0:00
Huh, she's done the hard work
and read it. Adam curry, John C.
0:05
Dvorak.
0:06
It's Thursday, May 19 2022. This
is your award winning keep on
0:09
Asian media assassination
episode 1452. This is no agenda,
0:15
celebrating three out of seven
and broadcasting live from the
0:18
heart of the Texas hill country
here in FEMA Region number six
0:21
in the morning, everybody. I'm
Adam curry, and from
0:24
Northern Silicon Valley where
the nearby Oakland terminal is
0:29
dumping tons of Chinese products
in our lap. I'm John Cedarburg,
0:35
buzzkill
0:37
Oh, really? Oh, really? Now you
guys get all the Chinese crap
0:42
it's just pouring in I'm
watching the train go by that's
0:46
been started some time way
before we started talking before
0:50
we began the show still going
0:52
and what can you tell what's on
it? Or is it just boxcars of
0:55
Chinese whether these cargo
containers they're just
0:59
different vendors? The last one
just went by I went to Taiwan
1:03
each
1:03
wonder what they had. I wonder
what they carry junk? We need
1:09
chips man. Are they sending
chips? That's what we use some
1:12
chips in there. I doubt there's
any chips in there. undoubted
1:16
there's no chips. Well, it was
three years ago today, John that
1:20
we saw each other for the last
time in person that we were in
1:23
the same room at the same time.
Where was this at my wedding?
1:28
Ah, today is a year anniversary.
Yes. Today's
1:32
is the keeper Korean the keepers
three year anniversary. That's
1:35
right. And we never had a fight.
1:39
Night but I believe that's true.
Exactly. You're always so lovey
1:43
dovey, you
1:43
know, aren't we the worst?
1:46
Disgusting time?
1:49
Well, we had a lovey dovey
little trip to Charleston, South
1:52
Carolina, which was quite nice.
Ah,
1:55
yes, give us a report.
1:57
Wow, man, I unfortunately
everyone agrees that you
2:01
probably won't like most of the
report. Who and
2:07
why would that be? Why would I
not like or dislike or not like
2:12
a report like this?
2:13
Because travel went smoothly? Oh
no, good. That's what I that's
2:23
exactly what everybody said. Oh
man. Jonelle hate that. You
2:27
know, it was so nice. We went to
San Antonio, who flew out of San
2:30
Antonio which is a little under
an hour from from where we live.
2:35
Boom went to Nashville Varane
the next flight within 35
2:39
minutes boom arrived. Perfect.
Southwest Thank you. Well, you
2:44
know, Southwest, they had
invested a lot of money in in
2:48
new routes. And they had to make
some changes with the, with the
2:51
crew, but mainly the pilot
shortage by and some bullshit
2:55
weather problems that everyone
seems to have. But they fixed
2:59
it. So you know, they have
dropped I think 10 or 12% of
3:02
their routes and so everything
they're doing is smooth. And
3:06
that was that was nice.
3:08
Anyway, it was one of the best
run airlines in the world.
3:11
I agree. Every single to end the
spread. I just love the boarding
3:15
process. I can't help myself. I
love it. It's like the number
3:18
one thing everyone sits in the
same class. But you can you can
3:21
for 15 bucks you can board
sooner and makes you feel good.
3:25
Well 15 Not always 15
3:29
Yeah, the early board the early
bird special you can you can get
3:32
your earlier in line.
3:33
It doesn't isn't that business
or used to I've seen business
3:36
that's that's business select.
Yeah, that's different. Yeah,
3:38
you're guaranteed a friend.
3:40
And and if business select is
handy if your airport has a
3:45
premium traveler line through
TSA because the Southwest
3:50
business select qualifies for
that. But it's significantly
3:54
more expensive. So we just had
the early bird, the early bird
3:57
special, which was fantastic. So
have you you've been to
4:02
Charleston, I'm guessing in your
life.
4:05
I went through it once.
4:07
How do you just go through it?
Where were we on your way to
4:10
was on my way?
4:12
Somewhere else somewhere else?
That I know I'd been there on
4:16
the Hot Pockets to where we're
probably not further as the
4:18
campground because we were you
know, had the this was 24 2011
4:24
and I not sure I actually saw
much of of Charleston itself but
4:28
wow, what a nice little city
4:31
is considered the best prettiest
city in the country. No doubt
4:34
about it. So we had the me
Savannah comes close to being
4:38
better as a distant second.
4:41
It was really quite quite. Yeah,
just really enjoyable. I'll give
4:46
you a little rundown of the trip
and the meet up if that's okay,
4:49
just to get everyone up to speed
4:54
that Austin's all gay, you know,
4:56
there's no I was very little gay
in Charleston. You know, we did
5:01
see a lot of Ukraine Flags over
Charleston,
5:05
very Ukrainian
5:07
actually I learned why or part
of its of course, virtue
5:11
signaling. But Charleston, you
know, the Civil War started
5:17
there. They wouldn't even call
it the Civil War. But they're
5:20
they're all about rebels and
resistance.
5:23
Most Civil War actually started
Fort Sumter. Correct?
5:28
Right. That's the you can see it
from Charleston. Yeah, yeah. And
5:34
the same still shooting over and
and the fans of the fort will
5:38
fly different flags. Any rebel
flag like you know, Northern
5:42
Ireland, they'll fly any flag so
they are flying the Ukrainian
5:47
flag from time to time and I
think that that goes this is
5:49
what I was. We had a great tour.
5:51
Have you ever flown the North
Korean flag that's kind of rebel
5:54
might be I'll ask. So we got a
let me run it down. And then
6:00
I'll and I'll tell you how we
got to that note, first of all
6:03
Dame Jennifer organized with
with Tina, Tina organizing the
6:08
the away crew from from Texas
Dame Jennifer did a phenomenal
6:13
job. And she and of course
Patrick Coble, Duke of the South
6:18
Metis at the hotel, and we got
like a full blown Rockstar
6:21
treatment. It was almost
embarrassing. Charleston place
6:25
beautiful hotel. And one of Dame
Jennifer's friends Margo, I
6:30
think she's manager where she
managed she a manager at the
6:34
hotel. And so she pulled all
kinds of cool strings for us. He
6:37
had a great room. And it was
just, again, rock star
6:41
treatment. Fantastic. We got in
had a little time to just turn
6:45
around, freshen up. Then we went
to lunch, which I think was at a
6:49
place called the cotton. I'm not
quite sure if that's what it
6:52
was. And this was a small
exclusive lunch. John with pre
6:55
selected people who could be
there. This was very nice. Let
7:00
me tell you he was at the table.
We got of course Dame Jennifer
7:03
we have Sir Patrick. Roger
roundy with DC girl. We had
7:11
Jimmy gouttes and his wife Pete
You know, Jimmy is the hollow
7:14
book. Hollow Book Guy.
7:17
NUS bound and DC girls seem to
be hanging around a lot.
7:21
They seem to be quite committed
to each other. Yeah, that's all
7:27
I know. Yes, they they hang out
a lot together. It was nice to
7:31
meet roundy is is a fun guy.
Have you met him?
7:35
No, I've talked to him. I've
never met him. I will. I've met
7:37
him by talking to him. I've
never know. So he
7:41
he he made some beautiful T
shirts actually some mo facts T
7:45
shirts that he brought for me.
Dan keybox around with with his
7:51
Dame Jennifer had everywhere
printed signs printed menus for
7:55
the lunch beautiful badges for
everybody. It was calligraphy. I
7:59
think roundy might have even
designed you know, some of the
8:02
some of the signage. It was it
was just mind blowing how good
8:07
this was. And Roger roundy his
badge he had a QR code. He's
8:11
like, Hey, if you want some T
shirts scan this code. He's He's
8:16
a commercial artists which was
fun to see. So Nussbaum was
8:19
there. Councilwoman McKenzie
Kelly from Austin came out with
8:24
with Brian Skelton. Also, Tom
Blomqvist was there. Tom
8:30
Blomqvist, the guy who wrote my
swampthing episode and was the
8:34
showrunner. So we we got some I
got to bitched at him about that
8:37
blato statement. If you recall
the law remember it now it's the
8:42
line we're Oh man. I'm sorry. I
was totally blocked. Oh, I
8:45
remember arguing was you said
8:46
blood blood lotto movie. Yeah,
that's because the kids say
8:51
Yeah, exactly. And that's what
he reiterated. So then we went
8:57
to the event and the event was
at at the thing was called the
9:04
American. I see the royal
American. So you know, thanks to
9:10
John Kenny, the owner, Joe West.
GM took good care of everybody.
9:15
We had our own area. John with a
velvet rope. This is how good
9:20
this was. Tina and I arrived, we
get the velvet rope opens we go
9:25
past you know there's there's
drinks in this just you know,
9:29
and people just start streaming
in Dame Jennifer has no stops
9:33
everyone at the velvet rope.
Donations, write it down. She
9:36
had forms for people to fill
out. Everything was managed
9:42
perfectly. And, you know, this.
This was a little different. I
9:47
know Tina didn't have the same.
Well, she would know the
9:51
experience that I have. But
maybe you'll understand when I
9:54
say that this meetup had kind of
a startup vibe to it. You know
9:59
when you have your own Start up
and you're like 25 or 50 people
10:02
now this was well over 100. But
10:05
I know exactly what you mean.
Kind of a douche bag quality.
10:10
Oh, that's not what I mean.
That's not exactly what a
10:13
startup was. I know it. No, no.
Yeah, no. Yeah. Very young group
10:19
it all Jack no
10:21
the wild there Jack because it
was, first of all, it's not a
10:24
very young group. It was as
diverse as you can imagine. old,
10:28
young, gay, straight black
brown, invalid, valid. different
10:36
nationalities. Everything you
can imagine was that people came
10:39
from quite far Pennsylvania.
Bill came from North Carolina.
10:44
Oh my goodness. We had a spook
an actual spook. Who was he had
10:48
admitted spoke. Yes. Well, he, I
forget his name. Well, it's
10:52
probably better. I don't tell
you his name. And he had his MIT
10:54
t shirt on and someone said this
guy is actually a spook and I
10:57
said, Oh, MIT Of course. Yep.
I'm the spook. So we identified
11:01
the spook, I'm sure there are
about 10 more. Most people there
11:04
have some coming from Virginia
in particular
11:06
if you're in Virginia yet if for
every 20 members of the meetup
11:10
you have at least one books
Yeah, he had three at least Yeah
11:13
At least someone with with with
clearance,
11:17
or was clearance a spook
wannabes grip clearance.
11:22
But what I mean by the startup
vibe is it was very people very
11:25
excited. Like we were building
something new. Like we're doing
11:28
something together. It was it
was just it had something a
11:31
little bit different than other
meetups. So that was just it's
11:35
hard to explain it's also has to
do with Dame Jennifer because
11:38
you know when you when you have
a startup you have always have a
11:41
couple of people in the
organization who really make it
11:44
all work and bring it all
together. And that's what she
11:48
was doing
11:48
this otherwise used to get fired
first.
11:51
So just a couple people who were
there of note phone boy and
11:55
Phoenix DJ power boy, a lot of
colorful people. I'll tell you
11:59
many, many colorful people.
Couple of you know Tina, she
12:04
ain't she DMS on Instagram with
all kinds of dudes. So I've met
12:08
one of them Salvador. Very
intelligent funny people.
12:13
Fall back guys.
12:15
Fall back guys. Meet us and
Leila from Fun Fact Friday,
12:19
we're there. My goodness, who
else do we have? So many so many
12:29
to think of anyway, we'll even
get the some of those in the
12:32
donations now the next day. We
decided to stay an extra day.
12:38
Because it was Dame Jennifer's
birthday on the 17th. And we had
12:41
a dinner in her honor that
evening. But she had arranged a
12:44
tour with David Gwen Vaughn, who
is married to Margot from the
12:48
restaurant. You see how it works
in the small towns. And he has
12:51
something called 1670 tours.com.
And he took us on a two and a
12:56
half hour walking tour of
Charleston. And the weather was
12:59
perfectly 80 degrees. i There's
I learned a lot of stuff. First
13:04
of all, Dame Jennifer is a
celebrity and Charlson there's
13:07
no doubt about that, everyone.
Oh, Jennifer. Oh, yeah.
13:10
Jennifer. Just the architecture
is just phenomenal. It's really
13:17
interesting to see how many of
these you have to kind of be
13:25
there to understand how just how
beautiful it really is. I
13:28
learned something that was
unexpected. You know, this is
13:31
where the AME Church shooting
was that Obama went to if you
13:37
recall, that was was that
2015 2016 This is the this is
13:44
when Obama sang Amazing Grace.
Yes, which of course we
13:49
ridiculed a lot.
13:51
But he can sing Dawn well what I
learned was
13:56
that so the community the AME
Church when when this shooting
14:01
went down they said you know
what? Keep Sharpton out, we
14:05
don't want Jesse Jackson, we're
gonna we're gonna solve it. And
14:08
when you when you walk around
Charleston, it's a very small
14:11
community, because we're going
to solve this ourselves within
14:14
within the community. We don't
want outsiders coming in. And
14:20
Obama coming into the AME Church
and of course he was politicking
14:25
and virtue signaling and doesn't
really even have the historical
14:29
background to sing that song but
it was for the people they're
14:33
very healing and I felt a little
when he when David told the
14:36
story I felt a little bad about
the risk if we think it's okay
14:41
to ridicule Obama but in general
that was kind of seen as a good
14:44
thing. And a nice dinner with
with Dame Jennifer and and
14:52
Mackenzie Kelly and Brian that
evening and then we came home
14:55
the next day was without a doubt
a fantastic trip. We really had
15:00
a good time.
15:03
Well, I was here I stayed home
and we did.
15:08
You we did
15:09
that summarizes my two three
days now. Okay,
15:12
well, how did the weeding go?
Well, you
15:15
gotta get these foxtails out.
15:19
Well, there was one very
disturbing statement that I
15:23
learned this was on the way on
the on the way there. We learned
15:28
that the Eurovision Song Contest
was rigged.
15:37
The voter in
15:38
the voting was rigged. Admitted
admitted it was rigged. I
15:43
thought they always admitted it.
No, they never admitted like
15:46
this
15:47
is the first time they've
admitted it. That must be some
15:49
reason for that.
15:51
Well, of course, because Ukraine
really had to win and the UK who
15:55
never or rarely ever, when they
were number two, they probably
15:58
would have would have cleansed
it. This was a big problem for
16:01
the UK. But Romania is the one
who blew it open by claiming
16:07
Eurovision changed their vote in
order to give first place to
16:10
Ukraine. And as it turns out,
the European broadcast union
16:15
said, Well, we had noticed,
quote, irregular voting
16:19
patterns, which forced them to
replay scores from six
16:24
countries, Azerbaijan, Georgia,
Montenegro, Poland, Romania and
16:29
San Marino,
16:30
just a reflection of the 2020
elections.
16:34
In order to comply with the
voting instructions of the
16:36
competition, the EBU
collaborated with its voting
16:39
partner to calculate a
replacement aggregate result for
16:44
each country concerned both for
the second semi final and for
16:48
the grand final calculated on
the basis of the results of
16:51
other countries with a similar
voting history. Okay, so they
16:58
just said we don't we think this
is we don't like the way people
17:01
are voting. So we're going to
recalculate your votes. This is
17:06
this is what they did with the
Lisbon Treaty. This is this is
17:09
what they do over there. Well,
it's the theme of the EU it's
17:13
and it's not just the EU, of
course, because other countries
17:15
are in it, but it's where's the
outrage where the riots in the
17:20
streets? Nothing, nothing gets
people on the streets anymore.
17:24
Not even this not even ruining
their entertainment.
17:28
Yeah, you gotta get see what
who's What's the latest on tick
17:31
tock? Yeah, exactly.
17:33
Exactly. Actually, there is. I
want to do this now because it's
17:41
important. I did have some got
some bad news on returning from
17:46
the clip custodian. This was
this was a real cut rancher. So
17:53
He has two sons. And you'll
recall the clip custodian
17:55
started producing and sending
and clips about two years ago,
17:58
and he's done quite a lot of
clips for the show. And he at
18:03
the time was a custodian and he
quit his job he he was inspired
18:08
by the show to homeschool his
kids inspired to become an
18:12
entrepreneur. He's for two years
he's been selling his plants at
18:16
at farmer's markets, and it's
going really well. And
18:21
devastating. He says his
youngest son Seamus was
18:24
diagnosed with AML acute
leukemia, like all of a sudden.
18:30
And he lives in Mobile, Alabama.
And so I just wanted to pass
18:35
this message along because, you
know, this is could be a long
18:39
haul for them. And luckily, they
have Ronald McDonald House
18:42
Charities working with him and
so everyone's doing everything
18:45
they can. But what would be very
welcome and I I sent him a note
18:50
about this. He said all prayers,
karma, good thoughts would be
18:54
tremendous. If I could ask get
mo nation to do that. He told
18:59
Seamus, that as I told him that
hundreds of 1000s of people will
19:04
be sending their love prayers
positive energy and young Seamus
19:07
eight years old says he just
wants to be healthy not to be
19:11
able to fly he says don't give
too many prayers because
19:14
miracles sometimes will give
more than I would need so
19:17
everyone could think of him as
just crap. So
19:23
um, that has to do survive that
one of the famous comedians who
19:26
now has a show on Showtime as a
comedian from Saturday Night
19:31
Live and she was a childhood
leukemia survivor and she's
19:34
great.
19:35
Oh, no, i i This is not a this
has not given up at all, you
19:39
know? Absolutely. Especially
because you know, these things
19:43
these two boys were homeschooled
to that day in general. I think
19:46
they're pretty healthy but now
you know, she's learning about
19:49
nature and all kinds of stuff so
of course we will be sending all
19:53
the good vibes to shave Seamus
Jones.
19:56
Well, while on the let's add a
little good news that I love you
20:00
A little light heartedness
started off with the with the
20:03
George W. Bush.
20:06
Yes, this is fantastic. There
was only his
20:09
little speech. Yeah. And
20:11
where was the speech? This was
Was he that he did this?
20:16
It was one of these like a
veteris opera Orion thing,
20:19
right.
20:21
The result is an absence of
checks and balances in Russia.
20:25
And the decision of one man to
launch a wholly unjustified and
20:32
brutal invasion of Iraq. I mean
of Ukraine. Correct. Anyway. 75
20:42
Yeah. The the audience response
is what got me on that? Where
20:47
was the? Where was the gasp of
horror?
20:52
I know where it was. They were
half asleep.
20:57
Yeah. Well, they started to
laugh after the did he also say
21:00
also Iraq after that, that I
hear him say that?
21:03
No, he didn't say he said he
said
21:07
No, listen, Asian of Iraq. I
mean of Ukraine. Correct.
21:12
Anyway, he says Iraq to anyway,
that's exactly what he said.
21:16
No, he didn't say right to he
said. He said Iraq to begin
21:19
with. Why would he say Iraq to
21:21
you tell me what he's saying.
Right here. Listen, and brutal
21:24
invasion of Iraq? I mean, of
Ukraine. Correct. Anyway, right
21:30
there. He says Iraq to
21:31
know. He said it kind of sounded
like I think what he said was
21:36
invasion of Iraq,
21:37
and Ukraine. He says, I mean,
it's crazy.
21:41
But then he stopped and said
Ukraine, and then he said to
21:44
himself, Iraq, like you know,
raka
21:47
Listen, he's saying Iraq to I
have it on my headphones.
21:50
Why would he say why would he?
Because he doesn't give
21:53
a shit. Because these people
don't care. They don't care.
21:57
That's why he would say that.
Listen. Anyway, Iraq to anyway.
22:02
He's trying to play it off. As
the you don't hear a rock to
22:08
write anyway.
22:10
Well, I don't know what he's
directed. Just a gang. All
22:12
right. Great. Well, regardless,
shame on everybody. Five, which
22:16
I think is a lame excuse. Very
ageist,
22:18
extremely ageist. And he's
right, lame. Excuse. Lame. Yeah,
22:24
but that's it. Your question was
the right one. These people
22:28
don't care. They think it's
hilarious. Whoever was there?
22:34
No, they're not. Yes, there will
probably. I'm guessing it was a
22:38
dinner speech. And they're half
in the bag. Yeah, that too.
22:44
Yeah. I don't know. It's but he
also makes jokes about, hey, I'm
22:48
still looking for those weapons
of mass destruction. And it's
22:51
also supposed to be funny. Yeah.
And these people don't care. I
22:57
was interesting. Tina was when
we were given Scotland, Scott
23:00
Atlas, his book, and Dr. Scott
Atlas called a plague upon our
23:04
house, where he writes about
this ties into the elites where
23:08
he writes about his time in the
White House during the COVID
23:12
pandemic. And I guess he had
like, you know, 130 days he was
23:16
contracted to work and he's very
candid and open about how
23:20
everything went behind the
scenes, man. It's worth reading
23:24
this because it's just Jared
Kushner, who really was a
23:28
gatekeeper. You know, he had to
blow Jared Kushner to get a
23:32
meeting with Trump and all that
kind of stuff. But the the main
23:36
eye opener, it's not Fauci,
Fauci was not the guy, you know,
23:41
who really got us into lockdowns
and all of this mask wearing in
23:45
the sense of social distancing,
you know who what, which one
23:47
person went to every single
governor and was continuously on
23:51
the road? propagandizing this
Burks Birx key points their
23:56
favorite. She was my favorite
for about a week until I figured
24:00
out she was no good. Yeah, she's
the one. And you know, it's all
24:07
over the book that she she's
evil. Very interesting. I didn't
24:13
expect to read that.
24:16
The scarves were a giveaway.
24:19
They kind of were very ugly this
tournament or Lady very elitist
24:22
ever. Now. This is the number
one emailed question. Everyone
24:27
is asking me about this. We have
discussed it to some degree. And
24:31
finally, I think I can give some
answers. This is the May 22 to
24:36
26th meeting where the
international health regulations
24:40
will be amended and the World
Health Organization will take
24:43
over the world. We will no
longer be sovereign. Have you
24:49
heard this?
24:52
Yeah, people keep running it by
me too.
24:55
But I think I have some answers
in the form of two clips. Now
25:00
I'm in the European Union, I
think, yeah, you actually are in
25:05
trouble out there. This is
Christine Anderson. She's a
25:09
European Union parliamentarian,
your colleagues,
25:12
you might not be aware, but the
abolition of democracy by the
25:16
global elites continues. On
March 3, the EU Commission was
25:20
authorized by the council to
renegotiate the treaty with a
25:23
World Health Organization on
behalf of the member states.
25:26
Under the guise of improving
global pandemic response. The
25:30
plan is to allow the WH o
disease executive governance
25:33
powers of the member states, in
a case of a pandemic, granting
25:37
government powers to non elected
body as the exact opposite of
25:41
democratic recourse and takes
away any possibility for the
25:45
people to hold officials
accountable. This amounts to no
25:49
less than Disenfranchising the
people, we, as elected
25:54
representatives by the people,
for the people must not allow
25:57
this to happen. I am imploring
you do what you were elected to
26:02
do, look into this and protect
the rights of the people, the
26:06
people you were elected by to
act in their best interest. And
26:11
to all the people in Europe, I
would like to say, start acting
26:15
now write to your MEP s, let
them know you will not tolerate
26:20
to be stripped of your rights to
democratic recourse, let them
26:24
know that any MEP is supporting
this or voting for this will not
26:28
ever get your vote again.
26:32
So it's a very subtle change
that is taking place. But it
26:36
does allow, in this case, Ted
Ross, who the executive director
26:41
of the World Health horse health
course, the world, the world
26:43
horse organization, it allows it
does allow him to claim the
26:47
pandemic or a country to be
contaminated. And to call in all
26:53
resources necessary, I don't
know flying black, black
26:56
helicopters, whatever people are
thinking of, in the European
27:00
Union, I think that's actually
possible because the European
27:03
Union, the parliament has pretty
much no power is just that just
27:07
there look fancy and to bitch
and moan, you know, I think this
27:10
may be a done deal in the EU. In
the US this is the question I
27:14
had is how does this work? Do we
not have mechanisms for this to
27:20
you know, we don't just you
know, we the President doesn't
27:23
just sign something with the
World Health Organization, and
27:26
then all of a sudden, they
determine what happens. And so
27:29
get hit.
27:30
First of all, it has it tougher
to be anything to do with our
27:33
sovereignty, it has to be a
treaty because treaties to
27:36
impact our sovereignty, they
always have they always will.
27:39
Yes. And I believe that this is
a treaty. Yeah. And
27:43
so it will impact our
sovereignty. So does the web I
27:45
think more onerous, or
operationalize the WTO? Well,
27:49
before
27:49
we go WTO,
27:51
when we go on WTO, I'm just
saying,
27:55
how will the WTO? Well, anyway,
to understand how this may or
28:00
may not affect the United
States, we turn to Viva fry with
28:04
Robert Barnes. I could not
imagine two more perfect
28:07
gentlemen to discuss the
legality of this. And they do
28:10
quite well do so quite
eloquently. What the hell is
28:13
going on with the who? And I
tried to look into it? I mean, I
28:18
think I understand. I know what
crew that's funny. What's going
28:21
on?
28:22
Who I just thought I could hear
the opening to two or three of
28:26
their songs.
28:27
Quite who were What the hell is
going on with the who? And I
28:32
tried to look into Griffin?
That's exactly what he's doing.
28:36
Yeah, you finally got it. It's a
steal. We reference what is
28:40
going on who the who I think I
understand what's going on that
28:43
they're going to establish a
global pandemic response to
28:47
signatory nations. And it would
seem that a lot of nations have
28:51
become signatories to this. Do
you want to elaborate on the
28:54
details of what's going on?
28:56
Yeah. So what's still
misunderstood, is there's a
29:00
belief out there that the Biden
administration is lobbying the
29:03
World Health Organization to
adapt a range of rules governing
29:07
its members, that would empower
the World Health Organization to
29:12
centralize responses to a
pandemic. Now, those rule
29:17
changes are not legally binding
on the United States until a
29:21
treaty is proposed to the United
States Senate. We join the World
29:25
Health Organization, just kind
of as you know, an organization
29:28
designated by the United Nations
by a joint resolution in
29:32
Congress, not by treaty. So
there's no legally binding. This
29:36
is why Trump was just going to
unilaterally withdraw from it
29:38
and was on pace to do so before
the election fornication of
29:43
November 2020. So even if these
rule changes pass that the Biden
29:47
administration is trying to push
through, they do not become
29:50
legally binding on the United
States until unless a treaty.
29:53
Now they're talking about taking
these rules and conforming them
29:57
into a treaty and proposing that
treaty, but that is still
30:01
several years by their own
timetable away from happening.
30:05
And in fact, multiple countries
have said they're not interested
30:08
in delegating power that type to
the World Health Organization.
30:11
So there's a desire for it to
occur. But there's been a lot of
30:14
overreaction in some parts of
the political universe, because
30:18
they think it's politically
binding. It is not it is not any
30:22
statement, you see that says
politically binding is either
30:24
someone that's in good faith
that's misunderstood it or
30:27
somebody that's in bad faith is
trying to miss portray it,
30:29
whichever the case may be. It's
not legally binding until a
30:32
treaty passes, that requires two
thirds consent of the Senate and
30:36
has to go to the Office of Legal
Counsel and has to go through
30:39
the State Department, it has to
reach multiple levels of review
30:41
before it's even proposed to the
United States Senate, then the
30:45
United States Senate has to
debate on it, and more than two
30:47
thirds have to approve it for it
to become binding law.
30:50
There we go. Exactly what we
thought, good. So no worries,
30:55
everybody in America, he you
bend over, bend over, you guys
31:01
might want to start rioting or
something.
31:03
You know, I have a second,
second dimension to this too.
31:08
Okay. America signs, treaties.
And we violate treaties
31:12
commonly, I mean, our history is
just to the American Indians,
31:16
which are all protected by
treaty. That's true. And so the
31:19
treaty thing is like, yeah, I
don't think we're given we will
31:23
give up our sovereignty for one
thing or another. And I think
31:25
the World Trade Organization is
a fairly good example where we
31:28
do it voluntarily but by I
believe that's a treaty. But,
31:33
and I think we're happy to do
it. Because we think we can run
31:36
the place. But generally
speaking, and I think people get
31:40
worked up over nothing
sometimes. Yeah,
31:42
that's why I want to get this
out of the way immediately,
31:45
people just flipping out about
it everyone's time. May 22.
31:49
We're all gonna die.
31:51
Yeah, I've since we began this
show. People have been talking
31:55
about the blue helmets coming
into the United States. And I
32:00
Chicago,
32:01
Chicago, no less. And distri.
Now what?
32:05
What is it? dysentery,
dysentery,
32:07
destroy Destry two. Got a bad
case he gotta go. Chicago.
32:12
That's where we always heard
Chicago gonna come in and take
32:14
over blue helmets. Not that it
couldn't happen. So this is an
32:21
odd report that kind of plays
along with this. Speaking of
32:24
world trade organization, also
China, if we look at the global
32:30
stage, we have President Joe
Biden clearly incapacitated by
32:36
dementia or something else. Now
to the top of his heads been
32:41
removed twice, doesn't help.
Yes, when you get is not
32:45
functioning. Now he's not he's
not firing on all cylinders,
32:48
again, Jack him up with some
drugs, but it only lasts for a
32:50
while, right. But
32:51
he's also obviously not writing
his own scripts. They call that
32:56
Joe bomb. Then we have Vladimir
Putin, as we know is clearly
33:01
dying of cancer, clearly on his
way out. And then we have
33:07
President Jing ping of China.
33:08
The sun is reporting that
President Xi Jinping is
33:12
suffering from a deadly brain
aneurysm. According to reports,
33:17
many faces accrue over China's
devastating COVID lockdowns the
33:23
Chinese president reportedly
wanted to be treated with
33:25
traditional medicine rather than
undergo major surgery after he
33:29
was rushed to hospital now,
kosher we don't know how
33:33
accurate these reports are, but
have got to say they're very
33:39
strange happening in China. With
these lock downs. We're just
33:42
seeing some bizarre decisions
even by CCP standards.
33:48
It's true. And you know, as we
say, the Chinese political
33:51
system is very opaque and it is
impossible to know what the
33:55
truth is in these reports. But
there has been reporting for
33:58
quite some time now. Certainly
amplified since then, of sort of
34:03
strife within the CCP, and his
the second most powerful person
34:07
in the CCP li called Chun, he's
sort of been stated as somebody
34:12
who shares shares a philosophy
of CI but sort of tactically
34:16
disagrees, he's a little bit
more westernized, if you will,
34:18
or more capitalist, as opposed
to the strict lockdowns and the
34:21
strange things that are
happening or she is much more of
34:23
a Maoist and really believes in
kind of the state and central
34:27
planning and the economy. So
there are reports out there,
34:30
it's possible that it's true.
It's possible that is Chinese
34:32
propaganda, sort of the
opposition trying to put that
34:35
out there to curry favor or it's
also possible it's a Western
34:38
media trying to suggest that
there's strife within China as a
34:41
as a way to manage it. So who
knows? But certainly it's not a
34:44
popular opinion what he's doing
right now with the oldest people
34:47
in house arrest.
34:49
What if all three croaked within
a couple of days from each
34:52
other? What would we do?
34:54
I see no evidence that she has
brain tumors, whatever they're
34:59
trying to because he's making
these crazy decisions, but we
35:03
get to watch Biden on a day to
day basis and make our own
35:06
decisions and we can tell if
he's, you know, got a screw
35:10
loose or whatever it is. I think
it's something simple like a
35:13
screw loose. They're not going
to die. That's for sure. These
35:16
guys.
35:18
Oh, man, I got some pushback on
your newsletter, which I never
35:21
received the draft by the way. I
don't know what happened. I do.
35:25
Oh, what happened? You didn't
send it.
35:27
It turns out to you're not a DI
q m curry.com.
35:32
I'm not see. You did you do have
disliked me so much. I'm not
35:37
even your address book. Your
your email client doesn't even
35:41
automatically autofill my email
35:43
used to before they updated. Oh,
I thought you never updated. No,
35:48
they updated the thing because
it's a long story.
35:52
I'm gonna make that email
address though. I'm gonna make a
35:55
DQ m@curry.com q m, just to make
sure. So two things. One, I
36:03
believe there was an error that
you said Turkey is a recent NATO
36:07
member. That's incorrect.
36:12
I said that. Yeah. How long have
you been a member?
36:17
Since 1952?
36:20
Wow. Yeah, that's pretty recent
for me. But yeah, I'm the older
36:24
guy. Hey,
36:25
but then I got some real
pushback from your, your Slavic
36:29
brother. Carmex. True blogger.
And, yes. Allies. You want to
36:36
hear your lie.
36:40
Quote? Yes, I do.
36:41
NATO is making moves to get
Sweden and Finland to join the
36:46
Alliance. Yeah, well, this is a
lie. Because it was 100% pushed
36:54
by Finland and Sweden not pulled
by NATO. You see?
37:02
Yeah, well, that's a matter of
interpretation. Yeah, that's a
37:05
lie. Let's let's go to NPR and
start playing these clips. All
37:09
right, let's do it. Sweden
Finland update one.
37:13
It's official, Sweden and
Finland have applied to join
37:18
NATO. The head of NATO Jens
Stoltenberg is calling it a
37:20
historics. And the alliance
37:23
is I'm sorry. She sounds
37:26
like a waitress somewhere at
some high end Hotel. Would you
37:30
like some tea?
37:32
Would you like sugar with that?
Perhaps some half and a half on
37:34
the side.
37:35
It's official, Sweden and
Finland have applied to join
37:40
NATO the head of NATO Jens
Stoltenberg is calling it a
37:42
historic moment and the Alliance
is promising to fast track the
37:47
applications. New members would
expand NATO's territory also its
37:52
cloud, a fact not lost on
Russia, which is threatening to
37:56
retaliate, it will fall to our
next guest to lead his country's
38:00
next steps in all this and to
navigate the very fast changing
38:03
security situation in Europe.
Peter Holt fist is the Defense
38:08
Minister of Sweden today he is
here in Washington for meetings
38:11
with his us counterpart, Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin. Peter,
38:15
hold fist Welcome to All Things
Considered. Welcome to
38:17
Washington.
38:18
Thank you so much. Thank you.
38:20
I have to say, this is a
conversation I did not expect to
38:24
be having because you have been
defense ministers since 2014.
38:28
And all those years you have
opposed joining NATO, you were
38:30
on Swedish TV just late last
year. Sweden will never become a
38:35
member of NATO. As long as I am
the Minister of Defense lie. You
38:39
were still the Minister of
Defense. Yes. Are you now fully
38:42
on board with joining the
Alliance?
38:45
Yes, you must understand the
context and the situation also.
38:50
Because Sweden and Finland we we
decided to have a strategy to be
38:57
military and non allied. And at
the same time, there were a lot
39:02
of military planning building
pieced together in our two
39:06
countries. And at the same time,
we upgraded our military
39:10
capability and have to sign
defense agreements with
39:15
different countries. And that
worked, but we came until the
39:20
situation when they started the
war. The 24th of February, this
39:26
year,
39:26
when Russia invaded Ukraine.
Yeah, yeah,
39:29
that changed the situation.
Yeah, okay. I guess never ever
39:35
was only in the end that you
thought everything would be the
39:38
same forever.
39:41
I find this peculiar and of
course, your friend who's hates
39:47
me. Comic Strip blogger. Has. I
mean, I don't know depressors
39:53
coming from someplace these guys
just jump in for no good reason
39:56
because it makes no sense that
Sweden wants to go in for exact
40:00
Apple, because what what's
Russia going to do? March in?
40:03
They actually talk about this.
Well, you know, Russia could
40:06
March in March, were they in a
march in from?
40:10
I'm going to tell you my idea.
This has nothing to do with
40:13
Russia marching in this has
everything to do with financial
40:17
networks or whatever that
whatever the central banks are
40:21
planning on changing or
upgrading, I think it's
40:24
something very different has
nothing to do with military or
40:27
kinetic strikes or, or occupying
someone's country. This is Hey,
40:33
are you guys on board with us
and the new new? That's what it
40:36
feels like to me.
40:37
Sweden has been one of those
countries that's reluctant to
40:41
become a member of the Eurozone.
Yes, which is kind of gold. I
40:46
think. I mean, the British now
they're out. So it doesn't make
40:49
any
40:49
British that they had Sweden's
back. We got your back.
40:53
Yes, what they did they got your
back in this reports. Let's go
40:56
to part two.
40:57
Oh, second, part two.
41:00
So I was going to ask because I
understand that obviously,
41:04
Russia invading Ukraine and
February changed all kinds of
41:07
things in Europe. But in terms
of why it totally changed the
41:11
calculus for you in Sweden, you
don't have a border with
41:14
Ukraine, you don't have a border
with Russia, you're saying it
41:16
was suddenly it felt like you
might be all alone.
41:19
But you know, we are out donate
to all the other countries
41:24
around us is in NATO, we will
have a weak situation in all
41:30
these partnerships. And at the
same time, when we are out to it
41:34
in that new scenario, we will be
more exposed to Russia. So we
41:38
have a bigger risk towards
Russia, that they can make
41:41
pressure on us when we are
alone.
41:45
Make crush, but it is going to
feel you up in the corner there.
41:49
Finland was problem
41:52
because we're alone
41:54
or in the corner and he's making
pressure Russia is making
41:56
pressure Get your hands off me.
41:58
Just seems so staged. Let's go
to part three.
42:00
How worried are you now that
you've applied about retaliation
42:05
from Russia,
42:06
I can say that they talked a lot
about do something and they also
42:12
violated or bored or now twice
in the forest in a short time.
42:16
So they can do things and what
we prepare for is cyber attacks,
42:23
hybrid attacks. They seem for
information. We have in a
42:27
decision, Parliament said that
we cannot exclude the risk for
42:32
military attack, et cetera, et
cetera. So there is a broad
42:35
spectrum.
42:39
My
42:40
I looked into the into Russia
turning off Finland's energy.
42:46
You look into that, you know why
they turned off Finland's
42:49
energy? They didn't pay. Yeah,
exactly. It's about 10%.
42:55
If you remember years ago during
the even before the Georgia
42:58
thing with Ukraine, they shut it
off. And people always not
43:02
paying their bill. Yeah.
43:05
Always not. Exactly. So the but
the reason why they didn't pay
43:10
the bill is they couldn't pay
the bill because they can't pay
43:13
in rubles. And that's that's
that's the word.
43:18
Yeah, you can pay in rubles
somehow you got work. Yes,
43:21
you can do the of course you can
do it Italy's doing, but I guess
43:24
they didn't do it. So you can
but they're just saying, Hey, we
43:28
can
43:29
Yeah, well, good. They can deal
with it. Let's go to part four.
43:33
You're just gonna just going to
pretend like that's not true.
43:36
And the okay part for Turkey is
43:39
pretend he's not true. Well, I
mean, it just seems to me to be
43:44
a lame excuse,
43:45
right? But I'm just giving you
what the excuse is, of course,
43:48
it's a lame excuse. This whole
thing is is a total setup it.
43:54
They're talking about banning
all Russian petroleum products
43:57
globally, because that makes so
much sense. It makes no sense.
44:01
Of course not.
44:02
Turkey is raising objections to
Sweden and Finland joining and
44:07
the rules say you need unanimous
agreement from all NATO
44:10
countries. For it to happen. How
confident are you will that your
44:15
membership will be approved
44:16
or ambitious or sold the problem
will be Turkey in a dialogue.
44:21
I mean, the specific objection
that I'm seeing is that Turkey's
44:24
president Recep Tayyip Erdogan
says his quote, Scandinavian
44:29
countries are like guest houses
for terrorist organizations. Is
44:34
there any merit to his claims?
Just we didn't have a problem
44:36
with violent extremism that you
need to deal with before joining
44:40
NATO?
44:40
I don't think so. And and I have
no comment to vote on says
44:47
that'll help
44:49
you know,
44:51
this this it may be it's all
about Turkey maybe this is men
44:55
as
44:55
well here's the turkey clip so
this turkey NATO and and I have
45:01
here in Sweden,
45:02
but Turkey is raising some
doubts. Just listen to what the
45:05
Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut,
Shiva solo had to say. I had a
45:10
brief appearance with Blinken
today.
45:12
You know, we have also
legitimate security concerns
45:16
that they have been supporting
terrorist organizations. And
45:20
there are also export
restrictions on defense
45:24
products. So what I'm trying to
say, we understand their
45:28
security concerns, but Turkey's
security concerns shall be also
45:33
met.
45:34
And when he talks about
terrorist organizations he's
45:36
talking about, but you know, the
Kurdish militant group, the PKK,
45:39
and followers of an exiled
cleric that Turkey says was
45:42
behind a 2016 coup attempt. So
it seems the Turks are really
45:46
trying to use this issue of NATO
membership to get some
45:50
concessions from allies.
45:53
About this. Maybe NATO wants to
kick turkey out.
46:01
I think that would be almost
impossible. Upon
46:05
what is what is the plan, then?
I mean, surely someone went over
46:08
and said, Yo, bro,
46:09
we've watched the Turks with
these with the refugee
46:12
situation. Use their leverage
for extortion. Yes. There may be
46:19
an extortion play here.
46:21
Yeah, like the like, well, a lot
of the refugees that went to
46:24
Sweden came from Syria through
Turkey.
46:27
Yeah. Now that complaining,
46:30
well, they haven't quite made
their demands. Well, if that's
46:33
their demands, that's, you know,
that's gonna that's not
46:36
something's gonna
46:37
happen overnight, put their
cards on the table, we have no
46:39
idea what they're really up to.
But as is now stands, they're
46:43
voting no. Right. And, and
there's no evidence to the
46:47
contrary. I mean, you hear that?
Well, they're going to,
46:50
depending on who you listen to,
well, you know, they can they're
46:53
gonna change their minds. But
after they've already changed
46:56
their minds for that, as far as
I can tell. Now,
46:59
after the NATO Treaty has been
enforced for 20 years, we will
47:02
pass that any party may cease to
be a party one year afterwards,
47:05
notice of denunciation has been
given so they could withdraw.
47:09
Yeah. And they have to give it
to the government of the United
47:11
States of America.
Interestingly, which will inform
47:14
the governor. Yes. Which will
inform the governments of the
47:17
other parties of the deposit of
each notice of denunciation.
47:21
Hmm. doesn't really say anything
about getting kicked out, though
47:25
maybe? I don't know. I
47:26
don't think you can get kicked
out. They did. Now. Here's what
47:30
here's what here's what can
happen, I believe, because the
47:33
way is Lloyd Austin and the way
we and again, part of what I
47:38
brought up earlier, which is
that we don't we we don't play
47:42
necessarily fair, and we don't
necessarily sign on do what the
47:46
treaties tells tells us to do.
47:49
Now we can we've nothing with
the treaties were eight holes.
47:53
We could do the following. And
we would do it almost
47:56
unilaterally. And it would be
very simple to do because there
48:00
are governing bodies within the
NATO. It's not like the US
48:03
Senate where you need a 60 vote
situation. You don't need that
48:07
means the I think just a regular
guy. Just the little rule about
48:11
unanimous Yeah, yeah.
48:13
Just just have Jen sign
something. It's all fine.
48:17
Just kick out the idea that that
all members have to agree. Just
48:21
throw that out. Turkey, you
don't like it too bad.
48:25
So in your view, to what end to
what is the point? I mean, do
48:29
you surely you do not buy that
this is some some smart move
48:34
that's going to contain or
curtail Russia and the world
48:38
would be a happy place.
48:42
I think what you're asking me,
I'm not sure. But I think you're
48:45
asking me why they hell is this
going on? Right? This thing
48:50
even? Because Trump, we're like,
we're like just a couple of
48:54
years away from Trump just
killing NATO. Right. And now all
48:58
of a sudden is the world's
greatest things is the greatest
49:01
thing since sliced bread and has
to be everywhere. Well, maybe
49:03
that maybe your answer is right
there. Yeah, this is in
49:07
preparation for Trump. 2024 very
possible.
49:13
Learns things thinks something's
wrong with this picture. So like
49:16
I say, I learned something.
49:18
Now we discuss a lot today. No,
no, a lot. A lot of things. We
49:22
we heard that Russian soldiers
were shooting toilets in
49:27
Ukrainian homes. And we wonder
it was on our show. Yes, that's
49:31
when we learned it. And we
wondered why. Well, says our
49:35
producer we truly have the best
producers in the universe.
49:38
There's no doubt about it.
Everybody can contribute time,
49:40
talent and treasure. Everybody's
an expert in at least one thing.
49:45
And this producer is an expert
in toilets and Russia.
49:50
specifically says out of my
smokin hot Ukrainian wife has
49:54
informed me the Russian soldiers
believe indoor plumbing is
49:58
disgusting and back words. She
even sent me a recording of
50:03
Russian soldiers calling home.
The guy told his wife about the
50:07
toilets inside and they were
laughing about how disgusting it
50:10
was, apparently. Well, I have
some corroboration from other
50:16
people about this.
50:18
You've been to Russia? Are you
crapping in the streets?
50:23
Well, when I was in Russia, it
wasn't far from it. This may be
50:29
just not the Russians in the
cities. I don't know. The good
50:32
news is we have a lot of
Russians who listen to the show.
50:36
How else do you think we make
our money? It's all FSB. So
50:40
they, they will inform us if
this is true or not. I have no
50:43
reason to doubt this.
50:45
I have plenty of reason to doubt
it. It's demeaning. It sounds
50:50
like Ukrainian propaganda is
some way to further demean the
50:53
Russian people
50:57
are being propagandized by
Ukrainian chicks. Now,
51:00
man, Ukrainian chicks are
probably the best in the world
51:03
at it.
51:04
Yeah. As the Beatles said
they're really not
51:06
cost at $30.
51:09
Wait, you've been to Ukraine, I
hear.
51:14
Another thing that is worrying
you tied down and robbed.
51:17
There's no you wake up with in
the bathtub full of ice? Well,
51:21
the lipstick on the mirror that
says we've taken your kidneys
51:24
don't move. Another thing that
bubbled up how the United States
51:31
can grab these Russian
oligarchs, yachts and homes and
51:37
money?
51:38
Yeah. Do you have any new
information that's come to
51:40
light? Well, the information
51:42
that's come to light is
something we've known we haven't
51:44
really discussed that much just
because it's been on the radar
51:46
for years and years. And anyone
who was celebrating this and
51:51
laughing and jumping up and down
and saying yeah, go get those
51:54
Booker's yet. This is the
procedure known as asset
51:58
forfeiture, which in the United
States has bankrupted hundreds
52:04
of 1000s of people. Yeah, just
because you're
52:07
driving along, you're driving
along in the back road of some,
52:11
some crazy County in southern
Alabama and they pull you over
52:16
and they find you you're
carrying around cash. Doesn't
52:19
matter how much but let's say
whatever amount it is, is drug
52:22
money. And there's been there's
so much documentation
52:26
doesn't even use can be just
suspected. You don't even know
52:30
it's drug. No,
52:30
that's the point. Yeah. You got
Wait a minute, what are you
52:34
woohoo, carries around that you
go, the dialogue would go like
52:37
this. Who the hell carries
around $500. No buddy, except a
52:43
drug dealer. And then they just
take the money, you're out of
52:48
luck. You can never get it, but
you can sue them. And you'll
52:50
maybe get it back in years
later, years later, but it's
52:53
it's costing more than 500 bucks
to do it. But if you have more
52:56
than that, you're definitely
going to lose it.
52:59
So for people, you know, we said
hello, go ahead laugh because
53:02
they'll come for non Russian
billionaires next. And don't
53:05
forget that we just come in for
everybody. So Laugh all you
53:09
want, because it here's what'll
happen. Oh, we have evidence
53:13
you've been listening to the no
agenda show clearly Russian
53:15
disinformation. So how much
money you got on you will take
53:19
that that's clearly Russian
propaganda money. Seriously,
53:24
that could happen. It's
unlikely, but it could happen.
53:30
Indeed. You got anything else on
Ukraine? Russia?
53:37
Let's see. I don't think so. I
think I've got
53:40
well actually we I guess we can
talk about something we can talk
53:44
briefly about the the halting of
the Ministry of of truthiness.
53:51
This is the disinformation and
53:53
picture of her in Ukraine. She's
in Ukraine doing work.
53:56
Well, it's an old picture and
and did you see the article? I
54:00
mean, here's what happened for
those who missed it. I don't
54:02
know if you have a clip of it.
But the disinformation clip of
54:05
this woman the disinformation
governance board, part of the
54:08
Department of Homeland Security
with Nina Janka, which also
54:13
known as scary Poppins. Nice
nickname for is she I guess she
54:21
was going to resign then she
didn't resign, but maybe she did
54:23
resign. And this all all
coincided with an excellent
54:29
article which came out on the
same day from revolver news who
54:34
are pretty good when it comes to
actual reporting. And they had
54:39
this big article about the scary
Poppins being a part of a NATO
54:48
funded group called integrity
initiative, whose purpose is to
54:53
quote defend democracy against
disinformation and was actually
54:59
an OP Peredur spreading
disinformation in the internal
55:04
politics of Spain
55:07
ah yes so you know I don't think
you've been your best people
55:13
know what they're doing on both
sides right
55:15
but so I don't think that's it
yeah, I don't think that's true
55:18
coincidence it is not a
coincidence that the oh well
55:22
we're going to stop this we're
going to reevaluate and then
55:25
she's ready to resign
55:27
she was a bad pick it was
politically incorrect pick it
55:30
was dumb pick she she wants to
be a Broadway stars ludicrous.
55:36
That meant a lot of videos of
her doing stupid stuff. Yoga
55:40
instructor of all this horrible
stuff. She's a whack job. But
55:45
listen to this. She did a fake
news report called the fake news
55:50
report. And, and just listen to
how she reads the news. I mean,
55:56
it's exactly the way she was
reading everything else before
55:59
she I mean, we saw some stuff
from her some testimony before
56:02
she kind of got started, but
also listen to her pronunciation
56:06
of certain words and becomes
really clear that this woman
56:08
really was real operative in in
the Russian disinformation game.
56:15
But not not in a good way
56:18
Russian media are incensed that
Nazi propaganda.
56:20
This is this is literally Nina
Janka doing a fake news report
56:24
is completely styled. She's
sitting at a desk or hairs all
56:28
pulled back like she doesn't
news model
56:30
Russian media are incensed that
Nazi propaganda minister Joseph
56:33
Goebbels Diary will
56:34
be published as he says gurbles
with an AR that's really good
56:38
Russian media
56:38
or incense that Nazi propaganda
minister Joseph Goebbels Diary
56:42
will be published in Ukrainian
translation. With monotonous
56:46
predictability. The Kremlin
claims that Ukrainians are
56:49
glorifying Nazism, but Moscow's
real concern is that an
56:53
examination of gurbles
techniques exposes how closely
56:56
Putin his methods using lies and
fake news are derived from and
57:00
to mirror those of the masterful
Nazi propagandist. Remember,
57:04
consuming Fake news is not only
bad for your health and your
57:07
brain, it's bad for the
psychological climate of
57:10
society. So don't do it.
57:12
I'm Nina Jung. KOVITCH and this
is Stop Fake.
57:14
Thanks for watching.
57:17
Notice how she presses me you
know Yankelovich? Eastern
57:21
European flair to it.
57:24
Yeah. Well, it was fun while it
lasted Tao they'll
57:30
bring it they won't bring her
back. Unfortunately, she's toast
57:33
but they'll bring this this
department back or whatever it
57:35
is. I'm sure of it. I'm just
gonna miss her. What a bummer.
57:41
Yeah, she is this used the gift
that kept on giving. Yeah, every
57:45
time he turned around to be
something like this, I'm sure
57:47
there's a whole bunch more.
57:50
But she she was the real deal. I
think I think they really loved
57:53
her. They just didn't vet her or
they think it's normal the stuff
57:56
that she was doing. Or, of
course, it makes sense that a
57:59
disinformation specialist would
be all over Twitter and YouTube
58:03
and Instagram. That's what you
do. Even though she has a very,
58:08
very meager Wikipedia profile,
as most spooks do.
58:11
spooks yes or no problem with
the spook community. Yeah. So I
58:15
have a thing to breed cast is a
study that should get people's
58:21
attention never did get a bunch
of mainstream media player. I
58:24
don't think Chuck Todd. Study
testosterone treatment turns
58:30
Democrats to Republicans. I saw
this.
58:35
Explain this study was good.
58:37
increased testosterone levels
can cause Democrats to become
58:40
more conservative in their
political affiliation. A recent
58:44
experiment analyzing voters in
the US elections found the
58:48
study, vote testosterone
administration induces a red
58:53
shift in Democrats, was
published on November 14 2021 by
58:58
Professor Paul Zak the director
of the Center for Neuro Economic
59:02
Studies at Claremont Graduate
University. His research has
59:07
made a substantial impact in
explaining the variation in
59:10
human social behaviors and has
been cited by other scholars
59:12
over 18,000 times placing him in
the top point 3% of all
59:16
scholars, explains his
biography. Zach's latest
59:22
findings reveal a link between
testosterone levels and
59:26
political preference. There is
so anyway, it goes on just like
59:30
that. But yeah, make sense.
59:35
So what do you think the point
is, is like we can we can make
59:38
a pizza. What's the point? It's
one of those it's douchebag
59:42
point I have to say. It's like
hey, you ball is wonders. You
59:47
guys have got no balls. No
testosterone, you're voting
59:50
Democrat. You're wearing
dresses.
59:54
That's the takeaway right there.
You're wearing dresses. Get over
59:59
it. People stopped wearing
dresses. Yes, exactly, exactly.
1:00:06
Yeah, that but this
1:00:07
kind of belies a certain point
that most young people and
1:00:11
especially when they first enter
university, especially if
1:00:14
they're lower class or working
class or even middle class they
1:00:18
did when they're young they have
a lot of more testosterone it
1:00:21
starts to diminish as you get
older so it makes no sense that
1:00:25
older people are more
conservative if that if you're
1:00:28
going to use that as a as a
metric it doesn't work but I
1:00:31
like the theory what he's done
here or you know, he's taken you
1:00:34
take a group that is just fixed
and then you give one group half
1:00:39
of them testosterone the other
half let them go off their merry
1:00:42
way and see what happens when
one becomes a Republican.
1:00:46
It makes so much sense it makes
so much sense but that's just
1:00:50
thought it was but that kind of
fits into the into the whole
1:00:52
purge thing you know, we're
getting closer to the January 6
1:00:55
report which will be the big
push for the trouble for the
1:01:00
midterm elections. Yeah, I mean,
we are
1:01:04
making the mistake and this has
been coming up a little bit even
1:01:07
on the propaganda side of the
news media which is most of it
1:01:12
they you know that you don't
when you're doing these these
1:01:15
invent investigations you
generally don't bring in other
1:01:19
congressmen so by subpoena
saying Oh, McCarthy right Right,
1:01:27
right. But about five or six
other Republicans this is not
1:01:30
gonna fly.
1:01:31
That's war. Basically. That's a
declaration
1:01:35
that deaths wait till we get in
we're gonna do it to you now.
1:01:39
But they're so desperate I think
the Democrat Party is very very
1:01:42
desperate though they're doing
anything they can and this
1:01:45
buffalo shooter man I'm sorry
but that it's being abused
1:01:51
basically to go after white male
Americans you know clearly with
1:01:58
testosterone and and it's really
ratcheting up a lot of hate a
1:02:05
lot
1:02:06
play these display these clips
this journalist at work this NPR
1:02:10
buffalo
1:02:12
her analysts that work yes
1:02:14
gotcha extreme changed on to
when I sent to you because I
1:02:18
changed it. No, it says hurdle
is her journalists like
1:02:22
that's okay. I was just looking
for a j i found that ah, it's
1:02:25
nearby extremism researchers are
scouring Okay, that's what I
1:02:28
want to be when I grew up and
extremism researcher is this Can
1:02:33
I take this class
1:02:33
by the way if you think that's
funny,
1:02:37
we're standing by
1:02:38
extremism researchers are
scouring through the online
1:02:41
footprint believed to be linked
to the accused buffalo gunmen.
1:02:44
Among the materials is a nearly
1:02:46
wow she almost read it like a
true crime. podcaster that's
1:02:50
great. Listen, this
1:02:51
is huge debts. I will stop.
That's exactly I kept hearing
1:02:56
her do her thing with this. This
kind of breathless style of
1:03:01
presentation. Yeah, I said well,
who is this? She sounds like
1:03:04
she's 12 years old, but it's
also reminding me of something
1:03:07
else I couldn't put my finger on
it. That's what it was. Yeah,
1:03:11
this is crime.
1:03:12
This is the most popular
category and all podcasts and
1:03:15
what Yes, it is any range any
genre cereal was in fact the
1:03:18
podcast that can recap
1:03:20
all sound like this woman
1:03:22
extremism researchers are
scouring through the online
1:03:25
footprint believed to be linked
to the accused buffalo gunmen.
1:03:28
That right the gun man. Yeah,
man. It's the gun man. That's
1:03:33
how we talk in a podcast
1:03:35
footprint believed to be linked
to the accused buffalo gunmen.
1:03:38
Among the materials is a nearly
600 Page printout of a log
1:03:42
should
1:03:42
it be gun person let's be honest
about this.
1:03:46
I think that you mentioned Yeah,
1:03:48
this is this is incorrect. This
is not the style guide
1:03:52
into thrown everything into
personhood except for this guy
1:03:54
god man beef to be linked to the
accused buffalo gunmen. Mold
1:03:59
materials is a nearly 600 Page
printout of a log from an online
1:04:03
chat platform. It reads like a
kind of diary of the months
1:04:06
leading up to the attack. And
Paris domestic extremism
1:04:10
correspondent Odette Yousuf has
done the work and read it and
1:04:13
joins us right earning some may
find elements of this of this
1:04:16
discussion just starting Odette.
We've read this what exactly is
1:04:21
in this printed document? What
1:04:21
do you learn? Well, Emily,
1:04:23
it's a discord chat log that's
believed to be authored by the
1:04:26
accused shooter starting from
about six months ago and parts
1:04:30
of it read kind of like a stream
of consciousness. In it the
1:04:34
author shares very detailed
information about how he
1:04:37
acquired the equipment and
weaponry for the attack and
1:04:39
tested it out. He cuts and
pastes a lot from outside
1:04:43
sources when it comes to his
racist and anti semitic
1:04:47
ideologies. And then there was
the mundane like his exercise
1:04:51
routine and food intake.
1:04:54
Yeah,
1:04:55
okay, now what you missed the
now I thought you'd catch. It
1:04:58
was for one thing this is
extremist correspondent
1:05:04
I can't believe I missed the
extremist correspondent.
1:05:08
And then you missed then you
missed a real gem which
1:05:11
is can I hear it again to see if
I can catch it? It did.
1:05:14
You started to be middle in this
right in the middle. There's too
1:05:16
little gems in there. Yeah.
1:05:18
joins us now. And a warning some
may find elements of this of
1:05:21
this.
1:05:22
Backlog,
1:05:23
I think. Yeah, yeah. Go back.
Yeah.
1:05:25
It reads like a kind of diary of
the months leading up to the
1:05:28
attack. And Paris domestic
extremism correspondent
1:05:32
mess. Its domestic. Hold on.
Domestic extremism
1:05:37
correspondent,
1:05:38
extremist correspondent. I think
this is extremely next sentence
1:05:42
is the to me is the one that
just has an eye roller
1:05:45
months leading up to the attack.
And Paris domestic extremism
1:05:48
correspondent Odette Yusuf has
done the hard work and read it
1:05:51
and joins us now.
1:05:52
Oh, she's done the hard work.
Oh, she's done the hard work and
1:06:00
read it.
1:06:01
It's so hard. She needed to have
pure buckets and she needed to
1:06:06
really steady herself.
1:06:07
He did the hard work and dead to
do some reading. She had to
1:06:12
actually read something and you
know the way we are millennials
1:06:15
we don't like to read
1:06:17
no too much hard work
1:06:19
really hard had to read. It's an
it reads like discord. It reads
1:06:23
like a stream of consciousness.
Yeah. Hello.
1:06:28
What a bunch of dipshits. Okay,
yeah, part two.
1:06:33
There's more,
1:06:34
it's important to know that the
author here wanted us to see
1:06:38
this record, Emily, he wrote it.
He edited it. And it presents
1:06:42
his own narrative, and it should
be taken with a high degree of
1:06:44
skepticism.
1:06:45
Who was the intended audience
for this? Do we know who read
1:06:49
this when it was online?
1:06:51
Oh, my goodness, I cut it off.
Because it was actually what
1:06:56
this extremist correspondent
said. She said he wrote it. He
1:07:03
edited it. And some other things
that he did. And we should take
1:07:07
it with a high degree of
skepticism.
1:07:11
I know why she's saying that.
1:07:14
Well, first of all, why am I
saying that? This is screwy to
1:07:17
me, because Adam wrote it and
Adam read it. And we should take
1:07:22
it with a high degree of
skepticism. Wait, wait. What
1:07:26
part of that? Are we supposed to
be skeptical about? About the
1:07:29
fact that he wrote it? Did he
not write it? No. Or he edited
1:07:33
it? Did he not edit it? No. Did
No, no. Okay. Explain.
1:07:37
What she's saying is we need to
be skeptical about the contents
1:07:42
of what he wrote. Which is kind
of an obvious thing. If it's a
1:07:45
deranged if it's a deranged
shooter, because of the meme
1:07:50
that has come out of this, which
is the great replacement theory.
1:07:54
You see, this is this is what
they're bringing out. And this
1:07:58
is the true white nationalist
hate fuckers like Tucker
1:08:03
Carlson, they all have one on
the hit list, they make the
1:08:06
great replacement theory, which
makes no sense. Because the
1:08:11
great replacement theory, which
stems from Europe, which is a
1:08:15
real thing, the color D pant
plan, there's even an award, the
1:08:19
color gi awards, there is a
replacement strategy that is
1:08:23
published is recognized in the
European Union as well. But
1:08:27
Europe, it makes little sense
to, on one hand, say this was a
1:08:33
hate crime against blacks,
African Americans, and then talk
1:08:40
about it being a replacement
bullshit. Now, if you say
1:08:44
immigrants, okay, I can kind of
go along with that. But that's
1:08:48
not who was targeted here,
according to the reports, that
1:08:53
specifically say black
communities, not immigrant
1:08:56
communities. So it doesn't even
make sense by the definitions of
1:09:00
what the great replacement
theory is. And that's what she's
1:09:04
referring to.
1:09:05
Well, she didn't she could have
been more clear, you explained
1:09:09
it quite well. And in fact, that
has never been what you said.
1:09:13
Which is true, has never even
been breached by the mainstream
1:09:19
media. No. So whether trying to
do trying to shoehorn two items
1:09:24
into the same Yes, yes. Because
there are a because what you
1:09:27
said her I'm gonna get GIMP
giving kudos today. me sit down.
1:09:34
Because what you said earlier,
which is that the Democrats are
1:09:38
desperate, right? And so they're
taking anything they can and
1:09:42
they're throwing it against the
wall just hoping it sticks to
1:09:44
trying this or try that and is
and is making things worse,
1:09:48
because they're now they're
looking like complete idiots.
1:09:51
Let's play this clip. This is
New York. This is your friend
1:09:54
pokel
1:09:54
My friend. Why is it my friend
all of a sudden,
1:09:58
she looks like someone you'd
like But
1:10:01
first you build me up and give
me props and then you slam me
1:10:04
down as a friend of Hogle friend
of Hoko. Fo Ah, okay. FOH I'm
1:10:10
going frh friend of hope now
1:10:11
let's start. Let's start before
I play this clip, this is the
1:10:14
clip that's entitled and why
clamps put down down? And what
1:10:22
are some of the what are the
couple of states that you always
1:10:25
assume is got some of the most
extreme gun laws?
1:10:32
New York City, New York state
New York State of California,
1:10:38
the Chicago Chicago
1:10:41
Chicago's got one at some of the
strongest gun laws.
1:10:45
That's what we're talking about.
Right? Strong gun laws.
1:10:47
Yeah, to keep people from having
guns but me well, these are the
1:10:50
same, but the stronger these gun
laws get and
1:10:53
the more people get killed. I
know. It's great. It's so it's,
1:10:56
it's counterintuitive.
1:10:59
So what are we going to do?
Let's play this clip and we'll
1:11:01
find out. New York Governor
Kathy
1:11:04
Hopewell has signed multiple
executive orders today
1:11:08
strengthening the state's gun
laws and domestic terrorism
1:11:11
response comes after a gunman in
Buffalo killed 10 black people
1:11:15
and injured three other people.
Julian forced that with member
1:11:18
station ws kg in upstate New
York is more
1:11:21
huncles Directive requires the
police to file an extreme risk
1:11:25
protection order with the court
when they believe someone is a
1:11:27
threat to themselves or others.
If granted the order prohibits
1:11:31
the individual from purchasing
or possessing the gun. There's
1:11:35
them to surrender any they own.
It it is
1:11:38
no longer permissive that when
certain criteria or flags are
1:11:42
out there very clear in
identifying what those are that
1:11:46
they have to take the steps for
getting the extreme risk order
1:11:49
of protection
1:11:50
and extreme risk protection
order was not filed for the
1:11:52
alleged buffalo shooter after
state police detained him for
1:11:55
comments about murder suicide
last June Hogle also signed an
1:12:00
order that establishes a new
domestic terrorism unit within
1:12:03
the state's Division of Homeland
Security and Emergency Services.
1:12:07
Yeah, domestic terrorist. This
is all political. No one cares.
1:12:11
In the media. No politician
cares about anyone who was
1:12:15
killed. They don't care. I don't
care. They only care about
1:12:19
stopping Donald Trump from
possibly even having a chance at
1:12:22
even running in the 2024
election. They want to root
1:12:25
everybody out call everybody a
domestic terrorist. Have
1:12:30
everyone surveilled? The
arresting people
1:12:32
they're surveilling everyone now
and they can't stop this stuff.
1:12:36
That's what gets me well, let's
add some more layers to the cake
1:12:40
that doesn't really is not even
edible. Are you kidding?
1:12:46
Aap the racially motivated
attack came a year a year after
1:12:50
the gunman was taken to a
hospital by state police after
1:12:52
making threats involving his
high school. This guy was not
1:12:56
unknown.
1:12:58
Oh, he's very well known as a
nutcase. Yeah.
1:13:01
But remember the first report
reports were no no no no
1:13:05
involvement with law enforcement
FBI to no no, we don't know
1:13:08
anything. Maybe New York should
evaluate what they're doing when
1:13:12
they pick someone up who's
dangerous more more laws for
1:13:15
picking people up is clearly not
helping. It's what you do after
1:13:18
that or not.
1:13:20
You know, I have a just a
snippet, a 14 second clip and I
1:13:24
was gonna take an ISO out of it
and I forgot to it's gonna do it
1:13:28
this morning. But I you know, if
I go do it, I don't I can't do
1:13:33
it. Anyway, but this is what
this is what they're trying to
1:13:37
promote. This was taken from
already clipped. This is where
1:13:41
Sharpton was on with Chuck went
back and I was erasing and I
1:13:45
heard this is just a little
segment that I thought was
1:13:49
interesting. This is Chuck,
talking about the toxic stew.
1:13:53
We have a toxic stew here, white
supremacy ideology that's
1:13:56
spreading. Washington Post
contributing column was backed
1:13:59
by Republican strategist al
Cardenas and Washington Post
1:14:02
White House bureau chief Ashley
Parker. Reverend Sharpton, we
1:14:07
have a toxic stew here.
1:14:08
No. Look, Sharpton is a known
FBI informant. He's the first
1:14:15
guy they call
1:14:16
we wrote we I don't want to talk
but they want to talk about this
1:14:19
talk.
1:14:19
So I'm just saying that how set
up this is to set up Yes, toxics
1:14:25
is a great show title.
Obviously. That's why you
1:14:27
clipped it. No doubt at all.
Yeah,
1:14:29
toxic sauces do
1:14:31
vast. I mean, we're done. We
don't have to think about it.
1:14:35
Yes, the toxic stew. So here's
what's this. This is an NPR
1:14:40
report. The great replacement
conspiracy theory isn't fringe
1:14:46
anymore. It's mainstream.
1:14:50
Oh play.
1:14:51
I'll just read a little bit 100
a 180 page online screed? What's
1:14:56
a screed? Quest not a manifesto
is
1:14:59
a is a manifesto that is
demented.
1:15:05
I see a long speech or piece of
writing typically one regarded
1:15:08
as tedious. Okay, I like your
explanation better. Mine is
1:15:13
better a 180 page online screed
attributed to the white man
1:15:18
accused of killing 10 people at
a top friendly market in Buffalo
1:15:22
on Saturday. By
1:15:23
the way, I should mention that
screed is used amongst writers
1:15:27
and amongst other pundits to
insult Yes, all derogatory, of
1:15:30
course, thank you for your
screed
1:15:35
on Saturday has brought a once
fringe white extremist
1:15:39
conspiracy theory into the
spotlight. But the underpinnings
1:15:44
of the great replacement
conspiracy theory, which has
1:15:47
been iterated over time to
appeal to wider audiences, they
1:15:50
just put wider but okay, they
used wider has penetrated a much
1:15:56
more mainstream portion of
American society. Oh, it's
1:15:58
penetrated. A recent poll
conducted by the Associated
1:16:02
Press NORC Center for Public
Affairs research found that one
1:16:07
in three American adults now
believes in a version of
1:16:10
replacement theory. Well, that's
not hard to imagine, when you
1:16:14
see the actual replacement
taking place at the open
1:16:17
borders. I mean, that's not
that's you don't have to be a
1:16:23
conspiracy theorists to think
this. So if you ask people like,
1:16:27
hey, you know, but you being
replaced? Well, yeah, that's
1:16:30
possible. I see it happening. A
lot of people when he saw it, if
1:16:34
you remember yesterday night was
before back in the 90s. I
1:16:37
remember when you had the air
conditioning company, there was
1:16:42
going to move to Mexico. And
they brought in foreign workers
1:16:47
to be trained by Americans. Yes.
Replacements when
1:16:51
big guys were brought in,
constantly trained by Americans
1:16:54
in the 90s. during the.com era,
that's a real was very common,
1:16:58
and people bitched and moaned
and bitched and moaned and you
1:17:00
get replaced by this Indian guys
getting paid half as much. And
1:17:04
which was the idea the new
replacement is not just two
1:17:08
purposes to the replacement, one
vote Democrat. And to don't pay
1:17:14
him as much. I mean, the
Democrats are very much kind of
1:17:18
aligned with low pay. They
encourage it, yeah.
1:17:25
Between 2010 and 2020. The
percentage of Americans This is
1:17:28
NPR again, who identified as
white only declined by more than
1:17:33
10% from 72 to 62%. Clearly,
that's pissed off a lot of white
1:17:37
people. During the same decade,
several Western European
1:17:41
countries saw record influxes of
migrants from Muslim nations. It
1:17:45
is against the backdrop of this
demographic change that
1:17:47
replacement rhetoric has
accelerated. Well, hello. Can
1:17:53
you blame people? Am I nuts? I
mean, I know by saying this if I
1:17:58
said this anywhere else but on a
podcast, they'd rouse me.
1:18:01
They'd rather miss absolutely
bang my head. I'd be done not
1:18:05
shot.
1:18:06
Yeah. The baseless theories
claim.
1:18:10
It's not his baseless whitey.
1:18:12
It's not baseless, this definite
base for it. claim that these
1:18:16
population shifts are
orchestrated, orchestrated by
1:18:19
elite power holders. Yeah,
politicians. In the US, it is
1:18:27
said that white nationalists
ascribe the plot to Jews to Jews
1:18:32
who they believe are bringing
you Jews. Yes, it's the Jews.
1:18:36
Who could they believe will not
replace us? Yes, exactly.
1:18:41
Who they believe are bringing by
1:18:42
the way where does that even
work? What's let me just as of
1:18:45
July I will
1:18:46
tell you this is the ColorGATE
plan. The ColorGATE plan is to
1:18:51
have Jewish run organizations
facilitate the great reset, it's
1:18:56
published. I mean, anyone can
call me a replacement theorist
1:19:03
which I don't think I want to be
but these are published things
1:19:07
it's not entirely basis
baseless.
1:19:09
Oh, so it's supposed to be
Jewish run organizations will
1:19:12
destroy the Jews will not
replace us as not that Jews as a
1:19:18
group in other words a Jew a
Zhao, you get the idea white
1:19:22
guy, it's the Jews running
things. Yes, sir. That will be
1:19:25
doing the replacing of you by
you know, Costa Rica and
1:19:30
Guatemala and what whatever. I
get Okay. Well, that's well,
1:19:35
that's never been fully
explained.
1:19:37
Yes. And there are Well, I think
we actually have I think we have
1:19:42
a clip. There's a there was a
Jewish nonprofit. And the woman
1:19:48
talked about this specifically
got its years ago, but I will
1:19:54
find it that that she says if I
if I recall correctly, she He
1:20:00
says no, this is this is our
destiny. We are this is what
1:20:04
we're supposed to do. We're
supposed to help Europe clean up
1:20:07
its act, you know, become more
integrated. And she was and she
1:20:11
was running a nonprofit. Oh man.
1:20:15
Yeah. Your cleanup and sag?
Well, the fact is, I mean you
1:20:24
you have to also note that the
Italian, Italians, for example,
1:20:29
are at the point where they
can't reproduce enough to
1:20:32
replace themselves, right?
1:20:36
Let me just see what
1:20:38
this just like to babies.
1:20:41
In 1925 Richard published
another book and titled,
1:20:45
practice your idealism us for
practical idealism. An excerpt
1:20:51
from practical idealism is about
the color the man of the future
1:20:55
will be of mixed race, the races
and classes of today will
1:20:59
gradually disappear due to the
elimination of space, time and
1:21:04
prejudice, that Eurasian Negroid
is the race of the future.
1:21:08
Similar, that's to logically but
I'll find it we need to revisit
1:21:12
the clergy plan choleric, are
also
1:21:14
learning more about the Eurasian
need graded. The race of the
1:21:18
future is like, wow,
1:21:21
yeah. Now this this goes very,
Richard van Kouwenhoven
1:21:25
kalaburagi. He came up with the
plan.
1:21:30
As in the 20s.
1:21:33
Yeah, I think no, maybe the
30s 20s or 30s. Let me see if I
1:21:38
can read it here. Everything
1:21:39
goes back so far. I mean, you
know, Marxism goes back to 1860.
1:21:44
These things are not new ideas,
and they can't be you know, I
1:21:48
don't know.
1:21:49
Yeah. Well, everyone who has
ever written about this is
1:21:51
basically a Nazi. Anyone who
ever talked about it, you
1:21:54
clearly a Nazi?
1:21:56
Me? No, you're the one that
brought it up.
1:21:59
In fact, this is this is on par
according to the wiki pedia with
1:22:03
the Protocols of the Elders of
Zion.
1:22:05
Oh, it's a phony. It's a fake.
It's a complete counterfeit. It
1:22:08
doesn't. It wasn't really
written by the person who
1:22:11
supposedly wrote it. Yeah.
Except it's like he says if it
1:22:15
was,
1:22:16
in the end, it was Angular
Merkel who got the clergy prize.
1:22:21
She got to ColorGATE with us.
That's not even possible. This
1:22:25
whole thing's a hoax.
1:22:27
Let me get a color the prize. It
was I think it was 2000.
1:22:32
We're going off into the we're
in the brush. Ladies and
1:22:35
gentlemen, here it is
1:22:36
the Kouwenhoven clarity so the
guy that wrote the conspiracy
1:22:40
theory. Right. choleric Hayden
is a prize
1:22:46
and price for now it is
1:22:49
going to read it for the
essence. Yeah, practice your
1:22:52
ideal most. The Kouwenhoven
choleric the European Prize is
1:22:58
awarded every two years to
Europeans who have excelled in
1:23:01
promoting the color gi plan.
Among those awarded with such
1:23:05
prizes are Angular Merkel and
Herrmann Vaughn the room boy if
1:23:08
you remember him room ploy. Room
for yes. Yeah.
1:23:14
Yeah. That's the guy was has the
person have a dish rag? I
1:23:19
think this haiku haiku Herman we
used to call him Hi. Oh, hi. He
1:23:23
is stupid. Yeah, he had these
little poems that were terrible.
1:23:28
So on this page, I'll put it in
the show notes as a picture of
1:23:30
Angular Merkel. And the prices
for services rendered. German
1:23:35
Chancellor Angela Merkel accepts
the Kudan whova colori society's
1:23:39
Europa prize, which is awarded
every two years to leading
1:23:41
figures who have done the most
for European integration and the
1:23:46
Jewish world project. Fact,
John, if this is like we're
1:23:49
being told something's not real,
but it's real. I'm not saying
1:23:53
it's good. It's great, but it's
clearly real. With the
1:23:57
chancellor, Austrian politics
and Joseph Hochschule,
1:24:01
representing the president of
the Kouwenhoven choleric a
1:24:03
Europa society and Prince
Nicholas one Liechtenstein, of
1:24:06
course, it's these are the
Nazis. These, these are the
1:24:10
Nazis I guess.
1:24:11
Dale doors are the Nazis. Yes.
1:24:15
So it's just crazy that you
know, but again, to bring all of
1:24:20
this into
1:24:23
an NPR does such a piss poor
job, and then really explaining
1:24:28
any of it and doesn't even go to
the 1/3 the detail that you
1:24:31
basically made up on the fly,
just from my knowledge who
1:24:35
ministered you didn't make
anything up. You just did like
1:24:38
two minutes of research, using
the web and some clips that we
1:24:42
have and got a better example
out to the public than NPR. Our
1:24:47
nation's treasurer did with all
that writing.
1:24:50
Well, I did have a rubber
composition. How do they even
1:24:53
stay in business in a company?
Yes, I do well, by doing native
1:24:57
ads on the web for their
podcast, that's how they stay In
1:25:00
a business, so this is the
result. If you get guys like
1:25:04
this retire would actually have
a classic clip of him. This is
1:25:07
retired FBI Assistant Director,
you might remember him, Frank
1:25:12
Frank if bluesy to bluesy. Yay
Yeah, Frank, bluesy. Now it fits
1:25:19
into all the narratives that we
have going on right now we have
1:25:22
Elon Musk is a real problem
because he wants to bring free
1:25:25
speech back to Twitter, we have,
you know, we've got a bunch of
1:25:29
January 6, we got to
insurrectionist. We got
1:25:32
national, domestic extremist
terrorists. So we might as well
1:25:36
pull it all together and get the
FBI guy to help
1:25:38
us what happened this weekend in
Buffalo is, in my opinion, the
1:25:42
very definition of domestic
terrorism, we have a legal
1:25:45
definition of domestic
terrorism. And this fits the
1:25:48
bill. Violence aimed at
coercion, intimidation of a
1:25:52
civilian population for the
promotion of an ideology, there,
1:25:56
there we go. We don't have a
law, making domestic terrorism
1:26:00
illegal, but we've got a
definition. Look, there's no
1:26:03
single solution to this. The law
enforcement is only a piece of
1:26:07
this. We've been talking about
who should be at the table at a
1:26:10
White House meeting, let's
ensure, in my opinion, that the
1:26:13
leaders of the social media
platforms, all of them,
1:26:16
especially 4chan are at that
table. Because we keep hearing
1:26:21
about freedoms.
1:26:23
What did he say? Especially for
Chan? Yes.
1:26:26
He said, that's where the of
course 4chan has a problem.
1:26:31
Especially 4chan.
1:26:34
They'd have as the leader.
1:26:36
I don't know, I guess. I didn't
know it was a social network.
1:26:40
It's just a message board. As
far as I know. 4chan, okay. Got
1:26:45
his head up his ass. Oh, but
that's why he was if he's a
1:26:48
former FBI Assistant Director,
the best guys to have their
1:26:52
heads up their asses,
1:26:53
talking about who should be at
the table at a White House
1:26:55
meeting, let's ensure, in my
opinion, that the leaders of the
1:26:59
social media platforms, all of
them, especially 4chan, are at
1:27:03
that table. Because we keep
hearing about freedom of speech,
1:27:07
freedom of speech, we can't do
anything. What was me freedom of
1:27:09
speech, freedom of speech does
not mean freedom from
1:27:12
responsibility. That's what it's
turned into. And so we need to
1:27:17
hold people accountable if it
takes an executive order because
1:27:20
this Congress can't legislate
regulation of social media, then
1:27:23
so be at what would that look
like?
1:27:25
You're starting to get the idea,
right, that this is the clamp
1:27:28
down. We're going to use this to
stop Trump from getting in. It's
1:27:32
all pathetic. By the way, we're
going to stop it from from
1:27:35
getting into but we're going to
use it to label Republicans as
1:27:38
domestic terrorists and
extremists. We've got all kinds
1:27:42
of groups set up in New York has
their own domestic terrorism
1:27:45
task force, okay, well, we
failed on a federal level, we'll
1:27:48
get a new, a new scary Poppins.
And don't worry, but this is
1:27:53
really about clamping down on
all online communication, at
1:27:56
least what these idiots think is
all online communication.
1:27:59
Because clearly that energetic
foods for chat,
1:28:01
the platforms, the reasonable
platforms, they're crying out
1:28:04
and reason angulation. They
know, they're not really media,
1:28:08
they're much more like a public
utility that requires
1:28:11
regulation. So they interact
with law enforcement every
1:28:15
single day on threats, but it
has to get put on steroids. We
1:28:20
need embedded federal agents and
vice versa, social media
1:28:24
security folks to actually
develop the algorithms together
1:28:28
that gets you to the violent
threat and get you to it before
1:28:32
it happens.
1:28:33
Let's just let's just review
this. So he's saying we need
1:28:36
regulations, an executive order,
if that's what it takes, because
1:28:40
we need the social media folks,
sorry, social media security
1:28:44
folks. We need them to develop
algorithms that will track what
1:28:49
you're saying so that we can
have the Goon Squad show up the
1:28:52
minute you're doing something
sketchy. That's what this guy,
1:28:55
former Assistant Director of the
FBI saying,
1:28:58
the reasonable platforms,
they're crying out for
1:29:01
regulation? They know what is
1:29:03
the what's the laughs? What's
the laugh, tell douche, the
1:29:06
crying because they're in on it.
That's why
1:29:09
legislate against doing here. I
didn't I missed the tail go on
1:29:12
relations. Roll it back a bit.
But a White House meeting, let's
1:29:15
ensure, in my opinion, that the
leaders of the social media
1:29:18
platforms, all of them,
especially 4chan are at that
1:29:22
table. Because we keep hearing
about freedom of speech, freedom
1:29:26
of speech, we can't do anything
woe is me freedom of speech.
1:29:29
Freedom of speech does not mean
freedom from responsibility.
1:29:33
That's what it's turned into.
And so we need to hold people
1:29:36
accountable if it takes an
executive order because this
1:29:39
Congress can't legislate
regulation of social media, then
1:29:42
so be it. What would that look
like? The platforms, the
1:29:46
reasonable platforms, they're
crying out for regulation?
1:29:49
They're no they're not really
media. They're much more like a
1:29:53
public utility that requires
regulation. So they interact
1:29:58
with law enforcement every
single day. He on threats, but
1:30:01
it has to get put on steroids.
We need embedded federal agents
1:30:06
and vice versa social media
security folks to actually
1:30:09
develop the algorithms together
that gets you to the violent
1:30:13
threat and get you to it before
it happens. It's not happening
1:30:17
fast enough. This young man,
this person, this shooter, call
1:30:20
him whatever you want this
terrorist terrorist in a forum,
1:30:24
talking about things that were
largely legal. So you know,
1:30:27
Reverend Al talked about what's
the law 99% of his manifesto is
1:30:32
perfectly legal. It's dangerous,
it's vile. But getting the FBI
1:30:37
in there in the form of
informants, undercovers
1:30:40
monitoring, we they can't
possibly do that. And they
1:30:42
certainly can't do it under
existing regulations, because we
1:30:45
don't want the government
looking at it. Everybody's
1:30:47
communication. So we need to
change that dynamic right now
1:30:51
with the social media platforms,
identifying it and the language
1:30:55
before it's too late.
1:30:57
There you go. It's very clear
what they want. And the NPR
1:31:00
article is a state similar that
is they quote, the CEO and
1:31:05
national director of the ADL,
the anti Defamation League,
1:31:08
quote, we have literally watched
as ideas that originate on white
1:31:12
supremacist message boards, or
like the dark web, which is what
1:31:17
a dichotomy of terms white
supremacist, live on the dark
1:31:20
web, the places that are
difficult to get to move to
1:31:25
Greenblatt, they literally jump
to Internet message boards like
1:31:29
4chan and HN, which are much
more accessible. Then they jump
1:31:33
to websites like The Daily
Caller or Breitbart. Then they
1:31:36
jump to Tucker Carlson's talking
points, or Laura Ingraham is
1:31:40
talking points or other am radio
DJs talking points. And then you
1:31:44
have theoretically mainstream
Republican politicians repeating
1:31:47
some of this stuff. Not
podcasters were Ingraham.
1:31:54
podcasters will be next.
1:31:55
She actually uses ad libbed at,
no, it's in this.
1:31:58
It's the literal sentence. Let
me read it again. Because that's
1:32:02
a nice little. So let me just
read this again, this person,
1:32:07
they start on the dark web, the
places that are very, very, very
1:32:11
difficult to get to those places
move. They literally he says
1:32:16
they literally jump, jump on
jump literally it's not
1:32:20
possible, but it's literally
literally jump. They like a pin
1:32:25
in your chair. So sticks in the
Astra jump,
1:32:27
they literally jump to Internet
message boards like 4chan and
1:32:31
HN, which are much more
accessible. Then they jump to
1:32:35
websites like The Daily Caller
or Breitbart. And then they jump
1:32:39
to Tucker Carlson's talking
points, or Laura Ingraham is
1:32:43
talking points or other am radio
DJs talking points. And then you
1:32:47
have theoretically mainstream
Republican politicians repeating
1:32:50
some of this stuff. You see
1:32:54
what kind of a paranoid weirdo
thinks this?
1:32:58
They're coming for? podcasters.
Next, Mr. Adam curry. Now, the
1:33:04
common the common that and this
is not new, certainly not from
1:33:08
this douchebag. Here he is in
2019. Is mine sound familiar?
1:33:12
He spoke in the in the passive
voice in the collective voice.
1:33:17
We didn't hear first person from
him. We didn't hear I condemn
1:33:20
white hate ideology. We heard
the nation must condemn it.
1:33:24
Well, they just talking about
Trump, obviously, patient does
1:33:27
condemn it. But we didn't hear
what we needed to hear. So what
1:33:30
happens is the extremists
interpret what the President
1:33:33
read off a script today as
something he needed to say
1:33:36
something he he didn't really
want to say. So the President
1:33:40
said you're getting really good
advice and rejecting it, or he's
1:33:42
getting really bad advice. And
I'll give you an example of
1:33:47
that.
1:33:48
So what he's trying to say is
that Trump was passing hidden
1:33:52
messages by reading his script
and making it apparent that he
1:33:55
had to read this because, hey,
y'all know that I'm really all
1:33:58
in with the, you know, the great
replacement theory, you know,
1:34:01
Jews will not replace us, I just
have to say this stuff on the
1:34:04
teleprompter, just to just to
keep it up appearances,
1:34:07
we have to understand the
adversary and the threat we're
1:34:09
dealing with. And if we don't
understand how they think we'll
1:34:13
never understand how to counter
them. So it's a little things
1:34:16
and language and messaging that
matters. So the President said
1:34:19
that we will fly our flags at
half mast until August 8, that's
1:34:25
eight, eight. Now, I'm not going
to imply that he did this
1:34:29
deliberately. But I am using it
as an example of the ignorance
1:34:32
of the adversary that's being
demonstrated by the White House
1:34:35
the numbers eight, eight are
very significant in neo Nazi and
1:34:39
white supremacy movement. Why?
Because the letter H is the
1:34:44
eighth letter of the alphabet
and to them the numbers eight
1:34:48
eight together stand for Heil
Hitler. So we're going to be
1:34:51
raising the flag back up at dusk
on Eighth eighth. No one's
1:34:57
thinking about this. No one's no
one's giving him the advice.
1:35:00
He's rejecting the advice so
understand your adversary to
1:35:03
counter the undersell, oh my
1:35:05
God, but yourself beating
yourself up to the health
1:35:08
aid is the Chinese lucky number.
It is the Chinese lucky number.
1:35:16
And if you're going to start
making references to aid in any
1:35:20
number of forms 888888888 It's
not Heil Hitler.
1:35:28
Well, that's the same as number
14, you know, that's also
1:35:31
another Nazi reference, which
was on the church, Christ
1:35:34
shooters weapon as well as the
buffalo shooters weapon.
1:35:39
Which is interestingly always on
the buffalo shooters.
1:35:42
Yeah, well, there's a picture
that could be totally could be
1:35:44
totally made up. I think some
1:35:46
of these, what was written all
over that weapon is dubious.
1:35:49
I mean, even some of the video
I've seen is dubious. But it
1:35:53
doesn't matter. Ultimately, we
understand people died. So we'll
1:35:58
take that at face value. And
this is horrible, but how it's
1:36:02
being abused. Is is bad for
everybody. And I will and we got
1:36:10
to take a break. But I just want
to shoehorn this into Elon Musk
1:36:14
and Twitter. Cuz it fits
perfectly with my theory that
1:36:18
Elon Musk is an agent, a
government agent of change, and
1:36:21
his entire intent is to destroy
Twitter, because they because
1:36:26
it's no longer within the
Democrat party's control. They
1:36:30
know it. They know they're
losing their grip. So they bring
1:36:33
in their hitman. I'm sorry, I
can't see him any other way. He
1:36:36
may be a super nice guy. He may
not even know he's doing maybe
1:36:39
it's all MK Ultra, but when I
hear he so he's good friends
1:36:45
with our buddy, your buddy,
actually your best friend Jason
1:36:47
Calacanis, you hang with the
with the Cal Meister out there
1:36:51
in California. You know, Jason,
of course, we know Jason. And
1:36:56
Jason is very good friends with
Elon, he bought a number of
1:37:00
Tesla cars. 16. He invested in
Jason, I think made a lot of
1:37:04
money investing in Uber and
Tesla. And he's the little, he's
1:37:08
the angel investment guy. And he
he had put together a fund,
1:37:13
which would invest in Elon
purchase of Twitter, I think you
1:37:18
could buy in for $250,000, which
is a nice way to get in on a
1:37:21
deal if the deal made any sense.
So now we see some interesting
1:37:26
things taking place, which in my
mind has already destroyed
1:37:31
Twitter, it's destroyed its
reputation. And advertisers will
1:37:35
run away if they haven't
defected already. Twitter is
1:37:39
toast. And he and Jason had a
big conference. The onstage and
1:37:44
yet Chema found there and all
his his poker playing buddies,
1:37:47
and they're talking about making
money and it said, and I love
1:37:50
Jason Calacanis. He brings color
to the world. So don't get me
1:37:54
wrong on this. He's fabulous.
And he really helps out with
1:37:57
some content on the show today,
because he brought his good
1:37:59
friend Elon on to discuss the
Twitter acquisition or not.
1:38:04
Is this Twitter deal going to
get closed event chances here?
1:38:07
Well, I mean, it really depends
on on a lot of factors here. I'm
1:38:12
still waiting for some sort of
logical explanation for the
1:38:18
number of sort of fake or spam
accounts on Twitter. And Twitter
1:38:22
is refusing to tell us. So you
know, this, this seems like a
1:38:29
strange thing.
1:38:31
We sorry, is are they refusing
to tell you you don't think they
1:38:33
really know? I mean, there's a
good chance they may just have
1:38:36
no idea.
1:38:38
They claim that they do know.
Yeah. And they claim that
1:38:42
they've got this complex
methodology that only they can
1:38:45
understand
1:38:52
rockets through this cauldron,
and then you throw it and
1:39:04
suddenly, it comes to you in a
dream, I don't know.
1:39:09
But there should be some, you
know, objective wait is the
1:39:14
thing because this is this is a
material public statement
1:39:17
tradition. Yeah. It's a you
know, it's a material adverse
1:39:22
misstatement.
1:39:25
This is important. I know this
from my own s one. filings and
1:39:29
documents.
1:39:30
Miss your legalese term, and
he's saying he's saying it
1:39:33
material adverse clause the Mac
is what we call no material
1:39:37
adverse condition clause. That
known as the Mac clause means if
1:39:41
anything changes in a material
way, all bets are off, and
1:39:45
there's always a legal clause in
these types of contracts. They
1:39:50
handle all of them. And there's
an all bets are off,
1:39:53
total Out. Out. That's why he's
bringing up material adverse
1:39:57
because this is what this is
what's happening. Okay, I'm
1:40:01
sorry, continue.
1:40:05
I don't know. There should be
some, you know, objective way to
1:40:11
set the thing because this is
this is a material public state
1:40:16
issue. Yeah. It's a, you know,
it's a material adverse
1:40:22
misstatement, you know, if they
in fact, have been vociferously
1:40:27
claiming less than 5% of failure
spam accounts, but in fact, it
1:40:31
is four or five times that
number or perhaps 10 times that
1:40:34
number. This is big deal. It's
not, it seems like if you said,
1:40:39
Okay, I'm gonna, I agree to buy
your house, you say the house
1:40:43
has less than 5%. Termite?
That's, that's an acceptable
1:40:47
number. But if it turns out it
is 90% termite. That's not okay.
1:40:52
You know, it's not the same
house. Leave it literally, your
1:41:01
house will disappear, because
it's mostly made in two months.
1:41:04
So he's drawing an analogy
between a 90% termite house and
1:41:11
Twitter, the bot termite house,
the deal is done. It's this is
1:41:16
not a negotiation tactic. All
you hopefuls. Now, Elon is not
1:41:20
going to save anything. He There
was never the intent. This is to
1:41:23
destroy it. And you know, what?
It's going to destroy the
1:41:27
advertising model of other
social media companies as well,
1:41:30
I think. And you and I have been
in the business a long time.
1:41:35
When it comes to number
reporting to advertisers. Let's
1:41:39
be honest. Can we just say, it's
probably 50%? Bullshit.
1:41:47
I would say that's a good
number, but half w double it.
1:41:50
Yeah.
1:41:51
It's bullshit. And take into
account how Facebook, so that
1:41:56
counts.
1:41:56
That's why there's all these
auditing companies, and there's
1:41:59
all these different operations
that are supposed to check. And
1:42:02
that's why you know, Adobe's in
on the deal, and Nielsen's
1:42:05
always trying to keep track of
the TV and now they don't know
1:42:07
what to do about streaming or,
or podcasts or anything in
1:42:10
between. And there's new comers
coming in and they're all
1:42:13
fretting over it, Nielsen. And
if you read the trades, all you
1:42:17
hear about is this. Worried?
1:42:20
Yeah, but it's because we know
it's bullcrap. And if you just
1:42:24
look objectively at Twitter, I
mean, they have an API that's
1:42:30
wide open to create bots with I
mean, I post I never I rarely
1:42:34
post to Twitter directly it's
always through my system the
1:42:37
freedom controller which
1:42:40
direct but I have to say I've
been looking at my numbers going
1:42:43
up and then I noticed that the
real divorce if anyone wants to
1:42:47
join so I'm noticing so I go up
I've been checking out who has
1:42:50
been following me of late to see
you know, just any buddy
1:42:54
interesting some famous person
and they've been seeing these
1:42:57
babes.
1:42:59
The babes are out okay, now you
know that that spam, or trolls?
1:43:04
Oh, crap.
1:43:05
So the bait so there's these
babes and then there's everyday
1:43:08
come up with a false way. These
1:43:10
babes follow you? Yeah, they're
following me. Okay, so now we
1:43:13
know they're fake.
1:43:16
Thank you. Thank you very much.
I can feel my balls shrivel. He
1:43:19
says he's telling me this. So So
I checked the babies and the
1:43:25
babies, the babies. They're all
exactly the same. I mean, the
1:43:29
different babes, babes. The guy
all got big tops, they post
1:43:34
photos. Big tops. You people
should check this. Yeah, they
1:43:40
put for they've got like seven
followers, which I don't know
1:43:45
why. But it I think people
thought they posed for photos of
1:43:48
themselves for and only for
photo 123 and four and nothing
1:43:53
else. And these photos come in
pretty much at the same time.
1:43:56
And they you know, and they also
have kind of a cute little bio
1:44:00
of themselves. It's kind of
always cute. They're like
1:44:03
kittens and things like that.
And it's so obviously a bot or
1:44:08
have some sort of effects. Why
did they all have all of them?
1:44:11
Not one or to all put the four
photos there either hookers?
1:44:15
Which is possible? Yeah, that's
a mistake there hookers. I think
1:44:18
they're just fakes. Complete
fakes from the get go. And as I
1:44:24
get probably 20 of them.
1:44:26
Have you checked the profile of
all 20? Yeah. Oh, no. That's 40
1:44:33
tops. That's crazy.
1:44:35
Hey, Oh, yeah. So let's say for
photos, it just cracks me up.
1:44:40
It's such a formula. They don't
even have enough creativity.
1:44:43
Whoever is doing this to do
something a little different.
1:44:47
Maybe post a comment. They will
say something like, Jay I don't
1:44:51
like Joe Biden. No, no, no,
there's none of that just for
1:44:53
photos. Yeah.
1:44:56
So I think we can safely assume
that this deal is not going to
1:45:01
happen. And what is
1:45:04
not, I'm not I am on the
optimistic side and I'm not
1:45:08
making I'm not making this
assumption that this is your
1:45:10
theory. And you can lord it over
me about this particular moment
1:45:14
in history. If what you say
happens, I'm not saying you
1:45:18
don't have valid reason for
thinking this way. No, no, I'm
1:45:21
just doubtful.
1:45:22
That's why there's two of us.
I'm looking at Twitter stock
1:45:25
$37.37. So that's a problem room
no matter what.
1:45:31
Not a problem if you shorted.
1:45:34
Did you guys short on your game?
Now, we
1:45:36
didn't show it on the game. I
was thinking, I think I actually
1:45:39
I think the horror was actually
shorted in real life.
1:45:43
Yeah, because He's smart. He's
like, I'm gonna listen to Adam.
1:45:46
He knows what he's talking
about.
1:45:47
John wasn't because of your
theory.
1:45:50
Oh, he had some other theory.
1:45:51
No, he thinks that the thing?
Yeah, he thinks he's just, he's
1:45:55
the basic and I think we've kind
of agreed on this. If, if, if
1:46:01
Musk already bought some 10% of
the company or something like
1:46:04
that, now he can pick up even
more lower. So his total outlay
1:46:08
for mine, the entire company
would decrease by quite a bit.
1:46:11
Okay. So he's investing in
Twitter the same way people
1:46:14
invest in crypto, buy the dip?
Well, I think shorting is a good
1:46:23
idea. On Twitter. This is not
this is not advice. I'm not in
1:46:26
it. I don't do that anymore. But
this this is this is part of it,
1:46:32
you know, they need to destroy
it, they need to get rid of
1:46:35
Twitter is the problem. Facebook
kind of under control.
1:46:39
Everything else is kind of under
control. But Twitter is a
1:46:42
problem, because you can sign
up, you know, just there's
1:46:44
anybody. There's no way and, and
just thinking about it
1:46:49
logically. I mean, when Elon
Musk went into this bin, he must
1:46:56
have known everyone knows
there's no way to actually know
1:46:59
how many real people are on
Twitter. Because it's an open
1:47:04
registration, just need an email
address. And you know, they they
1:47:07
say that they remove half a
million fake bot accounts every
1:47:11
single day. Imagine there's got
to be a percentage that gets
1:47:14
through. So I just don't see
how, you know, I don't see how
1:47:21
we could ever think, except for
Facebook's official SEC filing
1:47:25
that said that they had less
than 5% fake accounts. Well, now
1:47:29
they have to show it and I think
they have to show it not to the
1:47:31
stock. The stockholders may
care. But the advertisers that
1:47:35
Twitter only does brand
advertising. Do they do any
1:47:38
other kind of revenue that
you're aware of?
1:47:41
As far as I can tell me Linkbait
1:47:43
Yeah, well, they don't even have
that anymore. It's their
1:47:45
destroyed is done. Anyway, we
shall see. We'll keep on it.
1:47:50
It's okay. made your point.
Thank you beating me up with it.
1:47:53
Yeah. It's fun.
1:47:55
And with that, I'd like to thank
you for your courage. As I say
1:47:58
in the morning to you the man
who put both seeds in his buddy
1:48:01
Jason Calacanis, his name ladies
and gentlemen, Mr. John seed of
1:48:06
Oreck.
1:48:12
In the morning to you Mr. Adam
curry in the morning Illa chips
1:48:15
as he boots on the ground,
feeding ourselves in the water
1:48:16
all the days and nights out
there and
1:48:18
the morning to the Frozen Throne
Room. Hey, how you doing? Let's
1:48:21
count you right away. Let's see
how we're doing on this
1:48:22
Thursday. Hands up. Okay. Oh,
my. Oh my Oh, mais by Ed 1813
1:48:30
Lo, lo Yikes. Yikes. We're
losing our mojo in the troll
1:48:37
room. John.
1:48:38
What is this today? Sunday or
Thursday? Last Thursday, it was
1:48:43
17 something. So wheeling up.
1:48:46
shows you what I know. I'm not a
statistician. Okay. Well, trolls
1:48:52
Good to have you here. Good.
There's 100 More than last week,
1:48:55
we do appreciate that. This is
troll room.io It's live. You can
1:48:59
listen to the show live we
stream it on Thursdays and
1:49:02
Sundays is 24/7 There's no
agenda stream. So there's the
1:49:05
best podcast in the universe you
can listen to. Many of them are
1:49:09
live, many of them are recorded,
but you control every single one
1:49:12
of them. And it's a fun
community to hang out in go to
1:49:15
troll room.io or you can follow
us at no agenda social.com You
1:49:21
can actually go to no agenda
social.com And look at the
1:49:24
public timeline if you want to
just read along and see what the
1:49:27
conversation is about. But if
you get an account with any
1:49:30
Mastodon server, pretty much all
of them although some will block
1:49:33
us. Ignore those find one that
doesn't. And you can follow
1:49:38
individuals. It's it's the
fediverse it's what the Elon
1:49:42
Musk's should have been thinking
about is what Trump wanted to
1:49:44
do, but did it wrong. We're
doing it right now. Agenda
1:49:46
social.com Sorry, just the way
it is. And we send out a huge
1:49:52
thanks and congrats to the
artist who brought us the album
1:49:56
art for episode 1451 aptly
titled Texas ball halls. And
1:50:01
boy, I have a lot of invitation
to take people's balls around
1:50:04
Texas. I'm very excited about
that. capitalist,
1:50:07
there's a lot of balls sucking.
1:50:11
Amen. It was already iffy that I
did it, you didn't have to, like
1:50:14
hit it home like that capitalist
agenda brought us a, it was like
1:50:20
a classic piece of artwork that
reminded me of Steamboat Willie
1:50:25
to be honest. And this is a baby
bottle. Looking very distraught
1:50:32
sitting on the ground with a
sign holding a sign say will
1:50:34
work for formula. And it's
obviously fit with the news of
1:50:38
the day. But it was also just a
really interesting piece. And I
1:50:43
don't know if there were there
other things that we looked at,
1:50:45
we'll
1:50:46
just comment on this heart.
Okay. Now I, it was catchy for
1:50:51
the exact reasons that you
suggest, except they will say
1:50:54
one thing just to correct the
style a little bit that it's
1:50:58
something that should have been
wasn't noticed by us. And it
1:51:00
wasn't important, and nobody
else would pick this up. But in
1:51:03
the era of that sort of art, the
arms are always rounded off the
1:51:09
dish. No elbow, no sharp edges.
Uh huh.
1:51:12
And he's got a sharp edge elbow
and a knee. Both very visible, I
1:51:18
would say they should.
1:51:19
Capitalist agenda is lucky. We
didn't reject them for these
1:51:22
clear, technical, technical
issues.
1:51:25
Well, he did it in such an
extreme way that it was like I
1:51:28
said, Okay, this is stylistic
consideration, I think we can
1:51:31
let it slide. But that was the
only thing that kind of bothered
1:51:34
me, it would have been better if
they were round instead of
1:51:38
Angular.
1:51:39
But it was kind of the Steamboat
Willie vibe and had the as a
1:51:43
great piece the right colors to
it. We did look at a few other
1:51:46
things as it went up higher and
he did a toilet with a bullet in
1:51:49
it. Same thing and in that case,
he did have the round elbows,
1:51:54
which I find interesting change
and looking for it so pious got
1:51:59
the it's got the TV set with his
hands in the air. Oh, don't
1:52:02
shoot. Yeah. And then
1:52:04
I don't think I don't think that
one came in before.
1:52:07
I remember it. Oh, you do?
1:52:09
I don't remember that one. There
were a lot of toilets being shot
1:52:12
for art. A lot of toilets with
targets. None of them really
1:52:16
hit. I'm not quite sure why. I
did like the poo tin from
1:52:20
Taunton, Neil. Which was the
Anton Yes, the the bucket, the
1:52:26
tin bucket where you pull in
Putin get it? We both like
1:52:31
Matthew drop co 1972 Is washing
chips, but the execution was
1:52:35
just not there. That was the
mouse connected to the washing
1:52:38
machine.
1:52:40
That's when you initially liked
the bat I did then I kind of
1:52:44
didn't like the composition
1:52:46
you put the kibosh on it you
don't like that guy Matthew
1:52:49
dropped.
1:52:51
I found that the composition was
could have had been could have
1:52:55
been improved somehow. I'm not
sure how, but that's what
1:52:59
artists do not be and you also
liked, which I put the key I did
1:53:03
put the kibosh on round. Oh, no.
I know neither one of us put the
1:53:06
kibosh on round. He had a piece
I think it came in for today's
1:53:09
show. With what's her name with
a loser thing? No, no, no,
1:53:13
that's new. We didn't put that
that is new. But I'm wondering
1:53:16
if that's a real picture of her.
1:53:19
Huh? No, probably not. Well, it
does represent who she is. I
1:53:25
mean, it's, it's, it's a real
representation doing
1:53:28
that. Yeah, it's beside the
point. He's had nothing to do
1:53:31
with the art that we're
discussing.
1:53:33
You liked the Gerber babies that
kind of like
1:53:37
the Gerber babies. Yeah, the I
thought had a subtle, a subtle
1:53:44
nod to the recent auctioning of
the Andy Warhol, Marilyn, for
1:53:50
like
1:53:50
$300 million.
1:53:53
is ridiculous. Crazy, but it was
funny. But this was this was
1:53:56
done in a Warhol style. I
thought it was very creative.
1:53:59
Everybody thought, you know, we
never talked about Warhol. We
1:54:01
don't hear
1:54:04
a lot of the Texas testicles,
balls jokes.
1:54:09
Yeah, yeah.
1:54:12
Now it's hard. It's hard to say
how we feel after the show. What
1:54:16
we're looking for.
1:54:19
Was anything Yes. By the way
that we typically pick this art
1:54:22
like a week later, I'm typedef
that we'd pick the same art.
1:54:26
You doubt or you think?
1:54:27
You doubt I doubt.
1:54:30
I don't want to second guess us
because that's what we did in
1:54:33
the moment. And I'm still I love
it a lot. And I, again,
1:54:36
congratulate capitalist agenda
for for doing that. And you can
1:54:41
if you're using a podcasting 2.0
app, you see it right now on
1:54:45
your screen, go ahead and take a
look. If you're not then you're
1:54:47
using a bad app you need you
need a good one new podcast
1:54:51
apps.com Also, when one of your
favorite podcasts gets the
1:54:55
platform, it's happening from
Apple or Spotify or Amazon or
1:54:59
Google or what Laundry or
whatever these outfits are Yahoo
1:55:02
God knows Sirius XM I Heart
Radio, get off those apps get
1:55:08
something that's open and free
and open source and distributed
1:55:12
and made by people who care not
by money grubbing horrible
1:55:16
people who try to ruin
podcasting and capture it.
1:55:20
Backslash. Now let us thank our
executive and Associate
1:55:24
Executive producers for screen
Yes, screed for episode 1452. We
1:55:30
have a number of donations that
many of them came in, on the
1:55:35
spot. Ad during the meet up many
people have sent in after the
1:55:40
fact. So where appropriate
1:55:42
want to do Do you want to do the
over $50 ones right and
1:55:46
everything that you got in your
hand and you can get that out of
1:55:48
the way and then we can just
roll from there? Well, the way
1:55:51
we did it in the spreadsheet and
up on the spreadsheet.
1:55:54
Yes. If you look at the
spreadsheet, everything in
1:55:57
Orange is in the right spot. And
that comes from a donation made
1:56:03
at the meetup. Oh, then we just
read away we just read like it's
1:56:06
a normal donations segment. Yes.
And this is of course, Dame
1:56:11
Jennifer, who said who'd scanned
all the notes now we didn't she
1:56:14
didn't she scanned the notes.
She transcribed the notes put
1:56:17
them in the spreadsheet made a
Word doc and also has a database
1:56:23
in case you want to ask she
should meet Eric I think I think
1:56:27
these two would hit it off with
all of the all of the systems
1:56:31
but very very good and so
appreciative as we kick it off
1:56:35
with our top donor sir boiled
peanut, who is from Charlotte,
1:56:40
North Carolina, and comes in
with the big baller amount here
1:56:44
$1,495.04 Not even sure why that
is but perhaps the note will
1:56:52
give us some information no
jingles no karma Overall this is
1:56:56
roughly a 62nd read. Holy crap.
Adam we met in Charleston thank
1:57:00
you for being gracious and
tolerant to people like me that
1:57:03
have absolutely nothing
interesting to say to you.
1:57:07
That's not true. Everybody was
interesting. Everybody was
1:57:11
interesting to listen to. These
are the proceeds from my button
1:57:14
artwork sold through no agenda
shop.com Truly a class operation
1:57:18
unlike myself, to all producers
who haven't received their
1:57:22
orders yet you will get them
life's issues got in the way I'm
1:57:25
very behind. I apologize. And he
said oh, you know, he said no
1:57:28
jingles No. Carmi does request
health and baby making prayers
1:57:32
from producers that love Jesus.
Sorry for the long note. And
1:57:35
since it's no jingles no karma,
we always have the double karma
1:57:38
for you.
1:57:41
You've got double pharma
1:57:49
on a 25 second read in fact,
1:57:51
yes. Thank you very much for
both peanut It was great meeting
1:57:53
you. And I remember you
specifically because you had a
1:57:55
cool logo.
1:57:56
Did he give you a button?
1:57:58
He did several buttons actually.
That that's this 1495 He's what
1:58:03
he made as an artist on doing
button selling him through the
1:58:07
shop. There's people with
businesses out there. Gitmo
1:58:11
nation is rockin it.
1:58:13
Like knights sir big loaf is up
on the list and garner North
1:58:19
Carolina 437 5060 And he came in
this is one of those that you
1:58:25
got you picked up at the at the
event. That is a very drunk
1:58:29
donation. My girlfriend and I
have arrived a day ahead of time
1:58:33
for the Charleston meetup. We
caught up in a few producers and
1:58:35
Alas, we're sloshed.
1:58:38
It was a common theme.
1:58:40
Since you always talk about
donating time treasure and
1:58:43
talent is about time you get
some real treasure. I donated 11
1:58:46
ounces of silver.
1:58:48
Yep, we have so we have it in
our possession.
1:58:52
Also, I'm including $200 This
should bring me to executive
1:58:55
producer level. Can I get a
master of the house karma? Hale
1:59:00
the shoots before? Black night
big love
1:59:04
pill the foots not the Toots
held the fourth? Yes, I looked
1:59:09
it
1:59:09
up for you whenever you have
to.org/na
1:59:14
donate enough to be tonight some
day. There you
1:59:17
go. There's your master of the
house DMCC aka Kathy Rhodes,
1:59:21
Greensboro, Georgia, Greensboro,
Georgia $400.02 ITMA and J Dame
1:59:28
CC from Greensboro, Georgia here
with a two first switcheroo
1:59:31
Okay, first for my for Lee roads
My dear husband who was with me
1:59:36
at the Charleston meetup a de
douching. Please use van de
1:59:41
douche second a de douching and
happy 70th birthday to my big
1:59:46
brother, Mike ray from Catawba
South Carolina who hit me in the
1:59:51
mouth a couple of months ago and
fell face first into the deep
1:59:54
end.
1:59:56
You've been deep deuced I love
1:59:59
you both dearly with this check
in my monthly alimony they both
2:00:02
reach executive producer at
three three 3.33 Please play
2:00:07
camel a biscuit that's the
biscuit for your birthday and a
2:00:12
reverend owl resist we much
thanks guys and Dame Jennifer
2:00:16
May your exit strategy be a long
time coming DMCC they
2:00:19
always give me a biscuit on my
birthday resist. We much we must
2:00:25
and we will much about that. Be
committed.
2:00:31
There you go. Next, Next, Next
up is Gunther Vabre. In Odessa,
2:00:38
Florida I'm sure they everyone
calls him Weber Weber Yeah 347
2:00:44
But as you first name is Gunther
it's likely you're a Weber's
2:00:48
going to have a BA This is my
second donation but never got a
2:00:52
property douching
2:00:53
what we can do that for it right
now.
2:00:56
You've been deed deuced
2:00:58
I hope this donation amount of
333 plus the amount to get me
2:01:02
halfway to knighthood helps you
to help you to keep you guys
2:01:07
have helped you to keep you guys
afloat we're treading water
2:01:11
pledge please call out Eric at
the chase as a douchebag. And
2:01:19
then he notes this for the
second time. Oh boy. You guys
2:01:23
are a national treasure and I
see no to do it.
2:01:28
Anonymous with our favorite
number three four 5.67 Can I get
2:01:33
an F cancer karma please my
friend Rachel's cancer might be
2:01:36
coming back appreciate any
prayers thrown her way love you
2:01:39
mofos mean it of course
2:01:45
you've got karma
2:01:50
Matthew shock in farming it
Farmington, Minnesota. 33333 33.
2:01:58
Happy birthday to me tomorrow.
22 will be my 36 so I have to
2:02:02
start planning what to do for my
midlife life crisis. My advice
2:02:08
Ferrari instead of candles, I'd
like a jobs karma as I'm finally
2:02:13
making some moves
professionally. Thanks for all
2:02:16
you to do.
2:02:17
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs or
jobs.
2:02:26
Just a question on that Kathy
Rhodes. So the switcheroo was
2:02:29
for Lee roads, but then she also
mentioned Mike. Okay, I think
2:02:34
it's just Lee roads will be the
switcheroo. I'm just rereading
2:02:37
it here. Make sure we get
everything done right. All
2:02:41
right. That was Matthew shot.
Chris Sully. Sullivan is in
2:02:44
Ventura, California 333 dot 33.
And he says all your hard work
2:02:48
is very much appreciated. And
there will be more 33333
2:02:51
donations in the future. One
more 333 and I'll be cents shy
2:02:56
of night status. But I'll admit
that my roundtable requests
2:02:59
probably won't be very exciting
is I'm currently in prep for the
2:03:02
USA bodybuilding championships
in Las Vegas. On July 29, and
2:03:07
30. Chris sent photos if I win,
I'll become an IFBB professional
2:03:14
bodybuilder a dream I've been
chasing for 15 years. Man Can we
2:03:19
get a little no agenda on the on
the shirt there something is
2:03:23
this a sponsor? time we got
racing cars we got every we got
2:03:27
horses across the chest. Yeah,
that guy. With that goal in
2:03:32
mind, a little goat karma would
be appreciated as I navigate the
2:03:35
next 10 and a half weeks of
contest prep the training is
2:03:37
hard. But this show helps put my
mind in a different place
2:03:40
helping me maintain discipline.
If anyone is interested in
2:03:44
following my journey, it can be
found under the handle of at
2:03:47
financial Sully on both Tiktok
and Instagram, as it is with
2:03:51
trading and donating. If it
doesn't hurt, it doesn't count.
2:03:54
Onward. Thank you, man.
2:03:58
You didn't want to use that
little. Yeah, the on the news.
2:04:01
Yeah, if
2:04:01
it doesn't hurt, it does. Well,
that is the beauty of value for
2:04:04
value. It's like if it's $30 and
that hurts you That's massive
2:04:08
value. We consider that to be
massive value. You know, that's
2:04:12
beyond probably
2:04:14
not so is Sir Jake Knight of the
deep blue sea in San Diego,
2:04:17
California with $333.33. It's an
honor to be the EP of the no
2:04:23
agenda show once again. In three
weeks. I'll be graduating from
2:04:27
the University of California San
Diego with an MBA after which my
2:04:31
family and I will be headed to
Pearl Harbor, Hawaii to start my
2:04:35
new assignment. We're hoping to
buy a house out there. But the
2:04:39
interest rates not even the
interest rates. It's brand new.
2:04:42
I don't know if you can buy you
have to lease everything with
2:04:44
the interest right now
2:04:46
from BlackRock, you know, which
was not happening according to
2:04:49
the former to your banker not
happening.
2:04:52
Take it up with him to start my
new assignment. We're hoping to
2:04:56
buy a house out there with
interest rates where they are
2:04:58
right now that isn't in the
cards that will be renting but
2:05:00
even affordable rentals for a
family of six seem few and far
2:05:03
between please send some moving
and house finding karma Roa.
2:05:08
Also Adam Let me know if you
need some more Axio if other
2:05:13
people want to try it they can
get it from Bitly Bitly slash
2:05:19
tiny Axio BIT dot tiny Axio
there's a few lemonade flavors
2:05:25
that still that are delicious
all the best sir Jake is he
2:05:29
talking about
2:05:30
this these powders called Axio
it's bit.li/tiny Axio and I
2:05:36
think he makes him where his his
company are. And they're like
2:05:40
protein kind of healthy. Not
even protein it's been a while
2:05:45
since I've tried them but it's
like it's supposed to make you
2:05:47
feel good. It's cracked
basically healthy crack this
2:05:50
good. I enjoyed it. A couple of
them as legal crack. Oh, yes.
2:05:57
Where do you want you wanted
some moving in house finding
2:06:02
calm we got that.
2:06:05
You've got karma.
2:06:08
The feral housewife is in
Woodinville Washington. Three
2:06:13
Three. How selling yak karma
please. Okay, I have some karma
2:06:21
for you. We are listing our
house today hoping to escape
2:06:24
Washington State Crime COVID and
general insanity short notes
2:06:29
save lives. Oh and can you
please say shapeshifting Oh,
2:06:34
shit. Yes, that should be on
your newsletter too. short notes
2:06:37
save lives. By request.
2:06:51
shapeshifting
2:06:54
you've got karma
2:07:00
as you Yak.
2:07:03
Casey Hamra in shit, Texas. I'm
sorry Sure. Schertz Texas 333 33
2:07:12
I have been listening for far
too long and need a deep
2:07:15
douching
2:07:18
you've been deep deuced
2:07:20
followed by some health karma.
Thanks for all you do love and
2:07:24
lit
2:07:25
beautiful short notes save
lives.
2:07:27
You've got karma
2:07:33
Tao and Allah and Allah is in
Martin's Deck, the Netherlands.
2:07:37
Three, three 3.33 No note that
means double karma for you.
2:07:42
You've got double, double
pharma,
2:07:48
and a reminder. The only way you
can get this jingle is if you
2:07:52
post nothing, no note
2:07:54
shows by Yes, it's a winner
333 33 in Richmond Hill, Georgia
2:08:02
in the morning. I have been
listening to the show since the
2:08:05
start of the planned Demmick my
brother hit me in the mouth and
2:08:10
I have not missed an episode
since it's a great show. And I
2:08:14
hope you all don't find it in
strategy anytime soon. Everybody
2:08:18
else are quacks I haven't closed
333 33 And I request that Trump
2:08:25
jobs karma as I've been out of
work for a few months awaiting
2:08:29
my renewal of my two twi C card.
I'm in the local IU a 1475 at
2:08:36
the Port of Savannah, Georgia.
Second prettiest Stan in the
2:08:40
country. Okay, I'm rambling
thank you for the show. Joe
2:08:44
spry.
2:08:44
I met Joe funny didn't talk like
that at all jobs jobs,
2:08:48
jobs, jobs, jobs. Jobs.
2:08:51
You've got karma well, he should
2:08:56
Oh, there's that anonymous from
Glorietta New Mexico 333 Please
2:09:02
do douchey sweetest deed do
listen to no agenda show after I
2:09:09
listened to your interview with
Joe Rogan a year ago love the
2:09:11
value for value system if
implemented in society, the
2:09:15
world would look a lot better.
Well, yes, indeed. I agree.
2:09:21
Jingles karma and something of
your choice? Well, when you say
2:09:26
that, then this is what you get
2:09:28
choice. And
2:09:31
that's what you you've got karma
dealer's choice. Sir Paul of the
2:09:37
command line comes up from
Massachusetts from Midway as a
2:09:41
matter of fact during the $33
and he writes, I would like to
2:09:46
request banning of monkey pox
photos in the newsletter. Gross.
2:09:53
Thank you for your courage for
politic man, I will say
2:09:55
something about this. I had this
photo and I was thinking should
2:10:00
I run this photo or not run this
phone, I had just watched a kind
2:10:03
of a, a, not a documentary, but
like a discussion of advertising
2:10:10
photos and how what the reason
used pretty women is because it
2:10:14
gets you excited to the point
where you're more, you can sell
2:10:18
somebody something easier. And
I'm thinking, what if you grow?
2:10:21
So? Yeah, because I didn't like
this photo either. Oh, okay.
2:10:24
So this was a test to see if
donations will be affected by
2:10:27
grossness.
2:10:29
So I put this in there. And to
see what would happen, and I did
2:10:35
this is the response. I mean, it
was gruesome, but I don't know
2:10:37
that. I don't know. I don't know
if I can conclude anything. I
2:10:40
should have run an A B, I'm
going to next time I have a
2:10:43
gruesome picture. I'm gonna do a
B thing. So when only half the
2:10:46
audience will get it. Which is
what I should have done with
2:10:49
that when I'm sorry. Okay, so
yes, I was thinking about
2:10:54
Believe me, it wasn't something
I was unaware of.
2:10:57
But I think the the cool thing
about it is, you know, this Oh,
2:11:00
monkey pox monkey, but it's not
viral. You'll get monkey pox
2:11:05
from someone breathing on you.
2:11:08
Know, it happen.
2:11:11
You got to be touched by a
monkey. Touch my monkey.
2:11:15
Need a shot? Yes.
2:11:16
Ecuador. Eric is next on our
list. Ecuador. Eric is in
2:11:22
Richmond, Virginia. 333 jhingo
Spot on. Manyana, Fauci
2:11:26
weihsien. A de douche. Well,
let's do that. First off.
2:11:30
You spend deed do
2:11:31
and have an announcement come
hang at the Central Virginia
2:11:34
804. Local 804 meetup Sunday 522
at bingo beer company from two
2:11:39
to 4pm Brewery bar plus Arcade
is partay Thank you boys for
2:11:44
your courage. As requested,
2:11:49
Tim was born in LA and
Netherlands $333. And he writes
2:11:57
Hi TM to you gentlemen been
listening since finding Adam on
2:12:00
the Glenn Beck podcast he's the
guy this is my first show
2:12:08
donation so please do shoot me
lots of
2:12:11
d do things today I love this.
2:12:15
You've been D deuced.
2:12:18
Thursday have an interview for a
new job and would like our two d
2:12:21
two karma magic number 33 And
China is asshole but denkt
2:12:30
doesn't magic magic China is as
2:12:40
you've got
2:12:43
Harmon couple here in a row Evan
Downes 333 from Charleston,
2:12:51
South Carolina. I do not have a
note from Evan although I think
2:12:56
I remember meeting him Excuse me
COVID Long COVID So he gets the
2:13:04
double.
2:13:06
You've got double pharma
2:13:14
I'll do these next ones to Ryan
kill go in Houma, Louisiana 333
2:13:20
says Enjoy the shrimp and grits
in Charleston. Adam How about
2:13:22
some relationship karma here it
is for you Ryan.
2:13:25
You've got karma
2:13:31
now yours do well, this
2:13:33
is apparently Kristin should
have sent an email to to my to
2:13:38
my email. And let me just double
check because I certainly had
2:13:42
nothing with Oh,
2:13:45
you're checking our returning
Kristen good to lie in San
2:13:48
Carlos, California right by our
anonymous cop $333 And there's
2:13:55
no note from her so but she
doesn't she did say she sent one
2:13:59
so we can't give her the double
can't give
2:14:01
her double karma. But please
make sure you resend that
2:14:03
because I did not see it. Then
we have evidence Sarah Ellen
2:14:07
Leakey who are in Charleston,
South Carolina $300 from them
2:14:12
thank you please accept this
long overdue donation from us to
2:14:15
douchebags. We love the show.
And thank you for all you do
2:14:18
hope to meet you and Tina at the
Charleston meetup. Pretty sure
2:14:21
we did. My wife is gawking at
you from across the royal
2:14:24
American as I write this note,
no jingles but a good deed
2:14:28
douching. And karma requested to
2:14:31
use Band D deed deuced.
2:14:34
You've got karma.
2:14:36
There was this one guy at the
meetup. And he didn't know that
2:14:40
the meetup was taking place and
he was looking and he said wait
2:14:44
a minute. That's because he
listened to the show but he
2:14:46
didn't know that there was a
meetup he was on a first date at
2:14:50
the at the Royal American where
the meetup was and he came over
2:14:54
to say hi good looking guy.
Millet ex military guy and I say
2:14:59
Hey man, you know Do you do he
says I'm a train engineer T
2:15:02
bride drives the train. And so
he had this tattoo. I took a
2:15:08
picture I posted on Twitter he
had a train a locomotive engine
2:15:11
tattoo on his bicep that was
killer. True foamer that's a
2:15:16
foamer right there. Bohmer
massive fomer
2:15:20
but if you're working I don't
think if you're working in the
2:15:22
in the industry that you can be
considered a foamer Well, I do
2:15:27
that just for the amateurs that
are outside of the industry that
2:15:30
scream
2:15:32
that just like this, jump, jump
up and down.
2:15:35
Yes, Baronet sir, row goes the
taverns in Victoria beautiful
2:15:40
city, BC 333 33 And he writes a
very long note. baronet's over
2:15:47
sir raga, the taverns a donation
and Canadian dollar s brings me
2:15:50
to Baron, I would like to
request this following territory
2:15:53
the Cowichan Valley valley to
include Lake Cowichan and
2:15:58
surrounding areas. I could be
pronouncing it wrong. I would
2:16:02
like to be sir rogue of the
taverns Baron of the Cowichan
2:16:05
Valley since I missed the order
during my knighting Oh, no, I
2:16:09
missed the A okay, I would like
to request bomb bamboo rum and
2:16:15
dark chocolates added to the
party. I knew that yeah, that we
2:16:20
already have some of that and
right under your desk there.
2:16:24
Yes, I
2:16:24
have to have my own podcast
tavern talk and WP plugins A to
2:16:29
Z Whoo. So I'm holding a multi
podcast community mid Vancouver
2:16:34
Island meet up in a row.
Vancouver is the place everyone
2:16:37
should go at the roof because
you can't get in at the Rose
2:16:40
Oasis and Lake Cowichan on the
25th to get the location you'll
2:16:44
need to RSVP to the meetup as
there is no Is there a limit on
2:16:48
how many people like in hosted
spaces limited? More information
2:16:50
on no agenda? meetups.com with a
for a plug for that for any
2:16:53
Vancouver Island producers visit
the honeymoon Bay market. I am
2:16:58
install 13 Every Saturday 10 to
two all right now there's a
2:17:03
jingle culus he wants 6969 Oh my
god that's amazing. Goat karma
2:17:07
for all jobs jobs jobs. Yeah,
2:17:09
he does ask for some celebration
horns but we gotta live with
2:17:12
that for you.
2:17:13
6969 God that is
2:17:21
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs.
Karma
2:17:31
anonymous rancher Columbus,
North Dakota 255 55. We love our
2:17:35
ranchers goat karma, please.
This is a yearly cast check
2:17:40
donation. Great shows had to
donate when Adam couldn't
2:17:44
pronounce ruminant we say room
in that room in that which means
2:17:49
for cattle, goats and more. They
have more than one stomach for
2:17:53
in cattle to help in digestion
of gas grasses. And all the bull
2:17:58
ball tack was talk was an added
bonus. We have testicle
2:18:02
festivals in North Dakota.
Hello. Hello. Meet up. Hello.
2:18:07
testicle meet up.
2:18:09
Yeah. They have a ball. Hey, and
2:18:13
it just gets better.
2:18:15
By the way and Yak has three
stomachs.
2:18:18
Well, so that's also a rumor
net. Yeah, okay. Yeah. Adam.
2:18:24
Yeah, yeah. Adam in Northwest
North Dakota. We grow a fair
2:18:29
amount of durum wheat which
makes pasta us and many other
2:18:32
crops and we have had a wet
spring delaying and possibly not
2:18:37
allowing planting. And yes, John
we have looked into Wagyu beef
2:18:41
and look really hard at a cow
Shi beef but our climate is
2:18:45
tough to make that pay having to
feed them for so long. I'm not
2:18:50
familiar with this a cow sheep
beef It's sounds good.
2:18:56
I should know and I don't sorry.
2:18:58
So is our rancher here telling
us that what words there's going
2:19:02
to be pasta shortage.
2:19:04
I think he's warning us there
might be a shortage you know
2:19:07
that's funny because I get Bart
I guess some wheat or some some
2:19:11
flowers from Barton Springs,
which is a kind of a high end
2:19:15
place and you have to
refrigerate in springs,
2:19:17
Texas
2:19:19
I don't know where they are not
you mentioned maybe Texas No, I
2:19:22
think it is Texas. Yes. Barton
Springs is near Austin. Yeah,
2:19:25
and
2:19:25
they have they bring in wheat
from all over the country and
2:19:29
then they process it there and
and they have as all high end
2:19:34
weeds and they have just a lot
of stuff. But and I but I had
2:19:38
some Barton Springs I think
maybe it's what it was. And so
2:19:43
last year I got some some of
their durum wheat and then this
2:19:46
year when I went to buy some and
you have to keep it refrigerated
2:19:49
because it's not aged. It's not
treated with bromides or
2:19:52
anything. And I had their
catalog there's no durum wheat
2:19:57
anywhere on there as though they
can't either can't Can't it just
2:20:00
not be made heard they are they
dropped it? I don't know. I sent
2:20:03
him a note about it they never
answered back. So maybe there is
2:20:06
something going on with the
durum wheat. Anonymous anonymous
2:20:12
ranchers one of the guys that
sells the wheat to these guys
2:20:14
and other people.
2:20:15
Well anonymous rancher hook up
with Texas slim man, you sound
2:20:18
like you're perfect for the beef
initiative or be fun. Thank you
2:20:21
very much Oryx. Oh, I also
learned that there's a yak and a
2:20:28
neck. Were you aware?
2:20:31
I don't know anything. I
probably was but I don't think
2:20:34
the Yak has has a balls in the
neck is a female. A female Yak
2:20:41
is a neck. No, exactly. That's
what I said.
2:20:46
Oh, no. More useless
information. Josh. It's Yes. A
2:20:51
and the rancher should also
consider yak
2:20:54
big time. Did are Daxing of your
yak yak dealer did that have an
2:21:01
effect on his business? I
haven't asked this. He had to
2:21:05
disconnect this phone.
2:21:07
He should have gotten a few
orders. Joshua, go ahead. Joshua
2:21:13
Gribben in Richmond, Victoria
Australia. 250 And he writes in
2:21:22
Dear John and Adam, please
deduce me.
2:21:25
You've been de deuced
2:21:28
and except my 250 australian
dollar he dues from the
2:21:31
communist state of Victoria
Melbourne. Thank you for all
2:21:35
that Migdal amygdala shrinkage,
please call out phrase and mugs.
2:21:44
And give me some relationship
slash house buying karma. Got
2:21:49
it? Joshua, you've got
2:21:50
karma.
2:21:54
We're down to our social
executive producers a good list
2:21:56
today. Thanks also to the meetup
donors, Joshua Gribben, Richmond
2:22:01
Victoria Thompson. We just did
that with Sean Fishman that we
2:22:05
go in Portland, Oregon, two
three 4.56 in the morning John
2:22:08
and Adam have really been
enjoying the shows in recent
2:22:11
weeks need a heavy dose of how
selling karma perhaps a twist of
2:22:14
ghost cheers from Baron Finch.
Always Baron you've got
2:22:23
Alan Dix from Spring Hill
Florida two three second
2:22:28
donation to make to make Kane my
deed deuced status love you guys
2:22:33
mean it shout out to Sir CB
provider of worldwide goat karma
2:22:37
and chicken karma. No jingles
but baby formula karma for all
2:22:41
the birthing people?
2:22:42
Yes. There you go.
2:22:44
You've got karma.
2:22:47
tu tu tu dot two three. It's a
row of ducks with a tail
2:22:50
anonymous in Parts Unknown. This
is Oh, this is the Osaka cherry
2:22:55
viewing meetup donation. Osaka
Japan. It's the row of ducks
2:23:00
Webb saw in the Osaka Castle
moat. Oh, okay. This is
2:23:06
numerology to the extreme. One
of them was possibly not a duck.
2:23:10
He says requesting the we've
been waxing the ceiling jingle
2:23:13
and karma for all meetups? Is
this a thing? I don't remember
2:23:17
this waxing. Oh yes. Waxing the
ceiling
2:23:30
Yes, so you've got karma. And
that's from Gitmo nation octopus
2:23:35
balls loving let's and he did
send a meet up a meet up report
2:23:41
but I was not able to decode his
PGP encryption for some reason.
2:23:46
So we'll play that on this
Sunday.
2:23:49
Dave sealing the wax thing comes
from the ceiling wax and wax in
2:23:53
this thing somebody was confused
or he kept talking about sealing
2:23:55
wax. Yeah. Jonathan Keegan
Baronet of Sir psychopath in
2:24:00
Charlotte, North Carolina. tu tu
tu tu tu a first off I'd like to
2:24:05
wish Adam and the keeper a happy
third anniversary and I hope all
2:24:09
of the producers enjoyed
themselves in Charleston on
2:24:13
Monday. With this donation I
climbed to the rank of Grand
2:24:17
Duke. And is that right?
2:24:21
Grand Duke grant do know he's
Baronet
2:24:27
now the Grand Duke you better
look great you do I mean you if
2:24:30
you can document grand Grand
Duke is
2:24:34
that's way up there man. But
he's he sent in. He sent in a
2:24:40
napkin with his accounting. And
he said or we can contact Arthur
2:24:45
Andersen with any additional
accounting questions. We shall
2:24:48
do that.
2:24:51
I didn't see the napkin.
2:24:53
Neither did I. But he says it in
his note. So I'm not I don't
2:24:58
know whether I know what he's
talking about.
2:25:00
I'm proud to announce that none
of my 12 We're gonna put you in
2:25:02
abeyance for today's show.
Because he went from Baronet to
2:25:07
Grand Duke you don't do that in
the tune of dollars that's
2:25:11
that's
2:25:11
like jumping from 4chan to
Tucker Carlson
2:25:15
yeah
2:25:17
he says I'm progent so none of
my 12 followers from Twitter are
2:25:21
robots no jingles just some yet
karma huh I think it's the no
2:25:30
here's what I have yet to
2:25:32
bear in cycle sir cycle as he
meant Baron he could be barren.
2:25:37
No he's also not on the barren
list
2:25:40
so we're putting this in advance
2:25:43
no worries don't worry if it's
all good it'll it'll be taken
2:25:45
care of but this is just this
seems to be we don't we want to
2:25:48
spare anyone any embarrassment
so but it's very possible so
2:25:53
we're gonna give you a Karma Oh,
you want a jack karma? Sorry.
2:25:57
Got ya karma for you here.
2:25:59
You've got karma.
2:26:04
Then we have David meters. David
meters known from himself and
2:26:09
his daughter Leila with the Fun
Fact Friday to 12 dot 13
2:26:12
Pikeville, North Carolina David
and Leila here from Fun Fact
2:26:15
Friday. Adam sorry to put you on
the spot for a fun fact at the
2:26:18
meetup. No, I loved it. Our live
100th Episode is May 19 at 630
2:26:23
Eastern time fun fact.
friday.com. Thank you both. We
2:26:28
could use some live stream karma
for the big show. I guess they
2:26:31
will be on the live stream no
agenda stream. Go ahead. Hit him
2:26:34
up in the troll room. I'm gonna
give you some goat karma for
2:26:37
that YouTube. Very good. You've
got it was great to see them
2:26:41
both.
2:26:43
Okay. Jesse H R Y. And K IW.
Returns you've earned Keith
2:26:54
Frankie. I think what he can
tell us or she can tell us
2:26:59
later. Birmingham Alabama
$200.01. I like to hear what
2:27:04
they say that was an Alabama
accent. Happy birthday to my
2:27:08
smokin hot hubby Zeke. He is one
of the shows podcasting one of
2:27:14
the shows pod slash podcasting
two O's bigots faves they love
2:27:20
podcasting. 2.0 I think is what
2:27:24
Oh, okay. Yeah, biggest faves
love you for ever. And can't
2:27:30
wait to hit our firstborn. You
mix his numbers in here. First
2:27:35
born human resource in the mouth
in a couple of weeks. John and
2:27:38
Adam, for all you do. She's
under social media too much.
2:27:46
Goes don't trust China and
respect Donald Trump don't trust
2:27:50
China. China is an
2:27:56
ESP ICT.
2:27:58
Thank you very much. We got
Andrew Baker next Stratford,
2:28:01
Missouri. 200 ollars. No
jingles? No karma. Good. Thank
2:28:05
you very much. I'll move
straight to Sir William Lee from
2:28:08
Austin, Texas. $200 first time
supporter new listener. Well,
2:28:11
that gives you a deducing in our
books. You spend deed do love
2:28:16
the work you guys do keep up the
great work your neighbor Sir
2:28:19
William Lee. Thank you, Sir
William. I can I'm waving to you
2:28:22
right now.
2:28:24
And wrapping it up as Justin
Spry in Richmond Hill and he
2:28:27
needs a D douching.
2:28:31
Youth Band D deuced.
2:28:33
Thank you for encouraged we've
been listening since Adams first
2:28:36
Rogan appearance was love at
first listen, here's 200 bucks
2:28:41
for my smokin hot girlfriend
Brianna's journey to Dame hood.
2:28:45
Thanks for that. And thanks for
all you do. Could I get a court
2:28:49
room slash custody karma and a
jobs karma for everyone? Thanks,
2:28:54
Justin Spry
2:28:56
jobs, jobs and jobs for jobs
2:29:06
yes, that wraps up our executive
and Associate Executive
2:29:09
Producers where we will be
thanking more of the in person
2:29:13
donations. In our next segment,
and actually, I did just want to
2:29:19
mention briefly a couple of
gifts that we received. I'm just
2:29:24
grabbing the pile so I don't
forget. A brand new holo book
2:29:28
from Sir Jimmy got some dynamite
coins from Nussbaum including,
2:29:34
including a token a coin from
the 1933 World Fair. With a
2:29:41
swastika on it. That's great for
when they come in. That's me. We
2:29:46
got the silver from sort of big
loaf of the blasts that I'll
2:29:51
have to send portions to you.
Dame Katie of the unfinished
2:29:56
knitting project, gave me a
beautiful needle point with on
2:30:01
it I think we probably tweeted
this out but just bring yourself
2:30:05
make your copter to health a
nice little airplane with a 33
2:30:09
on it thank you for that. From
sir a 0011001 SOS Adam and Tina
2:30:18
Great to meet you both thank you
for your courage my life is
2:30:20
truly better because of no
agenda. Best regards. Oh, the
2:30:26
Welch's Brandon and Kristen
Welch who who were the I think
2:30:31
the first ones there. What a
beautiful fabulous couple she's
2:30:35
a photographer and it shows when
you look at her photos they made
2:30:39
a t shirt which is I mean I
don't know if it's a one off but
2:30:44
it's a t shirt says Adam curry
24 firmament first it's got a
2:30:49
little picture of the Flat Earth
and has really beautiful I shall
2:30:53
wear that got a dover a
forgiveness fable from Roger
2:30:59
roundy in one of his comic books
is books not comic books book
2:31:03
they do you have one of those
books is beautiful book. It's
2:31:06
like a rounding like he's not
there. Well, we have one for you
2:31:08
around the extravaganza along
with the facts t shirt. And of
2:31:14
course, thanks to Brandon and
Kristen for the flower also,
2:31:18
thank you to Phoenix for the
flower. The name when I say
2:31:23
flower, you know what I mean?
Thank you again, these are
2:31:27
official titles all of you get
the credit executive producer or
2:31:30
Associate Executive Producer you
can use it anywhere it's part of
2:31:33
the value for value model. You
do that we do this you keep
2:31:37
everything running. We're
appreciative and if you'd like
2:31:39
to be one of these execs or
associate execs go to
2:31:41
vo rack.org/and A remember its
2:31:45
value for value we need your
time talent and treasure and the
2:31:48
value you think it's worth
2:31:50
our formula is this we go out we
hit people in the mouth a good
2:32:11
upcoming an upcoming show I'm
going to bring in I know you're
2:32:15
going to cringe but I have to
bring in because I finally found
2:32:19
some concise clips from the
Amber Heard Johnny Depp is she
2:32:26
is a lunatic
2:32:28
is it possible that this is just
like some really long sex game
2:32:35
they're playing with each other?
2:32:39
Yeah, I think it is possible I
don't think I don't think that's
2:32:42
what it's come to. But I think
that's I think it's possible
2:32:44
they seem to have had a kind of
a perverse relationship.
2:32:51
Well, it's very perverse that
you bring that to the show, but
2:32:53
I'm sure there's a reason for
it. So yes.
2:32:57
Yeah, yeah, I think there's a
good reason is because a couple
2:33:00
of things that just like your
you know, they had like five
2:33:06
penthouses and they kept going
from one to the other coat. Some
2:33:09
testimony was all down though. I
was in Penthouse for when she
2:33:13
went and left for penthouse
five. And I think he was in
2:33:16
Penthouse to
2:33:17
FYI. FYI, that's what the I
happen to know this. Johnny Depp
2:33:22
bought for I think four I don't
know if it's five, that
2:33:26
penthouses in downtown LA all in
a row and the Kinect and he
2:33:29
connected them all. Yeah, so he
connected all of those
2:33:34
penthouses. That's why so you
can just walk from one to the
2:33:37
massive house basically. She
meant I love John. I love Johnny
2:33:42
Depp cut me with some glass if I
can live with him in the
2:33:44
penthouse.
2:33:46
You know, Bill's Ziff, who had
who does more money than Johnny
2:33:52
Depp? He had a mansion down
banana and pineapple. I'm
2:33:55
Annapurna mountain,
2:33:57
monopolists
2:33:58
that place down in Florida. And
their house was so big that How
2:34:03
big was it? It was so big and
had two sides of the house were
2:34:08
on either side of the freeway
was an underground Oh, that's
2:34:12
freeway That's badass.
2:34:16
You're hanging out with good
people man. So you were there at
2:34:20
that house? Did you walk
2:34:21
into his house? I was I was at
the Aspen place and there were I
2:34:27
did I documented and inventory
his wine and pm so we get some
2:34:35
some things fixed but in that
place, it's just an example of
2:34:39
extravagance. So I'm roaming
around this place which is a big
2:34:42
mansion up into Aspen hills. And
so I go there's a big giant pool
2:34:48
and and over the pool is all
these this foliage and I'm
2:34:53
looking in this a bunch of
lighting. Right this like I was
2:34:58
scaffolding with a bunch of
light It's and that are pointing
2:35:03
up into the sky at the foliage.
And I said what? What's going on
2:35:07
is plants, they'll get enough
light to No, no, no, we put that
2:35:10
up there. Because when there's a
big party, we'd like it so that
2:35:14
when the we put these lights up
there and it makes the plants
2:35:18
stink, that's where the sun is
ready to start the turn around.
2:35:20
So the flowers are all facing
down on the pool. So when people
2:35:25
are at the party that you know
they'd be more pleasant.
2:35:28
Oh, wow. That's planning right
there that that's that's a
2:35:32
landscaper.
2:35:34
Something. Lots of mousetraps is
all I can tell you.
2:35:40
It's been very interesting
watching some of the things that
2:35:43
have been coming out that are
completely ignored by M five m
2:35:46
two and just briefly, like
everything well briefly reaching
2:35:50
back to NIH and Fauci. So
there's been some FOIA requests
2:35:56
for your information act. And it
turns out that what we told we
2:36:00
were told was not true. It is
true that National Institutes of
2:36:05
Health Research executives
receive royalty payments from
2:36:09
big pharma for vaccines and
other medications that they
2:36:13
helped co invent. In fact, Fauci
has received at least 35,
2:36:18
another key executive 70, and
these royalty payments are
2:36:23
blocked out You what 70
payments, that's the thing. The
2:36:27
actual amounts are redacted. I
don't care. I don't care if it's
2:36:31
$1. It must be millions. But you
know, this is what's cool about
2:36:35
it. The taxpayers give big
pharma on average during the
2:36:39
during a calendar year or budget
year $10 billion. It could be
2:36:43
more might be 30. But let's just
say 10 billion to go make make
2:36:48
vaccines and medication. And
they do that in complete harmony
2:36:53
with the with the government
workers who receive salaries.
2:36:57
And then when they have a hit
and then something's something's
2:37:01
out in the market, then these
government employees get to
2:37:03
royalty payments of undisclosed
amounts. I'm glad people are
2:37:08
seeing this. We were told it's
bullshit.
2:37:11
It's not true. Who's wrong? Who
2:37:15
I remember us being told that
his bullshit that it was a known
2:37:18
fact now
2:37:19
Oh, my goodness, I have to go
look it up. Yeah, totally. So
2:37:25
too,
2:37:26
are we names are on most of
these patents? So they're gonna
2:37:29
get some money? Let's face it.
Well, they actually did.
2:37:33
I think I think they'd hit it.
No, I think they've hidden it.
2:37:35
So it's a royalty payment, not a
patent royalty. I think NIH has
2:37:41
the royalty has the patent. The
CO ownership of the patent I'm
2:37:45
not sure that that it's a patent
royalty. It is it's a sales
2:37:48
royalty. I'm not sure it's a
bonus check. I think it's thanks
2:37:52
for being corrupt. Hey, that
vaccine didn't work. Thanks.
2:37:56
Here's some money bonus. Now the
other thing which is just which
2:38:03
is in entertaining to me, is
that now people are seeing E S G
2:38:08
as the as the evil scourge that
it is on the financial markets,
2:38:14
the environmental, social
governance, and how do they know
2:38:17
this? Because Oh, Tesla got
kicked out of the standards and
2:38:21
poor five hundreds ESG index.
And so what's fun to see is
2:38:26
people are saying, Wow, man,
does people suck. They kicked
2:38:30
Elon and Tesla out of the ESG
histories. He's making he's
2:38:34
making EVs man How can you get
kicked out? He's He's the
2:38:37
epitome of environmental
goodness. And that's where you
2:38:42
need to look at the s in ESG. It
was why was Tesla kicked out of
2:38:47
the ESG index making them an
investable, an investable for
2:38:52
many institutional investors,
including the big ones at Black
2:38:56
Rock being one of them who
manage institutional money. Why
2:39:02
not? Because they don't do good
EVs. No, no, no, no. It's
2:39:05
because of racism on the work
floor. So this is what you're
2:39:12
going to see. This is how
they're going to control big
2:39:16
public corporations with this
ESG bullcrap. I'm so happy to
2:39:20
see it. And we're also learning
again you're no agenda show was
2:39:24
on the ball. We learned it from
the dude named Ben protector of
2:39:27
megawatts about the Texas grid.
And the basically the Enron
2:39:33
practices that are going on
here, which led to the
2:39:36
Snowmageddon when power was
turned off for many three, four
2:39:40
days, some even longer,
paralyzed Texas and a lot of
2:39:44
peeps people died over this.
Dave Walsh is the former
2:39:49
president of Mitsubishi Electric
and he lays it out perfectly.
2:39:54
Which I wanted to share. It's
interestingly it's a war room
2:39:58
clip. Bannen does have good
guests. I can't, I can't. This
2:40:04
is what I also used to say about
Alex Jones 10 years ago.
2:40:08
So though, ya know, John's had
terrific guests. Now, I want to
2:40:11
mention something that he talked
about birthing people. Okay,
2:40:16
have you seen Ben? And recently?
Is he your birthing person? Have
2:40:20
you seen you know, that emoji
with the pregnant male?
2:40:23
Is that as you share this with
Bill Gates is is Dan and
2:40:27
Bill Gates is wearing a midget?
Really, he's letting himself go.
2:40:33
It looks like he's gonna give
birth to quadruplets.
2:40:37
So Dave Walsh, talks about
ERCOT. This is the, the the
2:40:42
outfit, the way that Texas just
briefly the way the Texas grid
2:40:46
works, is, every five minutes
there's an auction. And this
2:40:50
auction is held not amongst
energy providers, but people who
2:40:55
have purchased energy, sometimes
five years in advance. Some are
2:40:58
hedge funds, some not even
American companies, let alone
2:41:01
Texas companies, and they are
vying for the best price on
2:41:06
their energy. And that happens
every five minutes. And of
2:41:09
course, when things get a little
tight, you know, when when
2:41:12
things go off line or things
aren't right or there's too much
2:41:15
usage, then that price shoots up
recently, just the Houston area,
2:41:19
because a few plants were not
available to provide. The price
2:41:24
went up to 1000s of dollars per
kilowatt hour. Normally, it's
2:41:27
about 50 bucks, 5060 bucks. And
that's exactly what happened
2:41:31
during the Snowmageddon. And the
reason is, there's no incentive
2:41:36
to think of the people of Texas
who might need energy in case
2:41:39
something goes wrong. So just
sharing this Dave Walsh, he's he
2:41:44
was in the business. He knows
what he's talking about. And
2:41:46
it's disgusting.
2:41:47
If you look at the Texas model,
unfortunately, because of the
2:41:51
lack of a capacity payment
structure in Erekat, which is
2:41:54
the Texas grid, and that's a
structure that allows some
2:41:57
incentive for building of
baseload continuous duty power
2:42:00
plants like gas once coal
plants, nuclear plants, no
2:42:04
incentive to do that in Texas.
The market shifted heavily to
2:42:08
when Texas is 27%, dependent on
wind resources for its basic
2:42:13
electrical energy, which leads
to tremendous instability in its
2:42:17
grid, Texas reserved margins are
only eight to 9%. Nationally
2:42:22
reserved margins are 27%. That's
the amount of electricity
2:42:26
capacity generating capacity
that states have to exceed their
2:42:31
demand. So in the worst peak
times, mid summer and or mid
2:42:35
winter, places like down here in
the southeast, winters a big
2:42:39
peak, there is enough generating
capacity to easily sustain the
2:42:42
worst peak times of the year.
Texas has 1/3 of the reserve
2:42:47
margin of the rest of the states
minus California in the country,
2:42:51
which leads to their heavy
dependence on wind power leads
2:42:55
to shortages and brownouts in
periods of times when it becomes
2:43:00
excessively warm in the summer.
But that's because of a policy
2:43:03
they pursued on on not not
inducing spending on
2:43:07
conventional baseload electrical
power generating facilities.
2:43:11
California is in a far worse
position with that that's why
2:43:13
internationally look, and around
the country, California, Texas,
2:43:18
Australia, plagued with
brownouts because of excessive
2:43:21
dependence on intermittent non
reliable solar and wind resource
2:43:25
to the extent of 50 and 18%,
Texas 27% or more of their power
2:43:31
portfolio, that's not a
sustainable mix of energy
2:43:34
resources.
2:43:35
It's hard to believe that Texas
is just as shitty as California
2:43:38
in that regard. sounds worse.
And I learned something new we
2:43:43
got a hill country is not that
big. Fredericksburg is very
2:43:47
small. And there's a lot of
people who have conferences and
2:43:52
meetings out at the wineries and
they all know that's a good
2:43:55
place to take your organization
to. And so I hear a lot of
2:43:59
things from people are caught
has on his board. Obviously,
2:44:03
they've got energy providers and
some of these hedge fund guys
2:44:06
and God knows who else is on
these boards and political
2:44:09
figures. But there's also
someone who reports directly to
2:44:12
the governor of Texas to
Governor Abbott. Then he has a
2:44:17
non voting spot on the board.
But he's there an assessor? I
2:44:21
guess you'd call it he's
supposed to assess and report. I
2:44:24
heard that this guy during the
week. It was at some some
2:44:28
conference in Hill Country, and
he was spotted at breakfast,
2:44:33
drinking a beer. So if that
tells you enough about how this
2:44:38
is being run, I don't know. And
guys slamming him back in the
2:44:41
morning.
2:44:45
Yeah, I guess. Abbott, they may
do what they just said that
2:44:50
whole thing. That whole clip.
That's a Republican state.
2:44:54
I know it's crazy.
2:44:55
How did that go that way?
2:44:59
No, on money, greed,
2:45:03
but no bad information on that.
2:45:05
No, the people aren't gone. It's
bad information. It's it's
2:45:09
complete lack of understanding.
The mainstream media is shit.
2:45:14
They don't understand they just
read press releases and
2:45:16
regurgitate talking points. They
don't talk to a dude named Ben
2:45:20
protector of megawatts
understand how it works. That's
2:45:24
what we do. Talk to people who
are right in the middle of it.
2:45:30
Here's more under reported news.
This is the changing the subject
2:45:35
here. This is Afghanistan,
what's going on there, they're
2:45:38
starving him out.
2:45:39
The UN says acute hunger has
spiked around the world with a
2:45:42
number of people facing famine,
rising by 3 million over the
2:45:46
past year. But this year's spike
is largely due to a surge in
2:45:49
food insecurity in Afghanistan,
where more than half the
2:45:52
population is malnourished. aid
agencies say millions of
2:45:56
children could starve to
2:45:57
death. This week, Afghanistan
got some rare attention in
2:46:00
Congress at a hearing in which
Senator Chris Murphy, a Democrat
2:46:03
from Connecticut, quizzed
witnesses about the US fueled
2:46:06
crisis unfolding there. And I'd
2:46:09
like you all to give us a little
bit of advice as to how we best
2:46:14
unlock the significant amount of
money that the United States
2:46:17
currently has in its possession
at its disposal to try to
2:46:21
address this crisis. In February
President Biden authorized $3.5
2:46:26
billion that's about half of
Afghanistan's frozen assets to
2:46:30
be used, quote for the benefit
of the Afghan people but three
2:46:35
months later, we have not yet
figured out what that
2:46:39
international financing
mechanism is. Still hasn't been
2:46:43
set up.
2:46:44
First up was David Beasley
Executive Director of the World
2:46:46
Food Program whose organization
has been trying to get food
2:46:49
directly to those in need
without it passing through the
2:46:51
government's hands.
2:46:52
So we actually sat down with the
Taliban said look, no one's
2:46:56
gonna give you money let it go
directly to us without your
2:46:59
fingerprints being on it and
they I would say consented but
2:47:03
didn't matter but it worked out
with money came directly to us.
2:47:07
But because the funding we're
having to cut back, cut back cut
2:47:10
back and at least try to reach
those and knocking on families
2:47:14
door but we've got to unleash
those funds, whatever it takes,
2:47:16
because otherwise you either got
appropriate more dollars and if
2:47:20
you don't you go have famine,
you have destabilization, which
2:47:23
means you have more migration
coming out of Afghanistan, and
2:47:26
you're gonna have an
extraordinary amount of
2:47:27
recruitment by extremist groups
for terrorist training
2:47:31
activities.
2:47:31
Oh, my goodness. People are
starving around the world. And
2:47:36
but all people are gonna start
starve. People are starving in
2:47:39
America. They've been starving
before any of these problems by
2:47:43
now. Yeah, let's give it to
Afghanistan. God this is this is
2:47:48
do you think
2:47:49
you gave me $80 billion in
armaments you think they could
2:47:52
sell his stuff on the you know,
big surplus store?
2:47:56
Yeah. Gosh, that is very
disturbing
2:48:06
talking about food in Victoria,
Australia there's now a
2:48:13
agriculture Legislation
Amendment Bill on the books
2:48:16
which looks like it's going to
pass and beside which will
2:48:20
prohibit people from growing
their own food because you know
2:48:27
it's really important that we
keep our agriculture up despite
2:48:30
we can have people you know,
putting contaminated stuff out
2:48:33
there jumping from crop to crop
can have that.
2:48:36
But yeah, that's insanity
2:48:39
got a note from one of our
producers in the Benelux in the
2:48:44
morning from the boots on the
ground in the headquarter of the
2:48:46
biggest wholesale food
distributor of food in the
2:48:49
Benelux that's Belgium, the
Netherlands, Luxembourg Benelux
2:48:54
the mother company will be
investing heavily in promotions
2:48:58
of consuming bugs being the new
normal see this is from inside
2:49:01
the company. And so this is
2:49:04
probably due he doesn't say what
company but I would guess
2:49:08
Nestle's
2:49:10
might be well let me read on.
This company is actively
2:49:14
influencing chefs of restaurants
and catering companies and are
2:49:18
delivering food to almost all
restaurants in the Benelux soon
2:49:22
they'll be giving masterclasses
cook sessions updating menus and
2:49:26
how and and marketing on how to
persuade customers to eat bugs.
2:49:31
All this will be given for free
to promote the consumption of
2:49:35
bugs all for a better climate.
And they actually sent me back
2:49:41
sent me a magazine about the I
think it's called eating bugs
2:49:45
magazine. He says it's common,
this
2:49:48
subscription to eating bugs.
2:49:52
Is is we should probably make a
Yelp I think we you know we are
2:49:59
kind of uniquely position to
make a bug cookbook let's be
2:50:03
honest I mean it's disgusting
but
2:50:07
when you do a cookbook the rule
is you have to taste all the
2:50:12
recipes
2:50:12
okay well that let's scrap that
idea that's not gonna work let's
2:50:18
see I have one
2:50:19
kind of an update eclipses you
should get this otherwise just
2:50:22
just just
2:50:23
wait just before you go I just
want to mention a couple more
2:50:25
things about bugs just about
Yes, well, food in general. You
2:50:29
know, the UK inflation jumped to
9% 40 year high for them food
2:50:35
and energy prices, of course,
the top of the list, and the
2:50:39
Bank of England has warned of
apocalyptic global food shortage
2:50:43
Sri Lanka is in that moment
right now the prime minister
2:50:48
came out and made a big
statement says look we don't
2:50:50
have money for petrol for
tomorrow he said we got no money
2:50:55
we got nothing to do is going to
be shit. I don't know how we're
2:50:58
gonna fix it. And that's just
one of what did we hear from wi
2:51:02
when one of 65 countries as I
don't think it's good, what's
2:51:11
happening here and it's really
not being discussed.
2:51:15
Except here he is being
discussed. We discuss it all the
2:51:17
time except here. It's what I
said except here. I think
2:51:20
there's other I think not sure.
I it's not being discussed as
2:51:28
like the election which I have a
clip wrapping up where it's not
2:51:32
being discussed, like giving
more money to Ukraine. That's
2:51:36
not being discussed like that.
It's not being discussed like
2:51:39
the shooting in New York. No,
it's not being discussed like
2:51:43
Roe versus Wade those three
items true up two thirds of the
2:51:47
new cycle. Yes.
2:51:48
Now all the only food we're the
only being the only food Yeah,
2:51:51
the only food the M five M is
giving us is toxic stew. It so
2:51:56
we get to eat here. You know,
you mentioned the pregnant man
2:52:01
emoji birthing person. Sorry.
Steve Bannon, Bill Gates. So
2:52:08
there was one of these, let's
show how crazy everybody is in
2:52:12
the Senate to in Congress
sessions, where the whole thing
2:52:16
is just meant to get sound
bites. To show everyone how
2:52:20
crazy the other side is. I think
Congressman Johnson did a pretty
2:52:25
good job with this, this this
woman, I don't know who she is,
2:52:30
I don't care to look it up. It's
all theater, but I just wanted
2:52:33
to play the 50 seconds as
intended.
2:52:35
So abortion should be allowed
in, by your definition for any
2:52:38
reason, for any purpose at any
stage, right?
2:52:42
I trust people to make decisions
about their body and then when
2:52:45
relevant, I think that they need
to consult their medical
2:52:48
practitioners. Okay. And
2:52:49
if it is, listen, let me just
ask you this question. If it is
2:52:52
not lawful and morally
acceptable to take the life of a
2:52:55
10 year old child assume you
agree with that, right? That
2:52:57
would be wrong. Correct. I
believe that, okay. And a two
2:53:01
year old child, same thing that
would be murder, we would all
2:53:03
agree that's wrong. Then what is
the principle distinction
2:53:06
between the human being that is
two years old, or nine months
2:53:09
old, or one week old? Or an hour
old than one that is eight
2:53:13
inches further up the birth
canal in the uterus? What's the
2:53:15
difference? Why is it okay in
the latter case and not the
2:53:18
former cases?
2:53:20
He trusts people to determine
what to do with their own
2:53:22
wow yeah,
2:53:30
that's, that's full stop. That's
a clickbait for today. That's
2:53:34
what everybody Whoa, let's be
outrage. Tulsa. Now should we
2:53:38
just talk about the fun factor?
We have such a fun factor that's
2:53:42
come back into our lives. I'm so
happy that she's with us.
2:53:46
Hillary No, Karina Abdul Xian,
Pierre.
2:53:51
Oh god.
2:53:52
I love Karina Duchamp here. She
is going to save the humor of
2:53:58
the show. And it's really
beautiful. This is Jen Sakis
2:54:03
replacement. Ta replacement
theory at work. White woman red
2:54:09
hair replaced by black woman.
She is actually a member of for
2:54:14
for protected classes. She's a
woman. She's a woman of color.
2:54:19
She is a member of the LGBTQ
plus community and she's an
2:54:24
immigrant. So no matter what she
does, no matter what happens,
2:54:29
nobody can really do too much
about it because you will be
2:54:33
let's see a racist misogynist
bigot and a homophobe. And
2:54:41
Tucker Carlson, I guess took her
to task. I did not see this
2:54:43
episode, but people sent me his
super cut. Did you see his
2:54:47
history? No, I did not. So
Corinne was an MSNBC contributor
2:54:52
prior to this fabulous. It's
interesting how she was at MSNBC
2:54:57
is going into the State
Department and And Psaki from
2:55:00
the state from the White House
is now going to MSNBC. So it's
2:55:04
kind of a swap, if you will. And
she's also married to CNN
2:55:12
reporter, so I see no conflict.
Let's listen to how she spoke
2:55:18
about President Trump for much
of her tenure during during her
2:55:23
MSNBC days,
2:55:25
Donald Trump is running a racist
campaign, the Grand Wizard of
2:55:29
the birther movement, which
birtherism is inherently racist.
2:55:32
By the way, he's a racist and a
bigot, which we already knew,
2:55:36
walks like racist talks like a
racist acts like a racist, it is
2:55:40
a racist. And we saw all these
awful voter suppression laws,
2:55:43
which is really racism just
across the country. And we have
2:55:46
a racist president in the White
House who really pushes his
2:55:50
racism like a peacock. Because
I'll say this, we knew Donald
2:55:54
Trump was a racist. I wanted to
ask you just change the topic
2:55:58
for just a quick second about
Donald Trump's racist tweets,
2:56:01
systemic racism, and how that
has affected our country. Donald
2:56:06
Trump is the most outwardly
racist president that we have
2:56:11
seen in generations. This
country needs to start talking
2:56:16
about uprooting institutional
racism. Fox News was racist
2:56:20
before Coronavirus. They are
racist during the Coronavirus
2:56:24
Fox News will be racist after
the Coronavirus
2:56:28
oh beauty will say Tucker's
production team could learn a
2:56:33
lot from our producers when it
comes to Supercuts. They need to
2:56:38
flow into each other not this
like like a hard stop almost
2:56:42
between the
2:56:43
throw and they kind of thrown it
yeah that was not not really
2:56:45
good but she's just super cuz he
has that are good are done by
2:56:47
someone outside.
2:56:49
But wouldn't you say that's kind
of disqualifying for someone who
2:56:51
wants who was going to be the
spokesperson for the White
2:56:54
House?
2:56:55
I wouldn't hire her
2:56:57
no. As a let's let's just get
one example. And, and and as as
2:57:02
time progresses, if she makes
it, maybe we'll we'll hear more.
2:57:06
I don't know if she's she may
flip out. It's just been
2:57:08
beautiful to see how she can't
answer questions. She has none
2:57:11
of the training that Saki had
Psaki, when she was at State
2:57:14
Department. She learned from the
best from Toria Toria Nuland the
2:57:19
destroyer she
2:57:20
is also being grilled by Matt.
2:57:23
Exactly. Real grilling and Tori
it taught her how to talk Jen
2:57:29
how to use the tabs, the tab in
the big binder and flip back and
2:57:34
forth and and you know, look at
it and know exactly what to say
2:57:38
on the fly on the fly really
good. Karina Abdul jump here not
2:57:42
so
2:57:43
great. Congratulations. Thank
you. The President's Twitter
2:57:48
account posted the other day,
you want to bring down
2:57:50
inflation? Let's make sure the
wealthiest corporations pay
2:57:53
their fair share. How does
raising taxes on corporations
2:57:57
reduce inflation?
2:57:59
This is a good question. I also
question How does raising taxes
2:58:05
on corporations help inflation?
Do you have an idea about that?
2:58:08
Generally, what it does
2:58:11
is it is that as soon as they
get a higher tax bill, they pass
2:58:14
it on to the consumer. So the
consumer can pay more money for
2:58:18
the goods and services than they
paid in the past before they're
2:58:20
overheated before the
corporation is over taxed. So
2:58:23
thus, it means that you pay out
more than you would have before
2:58:29
and that automatically fights
inflation.
2:58:34
Doesn't that raise inflation?
2:58:40
You're a Nazi.
2:58:46
I think homophobe is the one you
were looking for. But but his
2:58:50
you're a homophobe his question
actually, now that I think about
2:58:54
it. His question is listen to
the question. Great.
2:58:58
Congratulations. Thank you. The
President's Twitter account
2:59:02
posted the other day, you want
to bring down inflation. Let's
2:59:05
make sure the wealthiest
corporations pay their fair
2:59:08
share. How does raising taxes on
corporations reduce inflation
2:59:13
or reduce inflation I thought
was help inflation it helps
2:59:15
inflation but it doesn't reduce
it. We just heard it from you.
2:59:20
So are you talking about a
specific tweet
2:59:24
you want to bring? This is how
the tab book works. There's a
2:59:28
tweet and every tweet the
president hands out or every
2:59:31
whatever Jo Obama tweets there's
a tab so that she can respond to
2:59:37
it because you know Joe's crazy,
he tweets crazy shit, so they
2:59:42
have to have some kind of crisis
meeting about every single one
2:59:45
even though his job mama. So now
she can't she will. Oh, what
2:59:49
time is that?
2:59:51
So are you talking about a
specific tweet,
2:59:55
you tweeted? You want to bring
down inflation let's make sure
2:59:58
the wealthiest corporations pay
their fair share.
3:00:01
Well, you know, we have talked
about, we have talked about this
3:00:04
this past year about making sure
that the wealthiest among us are
3:00:09
paying their fair share. And
that is important to do. And
3:00:13
that is something that, you
know, the President has been
3:00:17
like Miss South Carolina teen.
3:00:19
Boy, do we have midway? Can we
do an A B here
3:00:24
this evening and find its
underside. So the South Carolina
3:00:26
Miss South Carolina Teen USA,
something like that. This is
3:00:30
the fifth of Americans can't
locate the US on a world map.
3:00:34
Why do you think this is?
3:00:36
Okay, so All right, this is
let's ask this question again.
3:00:39
Okay, here we go. Great.
3:00:44
Congratulations. Thank you,
President, Twitter account
3:00:49
posted the other day, you want
to bring down inflation? Let's
3:00:51
make sure the wealthiest
corporations pay their fair
3:00:54
share? How does raising taxes on
corporations reduce inflation?
3:01:00
I personally believe us
Americans are unable to do so.
3:01:06
Because sama people out there
and our nation don't have that.
3:01:12
And I believe that are at
education like such as South
3:01:16
Africa and Iraq everywhere like
such as and I believe that they
3:01:22
should, our education over here
in the US should help the US or
3:01:27
should help South Africa. It
should help Iraq in the Asian so
3:01:32
we will be able to build up our
future.
3:01:35
Yes, correct. Beautiful answer.
Beautiful, beautiful. Now let's
3:01:39
go do the candidate from Haiti.
3:01:41
So are you talking about a
specific tweet?
3:01:45
I have the question, again,
3:01:46
you want to bring down
inflation, let's make sure the
3:01:49
wealthiest corporations pay
their fair share.
3:01:52
Look, you know, we have talked
about we have talked about this
3:01:55
this past year about making sure
that the wealthiest among us are
3:02:00
paying their fair share. And
that is important to do. And
3:02:04
that is something that the
President has been such and such
3:02:09
working on everyday when we talk
about inflation and lowering
3:02:12
costs. And so it's very
important that, you know, as
3:02:15
we're seeing costs rise, as
we're talking about how to, you
3:02:20
know, you know, build America
that safe, and that's equal for
3:02:24
everyone doesn't leave anyone
behind? That is an important
3:02:27
part of that as well.
3:02:29
But how does raising taxes on
corporations lower the cost of
3:02:34
gas, the cost of a used car, the
cost of food for everyday
3:02:37
Americans?
3:02:38
So look, I think we encourage
those who have done very well,
3:02:41
right, especially those who care
about climate change, to support
3:02:45
a fairer tech tax code that
doesn't change that doesn't
3:02:48
charge manufacturers, workers,
cops, builders, a higher
3:02:52
percentage of their earnings,
that the most fortunate people
3:02:55
in our nation and not let that
stand in the way of reducing
3:02:59
energy costs and fighting this
existential problem, if you
3:03:02
think about that, as an example,
and to support basic collective
3:03:06
bargaining rights as well,
right, that's also important,
3:03:09
but Right, right, right. Right,
by not right, without having a
3:03:13
fair tax code, which is what I'm
talking about, then.
3:03:17
Manufacturing Workers, cops, you
know, it's not fair for them to
3:03:21
have higher tax than the folks
that who are who are who are not
3:03:26
paying taxes.
3:03:27
With inflation, the President
said, you want to bring down
3:03:30
inflation. Let's make sure the
wealthiest corporations pay
3:03:32
their fair share. Jeff Bezos
came out and tweeted about that.
3:03:36
He said the newly created
disinformation board should
3:03:39
review this tweet, would you be
okay with that?
3:03:41
Look, it's not a huge mystery.
Why one of the wealthiest
3:03:44
individuals on Earth, right,
opposed the long anomic agenda.
3:03:49
That is for the middle class
that cuts some of the biggest
3:03:51
costs families face fights
inflation for the long haul,
3:03:55
right. And that's what we're
writing about. That's why we're
3:03:57
we're talking about lowering
inflation here and adds to the
3:04:01
historic deficit reduction the
President is achieving by asking
3:04:04
the richest taxpayers and
corporations to pay their fair
3:04:07
share. That is what we're
talking about.
3:04:12
Okay, you get Tip of the day for
bringing that dumb shit on
3:04:15
board.
3:04:16
Well, this is I'll only accept
it once because she'll be back
3:04:20
more often than you think. She's
gonna keep coming back. This is
3:04:25
the gift that keeps on giving.
3:04:27
And you said nothing there. She
doesn't know what she's talking
3:04:30
about. I don't even know if she
knows what inflation is.
3:04:32
Nope. She has no idea except
prices, high taxes, climate
3:04:37
change more. I am hoping that
she has a meltdown. She looks
3:04:45
like she could have one because
she does look high strung. She's
3:04:48
been fond over by MSNBC for
years. And she could say
3:04:53
anything she wanted you heard it
racist, racist, racist, racist,
3:04:57
racist, racist. prices. Anything
she wanted to say fond over. Bah
3:05:06
Yes. No, yes. Corinne I mean
this is a This to me is on par
3:05:15
with the scary Poppins. I mean
they are bringing in the truly
3:05:23
radical for these jobs. So we
can't even
3:05:27
do the jobs this is the problem
is so upset that what she said
3:05:31
right there. She sounded just
like Miss South Carolina.
3:05:36
I'm going to show my mood by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
3:05:39
all the people who could do
that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
3:05:49
so we have a few people thanking
some of them have complaints.
3:05:53
Oh, really? Or some commentary.
Well, Kay baby from New Paltz,
3:05:56
New York was 7508. And she and
this actually a credit goes to
3:06:01
her smokin hot husband tea dog.
So that's the switcheroo. Okay.
3:06:07
But she's got a couple of
things. He wants to call out her
3:06:10
brother Jason Missick for still
being a douchebag.
3:06:16
And she also wants to she wants
to deducing it's your first
3:06:19
donation. So we got to give her
that.
3:06:22
You've been deed deuced.
3:06:27
And she straightened us out on
the room in ruminants and by
3:06:31
what you already did in the
show, and she wanted some
3:06:34
jingles. But we don't do jingles
in this segment. So we asked Ben
3:06:40
credit
3:06:40
allow me to grab the next three
because these were in person
3:06:44
donations at the meetup. And we
do like to do that when people
3:06:46
show up themselves Christian
Anamika holder, but a mica is
3:06:49
another one of Tina's Instagram
buddies. And she's Dutch and
3:06:54
they live in Ponte Vedra Beach
in Florida $100. And they say
3:07:00
that they love the show. It was
very nice to meet them. Dame
3:07:03
Jeff a dame Janet and Jeff
pally, good $100 And they are
3:07:08
from parts unknown. And they
thank us for navigating this
3:07:12
crazy world. We're finding
ourselves in today enjoy the
3:07:15
opportunity to meet us and thank
you to Dame Jennifer for
3:07:18
arranging the low country meet
up and that here's Brandon and
3:07:21
Kristen Welch I told you about
the t shirt and the flower they
3:07:24
gave me I do want to read this
produce it from episode one. I
3:07:29
was a listener of the daily
source code prior to no agenda
3:07:31
I've donated on and off and a
couple of my designs are in the
3:07:34
no agenda shop. I've not donated
enough to be a night and I'm
3:07:37
sorry for that. Chasing rock
stardom from 12 to 27 years old.
3:07:42
I was even on MTV says going
back to my school in my 30s
3:07:45
becoming a dad while in school
then having our photo business
3:07:48
ruined by this as his wife as
the photographer ruined by COVID
3:07:52
measures has made it hard for my
wife and I to donate like you to
3:07:55
deserve we hit everyone in the
mouth though. I'm eternally
3:07:59
grateful for the work you do
what's kept me sane is brought
3:08:01
my wife and I closer together
and influences my art in a big
3:08:05
way. As soon as I'm done with
the album I'm currently making
3:08:07
I'll make a bigger donation. It
has some no agenda references
3:08:11
sprinkled throughout it it's a
concept album. Yes, Brandon.
3:08:14
Make sure you hook up with Sir
Spencer. And and talk to them
3:08:19
about the value for value music
release. They did a mill in the
3:08:23
wolf. Okay. That's, that's no
agenda meetup donations.
3:08:29
Back to you.
3:08:30
The tall corn in Davenport,
Iowa. 808. Sir Kevin McLaughlin,
3:08:34
our buddy is Duke of Luna by the
way in America lover of America
3:08:38
and love her boobs and Lucas
North Carolina. 808 I'm
3:08:41
surprised it wasn't at the
meetup. Yeah. I'm sure there
3:08:46
were boobs there. Yeah, there we
weren't and of Wessex in
3:08:50
yeoville. UK 6969. And he's got
a D douching. Request.
3:08:58
And we can do that.
3:09:00
You've been D deuced.
3:09:03
And then he's got to douchebag
call us one for rain Walker. And
3:09:11
Dave, don't call me pancake
pancake. Okay. Bruce Schwalm in
3:09:21
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, 6933.
And we have a long note and I
3:09:25
want to that's worth roasted.
That's nice. But it's an
3:09:30
extremely long note in the $50
section. And this happens twice
3:09:34
in today's show. And I want to
say that we read a lot of notes,
3:09:39
and some of them are very long,
but it takes up so much of the
3:09:42
show and to now throw it start
throwing this into the $50
3:09:45
section. I find it personally,
you know, an affront to the
3:09:50
audience at large. And I wish
you'd stop doing it. Yeah.
3:09:55
Yeah, I agree. You know, you're
not talking about Bruce. You're
3:09:58
talking about Michael
3:10:00
like well, I don't know who I'm
talking about in this first case
3:10:03
because because they can't it's
yes Michael it because it's
3:10:08
clogged up my spreadsheet.
3:10:10
Yes. So he does have a birthday
and he will be knighted sir
3:10:16
lavish night of divided and
Concord California and the dirty
3:10:20
sack delta and surrounding
territories at owl at all. And
3:10:26
he does want seared Tri Tip and
a case of rough Russian River
3:10:30
blind pig at the roundtable. His
birthday is on the 29th. So he's
3:10:34
in for that. But I agree with
you. I mean, it's it's really
3:10:39
taking away from it's too long
and it's in the wrong spot. I'm
3:10:46
in agreement,
3:10:47
and then coming up as Victor
Munoz who has a similar note,
3:10:50
not quite as long but it's
pretty long. Right, we'll get to
3:10:55
that right.
3:10:56
But first, first we have sir
Daniel, who was at the meetup in
3:11:00
Charleston, we appreciate that
$60 from him.
3:11:05
You don't have a note or
anything.
3:11:06
I have no note from him.
3:11:08
I have Gergana Yang Cova in
Chesham UK 50 678, Keegan
3:11:15
Sullivan in Peoria, Illinois.
5624. And now you have your
3:11:18
other night.
3:11:19
Yes, this is Victor Munoz from
Keller, Texas, who moved from
3:11:24
South Florida to North Texas and
resumed his monthly donation.
3:11:27
Now, to be honest, he has made
this through monthly donations.
3:11:31
So we do like to applaud when
people do this. And he says for
3:11:35
listeners that feel they'll
never reach knighthood. I can
3:11:37
assure you that getting on a
monthly donation subscription
3:11:40
will get you a seat at the table
before you know it and he will
3:11:43
be known as servic Knight of the
threat hunters and he's
3:11:46
requesting some Fleur is it
Florida Kenya Nicaragua and
3:11:50
Rome? Florida, Kenya, Nicaragua
and Rome and Cuban croquettes at
3:11:57
the roundtable and so ordered so
done, they're ready for you. It
3:12:03
would be Kanye. Oh, and he also
wants us to add his smokin hot
3:12:06
wife Margie to the birthday list
for today. Yes, done.
3:12:09
She's on it. Yep. Andrea Taylor
in Nampa, Idaho. By 37. And is a
3:12:15
switcheroo a happy 37 first book
not husband, Tim
3:12:19
and a de douching for him and he
homeschools there to human
3:12:25
resources. She's so grateful.
3:12:28
You've been deed deuced
3:12:32
Dean Roker 5510 UK, Richard
butter, London UK 5510 Rachel
3:12:38
Gabriel in Tucson Arizona 55 She
needs a deed douching for her
3:12:45
husband.
3:12:47
And this is another deed do
switcheroo this goes to her
3:12:51
husband Rick who has celebrating
his birthday today. Oh yesterday
3:12:55
on the 18th Got it.
3:12:57
Bejo for Deki in Kannapolis,
North Carolina first time donor
3:13:02
5114 Christopher Pike 51 and
gherardo Kansas Zach Boyles and
3:13:09
Edgewater, Florida 5069 Sir Luca
the Earl of London in the
3:13:12
southeast London UK 5055
collective karma we'll put that
3:13:18
at the end for it sir Sergeant
postle in Miami Lakes, Florida
3:13:22
5033 Paul Rader in Boise, Idaho
5033 listening since Joe Rogan
3:13:30
Cameron Linda mood in Garland
Texas 5005 And now the following
3:13:35
people are $50 donors name and
location if I have the locations
3:13:39
to meet Dre Saravana in
Fredericksburg, Virginia 50 Sir
3:13:45
Mark the wandering Knight Box
Elder South Dakota 50
3:13:49
He's He's requesting rainstick
and I'm not prepared to do rains
3:13:55
thick at the moment we have
created so much rain and flood
3:14:00
and he says that they need rain
in Arizona and New Mexico. They
3:14:09
do I need to evaluate it because
we've gotten those big trouble
3:14:15
put
3:14:15
it under advisement under
advisement.
3:14:17
Thank you. Well, Karen
3:14:20
in Chi Ei, Hawaii. Andrew gusik
Sir Andrew in Greensboro, North
3:14:28
Carolina, Steven Chu Mach in
Xenia, Ohio. Sean Avery in Los
3:14:34
Angeles, California, sir Scott
lavender in Montgomery, Texas,
3:14:37
David Kelowna, in Micha Ilona.
Madisonville, Louisiana, James
3:14:42
Edmondson in South Plainfield,
New Jersey, Kevin O'Brien in
3:14:45
Chicago, Illinois, Christopher
Campion in Charlotte, North
3:14:49
Carolina, John camp and antlers
Oklahoma Joshua Dare and
3:14:53
floating around summers in the
military are using military
3:14:57
boxes, Paul DuBois and Chris Are
honks in New York. Rob Nunn
3:15:03
maker in Missouri City Texas
with a name Michael Jan Zach in
3:15:11
Sun Prairie Wisconsin. A lot of
50s today for summer Norris and
3:15:16
Denver. Kevin Kurtz in
Charleston Lorenzo row whoa.
3:15:22
Hold on a second John Kevin
Kurtz in Charleston that was a
3:15:26
in a meet up donation Lorenzo
Roho. says Happy Birthday Dame
3:15:32
Jennifer now you can add bungler
to your resume. And he added $50
3:15:37
to the donation pile. Thanks
Lorenzo. And that's it. That was
3:15:40
the last one right? Yep. I'll
just even though we never read
3:15:46
anything from under the $50
level a few more. In person
3:15:51
donations. They are highly they
gave you the Oh they did meet
3:15:54
the they gave us the Okay. They
signed it away. They signed it
3:15:57
on the piece of paper the dame
Jennifer gave them anonymous $40
3:16:00
Rick PK $40 Both parts unknown.
And we read the SIR a 00110001
3:16:10
sauce. Shawn and we have Evan
mulch from Spartanburg, South
3:16:15
Carolina with $20 and Michael
hynt. Money from Charleston. He
3:16:20
or Michael he has hemp money on
no agenda social also $20. And I
3:16:25
think that is I think that's
everything double check. Yes. So
3:16:32
thanks, everybody for coming to
our meetup making it a great
3:16:35
success. Thank you all for
supporting the show. Thank you
3:16:37
for coming in when we needed it.
And also if if you're on one of
3:16:42
these subscriptions, those are
incredibly important. If you're
3:16:45
not please consider doing that
the sustaining donations make a
3:16:49
big deal to the show. And if
you'd like to find out more go
3:16:53
to a meet up or perhaps check
out our donation page
3:16:55
vorak.org/an NGO Congress
everybody
3:17:00
who may need it, you've got
3:17:13
and here is your list for today
and Jesse Hearn key her smokin
3:17:18
hot hobbies Zeke celebrated on
the 16th She says Happy
3:17:21
Birthday. Of course everyone
says Happy Birthday to Dame
3:17:23
Jennifer celebrated on the 17th
to Rachel Gabriel. Her husband
3:17:27
Rick turned 55 Yesterday. I
believe our very own Erica Chu
3:17:31
also celebrated his birthday
yesterday. He was not on the
3:17:33
list so I add him to manually
Victor Munoz is smokin hot wife
3:17:37
Margie is her birthday today.
Happy birthday. Matthew shocked
3:17:41
33 Tomorrow, Andrea Taylor's as
Happy Birthday we're smoking out
3:17:44
husband Tim Taylor 37 on the
21st and Michael's Zavala was
3:17:48
avala we'll be celebrating on
the 29th and of course
3:17:52
congratulations to my beautiful
wife Tina the keeper three years
3:17:56
and we never had a fight.
3:17:59
And you're going to add Brennan
lot into the list. He's got the
3:18:04
same birthday as Eric and he's
the boyfriend of Jay don't want
3:18:16
to be induced
3:18:17
one title change and of course
we do have one in a bands but
3:18:20
we'll learn more about that as
we get information today.
3:18:23
Baronet sir rogue of the taverns
becomes sir rogue of the Terrans
3:18:27
of the taverns Baron of the coup
which can which I'm Kuwait.
3:18:31
COVID Chon coward, Chon Valley.
I got it out there. Thank you
3:18:35
very much. Baronet now, Baron
for your support of the no
3:18:39
agenda show in yet another
$1,000. And then we have to two
3:18:45
nights, two nights things.
Here's the blade. Here you go.
3:18:50
Nice. Let's do that up on the
stage plays. Michael Zavala, and
3:18:56
Victor Munoz. Both of you have
supported the no agenda show in
3:18:59
the amount of $1,000 or more.
That gives you a coveted seat
3:19:03
here at the no agenda round
table and I am proud to
3:19:06
pronounce the K v as Sir lavish
night of divided and conquered
3:19:11
California and the dirty sack
delta and surrounding
3:19:13
territories at all. And servic
night of the threat hunters for
3:19:18
you gentlemen, we've got hookers
and blow rent boys and
3:19:20
Chardonnay, lumborum and dark
chocolate see your tribe tip in
3:19:24
a case of Russian River blind
pig Florida Kenya Nicaraguan
3:19:27
Roman some Cuban croquettes Of
course we've been asked we
3:19:29
wondered Rosae geishas and sakeI
vaca Milla buckets and bourbon
3:19:32
sparkling cider and escorts
ginger ale and jervois breast
3:19:35
milk and pablum. And yeah, the
mutton and Mead. The muddy meat
3:19:38
is what everybody loves while
you're drinking the meat go to
3:19:41
no agenda nation.com/rings Give
us all your information. So we
3:19:45
can send those rings to you the
wax for the ceiling, and of
3:19:49
course, your certificate of
authenticity. And thank you very
3:19:52
much for supporting your no
agenda show. No one
3:20:00
A couple of meetup reports we
have the Madras Oregon meetup
3:20:07
report, which should be Madras
mad dress Madras I have a
3:20:11
pronunciation guide Madras
rhymes with address like
3:20:14
addressbook Madras, Madras John
Adam. Here's the report for
3:20:17
Saturday May 14 meet at Mecca
great in Madras. Turnout was
3:20:22
pretty light was just my lovely
better half Dame Draya myself
3:20:25
the proprietor Seth and the
Mecca great crew. We enjoyed all
3:20:28
the beers they offered and many
hours of non triggering
3:20:31
conversation while enjoying
local live music. If you're in
3:20:34
Central Oregon, I highly
recommend you check out Mecca
3:20:36
graves 1000 acre farm and
tasting room it's off the beaten
3:20:39
half beaten path but certainly
worth the trip thanks for all
3:20:42
you do em of the Mid Valley aka
MX Adam mix Adam or something
3:20:47
like that. You know at the
awesome guys yelling at the
3:20:53
South Carolina Beat that we
needed no agenda dating app. To
3:20:56
which I said what do you think
the meetups are? I mean there
3:21:00
are there romances have come out
of these meetups. And I think
3:21:04
we'll have we will see at
minimum two weddings this year.
3:21:08
From no agenda meetups, if not
more. And here's one you could
3:21:13
go to on May 23.
3:21:16
And a producers and producers
alike come to the Victoria Day
3:21:20
National patriots bash. Let's
bash some heads near Victoria on
3:21:25
Vancouver Island. Not Vancouver
Adam. It's easy as 1pm May 234
3:21:32
mile restaurant bring your
chalet Lee for a bloody good
3:21:36
time.
3:21:38
And there was a meet up in my
old stomping ground where I used
3:21:41
to live in Guilford in the
United Kingdom at the White
3:21:45
House. And surprisingly, it
sounds like there were quite a
3:21:48
number of human resources.
3:21:49
Hey, John and Adam, this is
internet personality room and
3:21:53
we're at the White House in
Guildford where mac and cheese
3:21:56
is not on the menu. This is
Chris G
3:21:59
my decade of douchebaggery must
come to an end soon. So John and
3:22:02
Adam I will become an Easter
night soon.
3:22:05
In the morning Adam and John
cracking bars this is Malton
3:22:08
with the Guilford no agenda no
3:22:10
John That's it. That's it
cracking buzz. That's our new
3:22:14
nickname nicknames. Cracking
buzz in the
3:22:17
morning Adam and John crack in
bars. This is Malcolm at the
3:22:20
Guilford no agenda meter. Having
a great time. Everyone's having
3:22:24
a great time. I donate but I'm a
struggling 20 year old student
3:22:29
and I can assure you, however,
that I am switched on and turned
3:22:34
on
3:22:35
no comment
3:22:36
from the FEMA Region of the UK
in the morning.
3:22:40
This is Mike at the Guilford
meetup. We're getting eaten
3:22:42
alive by Bill Gates his
mosquitoes here.
3:22:45
dude named Ben named Ben from
Dan anda
3:22:49
in the Morning John Madden faces
get a gardener the Bulgarian
3:22:54
lovely evening.
3:22:56
Thank you. And a big shout out
to Paulo who made it down but
3:23:00
unfortunately had to leave
earlier.
3:23:03
For good old Gilly Thank you
very much everybody. Here's
3:23:07
what's happening meetup wise
today Charlotte's Thursday Third
3:23:09
Thursday seven o'clock tonight
at Ed's tavern Charlotte, North
3:23:12
Carolina tomorrow where the
Western simulation begins six
3:23:16
o'clock dinos live Haltom City,
Texas. Saturday flight with no
3:23:22
agenda oh two 8:11am Pacific
Time Aeneas kitchen, El Monte
3:23:27
California. Also on Saturday.
Hope goes local spring edition
3:23:31
noon at a San City South
Lindenhurst. New York where else
3:23:35
are the locals. Also on
Saturday, the shrunken amygdala
3:23:37
support group two o'clock at
Tufts brew pourrions Cincinnati,
3:23:40
Ohio, North Idaho Saturday
brigade two o'clock Pacific at
3:23:44
the growler, guys Kerr d'Alene,
Idaho d'Alene, Idaho, Saturday
3:23:50
the resist we much sin Cal meet
up 2:30pm Barrelhouse Brewing
3:23:53
Company tap room Fresno,
California, the Central Virginia
3:23:57
local 8042 o'clock bingo beer
Corporation, Richmond, Virginia
3:24:01
and that's on Sunday. Also on
Sunday. The slaves meet up 333
3:24:05
Eastern shelter one in
Blacksburg, Virginia. And let's
3:24:09
see finally we have the Texas
Piney Woods meet up the third
3:24:14
revision 4:33pm Central at rotos
pizzeria in Longview, Texas,
3:24:19
there's a whole mess of them for
May for June and into July and
3:24:24
we're already into August make
sure you go check them out. No
3:24:28
dating apps necessary. This is
where you could find your your
3:24:31
future soulmate, or just someone
to hang out with and drink beers
3:24:35
no agenda meetup.com If you
can't find one near you start
3:24:37
one it's always a pot a
3:24:44
day you will be triggered.
3:24:51
You want to be where everybody
feels the same.
3:24:57
Is like a party
3:25:01
You got ISOs
3:25:04
I have none. You win. Oh,
3:25:07
I was hoping you would have some
because I don't think mine are
3:25:10
any good.
3:25:11
All right. Well, there's always
a good one. Here we go.
3:25:16
I like it. But it's not
understand I don't want to eat
3:25:18
bugs. That's isla. What's this
word?
3:25:23
The pastor power is the pastor
the teleprompter.
3:25:27
And this is the last one I have.
Oh, no, no. That's all I got.
3:25:33
Was that last one?
3:25:33
That's the last one. Oh, no, no.
Oh, no, I like it. Yeah. Okay.
3:25:39
Well, thank goodness. On a
second. Let me just put that in
3:25:43
its slot. It's usable, but it's
not the best we've done. And I
3:25:48
would say that it's time for
time to take us back to the
3:25:52
1970s we continue to track
everything that's happening. The
3:25:55
complete replay of those groovy
bell bottom days.
3:25:58
Time now. For no one gender
Seven News Flash.
3:26:06
Name a big TV show from the 70s
John and I'll blow your mind.
3:26:12
What? Name a big TV show. Well,
a big TV show Big. Big TV show
3:26:18
was a weekly it was it was a
roar like a sitcom a sitcom all
3:26:22
in that right in the right area
in the right in the right realm
3:26:25
know,
3:26:26
The Love Boat. Oh, yeah. Big,
big show.
3:26:29
So we could have come up with
this. pissed at us. We are not
3:26:34
doing the job of television
producers. CBS fall lineup has a
3:26:39
reality show called The Real
Love Boat. It's such an obvious
3:26:43
one. He's got the cruise
industry needing to do some
3:26:47
extra marketing. Yes, throw a
bunch of people on a cruise
3:26:51
ship. You get them drunk. You
gotta you gotta program. And
3:26:56
when people get voted off, they
actually get thrown overboard,
3:26:58
get
3:26:59
thrown into a drink the drink?
3:27:02
We could have come up with this
one. What a piss we didn't
3:27:05
actually.
3:27:07
Well, if you do we start going
through old TV shows we'd come
3:27:10
up with a lot of these. I have
one last clip. Which just to get
3:27:15
us out of the way out of the
election stuff because they
3:27:17
because there's there was
freaked out because Trump is
3:27:19
endorsing this guy and that guy
and some of these guys are
3:27:22
winning, right? A lot of them
and they say about half but I
3:27:25
say most of them. And here's the
NPR report. Notice these find a
3:27:30
little propaganda in here.
3:27:32
Results from yesterday's primary
elections are showing something
3:27:35
of a mixed bag for candidates
supported by former President
3:27:38
Donald Trump. Trump's pick for
the GOP race for the US Senate
3:27:42
prevailed in North Carolina had
been easily winning there, but
3:27:45
it's picking Pennsylvania Dr.
Mehmet Oz remains locked in a
3:27:48
tight fight with Dave McCormack
the PA governor's race and other
3:27:51
Trump back contender Douglas
Mastriano defied even his own
3:27:54
party's efforts to deny him the
nomination monster and was
3:27:58
spread lies about the 2020 vote
count. But still while I'm
3:28:01
asleep.
3:28:03
Lies is pretty light.
3:28:04
This guy has a problem they did
not expect this guy to do it to
3:28:08
get to where he is spread
3:28:09
lies
3:28:10
a liar. It's all lies.
3:28:13
They hate these guys. Yeah.
Well.
3:28:17
That's what it is. Hey,
everybody, that was our show for
3:28:20
today. Thank you for supporting
us and hanging around because
3:28:25
coming up next on no agenda
stream.com We have who are these
3:28:29
podcasts live in Nashville. Then
two live shows on the stream
3:28:34
after that Fun Fact Friday
followed by hog story. It's a
3:28:37
bonanza on the stream. And you
should listen to him in a
3:28:42
podcasting 2.0 app. I think pod
verse and curio caster do the
3:28:46
live stuff now. So make sure you
check that out. And end of show
3:28:52
mixes Professor JJ we got li o
le Pew who's just on a roll and
3:28:59
our very own GW ff the COC with
a perfect Louie Louie rendition
3:29:04
for John's collection. Coming to
you from the heart of the Texas
3:29:07
hill country here in FEMA Region
number six in the morning,
3:29:09
everybody. I'm Adam curry,
3:29:11
and from Northern Silicon Valley
and despite all reports, we
3:29:15
still have power and Jhansi
Dvorak
3:29:17
we return on Sunday with another
deconstruction of your M five M
3:29:22
anything else happening in your
world? Trust no other sources
3:29:25
until then remember us at the
vortec.org/n A and adios mofos
3:29:32
when such
3:29:38
monkeypox
3:29:39
you might want to get away now
because I didn't I was chatting
3:29:41
with a monkey just before two
more monkey bots cases
3:29:45
identified in England, but they
are in the same household. And
3:29:50
this is a new disease that will
kill us all. Slash do nothing
3:29:54
because that's the new big thing
the media can scare us with
3:29:56
monkey boxes of rare viral
infection that does not spread
3:29:58
easily between people. It's
usually mild and self limiting,
3:30:01
but that's not gonna stop the
media from using it to scare us
3:30:03
off after
3:30:04
two years extraordinary and
unprecedented damages result of
3:30:08
trying to control the virus. If
someone mentions a new virus, I
3:30:11
don't care.
3:30:16
But I wouldn't be surprised if
Bill Gates is behind this
3:30:18
because COVID didn't quite work
out for me. He's been in his lab
3:30:21
and instead of Winged Monkeys,
he's got
3:30:36
a little pasty tonight and
you've got some unusual bumps on
3:30:38
your hand.
3:30:39
You might want to get away now
because I did. I was chatting
3:30:41
with a monkey just before and
this is a new disease that will
3:30:44
kill us all slashed to nothing.
So I'm swinging in a
3:30:47
tire. Yeah, well, that
3:30:49
would do it monkeypox for some
swinging in a tire. Yeah, well,
3:31:04
that would if someone mentions a
new virus, I don't care and this
3:31:08
is the new disease that will
kill us all. Slash do nothing.
3:31:17
Let's stop. He was given another
inspiring and coherent speech.
3:31:22
Of course I'm joking. We're
talking about Kamala Harris.
3:31:30
I have the count. They call me
the count because I love to
3:31:33
count things.
3:31:35
We will work together to work
together to address these issues
3:31:39
together to tackle these
challenges together. And to work
3:31:43
together why as we continue to
work together operating from the
3:31:47
new norms, rules and agreements
together, that we will convene
3:31:52
together, work together to
galvanize together global action
3:31:56
together with that I thank you
all this is a matter of urgent
3:31:59
priority for all of us. And I
know we will work on this
3:32:03
together together all together.
3:32:12
Together described every Kamal
Harris as sounding like someone
3:32:17
delivering a book report on that
quite clearly haven't read it.
3:32:22
And wish you would have said
something about working
3:32:24
together. This wasn't just off
the top of her head. She was
3:32:29
actually reading a script
3:32:36
that was a lot of
3:32:37
together don't you have the
entire collection of every
3:32:41
version of Louie Louie
3:32:42
I'm always on the lookout for
other versions I have about 40
3:32:46
Kids
3:32:46
Jesse Johnson you gotta go home
Oh, sad you gotta go home. All
3:33:02
the wine in the world it's
wasteful he won't
3:33:10
buy enough in second half of the
show. He got fans rarely leave.
3:33:18
Johnson and Johnson Johnson and
Johnson you gotta go home. For
3:33:33
33 nights he gave it for
Rayburn, the ones bear if it's
3:33:39
got all bad haze and only good
landlines. Seiko halls yeah
3:33:47
no sweat off my balls
3:33:53
you gotta go
3:34:05
I used to work at this radio
station and cause kfdc And one
3:34:09
day I'm listened to and I have
it on my radio spill discuss
3:34:12
station. And that one day some
guy played Louie Louie style.
3:34:15
One hours of Louie Louie. He's
now he's different Louis Louis.
3:34:18
I'm gonna start collecting Louie
Louie. So I've started
3:34:21
collecting
3:34:22
K FJC.
3:34:24
And you're on hair. Everybody
here on KF JC
3:34:29
JC and Ks JC gets for JC.
3:34:33
I was on the air. Doing radio
plays the Lord
3:34:36
knows he'll never buy no crimson
keeps a track on those skwawkbox
3:34:42
Now if good yak means he'll take
color you gotta go You gotta go
3:35:04
you gotta go yeah
3:35:15
MoPhO to boruch.org/in
3:35:19
A Oh no, no