Cover for No Agenda Show 1452: Toxic Stew
May 19th, 2022 • 3h 35m

1452: Toxic Stew

Transcript

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

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

0:00
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
0:00 0:00