
1:15:20
and we have breakout shows
happening. It's it's and you
1:15:24
know what, no meetings?
1:15:27
Nope, no, no payroll? It's it is
Wouldn't you say? John the the
1:15:33
troll do it. You have a we have
a fascist that that up there in
1:15:38
Washington who just puts on what
he thinks is best.
1:15:43
And that's that.
1:15:47
So definitely check out troll
room.io If you'd like to follow
1:15:51
some of the conversation, the
conversation is on no agenda
1:15:55
social.com which you can follow.
You can follow me or you can
1:15:59
follow John there. I'm Adam at
no agenda. social.com John is
1:16:03
John C. Dvorak at no agenda
social.com And that's really
1:16:07
where the community lives and
hangs out. And of course, you
1:16:10
can always go there and look at
the timeline to see the local
1:16:12
timeline and you know, follow
someone from your own Mastodon
1:16:16
server or anyone that you are
able to get an account with. And
1:16:20
then we thank networks for the
album artwork for episode 1448
1:16:24
titled that one French rats. You
knew we're gonna go for some
1:16:28
kind of Cinco Demayo gag and a
lot of artists picked with knew
1:16:32
that this was going to happen.
And it was the mug the happy
1:16:36
Cinco Demayo the coffee mug get
it and that was a good one with
1:16:39
the Sombrero and then the
management in all uppercase,
1:16:44
which was an inside joke for the
show. It was good and obviously
1:16:49
there was other things that we
liked. We take a look here in
1:16:52
our lives like the I like I like
something I was fighting for it.
1:16:56
You
1:16:58
know what we discussed Matthew
drop COEs Cinco Demayo coffee
1:17:02
tin Yeah, that's one of them. We
like that so when I was really
1:17:06
jacked up about you like the pig
with lipstick I mentioned it no
1:17:11
you liked in raw jacked about
the pig with lips now now.
1:17:15
She we have to go to the next
page already.
1:17:20
There was a lot of Cinco de Maya
with mayonnaise. I actually
1:17:22
liked Rick Harris as cinco Cinco
de mio Rio mayo.
1:17:29
What else was there anything
else that we liked the rat? I
1:17:32
liked the bath you dropped COEs
rat on a bicycle?
1:17:37
Yes, when I was fighting for
Yeah.
1:17:41
didn't fight very hard. I did.
1:17:45
And then you'd like to score. I
liked the mug a lot, though. So
1:17:48
yeah, you'd like to Skull Cinco
de na by toast? Is that the one
1:17:53
you liked? Like the death mass?
Was that that was one of those
1:17:56
you'd like that's the one that
is the death mask. But was it
1:18:01
toast? It was moose throat was
toast was the one I liked, which
1:18:05
was I used on the newsletter, I
think when you're talking to oh,
1:18:09
they Okay, that was a different
one.
1:18:12
In all, though, an outstanding
selection for us to choose from
1:18:16
cannot beat this type of value
that the artists bring to us for
1:18:20
every single episode of corn. I
mean, it's hard to imagine I
1:18:24
talked to other podcasters. And
they'll say hey, man, great art.
1:18:28
You guys do us and we don't do
anything. We just we just sit
1:18:32
there and like we do this show?
Yeah. It's like if we can
1:18:35
automate us, that's good. We're
good to go. No.
1:18:40
Now there's a project.
1:18:43
Yeah, just draw on the sources
from 50, almost 1500 episodes
1:18:48
and create the voices and no
theories. The theory must show.
1:18:52
Yeah, no, but our thinking, I
think there's enough of us out
1:18:55
there that AI should be able to
get our thinking,
1:18:59
or how we're familiar with the
matters anyway. And I just had
1:19:03
to say no, no, this is this is
1020. Sometimes 50 could be 100.
1:19:07
People who are who are vying for
for this honor of being
1:19:12
excoriated by us telling their
work is no good. And they seem
1:19:15
to really enjoy it. And then of
course, when they when they when
1:19:19
when they because we understand
the heart of an artist. Yes, we
1:19:22
do.
1:19:24
Use us especially understand the
heart of the artist. Exactly. So
1:19:31
thank you very much to
1:19:34
what was it? networks for the
Cinco Demayo It was perfect. You
1:19:38
can follow along and no agenda
art generator.com. Or if you'd
1:19:42
like, drop that legacy app.
Don't send me emails that hey,
1:19:46
my app is not working. If it's
Apple or Spotify, go to new
1:19:49
podcast apps.com You will be
updated when the show drops
1:19:53
within under 60 seconds. Oh, by
the way, I did like to Kenny
1:19:58
Ben, let me grab my
1:20:00
Sign art. That was also cool.
Yep. We needed Cinco Demayo.
1:20:05
Yeah, that's what we needed. new
podcast apps.com. Go grab
1:20:10
yourself a modern podcast app
there for all platforms, all
1:20:13
versions. I personally liked the
web apps for some reason that
1:20:16
just seemed to work great. And
you can store all your your
1:20:19
podcast list and it works on any
device and install apps. But
1:20:24
that's just me.
1:20:26
Now, you're the you're the guy
got the gun. Did you see that
1:20:30
Facebook canceled their their
podcasting initiatives? B, I
1:20:34
think Did you mentioned that? I
might have I might have.
1:20:38
They turned out that they
didn't. They couldn't make it
1:20:42
work. There's no there is no
money, because they don't
1:20:45
understand. Any value for value
is what you need is the only way
1:20:49
that this can work long term. I
was telling the Hollywood
1:20:52
executive that last night. I
mean, you know, it's not going
1:20:55
to last forever. People are
going to stop paying for
1:20:58
streaming. There's too much
you've oversaturated the market.
1:21:04
He went free with that. He went
to shoot me he went yeah, sure.
1:21:06
You're right. But I'm rich. So
shut up.
1:21:10
didn't say that.
1:21:14
He agrees he agrees with me. Of
course. Let's thank our
1:21:18
executive producers and
Associate Executive Producer
1:21:21
49. Yes. You know, you mentioned
that I was watching some morning
1:21:25
shows today. And they said,
Well, what are you doing? And
1:21:28
they they're doing to play some
shots? That's a great show. I'm
1:21:31
listening to it. They say where
is it? When is it started
1:21:34
starting Wednesday on Discovery
plus, Discovery plus now
1:21:39
discovery plus, what's
discovery? Plus? I think that's
1:21:44
that's the big concept that they
roll CNN plus into and they're
1:21:48
going to create a huge, you
know, the History Channel,
1:21:50
everything will be in discovery
plus, that's going to be yet
1:21:54
another streaming offering. It's
going to be free. This I don't
1:21:59
know. Probably not. I would
doubt it. Yeah. I would doubt
1:22:03
it.
1:22:06
All right. Our executive
producers and Associate
1:22:09
Executive producers for episode
1449. Luckily, we did have some
1:22:13
people who love their moms, but
most didn't. 11 1111 mom lovers,
1:22:18
once COVID Pass s grew mom, who
cares?
1:22:25
John Cooper's from Honolulu
Hawaii sent 508 teen and he says
1:22:31
right away a switcheroo in honor
of my smokin hot bride Sorrell
1:22:36
Sorrell that the soil soil as
sorrow would it be so rel it
1:22:41
looks I bet you'd soil. I think
it's Sorrell. It's Sorrell and
1:22:45
her superior birthing skills.
All right. Happy mom's day from
1:22:49
our three homeschooled human
resources in me. Now we love
1:22:53
hearing this. And what does he
say here? Please play mac and
1:22:58
cheese full load which I'm going
to presume this whole load and
1:23:03
33 is the magic number. Thanks
very much from John Cooper.
1:23:06
Thank you John.
1:23:09
Mac and cheese, mac and cheese.
I'm going to give you the whole
1:23:12
load today
1:23:19
the magic comes
1:23:24
on where was Steve Webb also
known as sir oh gee God caster
1:23:28
he's the man the one and only
and he's where he belongs in
1:23:32
Riverside, California. Three
3.77 ITM I'm making this
1:23:37
donation, no agenda today and
gratitude to us guys, for being
1:23:43
the prototype of successfully
making V for V work. We have a
1:23:47
book coming out by the way. Yes,
we started I guess. Yes. Many
1:23:52
Lifespring family members have
responded to the V four v
1:23:55
message on my show. The
Lifespring family Audio Bible
1:24:00
and are listening to the show
the Lifespring family Audio
1:24:04
Bible. It's the Lifespring
family Audio Bible
1:24:09
Lifespring family Audio Bible.
Got it. And I like you to I'd
1:24:14
like to thank you too for
showing how to communicate that
1:24:17
message.
1:24:18
Well, we got some of the ideas
from mega churches.
1:24:24
With and thank you, and thank
you thank you church.
1:24:30
Adam, the lovely lady Lian.
1:24:33
Is that your name the other name
you use? No, that would be his
1:24:36
wife the
1:24:39
structure that's only when I'm
hanging out with the luck. Yep,
1:24:43
see Adam to love the lady Liana
and I have been really happy to
1:24:46
hear you in the keepers God talk
on on ch T. K. God bless you.
1:24:52
Let's see he has went on a
religious show now. ca t kz a
1:24:57
It's Korean the keeper. It's our
show.
1:25:00
Oh, you haven't heard that okay
you haven't heard our show yes I
1:25:05
have heard this show I have
comments if you want to hear him
1:25:07
you know had no I don't want to
hear any of your comments good
1:25:13
all of get a good show except
yeah no no I don't I'm not
1:25:17
interested in your comments
thank you I'm not I'm just not
1:25:20
let's just not do it. I'm not
gonna get mo nation as invited
1:25:23
to Joe us. Joe, US Jays Come on,
to join us as we're reading
1:25:28
through the Bible in a year.
1:25:31
After each day's reading, I
share some thoughts about what
1:25:34
we've what we've read, look for
Lifespring family Audio Bible in
1:25:39
your podcasting 2.0 podcast app
plug, or add an audio Bible
1:25:44
link. Thank you for your courage
and may God bless you richly.
1:25:49
Steve Webb, thank you very much
Steve. Walk away
1:25:55
the de Loreto sisters
1:25:59
died like this. Are they are
they a group? Are they a singing
1:26:01
trio? The Diletto sisters from
Damascus Oregon. Our favorite
1:26:07
number? Three, three. And they
say off by a say off they start
1:26:13
off by saying Happy Mother's Day
Mom. What is the best way to
1:26:17
celebrate the best mother in the
universe? Celebrate rest that I
1:26:20
said breast but I've tried to
talk over it. I'll start over.
1:26:23
We'll fix it in the edit. Happy
Mother's Day Mom. What is the
1:26:27
best way to celebrate the best
mother in the university?
1:26:31
Celebrate her on the best
podcast in the universe. John
1:26:35
and Adam we all thank you for
your courage and keeping our
1:26:37
Mykolas tiny my sister's John
Kyle and I would love to put
1:26:41
this donation towards our mother
Joyce's Dame hood. She has about
1:26:44
$200 to go Thank you mom for
your strength unconditional love
1:26:48
and amazing perseverance.
Through this rough time
1:26:51
regarding your health and this
wild life we live we always look
1:26:55
to you as an amazing example. We
love you mom. Oh also you too
1:26:58
crackpot. And Buzzkill? No,
thank you so she has I don't
1:27:03
know if she is oh, she has 200
to go more to go after this.
1:27:06
Okay, well, we should see her
being danebury Soon. Excellent.
1:27:09
So nice of you. She also
mentions love it love enlyt I
1:27:13
don't see the love and lead. Oh
yes. I'm sorry. Oh, I didn't
1:27:16
even see this. I'm sorry.
1:27:18
I didn't expand the spreadsheet
properly this morning. Hold on a
1:27:22
second.
1:27:24
Goodness. That means I've missed
some jingles. Engel What is she
1:27:28
asked for jingle wise bite and
get vaccinated. Obama No, no, no
1:27:32
no no. Which is a good combo
Yeah. At noodle gun and how's
1:27:36
karma? Okay, so vaccinated get
vaccinated. This is this is like
1:27:41
the hardest one to find for some
reason the Biden get vaccinated
1:27:47
because it's okay. And then
Obama No, no, no, no. I didn't
1:27:51
pre select these. Obama No, no,
no, no. Okay. And that was after
1:27:57
that noodle gun and then a
health karma noodle
1:28:02
gun.
1:28:04
I only shoot you with my noodle
gun. Yes. I understand the
1:28:09
sorry about this. And then a
health karma get vaccinated
1:28:13
right. No, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
1:28:16
no, no, no, no, no, no. Hey, I'm
gonna shoot you in the face with
1:28:21
the Maduro gun
1:28:28
I got the my pasta Glock locked
in.
1:28:33
You've got karma.
1:28:37
Jason totally opolis in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Three,
1:28:42
three 3.31 Thanks for the best
podcast in the universe. I don't
1:28:47
care what time you start this
show. I'll be listening,
1:28:50
downloads and q i donating in
honor of Mother's Day in
1:28:54
particular three very special
mother's mine who doesn't listen
1:28:59
but who I love all the same. Bad
ma
1:29:03
my mother in law Mary who is
trapped in communist Canada
1:29:07
because she has convictions. I'm
very lucky to to have her in my
1:29:13
wife she she she a convict. She
crushes his convictions. Oh, is
1:29:19
in opinions. Oh, I thought she
would have criminal
1:29:24
I'm very lucky to have her in my
life. She may not know it but
1:29:27
she's a huge source of
inspiration for me and many
1:29:31
others.
1:29:32
So she is obviously outspoken.
1:29:35
And lastly in honor of Dame
orchid, beef, I think that's her
1:29:39
night name orchid thief. I
should know this. And her new
1:29:44
human resource Nadia, who, who
mushy recruited into the world
1:29:48
last week. She is the mother of
now five beautiful children, all
1:29:52
of whom are being raised right
and are proof that there is hope
1:29:57
for the future. Can I get some
health karma for my autistic
1:30:00
sister who is having jab related
health issues oh man some
1:30:05
liberation karma for all
Canadians trapped under Castro's
1:30:12
boot. Well for that we need to
roll up the goat. You've got
1:30:17
karma
1:30:22
Amanda Ford is in Westbrook,
Maine 333 Thank you Amanda in
1:30:26
the morning Adam and John My
name is Amanda from Westbrook,
1:30:28
Maine I'm making my first and
long overdue donation however,
1:30:32
it is my husband Dan's birthday
so I'd like to switch this to
1:30:35
his name. Now the switcheroo Dan
Ford. Okay. I got Dan reflected
1:30:44
because this is the first Could
you do do
1:30:47
you spend deed deuced his
brother Brian hit him in the
1:30:51
mouth about a year ago and now
never misses a show I will often
1:30:54
catch Dan and his brother having
their own late night no agenda
1:30:57
meet up on the phone and singing
all the no agenda jingles
1:31:04
that's something you need to
record secretly. That would be
1:31:08
cool to do it's like it's almost
like a Budweiser commercial was
1:31:11
a was up shut up sleeve Chem
trails but why Sure. It's time
1:31:17
to return the favor you do for
us and share some of our
1:31:20
treasure. Please give a shout
out and Happy Mother's Day to
1:31:23
this to his smokin hot wife
that's me. His brother Brian and
1:31:27
Brian smokin hot wife Lesley
also call out Brian for the
1:31:31
douchebag he is
1:31:34
for jingles Shut up slave and
bugs bugs bugs Thank you slave
1:31:51
tastes like blue
1:31:55
Michael says Lowe's next on the
list that $333 In these Rotunda
1:32:00
West Florida. This is switcheroo
another one now this is a Joe
1:32:04
nation from my beautiful bride
Renee for a Mother's Day
1:32:08
donation on her way to Dame
hood. She is the mother of my
1:32:11
three human resources and have
had and has had the patient
1:32:16
patients to put up with me for
the last 27 years flowers would
1:32:20
only only flowers would last
only a bit longer than a
1:32:25
politicians promise. But being
an executive producer of the
1:32:30
Mother's Day special for the no
agenda show will last forever.
1:32:38
Thank you for all the
infotainment and hoping that all
1:32:41
the mothers out there have a
great day and a better year.
1:32:44
Rene's favorite jingle is sleepy
Joe. And could you throw in a
1:32:49
reverend l clip dealer's choice
Thanks Mike says low night in
1:32:53
the making.
1:32:56
Keep a go here we go. Last
choice and the
1:33:06
ESP ICT Boom shakalaka. There
you go.
1:33:11
Val Steen's land Kirkland,
Washington, home of Costco. 301.
1:33:16
Thank you for your courage and
for your intelligent and
1:33:19
irreverent take on media and
newsmakers. My mom in the 1950s
1:33:24
watched the Senator McCarthy
hearings on television after
1:33:27
listening to every word of the
hearings on radio during the
1:33:30
day. She was bemused at the
difference of the focus brought
1:33:34
by the TV version to the public
when compared to the tone and
1:33:37
meaning of questions asked and
answered verbatim on the radio
1:33:41
during the day. Yes, that was
what C span you know, that was C
1:33:44
span back in the day. You listen
to it live on the radio and then
1:33:47
at night they gave you the
skewed version. What's the
1:33:50
McCarthy now the McCarthy trials
was?
1:33:54
What was that John was that the
commies?
1:33:57
Are communism in the army,
communism in the army. She
1:34:00
encouraged me to join the debate
team in high school and learn
1:34:03
how many versions of the truth
debate team how many versions of
1:34:06
the truth debate teams could
tell each other with an adamant
1:34:10
voice and straight face. We are
all required to research and
1:34:14
debate both sides of the topic
1956 resolved that government
1:34:18
subsidies should be granted
according to need to high school
1:34:22
graduates who qualify for
additional training.
1:34:25
Wow, that was kind of out of
left field.
1:34:28
Like I'm not quite sure that
meant.
1:34:32
You understand the last part not
completely. It sounds like some
1:34:37
communist thing or you know do
each according to his needs.
1:34:41
From each according to his
abilities. And what she wanted.
1:34:45
Val wanted us to play ants.
We'll do a little bit of ants
1:34:48
and cut it off with the karma.
Hit it again ants.
1:34:57
Ants
1:35:03
You've got karma
1:35:09
All right, sir real estate comes
in at $250 from Highland
1:35:12
heights. He's an Associate
Executive Producer and he's in
1:35:15
Ohio. And this is yet another
switch Aroo Holy moly.
1:35:21
For Dame Ashley Lady of the
Lake.
1:35:25
Happy Mother's Day to Dame
Ashley Lady of the Lake. Says
1:35:28
her mom passed away in oops.
happened there. Sorry. Since her
1:35:35
mom passed away in 2014 at the
young age of 51 Ashley doesn't
1:35:40
really like to celebrate
Mother's Day so I couldn't think
1:35:43
of a better gift that been a no.
No agenda executive producer
1:35:46
ship.
1:35:48
Ashley is a beautiful talent and
amazing mother to our six kids.
1:35:52
Today's kids day and deserves
more praise and I can give her I
1:35:58
love you baby. I also want to do
that again. Do the I love you
1:36:02
baby with a little more heart. I
love you baby.
1:36:07
I love you, baby. Per I also
wanted to give a quick shout out
1:36:10
to Adam and Dred Scott for
helping Dame Ashley and I get up
1:36:17
to deliver a get set up to
deliver our value for value
1:36:20
podcast the written revolution.
1:36:24
You did this? Yes of course. Am
I not the pod father?
1:36:30
The podcast has a range of
topics including liberty, law
1:36:33
and cultural deconstruction. We
are blessed by the support of
1:36:36
time talent and treasure from
the nose agenda community as Stu
1:36:41
Sparkol motion sir CEO of ship
posts and Sir Timothy. Timothy,
1:36:47
have no fixed title was Munch
nuts. mentioned a few words I'd
1:36:52
like to invite everyone to go to
www real passage way.com real
1:36:59
passageway.com and check out the
podcast and substack is also
1:37:03
available on all podcasting 2.0
Plug apps. Finally, there'll be
1:37:10
a North East Ohio meetup on May
21. Check out the no agenda
1:37:14
meetups for the details. No
jingles no karma.
1:37:17
So real estate wares month this
is going to be a that's actually
1:37:21
a title. Oh, where's Munch nuts?
1:37:26
Well, it's a modern Ferris
Bueller. Let me
1:37:30
let me try Okay, give it a shot.
Give it a shot.
1:37:35
Is Munch nuts
1:37:40
it's a beautiful thing. Sir
Jeremy toon potty is in Oakland,
1:37:45
Ontario. Two, three 4.33. In the
morning, gentlemen, this is
1:37:49
fatty chum fatty. Like what did
I say? Patty? Oh, Trump, fatty.
1:37:55
I thought I said fatty. Oh,
maybe it did. Oakville, Ontario.
1:37:58
Two, three 4.33 in the morning,
gentlemen. It's been a week of
1:38:01
33. So time to donate. Exactly.
Exactly how you got to look at
1:38:06
those things. It's a message
thank you for your courage, sir
1:38:08
Jeremy Choom. Fuddy Tong fatty
Tim funny, sir clay Alchemist of
1:38:14
the Grand River in Wyoming
Michigan. tu tu tu tu tu tu
1:38:18
finally somebody came up with a
row of ducks. Yep, that's last
1:38:21
time. He says last time.
1:38:24
The most you heard for me was
this.
1:38:27
The last time most of you heard
from me. This time last year.
1:38:33
Days before I had severe medical
emergency I had to be
1:38:36
hospitalized for a manic episode
leading up to it. It was over
1:38:39
240 days into long COVID Oh, I
was too under 40 days in the
1:38:44
long COVID I was not improving.
And I decided to get vaccinated
1:38:49
as many customers at that time
were claiming it would help Oh,
1:38:52
he had caught COVID Yeah was 240
days and Alon COVID and a bunch
1:38:57
of customers to make it a shot.
1:39:01
Sadly, it did not help and very
likely triggered my first and
1:39:05
only manic episode in my life
what is a manic episode exactly
1:39:09
what was like running around
your hair on fire is going nuts.
1:39:13
Oh going nuts. It's going nuts.
Oh okay.
1:39:19
Finally for some good news in
the past few months I finally
1:39:23
get my mental health to the best
point in my life. That's due in
1:39:27
part to my quitting my job a 14
years ago where people gave him
1:39:31
advice to get the shot. Yeah,
I'm currently taking a
1:39:34
sabbatical in Arkansas
appreciating the beauty of the
1:39:37
flu the Wichita Wichita which
Wichita Wichita mountains.
1:39:44
Arkansas beautiful by the way.
Yeah, you might save I buried
1:39:47
the lead but I see it as saving
the best for last. I have fallen
1:39:50
in love God. There you go. Most
amazing woman who brings me so
1:39:54
much joy. And on that note, I
could use some relationship
1:39:58
karma John and Adam thanks for
1:40:00
Help me shrink the amygdala,
literally. Sir clay Alchemist of
1:40:04
the Grand River PSA do not have
permanent job lined up yet. So
1:40:08
if you have some custom
illustration work, reach out to
1:40:11
me on clay. Let's go Clay
alchemist.com Clay alchemist.com
1:40:18
to help calm my brother, you've
got karma.
1:40:23
And Donald Francis, also another
switcheroo, please do a
1:40:28
switcheroo credit we'll do a
switcheroo and credit this
1:40:31
donation to my smokin hot wife
Stephanie Francis towards her
1:40:35
eventual Dame hood. Happy
Mother's Day. Now do we actually
1:40:39
say smokin hot wife Stephanie
Francis or just Stephanie
1:40:42
Francis? Stephanie Francis.
Okay. Otherwise, yeah, I know.
1:40:48
We gotta be careful. We let
people get away with
1:40:52
it's true.
1:40:54
Then carry Jackson. Oh, no, no,
that was it. Yeah, that's it.
1:40:58
That's our group of associated
executive producers and
1:41:01
executive producers for show
1449 coming on, coming up on one
1:41:06
four or five. Oh, next Thursday.
We appreciate those who do love
1:41:10
their moms. And of course we'll
be thinking more people who came
1:41:14
in under the exec and Associate
Executive producer level but
1:41:17
these people these associates
and execs they can proudly take
1:41:22
that credit that is now official
and it is yours to display
1:41:25
wherever you want try IMDb
LinkedIn, it's all it's all
1:41:29
valid. And if anyone has a
question you send them to us we
1:41:32
will vouch for you no problem. I
will thank you for
1:41:36
thank you for producing episode
1449 If you'd like to be a part
1:41:40
of this mayhem go to
your.org/and a time talent and
1:41:46
treasure we love it all
especially the treasurer thank
1:41:49
you our formula is this we go
out for yet people in the mouth
1:42:10
Well,
1:42:12
I have good news for you, John.
You do? Yep. The war is
1:42:16
officially over.
1:42:18
Officially over that was gonna
be over when Putin gave his
1:42:20
speech not enough. Do you hear
this listen to this
1:42:27
that is Bono and the edge from
YouTube doing what is billed as
1:42:34
an impromptu pop up song with
some Ukrainian military in the
1:42:39
subway. In in
1:42:43
well, they say Ukraine but it
looks like a film sent to me and
1:42:48
they're singing standby Ukraine
when Bano shows up you know that
1:42:52
at the end is near you know the
mono was save will save the
1:42:55
world.
1:42:58
So and have you ever seen this
subway? They just like oh, they
1:43:02
they performed ad hoc concert in
the subway? This is the subway
1:43:06
where's the Lensky? Does his
soul lit? Yeah, it's a studio
1:43:11
basically were where they had
the steps. Yes. Yeah, yes,
1:43:16
exactly. And you know where my
studio you know, we're one step
1:43:19
closer to the war ending when
we're taking away the toys. It
1:43:22
goes to heavy pads, a swimming
pool and a movie theater. But
1:43:26
the 140 meter luxury yacht, the
Sahara Zod, will not be setting
1:43:30
sail anytime soon after being
impounded by Italian authorities
1:43:35
under EU sanctions imposed
against Russia in response to
1:43:38
the war in Ukraine. Anti
Corruption activists claimed the
1:43:42
boat which is valued at 650
million euros belongs to Russian
1:43:46
President Vladimir Putin himself
citing as evidence a crew list,
1:43:51
which contains the names of
people who work for the
1:43:54
organization that looks after
the president's security.
1:43:58
But the Italian Ministry of
Finance said only that it had
1:44:02
found significant economic and
business links between the
1:44:05
ship's owner and eminent people
in the Russian government. So
1:44:12
maybe we got Putin's yacht maybe
not take it anyway. I mean,
1:44:17
first of all, first of all, I
have another yacht story too.
1:44:21
Let's play mind before we my
thoughts on this bullcrap. In
1:44:25
Italy. This is a this is on
shocky turned over the reins of
1:44:31
her job to some black. No, no,
it's not hold on a second. Not
1:44:35
some black woman we have to we
have to discuss her separately.
1:44:39
It is Corinne jump here. Not
just some black woman. She is
1:44:44
the first groundbreaking Black
LGBTQ plus woman, perfect
1:44:50
person.
1:44:53
How can somebody be LGBTQ plus?
Isn't she lesbian? Well, it's
1:44:59
the category
1:45:00
What's the giant category? Could
mean does it mean that she's
1:45:04
what's what's one of those? Go
through those terms? One by one.
1:45:08
Could she be? could she possibly
gay male?
1:45:12
Well, I'm just looking for the
headline, I want to show it to
1:45:15
you.
1:45:18
Because magical will not show it
to you. I want to read it to you
1:45:22
because that that was the way
here. What that's the way she
1:45:26
introduced her at this stage on
the stage. Yes, I know. I saw
1:45:30
this and they started crying
together. It was.
1:45:35
I was looking for the headline
LGBT care, peered out and here
1:45:39
it is. Oh, it's a little
different. This is CNBC, Corinne
1:45:43
jumpier has been named the Biden
administration's new White House
1:45:46
press secretary becoming the
first black woman and the first
1:45:49
out LGBTQ person to take the
podium. So she's not in that
1:45:56
long lead. LGBTQ plus? Yes. But
in the long the full size of the
1:46:01
plus part isn't associated also
in the ally. Ally. Ally. Yeah,
1:46:06
maybe she's just an ally. Well,
or she's but that's why we're
1:46:09
that's why they don't well, no,
that's why they shortened it to
1:46:12
LGBTQ in the headline because
they know she's not an ally. She
1:46:16
knows she's not they know she's
not a CJ to gay male. She know.
1:46:21
The other ones is G. Yeah. Yeah.
Did you say what she is instead
1:46:26
of throwing that that moniker on
there, would you like to
1:46:29
understand why they do that?
Because I think you know, yeah,
1:46:32
yeah. Because that's the
understand because that's the
1:46:35
group that's the activation
group.
1:46:38
You know, that's, that's the
people you need to help the poor
1:46:43
LGBTQ issues. Okay. Yeah. And
you leave the pluses out Yes.
1:46:48
Now the pluses did not import or
the allies were not in it.
1:46:53
So let's go back let's go now so
they did that little event and
1:46:56
then it's okay this will be fun
to watch when she takes over.
1:46:59
And so she so the first thing
they go to is this this is the
1:47:03
first thing when they do the
press guys, the first thing they
1:47:06
go to is the capture of a yet
another yacht without due
1:47:10
process. And I want to
deconstruct this a little bit
1:47:12
and then talk about the Italian
lot. I want to give you an
1:47:15
update on a Russian oligarchs
yacht that was seized that you
1:47:18
may have seen, not me, but I did
want to note and make sure
1:47:23
everybody saw it. Today, the
Department of Justice announced
1:47:27
that the Fijian law enforcement
executed a seizure warrant
1:47:31
freezing the motor yacht
Ahmadiyya, a 348 foot luxury
1:47:35
vessel owned by sanctioned
Russian oligarch Suleiman
1:47:39
Kerimov. They got his worth
approximately $300 million or
1:47:42
more. This was done with support
and assistance from the FBI and
1:47:46
Fiji acted at the request of the
Department of Justice. Following
1:47:50
issues issuance of a seizure
warrant from the US District
1:47:52
Court for the District of
Columbia, Fiji and authorities
1:47:56
executed the request obtaining a
domestic seizure warrant from a
1:47:59
Fijian court. As you know, the
President has made clear we will
1:48:03
go after Russian oligarchs and
their ill gotten gains using
1:48:06
every authority we have to hold
them accountable. That is so
1:48:09
crazy.
1:48:14
Did they threatened Fiji?
1:48:18
And what authority what
authority do we have? This is
1:48:21
this is global police force now.
1:48:26
Please read the last part of
this again, that's just the last
1:48:29
few sentences. Oh, hold on. I
already dumped it already
1:48:32
stopped I got I got
1:48:35
from a Fijian court. As you
know, the President has made
1:48:39
clear we will go after Russian
oligarchs and their ill gotten
1:48:41
gains using every authority we
have to hold them accountable.
1:48:45
So I guess they have that
authority then somehow
1:48:48
that I know of. But what is this
ill gotten gains? What are the
1:48:52
ill gotten gains? And what is
that what was
1:48:56
holding them accountable for
their play that last just let
1:48:59
that last word EJ and has made
clear we will go after Russian
1:49:02
oligarchs and their ill gotten
gains using every authority we
1:49:06
have to hold them accountable or
hold them accountable
1:49:09
accountable to ill gotten gains.
Okay, this was they got ill
1:49:12
gotten gains do we know that for
a fact and what what is ill I
1:49:15
mean, are they ill gotten gains
is it drug money is ill the same
1:49:19
as illegal or is it just let me
see ill ill gotten ill gotten
1:49:23
what does that mean? That could
be that you got it you're sick
1:49:25
and you got it? Let me see ill
gotten ill gotten definition
1:49:29
meaning here we go. Let's let's
get into it. A call Okay.
1:49:33
Acquired by illicit or improper
means. Says who? Merriam
1:49:38
Webster. There's
1:49:44
who says gays that they've got
were ill gotten on what
1:49:48
authority do we have to make
that make that assertion because
1:49:52
nobody can have a yacht? Nobody
can have them accountable. Hold
1:49:56
them accountable for what for
having a yacht
1:50:00
That's the only answer is the
authority to do this and what
1:50:04
that Feagins cave for no good
reason. This is just beyond the
1:50:08
pale I don't get it. I do I want
to mention this global police
1:50:12
force. That's what this is.
1:50:15
What is that? We had that that
was independent and this is also
1:50:18
keeping Jeff Bezos in check.
Keeping Bill Gates in check.
1:50:23
Keeping everybody with a yacht
in check. Hey, you know don't
1:50:27
mess around man at the biggest
one. Yeah. Everybody with the
1:50:31
uh, you know what? They might go
after his yacht.
1:50:36
But they're gonna go gotten
gains you've gotten gains.
1:50:38
That's right, scam. Here's this
article that's funny. From 2020
1:50:43
to 577. Russian oligarchs many
involved with oil and gas have
1:50:49
recently died under mysterious
circumstances. Oops. Those
1:50:53
suicide is officially suspected.
1:50:56
Yeah, that's what I do when
criminals involvement with
1:51:00
violence. And they list one
after the other. They're always
1:51:04
shot in their homes shot in
their homes. A family shot dead
1:51:08
the kids the wife everyone's
shot dead suppose Really?
1:51:12
Really? Yeah. That's a murder
suicide. One guy? Yeah, the
1:51:17
police starts with Loretta Mora
in Spanish. A lot of them in
1:51:22
Spain.
1:51:24
Read I just read one of these
day earlier police in Moscow but
1:51:28
3000 miles away from the coastal
city in Spain made a gruesome
1:51:31
discovery. Vladislav Ave of
another millionaire and his wife
1:51:36
and 13 year old daughter were
found dead in their luxury
1:51:39
apartment. The Russian state
news agency Taz reports that he
1:51:43
had a pistol in his hand and is
suspected authorities suspected
1:51:48
by shooting his wife and
daughter before killing himself.
1:51:52
incidents took place within 24
hours of each other and the
1:51:55
presumed courses of events
strikingly similar, is like two
1:51:59
of those. They're desperate
latest in a series of mysterious
1:52:03
deaths of Russian oligarchs,
primarily from the energy sector
1:52:06
that have taken place in 2022
and January. Leonid Schulman a
1:52:12
six year old high level manager
Gazprom reportedly committed
1:52:15
suicide. Then on February 25,
Alexander Tullia cough another
1:52:20
former manager at the energy
giant was found hanging dead in
1:52:23
his house in St. Petersburg
three days later, the Ukraine
1:52:26
born gas and energy magnate
Mikhail watt Ford was also found
1:52:30
a hanging dead in the garage of
his country estate in England.
1:52:34
It goes on and on and on when
one after the other
1:52:38
Ha, yeah, nobody knows what's
going on. Apparently this took
1:52:41
place in 2017 to a whole bunch
of oligarchs quote unquote
1:52:45
oligarchs wound up dead no
Western media doesn't report on
1:52:48
any of it or even care and the
curious thing is is all these
1:52:52
guys recently that were found
dead were were all all of them
1:52:57
were missing from the sanctions
list they were not listed as to
1:53:00
be sanctioned against and and
did they have ill gotten gains
1:53:03
and Yassa well I don't know for
sure held accountable were held
1:53:08
accountable man well this is
only adding you know to the to
1:53:13
the problems that we have the
EURO NEWS today was filled with
1:53:16
that's it G sevens going to
going to sanction no more
1:53:20
Russian imports of of oil the
same oil not gas. Eu Nope. No
1:53:25
more No more Russian petroleum
products. So now we have
1:53:32
all kinds of interesting things
happening Yes, in that regard.
1:53:36
Let's go back to your story
about the guy neatly Why is
1:53:39
Italy doing this unless they
want it either. They're getting
1:53:42
cut off from the gas, or because
they're they're going around
1:53:45
about ways and intelligence can
do this to pay the Russians for
1:53:48
gas. They want gas they're doing
they're doing it they are they
1:53:53
are paying so an intermediary
who then takes that and then
1:53:57
pays the Russians in rubles. And
so why are they grabbing the
1:54:00
yacht because it's, it's it's no
different from you to appearing
1:54:03
in a subway. Look what we're
doing. I'm just saying if I'm
1:54:06
giving you gas, yes. And you're
going to freeze to death without
1:54:10
my Russian gas. Why are you
taking my yacht?
1:54:16
I wish this was a real
conversation that we were
1:54:18
having. I don't know man. Your
yachts tiny sucks.
1:54:23
Your yachts my way. It's a lot
better than your yacht. It's
1:54:27
virtue signaling. It is it and
there's a lot of it going on.
1:54:31
You know when there was I got
it. What?
1:54:36
To grab the Russian yacht. The
Italians did to seize it. So the
1:54:42
Americans can grab it.
1:54:44
Oh, I like that. Keep it safe.
Because there was a different
1:54:48
story about the Italian yacht.
It wasn't that didn't sound like
1:54:51
it was coming from the US
Justice Department. No, this is
1:54:56
the grammar yacht. Yes. Oh,
don't worry boy. We got
1:55:00
We got it. Yeah, that's a good
point. Fiji, those suckers, they
1:55:04
should have done the same thing.
1:55:07
Yeah, the Fiji well, did they?
Yeah. Right from their hands. We
1:55:12
couldn't do that with the
Italian so easy. Hey, do you
1:55:14
remember the who, you know like
talking about my generation?
1:55:17
Yeah. bump bump, bump bump pom
pom. They were kind of like
1:55:21
rebels back in the day, weren't
they? Were they?
1:55:26
Well, not anymore, for sure. But
one of our producers sent in a
1:55:30
video of the WHO playing Dallas
think they're playing in Austin
1:55:35
this week. And they have you
know, they got screens, and oh,
1:55:38
yeah, they're flashing images of
Zelinsky and the Ukrainian flag.
1:55:43
So ladies and gentlemen, the who
1:55:47
is falling for this Google crop.
1:55:51
So with all this, with the
energy markets, upset, a lot of
1:55:57
different things to talk about
kind of briefly, but diesel fuel
1:56:00
is now at $6 a gallon. So this
is now pretty much a past six
1:56:06
bikes around here and give me a
break. It's adult it's really
1:56:09
what is it now? Close to nine I
think diesel fuel in the like in
1:56:13
my immediate areas probably won
675
1:56:18
Hmm.
1:56:19
Yeah, that I mean, that's too
expensive. So that's that's
1:56:22
hurting think that's yes, that's
hurting everything.
1:56:28
That is going to bring some
version of food shortages, pure,
1:56:33
if only purely from delivery not
being able to be made. We have
1:56:38
warnings again now of
electricity shortages. And
1:56:42
they're cranking it up,
particularly in Texas. Now Oh,
1:56:46
it's warm. It's warm. Now on
zero. It's really easy. Yes, we
1:56:49
are ground zero. It's warm. Now
we can't we can handle the we
1:56:53
can handle the load. We can't
handle the load. We can't handle
1:56:58
too much. Did you know you
mentioned the discovery plus the
1:57:02
History Channel
1:57:04
is involved in a lot of
predictive programming. And they
1:57:08
actually did a history piece,
which I will play a piece of
1:57:11
this is Nostradamus, did you
know that Nostradamus predicted
1:57:15
all of this, John, did you know
that, of course predicted all of
1:57:18
this always focused on the big
picture? Nostradamus was
1:57:21
fascinated by crises that could
have global consequences.
1:57:26
If there was a famine that was
bad enough to shut down the
1:57:32
American food production,
1:57:34
where would really look bad, is
not so much in America would be
1:57:38
bad enough, but it would be
catastrophic. Beyond America's
1:57:42
borders. Because we are the
breadbasket of the world. It's
1:57:47
been estimated that if exports
of food were cut off, in a
1:57:51
year's time, 400 million people
in Africa might die from famine
1:57:56
and starvation. Nostradamus sees
this famine spreading out of
1:57:59
control and our world descending
into barbarism. The Great
1:58:04
Famine, which I sense
approaching, will often turn up
1:58:07
in various areas that have
become worldwide.
1:58:11
It will be so vast and long
lasting, that people will grab
1:58:15
roots from the trees and
children from the breast. It
1:58:19
would be so complete and variant
that babies would be snatched
1:58:25
from the breast and man would
eat his fellow man Yeah, ASTRA
1:58:28
Dominus is terrifying scenario
is one of his most graphic
1:58:32
descriptions of the end of the
world. I mean, he got it right,
1:58:35
right down to Democrats eating
babies. The guy nails it.
1:58:42
Now he was a talented belly. Do
you know that what he predicted
1:58:46
would be the the safest place to
ride out the end of the world?
1:58:51
It's an island. It's an island.
Oh, Catalina No, the visa?
1:58:58
The yes the the guy was a
genius. Because the party Island
1:59:02
Yes. Where he wanted the
1:59:04
world of course.
1:59:07
Anyway, we all know that climate
change and Putin is priced in I
1:59:12
leave it okay. You're not
leaving Ukraine? I got you
1:59:14
kicked Ukraine clips. Oh, I'm
sorry to bring on Ukraine clips.
1:59:19
Let's go. First of all, listen,
listen to Ned Price.
1:59:24
Not price again. I want you to
listen to Ned Price, but I want
1:59:29
you to listen to His voice and
net is what national security
1:59:32
adviser? No, no, that's Jake.
No. Jake is the Secretary of
1:59:37
State. No, Jake Sullivan is the
National Security Adviser.
1:59:42
What's Ned Price then? He's the
spokes hole. Oh, spokes hold
1:59:47
what? He went from spook to
spokes hole.
1:59:50
Yeah, wow. Russia's power in the
region and beyond. is
1:59:57
significantly diluted and it is
diluted because
2:00:00
As if something you referred to
cite, those are the export
2:00:03
controls, but also the economic
sanctions that we have placed on
2:00:07
Moscow. It's diluted because of
the diplomatic isolation, the
2:00:10
pariah status that President
Putin's war campaign in Ukraine
2:00:16
has bestowed upon Hold on a
second new talking point pariah
2:00:21
status.
2:00:24
Let's kind of get this clip a
week ago, it hasn't caught on,
2:00:27
on him. to your specific
question. Yes, Masco does have a
2:00:33
defense industry. It is a
defense industry that is not
2:00:39
wholly self reliance. It is
reliant on key inputs and
2:00:44
products from the international
community, including from the
2:00:48
West, that is precisely what our
export controls are designed to
2:00:54
choke off. Because of that,
Moscow's high tech, its defense
2:01:00
sectors, its aerospace sector,
its energy exploration sector, a
2:01:05
number of strategic sectors that
Moscow would need
2:01:11
for its regional and and
ambitions beyond the region have
2:01:16
been an orbing start. And as I
said, Russia is is now proposed
2:01:23
from China. In terms of the
response we've seen from the
2:01:27
international community, you
look at any number of votes at
2:01:31
the UN, for example, where 141
countries, the vast majority of
2:01:34
the world, country, world
countries have come together to
2:01:37
condemn President Putin's
behavior.
2:01:41
Oh, this bullcrap. Yeah. He gets
the same stuff from China that
2:01:45
we do. Yeah. And India, India,
and China can provide Russia
2:01:48
with everything. Okay, but
that's not worth actually the
2:01:52
very interesting thing and he's
another part to this. I'm gonna
2:01:54
get I'm gonna skip that. Because
I don't want to play.
2:01:58
It was on was on meet the
president, Mike McCaul. He's a
2:02:02
Republican. Yeah, he's from
Texas. He's a total douche
2:02:05
knuckle. Now. Warm. Warm, are
you? Yes, he's a war monger from
2:02:09
Texas. And he's under one of the
committee's as important foreign
2:02:14
relations I think but that's not
the point. You heard.
2:02:18
Ned Price and the way he tells
you Yes. Thanks.
2:02:24
For him Yes, I did because he's
from the CIA millio but he's
2:02:30
from the gate CIA. mil either
very gay CIA. Millia Yeah, he's
2:02:36
out gay this person that were
LGBTQ plus out. Let's listen to
2:02:40
Mike McCaul. Listen to his
cadence that concerns that these
2:02:44
attacks on Russia could actually
lead to a wider war maybe even
2:02:48
retaliation with nuclear
weapons. That's always a
2:02:51
concern. The short range
tactical nukes is always the we
2:02:55
discussed that with with NATO
when I was there, you know they
2:02:58
brought the Butcher of Syria in
the fight this the second phase
2:03:03
of this war he's a very
2:03:06
very frightening man he dropped
barrel busting bombs in Syria on
2:03:12
civilians and that's been
discredited McCall chemical
2:03:17
weapons with Assad in Syria to
kill civilians White Helmets,
2:03:22
bullcrap hoax, what would happen
if a chemical weapon was dropped
2:03:27
in Ukraine and or short range
Tactical Nuke? The question
2:03:32
there is what the world idly sit
back and watch that happen
2:03:37
without doing anything? What
would we what should we do? I
2:03:41
just find it hard to believe we
want to talk to the Secretary
2:03:43
General of NATO. Their job is
really to defend NATO. That's
2:03:47
not trigger. What? He sounded
more like me when I did these
2:03:51
clips, but okay, it doesn't
sound just like nice. No,
2:03:55
because he doesn't have enough
talk. And so it's but the guy's
2:03:58
a jerk. Well, allow me to play
his counterpart, Seth Moulton,
2:04:03
Democrat from Massachusetts. I
only have 10 seconds left for
2:04:08
each of you if you can't Fox
News. Interestingly, I did. But
2:04:12
if they wrap this in the Senate,
with a Ukraine funding and a
2:04:16
COVID funding, you guys okay
with that Congress Moulton.
2:04:21
We're gonna support it because
it's the right thing to do for
2:04:23
Ukraine. I mean, obviously,
there's a lot of politics
2:04:25
involved. And there will be
domestic debates here at home
2:04:27
about all their policies and
whatnot. But at the end of the
2:04:30
day, we've got to realize we're
at war. And we're not just at
2:04:32
war to support the Ukrainians
were fundamentally at war,
2:04:36
although it's somewhat through a
proxy with Russia and it's
2:04:38
important that we win.
2:04:43
We win Russia, it's important
that we win. Yeah. You know,
2:04:46
because what he means is the
Democrat Party is at war with
2:04:49
Russia.
2:04:53
Could be they could be could be,
could be. I have a
2:04:58
this is CBS
2:05:00
This weekend Russian nuclear
saber rattling.
2:05:06
I always love a package that
starts off with violence.
2:05:10
This is how Russia rattles
sabers.
2:05:14
Testing a missile capable of
carrying a nuclear weapon more
2:05:17
than 10,000 Miles nearly twice
the distance from Moscow to
2:05:21
Miami. At least you use my this
muscle schists. Russia's Foreign
2:05:25
Minister recently called the
risk of nuclear war considerable
2:05:30
yet Brian and Russian talk shows
have debated how quickly a bomb
2:05:33
could reach Europe, even showing
how one might create a nuclear
2:05:36
tsunami. So wipe out the UK
Yeah.
2:05:41
US Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin has tried to play down
2:05:44
the threat of nuclear war.
2:05:49
But as the war rages on in
Ukraine, a mushroom cloud
2:05:52
wouldn't suddenly just appear on
the horizon. The West would have
2:05:56
intelligence so there'd be a
warning. There would be warnings
2:06:00
that these warheads were being
deployed in a period where it's
2:06:03
not available for sea retired
commander Andy Corvette captain
2:06:07
to have the UK is Vanguard class
submarines capable of delivering
2:06:11
its Trident nuclear missile. How
easy would it be for Putin to
2:06:15
launch a nuclear weapon, my
understanding of the Russian
2:06:17
system is that is very similar
to the British one. So the
2:06:21
authority to launch must come
from Putin. Although the
2:06:24
decision rests with the
political leader, the ability to
2:06:28
do that doesn't.
2:06:31
So tomorrow is Victory Day in
Russia, May 9. And Victory Day
2:06:38
is to commemorate the Soviet
Union's defeat of Nazi Germany
2:06:42
in World War Two. And the
speculation is that Putin will
2:06:45
declare a win on the Nazis in
Ukraine, which is great that
2:06:50
happened on the same day.
2:06:52
And I think he could do it and
you could pull it off. I think
2:06:56
if I was going to do a photoshop
job, I just didn't have time for
2:06:58
this last newsletter where it
was going to be Putin placed
2:07:02
right over Bush words had
mission accomplished in the
2:07:05
fact.
2:07:07
Yeah, yeah. Couldn't be easier
to talk about is actually to do
2:07:10
it. Although it's not hard to do
that type of Photoshop. So I
2:07:14
friend in my Ukrainian he wants
to large software companies, and
2:07:19
he's got 150 employees in
Ukraine 150 In Russia, and I
2:07:22
talked him over the weekend. And
he says that and he's
2:07:29
he's Ukrainian himself. He was
born in Kyiv. And he also told
2:07:33
me how to pronounce it
correctly. Oh, and everyone's
2:07:37
everyone's pronouncing it wrong.
If you have a real if you're
2:07:40
Ukrainian. It's pronounced is
it's like it's like key. If only
2:07:45
it's Kev. Kev. be exact. You
actually nailed it. Yeah, well,
2:07:49
I'm Ukrainian. So he's
2:07:54
like, yeah, it's one syllable.
It's like saying, it's like,
2:07:56
well, we say, Kevin. Hey, Kev.
Hey, Kev. Come over here, man.
2:07:59
Yeah, that's exactly what's
supposed to be anyway. So he
2:08:02
says that the Ukrainians are now
and he's taken three out. He's
2:08:05
gotten 3000 people out of the
country himself. And he's got a
2:08:08
he's got 150 employees and in
Kyiv key, and he's got another
2:08:13
group in Russia. And he's This
is a nightmare. And he says,
2:08:18
and he says, The Ukrainians are
tougher than the Russians
2:08:21
thought and is going to, they're
never gonna beat them. And he
2:08:24
says, Now the Ukrainians because
of the guns and all the bullets,
2:08:29
they actually think they can
push the Russians out of the
2:08:31
country completely. And so
2:08:34
nothing, you know, great. So I
told them the idea of Putin
2:08:38
coming off and just saying you
won tomorrow? Yeah, he, he says
2:08:44
they know, he doesn't think so.
But I think it's possible.
2:08:49
You know, speaking of Ukraine
CrowdStrike, the renowned
2:08:52
cybersecurity firm is, of
course, founded in in Ukraine,
2:08:57
Ukrainian management.
2:09:01
They are now saying, hey, you
know what?
2:09:05
We did all that research on the
DNC server. And we thought that,
2:09:10
you know, the Russians have
stolen the data. And of course,
2:09:13
we know it was Seth Rich.
2:09:16
They're saying, oh, you know, I
think we might have relied too
2:09:19
much on spoof data.
2:09:22
All this stuff is coming out,
John. It's crazy. It's like the
2:09:26
Pfizer stuff that maybe they're
just dropping it well, and until
2:09:28
they can say, hey, hey, we told
you, we told you tell us what
2:09:34
were you doing? Meanwhile, we
told you about it. Roe vs. Wade.
2:09:39
Yeah, exactly.
2:09:43
Exactly. All right. I got to
update Baiser get them out of
2:09:46
the way this year crane steel
plant update.
2:09:50
Sorry. misfire. Can we go?
Ukraine says all women, children
2:09:55
and elderly people have been
evacuated from the Edo style
2:09:58
steel plant and Mario
2:10:00
People, but Ukrainian fighters
remain trapped inside. The plant
2:10:03
is the only part of Mario pol
still under Ukrainian control.
2:10:07
Russia has stepped up its
attacks across Ukraine.
2:10:11
Observers say Russia wants to
show a force to coincide with
2:10:14
its Victory Day holiday on
Monday.
2:10:18
See, there you go. There you
have it.
2:10:21
John, the Donbass report. This
is from NPR that was from I
2:10:26
believe. LG zero. This is from
NPR. This is the Ukraine Don
2:10:31
boss stalled. Ukraine's military
says fighting in the eastern
2:10:35
Donbass area is intensifying and
prsu Leon high da reports Russia
2:10:39
is trying to break a defensive
line that's held for nearly
2:10:42
eight years. The military
administrator in Ukraine's
2:10:45
Donetsk region says that Russian
bombardment either damaged or
2:10:49
totally destroyed more than two
dozen homes and businesses
2:10:52
overnight. This reporter is CIA.
He says the number of dead is
2:10:56
relatively low but expects to
find more victims throughout the
2:10:58
day. Russian forces have spilled
across the line of contact here,
2:11:03
attacking from the north and
south but they haven't managed
2:11:06
to penetrate this particular
area. After almost two and a
2:11:09
half months of all out war. The
line was fortified in 2014, when
2:11:13
Russian backed forces first
attempted to seize the region.
2:11:16
Russia may be looking for some
key victories in the done boss
2:11:19
ahead of Monday's Victory Day
celebrations. When President
2:11:22
Putin is expected to make a
major speech about the war in
2:11:25
Ukraine. I guess, I guess the
word is out. I guess that's
2:11:28
that's where it's headed. This
speech is going to be
2:11:31
interesting, but you know, it'll
be at least a five month longer
2:11:35
war because that's what we paid
for $33 billion was for five
2:11:39
months. So we do want to see our
money on the screen people.
2:11:43
We're not just giving you money
to then you know, like, Okay,
2:11:46
we're good now.
2:11:48
We want to see that money up
there on the screen Ukrainians,
2:11:50
they can get their way they can
get the money and run. All right
2:11:54
from Ukraine. Now I'd like to
just circle back since we are
2:11:58
talking up Saki who did this
When did she start an MSNBC?
2:12:01
Does she start like, like this
week right away, or I don't know
2:12:05
that she's starting.
2:12:07
The staff is all up in arms
about this. I mean, now that I
2:12:12
Okay. I had a chat with
2:12:17
my friend who works at NBC. And
she said that that woman by the
2:12:22
way, that woman?
2:12:25
Yes.
2:12:26
Woman Rashida. She's been there
for a while. And she's been
2:12:31
trying to shake things up for
ages. I
2:12:33
Rashida is she's missing some
important factors to be
2:12:37
considered for this job.
2:12:39
skin color, and sexual
orientation. But she's got this
2:12:43
skin color. No, not like Karina,
John Pierre, but you don't think
2:12:48
she's black enough? No, in fact,
me and Kareem Jean Pierre is not
2:12:54
a DOS. She's not she's not
African America. She looks like
2:12:57
Haiti. Yeah, Haitian Exactly.
Yeah, because a lot of Haitians
2:13:00
calling themselves black
Americans,
2:13:03
much to the chagrin of many
black Americans. But let's
2:13:07
listen to CBS This morning's
report about this joyous
2:13:10
occasion. Well, the new White
House press secretary is taking
2:13:12
over the podium Korean John
Pierre will replace Jen Psaki
2:13:15
starting next week. She will be
the first black and first openly
2:13:19
LGBTQ plus person to fill the
role is currently the White
2:13:23
House's Principal Deputy Press
Secretary. I'm just so grateful
2:13:27
to have had Korean by my side
for this over the last 15 months
2:13:31
and I just can't wait to see her
shine at the podiums Misaki has
2:13:36
held the position that's racist,
joining MSNBC following her
2:13:42
departure to be joining MSNBC
following shine when she is
2:13:46
shoeshine boy. John is so
racist. That's what she said.
2:13:52
Yeah, well, I think you know, I
think it was in subconscious I'm
2:13:55
telling you. So the views look
like a generous person. The view
2:14:00
went off script and and off the
rails over Korean and it wasn't
2:14:06
even about Korean. So we have
Sonny Halston, who is the
2:14:13
the also not a doll she's the
cute brown curly hair lady who
2:14:17
has the big Netflix deal, which
is all about black women or
2:14:22
women of color, people of color.
That's her production company
2:14:25
another Netflix winner everybody
that shit that's liquid your
2:14:29
stock price. Tell me how that
programming is working out.
2:14:33
Then there's the Republican
2:14:37
consultant to Anna Navarro. Who
doesn't seem like she fits in
2:14:42
the Republican bodies every day.
She's never voted Republican in
2:14:46
her life. Probably not. And then
2:14:50
another I think an actual a das
black woman who was I think she
2:14:54
was a guest. I don't know her
name offhand. And she says hey,
2:14:58
you know like, you can be
2:15:00
All kinds of different things. I
can be a Republican and I can
2:15:03
still believe in pro choice.
This is not you know, it's not
2:15:06
strict straight lines up and
down. And Sonny hos and I have
2:15:09
to imagine we know this show was
tightly scripted, right? With
2:15:13
this has been confirmed by many,
many sources. Yeah. So it, it
2:15:18
starts to go off the rails, and
Sonny grabs her right ear with
2:15:23
her hand, but you know, pushing
her hair back, because that's
2:15:26
where the IFP is. That's where
the where the earpieces. And
2:15:31
she's going. Well, you'll hear
what she says. But just imagine
2:15:33
she's holding the earpiece out.
No, she's like, almost like
2:15:36
twisting it to turn up the
volume only she's twisting her
2:15:39
ear to make it louder, because
they're trying to tell her what
2:15:42
to do, and she can't handle it.
2:15:45
Okay, but I know this may be a
novel point, a novel idea for
2:15:49
somebody who's you know, a
supporter of Trump. But there
2:15:51
are people who are capable of
being related.
2:15:55
tried any of these that I don't
stand by the Trump did, Trump
2:15:58
has done things that are racist,
I'm a black woman first. So
2:16:00
always understand that. But I do
say that I've had many
2:16:03
conservative values that I will
talk to you about. And so if you
2:16:05
look at your network, you're
standing behind. Yes. And when
2:16:08
you look at your network that
you're standing behind you
2:16:10
saying that you look at Chris
Cuomo, that's the oxymoron, a
2:16:12
black Republican. You feel like
it's an oxymoron. Why you
2:16:16
friend, right. Here's the
Republican, we have.
2:16:19
You do what you said, you feel
like you're Catholic, but you
2:16:21
also have I don't understand I
know you don't understand
2:16:24
yourself, then you have to
understand myself. I don't
2:16:26
understand either. But it's not
a personal conversation. I don't
2:16:30
like we're having a personal
conversation about about
2:16:33
black lives and I don't
understand Latino Republic.
2:16:35
Well.
2:16:37
This is not about me. And it's
not about you. It's about
2:16:40
celebrating Korean John Pierre.
Very good.
2:16:47
Sunny house, Sunny Austin says
Black Republican is an oxymoron.
2:16:54
Yeah, come on, man. That's
crazy.
2:17:00
I know.
2:17:02
And yeah, and the grasping of
free. I don't understand. I
2:17:05
don't understand. I don't
understand either of you. I
2:17:06
don't understand how I don't
understand.
2:17:10
Is she racist? is that can we
qualify that as racist?
2:17:15
bigoted, bigoted man will be
good. It's no good.
2:17:19
No, good.
2:17:21
Yeah, the Republican Party
2:17:25
was all blacks until
2:17:30
was it that was, was the I had a
bunch of clips on this was
2:17:33
actually quite interesting. I
just had to go dig those up
2:17:36
again. How they are the
Democrats took over. And it
2:17:39
wasn't just Lyndon Johnson. It
was a series of events that got
2:17:46
the black, the entire black
nation to vote Democrat all the
2:17:51
time. Yeah, very tricky. And
it's, it's still, it's still
2:17:55
predominantly that way. But in
the US a lot of guilt on people.
2:18:00
There's a good example your best
example right there. You if
2:18:04
you're black, and well, Biden
said it. Yeah, if you vote for
2:18:08
me, you ain't black as right.
There you go.
2:18:12
Moving, very patronizing. I
might add on the fact that
2:18:16
anyone would put up with that
without punching somebody is
2:18:20
beyond me. That's your media.
It's toxic. It's toxic. And it
2:18:24
is, it's super to end and you
know, we would call it we will
2:18:28
call the media the enemy of the
people fake news. This I have to
2:18:33
play this. This is our our
mistress of truth from the
2:18:36
Ministry of truthiness. Dis just
so many great, I've noticed
2:18:40
something about her. This is a
Nina Janka, which she has an
2:18:44
uneven chin. I love you know
that she's asymmetrical this way
2:18:49
he looks so weird. Yeah. And so
what she does to kind of
2:18:52
compensate. I'm a person who
notices this because I try and
2:18:55
compensate for my Tourette's.
And so I'm noticing all these
2:18:58
little things people will do.
And she tilts her head, so that
2:19:02
it almost looks like well, it's
just the shot that that one half
2:19:06
of her chin is is point here
than the other half.
2:19:10
So that's just, that's just me,
because classic no edge is just
2:19:15
me picking on anybody else who
would dare do this site or
2:19:18
material. But it's important
because if you're choosing
2:19:21
someone whose job it is to be in
the media, they should be
2:19:24
symmetrical. She has the big
head. That's good. You know, the
2:19:27
most unsymmetrical person that's
gotten the furthest in the media
2:19:30
and he finally quit his Brian
Williams. Yes. Broken nose.
2:19:35
Yeah. And he would always have
his head to the left bellies
2:19:38
turn it Yeah. But if you just
looked at that noses and in the
2:19:41
wrong place, that noses off a
good half inch. Now this is 2020
2:19:46
This is so of course it's about
Trump and Trump calling, you
2:19:50
know, what's fake news and
really about having the
2:19:54
government be in charge of of
what can and cannot be done.
2:20:00
replicated online. And she
there's a kicker at the end,
2:20:03
that is hilarious. Imagine that,
you know, with President Trump
2:20:07
right now calling all of these
news organizations that have
2:20:11
inconvenient for him stories
that they that they're getting
2:20:15
out there that he's calling fake
news, and now lashing out at
2:20:18
platforms, I would never want to
see our executive branch have
2:20:22
that sort of power. And that's
why, you know, the legislative
2:20:25
process, our duly elected was
two years ago, John, so she's,
2:20:29
she's, she's allowed to change
her mind, but she would never
2:20:32
want us. Okay, you get it right
sort of power. And that's why,
2:20:37
you know, the legislative
process with our duly elected
2:20:40
officials is really important,
that sort of consultative
2:20:43
rulemaking process, and we can't
governed by executive order
2:20:47
anymore. I'll leave it there.
Oh, we can't do it by executive
2:20:51
order, except the creation of
your entire department by
2:20:54
executive order. I think the
reverberations in the free
2:20:57
speech space are huge.
2:21:00
The free speech space, John, are
we in the free speech space?
2:21:05
Whatever that means? Well, I
think that means
2:21:09
conservatives,
2:21:11
not to podcasters exactly what
section 230 was designed to do
2:21:15
to allow the platform's to
enforce the standards on on
2:21:19
their own spaces. No, no fact
check false. That is not what
2:21:23
230 was designed to do. What did
you just say here? It was
2:21:27
designed so that
2:21:29
these these private companies
could manage their own
2:21:35
content in their own spaces? No,
it was so that they could not
2:21:39
get sued over user generated
content. That's what section 230
2:21:43
was about. It was protected as a
protect it was a protection airy
2:21:47
mechanism for them. Yes. By the
way, I'm not against it. The
2:21:51
idea was right, but now it's
being misused, particularly when
2:21:54
you have a ministry of
truthiness. That is telling them
2:21:57
what to do in the back channel.
anymore. I think I'll leave it
2:22:01
there. I think the Reverberi
free speech, yeah, wait for it
2:22:05
are huge.
2:22:06
Not to mention, this is exactly
what section 230 was designed to
2:22:10
do to allow the platforms to
enforce the standards on on
2:22:15
their own spaces. So I think,
you know, the entire
2:22:18
conversation is being obviously
blown out of proportion for
2:22:21
political reasons. I'm super
invited in the in the morning,
2:22:24
now that I think about it, if
you recall, there was an update,
2:22:27
there was a minor change to
Section 230. And that was the so
2:22:32
called Backpage. edition. And
they needed to get human
2:22:39
trafficking off of the web. So
that's how they killed
2:22:42
Craigslist.
2:22:44
Because you couldn't do ads
anymore for for hookups. And at
2:22:50
the time was like, No, this is
very strict, this is only a
2:22:52
deletion of this kind of stuff.
It's only in certain
2:22:55
circumstances, I'd have to go
back and look at it, I have a
2:22:58
feeling that that change is
being utilized legally, in in
2:23:03
all of these different D
platforming things that are
2:23:05
taking place. So there were
there wasn't there wasn't
2:23:08
addition, but it was minor
reasons. I'm super advised in
2:23:11
the in the more democratic
countries I'm thinking, in
2:23:14
particular, Poland, established
this consultative process with
2:23:19
is Poland more democratic than
the United States. I don't know
2:23:23
what she's talking about
countries. I'm thinking, in
2:23:26
particular of Poland, Poland has
established this consultative
2:23:30
process with its Ministry of
digitalization and Facebook,
2:23:35
because like the Trump
administration, and I wouldn't
2:23:37
be surprised if the Law and
Justice Party got this idea from
2:23:41
the Trump administration. They,
they believe that there's anti
2:23:45
conservative bias on Facebook,
even though there have been
2:23:47
multiple studies that prove
otherwise, I'm gonna let her
2:23:50
finish out the next 30 seconds.
You recall, she, she comes from
2:23:53
the Wilson Center. And the
Wilson Center is a government
2:23:58
funded operation that is
supposed to provide
2:24:02
transparency. I think in media
actually. That's where she comes
2:24:06
from. And they have this
consultative process where they
2:24:09
send someone from the Ministry
of digitalization to discuss
2:24:12
with Facebook's officers in
Warsaw, all of the instances of
2:24:16
unfair content moderation, and
some of them are being
2:24:19
overturned. Through that
political pressure. They have a
2:24:22
tip line that people can kind of
report when they think their
2:24:24
content has been unjustly
overturned, and the Trump
2:24:27
administration has a similar
thing. So it's providing a lot
2:24:30
of fodder for anti democratic
online governance. And it's it's
2:24:35
very, very scary. And I think
this is really where Congress
2:24:38
needs to step in. I think we're,
we're seeing cooperation ramp up
2:24:42
on a number of levels. So I will
be completely honest and say
2:24:45
that my program at the Wilson
Center is partially funded by
2:24:48
Facebook.
2:24:50
There you go. Now we know where
she's coming from. It's her job
2:24:55
to usher in the Facebook
legislation that will behoove
2:24:58
Facebook that will make
2:25:00
Facebook are unbeatable because
only they can afford the type of
2:25:04
regulations that will be created
she is the Trojan horse of
2:25:08
Facebook a good one good catch
it's a winner thank you the
2:25:12
Wilson Foundation seems to be
2:25:15
yeah look this up I can do like
I keep finding is it's to help
2:25:20
low income kids
2:25:23
well it'd be some other Wilson
Foundation no the Wilson and
2:25:27
what's interesting is I was my
impression the Wilson Foundation
2:25:31
is funded by Congress
2:25:34
to be
2:25:36
so I don't know how does
Facebook get in there with
2:25:38
partially funding something
2:25:44
Yeah, you're right the Wilson
the Woodrow Wilson Foundation is
2:25:47
an educational nonprofit created
1921
2:25:54
My see
2:25:58
I guess a couple of you must
maybe something to me is more
2:26:02
than one Wilson because a lot of
Wilson stuff God wishes call
2:26:05
this the no agenda show brought
to you by Wilson.
2:26:10
Political Okay, well, all right.
There you go.
2:26:16
Maybe another clip here. You're
Off mic, man. You gotta get back
2:26:20
into the
2:26:21
mic. I'm just mumbling Hang on.
Okay, well, while you're
2:26:23
mumbling Oh, I got I got it off.
Good. Nice. Interesting. I have
2:26:27
a nice oh, what this talking
about this. There's a clip dead
2:26:30
Americans at Sandals. Oh, yeah.
This is a crazy story.
2:26:34
Authorities in the Bahamas are
investigating after three
2:26:36
Americans were found dead at a
Sandals Resort yesterday and a
2:26:40
fourth was hospitalized. The
health minister there Dr.
2:26:43
Michael Darvill says some guests
had sought treatment for nausea
2:26:48
and vomiting. I feel confident
at this particular time that
2:26:52
there's no potential risk to any
of the residents on Exuma.
2:26:58
Police a foul play is not
expected.
2:27:01
What do you think this is?
2:27:04
Food poisoning I'm guessing to
have to die from food poisoning.
2:27:08
That's pretty hard to die from.
Well, you could but I mean, they
2:27:11
the doctor saw them and one of
them was to me this was
2:27:14
fentanyl. Something like oh,
it's got to be some crazy drug.
2:27:18
I retract my food poisoning.
Yeah, I was thinking you know,
2:27:22
it's two couples. They're
hanging out there in Exuma.
2:27:26
They're ready. They want to do
some blow.
2:27:30
I'm laughing but it's not very
funny. But yes, they want to do
2:27:33
some blow. They get some local
blow. Yeah. And they and they
2:27:38
wind up dead because they should
have mmm looking now they should
2:27:42
have an answer by now. We
should.
2:27:45
Amber Heard taken a couple of
Toots. Oh, that was gone. Right.
2:27:49
It was what held me in court.
Yeah, it looked real to me.
2:27:57
It looked real to me to the the
Hollywood executive said
2:28:01
everyone's talking about it. So
it looks real to Hollywood. But
2:28:04
there's lots of pushback on
online. Oh, new new nude is no
2:28:08
true. But I mean, but that's not
the only thing. Did you hear her
2:28:12
testimony? I've heard some of
it. Yeah, it's about the bottle
2:28:15
or broken bottles and
penetrating with bottles and
2:28:18
what the heck off the rails. And
she's citing movie lines. Yes.
2:28:23
They told us that her testimony
is a lot of movie.
2:28:28
Which is she's off to read. Now.
Here's the thing I do fall down.
2:28:32
I know that we hate to talk
about this sort of thing.
2:28:35
Because it's real. Yeah, because
we don't care. But there she
2:28:39
give it gave her testimony. And
now there's a week off.
2:28:43
Oh, so there's a whole week
before they go into cross
2:28:46
examining examinations, which
some people say well, now it's
2:28:50
gonna give her a big edge
because we were going to talk
2:28:52
about her testimony. Oh, I know.
I know that. Okay. I think it's
2:28:56
just the opposite. Because what
gives the the prosecutor the
2:29:01
prosecutor, the bill litigator,
they the depth side of the
2:29:05
thing, they can now go over her
testimony with a fine tooth
2:29:07
comb, and they got a week to do
it to crosser with all kinds of,
2:29:11
you know, well, how about think
she's got timeline issues? How
2:29:15
about this? How about they know
what's coming this week? Power
2:29:20
outages food shortages. The
internet's gonna go down here in
2:29:25
their ATMs was scheduled for a
week to go to some event. Yes, a
2:29:30
year ago. Yes. Yes, of course.
Of course, some Freemason
2:29:35
meeting.
2:29:38
Okay, what is second half a
show? Hey, but no, it's not even
2:29:42
actually second half of show.
2:29:46
We're not a second half a show.
Second half a show happens after
2:29:50
this. I'm gonna show my mood by
donation to no agenda. Imagine
2:29:54
all the people who could do
that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
2:29:59
No,
2:30:00
And
2:30:04
here we go. Now I want to ask
Adam to read the hello to moms
2:30:11
that are listed in here because
we have a lot of Mother's Day
2:30:14
greetings included with this
with this particular donation
2:30:19
segment, which is unusual
because we normally don't do
2:30:21
this. You would if you would
keep an eye keep I will keep an
2:30:26
eye out. Yes, I will keep an eye
do we have carry Jackson's notes
2:30:29
because I don't think I am
possession of that that came in
2:30:32
as a check. So that means there
was probably no note. This is a
2:30:35
bank check. Okay, so Carrie
Jackson in Watertown, Tennessee
2:30:38
came in first at $100. And then
Chris.
2:30:42
Chris Abrams, comes in Sir Chris
Abrams comes in from Arlington,
2:30:46
Virginia with $85 and he says
this is Sir Chris Abrams lost my
2:30:50
mom to cancer 10 years ago, she
was 75 they had lost mine to
2:30:54
cancer too. But that was I got
almost 18 years ago.
2:30:59
She would have been 85 Happy
Mother's Day Barbara and Dawn
2:31:02
love from your son Chris. I says
I also think about I always
2:31:05
think about Adam losing his mom
and is an amazing, heartfelt
2:31:08
daily source code tribute.
2:31:11
Yes, Michael Gilbert's next on
the list from Greendale,
2:31:13
Wisconsin. 808. Yes, and
although he's a lover of boobs,
2:31:17
like the next donor, he says
Happy Mother's Day to my pet
2:31:21
rock. You know, I will mention
that on the the optional
2:31:25
donation site thing, we had
three donations that involve
2:31:30
Mother's Day donations. I think
maybe we had one at the top of
2:31:34
the list are 5050 816. I don't
know if that was one of them or
2:31:37
not, but it might have been. And
then I instead of having that I
2:31:41
just drew in 808 as a possible
Mother's Day donation.
2:31:47
Thinking it was kind of funny,
and we got exactly the same
2:31:50
amount as usual.
2:31:53
Kevin McLaughlin's one of them
is that Nuka Luna lover of
2:31:55
American boobs and he comes in
from Concord, New Hampshire with
2:31:58
eight oh, interestingly, nothing
about his mom. No. Serious just
2:32:03
moved Brian Masterson in
Aberdeen, New Jersey. 808 does
2:32:08
Yes. Well, he credits this to
Grandma Judy Johnson of
2:32:12
Tunkhannock Pennsylvania, so she
gets the credit she does.
2:32:16
Stephen man in Plymouth,
Michigan. 5923. He needs a D
2:32:20
douching.
2:32:23
Band D deuced. We miss on Cinco
Demayo Stewart Walton Stafford,
2:32:30
UK 5922 This is a Mother's Day
to for our mum Jill 88 this year
2:32:35
and still going strong from her
son Stuart and Simon and to my
2:32:39
wife Michelle, the best mum and
wife after 22 years still
2:32:42
putting up with me and looking
after the kids even though they
2:32:45
are both at university. Stewart
Stewart Rita Harrington says
2:32:50
hello to her mom 2922 from
sparks Nevada Noah Wotton mocker
2:32:55
Baron sir quota of the Sierra
sir Koya actually
2:33:02
says Oh sure. Koya Haha, I
missed it. I think my small
2:33:07
amygdala amygdala mom would love
the show but she's not a podcast
2:33:11
person. Here's to her anyway.
Best mother ever know what
2:33:14