0:00
is going down going down man,
Adam curry, John C. Dvorak. It's
0:05
Thursday, May 12 2022. This is
your award winning get my nation
0:08
media assassination episode
1450. This is no agenda, landing
0:14
with no flying experience and
broadcasting live from the heart
0:18
of the Texas hill country here
in FEMA Region number six in the
0:21
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry
0:22
and from Northern Silicon
Valley, where we're celebrating
0:27
National Mental Health Awareness
Day. I'm Jesse diboride.
0:33
Buzzkill.
0:35
screwby We are of course the
poster children for mental
0:39
health awareness.
0:40
The highest Texas is shown
prominently on the posters.
0:44
What do you mean? We're insane
in Texas? Is that Is that what
0:48
it says? Yeah, exactly. But
mental awareness in Texas is
0:51
battle health. The Mental Health
Awareness health we haven't we
0:54
have no awareness of health
mental health. Is that it?
0:57
Yeah. That's a known fact. What
do you even ask them before?
1:02
So hey, man, let's just start
this off with something really
1:04
weird and I saw you had clips
that's why I'm going to start it
1:07
off. This this this passenger
who landed the airplane with no
1:12
flying experience. We were
missing some of the story here.
1:17
I have. I have an ask Adam
question at the end of this.
1:21
Okay, can we can we jump right
into your first one?
1:24
Sure. Play away.
1:25
And then uh, did you see this
today an absolute nightmare in
1:28
the air above Florida. That is
the sound of a passenger who has
1:32
no flying experience taking over
control of a private airplane
1:37
after the pilot had a medical
emergency that plane nose diving
1:41
toward the ground at what point
until one of the two passengers
1:45
on board, gets behind those
controls, calls for help, and
1:49
then safely lands. The plane
correspondent Brooke Schaefer is
1:52
live in Florida for us tonight.
So Brooke, the more that we hear
1:55
her about this story, the the
crazier and wilder gets,
2:00
yeah, what a story Marnie, the
FAA, you're even calling this a
2:04
miracle miracle aid flight. That
plane was actually even over the
2:08
water. When all of this
happened. The pilot lost
2:11
consciousness. So forced to land
the plane was a passenger, a guy
2:16
who had never flown a plane
before. A serious, serious
2:21
situation in the skies near Palm
Beach, a desperate call to air
2:25
traffic control from the
passenger in this plane,
2:29
something was seriously wrong
with his pilot.
2:36
Airplane. Roger, what's your
position? What was the situation
2:47
with the pilot,
2:50
the pilot out the passenger with
no idea how to fly the plane.
2:55
That's when the air traffic
controller steps in.
2:58
Roger tried to hold the wings
level and see if you can start
3:02
descending for me push forward
on the controls and descend at a
3:08
very slow rate. I said I want
you to start a slow turn to the
3:11
north. So the shoreline is going
to be off your right side.
3:14
Robert Morgan was on the other
end of that call. He and his
3:18
team printed out pictures of the
plane's cockpit and from the air
3:22
traffic control tower helped
that passenger land the plane
3:26
safely.
3:28
Yeah. Yeah,
3:31
I know you have a second clip.
But I have some comments.
3:35
We're all ears.
3:38
So when I've never heard this,
someone say I have no flying
3:42
experience. Very, very
interesting. You would say a
3:46
number of things. Then also very
novel, in this case, air traffic
3:53
control instructed this never,
never flying, never flying
3:58
experienced person to descend to
5000 feet so they could talk on
4:02
the phone. On the cell phone.
This is highly irregular. So we
4:07
don't have any audio of the
controller really helping this
4:11
guy down. Most of that went
through a cell phone call, which
4:15
even at 5000 feet. This is not
it's not a great idea if you
4:20
want to have constant. I've used
cell phones and airplanes and
4:23
small airplanes before it
doesn't work really well.
4:26
At all. Well, the report that I
had, has him going to the radio
4:31
a little bit now a little not
the cell phone it never
4:34
mentioned as a cell phone.
4:36
Most of this was done on the
cell phone. That's odd.
4:40
Well, just report doesn't say
that. And I read
4:43
I read the transcript and I
listened to all the available
4:46
audio so that's how and they
went back and forth for at least
4:49
a minute getting the number
right.
4:52
who recorded it how do you get
the two sides of the record?
4:54
Oh, no. of the when he was still
on the radio. It was ATC law.
5:00
I've done it. They've recorded
all that stuff. So that was
5:02
talking about the cell phone
call. And we don't have the cell
5:05
phone call. I thought you said
you heard the cell phone
5:07
know that number. They were
actually going back and forth
5:09
for a minute of precious minutes
trying to get the guy cell phone
5:12
number. Clearly he knows how to
use the radio. Clearly, he knows
5:17
how to do this.
5:18
Again, that's not in this
report. So I don't know
5:20
anything. All right, so let's do
your I don't think I can see
5:23
somebody say I have no flying
except this guy had
5:25
this guy had at minimum at
minimum flight simulator
5:30
experience. There's no doubt
about it.
5:33
This No, I think everybody said,
Microsoft heat lights.
5:36
I heard him talk. He said, Hey,
I can't figure out which nav I
5:40
should be on anyone who says
which nav I should be on has
5:42
done something in the flight
simulator. So that's no flying
5:46
or spirit, but didn't hear that
either. No, but this is, this is
5:49
all on separate audio.
5:51
All right, well, let's play the
rest of this clip.
5:53
Or as he's on the way and I
started to talk to him about how
5:56
the brakes would work as your
hero.
5:58
He is a hero. What he did is
pretty incredible.
6:01
Justin Hein is a pilot. He knows
the air traffic controller on
6:05
that call Robert Morgan. Later
in
6:07
the day, when I found out that
somebody landed in the
6:10
controller helped. I knew it was
Robert Morgan right away.
6:12
Because he's the only controller
that I know at this in this
6:15
area. That's a pilot. And with
him being an instructor, he's
6:18
able to definitely teach him and
know what he's doing to get down
6:21
on the ground.
6:22
And Marnie, get this, that air
traffic controller even said
6:25
he's never flown this specific
plane before. So really, all of
6:30
this working out as it did is a
miracle. We know that pilot was
6:34
taken to the hospital at this
point, we are still waiting on
6:37
some official confirmation as
far as how he is doing tonight.
6:40
Morning.
6:41
Yeah, that instructor even
having a printout of the
6:44
dashboard to understand the
controls in the cockpit. Brooke,
6:48
really incredible art. Thank
you. Oh, really,
6:51
really incredible.
6:52
So there it is not this
particular kind of aircraft. But
6:55
we really don't have any of that
information. Because that was
6:58
all done on the cell phone,
which is highly unusual. highly
7:02
unusual. I don't think I've ever
heard of this being done via
7:06
cell phone. But when you take
into do you have to ask Adam for
7:09
me because I can do that. Now if
you want.
7:13
I'm the guy in the plane, right?
7:17
Guy, right. You're the guy in
the plane, the passenger.
7:21
I don't know how long this took.
But after I land a plane, do I
7:25
get to log it?
7:28
Absolutely. Although that would
have to be signed off by an
7:31
instructor. So
7:32
the instructor who landed me
could sign it off. Yes, you
7:35
could. Yes,
7:35
that would qualify as that were
qualifies. Now I don't know how
7:40
long he was flying around. That
would qualify.
7:42
Yes, sure. Sure. So it goes in
the book. Okay. Because what I
7:46
wanted to know was your
question.
7:47
Okay. So, the tail number of
this aircraft was November 333,
7:52
Lima Delta. I mean, whenever I
see these things, and it's
7:56
weird, I'm just like, Oh, come
on, man. There's too many
7:59
threes. We don't really know
about any of the passengers. We
8:02
don't really know if this and he
was billed initially as a
8:06
passenger pilot. So it sounds
like someone who might have had
8:10
some flying lessons. Maybe has
done flight simulator was
8:13
sitting up front so it's not
just a typical passenger unless
8:16
they had this caravan loaded. In
this this tie this particular
8:20
aircraft I know a lot about a
flown them the Cessna Caravan.
8:24
Its main function is cargo, it
can haul a lot of cargo, and you
8:30
put some crappy ass seats in
there, you can take a lot, I
8:33
think you can take up to eight
people with a crapload of cargo
8:37
this as a special cargo bin
underneath doesn't go very fast
8:40
at all. It's not the thing. If
you're island hopping, and
8:44
you've rented a plane, it's not
necessarily the one you want. So
8:47
there's really no information
about other passengers. We don't
8:50
even know what happens. Oh,
okay, so we don't know what
8:53
happened to the pilot. This guy,
you know, no interviews as far
8:57
as I know further with him. He's
just a hero when he can sail off
9:01
into the night. I think this was
a drug run. I seriously do I
9:06
think there was this was a drug
run and that's why they had to
9:09
get it off the radio. Do it on
the cell phone. The report is
9:14
that this this never flown
before pilot wanted to land at a
9:18
different airport. And they said
no, no, no, you should come over
9:21
to international because you got
the long runway so this whole
9:24
thing smells smells bad.
9:31
Well, the pilot, at least when
this report was made was in the
9:36
hospital so they don't not to
pot you the pilot that passed
9:39
out. Yeah, could be could have
been the pilot. Well, if you
9:43
want to take it to that extreme.
You want to fictionalize it, I
9:46
would say I was a drug Rhonda
thing was filled with, with
9:50
with, let's say cocaine and the
pilot took a couple of Toots and
9:56
he had laced with fentanyl.
10:00
But yeah, he passed out. Yeah,
of course. Man before I fly here
10:04
take a couple toots. That's
exactly what would pilots do.
10:07
So couple of Toots with
fentanyl, keep the fentanyl and
10:12
fentanyl in there because that's
part of this. That is part of
10:15
the the the news stream this
week, because all they're doing
10:20
is talking about how many people
died. Well,
10:23
on that note regarding the
Sandals Resort, sandals, Emerald
10:28
Bay Great Exuma How about this
forget mo nation. We have an
10:33
actual boots on the ground
report from one of our producers
10:36
who was at the Great Exuma
Sandals Resort, who met Vince
10:41
and Donna's who died and hung
out with him for several weeks
10:45
before they died. Let me several
days. And I got a full on boots
10:50
on the ground report from one of
our producers. And you know, so
10:54
I was thinking this could be
drugs they weren't Hey, we're on
10:57
vacation where two couples were
hanging out. We're let's do some
11:01
Toots boom fentanyl. Now, that
doesn't appear to be what
11:05
happened according to our boots
on the ground report who who
11:08
were they they were they're
celebrating an anniversary. But
11:11
these are the two who died who
were in married had been married
11:15
for 40 years. It was the 40th
wedding anniversary. And I put
11:19
most of his concealing his
identity known to me, of course
11:22
even sent me photos of his wife
and and himself with with the
11:27
deceased. And the main thing if
you go through his excellent
11:31
rundown, which starts on I think
Tuesday all the way through the
11:35
day after they had passed away
had been found. There was a lot
11:39
of drinking, a lot of drinking
and in fact, the guy Vince on
11:46
Wednesday, he they were at
dinner, the four of them. He
11:50
said I'm having shortness of
breath for the last two days.
11:53
Now our producers wife is a
nurse practitioner and said, you
11:56
know, you should go get checked,
and maybe something to do with
11:59
the sleep apnea, whatever. The
next day, the guy does a round
12:03
of golf and 18 holes and he felt
better. And that's the last
12:08
thing they saw of them. And you
know, he says there was
12:13
initially some thinking about
carbon monoxide poisoning that
12:17
could have come from the hot
water heater in these two little
12:21
villas. By the way, the two
couples didn't know each other.
12:24
They only met once the one whose
husband died and I think the
12:27
wife is on the ropes in the
hospital spill. So they weren't
12:31
doing blow together apparently,
if that's what they were doing.
12:36
And, you know, the speculation.
He says it could have been just
12:41
excessive drinking and there's
higher end alcohol in the
12:45
villas. It could have been
tainted alcohol. We saw that in
12:48
one of these resorts a couple of
years ago, I think yeah, that's
12:50
right. That's a whole scandal.
12:52
But then then sir Ted of leak
detection and ozone hole
12:58
mitigation checked in. And he
says Adam is your resident
13:01
refrigerant specialist. Here's
what I'm thinking. A leak is one
13:05
thing or looking into Freon is
odorless. Many of the newer
13:09
systems pipe the refrigerant
into the space where it changes
13:13
state in the coil from a liquid
to a gas sucking the heat from
13:16
the area. It's very efficient.
If a leak occurs, occurs in a
13:20
small confined space that
refrigerant will displace the
13:23
oxygen starting from the floor
to the ceiling. I imagine this
13:27
hotel villa was small windows
closed AC blasting they were
13:30
laying down. Could have been
that. I've never thought of the
13:36
refrigerant being a problem.
13:38
I've never heard of such a
thing. Well, he is the
13:41
night of leak detection and
ozone hole mitigation.
13:45
Yeah, well, I understand this
can already hurt. You
13:49
can't argue with those. So there
you go. Get mo nation on the
13:53
case as usual.
13:55
Yes, we've we've gone just spent
10 minutes we learned absolutely
13:59
nothing. Regulation is dynamite.
Yes, of course. Because we have
14:04
the right people to do this
speculation as opposed to us
14:07
doing it.
14:08
Correct. We have which would
14:09
be me.
14:13
Right, exactly. Exactly.
14:16
Whatever. Okay, onward.
14:18
All right. So what do you think
is the biggest news what what do
14:21
we need to start with? And when
you have such a cornucopia of
14:23
choice,
14:24
or there's row I mean, I have a
if you notice mine, isn't it?
14:27
very eclectic? Yes, I have and I
don't have any queries kind of
14:31
overcome this. I don't have the
series of clips. But let's do a
14:36
couple of things that get some
row materials to the row stuff.
14:39
Get it out of the way. Okay.
Here's let's go with I got some
14:43
CBS reports for row one and two,
let's go with row one.
14:47
Fail to stand in defense of a
woman's right to make decisions
14:51
about her own body.
14:52
Democrats argued the measure
would codify Roe versus Wade by
14:56
preserving access to abortion
services, while Republicans
14:59
declared it to extreme,
15:01
when I said this was a five
alarm fire, I meant
15:05
I'm being called a radical
extremist because I believe
15:10
she's diable.
15:12
West Virginia Senator Joe
Manchin was the only Democrat to
15:15
side with Republicans against
the legislation.
15:18
We should not be dividing this
country for the
15:22
House Democrats. Yes.
15:27
So that was just a bad cut. That
sounds like there was something
15:30
going on at the same time to
where they have.
15:32
No, that was that was that was a
cut to the world. Demonstrators
15:36
did some shit.
15:37
But this the demonstrators
weren't anywhere. It wasn't
15:39
where mansion was promised they
they put mansion on he says one
15:44
word. Yeah, two, and then they
cut to something else completely
15:48
different. And I'm thinking kind
of sloppy cutting. Is this on
15:53
his News Package
15:54
sloppy, or is it intentional?
15:57
I don't think it was intentional
because it's too jarring. Let's
15:59
listen again,
16:00
against the legislation.
16:02
We should not be dividing this
country for the
16:06
House Democrats over to the
Senate chamber for the vote.
16:11
Protests have intensified around
the country following the
16:14
Supreme Court's leaked draft
opinion.
16:17
Yeah, this is so cool. What's
going on here in America? I'm
16:21
telling you self immolation is
coming. Someone's going to go
16:24
completely apeshit and burn
themselves over this.
16:29
It's I like the fact that you're
putting that into the
16:31
ether. Yes. Well, I need to get
it out before it happens. Or it
16:34
can be
16:36
true on conscience and some
lunatic wearing probably a green
16:41
kind of a raincoat with with a
mag cap. Screaming on her knees
16:46
will be the one that does it.
Yeah.
16:50
Maybe we'll see.
16:51
That's good. Let's go to cut to
16:56
personal threats has also
increased amongst some lawmakers
16:59
like main Susan Collins, called
police after protesters left
17:03
messages outside of her home.
17:05
I have received threatening
phone calls, letters, threats of
17:11
sexual assault. threats against
my family members.
17:15
Organizers are gearing up for
another round of demonstrations
17:19
this weekend in major cities,
including along the National
17:22
Mall in Washington.
17:23
Our hope is that through these
mobilizations and through our
17:26
organizing efforts, or elected
officials, we know that no
17:30
politicians can hold this over
us.
17:32
Several states are also readying
so called trigger laws that
17:35
would restrict access to
abortion if roe is overturned.
17:39
The governor of Illinois telling
CBS News his jacket is bracing
17:42
for an influx of women seeking
abortions. Should they take
17:45
effect in neighboring states
17:47
we're trying to provide
logistics help place to stay
17:51
anything we can do to help them
exercise their reproductive
17:55
rights.
17:56
Tonight the Attorney General has
directed the US marshals to
17:59
ensure the justice is safety and
he's being briefed on security
18:03
around the Supreme Court. CBS
News has also learned that state
18:06
and local law enforcement
agencies remain on high alert.
18:09
The justices are scheduled to
meet tomorrow, Nora
18:13
it's gonna be busy. Yeah,
18:15
gotta be busy can be you for you
played. We started talking about
18:18
this. We should play this one
clip row Canada. And then I have
18:21
some comments about this
bullcrap.
18:24
If there comes a time soon when
it is harder for Americans to
18:27
access abortion care, they would
be welcomed by Canada.
18:32
I mean, I don't see why we would
not I mean if they people come
18:35
here and need access certainly,
you know that's a service that
18:39
would be provided we
18:40
want that's what Karina Gould,
Canada's Minister of families
18:43
children and Social Development
told the CBC this month
18:48
Okay, so now we have a bunch of
situations cropping up they kind
18:52
of just subtext in these news
stories. One is Illinois, all
18:56
you know we're going to be an
influx because we're the one
18:58
state in the area in the Midwest
that can do abortions and then
19:04
we have the Canada persons stick
sticking their nose sticking
19:07
their nose and if I'm thinking
this could be a bonanza you
19:13
know, these these these
doctoring operations are all
19:16
nobody does goes to a doctor
anymore. They go to these health
19:19
centers. You set up shop smart
money sets up shop in Illinois,
19:24
and just brings people in left
and right screw Canada. Why
19:28
should you have to go to Canada
when you go to Illinois, you can
19:30
go to California and go to
Washington, you can go to
19:33
Oregon, you can go in these
places got wide open abortion
19:38
allowances, you can come to
California getting an abortion,
19:41
but where's the entrepreneurs
where and where's the interviews
19:45
of the entrepreneurs take and
say yeah, we're gonna set up a
19:48
big facility here and we're
going to be cranking out
19:51
abortions like there's no
tomorrow. Instead they played
19:54
this candidate thing about oh,
Canada. Well, you can come to
19:57
Canada. Well, you can go alcohol
you You can go into
20:00
Massachusetts you can go to New
York and go to New Jersey, you
20:03
can go to Illinois there's tons
of places you can go this is de
20:06
emphasized just to cause trouble
20:09
I think that the reason why you
don't see the entrepreneurs is
20:13
because the business case has
already been stated Amazon is
20:17
getting into this for their
employees, which I think also
20:22
will include customers, I
believe Amazon will set it up so
20:25
they they will transport women
to a state where an abortion can
20:29
be performed, they will then
take the parts to sell them to
20:33
the rest of the world
20:34
is good. Now why not? Why not
pay it sounds good to me now
20:39
that this is and you do get a
free Prime membership. And no
20:43
they get
20:44
this service. This service these
alarms. This service is included
20:47
with your Prime membership. You
see you get Amazon Prime Video
20:50
and abortion transportation,
also known as app Tran.
20:55
App an uptrend? Exactly that
would be right now if I may,
20:59
this and you get too busy guys
doing the transportation? Are
21:03
all contractors driving around
those Amazon trucks?
21:06
Oh, yeah. Oh, yeah. We're just
people who drive Uber. Yeah, it
21:10
could be any of those. It's
banana Bonanza, a piece of the
21:14
action answer. This is of course
political, as we discussed. We
21:19
discussed on the previous
episode, and they've popped this
21:22
way too early. So it has to get
pretty extreme. That's why it's
21:25
easy to call self immolation.
But here is Senator Schumer,
21:29
head honcho in the Senate for
the Democrats pushing the
21:32
political mean, which is now
everywhere. Now Republicans have
21:36
talked about their dream to
overturn Roe v. Wade for a long
21:39
time. But now the Magga
Republicans.
21:44
If the Maga Republicans get
their way, millions of women in
21:47
America would no longer have
power over their own bodies and
21:51
their own lives. If the Maga
Republicans get their way, young
21:56
girls will grow up in a world
where if they become pregnant
21:59
because of rape, they will have
no choice but to carry their
22:05
rapists child can you imagine?
Imagine? Imagine if the Magga
22:10
Republicans get their way
pregnant women could lose their
22:13
lives, because there will be no
exception for the life of a
22:17
mother. If there's a dangerous
complication in the pregnancy.
22:22
If Magga Republicans get their
way, women and their health care
22:25
providers could go to prison for
life for their medical
22:30
decisions,
22:31
so I think he's trying to brand
the mag Amin and this this Magga
22:37
meme and ultra mega ultra Magga
it's popping up everywhere and
22:42
Alomar
22:42
our joke writer official no
agenda joke writer Margie hit
22:46
Marty Higgins he sent me a note
about this ultra thing he thinks
22:49
is neuro linguistic programming,
the ultra use of the word Ultra.
22:53
And with Simon he has some long
argument about it.
22:57
Well, I think is a great meme
and Trump immediately pulled
23:02
that moniker on you know, he's
like, Oh, this is great. I'll be
23:05
ultra mag. I'll be the mega
king.
23:07
Oh, dramatic, ultra mag to the
rescue. Now. It's not just
23:10
political though.
23:11
Oh, no, no, no. This has severe
economic consequences. This was
23:17
interesting. As you know, I'm
following the Great reset.
23:20
Clearly something's going on. It
may be just the prelude we may
23:23
be in the middle of it. Just
looking at the markets. Even my
23:25
friends DHS unplugged or
flummoxed. Our Secretary of the
23:33
Treasury Janet Yellen was asked
by friendly fire Senate Senator
23:38
Menendez Democrat from New
Jersey. Obviously, was this it?
23:46
Wait a minute. Now I wonder if I
have the wrong clip. Hola. Crap.
23:51
Let's see
23:51
the ability to have full control
over one's reproductive health
23:55
has real world economic
consequences are so Secretary
24:00
Yellen. If the draft of the
courts majority holding and Roe
24:05
versus Wade has the right is the
actual decision. What impact
24:09
will the loss of abortion access
mean economically for one?
24:13
Well, I believe that eliminating
the right of women to make
24:17
decisions about when and whether
to have children would have very
24:22
damaging effects on the economy
and would set women back
24:27
decades. Roe v Wade and access
to reproductive health care,
24:33
including abortion helped lead
to increased labor force
24:37
participation. It enabled many
women to finish school that
24:43
increase their earning
potential. It allowed women to
24:47
plan and balance their families
and careers. And research also
24:52
shows that it had had a
favorable impact on the well
24:56
being and earnings of of choice.
Voltron, there are many,
25:02
how old are they are the
Democrats making children work
25:04
these days
25:05
and earnings. In China, maybe
well being in earnings of, of
25:13
children. Pure many research
suggests
25:16
that it's not weird. It's the
weirdest thing she says earnings
25:19
of Jill get to work, I'm only
eight
25:22
impact on the well being and
earnings
25:26
of, of children, assembling
iPhones,
25:30
there are many research studies
that have been done over the
25:33
years, looking at the economic
impacts of access or lack
25:39
thereof to abortion. And it
makes clear that denying women
25:44
access to abortion, increase
their odds of living in poverty
25:49
or need for public assistance,
or half of
25:52
the population of America.
Eliminating a right that has
25:56
existed for half a century for
low income and minority women
26:00
who have on the show already
showed that much of the burden
26:03
from a COVID pandemic would be a
disaster.
26:06
I have two things to say about
this. First, here's the economic
26:09
argument which I disagree with.
Modern monetary theory works
26:14
exceptionally well, unless
you're missing one element and
26:18
modern monetary theory, we're in
the middle of it, this is just
26:20
printing up as much money as
possible, another 5.7 trillion
26:24
coming, which we'll discuss that
we're slipping into the Japanese
26:31
debt trap, as I was taught by
the former New York banker, and
26:35
if you look at Japan, right now,
they're they're pretty much dead
26:39
in the water and they're slowly
ceasing to exist. People are
26:43
saying, hey, Japan may not be
around in 20 years, because
26:46
they're not making new human
resources which you need in the
26:51
modern monetary monetary theory
system. And so this goes
26:54
completely against what I would
presume Janet Yellen stands for
26:58
is MMT to have less people
unless you want us to cease as a
27:03
nation.
27:06
Okay, I have some thoughts on
this. Because all by priests,
27:09
priests, priests, the the row
waiting began in 7271 72,
27:15
codified 73. Pre that period in
the 60s, he had a booming
27:21
economy was going out of
control. 70s depression, right.
27:25
So so there we go. Okay. Well,
what about that? Well, let's
27:28
just ignore that. The other
thing, and you're right, because
27:31
I think the since 73, there's
been something like 74 million
27:35
abortions, which would be 74
million people working in the
27:39
system. 90 million of them black
babies, by the way. Yep. And
27:45
Drew could be working in the
system.
27:48
Making a good wage, as we just
heard. Good way, as a kid, good
27:53
wages.
27:53
So the so there's that element,
which is has to be taken into
27:58
account, I think your concept by
bringing in mm T into this and
28:02
adding that those numbers is
dynamite. The second thing is,
28:05
is that, well, if we can't have
all these people will just
28:08
aboard our own, and then bring
in Yes, open the southern border
28:12
and bring in all these Democrat
voters.
28:14
Exactly. That's right. Why would
we want to risk having black
28:19
belt black babies live and turn
out to be Republicans? Could
28:25
happen, it could happen now.
Personally, I'm pro choice. I'm
28:29
anti murder. Unless we can
broadcast that on television. As
28:32
Roy said about capital
punishment. I'm solutions
28:34
driven. Let me just say that,
what I what I hate about this
28:38
conversation conversation in
America, is the lack of context,
28:42
what is really going on here.
And this is, in my mind,
28:45
specifically about a DOS
abortions. So American
28:49
descendants of slavery, that's
where that's what Margaret
28:52
Sanger, the founder of Planned
Parenthood, that's what she was
28:55
all about was diminishing the
specifically descent American
28:59
descendants of slavery
population that was much better
29:01
for America, that is now kind of
universally recognized on the
29:05
right and on the left, that that
is the genesis of Planned
29:08
Parenthood. But what made this
worse was regulations, which
29:12
truly were white supremacist of
no man about the house when the
29:15
blacks came up from the south,
and I said the blacks, that's
29:18
right, everybody, sue me. Friend
of mine just got D platformed.
29:25
Over doing that. So when the
blacks came up, that was the
29:31
stipulation, if you wanted to
have welfare payments for you
29:36
and your kids, it could be no
man about the house, there were
29:38
patrols to make sure that didn't
happen. And what this now
29:41
resulted in initially, was a
culture of obviously men not
29:47
being in the house, amongst poor
people. So the oh geez, at the
29:51
time were the blacks. Now it's
the blacks and the whites, but
29:55
let's just focus on the blacks.
The fetus has been weaponized
29:59
now with the baby Baby Daddy
culture, you know, 70 or 80% of
30:02
children grow up without a
father figure in the house. And
30:06
thanks to like the Kardashians,
in our modern culture, the
30:09
concept of the baby daddy is Oh,
yeah, you know, I'll have this,
30:14
I'll have this, this baby and
this guy is going to take care
30:16
of me. These guys often run off
they become dead beats. The
30:19
fetus is weaponized in this,
Hey, I've got your baby, you
30:23
know, if you don't want my baby,
and then that's why you have
30:26
these late later term abortions
is because of this baby daddy
30:30
culture. That is that that
should be illegal. The
30:35
glorification of this night.
That's my personal opinion.
30:39
You're right.
30:42
That's the real problem. Yeah,
30:44
it is a real problem. You nailed
it.
30:47
I have. Going back to the
political side. Have you noticed
30:52
that many news networks, I've
seen it on Fox, I've seen it on
30:56
CNN and MSNBC. They're bringing
on comedians to do opinion and
31:01
commentary. And it's often
really lame, especially if
31:05
they're not introduced as a
comedian. Have you seen any of
31:09
this?
31:10
Talk our heads face began with
the podcasters
31:14
Yeah, but it's it's like all of
a sudden talk.
31:16
I think Tony also got field guy
has good ratings, like you
31:20
pointed out,
31:21
I can't watch that. But okay,
he's watch hard to
31:24
watch. It's poor is so poorly
done. Now.
31:28
MSNBC brought on Laurie kill
Martin, who apparently is a
31:33
comedian. I have no idea.
There's a million of them. Yeah,
31:36
well, here's what it but this is
the level stuff that you get,
31:39
then, in opinion show on a so
called news network.
31:43
So I mean, here's the thing,
here's my feeling about the
31:45
leaker. I would like to find out
who the leaker is, so I could
31:50
make sweet love to that person.
Because that person is a hero to
31:55
me. Okay, and if the leaker a
lot of people are saying you
31:59
could be a conservative if the
leaker is a Republican, and if I
32:03
get pregnant during our
lovemaking, I will joyfully
32:06
aboard our fetus
32:08
and let them know.
32:11
I don't know if that answered
your question. I probably did.
32:16
It was a little it was a little
off topic.
32:20
That's just weird. Why would you
do that? This tacky? Yes. tacky.
32:26
This is open mic level comedy.
32:29
Oh, it's very poor comedy. I
mean, especially with, you know,
32:32
a board the Republicans.
32:34
Funny. No, me abortion is not
funny as a topic. Oh, and then
32:39
to do this sort of in your face
type humor, which is
32:43
edgy. So we've seen I'm sorry,
no, no. So we've seen the it's
32:47
just lame. It's very lame that
so we've seen the Maga meme
32:51
trying to get mag out there
manga, this manga that manga
32:53
Republicans, then the next thing
is, what will they do next? What
32:59
will the manga Republicans do
next? And an unbelievable tweet.
33:04
I'm sure you saw it from the
mayor of Chicago. Lori
33:07
Lightfoot. Yeah, I just want to
I just want to quote this tweet.
33:12
To my friends in the LGBTQ plus
community. The Supreme Court is
33:17
coming for us next. This moment
has to be a call to arms. Are
33:24
you kidding me? I mean, is that
not direct? I mean, that is even
33:31
that's not even protected under
the Constitution almost. If you
33:36
take call to arms, literally,
33:39
who I mean if it was you know,
as insurrectionist on January 6,
33:45
right? Yeah. Oh, man. You were
home on the you were so right.
33:51
The you told us about Trump's
cover your ass memo to regarding
33:58
January 6, right was the
segment. Right. So there's a
34:04
there's a new memo that he sent
to I think he sent it to 60
34:10
minutes. This you see this? So
he sends it Donald J. Trump. I
34:14
love his little presidential
seal on his paper that and it's
34:17
talking about Mark Espers book.
And you know, he said and then
34:22
he he refutes a couple of things
about about Esper. And then here
34:27
is one of the statements from
the 60 minutes piece question.
34:33
President Trump wanted to send
10,000 Active Duty troops into
34:37
Washington DC after the St.
John's Church was set on fire,
34:42
and Trump says wrong. I wanted
to send at least 10,000 troops
34:47
for January 6, because I knew
many people were coming to
34:50
Washington that day to protest
the corrupt presidential
34:53
elections of 2020. Nancy Pelosi
and the DC mayor turned me down
34:58
60 minutes should ask them Then
why they chose not to have
35:01
proper security, which would
have totally changed that day
35:04
and allowed us to have a proper
debate on the evidence of
35:07
massive election fraud, which
the fake news media still
35:10
refuses to cover whatsoever. And
another question,
35:16
honestly, beauty that's,
35:17
I mean that that saves, that
saves his ass. That's when he
35:22
certainly was playing some kind
of chess up front there. He was
35:26
smart. Another question on a
couple of occasions, President
35:30
Trump suggested to Esper they
attack the drug cartels with
35:35
missiles into that Trump says No
comment. He's gotta love it. He
35:42
got love. It verifies hilarious,
really, really good. Now, along
35:48
this along these lines, just to
get it out of the way, the 2000
35:52
new rules documentary debuted
online, which is from Dinesh
35:57
D'Souza and I have some thoughts
about this. Did you? Did you see
36:03
this at all?
36:04
No, I did not. I had everybody
in the families asking me what
36:09
do I think? And I said, I
haven't seen it. I know what
36:11
it's I know what it is. I do I
have to see it was now I'm glad
36:15
you saw it. Because now you can
tell me? Is it something that
36:18
we've not discussed? If there's
new information has come to
36:22
light? Is it anything that I
have to see?
36:26
Well? Before I answer that
question, could you give me a
36:32
synopsis of what you think is in
it?
36:35
Excited? I think overall, a an
argument about voter fraud, that
36:42
probably took place in 2020 with
some evidence.
36:47
Okay. Well, I purchased the
documentary, you know, I'd like
36:53
to do that. I definitely never,
I try not to steal content from
36:58
anybody, I feel it's wrong. So I
found the $30 price tag rather
37:02
high. That That surprised me.
And it but it was it was done
37:08
pretty well. He was doing this
through through his locals
37:12
account. And then whatever it
was, the the purchase was pretty
37:15
seamless. And it was, at the
time, I wanted to watch it not
37:18
easy to get a free copy.
Although it is kind of ambiguous
37:23
whether you could watch it for
free or not. And I saw that
37:26
things posted as if that was
okay. And I saw it taken down
37:29
other places. So it didn't
matter to me I want to pay i
37:31
This is fine. This was way too
much money for the production
37:36
value. This thing was a piece of
shit. It was it was reality show
37:41
level production, almost like it
was inside the Big Brother
37:44
house. And for some reason his
wife is in every shot. And so
37:50
that they're interviewing two
main
37:54
team might be some other guy
that I think we both know whose
37:57
wife seems to be in a lot of
shots. Here go on,
38:00
who was that then? Bloom. It was
a level of that, except she
38:08
didn't look like blooms wife.
And she hadn't she had no
38:12
contribution. She was just
nodding. And she's in every shot
38:15
comes and she's a co producer,
I'm Shinya, all that but it's
38:19
it's it really surfaces around
to people a truth Truth, the
38:26
vote, I think I have it in this
clip. And they purchased cell
38:33
phone tracking data not not
connected to not really personal
38:39
identifiable, but you know, they
they were able to purchase this
38:42
data was just had cell phone
IDs. They were able to map where
38:47
it where the cell phones went.
And of course, when the cell
38:50
phones went home, they were
eventually able to correlate
38:53
those to human beings at that
address. And what they say is
38:58
they were 2000 meals on election
night. Mules meaning people
39:02
carrying harvested ballots,
which in most states, you really
39:05
can't put more than your own
ballot into the box. And then
39:09
they had all this video footage
which they also acquired under
39:12
FOIA and all all done aboveboard
and legally. It's like you could
39:16
literally see these people and
their their actions how they
39:20
were how they were just stuffing
the ballots, the brazen
39:23
corruption of the of the of the
election. The problem is, that
39:31
will I'll get to my conclusion,
the problem is that this is not
39:34
the 2000 meals documentary is
not being picked up or really
39:39
discussed by much right wing
media, specifically, Fox News.
39:46
Which is odd although I have my
thinking as to why that is but I
39:50
want to play a clip here from
D'souza now doing a podcast with
39:56
his wife, and she speaks now in
this one and we'll get to the
39:59
bottom of What actually is going
on? Because it seems like
40:02
there's some issues, including
Tucker Carson Carson Show,
40:05
one of the really remarkable
things about this movie is that
40:09
we have made it a success. It's
been trending pretty much
40:13
constantly. I mean, it's very
unusual to see the same topic
40:17
trending for day upon day upon
day on Twitter,
40:20
I should add one thing. They
explained very, very, very
40:26
clearly how money went into
nonprofits, and nonprofits were
40:31
the ones that were harvesting
the ballots. And then these
40:34
mules would go to all of these
nonprofits, and they had the
40:37
registered addresses. And they
would pick up the ballots, and
40:40
they sometimes they go back, you
know, 10 times a night, they go
40:43
to different nonprofits, not
once in the entire documentary,
40:47
did they even mention one of
these nonprofits, there was some
40:51
suggestion that these were
funded by the Zuckerberg and
40:55
Chan Foundation, which we know
to be pretty much true. We've
40:58
heard of the ballot stuffing.
But that was very odd. They
41:01
didn't mention any of these
nonprofits, which I found
41:04
suspicious.
41:04
And it's funny because I look
for it. I'm like, 2000 trending,
41:07
and I look a few hours later,
it's not trending. I'm like,
41:09
wait, trending, Dinesh, today
was trending to Souza, then back
41:14
to 2000 meals. So it's back and
forth. But the point to make is
41:18
that this is a phenomenon and
and what we have done that with
41:23
no health, I shouldn't say no
help from either Fox News, or
41:27
from Newsmax. You know, it's a
little unfortunate, because I've
41:30
been going on Fox News almost
weekly talk about various
41:33
issues. And you know, part of my
reason for doing that is not
41:36
just because I like visibility,
partly because I say you don't
41:39
want I'll do them a favor, and
then I'll have a book out, I'll
41:42
have a movie out and they'll
they'll get behind it. I'm not
41:46
saying they have to agree with
it.
41:47
Oh, wow. He's listening a veil
of how it really works, why you
41:51
go on to talk shows to give your
opinion, it's really because you
41:55
expect something in return, not
just for your visibility, but
41:59
they
41:59
allow me to talk about Yeah, and
so and that, to me, is the most
42:02
surprising thing of all, because
they if they don't agree with
42:07
the content, they can at least
debate it. They can they can
42:11
just put it out there and go,
You know what, we don't think
42:14
that what you're saying is a
fact. And so we want to we want
42:16
to fact check it or whatever.
But to not mention it. I mean,
42:20
just pretend it doesn't exist,
honestly. But but they're
42:23
purposely not mentioning the
movie, because as we know,
42:26
recently, you may have noticed
that Catherine angle bracket to
42:29
the vote went on Tucker Carlson
show,
42:31
okay, so this, this woman and
her husband have truth to vote,
42:35
they are the center of this
documentary. It's their data,
42:39
it's their maps, it's their
video footage, hope they're
42:43
getting paid from some of that
$30 For the work they've put
42:47
into it. But she and she is
really the one who is breaking
42:52
this wide open this 2000 meals.
And she went on Tucker Carlson
42:57
and here's Dinesh, his
42:59
story. And they talked about geo
tracking. And he talked about to
43:03
the vote, no mention of 2000
meals and a lot of people were
43:06
like, what's going on what's
going on? And for a while there,
43:09
I was just silent about it.
Because it's this is the problem
43:12
with Fox News is they
essentially kind of they feel
43:14
like we have you you know what I
mean? You can't you can get off
43:17
the reservation because we can
crucify you the seat. This is
43:20
the underlying. And to be fair,
we we did want for Katherine and
43:27
Greg's work to afford to be
known because that's the whole
43:30
purpose for doing a movie about
their work. And we told them
43:33
this from the very beginning. So
Tucker Carlson and his producer
43:36
told Catherine engelberg will
have you on but do not mention
43:40
2000 meals, don't mention it, we
forbidding you to mention it at
43:42
all.
43:43
So don't talk about the movie.
And now Twitter is just blowing
43:48
up with you. There's a great
movie. So you're right. There's
43:54
nothing in here. We didn't know.
And I think what's being missed.
43:59
The reason why Fox News will not
talk about this is because 2000
44:06
mules were stuffing ballots for
both Democrats and Republicans.
44:12
That's why it's so obvious. They
don't want they don't want to
44:18
tell you which nonprofits
because some of them may be
44:21
related to financing from the
Republicans. So they don't give
44:26
you that information. Fox News
doesn't want to talk about it.
44:30
It's obvious, because the
corruption was on both sides. It
44:33
may have been a lot more for Joe
Biden. Sure possible. And the
44:37
other thing that just made me
icky is throughout this whole
44:42
documentary, I get a vibe of we
really need the digital ID to
44:46
solve this problem. Seriously,
so I'm not a fan of this
44:53
documentary. I don't like what's
going on this. I think it's a
44:58
small, small All issue compared
to the voting machines, but
45:02
that's just me. So I'm not so
sure about Dinesh. And man, you
45:09
and I, you and I would have, we
would have rejected that
45:13
documentary. It was so bad. We
really would have like, No,
45:18
this has meaning so far as his
production
45:21
production was even the content,
it was just not great. Very
45:26
disappointing. Actually.
45:29
Oh, you know, it's not easy to
make a good film.
45:31
No, it's not. It's not. All
right. We should probably do a
45:38
little bit of Ukraine here,
because as you know, the most
45:40
important thing that's on
everybody's mind is the war on
45:43
Ukraine. There's nothing else
that really matters. I mean,
45:45
hohoho, and we passed a, we
passed the $33 billion package,
45:52
we added seven to it,
45:53
House lawmakers have approved
$40 billion new aid for Ukraine,
45:57
that's 7 billion more than
President Biden requested. A US
46:01
official now says up to 10
Russian generals have been
46:04
killed in the conflict. The US
Director of National
46:07
Intelligence warns Vladimir
Putin is preparing for a
46:09
prolonged war and may turn to a
nuclear threat as he struggles
46:14
to refresh his ground forces.
46:17
And that may end up meaning that
they have greater reliance in
46:20
effect on asymmetric tools
during this period. So they may
46:22
rely more on things like cyber
nuclear precision. Yeah. That's
46:28
obviously a shift in the way in
which they are exercising their
46:32
efforts for influence.
46:33
Is that as the request
Meanwhile, President Solinsky
46:35
says Russia's blockade course on
the Black Sea could lead to a
46:39
global food crisis.
46:41
No, no kidding, really. Thank
you. Thanks for that info. So, I
46:47
mean, a lot is going on. Again,
this is something that never
46:51
gonna be able to drag out
properly media wise until the
46:54
midterm election, which is part
of what it's for. It's
46:57
definitely helping with more
money printing see the 40
47:00
billion and the outrage over
47:02
it turns out to be a total of
53.
47:05
Have you seen that what it's all
for though? It's like USA ID you
47:10
know, that goes to all the NGOs.
It's for military industrial
47:13
complex is for CIA black
budgets. It's and there's a
47:17
secondary little thing. There's
that the CIA part you're talking
47:20
about? Like there's another
47:23
I have kind of an overview. Oh,
good. A we should place it Yeah,
47:26
sure. Ukraine update CBS.
47:29
You're really picking them from
from the Central Intelligence
47:33
broadcast system these days
47:34
now, more in Ukraine where
neither side is moving toward a
47:37
decisive military victory and
instead, it's looking more like
47:40
a stalemate that could last
months or even years. Soldier in
47:46
Ukrainian custody will be the
first to face of war crimes
47:49
trial for allegedly shooting an
unarmed 62 year old civilian.
47:54
CBS Deborah Potter reports
tonight from Ukraine.
47:57
It's a game of cat and mouse
danger of living far away from
48:04
village by village Ukrainian
soldiers of pushing Russian
48:08
troops away from her Keith and
back towards the Russian border
48:13
in their wake a trail of death
and destruction and a
48:19
bittersweet victory for those
coming home. The fighting has
48:25
not laid off in the south and
the east. Even in Mario called
48:30
the Russians do not have full
control, thwarted by Ukrainian
48:34
regiment, who remain barricaded
in that steel plant injured
48:40
close to starving. The soldiers
released these haunting images,
48:44
many have amputated limbs,
doctors forced to operate
48:48
without proper supplies for
loved ones on the outside how
48:53
can
48:53
they not have proper supplies?
What are we using that money
48:57
for? But is that not getting to
the to these frontlines proper
49:01
supplies
49:02
on another? Yeah, they're
talking about specifically the
49:05
guys holed up in a
49:08
steel mill. They're still there.
I thought they were out. Now
49:11
they
49:12
released the civilians there.
Okay. Oh, you know, the timeline
49:16
is confusing you so they get
these these these guys who still
49:20
I think are the Nazis are still
down and they show these
49:22
pictures, by the way. Yeah. And
they're they're, they're just,
49:27
they're gorgeous pictures. But
yeah, I mean, there's, they're,
49:30
they're done in a new war styled
professionally photographed.
49:34
They have a lot of that going on
in Ukraine. They're very
49:37
artistic, any
49:37
single shoes, any single shoes,
49:39
not that I could see. But it
seems to me that if you're down
49:44
there and you're taking pictures
and you're assuming that these
49:46
pictures are being taken by a
phone dial would be my
49:51
assumption. Big Nikon Of course.
And so but even if they're down
49:56
here with the big Nikon, you
flip the button and you take
49:59
them Movie where's the movie?
No, it's good point. You put
50:04
the, you know, where's the
crummy movie that people take?
50:07
They got all these fantasies.
Don't worry. Here's the movie
50:09
Dinesh D'Souza will have the
documentary, I'm sure.
50:14
Many have amputated limbs,
doctors forced to operate
50:18
without proper supplies for
loved ones on the outside. The
50:23
weight is unbearable a contrary
lilius to Peter's husband Andre
50:28
messages her every week to say
he's alive. She's more and more
50:32
desperate. I won't take you
you'll take a gun and I will do
50:41
everything to save him with
stoic and resolved. She believes
50:45
the world is not doing enough.
50:48
They are heroes not only for
Ukrainians. And we want our
50:54
heroes to come back home. But
one them alive. We're ready.
50:58
Firstly,
50:58
echoed by Katrina Prokopenko,
the wife of the brigade
51:02
commander, rigging the pope
intervene.
51:06
Yeah. Okay, that's trauma based
entertainment. That is how they
51:11
try and keep you cloistered in
front of your news box to learn
51:17
more, but I have three short
clips.
51:20
That really ladies cloistered
anymore? No, of
51:22
course not. But that's why you
need to do something extreme
51:25
like Lindsey Graham, who says we
got to take Putin out Putin.
51:28
Putin is got to be taken out.
There's no other way. So you're
51:31
saying that that's how this ends
that Putin is removed? Is there
51:36
any way there's
51:36
no off ramp? There is no off no
offering offering. So let me
51:40
tell you why. There's no offer,
please. Ukrainians are not going
51:43
to give the east to Putin to
stop the war, they're going to
51:47
fight for every inch of their
territory. If we push the
51:50
Ukrainians to give up half the
country, the Putin wins if we
51:54
back off prosecuting Putin as a
war criminal, all the laws on
51:57
the books become a joke. If we
don't get this right, China will
52:01
certainly invade Taiwan. There
is no off ramp in this war,
52:04
somebody's gonna win and
somebody's going to lose. And I
52:07
hope and pray and do everything
in my power to make sure Ukraine
52:11
wins. And Putin is in charge of
a state sponsored, state
52:14
sponsored terrorism that
designation needs to be given to
52:18
Russia. He's earned that
designation, we need to pour it
52:21
on when it comes to helping
Ukraine.
52:23
So he wants to invoke terrorism
laws, no off ramp, this guy who
52:27
was in Ukraine in
2014 2015 2016, promising
52:32
promising that we take care of
everything with his with John
52:37
McCain. Here these are horrible,
horrible war mongering people
52:41
who must have some kind of
corrupt connection to Ukraine. I
52:44
can't imagine any other reason
why you speak like this. And
52:48
then this pushing of poor
Finland poor Finland, sins are
52:54
not even the same as Europeans.
Not even the same as
52:56
Scandinavians, the Finns are a
whole different race. And now
53:00
they're being pushed towards
NATO, along with Sweden
53:03
and breaking news, the leaders
of Finland say they're now in
53:06
favor of joining NATO. Finland
shares a long border with
53:10
Russia. Neighboring Sweden is
expected to decide on joining
53:13
NATO in the coming days major
step and confronting Vladimir
53:17
Putin who has long fought
against NATO expansion.
53:20
And we have listeners in in
Finland, they're not really
53:23
happy with this
53:26
clip. I have a clip from it was
last week that I didn't move it
53:29
forward, but you can look it up.
You have the database, play it
53:34
because it discusses this a
little bit from a different
53:37
perspective. This is the Russia
tickets from I don't remember
53:41
the exact thing but this is
worth listening to. The clip is
53:44
called Russia, Finland, Sweden,
53:48
from Helsinki Oh, and McNamara
is visiting research fellow at
53:51
the Finnish Institute of
International Affairs and from
53:54
Brussels. We're joined by
international affairs
53:56
strategist, Nicholas white
Gentlemen, welcome to Inside
53:59
Story. Dimitri, let's start with
you. How will Russia react if
54:03
the two countries join NATO? Its
threatened to deploy nuclear
54:06
weapons to the Baltic border
region, and Kaliningrad should
54:10
those threats be taken
seriously.
54:13
Now? Well, so far, the
statements were mostly made by
54:16
the former Prime Minister Dmitry
Medvedev, not by President Putin
54:20
himself. So I wouldn't read too
much into the statements from
54:25
the data. Obviously, Russia is
very upset and distraught about
54:29
the possible membership or
Finland, Sweden, the NATO, let
54:34
me remind you that during the
Cold War, our relations with
54:36
these two countries were not bad
with Finland. They were actually
54:39
good. Yeah.
54:43
Well, just in case things don't
go good. The UK has stepped up.
54:51
And this is and Boris Johnson
went to Sweden to talk with the
54:55
Prime Minister and nice little
announcement that hey, you know,
54:58
we're you guys. We're gonna put
our Our NATO membership and we'd
55:02
like to be a part of this and
hey, no worries because UK good
55:06
old Boris here, it's got our
back and
55:08
Prime Minister and I have agreed
to face challenges in peace
55:11
crisis and conflict together.
And if either country should
55:16
suffer a disaster or an attack,
do United Kingdom and Sweden
55:21
will assist each other in
55:23
a variety of ways. The many
55:25
carcasses of Russian tanks that
now litter the fields and
55:31
streets of Ukraine, thanks to
Swedish developed and British
55:36
built in laws certainly speak to
how effective that cooperation
55:41
can be. But most importantly,
this is an agreement that
55:46
enshrines the values that both
Sweden and the UK hold dear, and
55:53
which we will not hesitate to
defend.
55:56
Man, if the Swedes and the Finns
fall for this. You make a dumb?
56:01
I mean, first of all, the guy's
name is Boris. Alright, that
56:04
gives you a clue that maybe you
should like step away from this.
56:07
Where's the Tasha? Right. In the
UK who
56:11
now They're the heroes. We're we
you me? Tina, Mimi, everybody
56:16
sending 40 billion over to
Ukraine 23 total and Boris,
56:21
Boris, Boris Johnson gets to go
over the end. Don't worry, we
56:24
got your back. Uh huh. What are
the chances of that? Once they
56:28
find the bullet for the army and
they got enough coal for the Air
56:31
Force to fly, please. So this is
graduating things up? To which
56:41
to which Foreign Minister Lavrov
who doesn't love him made a
56:46
little joke. But
56:47
if you cannot sleep because of
Russian Ukrainian conflict,
56:51
there are some advices to calm
you down. Just imagine that this
56:58
is happening in Africa. Imagine
this is happening in the Middle
57:03
East. Imagine Ukraine is
Palestine. Imagine Russia is the
57:08
United States.
57:12
Okay, thanks. That's really
helpful. Over to the media
57:17
portion of it. Everyone getting
on board, we have to go way
57:21
beyond the yellow and blue
flags. And, of course, we see
57:26
artists jumping on the
bandwagon. You know, the edge of
57:29
Bondo performed in the subway
and Kyiv Kyiv which is clearly a
57:34
set. They don't really have a
vast subway network, I'm
57:38
reliably informed, at least not
since 2018. So they must have
57:42
built a lot really quickly. But
there's news now about Bano?
57:45
What are the chances he has
57:47
been telling his life story and
song for decades. Now Bano is
57:51
writing a book release a new
memoir, this fall surrender will
57:55
follow Banos life and the band's
career through 40 of its
57:58
greatest tense. The book has
been in the work since 2015 and
58:01
will officially be on sale
November 1. So
58:04
it was just a cheap ass ad. And
back in the picture, everybody
58:09
is mono. Remember to buy my
book, it's coming out soon. Then
58:13
we have the scorpions Madison
Square Garden the scorpions who
58:16
I went to Russia in 1989, with
the scorpions with many others
58:22
to put on a CIA or manage
concert to bring down the Berlin
58:28
Wall The hit that did it at the
time. Contrary to what many
58:32
believe it was not David
Hasselhoff, but it was the
58:35
scorpions wind of change. The
only song that Klaus minor did
58:40
not write again is maybe it's
just coincidence there's entire
58:43
podcasts about this that suggest
the CIA may have had a hand in
58:47
writing and promoting that song.
But that was about Russia about
58:51
Russia breaking fee free and
joining the global community. So
58:57
now what happens now with
Madison Square Garden
59:04
I think tonight we should say
this song louder than ever
59:07
before.
59:10
So now they're playing when this
is so now we're using wind of
59:17
change for Ukraine against
Russia. I ended this is this is
59:24
this has gone off the rails
59:26
anecdotal insight that we no
other podcasts you could
59:30
possibly have. And I
59:31
will give you one more. Oops.
Unfortunately, we will not be
59:37
able to do the Saturday
Eurovision final Eurovision Song
59:42
Contest contest final narration
because I have a prior
59:46
engagement. As you know, I'm an
aficionado of Eurovision 20
59:51
Eurovision. I've watched it
59:53
sledding on this is
59:55
your you were a liar but We do
like calling out the winner
1:00:03
ahead of time so they had the
semi finals this past week. And
1:00:07
we're now on to the finals. And
I would like to make a
1:00:11
prediction who will win
1:00:13
the first doses in the semi
finals before you make your
1:00:16
prediction. Okay.
1:00:18
Hold on a second.
1:00:19
I had already colored people can
play along. Yes.
1:00:21
Okay. Your vision your vision
2022 finalists, here we go. The
1:00:28
finalists countries are they
call it the grand final not
1:00:32
grand finale the grand final.
Armenia, France, Germany,
1:00:37
Netherlands, Norway, Portugal,
Spain, Switzerland, Italy,
1:00:43
Greece, Iceland, Lithuania,
Moldova, United Kingdom and
1:00:49
Ukraine.
1:00:51
Who is not in the finals?
1:00:54
There's a lot of countries not
in the finals. Finland Israel,
1:00:57
Serbia, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
Malta, San Marino, Australia
1:01:02
Cyprus, Ireland. A lot of people
didn't a lot of countries didn't
1:01:05
make it in. But it doesn't
matter. I'm going to call it
1:01:08
right now.
1:01:09
useless. You can't get genius.
What you I know what you're
1:01:11
gonna say. Everyone knows what
you're gonna
1:01:13
say Ukraine. Of course. It's so
obvious. And I think they have
1:01:18
the song to back it up.
Collusion orchestra. This is
1:01:23
Stefania. It's a hip hop guy in
a pussy hat John Yes, he's got a
1:01:31
pink pussy hat he's like a
Ukrainian hip hop. I want you to
1:01:39
hear the hook when this guy
kicks in Hara now wait for it.
1:01:42
It gets worse from UK
1:02:02
How cool is that? Winner winner
winner chicken dinner written
1:02:05
all over it could be Moldova.
But I think Ukraine is just as
1:02:10
so so obvious.
1:02:12
It should What do you have the
demo Dovin in example,
1:02:18
I can grab it real quick I don't
have it handy but we might as
1:02:21
well do this. Let me open up the
channel here. Let's see mold
1:02:26
dove. Here's Moldova we click on
the link and here we go hearing
1:02:37
the sound
1:02:38
of silence is that the name oh
here we go
1:02:46
okay, some country in western HC
like stuff I think I think
1:02:55
Ukraine beats Moldova easily in
that in that one. The it's odd
1:03:01
that the United Kingdom they
never I mean since the 70s. Or
1:03:06
maybe there was something in the
80s they never when they're the
1:03:09
laughingstock of the of
Eurovision and they have an
1:03:12
entry Sam writer in the in the
finals. Let's listen to a little
1:03:17
bit of his
1:03:19
net Nast not be floating in
midair and a broken heart just
1:03:26
to someone else down. Okay.
1:03:30
Because this is stolen for
something more familiar. Yeah,
1:03:34
that's a stolen SE.
1:03:37
Typical Brits stall and so the
Dutch entry is also in there. I
1:03:41
haven't heard this one. But I
heard it's really depressing.
1:03:44
It's called the depth. There you
go. Already suck on the train.
1:03:55
Rain dark, I'm alone. Okay,
Dutch makes sense. So anyway,
1:04:01
the show business will continue
but what are they going to do
1:04:03
after they let Ukraine wind is
not just not going to be much
1:04:06
more they can't push it. They've
got they already rolled out
1:04:08
Bano? Maybe maybe they could
have Madonna do a concert for
1:04:13
him. I mean, she's desperate
these days. But I don't I don't
1:04:17
see how they can how they can
continue this psychological
1:04:21
operation to get us all jacked
about it.
1:04:26
Seriously,
1:04:28
I don't know if people are this
this this Roe versus Wade thing
1:04:32
is really taking the steam out
of the Ukraine thing by design
1:04:36
laws and to put that money pump
the money up. Mostly
1:04:39
Republicans. The funny thing was
and I have a couple of Biden
1:04:42
clips and I hate to claim to
that.
1:04:43
No, I'm okay with that because
he has been saying a lot of
1:04:46
stuff that is necessary to
analyze.
1:04:48
But they talk about the vote for
the 50 the 40 billion straight
1:04:56
up and it was like 100%
Democrats and 73 Senate
1:05:00
Republicans voted for it and
only
1:05:02
like 5050 or 60. Republicans
voted against it.
1:05:06
Yeah, very few. And, you know,
Marjorie Taylor Greene, I think
1:05:11
gets those guys all the all the
so called omega Republicans
1:05:15
voted against it. Yes, there's
not that many, but according to
1:05:18
Biden, they're taking over the
place. So I want to show that
1:05:21
Biden talks about inflation a
lot. And is, this is premise
1:05:25
inflation speech. And I have
these not these aren't a bunch
1:05:29
of short snippets so much as a
little longer. So you can get a
1:05:33
little better feeling for what
he's saying.
1:05:36
So you can get a better you can
focus your brain to understand
1:05:39
what he's saying. Is that is
that the reason for the longer
1:05:42
clip?
1:05:43
We know it doesn't help. But it
just brings context in go on
1:05:48
this one that a couple of these
is Biden, on inflation, straight
1:05:52
up Biden, on inflation,
1:05:53
I think what's happened is we
have in a sense, I never
1:05:59
expected we say, say this
carefully. Yeah, do. I never
1:06:04
expected the ultra Maga
Republicans who seem to control
1:06:11
the Republican Party now to have
been able to control the
1:06:15
Republican Party. I never
anticipated that happening.
1:06:25
Mr. President, a year ago, the
administration was saying that
1:06:28
inflation was transitory. That's
obviously not the case. Now, how
1:06:32
long do you think it will be
until we see prices coming down?
1:06:36
I'm not going to predict that it
ranges defendant most economists
1:06:40
are talking to by the end of
this year, and some say it's
1:06:43
going to be it's going to
increase next year. But there's
1:06:45
others say by the end of this
year, you're going to see it
1:06:48
come down by the calendar year.
I don't know but I know what we
1:06:51
have to do to make sure that we
can bring it down.
1:06:57
He doesn't know he doesn't know
shit. But the point is, is he
1:07:01
makes this assertion that they
mag is taken over the Republican
1:07:04
Party. But based on the votes
were only 70 Republicans in the
1:07:10
House and Senate combined, voted
against the fit the 40 billion
1:07:15
and the Magga people and Trump
included are against this
1:07:20
throwing money at Ukraine to
this extreme. So he's full of
1:07:25
shit they haven't taken over the
Lindsey Graham's and those other
1:07:29
you know, the kind of the
Democrat Republicans, the ones
1:07:33
that still run the party, the
other guys they still win the
1:07:36
elections and they're gonna
probably take over, but they
1:07:38
haven't. He's fully he doesn't
know what he's talking about. I
1:07:41
just thought that was an
interesting thing. He's because
1:07:43
he's freaked out about
1:07:44
this great, it's great to blame
it on Republicans makes nothing
1:07:47
but sense. Maga,
1:07:49
this will play through these
clips I got here's here's kind
1:07:52
of an edited one for time, just
the Biden edited for inflation
1:07:56
is to brambling about it.
1:07:59
Kitchen Table, I went, I want
every American to know that I'm
1:08:03
taking inflation very seriously.
And here's my top for domestic
1:08:08
priority solutions, and there's
going to be more we're gonna
1:08:10
have to talk about as well. But
first, I want us to be crystal
1:08:14
clear about the problem. There
are two leading causes of
1:08:18
inflation we're seeing today.
1:08:20
Does any of them include massive
printing? by the Federal
1:08:24
Reserve? Please tell us
1:08:26
the first cause of inflation is
a once in a century pandemic,
1:08:30
the supply challenges have been
further hampered by the onset of
1:08:36
delta and Omicron viruses. And
this year, we have a second
1:08:40
cause a second cause Mr. Putin's
war in Ukraine. You saw we saw
1:08:46
in March that 60% of inflation
that month, was due to price
1:08:51
increases at the pump for
gasoline, Putin's war has raised
1:08:56
food prices as well. Because
Ukraine and Russia, two of the
1:08:59
world's major bread baskets of
for wheat and corn, are
1:09:04
essentially completely stalled.
But here's the good news.
1:09:07
Because of the actions we've
taken America's in the stronger
1:09:11
position to meet this challenge
than just about any other
1:09:13
country in the world. They're
independent. They're
1:09:16
independent. I believe that
inflation is our top economic
1:09:20
challenge right now. And I think
they do too. I build a strong we
1:09:24
build a strong economy with a
strong job market. And I agree
1:09:28
with what Chairman Powell said
last week, that the number one
1:09:32
threat is the strength in that
strength that we built is
1:09:37
inflation. So the Fed should do
its job and it will do its job.
1:09:41
I'm convinced with that in mind.
1:09:43
Our number one strength is the
threat of inflation. Is that Is
1:09:46
that what I'm understanding is
what he said Could I interject
1:09:49
these clips with a quick ABC
News report regarding the maggot
1:09:54
King inflation.
1:09:56
President Biden is promising to
beat inflation after the latest
1:09:59
numbers. showed it remains near
a 40 year high. Biden outlined a
1:10:03
plan yesterday to help farmers
boost production to lower food
1:10:07
prices. The plan involves
investing in fertilizer and
1:10:10
insurance programs. Meanwhile,
he took a mad Republicans who
1:10:13
criticized his plan to raise
taxes on corporations and give
1:10:16
tax credits for electric cars.
1:10:20
My Republican colleagues say
these programs to help the
1:10:23
working class and middle class
people. That's they say that's
1:10:26
why we have inflation. They're
dead wrong. Under my
1:10:30
predecessor, the great maggot.
The deficit increased every
1:10:36
single year, he was President
1:10:39
Biden also said that he's
reduced the deficit to help
1:10:42
fight inflation. But Republicans
say the administration's overall
1:10:45
spending is the problem.
1:10:46
This is a fantastic message that
they're putting out there. The
1:10:51
message is President bright
Biden is reducing the deficit by
1:10:56
$1 trillion. And so I think most
people go oh, that's great. You
1:11:02
know, that's not me. Oh, $1
trillion, less, wow, Trump
1:11:05
couldn't do that. But it's not
the national debt. It's the
1:11:09
deficit. That means the amount
that we don't have, that we put
1:11:15
in the budget. So what he does
is he puts together an almost $6
1:11:19
trillion budget. Yeah, it was
less if it was less than or
1:11:24
created, saved or created jobs
and people and saying, oh, no,
1:11:28
we're cutting the deficit. But
that's nothing. It's going to
1:11:31
increase the debt the national
debt by a trillion a year. I
1:11:37
mean, it's and this is the death
knell if this budget, which I
1:11:41
doubt it will, but if it gets
through intact, cut my God. I
1:11:46
mean, you really, you really got
to stop the abortions, because
1:11:49
we're gonna need a lot of people
to make up for this. This
1:11:52
Japanese debt trap we're falling
into I found this issue, but
1:11:57
this is a great messaging, the
deficit will reduce the deficit.
1:12:02
But
1:12:03
so here, there's is also some
screwball messaging he makes, I
1:12:08
tend to bring up screwball
messaging, listen to this clip.
1:12:11
This Well, first, this is the
this this is the I wanted listen
1:12:15
to this. This the inflation Flim
flam is a short clip. I want
1:12:19
just to hear it.
1:12:21
Inflation. Flim Flam.
1:12:25
Oh, I'm sorry, I see that
consumer prices in April were
1:12:28
8.3% higher than a year ago.
That's just a shade below the
1:12:32
8.5% inflation rate the month
before.
1:12:36
Hey, isn't this supposed to be
mean that we've had peak
1:12:38
inflation?
1:12:40
Well, they're talking about
peaking inflation. But the
1:12:42
problem with this, this is kind
of a Flim Flam because it's year
1:12:47
over to eat. It's year over
year. It's not total,
1:12:50
right. He's so Oh, wow. That's
another bullshit statistic. Wow,
1:12:55
that's good. So
1:12:56
yeah, so if you go a year over
the over a year, and you say you
1:12:59
had say something costs 10 bucks
a year ago, and now it's 8.5%
1:13:04
higher this year? Well, the next
month from last year, it could
1:13:08
have already gone up another few
points. And so going, the other
1:13:12
8.3 Might even be higher. Yep.
So this is a Flim Flam. And then
1:13:19
he's also got another one in
here that I don't even know if
1:13:23
he's doing half of these or he's
knowledgeable enough to be able
1:13:26
to do this. But listen to this.
This is one of the few short
1:13:29
clips this Biden on corporate
tax
1:13:32
55% of the largest corporations
paid net zero in federal taxes
1:13:37
and 2020 and $40 million profits
just isn't right.
1:13:43
Let me just say before you go
ahead, let's talk about that.
1:13:45
And then I have something else
to say about
1:13:47
what's he talking about 40
million profit.
1:13:50
million or billion.
1:13:52
He said million when an idiot.
Okay, do it. I did do a clip. I
1:13:56
really want to actually that was
the wrong clip. The clip I
1:13:59
wanted to play is this one, this
is Biden on profit margins.
1:14:03
Oh, a second.
1:14:05
Fine. And there we go.
1:14:08
There rather she taxes on
working American families and
1:14:11
try to depress their wages to
take on inflation. nevermind the
1:14:16
fact that many of these
companies are recording record
1:14:19
profit margins, even as far as
prices as they raise prices,
1:14:24
records amounts to
1:14:27
record profit margins.
1:14:29
What does that mean? What does
record profit margin mean? It's
1:14:34
not the same. My sales went down
to one product. Yeah. And the
1:14:38
profit margin went way up on
that one product
1:14:41
record and record had record
profit margin. It's a record
1:14:45
record profit margin. It's a
perfect it's Flim Flam inflam.
1:14:50
It's not Yeah, it's no different
than the Flim Flam. It's no
1:14:52
different than anything. And a
lot of this is written by people
1:14:56
who I mean this used to work
back in the day when you just
1:14:59
watch The CBS Evening News and
when when it keeps getting
1:15:03
repeated about these types of
things profit margin you start
1:15:07
people thinking about what's
going on with this. But my
1:15:10
favorite Yeah Are you done with
with your Biden's for just this
1:15:14
moment?
1:15:15
I can move the whole lot. I only
have two left it
1:15:18
because this goes into a two
clip a two parter that you will
1:15:21
love. This was the one I liked
the most.
1:16:05
Now it's pretty much been that
way for decades. Mr. President,
1:16:08
wait a minute, wasn't if since
the pandemic be and the
1:16:14
shutdowns began in 2020. They
1:16:18
had huge lines of people at at
Food Banks hours hours they were
1:16:22
in line.
1:16:23
Who was President Trump. So
what's he talking about? Well,
1:16:30
why is the Maga people were
against it?
1:16:33
Okay. The point is, it's a call
to action to call to action.
1:16:38
It's a call to mac and cheese.
It's a call to veganism. It's it
1:16:42
encapsulates everything. We can
afford the food, we're going to
1:16:47
use different types of food. We
know where that leads, because
1:16:51
we have to get rid of beef and
animal protein anyway because
1:16:54
it's contributing to climate
change. Here comes your friend
1:16:58
in mind, Becky Warli. Tell
everyone how much we love Becky
1:17:03
Warli. We love Becky Warli Becky
is a fan. And she's a jokester.
1:17:08
She's,
1:17:09
she's very pretty much we're
there for years. I should have
1:17:11
lunch with her she catch up with
the gossip of Good Morning
1:17:15
America.
1:17:15
She is pretty much a dude in her
humor and you know off camera
1:17:19
wouldn't you say she's, she's?
We've had dinner with her
1:17:22
together once I think
1:17:24
she's had she's pretty much a
dude with her. Toughness,
1:17:29
toughness, right? She's a tough
chick.
1:17:31
So she gets the following
assignment from Good Morning
1:17:34
America.
1:17:35
Now GMA exclusive Consumer
Reports is revealing its top
1:17:38
picks and meat alternatives.
Reading choices from beyond
1:17:40
burgers to impossible chicken
nuggets on tastes and health
1:17:43
benefits.
1:17:44
Thank you. Well as I look at
them, good morning, Becky.
1:17:47
George. Good morning. This is
not your hippie ants. Veggie
1:17:51
burger. Remember those black
hockey pucks? Oh no. This is a
1:17:54
highly flavorful plant based
burger. And if you didn't know,
1:17:59
you wouldn't realize it didn't
come from something that wants
1:18:01
mood, but instead came from soy
and pea protein.
1:18:06
I like this meat better
1:18:07
than regular meat. I'm Kim
Kardashian to Snoop Dogg.
1:18:11
I don't know I like plant based.
It truly is impossible.
1:18:14
Plant based burgers are
mainstream. And dare I say cool.
1:18:18
Barbecue, maybe there let
1:18:20
all the legend flavor, none of
the meat.
1:18:24
And now in the GMA exclusive
Consumer Reports unveiling their
1:18:27
picks.
1:18:28
Oh, John, aren't you riveted to
find out what kind of fake meat
1:18:31
you can eat.
1:18:33
Consumer Reports always gets
things slightly wrong. I should
1:18:37
mention this. When I was at PC
Magazine, we used to have these
1:18:41
labs and all these new window
magazines a big fat magazine
1:18:44
came out twice a month. And we
and we'd have to run into
1:18:47
consumer reports every so often.
And they are always and I've
1:18:50
noticed this when I used to be a
subscriber as a kid when I was
1:18:53
in college, and they're always
they always miss missing some
1:18:58
little point little nuances
always missing and so let's see
1:19:01
what they do this time.
1:19:04
So Becky is LW K I think right?
Lesbian with kids. Yes, yes, she
1:19:10
is. So she's going to subject
her own children in this report
1:19:15
to the truth and she herself. I
can't I cannot believe that. She
1:19:21
must have a hard time with this.
I mean, I we know Becky Ward,
1:19:24
she must be gone a brother have
to do this crap. Don't you think
1:19:27
she likes steak?
1:19:30
I think she'd like a steak.
Well, here she is. Good pasta
1:19:33
sauce of bolognese
1:19:35
now. Now she's all in now, at
least for the TV show.
1:19:39
According to us. Sorry, says
what do you do? That's why we
1:19:43
don't have advertised this show
kid and happened to us.
1:19:46
According
1:19:46
to a nationally representative
survey by Consumer Reports. 53%
1:19:52
of Americans say they want to
eat less meat and more
1:19:55
vegetables.
1:19:56
Analyzing 32 Different meatless
products, Consumer Reports
1:19:59
ranked them based on taste and
health profiles, so we start
1:20:03
with burgers. Three top
contenders from Consumer Reports
1:20:07
are beyond Boca and impossible
1:20:10
meat substitutes. They tend to
have lower saturated fat and
1:20:15
more fiber, but that's because
they're made from plant and
1:20:18
sometimes they have more added
salt.
1:20:22
And you want to be mindful of
that, for example, the
1:20:24
ingredients of the Impossible
Burger, soy, water and nutrients
1:20:28
then binders to make it stick
together. When you add in this
1:20:32
stuff. It's called heme. It's a
ironi substance that makes it
1:20:37
look and taste like beef
1:20:40
was heme. Do you know what heme
is? You heard
1:20:44
that sound good? The Boca
burgers substance
1:20:49
thinner than the Impossible
Burger or the beyond burger. Oh,
1:20:56
the smell is so beef like. Full
them. You don't like vegetables?
1:21:03
Consumer Reports also ranked
Chicken Nuggets with corn and
1:21:07
impossible nuggets, including
the animal shaped versions.
1:21:10
Taking the top spots, flavors
good.
1:21:13
It's got texture. Kids would
definitely eat these. You want
1:21:18
and if you're wondering, no
she's not she's gonna give this
1:21:21
crap to her kid.
1:21:22
Are you do you really want it?
You really? Yeah. He likes it.
1:21:28
And so did I showing meatless
truly has gone mainstream.
1:21:33
Mainstream. Yeah.
1:21:35
Now if you wondering about
price, the plant based burger
1:21:38
costs about two to $3 more than
traditional hamburger at my
1:21:42
local grocery store at the
moment we did a lot in our house
1:21:45
and one of my favorites tacos in
honor of Cinco Demayo. Here is
1:21:50
the plant based taco guys happy
Cinco de Maya
1:21:57
that is just, it's horrible.
1:22:01
It's a native ad.
1:22:02
Oh, my goodness. I'm glad you
brought that up. First, I'd like
1:22:05
to say that. I've received many
comments from moms who said,
1:22:11
hey, you know vegan kids. You
know, it's we played a report to
1:22:14
reports really vegan kids that
okay, we're very aware that our
1:22:17
vegan children need be 12 in
order to get the protein they
1:22:22
don't get from animal or get the
sub sub whatever they need, that
1:22:26
they don't get from animal
protein
1:22:28
they'll get from plant protein.
Yeah. And so
1:22:31
I said, Well, what happens when
the supply chain messes up? And,
1:22:36
and there's no beat 12
available? What do you give your
1:22:39
kids? Do you know the answer?
1:22:44
Hamburger
1:22:45
bugs. What am I? Yes.
1:22:54
Becky will be selling bugs to
us. Yes. He's like,
1:23:00
bugs, man bugs. So native add
Holy crap. You played maybe two
1:23:06
shows ago? A native ad by what
was it was on NPR?
1:23:13
Well, it was the only one I've
ever found on NPR. So
1:23:15
it was I'll play a little bit of
it because it was quite It was
1:23:17
exactly two minutes, which was
the whole giveaway, which was
1:23:22
the whole point fans of
1:23:23
Taco Bell's Mexican pizza
received good news. This week.
1:23:26
The food chain is bringing back
the beloved menu item
1:23:29
you have the two like fried
tortillas that are like kind of
1:23:31
glued together with the beans or
the me whatever.
1:23:34
You know that one thing went on
for two minutes with someone
1:23:36
talking about how like this is
really good. And NPR is not
1:23:41
supposed to do native ads.
They're supposed to be
1:23:43
transparently
1:23:44
No, I don't I don't, I believe
some documentation that says
1:23:48
that. Okay.
1:23:50
That I will gladly do because
I'm quite sure it's well, if
1:23:55
they don't disclose it or
disclaim it. I think it's a
1:23:57
problem.
1:23:58
I don't date you show me
documentation for that. I'm not
1:24:01
going to show you. I'm going to
show you with me. I'm going to
1:24:04
show you documentation that it
was a native ad. Because just
1:24:09
one week later on the Today Show
1:24:11
Dolly Parton from the
rock'n'roll Hall of Fame to the
1:24:14
Taco Bell stage. It's been a
busy month for the queen of
1:24:16
country. On Monday Dolly has
revealed that she's going to be
1:24:19
joining the Mexican fast food
chains tick tock musical. That's
1:24:23
right to celebrate the return of
the popular Mexican pizza menu
1:24:26
item to Taco Bell. Taco Bell and
Dolly are joining forces to put
1:24:30
on a show rapper JoJo cat and
tick tock Vic Victor Hakuna also
1:24:34
set to appear in Mexican pizza
the musical and if that's not
1:24:38
enough, the music is being
written by Grammy winning duo
1:24:41
Abigail Barlow and Emily bear.
Taco Bell says it's going to be
1:24:48
a satirical musical. But the
harrowing story of those who
1:24:51
fought to bring back the Mexican
money I was one of them. Oh my
1:24:54
gosh.
1:24:58
Oh my gosh. So complete complete
program. You're right. You
1:25:03
nailed it. Not that we doubted
it, but you nailed it.
1:25:06
No, nobody doubted because it
was too obvious, especially the
1:25:08
two minute thing. But let's say
a couple things. First of all,
1:25:12
Taco Bell has these experimental
things that come and go from
1:25:15
their their shops. And people
just want a burger, you know
1:25:18
that she bean burrito and a
taco. But they have all these
1:25:22
other things. And so the thing
they had been is a second round
1:25:25
of this. They've tried to
introduce these French fries
1:25:30
with some powder and this
whatever. No, I would recommend
1:25:33
people go buy these French fries
one time. They are the worst
1:25:37
french fries in the world. They
taste terrible. They're not
1:25:41
cooked, right? They're dead
powder is horrible. That sauce a
1:25:45
dipping sauce is enough to make
you puke. It is this they don't
1:25:50
know what they're doing with
french fries. And they keep
1:25:52
trying to sell these horrible
french fries to people. I don't
1:25:55
think they have room for the
fryer. I don't know if they're
1:25:57
baked. I don't know what's wrong
with these things. But I tried
1:26:01
them once when they first came
out. Just say okay, let me check
1:26:04
his house. I have something to
talk about. Unbelievable. Good.
1:26:10
No bad. You're terrible. I said.
1:26:12
I just want to make sure. One
thing you said unbelievable. You
1:26:16
said it in a way that that made
me question
1:26:17
believably bad. Okay. Oh, man.
They're mealy. They're like
1:26:22
cheap potato. I don't know. All
this wrong with them. every
1:26:26
imaginable thing that is wrong
with these French fries is wrong
1:26:30
with maybe they took them out to
market to reformulate how
1:26:32
they're making them. I don't I
don't think so.
1:26:36
It's a sad state of affairs. And
it's expensive now but it's
1:26:40
going to be so cheap compared to
real
1:26:44
taco taco. Go with it. Start
getting early.
1:26:50
Get it on your bug tacos with
that I'd like to thank you for
1:26:52
your courage in the morning to
the to the man who just put the
1:26:56
C in the cheek bean burrito
ladies and gentlemen Mr. John C.
1:26:59
Devorah.
1:27:01
In the morning noon Mr. Adam
curry boots on the ground if you
1:27:07
didn't need a subsidy, the water
and all the names
1:27:09
in the morning to the trolls and
the troll room. Let's see how
1:27:12
many we have here. Trolls if you
don't mind, put your hands up.
1:27:15
Let me do a little count on you.
Okay, let's see what we got
1:27:17
going on here. 1830 We are below
our mean of 2300 from last
1:27:24
Thursday, was better was better
than it was. But is that year
1:27:29
over year or is that compound?
Year over year? We're sailing
1:27:35
we're sailing. Oh man, the troll
room is is his still trending?
1:27:41
You can join him troll room.io
go ahead and jump in there troll
1:27:46
around listen to the show live
on Thursdays and Sundays many
1:27:48
shows are live including Darren
O'Neal's rock'n'roll pre show
1:27:52
before every no agenda show
there's usually a live show.
1:27:54
After that. There's 24 hours a
day. You can learn you can
1:27:58
discuss you can troll troll
room.io. If you'd like you can
1:28:03
always follow us on our Mastodon
part of the fediverse which is
1:28:07
no agenda social.com Now we
don't have accounts open if you
1:28:10
want to be able to interact,
follow and post you have to get
1:28:13
a mastodon account. There's many
places you can get that you can
1:28:16
follow John C. Dvorak at no
agenda social.com Adam at no
1:28:19
agenda social.com where you can
always just always look at the
1:28:22
public timeline and see what's
going on. But we suggest you get
1:28:28
involved. It's the future of
social networking as far as
1:28:30
we're concerned. And a big thank
you to Taunton, Neil, for the
1:28:37
artwork for episode 1449 Last
Thursday show Sunday show we
1:28:43
appropriately titled that
Where's Munch nuts? If you if
1:28:47
you don't know what that means,
and you should listen to the
1:28:49
show. This was a typical no
agenda pick. We always like to
1:28:52
do it. There were many other
things to choose from. But when
1:28:55
it's a special day like
Christmas, or we're Fourth of
1:28:58
July, or Easter or Mother's Day,
we'd like to choose something
1:29:03
kind of noncontroversial and
beautiful. And that's exactly
1:29:06
what Taunton Neil delivered for
us, and we appreciate that. But
1:29:10
there were some other
candidates.
1:29:12
Yeah, you are a big fan of a
number of the other ones. And I
1:29:16
had to tuck into the tonton Neo
piece even though you thought it
1:29:19
was boring. We'll mention a few
of the
1:29:23
well the one that I liked. The
one that we discussed the most
1:29:27
was the cupcake and a shot by
guitar of Thrones, which was the
1:29:32
beautiful cupcake, the balloons
and the and the happy, happy
1:29:35
birthday and a syringe from
Pfizer and a little five
1:29:39
balloon. That's the one I liked.
1:29:41
I agreed with you too. I thought
it was a good piece I just felt
1:29:44
that we should have since it was
a Mother's Day special as such
1:29:48
with a special donation, even
though nobody did it. So I
1:29:53
thought we just had to have some
Mother's Day thing and this had
1:29:55
no Mother's Day. No, no, but I
liked it. And then also I typed
1:30:01
a reference to a five was, was
maybe being confused and
1:30:04
received
1:30:04
what I thought was beautiful
from the artists who purely did
1:30:08
this for their own joy and I
think for our benefit is they
1:30:13
the artists all started putting
up Polaroids of themselves as
1:30:17
babies with the following text,
Dear Mama, thanks for not
1:30:21
aborting me. It must have been
five or six of them that did
1:30:24
this. It was
1:30:25
pretty cool started with Tantus
Yeah, of course Kenny Ben be
1:30:29
followed up with one of hers.
And then a few minutes later,
1:30:33
the other artists saw those two
and they said Well, hell, I can
1:30:36
do that. And so he ended up with
one from Moose and then Parker
1:30:40
Paulie got in on it. And then
networks so unbelievable. These
1:30:45
guy crazy
1:30:46
thing is the dame Kenny Ben one
with a picture of her do that.
1:30:50
If you take off the dress that
almost looks me like me when I
1:30:53
was a kid with with that, you
know, almost shoulder length
1:30:55
hair parted in the middle. If
you take the dress,
1:30:59
it was a picture you Oh, okay.
Thank you. Bad by the way. I
1:31:02
think the final one that came in
was biscuit on your birthday by
1:31:05
a capitalist agenda who who's
the laggard? With the last
1:31:10
shirt? Isn't that here? It is. I
mean, a lot of happy birthing
1:31:14
person Day, which I think the
joke is old is that's maybe why
1:31:18
you didn't really even consider
it.
1:31:21
If you go out there with the
immobilize, you're using the
1:31:24
same bad male, pregnant male
emoji.
1:31:30
Yeah. Which is the whole point
of the joke, but it's yeah, it's
1:31:33
like, okay. There were other
nice Mother's Day. attempts for
1:31:38
sure. But it was just pretty you
had the flowers, you had a
1:31:43
religion.
1:31:43
It was a bunch of the entries
were funny. There was a lot of
1:31:47
humor, and especially those
photos. They were all quite
1:31:51
amusing. There's some little
note, some sort of joke. We're
1:31:54
lucky.
1:31:55
We love this. And we loved it.
It was really good. Thank you
1:31:59
very much, Tom to Neil and thank
you to all the artists for
1:32:01
entertaining us. The end of the
day after the show, no agenda,
1:32:05
art generator.com. They there
are people who are in fact,
1:32:08
refreshing this in real time
while listening to the to the
1:32:11
live show to the stream to see
because artists do this during
1:32:14
the show. And already I see
Ultra Maga things popping up
1:32:18
some other funny stuff. Some
other funny stuff that is
1:32:21
already possibly a contender. Or
you could get a modern podcast
1:32:28
app, get that from new podcast.
apps.com learn about all the
1:32:32
cool new features. Today I'm
going to suggest you try out
1:32:35
fountain if you're a podcaster
they also have an onboarding
1:32:38
function for podcasters so try
out fountain@fountain.fm Or look
1:32:44
at all the other selections at
new podcast apps.com. Now let us
1:32:47
thank our executive and
Associate Executive producers
1:32:50
for episode 1450. And we kick it
off with Anthony Raimondo from
1:32:59
Fresno, California delivers a
cool 101010 $1,010.10 cannot say
1:33:07
we're not happy with that. And
here's his note. I need some
1:33:12
special karma. I'm a lawyer in
California and I've represented
1:33:16
small businesses and family
farms for over 20 years. This is
1:33:20
fitting right in with what's
going on around a decade ago was
1:33:23
battling regularly with
California Rural Legal
1:33:26
Assistance. CRLA, a nonprofit
law firm of social justice
1:33:30
warriors hell bent on destroying
farmers. About 65% of their
1:33:34
funding comes from federal
grants intended to help low
1:33:37
income Americans Federal law
prohibits these funds from being
1:33:40
used for illegal aliens. I used
contacts I had at ICE let's our
1:33:45
immigration enforcement arm. To
verify that these lawyers were
1:33:49
violating this law. I verified
that their clients were
1:33:52
undocumented and reported them
to the federal agency that
1:33:55
oversees the funding. Even
cooperating in an ongoing
1:33:59
investigation. They were thrown
off several cases. Ultimately,
1:34:03
the lawyers accused me of trying
to have their clients deported
1:34:06
and sued me personally in
federal court. A corrupt union
1:34:11
UFW that I annoyed by
successfully representing
1:34:14
farmworkers pro bono against
them in a civil rights case. The
1:34:18
workers they didn't want the
workers to get to vote on
1:34:20
whether to be in the Union got
the state bar after my license.
1:34:25
I won a state bar trial last
year totally exonerated but the
1:34:28
prosecutor won't let go wouldn't
let go and appealed. The appeal
1:34:32
will be heard may 19 courtroom
karma please I'm in the process
1:34:37
of relocating to Southern Oregon
coast and would like to be Sir
1:34:40
Anthony night of the Kokila
River Valley so it becomes a
1:34:44
night today into the night Sorry
for the long No Don't forget to
1:34:47
de douchey and stay safe. Oh
Holy crap. I had a note
1:34:51
to me. This is a long note
that's very good long note. It's
1:34:54
this is content. This is not
just a note this is information
1:34:57
can
1:34:58
i This is a scandal boots on the
ground scandal report.
1:35:01
Exactly. Here's the deal do you
spend deed Do you know whenever
1:35:07
you're in a courtroom drama you
need some karma you need to roll
1:35:11
out the goat
1:35:11
you've got
1:35:14
karma. I don't do it.
1:35:17
Sir Kevin deals is up Earl of
North Carolina in Huntersville
1:35:21
North Carolina $512. In the
morning, it is my annual
1:35:26
birthday donation and this year
my birthday falls on the show
1:35:29
day. Please add me to the
birthday list I'll be turning 36
1:35:33
Today may 12 10. Hence the five
golf donation. Also this
1:35:37
donation brings me to the level
of Duke I'd like to upgrade my
1:35:41
telephone Earl of North Carolina
to Duke I don't know if he's on
1:35:45
the upgrade list or not to
North. He sure is my accounting
1:35:49
is attached. Also if it's not
too much trouble please have an
1:35:53
and play the Bob Dylan version
of the title change songs
1:35:56
interesting.
1:35:57
I really don't like that
version. People love it. Okay,
1:36:00
of course do you like it better
than the
1:36:02
day Bob Dylan?
1:36:05
Bob Dylan, Bobby Knight Robert
and I go back a long way.
1:36:08
Thanks for all you do no jingles
just current Mr. Kevin deals
1:36:11
Earl of North Carolina is soon
to become Duke of North
1:36:15
Carolina.
1:36:18
You've got karma $500 in one
penny from barren Chris of
1:36:24
Kawartha highlands of the
Kawartha Highlands core to
1:36:28
Ontario Canada Navia. In the
morning, Adam and John has been
1:36:31
far far too long since the last
donated by hope to have made up
1:36:34
for it with today's $500 assets.
Yes, we recognize these Canadian
1:36:39
Australian and New Zealand
dollar Edson dollar reduce as at
1:36:43
face value for just because you
use the term dollar it doesn't
1:36:46
really matter it's all going to
be shipped eventually as this
1:36:49
long period without providing
back the value I get from the
1:36:52
two of you has left me feeling
particularly filthy that request
1:36:56
to be deduced. bandied do no
jingles today but I would like
1:37:02
some generic goat karma oh no
problem here in the province of
1:37:05
Ontario. We're in the midst of
election season with the usual
1:37:07
suspects claiming the usual
nonsense and taking the usual
1:37:10
jabs at each other it's so
boring. Sadly, the party I'm
1:37:14
supporting this year the new
blue party is unlikely to win
1:37:17
any seats this being their first
general election. Still I hope
1:37:20
that after the votes are in
things at least don't get worse
1:37:22
for the province. We are
suffering enough was $2 per
1:37:25
litre of gasoline. Equivalent
$5.84 US dollar. On the COVID
1:37:32
Front things seem to be slowly
returning to some semblance of
1:37:34
normalcy around these parts.
Certainly I still see people
1:37:36
wearing masks out on the street
either out of continued
1:37:39
terrorism by the M five M or as
plumage to seek seek out far
1:37:44
left mates. plumage Yes, mask
plumage I like that. But most
1:37:50
only wear them now where they
are still mandates in place ie
1:37:53
hospitals and public transit at
this rate, the Toronto area
1:37:56
should be maths free in another
year or two. Wishing you both
1:38:00
the best keep our amygdala
shrunk barren Chris of the
1:38:03
Kawartha Highlands night of the
rare encounter corps to go karma
1:38:07
by request.
1:38:08
You've got karma
1:38:13
next on the list is Michael
Kenny. But he was in the last
1:38:18
show and there's no note from
him. Unless you have
1:38:21
I have what do I have here? What
Yes, this is a make do I
1:38:27
believe? Well, yes. Michael
Kinney. He said I just did. What
1:38:32
is the image to make sure this
is the right amount. What's the
1:38:33
month? 33508? Yes, Adam just did
a PayPal donation for 335 dot O
1:38:40
eight a switcheroo for my reason
for being Becky Kinney for
1:38:44
Mother's Day Kenny is pronounced
with a hard see like Kiante
1:38:47
please give her some karma and
some Al Sharpton. So we will do
1:38:54
the switcheroo for today. I
remember he emailed me about
1:38:58
this and I said hey man, do you
want us to do a make good and we
1:39:01
know what he said? He said no,
no. I'll just don't and again,
1:39:06
love him. Demand you've got
karma. So we change that to
1:39:16
Becky Kinney. Becky, Becky.
1:39:19
So the next one is interest is
Michael I'm sorry. Jim Birkin,
1:39:23
Stott in Madison, Wisconsin was
a writer $335 And he sent out a
1:39:29
note in a send it did you get
your copy of the book?
1:39:32
Oh, yes. The Rock and Roll
detective. I did. It was it's a
1:39:35
really nice book.
1:39:37
I got my copy too, but I should
mention something that I think
1:39:40
he's not aware of. Oh, I think
he sent me his copy. His
1:39:45
personal entire book is marked
up scribbled in it's got
1:39:50
underlining every single
collector's item.
1:39:54
If I guess collector's item,
1:39:56
yes go page is dog eared. And as
soon as he's got the he's got a
1:40:02
yellow marker on pretty much and
then he uses a pink highlighter
1:40:06
and for some reason, middle of
the book, I wonder
1:40:09
if it's different from mine. I
doubt it. I have a pristine copy
1:40:13
although he did write a nice
dedication in the front for me.
1:40:16
Yeah, but I insisted he do that.
1:40:20
Of course you do. But you got
even you got something even even
1:40:23
more special?
1:40:24
Yeah, the do but I thought it
might be something he wanted to
1:40:30
keep under separate cover. Um,
so okay, I'm enclosing my
1:40:33
donation executive producer
amount 335. I'm sending he's got
1:40:37
these books. I've sent them out.
And the book is called mysteries
1:40:40
in the music Case Closed. And he
goes and does a very good book,
1:40:46
just check that people should if
you can get it I think Tina
1:40:48
immediately
1:40:49
went, Oh, I want to read that
gone.
1:40:53
Was got all the stories, that
debt are half, you know, half
1:40:58
baked stories and rock and roll
history that have never been
1:41:01
concluded. And he's, he's a he's
written a number of books and
1:41:05
his main thing is, is I think
he's a former lawyer or
1:41:08
something. He's an interesting
guy. Yeah. Anyway, he said I
1:41:13
recently discovered your great
podcast and I love it. It took
1:41:16
only one episode to become
addicted. I am known as the
1:41:21
rocket roll detective. I have
spent decades deconstructing and
1:41:24
solving the myths, legends and
mysteries and conspiracies and
1:41:27
rock and roll history. My new
best selling book is called
1:41:31
mysteries in the music CASE
CLOSED travelled back to the 50s
1:41:35
to uncover who really discovered
Elvis Presley. And that's a good
1:41:39
story too.
1:41:40
That's a good visit to
1:41:41
1976 Jamaica to learn whether
the CIA tried to kill but
1:41:46
wholly totally believe that.
1:41:49
discover whether the Beach Boys
actually stole song from cult
1:41:53
leader Charles Manson helter
1:41:55
skelter that was the Beatles
What did they steal?
1:41:58
I don't know. I haven't gotten
to that part of the book. It's
1:42:01
in the book. Yeah. Dig into the
FBI classified fo a FOIA records
1:42:06
to determine what they failed to
learn in their witch hunt into
1:42:11
the ledge obscenity of the song
Louis Louis
1:42:15
Jones you have the entire
collection of version of Louis
1:42:19
Louis.
1:42:20
I'm always on the lookout for
other versions I have about 40
1:42:24
and you're originally from Sid I
will mention I used to work at
1:42:27
this radio station as in college
KF JC and one day I'm listening
1:42:33
to and I have it on my radio
still because it's good station
1:42:36
and it's College Station. And
they one day some guy played
1:42:39
Louie Louie star one hours of
Louie Louie's and all these
1:42:42
different Louis Louis has had a
hell I'm gonna start collecting
1:42:44
Louis Louis. And so I've started
collecting them too. So I got
1:42:47
about 4k F
1:42:48
JC and you were on air? Yeah.
Hey everybody, it's JC D here on
1:42:53
KF JC we put the JC and then KF
JC gets with JC
1:42:57
I was my I was on air and doing
radio plays
1:43:04
Did you announce the radio play?
1:43:07
No. We wrote these radio plays
that we produced and aired many
1:43:10
were of our more long.
1:43:12
Yeah, we need to put those on.
No agenda. Sorry.
1:43:14
I'm the best one I had. I had
this thing called War of the
1:43:17
Worlds revisited. And I had and
it was it was played two or
1:43:23
three, two or three times over
the years and I lost my copy.
1:43:31
Oh, that's horrible. Anyone
anyone alive who still might
1:43:33
have one? But don't
1:43:35
think so. Anyway, that was my
best one. I did a couple but
1:43:39
that was the one I liked doing.
It was the best one. Anyway, he
1:43:42
goes on. There are many more
stories he goes on and on sign
1:43:44
copies are free. Available at
music. Mystery book.com Music
1:43:52
mystery book.com He's got he
still consults with the beat.
1:43:57
The Apple Records Roy Orbison
state of George Harrison and
1:44:01
others he's ICT skills as an ex
trial attorney.
1:44:05
Oh, I was always good to have in
the family. Yeah. Anyway. Well,
1:44:10
we demanded it was very nice.
And I would also say well
1:44:15
produced I got the book. I got
the book right before the show.
1:44:20
And you got the book you got a
special book and we got the
1:44:22
donation and we got the notice
it could not get any better.
1:44:25
Good job sir. Rock and roll
detect rock and roll detective.
1:44:30
We go on to our next executive
producers Zachary stockstill
1:44:33
from Odessa, Texas 334. In the
morning, gents, he writes thanks
1:44:38
to Adam for answering my
questions on Twitter about how
1:44:40
to send a note. I know you've
heard it before but somehow
1:44:42
didn't hear it in the last two
episodes, send it to
1:44:46
john@dvorak.org or Adam
mccurry.com or notes at no
1:44:49
agenda show.net or just write it
in in the Pay Pal message which
1:44:54
is kind of the idea. This is my
second donation but my first had
1:44:58
no notes so I still need to be
doing deduced if you'd be so
1:45:01
kind you've been deed do I need
one more donation of 333 to
1:45:06
complete my trip to the
roundtable this month we all
1:45:08
know Cincinnati style chili
takes a while to make so no
1:45:12
rush. It needs to be just right
for the roundtable this is a
1:45:16
great way to celebrate my army
retirement and having my first
1:45:19
real job in 20 years thanks for
everything he says soon to be
1:45:22
sir Grease Monkey of the West
Texas oil fields. You bet
1:45:27
looking forward to now did he
wants Cincinnati style chili at
1:45:30
the roundtable is that was that
still pending? Or?
1:45:34
I think so. Want you ever had
Cincinnati style chili?
1:45:38
I have not.
1:45:40
Cincinnati chili is usually
served over spaghetti pot it has
1:45:45
distinction of tasting kind of
like chili all except this over
1:45:49
spaghetti but it's a heavily
influenced by the tastes of
1:45:54
clothes. Mm hmm
1:46:01
Well, we appreciate it and most
any Indeed he is on the list.
1:46:04
He's on the list. Arthur's Yeah,
Arthur sundry 3333 dot 33 from
1:46:11
Riverside Illinois. No note I
couldn't find one. Did you find
1:46:13
anything from Arthur? Nope,
1:46:14
I've got nothing from him. Okay.
Go on with Robert donahey A
1:46:20
Donnie Donnie, Donnie. And
novelty Ohio. Three Three.
1:46:26
Forgive me pod father I've
sinned this discuss I must
1:46:29
atone. I forgot to give birthday
shout out to my girlfriend Gronk
1:46:38
Gronk who turned 33 on Cinco de
mio apparently a kitchen mixer
1:46:44
doesn't mean jack compared to no
1:46:50
I think I think the breadmaker
is better than an average
1:46:53
producer ship but the mixer Nah,
bro, that's way too low.
1:46:57
It doesn't mean jack compared to
no agenda. Just come up. Please.
1:47:01
Got It Bad. Greg Porter Ronan,
November 7, Fox Sierra November
1:47:12
Carlsbad, California 333 dot 30
and 373 is kilo five Alpha.
1:47:17
Charlie. Charlie, if you're new
to the show. You're confused. In
1:47:20
the morning, John and Adam. I
please have some starting flying
1:47:24
lessons with the goal of getting
an ATP licensed karma. ATP is
1:47:29
airline transport pilot. I'm 42.
And although the cards are
1:47:33
stacked a bit against me at this
stage, at this age, I really
1:47:36
need a career change. 70 threes,
dude, I think that's a great
1:47:40
choice is going to be a low end.
But don't go to the big
1:47:42
airlines. There's going to be an
enormous small regional semi
1:47:47
private aviation system that's
going to be set up it's coming
1:47:51
you get some karma for that.
You've got karma.
1:47:57
Jordan Olson from Bellevue,
Nebraska comes in with 333 in
1:48:04
the morning, fam. I'd like to
give a huge shout out to my
1:48:08
smokin hot boss sir pasty. Tell
me I'm wrong. It's also my
1:48:14
birthday on Saturday. Can I get
a biscuit with some ants? Thank
1:48:18
you for all the hard work you
do.
1:48:21
Ants let me see I got oops,
sorry. Hey, that's not supposed
1:48:25
to happen. Kcd I didn't I didn't
get the ants for some reason.
1:48:31
Sorry about this. A Here we go.
They
1:48:35
always give me a biscuit on my
birthday. That's
1:48:37
for your birthday and we'll give
you a little bit of ants and
1:48:40
we'll wind it up with karma.
Again ants ants karma Pierre
1:49:00
Pierre. Just Pierre. is from
France as far as I know. But no
1:49:06
Pierre is from Farmington,
Connecticut. And Pierre writes
1:49:10
with a 333 donation. Bonjour.
You have beautiful hair. Oh,
1:49:14
this Pierre. It's actually
Pierre John is Pierre Hilary's
1:49:19
it's the the the hairdresser to
the coffee or do stars Yes. Oh
1:49:25
my goodness. So nice to meet you
in person mas you you have
1:49:28
beautiful hair. Recently, your
deliverables have been rewritten
1:49:31
in alignment with the industry's
best practices and telling the
1:49:34
story of the news journey. Going
forward. I'll reach out and
1:49:38
circle back with you when I'm
ready to hand off my next
1:49:40
donation. I'd like to call up my
next door neighbor's brother
1:49:43
Pepe as a douche bag. Give me
some Carmel with hot pockets.
1:49:49
Amen. Fist bump bingo Boom shaka
laka remix. This is Pierre from
1:49:53
Farmington Valley, Connecticut.
Bingo boom. Good day, man fist
1:50:01
bump. You've got karma.
1:50:08
Todd Trotman comes in from
Austin, Texas, just down the
1:50:11
street from where you used to
live. $300. And He only says one
1:50:15
thing. John substack content is
fantastic. Thank you, Todd.
1:50:21
That's from the Oasis and you
just published a new one, I
1:50:23
believe.
1:50:24
Yes, I did on cameras. I did
some cameras in school rooms in
1:50:29
the classroom. Yeah. In the
class why they should be there
1:50:31
and I would anyone who got to
read this thing, send a copy to
1:50:34
Mark Levin the great one, Mark
Laron. Send a Copy to him
1:50:40
because he's the classroom.
Camera guy, and he hasn't been
1:50:43
talking about it much recently.
Oh, maybe he'll read it on the
1:50:47
air and I'll get my numbers up.
1:50:51
Okay, we'll work on that. We're
going to the Associate Executive
1:50:55
Producer list almost done.
Bonnie Ray is in Fort
1:50:57
Lauderdale, Florida to 5025
Thank you, Bonnie Ray, who says
1:51:01
Bonnie ray here first donation,
please deduce me? You've been de
1:51:06
deux she continues. I'm here to
hit my big brother Bobby, aka
1:51:10
sir Chuck Lee. In the mouth for
his 25th birthday. Thank you for
1:51:14
introducing me to the best
podcast in the universe. Happy
1:51:17
Birthday jingle please. Well,
when we do the when he's on the
1:51:21
list, so we'll do it there. But
traditionally, this is your
1:51:24
Happy Birthday jingle. They
1:51:25
always give me a biscuit on my
birthday.
1:51:28
He's got himself a biscuit is
going on his birthday
1:51:30
very popular is very popular.
Kyle Derby McKinnis McGinnis
1:51:36
primate get McKinnis and
McKinnis in Calgary, Alberta. tu
1:51:39
tu, tu tu tu tu home of the
stampede. I've been listening
1:51:44
for the last year big fan of the
greatest podcast in the
1:51:47
universe. I recently got 25%
raise at work. And I credit to
1:51:51
the show's unflinching ability
to keep me motivated and
1:51:55
energized throughout the week. I
appreciate you both
1:52:00
very nice. Ray diazo is in
Fishers Indiana row a ducks two
1:52:06
two 2.22 in the morning gents
yesterday I returned a few items
1:52:09
in a row of ducks was the total
due back I swear I could hear
1:52:13
John's haunting Joe Nate coming
over the PA
1:52:27
this raft is there for now yours
just a de douching Please That's
1:52:32
all you've been deed do if you
Ryan the SEO
1:52:38
yeah Tommy yes sir Tommy Hawk of
the heartland comes out to 22
1:52:42
Parts Unknown is what I can tell
Heartland from our two day to
1:52:47
karma for all please dear the
management is possible this
1:52:55
donation will not reach you in
time as the new Showtime is
1:52:59
clearly toying with the balance
in the universe. I'm rolling the
1:53:04
dice that there will be still be
plenty of BS news to deconstruct
1:53:10
and I'm grateful you're here to
do so. Thank you for your
1:53:13
courage sir. Tommy puck of the
heartland
1:53:18
that's interesting his his
handwriting is actually quite
1:53:21
pretty for for a dude the only
He has nice cursive very
1:53:27
readable normally it's the women
that have I mean it's sloppy but
1:53:30
it's not you didn't notice that?
1:53:33
No, it looks kind of like my
writing is kind of sloppy it's
1:53:36
not as easy to read as you
think. For example the it's at
1:53:40
the beginning it looks
1:53:41
like yeah, it looks like it's
his or to be m why it could be a
1:53:45
lot it could be a lot of things
well for sure we've got the RTD
1:53:48
to karma for you sir. You've got
karma and then we have Trish
1:53:57
Petrit Petrit or pet rat
depending on how you want to
1:54:01
pronounce this like pet rat.
Yeah, it does look like you
1:54:05
spelled PE te Ra te pet rat
Petrit and she's from Brighton,
1:54:11
Michigan in the Morning John
Adams since the ACLU has done
1:54:15
absolutely nothing to protect
the rights of Americans
1:54:17
regarding vaccine mandates among
other things they ignore I'm
1:54:20
sending you my ACLU donation
with extra thrown in more you
1:54:25
deserve more than that but this
is what I got put it to good use
1:54:28
producing the best podcast in
the universe keeping with
1:54:31
tradition a bit of lingo What is
this is this seven easily and a
1:54:37
bit of na lingo? Holy moly. Oh,
this is Oh, this is no agenda.
1:54:43
lingo I guess. Now Holy moly. I
say that not ball maybe dipshit.
1:54:49
Yeah, well Golly. You say su
cahoots. I might say sacred
1:54:55
Wiseacres you Rolodex. Rolodex.
gloomy Gus. Gloomy Gus.
1:55:02
Yeah, I think I said good gloomy
guests. I called you that once
1:55:05
but Rolodex is interesting
because she may be right.
1:55:09
Explain. At some point, you
wouldn't even think to notice
1:55:14
it. But why would it be
millennial know what the hell a
1:55:16
Rolodex is right. And I'll
explain a Rolodex is actually a
1:55:22
an address book that is a form
that is the circle that you roll
1:55:27
it to get to the A B, C. D is a
very handy device. It was a best
1:55:31
seller. It flips over 50s and
60s, pull the cards out low
1:55:37
cards, very special cards.
1:55:40
Yeah, well, no. Yes. Why would
Millennials know about Rolodex?
1:55:44
No, they wouldn't, but they
still click on the little floppy
1:55:46
disk icon to save something. And
it's still a clear board.
1:55:51
There are lots of lots of
movement away from that the down
1:55:55
arrow with a Buddha pit or a
hole or something that down
1:55:58
meaning download.
1:55:59
Oh, I don't like that with a
hole.
1:56:02
Well, it's like it's like a
little like a like a bracket on
1:56:05
its side where the arrow points
down. That's where it's going.
1:56:08
It's going down going down, man.
1:56:12
What are we doing with the
download and download isn't
1:56:14
downloaded down arrow?
1:56:17
That's what I'm talking about
the download download to the
1:56:19
disk downloading to the disk as
my ret wrestler? Yeah, like
1:56:28
that's sustainable. No,
1:56:29
not really well, that's it for
our executive and Associate
1:56:32
Executive producers a very nice
list. Perfectly balanced
1:56:35
donations as if you all
coordinated with your notes and
1:56:38
and jingles. Thank you very
much. We love to hand out the
1:56:42
official titles for all of these
producers. And they are you are
1:56:46
now an executive producer, or an
Associate Executive Producer, no
1:56:49
agenda Show episode 1450. And
you can use these anywhere. And
1:56:54
it's all part of the value for
value model you you determine
1:56:58
what you how you have how much
you value the show, and no one
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else can do that. But you
depending on your own personal
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situation. And these people are
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And what we get back is well as
you see when you get to $1,000
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you get the night ring and now
you join the roundtable but the
1:57:15
credits people really liked
those and they keep them in
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their in their social media
profiles. They posted in their
1:57:21
their resume on LinkedIn and of
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an IMDB account with this
credit. Go ahead and look around
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to see other big Hollywood
people have these as well. If
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you'd like to be an executive or
Associate Executive Producer, or
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just a regular producer, who
will be thanking in the second
1:57:40
segment, here's where you go
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vote.org/and A thank you again
1:57:45
for producing episode 1450 of
the no agenda show.
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Our formula is this. We go out
we get people in
1:57:54
the mouth Hey, man I should get
my two extra Biden clips out of
1:58:13
the washer, we can we had. Okay,
here's a follow up on Biden on
1:58:21
inflation. And via the corporate
tax. And again, it's silly just
1:58:28
trying to follow the logic of
this. If you want
1:58:31
to bring down inflation. Let's
make sure the wealthiest
1:58:33
corporations pay their fair
share. My plan was to ask those
1:58:38
companies to pay their fair
share in taxes, congressional
1:58:42
Republican plan, let them off
scot free.
1:58:48
Okay, let's look at the logic of
this. You want to bring down
1:58:51
inflation, make corporations pay
more money? More taxes? So what
1:58:57
are they going to do? The
Corporation's do what they
1:58:59
always do they pass the taxes on
to the consumer which jacks up
1:59:03
the price more? Yeah. How does
this lower inflation? What is
1:59:07
the logic? I'm asking you
1:59:11
though there's no logic. This is
just to give people some fodder
1:59:14
to talk about and it's free.
It's not logic. It's politics.
1:59:17
It's mega,
1:59:20
mega mega. So here's the last
clip and this is where some one
1:59:23
of the reports and I just asked
you
1:59:25
a question about this for a
second. Sure about the taxation
1:59:28
specifically, as we predicted,
it now seems to appears to have
1:59:33
happened. The Internal Revenue
Service it's the people who
1:59:37
don't actually collect the money
but the people who tell you how
1:59:39
much you got to pay and and come
after you with guns and garnish
1:59:43
your wages and make your life a
living hell. They have indeed
1:59:48
destroyed an estimated 30
million tax returns because of
1:59:55
its inability to process its
backlog. Now we knew this was
1:59:59
going to happen If this was
rumored for a while, and even
2:00:03
all the accounting firms are
talking about it, they're just
2:00:05
going to cut loose. And they're
just going to let it all I'll
2:00:08
let it all go. Now, these are
paper submissions. The only
2:00:17
people who put paper in are
people who typically earn a lot
2:00:22
of money. I would say $100,000
Plus you can't even do an online
2:00:28
filing. I don't think above a
certain amount they request that
2:00:32
you send it in the printed copy.
How many people do you think are
2:00:39
rich people are getting a great
break by this taking place?
2:00:42
Because you think oh, IRS is
just the little people. I think
2:00:47
that this this particular move
right here, that is unbelievable
2:00:52
what's going on?
2:00:54
I'm guessing that the majority
of those people who have these
2:01:00
things just tossed are big time
Democrats.
2:01:06
It may be they were selective.
You know, who knows?
2:01:09
I'm thinking they were Yeah, I'm
thinking exactly that. And I'm
2:01:13
taking this back to that
situation back in the learner
2:01:16
days when she was running the
2:01:18
that's the origin of the dude's
name, Ben.
2:01:22
Yeah, right. That's
2:01:23
where the dude named Ben came
from.
2:01:25
to Dane, Ben, we should play
that clip again, for the people
2:01:28
who just recently
2:01:30
here it is. Here's the oh, this
is Chaffetz. Chef, it's no
2:01:34
longer a no longer in government
Congress, Congressman. And he
2:01:39
was questioning the I guess then
the director of the Internal
2:01:42
Revenue Service about you know
about this was it was it things
2:01:47
getting deleted or destroyed
2:01:49
they were putting the screws to
nonprofits that were
2:01:52
Republicans,
2:01:53
right. But then how did it come
down to it was something but
2:01:56
she's I don't know what happened
to it's, you know, some some,
2:01:59
some pay some requests or some
paperwork. Yeah. And something
2:02:01
some dude, if it
2:02:04
was anybody in the IT arena. Um,
I didn't actually interact
2:02:11
directly with people in the IT
arena. There was somebody whose
2:02:16
name was I can't even remember
his last name. I think his first
2:02:20
name may have been been
2:02:21
a guy named Ben, a dude named
Ben. Who else.
2:02:27
That's who you are. If you're in
it. You're a dude named Ben.
2:02:30
dude named Ben Norton. That's
where it began. And this was
2:02:32
some vital notes eight years ago
or
2:02:36
the date on this is free.
2:02:39
It was during the Obama
administration. It's
2:02:44
yeah, this is the Redux side.
Not that we're home we reread we
2:02:48
revisited this and 2018 and the
original goodness, the original
2:02:55
comes from, I think 2015. And
then we have this was crazy. We
2:03:07
have the best clips and
producers.
2:03:10
Alright, it's the last this last
Biden clip. And this is one
2:03:13
where you have a Wiseacre. I use
that word, a Wiseacre reporter
2:03:18
who will probably be banned from
being in any one of these?
2:03:22
One of these good words
Wiseacre. Isn't that also kind
2:03:25
of a 70s? Word Wiseacre,
2:03:27
I think goes into the 30s. I
think it's really old. So it's
2:03:32
like wizened Heimer has another
one. So some Wiseacre who's
2:03:37
decided decides and he doesn't
go after him like he used to
2:03:40
that's interesting, but he still
has to roll his eyes over this
2:03:44
guy coming in with this
question. And this is at the
2:03:46
very end of the press conference
where you have a walkaway Joe
2:03:49
situation at the end with people
yelling at him, which is always
2:03:52
amusing. But here we go. Called
Out Rick Scott
2:03:55
a little while ago in your
remarks earlier today.
2:03:58
anticipating your remarks, he
said and I'm just quoting here,
2:04:02
that the best thing the most
effective thing Joe Biden can do
2:04:06
to solve the inflation crisis he
created
2:04:08
is resigning. He's the problem.
Resist Senator Atlante.
2:04:12
The senator edit later. Joe
Biden is unwell. He's unfit for
2:04:16
office. He's incoherent,
incapacitated and confused.
2:04:19
These are his words, offering
the chance to respond.
2:04:22
I think demand is a problem. And
I asked him
2:04:28
will you drop former President
Trump's China tariffs
2:04:31
we're discussing that right now.
We're looking at what are the
2:04:34
most positive to erase them? No
I didn't say that. I've asked
2:04:37
him I'm telling you we're
discussing it and no decision
2:04:40
made on American
2:04:47
brain concerned about it. Let's
move up. Alright, let's move out
2:04:54
to six off sheet. He took it out
on the next guy he kind of gross
2:05:00
did him a little bit, but the
first guy who gave that question
2:05:03
about unfit for office, you
should resign. That's pretty
2:05:07
cool. I like that. Just keep
that going. That's good. Well,
2:05:12
let's talk about resigning,
resetting, great resetting.
2:05:17
There's a number of things
taking place, which are quite
2:05:19
concerning. Maybe we should look
at just in general, certainly
2:05:22
United States where I think
we're, here's what I'm seeing.
2:05:27
It's taking place jobs are going
to start drying up. I've seen
2:05:31
it. I don't know if what you've
seen in California. But
2:05:34
everything I've heard in New
York as well. The marketing
2:05:38
budgets are done. People are
drastically cutting back on
2:05:42
marketing and advertising
budgets, which is I mean, there
2:05:46
are and this is how I know
because I used to be in the
2:05:48
business. They're advertising
and marketing firms that are
2:05:51
firing people. Like a lot of
them, like 30% cuts. I think
2:05:58
that's going to run right into
the people wanting to have jobs
2:06:04
after they had, you know, great
resignation. And hey, man, I, I
2:06:09
want to have I want to be a new
collar worker. Have you heard
2:06:12
this term? The new collar
worker?
2:06:15
No, but that's the show titled
Yes, it's
2:06:17
the you have the white collar
worker, you have the blue collar
2:06:19
worker. And then you have the
new collar worker. Well, there's
2:06:22
also a green collar worker,
2:06:24
and what is the green collar
worker?
2:06:26
What does anyone who works in
the environment? Inspectors
2:06:30
okay. And I don't know, that's
probably a brown color.
2:06:35
So the new collar is people who
work remotely. And you know,
2:06:39
we're seeing a lot of people
saying I'm really productive
2:06:42
this way that Apple just lost
one of their top top executives
2:06:46
in the in the artificial
intelligence realm. He said, I'm
2:06:51
not going back to that
spaceship. So then we have
2:06:54
another problem, which is the
supply chains. The infant
2:07:05
formula is interesting. In the
United States, there's story
2:07:10
after story, Bailey from Fox
News, but I it sounds true, I'm
2:07:15
getting messages from people
that there's problems getting
2:07:19
formula for babies in America.
2:07:21
I want you to continue this but
play this clip. This is Nora,
2:07:25
not Fox News. Nora it says all
right on baby foam.
2:07:31
Pray tonight amid a nationwide
shortage of baby formula. A
2:07:34
major supplier says it could be
back online within two weeks,
2:07:38
but it could take up to 10 weeks
for the formula to hit store
2:07:42
shelves. Abbott nutrition, which
makes several brands of formulas
2:07:45
as if the FDA signs off its
plant in Sturgis Michigan could
2:07:49
soon resume making Ella care and
Alimentum and Similac and other
2:07:53
formulas to follow supplies are
running low in more than half
2:07:57
the country.
2:07:58
So of course we have a lot of
moms who are producers of the no
2:08:02
agenda show Amy wrote in Adam I
haven't listened to yesterday so
2:08:05
this is early in the week. I'm
not I'm gonna I'm gonna let you
2:08:10
slide on this one that Amy
because usually when someone
2:08:13
says I'm surprised you haven't
done this yet. That's usually
2:08:18
reason for delete. I'll take it
from you.
2:08:22
I'm stunned
2:08:23
I'm stunned I'm shocked you guys
haven't talked about the baby
2:08:27
formula shortage yet apparently
is due to a combination of
2:08:31
supply chain issues and there
was a Similac formula recall
2:08:34
there you go. However,
interestingly, there does not
2:08:37
appear to be any issue with
formula availability in Canada
2:08:41
or Europe. I learned this info
anecdotally through a new moms
2:08:45
forum Oh yeah. The moms new moms
friends their online this very
2:08:49
important great support system.
My sisters were had mom friends
2:08:54
in the forums great thing for
moms on the moms forum and their
2:08:58
moms in both Canada and the UK
reporting they had zero issues
2:09:01
obtaining formula and some even
kindly offered to ship formula
2:09:05
here. Moms throughout the US
were reporting visiting multiple
2:09:08
stores and the shelves were
empty. I've also experienced
2:09:11
that here in Southern Oregon. So
this does come with a
2:09:15
coincidence. I mean, it's
amazing how these things happen.
2:09:20
But this this news article
crossed the transom. And Bill
2:09:25
Gates has invested in a company
that says lab produce breast
2:09:31
milk will be only about three
years away. human milk produced
2:09:36
in the lab by Bill Gates back
company may be available in
2:09:38
three to five years. Bio Milk
Milk, bio milk bi o MILQ. Bye Oh
2:09:50
milk What do you turn these kids
into q1 on? Bill it's always
2:09:55
these little coincidence I don't
know the the extent of his of
2:10:00
His investment in may be very
small, but it's always fun to
2:10:02
implicate him. And yes, it's
coke atom by the way he has
2:10:06
COVID. Did you hear that? He has
COVID?
2:10:08
Yes, he does. He has COVID After
being that in might destroy I
2:10:12
don't think I have this story in
here but the entire, with few
2:10:16
exceptions, almost everybody who
went to the White House
2:10:19
correspondents. Yes, you wrote
about that. Go? Yes, they got it
2:10:24
in the newsletter. They all have
COVID Which to me is hilarious
2:10:29
because they went because Biden
made a big fuss about them all
2:10:32
be being double taxed and
boosted. Because if you weren't
2:10:36
double bet Baxton boosted you
couldn't get in, and
2:10:39
they all got sick. So here's his
tweet, which is very similar to
2:10:45
ones we've seen from other
elite. It's an elite tweet. I've
2:10:48
tested. I've tested positive for
COVID. I'm experiencing mild
2:10:52
symptoms, and I'm following the
experts advice by isolating
2:10:55
until I'm healthy again. I'm
fortunate to be vaccinated and
2:10:59
boosted and I have access to
testing and great medical care.
2:11:03
Shut up.
2:11:06
My wife who has got the latest
version of COVID
2:11:10
she she's she's still suffering
and she better No, she's,
2:11:13
she's better, but she's not over
it. And she's on a yellow these
2:11:19
forums. Like you know, the moms
for mountain she's on that but
2:11:22
she's on you know, women are on
these chicks, chicks, chicks
2:11:26
chicks man. So she says that
other people have it and she's
2:11:31
compared notes. And she says her
symptoms are no different than
2:11:37
someone who has it who has been
double Vax than boosted. No
2:11:41
different what? None at all. No
difference at all. If she
2:11:44
goes to the hospital, you'll
know the difference.
2:11:48
But But Bill Gates Oh, yeah,
sure.
2:11:52
And kind of looping back to, to
supply chain. Now, in earlier
2:12:00
clips, you heard President
Biden's promise to the farmers
2:12:05
is he wants them to do triple
crops this year, and is going to
2:12:09
fund that which most farmers and
I've heard is like, I don't know
2:12:14
how good we're going to do,
because there's going to be a
2:12:16
shortage. So they're trying to,
you know, after the soybean
2:12:19
harvest, immediately ramped some
wheat in there, see if that
2:12:22
works. And just in case it
doesn't, he's going to give them
2:12:25
all insurance. So if they are
approaching financial ruin,
2:12:30
they'll get some insurance
stipend or something like that.
2:12:34
We have a note from a 29 year
old dairy farmer in Ontario,
2:12:40
Canada. And and with all the
talk of inflation and
2:12:43
manufactured food shortages
manufactured, nobody says that I
2:12:46
want to pass along some
information to Jeremy, our
2:12:49
government in Canada Navia has
placed a 35% tariff on
2:12:55
fertilizer imported from Russia.
First of all, that's mind
2:12:58
blowing. So it's already hard to
get anything from Russia and the
2:13:03
Canadian government puts a 35%
tax on it. Interesting. However,
2:13:11
we actually import about 55% of
certain fertilizers from Russia.
2:13:16
Sounds like a disaster. Most
farms is reduced
2:13:19
faster for the consumer who has
to pick up this tab. Oh, it gets
2:13:22
better Minister, you know that
gets passed along
2:13:24
gets better. Most farms as we do
pre order our fertilizer in the
2:13:29
winter, so we pre pay. So the
orders had been placed. The
2:13:33
money had been sent to Russia,
and the fertilizer was on a
2:13:37
barge. When this fertilizer got
to Canada the sanctions had been
2:13:41
placed. So for customs to up,
the sanctions had been placed.
2:13:45
For customs to allow the unload
of this fertilizer, the dealers
2:13:49
had to pony up the 35% Tariff to
get the fertilizer off the ship.
2:13:54
The money had already been sent
to Russia. So the tariff on this
2:13:56
fertilizer only negatively
affects affects our country's
2:13:59
food supply, those tariffs get
passed on to the farmer. And you
2:14:03
guessed it, of course they have
to get passed on to the
2:14:05
consumer. Not only are we paying
almost exactly double as we paid
2:14:09
last year, and we now add an
extra 10% On top of that is
2:14:15
unbelievable.
2:14:16
If you Why are leaders no this
2:14:19
is great reset. This is
purposeful. I'm just there's no
2:14:22
other way you can see this
people are not that stupid. It
2:14:26
has to be part of part of well,
let's listen to a most recent
2:14:31
interview with the man of the
hour Klaus Schwab to tell us
2:14:35
more.
2:14:36
So the form is becoming now it's
talking about
2:14:41
the World Economic Forum just
just so you know, it's really
2:14:44
it's really advanced. It's
really in a good place. I mean,
2:14:46
it's really positioned to take
the world and global governance
2:14:50
into the next chapter.
2:14:52
So the form is becoming now if I
look at the future, and our role
2:14:59
in See global governance system,
we will concentrate much more on
2:15:05
systems design for the future,
like Singapore is doing so on a
2:15:11
more national level, we are
doing it on a global level. So
2:15:14
we have defined 15 key systems
force the world for examples of
2:15:22
future, shaping the future
Trump's shaping the future of
2:15:28
digital industries, shaping the
future of the financial monetary
2:15:34
system, shaping the future of
health system, shaping the
2:15:38
future of socially inclusive
countries shaping the future
2:15:44
education and I could go on and
on anymore. It's like the second
2:15:51
Earl, it's the approach we are
taking what is missing in the
2:15:54
world is and how we position to
form is to be actually software
2:16:03
architecture for global
cooperation. So not we have
2:16:08
those 50 initiatives, but to
allow other organizations that
2:16:13
we had, for example, preliminary
discussions now with the World
2:16:16
Bank, or yesterday, and so on to
allow us organizations to put
2:16:20
their own projects on our
platform to create a much better
2:16:25
cooperation. And for this
reason, you may be interested,
2:16:29
we even have our own team
developing artificial
2:16:34
intelligence. Because when you
look at the global cooperate
2:16:40
when you look at global
cooperation to make a final
2:16:43
remark, it's completely
outdated. How does it function
2:16:47
it's it functions in a very
analog way. You have meetings
2:16:51
send you create commissions, you
have reports. So now after a
2:16:56
year, you have again a meeting.
That's ridiculous in the digital
2:16:59
age. Because the digital age
allows us to supplement let's
2:17:05
say some meetings which you
absolutely need to create a
2:17:10
atmosphere of confidence
2:17:12
supplementing your meetings with
artificial intelligence.
2:17:17
That guy's a maniac I don't know
why you you pay so much
2:17:20
attention to
2:17:21
I pay a lot of attention because
of the vast number of bankers
2:17:24
who were involved in the World
Economic Forum. These are not
2:17:27
just drinking clubs. These are
people who right off the top
2:17:30
change the financial system, the
global financial system, you
2:17:34
cannot argue that that hasn't
started to happen with Russia
2:17:37
being kicked out of Swift. Just
lots of shifts and moves being
2:17:41
made. What is the I mean, I had
to turn off DH unplugged,
2:17:45
because all it was is like
everything is down. Everything
2:17:47
is down 70% Everything is
crashing. We're not calling it a
2:17:51
crash of course. But if Apple
Apple 20% down yesterday, this
2:17:57
is the this is the reset.
2:17:59
It's called the market
fluctuation happens all the
2:18:02
time. Okay,
2:18:03
all right, good. Well, a lot of
people have not seen this market
2:18:06
fluctuation in their lives. Oh,
2:18:08
this is what this is the point
we make there's there is an
2:18:11
entire generation of investors.
Millennials specifically that
2:18:16
have never seen a real bull a
real bear market they've just
2:18:19
never seen when they've seen
these downturns they've seen
2:18:22
these great recessions they've
seen these ups and downs they've
2:18:25
seen all kinds of stuff, but
they have not seen a genuine
2:18:30
bear market where things just
never go up
2:18:37
well they're about to witness it
but this time this time is a
2:18:41
little different John it's a
little different with with the
2:18:44
amount of money that has been
created or saved or saved it's a
2:18:49
little different but okay,
2:18:51
now that guys the guys are
socialists and once it comes out
2:18:55
that this guy's unless they get
the they still haven't got
2:18:58
enough people to buy into the
socialist bowl crop.
2:19:02
What are you talking about?
Everyone's all in on it
2:19:05
that you're not allowed to
everyone what are you not in
2:19:08
everyone I'm
2:19:09
not important I'm almost 60 I
don't count anymore see
2:19:13
you're still pronouncing it
correctly this shows that do get
2:19:16
some going on pronouncing work
correctly. Important point all
2:19:22
right here is usually once you
start saying that then I'm done
2:19:25
I'll start believing these eight
these concepts
2:19:28
Okay. Enjoy being broke because
California and you know what
2:19:32
enjoyed death in California
okay, just enjoy dying at the
2:19:35
hands of these these freaks
2:19:37
Thursday morning everyone. We
begin with that fire emergency
2:19:39
overnight in Southern California
a brush
2:19:41
fire quickly spreading tearing
through a neighborhood a latest
2:19:45
evidence of the toll the climate
crisis is taking across the West
2:19:48
climate crisis
2:19:49
John that's the World Economic
Forum telling you you you're
2:19:51
gonna die in California. Oh,
what fire fire who needs fire?
2:19:54
We got water going.
2:19:55
I don't know why this morning.
The surprising news from
2:19:57
California despite the historic
drought out, the state is using
2:20:01
more water, not less water usage
grows 19% in March compared to
2:20:06
the same period in 2020. And now
unprecedented new water
2:20:09
restrictions are being imposed,
affecting 4 million people in
2:20:13
Southern California. We're
beginning next month, outdoor
2:20:16
watering will be limited to two
days per week,
2:20:18
we're three years into a major
drought. And the first three
2:20:23
months of this year were the
driest ever recorded in
2:20:26
California.
2:20:27
And the California Senate is
going one step further passing a
2:20:30
bill to limit indoor water
usage. Right now the state
2:20:33
standard for daily indoor usage
is 55 gallons per person. But
2:20:37
under the bill passed by the
Senate, that would be lowered to
2:20:40
42 gallons in the years.
2:20:43
How much more pain Do you want
to take? That's coming from
2:20:48
these eight holes.
2:20:50
You know, they just a big
scandal going on right now in
2:20:53
California news. They don't play
it nationally. But it was Gavin
2:20:57
Newsom, that cut 50% of the fire
prevention budget course. So you
2:21:04
can have these fires and then
blame him on global warming.
2:21:07
Is Gavin Newsom, a young global
leader of the World Economic
2:21:10
Forum? I would think so. No, he
is he is now this is not just
2:21:15
your problem. We have problems
too. We almost had to start
2:21:20
shutting down the grid in
Houston two days ago as prices
2:21:25
up to 1000s of dollars per
kilowatt hour only in Houston.
2:21:29
And there's a reason for it. And
this is this message is being
2:21:34
propagated everywhere for this
summer. Get ready for it. Also
2:21:38
in California. Your powers going
to get shut down course I have a
2:21:43
whole house generator
2:21:44
electric grid operators all
across the country warning of
2:21:46
potential blackouts this summer.
I know Jeff flock outside a
2:21:50
nuclear plant actually in
Pennsylvania. What's the problem
2:21:53
Jeff?
2:21:54
Shutting down too many plants,
nuke plants and coal fired
2:21:58
plants. Take a look at the
numbers on specifically coal
2:22:01
fired plants. In the next six
years across 14 states, we will
2:22:05
shut down at coal fired plants,
coal fired plants. And people
2:22:10
say we don't have enough new
generation coming online to
2:22:15
replace it. We talked to Dan
Turner who runs an organization
2:22:18
called power the future. He says
the answer to this crisis is
2:22:22
simple.
2:22:22
Any plans to remove nuclear
plants or coal power plants or
2:22:28
natural gas plants that are
slated to be closed that has to
2:22:32
be completely suspended? And
secondly, many coal plants and
2:22:35
nuclear plants can come back
online. They haven't been
2:22:38
they've maybe been turned off
and decommissioned. But they
2:22:41
haven't been been torn down. I
mean, this is the whole great
2:22:45
Reset Plan. This is what Europe
meant. I'm desperately trying to
2:22:49
get my kid to understand she
needs to leave Europe. It's
2:22:53
going to be horrible. And it's
all based on lies and removing
2:22:59
the best source for natural gas
2:23:09
and what's the good news?
2:23:10
The good news is there was a
prize winner for a documentary
2:23:15
about free speech that was asked
to speak in the European
2:23:20
Parliament. I don't have all the
details on this person. But this
2:23:26
person was introduced and of
course a you need a round of
2:23:29
applause for someone who who
produces such a just a fabulous
2:23:33
fabulous piece of documentary
about free speech. The
2:23:37
introduction is in German and
then you will hear this person
2:23:39
speak he had an auction called
lapses.
2:24:00
Yes, that was the entire
acceptance speech.
2:24:08
People have lost their minds.
2:24:10
So is that somebody a protege of
Yoko Ono that won the award? I
2:24:15
think it's someone who looked at
the at the the liberal in the
2:24:18
green hat. You know, the classic
when Trump got elected.
2:24:25
That's Berlin the green hat,
2:24:27
the one who's the meme
underneath.
2:24:31
Oh, she's wearing a green
jacket. She's wearing a mag hat
2:24:34
a mag hat.
2:24:34
Okay, well that's the one I
think I think
2:24:37
that's no she's always screw
she's screaming now. Okay,
2:24:43
here's a little piece of news. I
don't know why but the
2:24:45
mainstream didn't really play
this up too much and I'm not
2:24:48
absolutely sure why but let's
play it. So we at least have it
2:24:51
in our
2:24:53
Okay, can I guess which one can
I just pick a random clip and
2:24:55
guess this is where you're going
to talk about
2:24:57
Okay, now to the Philippines
where was Got it? Yep. Down to
2:25:04
the Philippines where the son of
former dictator Ferdinand Marcos
2:25:07
appears to have locked up the
presidential election. With 97%
2:25:11
of the ballots counted, Marcos
won more than 30 million votes.
2:25:15
The closest contender the
current vice president has about
2:25:18
15 million boxing legend and
Christian Senator Manny Pacquiao
2:25:21
has the third highest total with
three and a half million
2:25:24
protesters marched in Manila
denouncing the unofficial
2:25:28
results. One leader said they're
outraged over a political system
2:25:31
that would allow the air of an
exiled dictator to become
2:25:34
president.
2:25:36
Yeah, this is uh, I mean, I
don't think anyone really
2:25:38
covered this much.
2:25:39
No, not much. Why is his name
Bong Bong I still figured that
2:25:43
out. His name is Bong Bong him
our goat.
2:25:45
No ID is that like bunga bunga
parties that
2:25:49
manga, manga, manga, manga
parties.
2:25:53
Very weird. But I mean it's,
it's,
2:25:59
it looks like his dad, too is
what's interesting about it.
2:26:02
Maybe a
2:26:02
little just quick history for
those who don't understand the
2:26:05
Marcos background. I'm ago
2:26:07
they elected president this guy,
Ferdinand Marcos, he became
2:26:10
something of a dictator. And he
sold the country blind just
2:26:14
basically said, billions and
billions of dollars overseas.
2:26:18
And then after they found out he
was just ripping everyone off.
2:26:21
They said, killing him. They
kind of just kicked him out of
2:26:25
the country. And then his wife
took over Imelda Marcos and she
2:26:30
ran the country into the ground.
And she was notorious for having
2:26:34
something like, I don't know.
100,000 pairs of shoes. Yeah.
2:26:38
And she had this big closet. The
closet was like, a warehouse
2:26:43
full of shoes to choose from,
2:26:44
what year what year did they
rain?
2:26:47
That's a good question. You
should look it up. But let's
2:26:49
look get it right. So I would
look it up on the wiki. Wiki
2:26:53
wiki. Okay, Marcos.
2:26:56
I have a feeling this might be
1970s. I might be crazy. But
2:27:01
probably are correct. Is would
be my guess if I'm just gonna
2:27:04
guess. As part of the 70 said,
2:27:08
Yes. And I have have something
to say about this. But what do
2:27:12
you what did you get? No, I
wasn't looking. I thought you
2:27:15
were looking at? Oh, no, I
2:27:16
wish I thought you were looking.
I'm looking now. You
2:27:19
said you were looking it up. No,
I
2:27:21
said we should look it up. Okay.
Well, we should look at it as I
2:27:24
got it. So Ferdinand Marcos,
2:27:28
Aedes, I think.
2:27:30
Okay. He Oops, no. He was rain
from no from 6502 86. So he was
2:27:42
in 20 years. So he, his main
years were the 70s. Yes,
2:27:46
the martial law was from 72
until 81. Ha, go figure 70s
2:27:53
Repeat. And something you said
would never happen was just
2:27:57
announced in Central Park this
summer. The disc Oasis, a 70s
2:28:03
theme roller disco experience.
2:28:06
Do we already do a clip on this?
No,
2:28:09
no. I said there will be roller
disco and you said
2:28:13
no. Didn't we just do a clip on?
It's like about four shows ago I
2:28:16
got it from NPR. They were
talking about this woman who had
2:28:19
this roller blade thing in Los
Angeles and they opened it up in
2:28:22
Central Park and Sam in New York
City. And it's called the same
2:28:26
thing she her Club was I don't
know do we have their clip? They
2:28:31
don't have a debit. This is not
a short this is a few shows
2:28:34
back?
2:28:35
I thought you said it wasn't
gonna happen. No, no,
2:28:38
i we i played a clip of it
actually happening
2:28:41
in real time.
2:28:45
Just the opposite of what you
Oh, well, I
2:28:48
apologize that because you
accuse I apologize. I apologize.
2:28:54
We want to sneak in some quick
COVID Before we get to the
2:28:56
break.
2:28:59
I don't really I do have I want
to play some before we do that.
2:29:04
I think I just want to get some
China stuff out of the way and
2:29:07
then you can do your because
there's a big beef going on.
2:29:12
Okay, is this about the May if
that was the May 22. World
2:29:16
Health Organization when they
take over all of our our health
2:29:22
authority for the entire world
2:29:24
do not take it over from China.
The head of
2:29:28
the World Health Organization is
calling out Beijing's zero
2:29:31
COVID-19 policy describing it as
unsustainable. He's pushing
2:29:35
China to shift its course on
virus handling. But the comments
2:29:39
have stirred both anger and what
looks like a new wave of
2:29:42
censorship from Beijing. Let's
take a look.
2:29:45
The head of the World Health
Organization or W H O appears to
2:29:49
be getting censored in China.
That's after he made comments
2:29:52
questioning the country's zero
COVID-19 policy
2:29:56
when we talk about the zero
COVID IT strategy. We don't
2:30:03
think that it's sustainable
considering the behavior of the
2:30:05
virus now and what we anticipate
in the future.
2:30:09
Tedros made the comments during
a media briefing on Tuesday,
2:30:13
they mark a rare case of
division between the W H O and
2:30:16
Chinese policies, and China's
two largest social media
2:30:19
platforms, weibo and wechat seem
to be censoring them, a Weibo
2:30:24
hashtag featuring Tedros. His
name has also been censored,
2:30:27
along with images of his face.
Social media reports say a
2:30:31
related article has been blocked
on WeChat and unable to be
2:30:34
shared. Beijing responded to the
who during a news briefing the
2:30:38
following day, officials called
Tedros his comments
2:30:42
irresponsible, Beijing's
disagreement with the W H O
2:30:46