0:00
The word is shared. Adam curry
0:02
Jhansi Devora Sunday May
22 2022. Is your award winning
0:07
get my nation media
assassination episode 1450
0:10
Freeze
0:11
is no agenda.
0:13
Still waiting for my free horse
and broadcasting live from the
0:16
heart of the Texas hill country
here in FEMA Region number six
0:19
in the morning, everybody. I'm
Adam curry
0:21
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where they're telling me to vote
0:25
from Jesse Dvorak.
0:27
Buzzkill. Yeah,
0:32
early voting
0:34
so I had a call just before the
show. And I just the Democrat
0:38
Party, I'm telling you this what
happened? Okay, they told me I
0:42
should be voting for this woman
Sanchez for sheriff. Okay.
0:46
What's the reason for voting for
her? Because she's Latina.
0:50
That's the reason
0:51
they gave you that as a reason.
0:53
Yeah.
0:54
Wow. Well, that's That's lame.
Did you say that? Did you say
1:00
hey, that's lame, bro.
1:02
It's a recording.
1:05
Did you see the horse? That one?
The Some? Some race? I'm spreekt
1:10
Street. Staple or something is?
Yeah, that's the one. Did you
1:14
see the name of the horse?
1:16
No agenda?
1:17
No. The name of the horse is
early voting.
1:23
Early voting wins.
1:24
Yeah, they'll do anything they
will. Well, there you go. No
1:31
agenda called this and January,
January 23. To be exact. We knew
1:36
it was coming. There's no doubt
about it. Would you like to go
1:41
back to January or would you
like to hear my supercut first
1:47
let's go back to January because
we can go into machine.
1:51
Okay, here we go. So in true
American fashion, when people
1:55
are starting to look around you
get some of these local reports
1:58
you know, we got to do something
we got to do something on a
2:00
grand scale to get people on
edge just a little bit. What can
2:04
we do? Here's the meeting we
would have remember we all
2:08
consulted on that movie with
Dustin Hoffman? Remember that
2:12
one because they outbreak they
all DS outbreak outbreak what
2:16
happened in outbreak? It was a
monkey. When you listen to this
2:20
report. Okay. And this is almost
over. This sounds so much like
2:25
the fake news would be on a T on
it in a movie about a monkey on
2:31
its way to a lab in Missouri.
There's a lady who touched the
2:35
monkey. She put her hand into
the box thinking was cats and
2:38
then you get this stoner dude is
like yeah, man, it was pretty
2:42
weird. It's like a monkey head
on the loose man. Now call me
2:46
crazy. But this lady was came in
contact with a monkey from
2:50
Africa on its way to the lab.
And they just let her go home.
2:53
They need to they need to put a
bag over this lady's head. Put
2:56
her in quarantine right away. So
we knew this would happen. We
3:00
didn't know exactly how it was
easy to see when you say this
3:04
was the dump truck accident.
3:07
I think we didn't mention them
the Monkey Park situation which
3:11
I get nothing but flack for
showing those pictures.
3:15
Of course. Now it turns out
those pictures and most of these
3:18
pictures of shingles shingles.
Exactly. From the CDC. Looks
3:22
good. Yeah, looks great. So so
we just do a little recap with
3:26
the past the past few days here
in well, not just the United
3:30
States around the world with a
mega super cut. We can stop it
3:34
whenever you read
3:34
things or everything's around
the world nowadays. It's not
3:37
just monkey pox, monkey pox,
monkey pox, monkey pox and
3:41
monkey pox. Monkey pox, monkey
pox, monkey pox, monkey pox,
3:45
monkey pox, monkey pox, monkey
pox, monkey pox monkey pet. You
3:50
have symptoms
3:51
associated with monkey pox
clusters
3:53
of the virus have been reported
in Britain, Spain and Portugal
3:56
with more cases popping up in
the US Australia and across
4:00
Europe.
4:00
Tonight at Bellevue Hospital
doctors are treating a person
4:03
who may have monkey pox, a city
that is still dealing with COVID
4:07
and its latest surge now comes a
potentially new virus to New
4:10
York City. This one is called
Monkey pox. What this is causing
4:14
is pandemonium antimony of
hearing the word monkey. Experts
4:20
say this new virus could be
spreading fast.
4:23
Scientists at Winnipeg national
microbiology lab have been
4:26
tasked with testing monkey pox
samples taken from Quebec
4:29
patients.
4:30
I would say generally that the
entire population is susceptible
4:34
to this to monkey pox.
4:36
seeking personal protective
options. You might feel a sense
4:40
of deja vu, experts recommend
masking handwashing and physical
4:44
distancing when needed.
mitigation measures
4:47
is my favorite masking for
monkey pox is not airborne. Why
4:51
do you have to put a mask on for
monkey pox?
4:55
Take a chance
4:56
seeking personal protective
options. You might feel A sense
5:00
of deja vu, experts recommend
masking handwashing and physical
5:04
distancing when needed.
mitigation measures with which
5:08
we've become all too familiar,
5:10
that requires very close
personal contact.
5:14
What is Monkey pox
5:15
this is what we call a zoonotic
infection where it can jump from
5:18
nonhuman animals into humans,
public health officials are
5:21
considering a ring strategy that
would include using a smallpox
5:25
vaccine for close contacts of
those infected
5:28
the number of confirmed or
suspected cases of monkey pox
5:31
worldwide is now 106. Doctors
and at least cluding the US are
5:36
now treating patients
potentially infected with the
5:39
rare illness the mysterious
5:41
spread of monkey pox is
concerning for doctors now at
5:43
least 80 cases in 11 countries
and 50 more possible. The spread
5:48
of the rare disease which causes
rashes and lesions has prompted
5:51
the CDC to issue an alert
doctors are hopeful they can
5:54
quickly learn why cases are
spreading around the globe.
5:58
I suspect that we will know a
lot more in about a week the CDC
6:01
is investigating a confirmed
case of a rare and sometimes
6:05
deadly disease called Monkey
pox.
6:08
It just goes on forever.
Everybody's all over the monkey
6:11
pox. And of course, we're
laughing about it. But I am not
6:14
going to make the same mistake
because last time they're
6:16
serious as a heart attack about
it. They're gonna push it,
6:21
you know, the reason they're
gonna push it. I think this
6:24
they've got this is this is a
shoehorn event. Shoot, they're
6:27
going to and I and because
monkeypox has been around, they
6:30
talk about it and they're
wondering why it's showing up
6:32
and especially in Great Britain
is a great place to start it
6:35
because they can blame it on
global warming. Because the only
6:41
difference between then and now
was just a years ago and monkey
6:45
pox has always been floating
around. But now because of
6:48
global warming.
6:49
Have you do you have any? I
mean, we've heard of this, that
6:52
global warming would create more
pandemics due to do we have
6:55
Netflix or any
6:56
evidence hearing it here first,
I like it what medicines
6:59
shoehorn event which means
they're going to shoehorn global
7:01
warming back into this
conversation using monkey pox.
7:05
The only reason we got monkey
pox and they have examples in
7:08
Canada is because of global
warming.
7:12
I think you're right about that.
But we'll still have to mask and
7:17
social distance and I think ask
up yep, here's let's listen to a
7:21
serious news report from CBS.
7:24
Health officials warned today
that additional cases of monkey
7:27
pox are likely to be detected in
the US in the coming weeks. And
7:31
the World Health Organization
reports at least 80 confirmed
7:34
cases of the disease in 11
countries. And educators are
7:37
still trying to confirm whether
a patient admitted to a New York
7:40
Hospital this week has the
disease. If so, it would be the
7:43
second case here in the US this
year. Monkey pox can be fatal to
7:47
one in 10 People who contract
the virus still health officials
7:51
stress the rest of the general
public is low low.
7:55
According to the Daily Mail
Belgium becomes the first
7:57
country to introduce compulsory
monkey pox quarantine. Anyone
8:02
testing positive must isolate
for 21 days. Do you know what
8:07
they use to test to see you if
you have monkey pox?
8:10
I would just go with the visual.
No, no, no.
8:13
No one has monkey pox with
lesions you see this is not you
8:18
get it the lesions don't come
until God knows when no no,
8:21
they're gonna test everybody.
And and I went to the CDC
8:26
website and I looked up monkey
pox testing. And it says right
8:31
here detection of viral DNA by
Polymerase Chain Reaction also
8:35
known as PCR is the preferred is
the preferred laboratory test
8:39
for monkey pox says who says the
CDC know who? The WHO Yeah, who
8:45
was it who was on fire who was
in China? Who's controlled by
8:50
China Ooh, that's a good one we
could do that bit goose
8:53
controlled by China I don't know
who who who
8:57
she Oh she
8:59
who she but how about him? This
is a
9:02
lot of material you can write
this I did this bit in a column
9:06
years ago same thing with the
who know I didn't use who yes I
9:10
did because it was hu
9:12
okay well let's do it with who
and who and gee
9:15
a sheet we should work on so we
can do it well. Oh, okay.
9:18
Well, that's the end of that
bit. Now of course if we really
9:23
want to know what's going on
who's involved you got to bring
9:25
in the man of the hour who Yeah,
that man we got to bring in the
9:27
man who knows everything who
knows everything because he is
9:31
on the board of Pfizer so he's
the go to for CNBC. Ladies and
9:34
gentlemen,
9:34
guy. Why don't we get rid of
that guy? He's on every TV t as
9:38
it is. You weren't William
Morris must be representing him.
9:42
Oh,
9:42
that wouldn't surprise me at
all. It wouldn't surprise me.
9:45
He's camera ready. You know, he
talks too long. But he's a it
9:49
looks pretty good. He's
appealing and soft on the eyes.
9:53
He's got a good rap. And he's an
insider Dr. Scott Gottlieb.
9:58
What the heck is Monkey pox and
do we So you need to worry about
10:00
this.
10:01
That's how you that's an
interview question. What the
10:04
heck is it? CMBC? The summit of
journalism?
10:09
Well, look, I think now that
there has been community spread,
10:11
it may be hard to fully snap
this out. I don't think it's
10:13
going to become a major epidemic
because it Yes.
10:17
Come, I thought it was, I don't
know why you snuff is one of us
10:22
ever. By the way, that's
something I wanted to miss
10:25
before you lose track of it is
if you listen to all these
10:27
reports, it's like there's been
25 cases, 110 cases, 80 cases,
10:33
two cases here. And then, you
know, it's just there's, this
10:37
reminds me a little bit of the
early days of COVID, where
10:40
nobody had a number which floats
serenity, throw the number what
10:47
is the numbers at 110? is at 80.
Oh, don't
10:49
worry five, I don't know the CDC
will start publishing numbers,
10:52
they'll be on your screen. In
the right hand side of your
10:55
screen, there will
10:56
be an ad jet. I think Jon's hot
Johns Hopkins that come to the
10:59
rescue. They're
11:00
the ones that provide the data
for the case and death count for
11:04
CNN and Fox and MSNBC for
everybody. So yeah, that's
11:08
common, don't worry, it's on its
way.
11:09
It's not this out. I don't think
nothing outcome major epidemic
11:12
because this is a virus that's
difficult to spread, you need
11:14
sustained close contact or
contact with the open sores.
11:18
There's so many cases now that
are disconnected. This is
11:20
spreading in the community, in
the community, maybe a lot more
11:23
infection in what we're picking
up. It has a long incubation
11:26
period, upwards of 21 days. So
there may be a lot of people
11:29
currently incubating the virus
is probably a lot of people went
11:32
undiagnosed or misdiagnosed
because doctors aren't looking
11:34
for it. And given the fact that
we found so many disconnected
11:37
cases, it does suggest that the
spread right now is pretty wide.
11:42
That concerns me, I mean, this,
what is this thing? What happens
11:45
if you get it? Well, look, it
11:47
could be dangerous. The case
fatality rate for the particular
11:50
strain that seems to be
spreading is anywhere from one
11:53
to 4% is
11:54
one to 4% That's like 100 times
more than COVID. That's, that's
11:58
a real case. fatality rate,
12:01
like, you know, when you see
somebody's the spread rate, he
12:04
wasn't talking about fatality.
So I think he was is this? What
12:07
happened?
12:09
Well, look, it could be
dangerous, you know, the case
12:11
fatality rate?
12:12
What does that mean case
fatality rate?
12:15
I didn't hear the word fatality
in there, these foolish shit,
12:18
that's bull crap, is this thing?
12:20
What happens if you get it?
12:22
Well, look, it could be
dangerous. You know, the case
12:24
fatality rate for the particular
strain that seems to be
12:27
spreading is anywhere from one
day
12:28
notice. Notice he says the
particular strain that happens
12:32
to be spreading? These are all
this is this is predictive
12:35
programming from Dr. Scott.
12:37
Well, look, it could be
dangerous, you know, the case
12:40
fatality rate for the particular
strain that seems to be
12:42
spreading is anywhere from one
to 4% is particularly dangerous
12:45
and immune compromised
individuals, people who are
12:47
vulnerable. It's also you know,
sort of a disabling virus to
12:51
class two to four months, you
know, you get you get fever,
12:55
lymphadenopathy. And this sort
of phase, a lead up phase, then
12:58
you develop these vesicles, that
class anywhere from two to four
13:01
weeks. So it you know, it's a
significant virus, I don't think
13:05
it's going to be widespread in
terms of an epidemic that we've
13:07
seen, you know, in order of
COVID, for sure. But we could
13:11
get low level spread, it just
becomes hard to snuff out there
13:14
anywhere from five to 10,000
cases a year in the DRC. So
13:17
there are countries where this
is endemic, and it's not
13:20
infrequent. And now that it's
spreading in the community here
13:23
in Western Europe and parts of
the United States, it appears to
13:26
be have gotten into this
country.
13:27
This is a good catch. You're
making here he used snuffed
13:30
twice that that can't be by
accident, this will come back.
13:33
I never heard him use it. You
know, though
13:35
I can already in my mind's ear.
I can hear Fauci going, if we
13:39
tried to snuff it out. We
weren't successful, let's
13:43
snuffing it out.
13:44
Again, it could code or
something.
13:46
Yeah. It's so hard to fully
snuff out. We're not going to
13:49
vaccinate for time I ring
vaccinate using the vaccine,
13:52
ring vaccinate, there you go
this vaccine. That's not a
13:56
vaccine a lot of people are
going to want to take so it
13:58
could be hard to deploy public
health measures to try to get a
14:01
handle on this. That's the
concern, not a widespread
14:03
epidemic here at this point. But
this just low level persistent
14:07
spread cases popping up here and
there outbreaks. That could be,
14:11
you know, a risk to individuals
and certainly headline risk.
14:15
A headline risk. What do you
think that means? headline,
14:20
risk, question two
14:21
headline risk. I'm not sure. I
mean, is that like headline
14:25
inflation, where it means that
the big headlines is oh, it's
14:28
bad, but it's really not so bad.
Is that what he means? Because
14:31
that's that's what they meant.
That phrase us like that either.
14:34
Yeah, no, that was the Jim
Psaki. She said, The the
14:38
headline inflation number is
8.5%. But that's because the
14:42
headline number includes gas and
food remember?
14:47
You don't want vaguely okay. It
wasn't forgot all about her
14:50
redhead.
14:52
So the question is, where does
this come from? You know, we're
14:56
going to try and figure out a
little bit about it. There's a
15:01
let me see this is who sent me
this what is this link from? By
15:04
the way,
15:04
I should mention that some
experts say that if he had the
15:08
oh, if you're older and had the
old smallpox vaccine, you're
15:11
probably won't get monkey pox.
15:14
The CDC writes that the US
government researchers in the
15:18
50s were infecting monkeys with
smallpox and monkey pox was
15:21
first seen in 1958 in monkeys
used in medical experiments. The
15:26
first recorded human is
something we created. Yes, of
15:28
course. It's good shit, good
diseases we created. Yeah, maybe
15:34
maybe we found some extra
batches in Ukraine labs. I don't
15:38
know. As far as I know, I have
yet to see an actual human being
15:42
living today on a tick tock or
an Instagram saying look at my
15:46
lesions. You know, I haven't
seen that. So people may be
15:51
testing positive according to
PCR. And that can be really
15:54
scary. But of course, we know
PCR can be falsified very easily
15:58
depending on the amount of
cycles. Then we have Bill Gates
16:02
obvious and obvious suspects.
You know, Bill Gates has been
16:05
talking about this since the
beginning of the COVID pandemic.
16:08
This is December 2020, is doing
16:10
the surveillance and actually
doing what I call germ games
16:13
where you practice, you say,
Okay, what if a bioterrorist
16:17
brought smallpox to 10 airports?
You know, how would the world
16:21
respond to that? You know, that
there's math to really cause
16:26
epidemics and bioterrorism cause
epidemics that could even be way
16:31
worse than what we experienced.
today.
16:33
I was talking about smallpox and
smallpox has been on the menu
16:37
for quite a while. But CU is
holding an emergency meeting
16:41
over smallpox monkeypox. This is
where you're supposed to say
16:47
who?
16:49
Oh, yeah. Why they have me in a
meeting at all?
16:55
Because they need to do
something about it. Because this
16:58
was all gamed out. By the way.
Do you think that the
17:03
AstraZeneca and j&j vaccines for
COVID which boasts both used
17:08
monkey Dino virus? Do you think
that could have any have
17:11
anything to do with this?
17:13
Oh, then den Pfizer's in play?
17:17
What do you mean, Pfizer is in
play for goodness?
17:20
No, this would be to slam those
guys who are competitors with
17:24
Pfizer the
17:25
membrane? Right. But they
haven't done it yet. I'm just
17:27
thinking, Do you think that's
even
17:29
know this whole thing isn't
Pfizer? No. Well,
17:32
I have my suspicions, of course.
But this was all supposed to
17:38
kick off may 15. Was I think
they nailed it. I think the
17:41
first report was around May 15
of this year 2022. And that is
17:45
exactly the date that the
tabletop exercise from the
17:50
Nuclear Threat Initiative. Used,
they use may 15 as their kickoff
17:59
date for their tabletop
exercise. And this was exactly
18:03
the same as event two different
scale maybe, although the
18:07
national or the Nuclear Threat
Initiative is quite the
18:11
operation. They have I think
they've 20 board members all
18:15
making $350,000 Plus. Country
talk a little bit about who's
18:20
funding them the usual suspects.
But it did, they presented the
18:26
results of their tabletop
exercise at the Munich Security
18:29
Conference. And it's quite
interesting, what they came up
18:35
with, at a very, very, very bad
situation. So I went and looked
18:42
and see if I could find some of
the videos from this tabletop
18:45
exercise similar to event 201.
And I was able to find one that
18:51
was on YouTube. And this one
has, its kind of it has news
18:55
reports and they cut back to a
black screen with words on them.
18:59
So I'm just gonna read the words
and and the rest will will play
19:04
out for itself. So this is
again, this is just a drill
19:07
everybody. This is not real.
This is a fictional scenario.
19:12
There are growing questions
today around a new and
19:15
deadly outbreak.
19:17
Another global outbreak. But
this time, it's different.
19:21
scientists determined that this
monkey pox virus was engineered
19:27
biological terrorism in one
region unleashed on the rest of
19:31
the world.
19:40
Billions of cases hundreds of
millions dead
19:46
with limited antiviral drugs and
no known effective treatments.
19:50
Countries around the world are
struggling to control another
19:53
pandemic with already
devastating effects,
19:58
poor oversight and gaps in
global governance leaves us
20:02
vulnerable to catastrophic
biological threats. Can the
20:09
international community act
quickly enough? Saying far fewer
20:14
cases and countries with
governments took early and
20:17
decisive action.
20:19
And some international experts
are urging the W H O to adopt a
20:23
phased approach to warnings.
20:27
The time to prepare for the next
global pandemic is now. Learn
20:35
more at nti.org/bio There you
go.
20:43
And you couldn't get a job as
voiceover.
20:46
I think it was my coach. My
coach always steered me in the
20:48
wrong to always wanted me to be
a surfer dude. Man. So I looked,
20:54
I read through the whole
document through this, what did
20:57
they actually call this thing?
They call it the strengthening
21:01
global systems to prevent and
respond to high consequence
21:05
biological threats, results from
the 2021 tabletop exercise
21:09
conducted in partnership with
the Munich Security Conference.
21:14
And I marked up a document which
everyone go and take a look at.
21:17
But the the main, the main
points are these are this is
21:23
what they discussed for the key
findings. The international
21:27
community needs a more robust
transparent detection
21:30
evaluation, an early warning
system that can rapidly
21:32
communicate actionable
information about pandemic
21:35
risks. That is the International
Health Regulations that the who
21:39
has is amending and the yes is
amending and we'll discuss those
21:43
in a moment. national
governments should improve
21:46
preparedness by developing
national level pandemic response
21:50
plans built on a coherent system
of triggers, that prompt
21:55
anticipatory action, despite
uncertainty and near term costs.
22:00
In other words on a no regrets
basis. This is very, very sketch
22:10
because if you read into the
document this no regrets basis
22:13
means that lockdowns shutting
down, you know, the basically
22:18
everything we went through in
COVID, that that should be
22:21
implemented based upon a
trigger. I think that trigger
22:25
would be the World Health
Organization. And then you all
22:30
have to just agree that well,
we'll have no regrets of
22:32
destroying people's lives. No
regrets at retarding children
22:38
who can't go to school no
regrets. So the anticipate
22:42
prompt anticipatory action
despite uncertainty and near
22:45
term cost, in other words on a
no regrets basis. The
22:49
international system for
governments dual use dual use
22:53
biological research is neither
prepared to meet today's
22:55
security requirements, nor is it
ready for the significant
22:58
significantly expanded
challenges in the future. There
23:02
are risk reduction needs
throughout the bioscience
23:04
research and development
lifecycle. Well, we know what
23:06
that clause means money. And the
final one, many countries around
23:13
the world lack financing to make
essential national investments
23:16
in pandemic preparedness. So
they went through this whole
23:19
thing, they set it all up, but
it's all ready to go. The
23:23
paperwork has been distributed.
And here we are. I believe
23:29
they're going to try and use
this one. They'll scare people
23:31
though. You see Belgium is
already administering some
23:34
lockdowns, but it comes amongst
the backdrop of something kind
23:38
of crappy. And I was well, I was
right at the time. But now that
23:43
more information has come out
about the International Health
23:47
regulation amendments that we
discussed, which would be a
23:51
treaty. It has been taught it
you know, people say, hey,
23:54
there's a treaty. And the the
Biden administration is joining
23:58
this treaty, which would give
the World Health Organization
24:01
control over calling a pandemic
or even a country as infested
24:07
seething rotten human resources
and taking appropriate action
24:11
with any resources they deem
appropriate. So we went through
24:15
this, we had our constitutional
scholars check in. And they
24:19
said, no, no, this is a treaty.
You and I discussed it does some
24:24
depth what you need for that you
need and it would be a
24:27
significant portion of Congress
to vote for it. Well, that turns
24:34
out to be possibly not true, or
I mean, it would have to be
24:37
taken to court. Because what has
happened is the changes are
24:44
being seen as the Biden
administration as amendments to
24:47
an already ratified treaty. So
the Biden administration is
24:52
saying we don't have to have
this ratified. It's already
24:55
ratified treaty. We're just
changing a few words. So now,
25:02
I think I'm reminded of the
authorized military force bills,
25:07
you know, the authorized
military
25:09
authorized use of military force
AUMF.
25:11
Yeah. Use that back in. But
Vietnam are we still use this?
25:17
Keep using it? Yeah.
25:19
Yeah. So I think we might be in
for a rougher ride than
25:23
anticipated. I mean, this is Na,
25:29
na us both wrapped. And Noah's
gonna put up with a note away
25:34
from from predicting the blue
helmets.
25:37
I'm not saying that.
25:39
What I'm saying you I didn't say
you said it. I'm saying you're
25:41
one step away. I'm not one
25:44
step away. Okay, two steps.
Okay, maybe two steps. I, you
25:51
say no one's gonna stand for it
absolutely wrong. The entire
25:55
world is going to comply,
they're going to shut their
25:57
mouths, they're gonna just Oh,
just shut up and put the mask
26:00
on. And there's already a
vaccine. So minus, we'll get
26:04
that just to so they can go back
to work because you know, I work
26:07
in a restaurant I work at
retail. You know, these are the
26:12
people that will be the poorest.
The hardest working will be the
26:16
ones who have to deal with this
crap once again. And I don't
26:20
think there's there's no doubt
in my mind that the majority
26:23
will go along with it because
we're still in Ukraine mode. We
26:27
still got our Ukraine flag up.
But so now okay, monkeypox.
26:33
monkeypox. And the funniest bit
is that it's kind of being
26:41
blamed on gay and bisexual men.
Which I think is just grand.
26:49
But there's been there was an
interesting I need to see the
26:52
last Bill Maher show. Yes, I
did. Holy moly. He went after
26:57
the whole situation. It was
unbelievable. I was gonna clip
27:00
it but it was so damn long and
it really should be watched and
27:03
we watched it last night and but
he had the punch line in there.
27:07
Where's all the game? Man? He's
all these organizations now.
27:10
They've been kicked out. Yep.
27:12
Know exactly what we've said.
And now they're being blamed for
27:15
monkey pox.
27:17
There's really some sort of a
war on men. What's that?
27:21
Vacation dad even start?
27:23
Oh, boy. In case you haven't
noticed there's a war on men in
27:26
general.
27:27
So we've noticed the war on men
and we've been with there's been
27:30
a war on chicken. And now war on
gun now.
27:34
It's not now
27:35
it has been a war on guns since
way before the show. Yeah, but
27:38
it was a
27:39
war on gay men when they put the
L in front of the G. It used to
27:45
be the GLB community.
27:47
Yes, we we've pointed that out a
lot. But we never thought that
27:50
as part of the war on gay man
27:53
as ground zero for the war on
gay men.
27:56
Blight and looking at in
hindsight.
28:00
The the argument goes as follows
paraphrasing, well, they already
28:05
got their gay marriage, as if
lesbians didn't get it. But
28:09
okay, they already got
everything they need. They have
28:12
all the rights. They're
accepted. We're not except that
28:17
it you know, if you haven't seen
the Bill Maher episode from this
28:21
past Friday, it's well worth it.
28:24
He it was interesting for a
couple of reasons. One is was
28:27
long distances. Okay? The Bill
Maher show is structured as
28:30
follows comes out does a little
monologue laughs at himself a
28:33
lot of stupid smile, you
interview somebody who may or
28:36
may not be anything he's
interested in, even when he has
28:38
somebody who has something to
say he twisted. So it's like
28:42
something he wants to say. So
then he comes out and he does
28:44
this little panel then he does
new rules. And then he does a
28:49
little editorial at the end. So
that's the entire show, print
28:52
out this week's new rules. What
it used to be in another segment
28:57
where he brought somebody out to
this, but they stopped doing
29:00
that because bovid this week's
new rules I'm what I usually
29:04
just watch a little bit of the
show and then I go to new rules
29:06
because I find them to be kind
of insightful. And I check out
29:09
what he has to say at the end
roll my eyes and hang up. But
29:13
this time I'm watching the new
rules. I'm saying this is the
29:16
lamest. There's nothing funny
here. This is not funny. And
29:20
then I just luckily caught the
beginning of his of his screed.
29:24
Yes. Together. And he goes off
the deep end on it. I go home oh
29:30
my god, this is a very good he
nails all the right points. And
29:34
this was this was about his
unbelievable conclusion at the
29:37
end about this war on gay men
that I didn't see coming. Well.
29:41
The segment was really about the
trendiness of trans trans
29:49
trendiness. And he said Hey, how
is it possible that there's an
29:52
extraordinary amount of trans
children in Calif he was really
29:56
like we're hurting our children.
He said that. It was like a It
30:00
was like a q&a. You know, we're
hurting.
30:05
specifically targeting the Los
Angeles Community Lee Hollywood
30:10
I it's, you know, you go to a
dinner party and everybody at
30:13
that dinner party has a kid
who's trans yes at work.
30:17
And what I found extra
interesting as Adam Carolla was
30:20
one of the guests. And Adam. So
Bill Maher starts this bit off
30:24
by talking about Abigail
Schreiber's book about this
30:27
trend in which you know, she's
been cancelled. And sqare eight
30:33
historiated at Joe Rogan had her
on and I remember talking to
30:36
Joe, I said, Man was pretty
cool. You had her on? He said,
30:38
Yeah, no one would have run Adam
Carolla refused. He said that's
30:42
too dangerous for my show. And
here's this douche sitting there
30:45
on the panels night. And he said
he had nothing. He said nothing,
30:49
not a single word. Did he say
Oh, I don't want to get any
30:52
trans juice on me. chicken shit.
Seriously, as you know, he's
30:58
chicken shit. And it wasn't
funny.
31:00
That book is in that book is it
should be required reading in
31:04
schools.
31:05
Yeah. Yeah, good luck with that.
So how do we get to that? I
31:12
don't know. Oh, yeah. About the
gay man. Yeah. And then his and
31:14
of course he had that. That
conclusion because it's been
31:17
that way for a long time. Gay
men are no good. Just, I think
31:22
they shouldn't drop just drop it
altogether from the acronym.
31:25
Yeah.
31:26
Okay, get them out of they get
the G out.
31:28
Get the LBB we'll just we'll
just drop the G it will take the
31:32
cheese. Just make all gay men,
white men. Even if the black.
31:36
You're gay. You're a white man.
Just whatever it is. This is the
31:40
direction it's headed. We all
know it. We're ready for it.
31:46
Alright, just a little catch up
on COVID How stupid everybody
31:51
is.
31:52
Let's start let's start by a
little problem a prominent COVID
31:56
is causing and of all places. I
didn't expect it to be in
31:59
France. Because I didn't know
that the resistance. French
32:03
resistance was so strong.
aggressive plays low clip. This
32:06
was a little side beat here.
This is I had it looked at
32:11
hospitals in France.
32:13
Oh, can you get on mic a little
bit more? Are you Off mic or is
32:16
that just my setup? I think she
was you're setting on good.
32:21
closers crazy other side? Yeah.
Well, that's that might be
32:24
necessary.
32:24
Now as Brian sands towards his
traditionally long and deep
32:27
summer break. French hospital
staff are sounding the alarm
32:31
ready, some having to shut down
emergency services due to staff
32:35
shortages, tough working
conditions, low wages. 1000s of
32:38
health personnel fired as well
for refusing to be vaccinated
32:42
against COVID means that
hospitals are really struggling,
32:45
even before many staff take
their breaks. No.
32:51
There you go. They've lost like
50% down in France and France
32:55
was to have the best socialized
medicine system in the world.
32:58
I thought that was the UK. I
thought that was Sweden. I
33:00
thought that was Norway. I
thought that was Denmark moved
33:03
to
33:03
France from the UK to get their
their medicine, but it's
33:07
the pride and joy of the UK, the
NHS, we're doing it for the NHS,
33:11
what save the NHS.
33:15
The number of you know, it's
just an overlook story by the
33:18
mainstream media, the number of
professionals in the business
33:25
who have refused to get the shot
because of what they've
33:29
witnessed firsthand, which is
the only reason I poor as I can
33:34
tell. They go they see all these
people get the shot we have at
33:37
the dinner table on Friday.
Jessie's has a friend in this
33:42
same schooling system that
they're part of that there's a
33:45
big route or rebellion going on
it. And the woman who was a big
33:49
Vaxxer got the shot and has had
nothing but she's been in and
33:53
out of the hospital with heart
problems ever since. And her
33:56
cardiologist told her going to
Jessie who who doesn't didn't
34:00
take the shot. And everyone can
talk to her about things because
34:04
she's reasonable, according to
Jessie, that the cardiologist
34:09
said to this woman, it's because
of the vaccine that you have
34:12
these issues.
34:14
Did she believe it?
34:16
Yes, she did. She got this shot.
The next thing you know she's
34:19
got a swollen heart.
34:22
Yeah, we had a runner die during
the marathon. There's a there's
34:28
a conference right now in
Valencia in Spain. And I know
34:33
people who were there and one
and they had an executive
34:36
meeting this I'm laughing but I
should then an executive meeting
34:39
the night before and of course
everyone's Vax, you know,
34:42
they're doing a huge conference.
So then, you know, that's the
34:45
requirements for these days for
conferences. Everyone has to be
34:48
vaccinated, and they have the
executives in the big room, and
34:53
boom, executive drops dead dead
before even hit the floor. Next
34:57
day. They're there in the
conference. venue. And there's a
35:02
cafeteria, very, very familiar
to these cafeterias in the big
35:05
hall, the big venue. Boom waiter
drops dead dead before he hit
35:08
the ground. 30, about 30 years
old, 3032 years old. Yeah,
35:14
nothing to see here, though
people, nothing to see. And
35:18
fries, and Pfizer besides maybe
getting a leg up on the on the
35:23
new, you know on discrediting
AstraZeneca and Johnson and
35:28
Johnson, they're really excited
about the future. And we got
35:31
Davos starting off today, and
everyone's out there. And I'll
35:34
be watching CNBC and getting
clips of all the elites and
35:37
we'll figure out the plan for
the World Economic Forum and the
35:40
great reset, they will be
talking about it, that's all
35:42
they talk about. And Pfizer CEO
Albear board is already there,
35:47
listen to what he says about the
great innovations that they have
35:50
coming
35:50
if he's basically biological.
See that it is in the tablet.
35:56
And once you take the tablet,
and dissolves into your stomach,
35:59
sec sends a signal but you took
the tablet. So imagine the
36:03
implications of that compliance,
the insurance companies to know
36:07
that the medicines that patients
should take they do take them.
36:11
It is fascinating what happens
in this field.
36:16
You said you couldn't hear him.
I couldn't hear those potted way
36:19
down and I could barely
understand him.
36:20
Well, I haven't changed
anything. So I don't know what
36:23
he's talking about part of the
way down once you turn over
36:25
speakers, and this was turned on
by speakers ever, I want you to
36:29
listen to what he says here and
dissolves into your stomach SEC
36:32
sends a signal that you took the
tablet. So imagine the
36:35
implications of that compliance.
So what he's saying is they have
36:39
a pill, we know it was common,
that the minute you take it, it
36:43
starts dissolving in your
stomach, it sends a signal so
36:46
that we know that you've taken
your proper medications. Imagine
36:49
the compliance he says. What
Yeah, that's what he said. Crank
36:55
it up.
36:57
I don't need a great app. You
told me what he said.
36:59
So imagine the implications of
that compliance, the compliance?
37:04
Yeah,
37:05
that's a great quotable.
37:07
Yeah, if we could hear it.
Fortunately, unfortunately, the
37:12
guy talks like a like an Israeli
even though he's from South
37:16
America. Where's he from? He's
not he's not really no, no, no,
37:19
no, no, we made this mistake
before. He's not doesn't matter.
37:23
He sounds like Schwab. He
thought I was like Klaus Schwab.
37:25
They all sound like a
millionaire. Yeah, exactly.
37:30
Exactly. All right. Back to
America. ABC. Good Morning,
37:32
America. Only dumb people watch
37:34
doctors here. And I'm gonna look
I'm gonna be honest with you all
37:38
when this viewer question and I
asked you about it here in the
37:40
break. Okay, here's the
question. Someone said, can I
37:43
get COVID More than one? And you
kind of just shrugged and side?
37:49
Because it seems incredible for
some of us that people don't
37:52
know this. A lot of us know
people who've had it even twice.
37:55
But you're still getting this
question. And I'm
37:56
sure both of you can answer this
question. Yeah, as well as I
37:58
can. So we understand that you
can get COVID-19 More than once
38:02
and the new armor, the Omicron
variant more likely than the
38:05
prior variants. When we first
had the Delta variant, it was
38:08
less likely. And I think that's
what got into the minds of many
38:10
who are asking this question
right now due to the increased
38:13
transmissibility of the Omicron
variant and their suspicion that
38:15
maybe the association to mild
symptoms does not produce a
38:19
robust immune response that can
protect you against having it
38:22
again. So the short answer is
yes, you can get it more than
38:24
once. unlikely to get it three
months after a recent infection.
38:28
But yes, you can and you can get
it more than twice Correct. I've
38:31
seen unfortunate people who have
gotten in four times and so I
38:34
think that some are more likely
than others, unfortunately,
38:37
safe and effective. Those
vaccines safe and effective. I
38:41
know lots of people who got it.
I know lots of people who got it
38:43
more than once Mimi being one
and that's Mimi's the only
38:46
person I know who's gotten a
twice and wasn't jabbed everyone
38:52
else has it has been jabbed
they've had it more than once.
38:57
She is she's the only one I
know. Maybe she got maybe
39:00
you know what? I was just
thinking about that she was
39:03
probably like, Screw those
crackpot and buzzkill douche is
39:07
they don't know what they're
talking about. I'm getting the
39:09
VAX
39:13
Yeah, who is it that we're
talking about on the other shows
39:15
I doubled double jab double that
the OH NO is one of our one of
39:19
our latest Diems on New York I
think. Vax double jab, very
39:25
proud of it.
39:26
Yeah. Well, the the fears of the
fear is that people's immune
39:29
systems are just saying I look,
I had it. What am I supposed to
39:34
do? I supposed to do here? I'm
done. Three, almost three years
39:40
ago, one of the first things we
talked about when when this
39:43
well, two and a half when this
thing kicked off when COVID
39:45
kicked off. We knew that digital
IDs and passports were coming
39:50
and they did and it was it's all
been disjointed and you know,
39:54
they're trying to pull it all
together and with this
39:56
monkeypox, maybe another
opportunity. I am I'm happy that
40:00
I'm not the only one here with
the clarion call. But I have a
40:03
friend in arms, a soldier in
arms, a compatriot from the most
40:08
unexpected place in the world by
presenting you, Naomi Wolf.
40:13
Thank you, Steve. I'm really
happy to be here. I, I am not
40:17
overstating this. I can't say it
forcefully enough. This is
40:20
literally the end of human
liberty in the West. If this
40:25
plan unfolds as planned. Vaccine
passport sounds like a fine
40:30
thing, if you don't understand
what those platforms can do. I'm
40:34
CEO of a tech company, I
understand what this platform
40:37
does. It's not about the
vaccine, it's not about the
40:40
virus, it's about your data. And
once this rolls out, you don't
40:44
have a choice about being part
of the system. What people have
40:47
to understand is that any other
functionality can be loaded onto
40:52
that platform with no problem at
all. And what that means is, it
40:56
can be merged with your PayPal
account with your digital
40:59
currency. Microsoft is already
talking about merging it with
41:05
payment plans, your networks can
be sucked up, a geo locates you
41:10
everywhere you go, your credit
history can be included, all of
41:14
your medical history can be
included. This has already
41:16
happened in Israel. And six
months later, we're hearing from
41:19
activists, that it's a two tier
society, and that basically
41:23
activists are ostracized, and
surveilled continually. It's the
41:27
end of civil society, and
they're trying to roll it out
41:30
around the world. And it is
absolutely so much more than a
41:33
vaccine pass it is it, I cannot
stress it enough that it has the
41:38
power to turn off your life or
on your life to let you engage
41:41
in society or be marginalized.
And by the way, the last thing
41:44
I'll say IBM has a horrible
history. With Nazi Germany, its
41:49
subsidiary created a kind of
precursor of this with punch
41:53
cards that allowed the Nazis to
keep lists of again, a two
41:57
tiered society or in a Jew in
such a way that they could round
42:00
up Jews, Roundup dissidents
round up opposition leaders
42:03
very, very quickly, it's
catastrophic it it cannot be
42:07
allowed to continue.
42:09
Like and see where I'm going to
be replaced if anything goes
42:12
wrong.
42:12
No, she's not No, no way. Here's
I need someone who's who's
42:17
against me, not someone who's
foremast
42:19
who I know. Well, you. You
probably prefer that. So she's
42:24
prettier. So let's go back to 30
years ago or so it may even be
42:32
longer than that. But there was
a Frenchman who invented the
42:34
smart chip that went into
42:39
Yes. Oh, Hi, Naomi. Yeah, I'll
probably back after the show.
42:44
I like the fact that you have a
big ringer.
42:47
I know that's
42:48
what I do. So this thing came
out and it was the promise was
42:54
as I was writing about this
stuff during that era, and it
42:58
was the chip was never
introduced it to the to the
43:01
United States. It was in Europe
but the United States and if you
43:05
look into it, you find out why
it because they were going to
43:09
MasterCard, Visa, and our boys
are going to just wait to the
43:12
Pat run out and we're gonna
steal the thing we're not going
43:14
to give the guy royalties. That
sounds like that sounds right.
43:18
Yeah, of course, we waited it
out. But during the when it was
43:22
first invented, they talked
about it being a an inclusive
43:27
chip and go on a credit card for
starters, but it could be used
43:30
in a passports and all kinds of
places. And the idea was that on
43:33
this one chip, you could have
exactly what she said. Health
43:38
information, credit information,
money, bank account of you know,
43:43
credit everything. There's
health records everything. And
43:50
it was praised as a great idea
because it was centralized
43:53
things and this is better to
have, you know, instead of
43:55
having 100 different cards in
your wallet, you have just one
43:58
protocol
43:59
was this was this the chip that
the European started using
44:01
initially for payments, was that
the chip or was it something
44:04
else? Yeah,
44:05
same chip. And there was also
the chip that was hacked. Of
44:11
course as usual Yes. And I
didn't ever den I remember this
44:17
watches coming out they're gonna
do the same thing in IBM had
44:20
some products and they were and
this is that era where the your
44:23
refrigerator was going to call
the repairman when it felt that
44:25
it needed
44:26
it was going to order that it
was going to order the milk for
44:28
me when I was well there
44:29
was gonna be you're gonna get
milk ordered everything was
44:31
going to innovate all like that
in the background. And but it
44:34
took so long to roll that any of
these futuristic ideas out
44:38
because they couldn't do it.
That it started we started
44:41
seeing the chinks in the armor
where you started said well wait
44:44
a minute, I really want this and
the mentality of the public
44:49
changed completely from those
early days of rah rah to now and
44:53
it was the left thing these
things are gonna work out and it
44:55
was the left that was against
it. I'll bet political left. Am
44:59
I correct
45:00
Probably I'm not i Yeah, well,
they were against the political
45:05
left was against all this sort
of thing, including just tech in
45:08
general. Until recently now,
they're all gung ho war mongers
45:12
what happened, how that
switched?
45:13
Well, we'll mark this down in,
in your little history book,
45:17
because in 1015 years from now,
there'll be some podcasts who
45:21
were saying, hey, you know,
there are people who are saying
45:23
that the party switched on on
issues. I mean, is that true?
45:26
That doesn't sound right. Well,
this has happened throughout
45:30
history. And it's always
discredited in in the official
45:32
literature. No, no, it was
always the Republicans who were
45:36
racist. No is always the
Republicans who are war mongers.
45:42
Just of note,
45:43
what's the switching word, the
party supposedly switch from one
45:49
to the other, completely, is not
the same as as, as did this is
45:56
not a switch. This is a slow
evolution. And that changed from
46:02
being gung ho for this
technologies back in the late
46:06
70s. To being very skeptical
about these technologies in the
46:11
2020s. You know, 50 years later
is evolution of thought is not
46:16
like some Ellison. Somebody
flipped the switch to well, we
46:20
have illusion of Silicon Valley
to being left wing is something
46:24
that was that snuck up on you.
46:27
Yeah, but it happened in a very
short period. It Yeah, I would
46:32
say well, 15 years is that long
do you consider that long?
46:35
I think it was longer than I
think it took play. I think the
46:38
ramp was longer. I think they're
ramping when
46:40
silica we were doing the show
and Silicon Valley was still had
46:44
the CEOs were handing out i in
rands book and, and there's all
46:53
this objectivism talk and greed
is good and then all of a sudden
46:56
it became very unpopular almost
overnight. You're
47:00
not gonna argue about the and
Rand thing but the same people
47:03
that were handing out that and
Rand book were that were
47:06
liberals to begin with. You're
talking about people like John
47:08
Doerr. Yeah, massive
contributors to the Democratic
47:11
Party. He was one of these and
Randers but
47:14
it was also the you know, the
Pay Pal guys, the big brawny
47:17
guys, and doesn't really matter.
But But what there was a switch
47:24
and it brings this all together
with Elon Musk, who now all of a
47:28
sudden is like I'm voting
Republican. That's a switch
47:34
there's your technology guy all
of a sudden switching to the
47:36
other side publicly making a big
deal out of it. That's not
47:41
something to be underestimated.
47:44
No, big deal. No, I know but
then again is he says it makes
47:49
it says okay, now they gotta
watch them come after me. He
47:52
made that comment one of his
tweets if you recall. And now
47:55
they're coming. I mean, they are
coming after him. But I think
47:57
they were coming after before he
made that comment. Yes. Is the
48:00
Business Insider thing when he
is exposing himself Al Gore
48:04
style? To Oh, man. Oh, man,
48:07
I gotta read this to you. I
gotta read this. This killed me.
48:11
This is the little piece of of
that article. So he
48:16
propositioned a flight
attendant. And here's how it
48:19
went. It was a corporate flight
attendant in his own jet and its
48:22
corporate flight attendant. The
flight attendant told her friend
48:24
that billionaire SpaceX and
Tesla founder asked her to come
48:27
to his room during a flight in
late 2016 for quote a full body
48:31
massage. When she arrived the
attendant found that Musk was
48:34
completely naked except for a
sheet covering the lower half of
48:37
his body. During the massage.
The declaration says completely
48:41
naked
48:42
now is during you I want to
point that out read that little
48:48
tidbit out is the kind of
writing you're getting today
48:51
completely naked, except that
he's saying Adam was completely
48:55
naked under his clothes.
48:57
It's exactly right. During the
massage, the declaration says
49:01
Musk exposed his genitals and
then touched her and offered to
49:06
buy her a horse if she would do
more performing to the
49:10
performance by referring to the
performance of sex acts. And
49:13
then the article. This is the
best writing when the attendant
49:17
who rides horses declined to
continue with the massage
49:22
without engaging in any sexual
conduct. Hey, Ilan, I want a
49:27
horse. Come on, man. What does
it take to get a horse out here?
49:33
It's just the way it's written
to say he exposes his genitals
49:37
and then says why don't you like
horses? Get a load of this. Love
49:43
some some facts out of this
thing? Come on, I think first
49:51
thing I thought of
49:54
My side hurts. Now, keeping with
my theory on Elon Musk Who is
50:01
having? We'll see how the
markets open tomorrow. But ask
50:05
around if any of your friends
are considering advertising on
50:08
Twitter at the moment. I
guarantee you they'll say no,
50:11
not until we find out how many
people are actually seeing our
50:14
ads that we're paying for. So my
my prognostication of him
50:20
destroying Twitter is well
underway. Kim joining the
50:23
Republican Party, you're voting
for Republicans. This guy is out
50:27
to destroy the Republican Party.
Do not trust this man. Will you
50:31
watch I put it right next to
destroying Twitter. He's going
50:34
to try and destroy the
Republican Party. This guy is a
50:36
heat seeking missile, and
everyone's fawning over him.
50:40
Like, like idiots. He's up to no
good. He's normalizing ESG he's
50:47
normalizing it. It's not Oh, ESG
is horrible. No. Hey, man, how
50:51
come I got kicked out of the s&p
500 ESG? Because I make electric
50:56
cars. Yeah, but you got racism
in the workplace. He's
51:00
normalizing this stuff. By the
way, I have a photo of a Bank of
51:06
America app. I can't verify this
because I don't have Bank of
51:10
America. But it clearly shows my
ESG score and it shows 7.5 And a
51:17
little green line that I guess
because this this Bank of
51:20
America customers a good doobie
in his buying the right things
51:24
and doing Yeah,
51:26
what individuals are not having
ESG scores. When did that began?
51:30
This
51:30
started with the investment
accounts investment accounts
51:33
from I think Merrill Lynch.
Yeah, for sure. Merrill Lynch,
51:38
they
51:38
already have this site. So I'm
an investor at Merrill Lynch.
51:41
Yep. And I buy a bunch of stock
and coal mine. Yeah. Chevron, I
51:46
buy some stock. And yeah, in
some you awesome. You will buy
51:51
lithium mine, you know, your app
51:53
will electrocute you. It's not
gonna warn you, if you're buying
51:57
if you're investing in that
stuff, your ESG score will be
52:00
negative. And yes, that shows up
in your Merrill Lynch account,
52:03
your ESG score?
52:05
And what difference does it make
what my ESG score is this? Add
52:09
that to the mix? Oh, is it for
the cocktail party? So
52:12
maybe once everything's all
integrated into the only Wolf's
52:15
app, then you'll be seen as a
bad person. Maybe you won't get
52:19
access to to a mortgage for the
next house you're going to buy?
52:23
Maybe you know, other things
will start getting turned off. I
52:28
mean, I know you're in a way
you're just being contrarian,
52:31
but I know you see it. I know
you see that this is totally
52:33
possible. You just have faith in
humanity. That's your mistake.
52:40
This is these people are evil
this crap. I'm sorry. No one's
52:43
putting up with it. John, come
on, man. They're all gone. That
52:46
people will be proud. Look at my
ESG score.
52:48
This is dopamine isn't bunch of
there's not a bunch of Nick's
52:53
out there that are would be like
this. And they're the people to
52:56
be shunned.
52:58
Well, it's going to be all your
friends and neighbors out there.
53:02
Well, I am in a kind of the
wrong spot to be making these
53:05
arguments. Yes, at times change.
53:10
All right, that's fine. Hey, I'm
in Texas, man. I feel good. I
53:12
don't need no ESG score out
here. If we take care of
53:16
our own facts around you
admitted it yourself, right.
53:19
Yeah. Yeah, we're all back. The
overnight reverse repo market,
53:24
which I've been tracking is
beautiful. This is banks lending
53:29
to each other. They actually
they lend from the Fed have to
53:33
give it it used to be overnight
now is it keep the money for a
53:36
couple of couple of weeks, is
now at an all time high. It is
53:40
not steamed to stop rising since
2019. When I started tracking
53:43
it. Now at $1.98 trillion.
There's a six sister in the
53:48
system, John, something
something is wrong. There's
53:53
there's someone it may be
multiple people. It could be a
53:56
hedge fund. It could be a bank,
you know, the the former New
53:59
York banker told us that it
possibly could be Goldman Sachs.
54:03
But this was again two years ago
or so.
54:06
Yet, like Goldman Sachs would be
out of business by now Disney.
54:11
didn't say that. But he said,
You know, it's likely Goldman
54:13
Sachs, if anyone if anyone has a
problem in the banking sector,
54:16
but it's probably more than
that. You know, it could be a
54:19
big hedge fund, you know, this
Luna meltdown. And that was a
54:23
lot of money. You know? Yeah, it
was a lot of phony baloney money
54:26
but someone someone took a bath
on all that stuff. And this came
54:30
in on the overnight from China.
54:32
What does it potentially tell us
about further risk ahead? Hi,
54:37
Heidi, happy Friday. Not so
happy for a lot of China's
54:41
China's fund hedge fund managers
because they are being forced to
54:45
sell the stocks in a in a very
highly volatile market. From the
54:49
story what we know is about 2350
hedge funds have fallen below a
54:54
threshold that requires them to
slash stock exposures by about
54:58
50% and Manny also heading below
a level that requires
55:03
liquidation.
55:04
So the Chinese hedge fund guys
are being forced to liquidate up
55:07
to 50%. This is not good. I
don't know much about investing.
55:11
But I know that that's not good.
And
55:14
that's by the government. The
Chinese government has decided
55:18
that a number of bad things
aren't good for their long term
55:23
strategies because they are long
term thinkers, supposedly Yeah.
55:26
And so they're just putting the
clamps down on these guys that
55:29
are mimicking Western ways.
55:31
Let's see how it's going here in
the US CBS
55:33
plenty of Americans are seeing
red tonight and feeling the
55:36
financial pressure of an economy
potentially heading toward
55:40
recession. From coast to coast
customers and businesses are
55:43
trying to make ends meet. But
that telling CBS News that is
55:46
becoming more difficult every
day. There are dangerous signs
55:50
everywhere tonight for the
American consumer. The cost of
55:54
gas continues to rise. The
prices are getting crazy. Food
55:57
prices are spiking.
56:00
I love that insert. I wish I
could so that
56:03
the cost of gas continues to
rise. The prices are getting
56:06
crazy. The prices are getting
56:07
crazy food prices
56:09
are spiking. We don't have that
kind of money and profits are
56:12
taking major hits sending
markets plummeting this week.
56:17
The Dow down for seven straight
weeks the worst wall street
56:21
performance in more than two
decades. The war in Ukraine and
56:25
COVID related factory closures
in China are fueling the worst
56:28
inflation in 40 years. Let's
check the pump JP Morgan
56:33
estimates that if current trends
continue, we could see
56:36
nationwide averages above $6 per
gallon and by August.
56:41
Oh goodness, we
56:43
have 690 so far here.
56:45
Yeah, but you're not part of
America. commie land. Here's my
56:50
prediction. We will see here's
my prediction we will see.
56:55
Because it's been this has been
grinding on too long. We'll have
56:59
like a two or 3000 point drop in
one day on the Dow that's coming
57:04
and when it'll be for a reason.
There'll be a catalyst and
57:06
that's that's when we'll finally
figure out where the bottom of
57:09
this is. It's got to come out.
There's too much happening. I
57:13
can just feel it in my loins
57:17
play this clip food shortage
worldwide. Yeah, that's another
57:21
one.
57:22
Now the global food crisis
caused by the war in Ukraine
57:24
threatens to tip 10s of
57:28
Did you catch that little ditty
that just blew right in front of
57:30
it caused by the war in Ukraine?
Oh, is that the only is that the
57:34
only reason
57:35
this is I think that this is
French 24 Adarsha. Well, this is
57:39
not a local reporter. No, this
is musicking. But Biden has to
57:42
say this
57:42
is narrative. Now the global
food crisis caused by the war in
57:45
Ukraine threatens to tip 10s of
millions of people over the edge
57:49
into food insecurity followed by
malnutrition, mass hunger, and
57:53
famine. That is the warning from
the UN Secretary General Antonio
57:56
Guterres as he said he's intense
contact with Russia, Ukraine,
58:00
Turkey, the United States and
the European Union in an effort
58:03
to restore Ukrainian grain
exports. Gutierrez saying he is
58:07
hopeful. But there's still a way
to go.
58:10
The Russian invasion in Ukraine
is amplifying the accelerating
58:13
all these factors. Climate
change, COVID-19 and inequality.
58:19
What? Well, climate change
COVID-19 in inequality, that's
58:22
what's causing it.
58:23
Yeah, I thought it was the war
in Ukraine was related to well,
58:27
we don't have it
58:28
changed. Everything's climate
change. By the way, did he when
58:31
he introduced that guy that he
said the terrorist
58:35
Oh, I don't. I don't know. On
the second clip was out again.
58:38
It was a little shorter show
home and let me listen to how we
58:43
intros
58:44
the Russian invasion.
58:47
The terrorists saying he is
58:49
good terrorists, his name is
guttatus Oh, good. Good said he
58:53
said weird way is the terrorist
terrorist. Well, from now on, he
58:57
will be
58:57
export the terrorist saying he
is he will be generous. Yes.
59:02
It will be the terrorist from
now on. We don't have to worry
59:05
about that. I'm kind of with you
on that. I think that USA will
59:09
be okay. And really when it
comes down to it as ABC Good
59:12
Morning, America shows us. You
don't have to worry about it.
59:16
The famine will be for black
people in Africa.
59:21
And the rain stopped and the
goats started dying. This was
59:24
all that was left to eat all you
eat all day as this kid was
59:29
about 10 Walking over 20 miles a
day to forage for these rockhard
59:34
palm fruit. At least 15 million
people across Bradstreet, Kenya,
59:39
Ethiopia and Somalia won't eat
today or tomorrow. Half of them
59:45
children like Akira we traveled
to northern Kenya with the
59:49
International Rescue Committee
where for failed rains have
59:53
killed crops if there are no
crops here now. What do people
59:57
eat? Nothing And millions of
livestock in their village
1:00:03
curieuse family spends hours and
bashing out a few meager
1:00:07
calories from that palm fruit.
Adding to the drought had been
1:00:12
swarms of locusts and spring
food and fuel prices. Meantime,
1:00:16
international aid to the region
has plummeted. 95%. So we're
1:00:21
looking at possibly the worst
famine in a generation or more.
1:00:25
Yes,
1:00:28
it is heartbreaking.
1:00:29
That means 6 million more people
will fall into hunger in the
1:00:32
coming weeks, and many won't
survive. According to save the
1:00:35
children in the Horn of Africa,
a person is dying of hunger
1:00:39
every 48 seconds.
1:00:42
Nothing to worry about to
Africa, the horn what I did read
1:00:49
this morning is that the
apparent supply of wheat is down
1:00:53
to 10 weeks worth a global
supply. Yeah. Does that sound
1:00:59
right? No. No doesn't sound
right.
1:01:04
No, it didn't sound right. I
wonder why they would want a lot
1:01:08
of wheat and storage. Now
they're talking about
1:01:12
what? Why is wheat so into
French for example,
1:01:15
have they they're self
sustaining with wheat? They
1:01:18
don't even need wheat.
1:01:19
Why is wheat so important?
Bread? Is that the only thing
1:01:23
people have the Can we give him
1:01:24
the dead? I was reading some
some defense stuff on it. He
1:01:27
said the way you should look at
it is wheat equals bread. Equal
1:01:31
sign wheat equals bread period.
You don't have to look at
1:01:34
anything else any further than
that. And breads. Massive staple
1:01:38
worldwide.
1:01:40
Yeah. Can it be replaced by
anything? Oh, nevermind. I know.
1:01:45
I know the answer. I know the
answer. Bugs.
1:01:50
Bugs actually that's probably
Yeah, bug bugs sorghum because
1:01:55
lots of bugs in Africa don't
know what they're
1:01:58
just pick it off your face. A
bug on the fly on
1:02:03
your face kid by the way this
ladies and gentlemen is just
1:02:05
being Cavalier yes office. Yes.
Do not get away we get we get
1:02:10
your support to do this. You
want us to do it? Yes.
1:02:13
I know. You need it. You need us
to do it. German in somebody's
1:02:17
gotta do it. German, the damn
bugs.
1:02:21
By the way. Another prediction
from over a decade ago. How long
1:02:25
have we been talking about the
elites of the world making us
1:02:28
eat bugs? Yeah. Forever which
1:02:32
is I think since the very
beginning Yes. Beginning of the
1:02:35
show and the theme that it
tastes like poop. I miss old
1:02:42
that material.
1:02:43
The report is in the United
States airlines desperate for
1:02:47
pilots. And they're considering
cutting training requirements,
1:02:52
which is supposed to make you a
bit frayed we have an untrained
1:02:55
by don't worry about that.
Apparently a guy with no flying
1:02:59
experience can land a Cessna 208
So you have nothing to worry
1:03:01
about a 787 47 or 737 By the
way, I didn't clip it but a lot
1:03:07
of pilots agree with me that
that guy's full of crap the guy
1:03:11
who landed Yeah, even though one
of our producers knows them.
1:03:14
He's been flying right seat in
that plane for seven years. He's
1:03:18
landed it with with the with the
pilot before this boat was
1:03:23
bullcrap story I
1:03:24
go for that. I do that story.
Yeah. So dishonest. Auto land a
1:03:30
plane with these big these big
airlines. I've been on one when
1:03:33
they were doing
1:03:34
really they have that
technology.
1:03:37
So I'm no I'm coming down on
Africa. What it was what? I
1:03:40
think it was a DC and out of DC
but you know, 757 Yeah. And so
1:03:47
so we come down, it comes down
at funny steep bang on that hits
1:03:51
the
1:03:51
hits boys a little hard, little
hard on a little by little hard
1:03:55
bounces
1:03:56
into the air. And then it hits
again real hard twice. And we
1:04:01
float over to the to the
terminal. And the pilots
1:04:05
sheepishly comes on and he says
this was their I think they have
1:04:08
to do this every so often they
have to do this test this auto
1:04:11
landing test, and apologize
profusely.
1:04:15
Okay, so that's bullshit. Kill,
he fucked up the landing.
1:04:19
Because those things don't do
that. The auto landing is really
1:04:24
sophisticated. It's not even
sophisticated. But it's really
1:04:28
perfect. Unless you have a 5g
transmitter nearby key landed,
1:04:31
he bounced and he blamed it on
the computer. I'm
1:04:35
not saying that's not possible,
because I don't know the guy
1:04:37
don't know the details and he
could be full of it. But that's
1:04:40
the story. Yeah. I thought it
was funny.
1:04:43
Well, if you're if you recall,
the Obama administration started
1:04:47
the next gen aviation
initiative, which I guess has
1:04:50
been stalled or I don't know
where it is. They put a couple
1:04:53
billion dollars into it and that
the whole idea was no pilots.
1:04:57
And I think this might be
playing into it. Let's look for
1:04:59
the next Jenn aviation system
talkin to be go let's look for
1:05:03
the next gen aviation network to
to get some
1:05:07
funding this money we need the
money get pilots Yeah, we can't
1:05:11
learn how to fly. Yeah.
1:05:12
And it's just a bounce people
don't worry. It's just a bounce
1:05:16
on landing. Yeah. And we missed
an election. I didn't know that
1:05:22
Australia was was voting. Yeah.
Scott Morrison out. Australian
1:05:29
voters ended nine years of
conservative rule in the
1:05:33
country. ousting him for the
center left Labour Party leader
1:05:37
Anthony Albanese who campaigned
on promises to take tough action
1:05:42
on climate change.
1:05:43
Yeah, the Aussies have been
finally sold the bill of goods
1:05:47
if you remember that redheaded
woman that was running this
1:05:50
country. She was really me.
1:05:54
Oh, in Australia, you mean?
Yeah. The redhead? Yeah.
1:05:59
She is a mean woman she was and
she would go this year if you
1:06:02
got to watch the parliament. And
you had that back and forth
1:06:05
question time, whatever it is
that she would just just rip
1:06:09
people to shreds her name he was
I hear that somebody in the chat
1:06:14
room should know
1:06:15
we only have a chance.
1:06:17
So she went went ran and got
elected on the promises of
1:06:21
climate change being a hoax. And
as you know, we don't need to
1:06:25
kill ourselves trying to do
anything and that but that but
1:06:29
then she did the she started
going pushing all kinds of
1:06:32
climate change agendas and she
got pretty much out
1:06:35
that Julia Julia Julia Gillard
Oh man. Oh, she was great for
1:06:41
the show. I forgot all about
her. Oh,
1:06:43
she was a mall. Let's
1:06:45
play. Let's play a throwback
clip. Just for just for just for
1:06:49
yucks. Oh man. She was a gem for
the show. Here's Gilly are
1:06:54
dodges a sandwich.
1:06:55
Australian Prime Minister Julia
Gilad has been forced to dodge a
1:06:59
flying sandwich the second she
was greeting children at line in
1:07:05
high school in Canberra when the
student flung the salami snack.
1:07:09
Oh, I think I thought I was
hungry. The and there's this one
1:07:13
member member the the face plant
she did.
1:07:16
Some tough times for the
Australian Prime Minister Julia
1:07:19
Gillard had an embarrassing
moment. This morning in New
1:07:23
Delhi, India. She was visiting a
memorial to Mahatma Gandhi. And
1:07:27
she took a tumble later, she
said one of her heels got stuck
1:07:30
in the soft grass. Thankfully,
she was not hurt at all. She
1:07:33
also pointed out that men get to
wear flat shoes all the time.
1:07:37
Yes. Speaking of flat shoes,
1:07:41
and wear flat shoes if she
wanted this, anyway,
1:07:44
well, wait, this is what she was
really about.
1:07:46
They will be no Carbon Tax under
the government I
1:07:49
lead. We need to price carbon
pricing carbon is the right
1:07:54
thing to do. And I said that
during the election campaign,
1:07:57
you did not.
1:07:59
Yeah, that's right. She promised
no carbon tax. And then she
1:08:02
switched around and they got her
out of there eventually. So the
1:08:05
Australians so they were going
to be tough against this sort of
1:08:09
nonsense, carbon tax, for
example. And now this guy gets
1:08:14
in. What happened? What changed?
What How did Australians get
1:08:17
brainwashed? Oh, it's
1:08:18
easy. Albert Nice. He's also
known as albeau That'll be his
1:08:22
name show name. albeau.
campaigned on improving free
1:08:26
health care, and advocating for
the LGBT community. There you
1:08:32
go. There you go. That's it. You
cannot vote against the LGBT or
1:08:39
should we say the LGBT LGBT
won't just make BLT bisexual
1:08:47
lesbian, trans, we don't need
Jesus anymore. G's are with us
1:08:49
now. All the gay men are now
with this podcast we welcome
1:08:53
them welcome to GS
1:08:56
Mugeez Hey, GS
1:08:58
he How you doing?
1:09:01
Yeah, so that's what So
Australia's circling
1:09:04
the drain. In Germany, the
producer price index. Now this
1:09:08
is not the same as inflation
from the Consumer Price Index.
1:09:11
This is prices for making stuff
I think and what does it be the
1:09:15
same? I think this is the
equivalent of our wholesale
1:09:17
price index.
1:09:19
And what does that represent?
1:09:21
It represents what you just said
producing things the cost of
1:09:25
making Cost of Goods making
manufacturing in general your
1:09:29
pay
1:09:30
so the producer price index
shows inflation of 33 and a half
1:09:37
percent who energy prices Yes,
energy prices which is the
1:09:43
headline inflation number for
producers up at 7.3%.
1:09:52
That's what you get for shutting
down your nukes.
1:09:54
No and let's shut off Russian
gas that makes nothing but
1:09:57
sense.
1:09:58
Yeah, shut off the gas shut The
oil shut off the nukes and then
1:10:01
bitch here's the story France is
having some issues too with
1:10:06
their nukes. This is a nuke
story A nukes in France as the
1:10:10
world faces the specter of
ongoing energy price rises.
1:10:13
There's an added difficulty here
in France now France is highly
1:10:16
reliant on nuclear power but of
the 56 reactors in operation 29
1:10:21
of them are currently shut down.
The current fleet is partly shut
1:10:25
due to plan maintenance but
others are being safety checked
1:10:28
due to unexpected problems of
unexplained corrosion on piping
1:10:33
and aid because
1:10:35
it's a squeeze on France's
energy supply. Over half of
1:10:39
France's nuclear reactors are
offline for maintenance
1:10:42
confirmed French nuclear
regulator the ASN on Tuesday 30
1:10:46
units have been switched off
while 26 continue to function.
1:10:50
Most of those 30 are offline for
scheduled maintenance or 10 year
1:10:54
outages for 12 have been shut
down after routine checks by
1:10:57
state and EDF revealed corrosion
on the pipes. Like seen here.
1:11:02
The injection pipes which
collect water in case of a leak
1:11:06
are essential to a nuclear power
plant safety of the 12 reactors
1:11:10
five have been shut down for
work and seven others will be
1:11:13
checked. The most recent models
are some of those most severely
1:11:17
affected. The shutdown means EDF
which supplies all of France's
1:11:21
atomic energy has been forced to
import power from the European
1:11:24
grid, compensating for its lack
of production. It comes as
1:11:29
demand for energy source amidst
the global gas crisis. energy
1:11:33
experts fear the potential
decrease in production could
1:11:36
raise bills this winter. The
head of French nuclear regulator
1:11:39
ASN warned on Tuesday that
fixing some of the corrosion
1:11:43
problems could take several
years. Nuclear energy makes up
1:11:46
for around 70% of the country's
total electricity production.
1:11:51
Hmm This is yeah that's their
that's their jam. Hmm What does
1:11:57
McCrone have to say? Nothing I'm
a little what? For take a break
1:12:05
here. I'm a little disappointed
because you promised something.
1:12:09
And you you Welljust I did Yeah.
You were going to give us cool.
1:12:14
Johnny Depp Amber Heard clips.
1:12:17
Oh yeah, I'm still working on
it. Yeah, it's
1:12:19
like come on, man. This is I
mean
1:12:21
they may bring Johnny back on
the stand
1:12:25
Did you know that you can bet on
in Vegas on the on the outcome
1:12:29
of some of this prize? Yes.
1:12:30
That's a good bet. Yes. And
1:12:32
here's though here's one of
them. This is I did not clip
1:12:34
this of course this is from some
sports show. I don't know what
1:12:38
this is from but especially post
1:12:39
that was her subjective belief
that she was a victim.
1:12:41
Let's go to some of the bedding
that is taking place out there.
1:12:46
Question one who will the court
have found to have defecate in
1:12:50
the bed this became a big issue
in the case and apparently
1:12:54
there's been a lot of discussion
around this Amber Heard plus 150
1:12:59
The dogs plus 175 Johnny Depp
plus 300 and the security guards
1:13:05
plus 1000 so it's It's neck and
neck between Amber herd and the
1:13:09
dogs who likely did it I
1:13:11
am more shocked at the security
made the list so people now
1:13:14
theorizing that they
deliberately did this to frame
1:13:17
Amber Heard that was the biggest
shocker from that
1:13:20
my money is on the dogs I think
that's it'll have to go to the
1:13:23
dogs
1:13:25
know that they're gonna
determine that so I was looking
1:13:28
at Mimi and I like to talk about
this case because she's been
1:13:31
following it closely and closer
than I have and so I started
1:13:36
doing a little background into
Amber Heard and she she was
1:13:41
actually quite as successful as
generic because she was a
1:13:44
leading lady in a number of
movies but she was doing like
1:13:47
three movies a year most the B
movie some higher quality.
1:13:52
She had a couple of winners
there I thought
1:13:54
well she did she was doing a lot
of movies she's done a lot of
1:13:57
films and and I never even heard
of her actually before this
1:14:02
because what am I paying
attention to? I guess I'm not
1:14:05
that interested. But I saw I
downloaded to over to one
1:14:10
executive produced one movie and
I think to was such a pain in
1:14:13
the ass to work with no one
would let her do it again. And I
1:14:16
saw I downloaded that movie I
download I download two
1:14:19
different movies there's only
way I could get them they don't
1:14:20
have for sale. And so I took the
I did my due diligence as a
1:14:28
producer of the show to download
these movies
1:14:32
if I was terrible if I can
interrupt you. You are right
1:14:35
What a bunch of dogs so I just
read down the list. Curious yeah
1:14:40
sure. Friday Night Lights
dropped dead sexy North Country
1:14:44
Alpha Dog all the boys love
Mandy lane. Remember the days
1:14:48
never back down the informers
Pineapple Express. Okay,
1:14:52
Pineapple Express. That was a
great movie. exterminators the
1:14:55
Joneses. Zombie land. Okay, I'll
give you a zombie land the
1:14:58
stepfather. I think that might
have been her serious acting
1:15:01
debut and soon the darkness the
river why the ward drive angry
1:15:07
than the Rum Diary. Syrup
paranoia Machete Kills three
1:15:12
days to kill the Adderall
diaries one more time Magic Mike
1:15:16
XXL, The Danish Girl. I do until
I don't Justice League curse
1:15:21
smell. London fields Aquaman big
movie Gally and Zack Snyder's
1:15:27
Justice League. There's not a
lot of recognizable names in
1:15:30
there for me. I'm no movie buff
1:15:34
that she did a lot of movies, a
lot of movies. Yeah. As she you
1:15:39
watch any of these movies and
she's very, you know, she's, she
1:15:43
looks good. That's about all you
can say. And she, and she was a
1:15:47
leading lady in a number of
these movies. You know, and it
1:15:49
was like, is a shallow issue
there for eternity kind of
1:15:54
films. I mean, you know, yeah, I
don't know
1:15:57
it. Does she? Does she show her
boobs in these movies?
1:16:00
I don't know. i It's hard to
watch the movie at all. But the
1:16:06
one I think she was the
executive producer in some
1:16:08
films. She ended up do you look
at that film? It turns out that
1:16:13
that's when she was dating depth
and depth was did a cameo. Right
1:16:17
and she was also the lead
actress. I'm thinking you know,
1:16:19
depth had something to do with
some of these situations for
1:16:23
her.
1:16:24
Oh, there were pictures of her
in the Fappening.
1:16:28
The Fappening remember the
Fappening? No.
1:16:32
Oh my goodness, the Fappening
Yeah, that was when the iPhone
1:16:35
was was reasonably new. And
hackers had figured out how to
1:16:41
get people's pictures off of
their iCloud accounts and a
1:16:44
whole bunch of Hollywood
celebrities, too. I guess she's
1:16:47
she was in the Fappening
1:16:50
she was one of the people whose
pictures were leaked. Yeah. That
1:16:56
didn't do it for you think she
would have gotten so that's
1:16:59
funny. I remember that. I
remember that situation that was
1:17:02
in 2008. And suddenly, I'm gonna
see the well the iPhone came out
1:17:07
in 2007 I think it was about a
year after that or 2009 at the
1:17:12
latest and that would be she
started her career on two for
1:17:16
2004 So I think that's a bit She
probably thought there's a good
1:17:20
publicity stunt I don't know how
that worked out.
1:17:23
too. This is interesting photos.
She had like a sign like this
1:17:28
Texas bitch will eat anything
you want like well sketch
1:17:34
he says sketch twice today in
today's show. Yeah, well, you'll
1:17:37
hear it again.
1:17:38
Maybe I don't know why you're
saying it because you shouldn't
1:17:40
be saying sketchy. I'm trying to
be seen as a small drawing and
1:17:46
look don't snuff me bro
1:17:51
continue with your analysis of
her did naked pictures
1:17:56
nothing left to say just see
they're staring Not really but
1:18:02
she you know I'm waiting for the
rest of your analysis of her
1:18:04
that you started it
1:18:06
I was just said the analysis
that I don't think she's a very
1:18:08
good actress and she just you
know, she hasn't
1:18:12
you had a whole different
analysis the other day but I
1:18:14
guess you're not going there
now.
1:18:18
New York different analysis was
Mimi's it's actually my well
1:18:21
there you go.
1:18:21
There you go. This is this is
what we needed. We needed to
1:18:24
blame this next bit on someone
else. Mimi is totally
1:18:28
appropriate. Especially now she
1:18:29
has CO has been watching nothing
but these things that she says
1:18:32
why do they keep leaving out
Amber's little jaunt when she
1:18:36
left home she ran away from home
and Austin and snow
1:18:40
in Westlake which is worse than
Austin. Okay, so what is the
1:18:44
hoity toity girls
1:18:48
she goes to New York she went
and they keep leaving this out
1:18:53
of their bio they said she
Ensign into Wikipedia she went
1:18:56
to New York for a year or two.
And then if you look at these
1:18:59
early pictures and she thinks
that she may have been working
1:19:04
quote unquote in New York as a
high end escort because that's
1:19:07
what she looks like if you look
at his early photos if you look
1:19:10
at those photos, you go holy
crap she looks like a girl that
1:19:15
would be expensive is your
1:19:18
how expensive would you pick her
out John I'm looking at
1:19:21
the five grand
1:19:23
All right, now that everyone is
tuned out I'd like to thank you
1:19:26
for your courage
1:19:27
to God this is the kind of stuff
people want to hear these kinds
1:19:31
of opinions which is all that is
I have no proof except none. I'd
1:19:36
like to thank you for your ask
my wife by the way, not me. I
1:19:39
had nothing to do with these
thoughts. I
1:19:40
would like to thank you for your
exceptional courage and say in
1:19:43
the morning to you the man who
put the sea and Amber herds
1:19:46
probable constipation issues
ladies and gentlemen, Mr. John
1:19:49
C. DeVore.
1:19:53
In the morning, new Mr. Adam
curry also in the morning to all
1:19:55
ships to see Bucha Rafi and
yourselves or David out there.
1:20:00
I talk about the dog right out
what the dog needs what the dogs
1:20:03
on scanner the dog will be that
woke the dog up. Oh, this is
1:20:07
never good. Does the dog have to
do it?
1:20:12
Now if the dogs not seen
anything I didn't ask if
1:20:15
the dog was talking. I said Does
the dog have to do it? Anyway?
1:20:21
In the morning,
1:20:23
so no one a dog barks to me.
They're saying something
1:20:27
in the morning to the trolls and
the troll room. Good to see
1:20:29
y'all there. We don't know how
much y'all is. Why don't we
1:20:32
check that out for a second?
Y'all Put your hands up.
1:20:34
Charles, come on. Let me see how
many we got a scurrying away.
1:20:39
2087 for this Sunday. Alright,
good to have you
1:20:43
guys. Oh, we're getting back.
Okay, last is getting back to
1:20:47
normal levels. Yeah, well, no.
normal levels had we're
1:20:53
averaging around 26 on Sundays.
1:20:56
26. Okay, well, you know, but
it's better than it was. We're
1:21:00
moving up. We're moving on up to
the big time. Moving on up.
1:21:03
That's right. The trolls are in
the troll room, you can find
1:21:06
that at troll room.io. And you
can listen to this show live,
1:21:11
you can listen to cause so many
different shows that you can
1:21:14
listen to live but also recorded
shows
1:21:16
how you think or how many shows
1:21:18
are on no agenda stream.com. All
we have to do is wait for sir
1:21:24
bemrose, who I think is
listening to 43. There it is
1:21:27
Boom 43 shows. It is by far the
best Podcast Network anywhere.
1:21:34
Because everyone's promoting
each other. Everyone is helping
1:21:38
each other.
1:21:39
We have a log rolling. That's
what you're supposed to log
1:21:41
everyone's
1:21:42
log rolling. Yeah, there's,
there's a boomer term for us.
1:21:47
And we both know it. Yeah,
everyone's log rolling. But
1:21:51
yeah, that's because of the
stream. The stream is where
1:21:54
people discover stuff you want
discovery, go to troll room.io.
1:21:57
And you'll discover all kinds of
interesting people. And they're
1:22:01
trolls. But you know, we call
them people. So go have a look
1:22:04
at that. Or you can always
follow us at no agenda
1:22:06
social.com. This is our social
network that is without
1:22:09
algorithms as part of the
fediverse which means you can
1:22:12
interact with us from far away
in all kinds of disparate
1:22:16
servers. It's a protocol that is
implemented in many different
1:22:19
types of little social networks.
It's distributed by its nature.
1:22:23
And you can follow John C.
Dvorak at no agenda social.com
1:22:27
Adam at no agenda social.com
Because that's where the
1:22:30
conversation is taking place.
And I always like we discuss a
1:22:33
lot of things there including
the donation segment. Was a good
1:22:38
thread on there. And we'd like
to thank the artists for episode
1:22:42
1452 We titled that toxic stew
if you listen to the show, you
1:22:46
knew that we would do that the
art one of my favorites now that
1:22:50
I've seen it several times
brought to us by capitalist
1:22:53
agenda making it two in a row
for him. This was Elon
1:22:58
destroying Twitter by opening it
up and gears and bots and stuff
1:23:04
is popping out he's little Elon
is sitting there with his little
1:23:07
Elan that really did it with
this Tesla is Tesla shirt. He's
1:23:11
got a wrench. Did you notice the
jack? I thought that I think
1:23:15
that was very subliminal at
least that's the way I took it
1:23:18
Did you are you looking at the
picture
1:23:20
and now I'm going to it right
now.
1:23:21
So the so this Twitter thing is
on a red Jack and I thought gee
1:23:27
that did capitals agenda do that
to represent Jack Dorsey is so
1:23:33
brilliant if not brilliant
1:23:36
now just no way let's check my
1:23:40
chats how I took it I saw it oh
that's the jack because I'm
1:23:42
looking for all the little memes
you know what are these
1:23:44
notes? Yeah, we got to note that
one thing with artists is that a
1:23:49
lot of them subconsciously put
stuff in the art but they don't
1:23:54
know it till you pointed out
1:23:55
to them and then they take
credit. Bastards
1:23:58
no they don't take care from I
can tell I know don't many they
1:24:04
don't seem to care but they find
it interesting. Oh yeah, that's
1:24:07
interesting. Yes. Good. Yeah.
Okay, I can see that that's what
1:24:10
they would be the way capitalist
agenda would be looking at it
1:24:13
well, artists artists think in
weird ways though, man.
1:24:17
There Yeah, but most of his
natural it just happens. I mean,
1:24:21
that little guy was holding the
ranch in the with the Tesla logo
1:24:25
is just hilarious. What is the
exclamation mark over his head?
1:24:30
You know, what's the point it
doesn't matter. The whole thing
1:24:33
we'd like to eat peas we like so
funny. We liked it. Now what's
1:24:36
interesting the spiders or the
eye balls or
1:24:39
the bonds? Those are the bots
the bots those are the bots the
1:24:43
bots that are that Elon is using
the bot count to destroy
1:24:47
Twitter's business model. Now so
I'll say it right in
1:24:52
couple of springs.
1:24:54
So the way this works if you're
an aspiring artists even if
1:24:58
you're just not an artist
doesn't matter. Anyone can
1:25:00
participate. No agenda art.
generator.com is where you can
1:25:03
upload your art. Most of these
artists or all of the artists
1:25:06
are doing this while listening
to the live stream trying to
1:25:09
come up with stuff that will fit
and have it done in time for us
1:25:12
to choose from by the time we
end the show. So I can tell you
1:25:15
right now, today, I would say
there's a high unlikelihood of
1:25:20
us choosing anything with a
monkey on it. What do you think?
1:25:25
I'm not getting any monkey that
stuff. Well, go go look at
1:25:28
what's been submitted so far.
1:25:30
I'm looking now there's a bunch
of monkeys. Like everyone's,
1:25:34
everyone's putting monkeys in. I
like to monkey with Bill Gates,
1:25:37
who did that one.
1:25:40
Oh, that's funny. BG and the
bear. That's actually funny. As
1:25:46
far as that as potential that
has potential. Let's see what
1:25:50
else we're much we were looking
at.
1:25:52
I don't like using images of
these people. bunches. bunches.
1:25:56
People like to submit it.
1:25:57
No, I agree. I don't think it's
I mean, the one we both really
1:26:00
wanted but there was a technical
problem with it was Taunton,
1:26:05
Neil's by follow JCD I don't
remember that's the baby.
1:26:13
Or the bay. Oh, yes. No. Yeah,
the baby. Babe was great. We
1:26:18
call it cheesecake. Yeah,
1:26:20
the bay was great. But the
Twitter logo was it made it I
1:26:23
follow JCD hard to read.
1:26:25
With a follow there was the W is
is is obfuscated by the
1:26:30
the oh it's oh, oh, yeah. Then
the W was wiped out by the
1:26:34
whatever the the lighting by
1:26:36
the lighting. Yeah. I mean, it's
well done. Kind of didn't quite
1:26:41
make it though. And it wasn't
going to hold it's not going to
1:26:45
beat that Twitter thing. That's
for sure.
1:26:48
What else do we have? We had a
lot of Kareena Abdul John Pierre
1:26:52
no scary Poppins No. George Bush
Obama morphin yet like we
1:27:01
haven't allowed Joe Obama that's
why we're gonna fly now. It was
1:27:06
Biden and Obama. Joe Biden. Joe
Barmah. I liked the Twitter
1:27:12
toast from Darren O'Neal. Just
Twitter told
1:27:15
you that pop right yeah, I like
that it was I didn't dislike it.
1:27:22
But I thought it was so
simplistic that it was and it
1:27:25
was like the gag you know, it's
being toast and I know it's a
1:27:29
little it was too much for me to
1:27:32
know and your face no and
capitalist agenda was just
1:27:35
better. Another one that you
liked was Taunton Neil's
1:27:39
outhouse with the Russian flag
because they hate toilets
1:27:44
apparently you know I asked us
or Gene said hey man, because he
1:27:49
heard it I said is this true
that the Russians hate toilets?
1:27:54
His answer what's the toilet
yeah exactly the all bug hot dog
1:28:03
you for some reason you'd like
that when
1:28:05
I didn't think it was really
didn't I don't remember saying
1:28:07
anything you were in love with
it
1:28:09
you weren't in love with it
you're
1:28:10
like god I'm the one I liked it
you're not mentioning is the
1:28:12
scary Poppins
1:28:14
No, I did just mention it I just
mentioned it scary project
1:28:17
mentioned outhouse with this
flyer before that I mentioned
1:28:19
scary Poppins you know listening
to scary Poppins listening.
1:28:24
I know when I liked it it was I
did like balls big balls killed
1:28:29
the testosterone with the
Democrat with the Republican
1:28:32
logo on it.
1:28:34
Yeah, yeah.
1:28:38
Without the story without the
story it looks like we're red
1:28:41
pilling someone wasn't a choice.
I think we made the right
1:28:45
choice. It was by far now there
was no comparison
1:28:48
heads and shoulders above
everything else. All the All I
1:28:52
see the all bug a hot dog with
the kind of Kirkland look for no
1:28:56
agenda thing that was by the way
subtle. There were also by
1:29:00
capitalist agenda. So I didn't
but there was a maybe pick one
1:29:03
would pick the other. So yeah,
that was a nice piece because I
1:29:06
because I liked the Kirkland
1:29:07
touch shoulder you were in love
with it. I wasn't in love with
1:29:11
it. You are you're drooling so
you can watch
1:29:17
it like big balls and I know you
did that I did like 20
1:29:22
So people like to refresh no
agenda art generator.com during
1:29:26
the show and that's it's now
become its own game to see oh,
1:29:29
this will be it? No, that'll be
it. Oh, maybe this one will be
1:29:32
which one was it? Just become a
it's become a whole is gamified.
1:29:36
Man to gamify. And, and I would
say that the artists are always,
1:29:41
you know, jabbing back and forth
on no agenda social. You want to
1:29:44
follow a couple of those guys
and gals and if you really want
1:29:46
to get into the action or just
wait until everything's
1:29:49
published, and Dred Scott has
done the chapters Yeah. You can
1:29:52
wait a few hours or maybe you'd
like to listen to the Sunday
1:29:55
show on Monday. I think most
people do. And you'll get the
1:29:58
podcasting 2.0 features, which
is a lot, including a full
1:30:02
transcript. He uses a lot of
these images for chapters. So if
1:30:06
you want to go to a certain spot
on the podcast, and you get one
1:30:10
of these apps, which are
completely compatible with all
1:30:12
podcasts, you can, you can get
anything. In fact, there's no
1:30:16
deep platforming on these apps.
So things that are gone from
1:30:19
Apple and Spotify you can get go
to new podcast apps.com. And for
1:30:24
those of you using Spotify that
oh, there's a big hullabaloo
1:30:27
today, John and whoa, this is
crazy. You've heard of brand
1:30:31
safety, which of course is the
reason why podcasting will never
1:30:34
be a huge media platform for
advertising at least this
1:30:40
because you can't be sure that
the these podcasts are safe and
1:30:44
advertisers want no big
advertisers, pharmaceutical
1:30:48
automotive telecom tech
1:30:50
to dimwits cussing just
constantly. Yeah,
1:30:53
we're talking about, you know,
Amber herd and her New York
1:30:56
escapades, that kind of stuff
would not fly but turns out,
1:31:01
Spotify is reversing it. And the
the wild turkey which is a is
1:31:07
that bourbon, or is it whiskey?
Bourbon, bourbon, Wild Turkey
1:31:12
has placed a huge advertising
buy on Spotify podcast. And if
1:31:19
you look at Twitter at
podcasters are flipping out
1:31:22
because there are podcasters who
have religious podcasts
1:31:26
podcasters who have definitely
do not want an alcoholic
1:31:31
beverage advertised on this
podcast, the bad. It's not just
1:31:35
that there's a lot. And here's
the thing, people are tweeting,
1:31:39
pay Spotify? When did I give you
permission to do that? And to
1:31:45
which I said, Did you read what
you signed, when you put your
1:31:49
podcast on there you ship shit
permission to anything, they can
1:31:53
do anything they want, and
you're not gonna get paid? Ah,
1:31:58
but it is kind of interesting
how Spotify is gonna is gonna
1:32:01
get backlash from this from
their advertiser. Hey, man, what
1:32:05
do you guys do people hate us?
No, that's not that's not the
1:32:08
point of advertising want them
to love us. And that's why we
1:32:12
are value for value, it's the
only way to do these kinds of
1:32:15
programs, is you can't have
Silicon Valley determine how
1:32:20
much this podcast should should
cost. You know, advertisers have
1:32:24
no interest in us, or truly in
any podcast, they're really
1:32:28
afraid of it big advertisers. So
what we do is we ask people how
1:32:33
valuable the program was, if it
was valuable to you, then we
1:32:37
appreciate you sending that back
in a number that is a value to
1:32:40
you of equal importance. Now,
you may not have you may be a
1:32:44
student, maybe $5 is a big deal
to you, that's fine, it's a big
1:32:48
deal to us, because that's the
value that you can assign to it
1:32:51
and that it's about you not
about us. It's how you feel
1:32:55
about handing back the value.
And we really appreciate it. Now
1:32:57
what that does not mean, and the
producer segments, we've always
1:33:01
kept very much open to the
producers, they've come up with
1:33:04
karma, douche bagging de
douching. None of this is our
1:33:08
idea. It doesn't mean that we
are obliged to read your 375
1:33:14
word note. These are at our
discretion. They always have
1:33:19
been. And you in particular John
have been bitching about the
1:33:23
length of notes. So today that
actually I think people took it
1:33:26
to heart and things are looking
good, but we are going to redact
1:33:29
and just might not do some
things. Now I'm just making this
1:33:34
up by myself. But I have a
feeling you might agree because
1:33:37
it got a little bit out of
control with people demanding
1:33:40
and saying that this is a right
to have our note read. Well,
1:33:44
that's value for value and then
give me some more value back
1:33:47
this like this like blackmail?
1:33:50
Well, there was a big brouhaha.
First of all, I excreted one of
1:33:56
our producers for a $50 note had
a long note attached to it that
1:34:01
took the whole spreadsheet, and
it was a $50 note. But since he
1:34:06
was a night we read those notes
and normally we don't we don't
1:34:11
read notes between 50 and 100
for people out there who are new
1:34:14
but it's our it's always at our
discretion should we want to if
1:34:18
it's contest
1:34:18
oh just once in a while there's
something there it's worth
1:34:21
looking at. But meanwhile the
show the agenda social people
1:34:25
got all bent out of shape saying
I was rude and I was mean I did
1:34:29
apologize to the guy by the way
if you didn't know you did, and
1:34:33
but I told him that it wasn't
for him. It wasn't for his
1:34:37
benefit. It was to keep
everybody alerted to the fact
1:34:41
that these notes are too damn
long and the rents are too damn
1:34:45
high. It's just it was getting
out of control and it sneaks up
1:34:49
and sneaks up in the next thing
you know we got this huge dose
1:34:52
of people. It's not as though
these notes once in a while
1:34:55
there. They have content once in
a while, but most of them don't
1:34:59
just go on on and on about
brother Fred and all the rest of
1:35:01
it. And sometimes it's tedious.
And it takes the show last show
1:35:05
was three and a half hours long.
It should be two hours and 45
1:35:07
minutes. And so, so what I did
what I felt it necessary to do
1:35:13
with the complainers on dynojet
is social. I blocked them all.
1:35:16
Just so you know.
1:35:18
I was wondering if you were
reading along, just blocked? Oh,
1:35:23
that's funny. Well, the note in
question, I did go back. And I
1:35:27
looked at us and what is this
about? And so here's where you
1:35:31
dropped off the conversation.
But it was a fundamental issue.
1:35:34
The note was a note thanking a
whole bunch of other podcasts
1:35:39
for helping him reach his
knighthood promoting other
1:35:44
podcasts, there was literally
nothing in there about no
1:35:46
agenda. And what happened was a
lot of these other podcasts or
1:35:50
no agenda stream.com podcast,
everybody was waiting for their
1:35:54
name to be read and recognize.
And that's where I draw the
1:35:57
line. If you want us to, to read
your name, and your note, we can
1:36:02
do a podcast separately for
that. And now it's like, well,
1:36:06
this is
1:36:07
funny, you say that I was
thinking the same thing that you
1:36:10
want. If you don't like what,
you know, the fact that we don't
1:36:13
let you just go nuts. We can
just do a separate once a week
1:36:17
or once a month podcast with all
the thank yous in there. I don't
1:36:21
think anybody wants that.
1:36:23
I don't think so either. And I
want where
1:36:25
it's gonna hand if this if this
continues. And if what you say
1:36:29
is excited, like you said, I cut
out I said, Fuck it, I'm not
1:36:31
going to do deal with this. But
if if everyone's gonna bitch
1:36:35
about this sort of thing like
that, that's what we're gonna
1:36:37
have to do, because that's all
we can do. We're, these long
1:36:41
notes are ruining the show for
most people. Yep.
1:36:45
People don't listen to the
donation segments. Because you
1:36:47
know, sometimes if 45 minutes to
an hour long. Now, again, the
1:36:51
premise was alt always value for
value. And that's an we do
1:36:57
stuff. We think it's valuable.
We love it. If people give us
1:37:00
value back, we've been able to
turn it into our, our end of
1:37:03
life career, because we've been
doing it so long. So we have an
1:37:09
audience that is sizable, but
I'll tell you, people who say,
1:37:12
Well, if you're not gonna read
my note, I'm not going to donate
1:37:14
fine. Please do not. We want you
to donate for value. We've
1:37:19
always shunned scammed. You
should sell T shirts. We don't
1:37:24
we let someone else do that.
Donate if you want to. You
1:37:26
should do NF T's you should do a
GoFundMe you should do and Dow
1:37:30
no value for value. If you'd
like what you heard, turn it
1:37:34
into value, send it into us. We
have we've had an opportunity to
1:37:37
sell the show for $10 million.
We won't do that either. We just
1:37:40
want to do the damn show. Is
that characterize it? Right?
1:37:46
And that's pretty good. And if
one of the complaints, which I
1:37:49
think is when I cut everybody
off is a guy says you're showing
1:37:52
no gratitude. Yeah, that's nice.
My last comment to the guy
1:37:58
before I blocked him was we name
everybody that gives us money.
1:38:02
We Nate give everybody a thank
you. I mean, that's dead pig
1:38:06
gets 10s in more than 50 bucks,
they all get their name
1:38:09
mentioned, how much more
gratitude? Are we supposed to
1:38:11
show them?
1:38:12
Well, the the comment that got
me was your business model is
1:38:15
based on this community. Like
no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
1:38:18
That's simply not true. We have
a wonderful community. And
1:38:22
that's where time and talent
comes in, which is a whole and
1:38:25
this is why we call you
producers and not listeners. We
1:38:30
have no business model, we
provide value, you send this
1:38:33
value back. We thank you for it.
That's the idea. And now it
1:38:36
basically made the donation
segment much longer than it had
1:38:39
to be with. So we're in trouble
again. It never works out. No,
1:38:43
it doesn't. We'd like to start
off by thanking Nicholas Siler.
1:38:46
I think that's how you pronounce
it. Who comes in with four,
1:38:50
eight 4.84 from Palmyra,
Pennsylvania, and says I'll send
1:38:56
email with header 484 dot 84
donation note it won't be too
1:39:02
long I promise Have you received
such donation note
1:39:06
zero. Let me just check looked
under it should be of course
1:39:13
under donation and what do you
mean header you mean subject
1:39:16
line
1:39:17
when there's another thing that
is sending donation notes on
1:39:24
email is such a problem. There
is a there is a box on every
1:39:30
PayPal donation page. This it's
it's every mobile it's in maybe
1:39:36
in different spots, but that's
what you want to use. That makes
1:39:40
it easy for everybody because
here we are. I have his email. I
1:39:43
have it here see just takes a
lot of time seriously. Thank you
1:39:48
Adam for dealing with me and
some of my predictions while
1:39:51
true and happened. You didn't
let me go crazy email wise. Few
1:39:57
of those earthquakes dude that
was making me nuts. I'm not Not
1:40:00
sure what that means, where I'm
at now much better place and
1:40:02
more grounded. I won't give
details of crazy dreams or
1:40:05
visions unless it's real insane.
There's so many people you talk
1:40:08
to and reach out to. I greatly
appreciate the time and response
1:40:13
you took out of your day. Great
love and knowledge and Peace be
1:40:15
with you, your family have a
blessed day. Okay, thank you.
1:40:19
I'm not exactly sure. I mean,
maybe we met we didn't meet at
1:40:22
the meet up maybe not sure
exactly what happened there. And
1:40:26
thank you very much and it goes
for your support.
1:40:30
Lord and Nico of the Gallatin
hills in Gallatin, Tennessee.
1:40:35
Three three short notes save
lives. These douche the great
1:40:42
ginger of the North.
1:40:47
limiters say please do do Jewish
1:40:51
go travel karma is Sir Eagle Eye
yak calm karma for all my people
1:40:57
in Gallatin Lord Nico the
Gallatin, here hills. Yes, John,
1:41:01
my real name. Lord Nico.
1:41:04
You've got ah Arma
1:41:10
333 33 from Berlin Deutschland
from tal Schecter Schecter. I
1:41:16
listened a lot and don't donate
accordingly. I was walking
1:41:19
through the garden colony nearby
while listening to no agenda as
1:41:22
Adam read the word 33 I saw it
also written on the ground in
1:41:26
sidewalk chalk. I hope this will
work as penance I think it will
1:41:32
30 threes you got the message
you responded appropriately.
1:41:35
Thank you very much, Tom.
1:41:38
A weird day mama Susan of the
North Country in San Diego or
1:41:42
the North County and Escondido,
California 33333. Please de
1:41:48
douche my son James Beals for
his birthday on his 25th You've
1:41:54
been deed deuced and started off
as an executive producer. This
1:41:58
is a switcheroo. I am fighting
forever grateful that he hit me
1:42:03
in the mouth. Love proud mom day
mama Susan of the North County
1:42:09
San Diego and she did the note
at 3:33am
1:42:13
Perfect All right, James you're
on the list. Greg Hunter is in
1:42:16
Springfield Missouri 333 dot 33
has got to be our favorite
1:42:20
number these short. They say
short nose notes save lives.
1:42:25
Rogan donation. Organ Donation
do you do shimmy? Please use ben
1:42:33
de deuced I've redacted this
next one so I can handle this
1:42:36
one appropriately. Travis Phelps
from Clayton Missouri week two
1:42:39
Missouri's in a row. The chances
are that 333 33 In the morning
1:42:45
please accept this donation of
333 dot 33 300 for myself 33 dot
1:42:50
33 For my father who passed away
on 10 to 22 from liver cancer.
1:42:56
Please de douche both of us.
Well, I will do a double D
1:43:01
deemed you Travis and this one's
for you. You've been deemed do I
1:43:08
was hit in the mouth by Mike B
the flat earth king of Casey
1:43:10
about a year ago I believe Mike
has yet to donate What a douche.
1:43:15
I spent the majority of my life
aimlessly enjoying the materials
1:43:19
of the world around me. Life was
good. And the party always was
1:43:22
always rockin. My father was
always there telling me little
1:43:25
tidbits about what was going on
in the world and what to watch
1:43:28
for, but I always blew him off.
can't be that bad, right? It
1:43:31
didn't affect me. I was in my
20s chasing women and boozing it
1:43:34
up as the good Lord intended.
Six years ago, I met my smokin
1:43:37
hot wife and three years later,
we had our first human resource.
1:43:41
My eyes were forced open and
right before the beginning of
1:43:44
COVID. I woke up I saw the evils
going on around me both left and
1:43:48
right. I am fortunate to have
been hit in the mouth by MB from
1:43:51
Casey and provided a new bond
between my father and I. Oh,
1:43:57
that's nice.
1:43:59
Leonardo Bravo in Los Angeles,
California. 33333 And he says
1:44:04
karma to all they're really
going to need it. Leo.
1:44:09
You've got karma.
1:44:13
Peter Yost Hendrik for hoof
using cut back the Netherlands.
1:44:16
333 Thank you, Peter. Donated
333 to get me deduced Well,
1:44:21
nice. You've been de douche. And
he says I'll keep it short. I've
1:44:27
been listening to you often on
Twitter around 2008 to 2010
1:44:32
That's for you. And no Adam from
his countdown 1986 fame days.
1:44:36
just sad. I never knew about you
and Adam no agenda until last
1:44:40
year when I guess some YouTube
or Apple podcasts. Algo hit me
1:44:44
in the mouth. Well, it's
interesting. We finally got into
1:44:48
an algo Oh, at the meetup. Two
people, not one but two people
1:44:54
told me they discovered the no
agenda show in the most
1:44:57
unbelievable manner. I will tell
you what it is. They found it on
1:45:02
the Roku. You know, we've had
the Roku app for
1:45:10
Yeah, we have we have a guy
doing a Roku app.
1:45:12
This is almost eight, nine years
this thing has been around. He's
1:45:15
been
1:45:15
doing it, you know, I haven't
talked to him for a while but he
1:45:21
one day I noticed all Delmark
was gone. And I bitched about I
1:45:25
think on the show notes as it's
it runs itself. I guess once
1:45:30
again, though, I
1:45:31
think I think he was, I don't
know if it was him or somebody
1:45:34
or someone was going to make a
2.0 version of it, which would
1:45:37
be kind of cool as the image is
flipped around. Anyway, I just
1:45:39
thought it was interesting that
people discovered no agenda by
1:45:43
looking through Roku torrents
very bored. So anyway, Peter
1:45:50
Yost Kendrick for who said that
he, he discovered us from some
1:45:54
YouTube or Apple podcasts. Algo
hit him in the mouth. Finding
1:45:57
the deconstruction duo was one
of the great positives of the
1:46:00
COVID period for me. That's
okay, because now will be the
1:46:04
big positive of the monkey pox
period for you. Thank you for
1:46:07
your courage crusius at holons
through Twitter.
1:46:12
Stephen Pearson Stillman Valley,
Illinois. 333 You guys are
1:46:17
awesome. Keep the truth coming.
If we
1:46:21
will. Darius gondii 333 Santa
Monica, California in the
1:46:26
morning Adam and John please
send health karma to the clip
1:46:28
custodian
1:46:29
they Darrius?
1:46:31
Yeah, it's not it.
1:46:33
Just I'm just pointing this out
to Darius how you pronounce it
1:46:37
and how I pronounce it just
mentioning.
1:46:40
What is your problem? Nothing.
It's
1:46:42
not my problem. It's Darius his
problem. What's his problem? He
1:46:47
says I mispronounce his name. I
say Darrius and you say Darius
1:46:51
but you just said Darrius, I
just said Darius
1:46:54
is there a correct way?
1:46:57
But Rupa Rupa Rupa? I don't
think there is but yeah, he
1:47:01
thinks there is. Alright well
Missy as you read the note you
1:47:05
will run into this
1:47:05
Okay, Mr. Gandhi supported the
show with him nice value 333
1:47:12
Santa Monica, California please
send health karma to the clip
1:47:15
custodian son Seamus Yes. Also
with clip custodians permission
1:47:19
I'd like to Venmo or Zelle some
support his way please email or
1:47:22
announce on the show the best
way to send any finite financial
1:47:24
assistance I'm in contact with
the clip custodian and just
1:47:28
y'all thinking about him is
enough for right now but as
1:47:30
should we need anything I will
be certain to mention on the
1:47:33
show in honor of my promise to
John to always decrease the time
1:47:37
of the show my next donations
won't have any words just love
1:47:40
for you both if you can and if
you remember to always take me
1:47:43
out with an Al Sharpton bit it
always makes me laugh I don't
1:47:47
expect you to remember but if
you do great actually I I had
1:47:51
forgotten about your your
Sharpton hang up Adam thank you
1:47:57
for pronouncing my oh here it is
Adam thank you for pronouncing
1:47:59
My name the way I like it Darius
versus John saying Darius I
1:48:03
always say Darius that's crazy.
You're both amazing. Okay took
1:48:08
up enough time we got to keep
the show going onward. I
1:48:10
think it was Matthews that they
want to put an asterisk next to
1:48:14
his name like they have done
1:48:16
ascitic good one. S
1:48:21
here we have a long note from my
Kate Marengo in Chicago 333
1:48:25
sheets or less so I think I have
a
1:48:27
feeling this is partially maybe
also a meet up report
1:48:33
hello from lib tard landed the
Beatles us tire any are tearing
1:48:37
tyranny here I pronounce it TT
irony and Adam pronounces it
1:48:41
tyranny boots on the ground
report and yes there's I think
1:48:45
you're right there's a I'm
trying to edit this on the fly.
1:48:50
Things are looking bleak here
but amongst the WHO taking your
1:48:53
sovereignty promised postures
with monkey pox and rigged
1:48:57
pustules I think is what it is
with monkey pox and rigged
1:49:02
elections around the corner and
work with my fellow slaves to
1:49:04
get oh Region Five group to re
conquer or conquer the anxiety
1:49:08
of what's to come. Shout out to
our resident caretaker Susan
1:49:12
Eric and non Shil aka Blake from
Michigan Steven our pilot, our
1:49:18
resident trader Nick Greg
Vigouroux. Liz of the IV and our
1:49:23
most recent to be determined
possible spook Courtney
1:49:27
supposedly she works for the
quote unquote airport love the
1:49:31
camaraderie and escape planning
we shared douchebag call out to
1:49:34
Dan for free loot loading have
no agenda during our mail
1:49:40
delivery service stay safe and
hookers and blow for my husband
1:49:43
who has offspring watching duty
bro last meet up nice we're
1:49:48
gonna bring the kids yeah
grateful for the community
1:49:52
private Instagram with the
keeper and photos of Phoebe keep
1:49:55
it coming gents.
1:49:57
Oh, way to go feeds there. Good
job. She's bringing In donations
1:50:00
that dogs trapped dog, sir
Marcus Miller is in Deutschland
1:50:05
monta Bauer 225 dot 44. He will
be our first Associate Executive
1:50:11
Producer pedo gentlemen turning
44 on the 22nd of May, I tuned
1:50:16
this donation to also finish up
my barren ship. Therefore claim
1:50:21
the title, Baron of Hestia. Keep
up the good work. That was
1:50:26
another thing, if you're sending
a donation notes. If you're
1:50:31
gonna make a joke, it's gotta be
pretty clear for us. There was
1:50:36
some confusion. The producer
says, this makes me a Grand
1:50:42
Duke. And we're like, wait a
minute, how does it stop the
1:50:44
show for a good minute, trying
to figure it out. He sent us a
1:50:48
note he
1:50:49
said and thought apologetic note
and saying I was just kidding.
1:50:53
How are we supposed to know
this? You don't have a smiley
1:50:55
face or anything? So it's like,
yeah, we're just reading these
1:50:59
things we're not analyzing
necessarily for for deep seated
1:51:04
humor. I meant meanwhile,
Jeffrey Morgan comes in with
1:51:08
$223.22 a Rolodex nice and slow
Berkshire, UK and he you have
1:51:13
his note I do.
1:51:16
He's put together an award,
which is interesting. And he
1:51:20
feels that there's not enough
NASCAR on the show, which is an
1:51:25
acronym, as well. No, it's not
what you think it is. He it's
1:51:30
not the actual racing. He feels
it's this is an acronym for no
1:51:34
agenda show child abuse relief.
I guess we're not abusing
1:51:38
children with jingles enough.
And yeah, I think he might be
1:51:43
right. And he says knowing that
I was deprived of the
1:51:45
opportunity to present the
Eurovision song contest this
1:51:48
year. He'd be honored if I
presented this award. So this
1:51:51
award will provide relief to
young producers from their
1:51:53
potential life as a wretched
imbecile, releasing the shackles
1:51:57
that bind the slave so they can
take their rightful place that
1:51:59
worthy of no agenda on air
talent alongside their peers at
1:52:02
the roundtable. And so here is
with the first ever no agenda T
1:52:10
club NASCAR award goes to Emily,
Emily, daughter of Dame Jamie
1:52:16
and Sir Mad Hatter Baron of the
Free State of Alabama, who along
1:52:20
be remembered for their
terrifyingly prophetic rendition
1:52:22
of Don't eat me both Jaiden
1:52:31
this is a no agenda tea club
initiative. Have you heard of
1:52:35
the no agenda? Tea club?
1:52:37
Oh, the tea club? Some tea from
the tea club. How is it? I
1:52:42
haven't really tried it yet. But
I got it. It's a little kit and
1:52:45
there's all kinds of screwball
teas in there. Doing some, some
1:52:49
white tea. Now it's all these
different blends. I'm going to
1:52:53
do box this week. It's probably
in your Pio box we can talk
1:52:57
about when you get it and we can
try it a little bit. This was
1:53:00
shipped from Portugal. Really
what that's all and then a cute
1:53:05
little tins as packages package
like some thing from China.
1:53:10
Chris, Kristen, Kristen, Brandon
and the sequence bat in perfect
1:53:18
town, North Carolina. I have no
idea how to pronounce that town
1:53:21
craft term, another rough draft
town. To to to just I think it's
1:53:27
fabulous. Thank you for the
love. On the last episode. My
1:53:30
wife and I recently have been
hired to handle the marketing
1:53:32
for a product that my father in
law invented and patented. So
1:53:35
guess what we're doing with the
marketing budget. Donating to no
1:53:39
agenda. Now you're talking
smart. Dave Minotti, the
1:53:44
inventor and listener of the
show we stoked? Stoked, bro
1:53:48
yeah, that's, that's actually
probably 60s But stoked, man.
1:53:53
He's stoked. Really everyone in
the family listens to the no
1:53:58
agenda show while we work. So
here it goes. The sequence bat
1:54:01
is a baseball Softball Training
bat. That takes the guest
1:54:05
workout a getting hitters this
strong palm up palm down
1:54:09
position while making it rolling
over impossible. How does that
1:54:13
work?
1:54:13
Well, you got to tat you got to
take a look at it. You got to
1:54:16
take a picture. No, it's well
it's it's a sequence bat.com
1:54:20
I'll read this while you take a
look at it because this is
1:54:22
something you need to see it so
it's sequence bat.com use code
1:54:27
it m at checkout for an
exclusive no agenda discount.
1:54:30
And please credit the sequence
bat for this donation. Okay.
1:54:35
These are Giroux, yes. A
switcher these are the This is
1:54:39
Brandon and and Kristen, who
were at the meetup. So do you
1:54:44
understand this thing? Yeah. How
does that work? It's
1:54:48
like I assume basically, the way
I see it. If you if you don't
1:54:52
swing correctly, and then do the
twist around it breaks your arm.
1:54:56
Very good idea.
1:54:58
There's your endorsement. Yeah,
1:55:01
that's what it looks. Hey, you
know,
1:55:04
endorsements to the no agenda
show donations are risky people.
1:55:07
Be careful.
1:55:08
Oh, here's a movie. I can see
the movie.
1:55:10
Thank you very much, Brandon and
Kristen. Mark panky, another row
1:55:15
of duck St. Louis, Missouri, I
believe I have his note as well.
1:55:19
After hearing of your show from
the moderator of the Barnhardt
1:55:23
podcast at Barnhart dot biz. A
year ago or so ago, I started
1:55:28
listening casually and now
listen as much as possible. Is
1:55:31
that Is that Is that a thing
that people listen casually to
1:55:33
us you think?
1:55:35
Like just checking people who
that's where he get these
1:55:37
strange notes. That's true. I
got one the other day. I was
1:55:43
talking about the fact that I
wrote a radio play called world
1:55:47
the world's revisited when I was
a cat at the foothill College
1:55:51
and I lost it is lost the
history. So one of our better
1:55:56
listeners, the guy who woulda
known guy sends me notices I
1:55:59
found it. I found what you're
looking for and he says be a
1:56:02
copy of Hg Wells's 1933
performance, which I have to
1:56:06
blog. Tons.
1:56:07
That's not where you want it.
You want to yours? Yeah, but he
1:56:11
was that he was a casual
listener. I see. I
1:56:15
see. God, this happens a lot.
1:56:18
So you think casual listeners,
people just aren't really
1:56:21
listening, instead of someone
who listens to an episode maybe
1:56:24
skips a couple?
1:56:26
No, I think right. I think it's
someone who just has it in the
1:56:28
background.
1:56:30
Like saddle tramp, your work
along with the enlightening and
1:56:34
informing content on the
aforementioned podcast now,
1:56:37
okay, if we can just talk about
notes. You could just say you
1:56:40
guys rock. Your work along with
the enlightening and informing
1:56:44
content in the aforementioned
podcast and with the
1:56:47
encouragement of Father James
Altman, a cancelled priests who
1:56:50
publicly did not go along with
the narrative, who said often in
1:56:53
his livestream sermons, God gave
us a brain let us use it. It has
1:56:59
kept us going over the past two
plus years. As a result, we
1:57:02
continue to have our immune
systems uncompromised and our
1:57:05
brains tuned to recognize the
lies that surround us. No,
1:57:08
jingles are Carmen thank you for
your work. God bless you both.
1:57:10
Thank you very much. God bless.
Who is that? That was Mark
1:57:16
Pinky.
1:57:17
Okay, when you have Jackie Kazan
wraps it up from Heartland
1:57:20
Wisconsin. In The Morning John
and Adam says this my 33rd which
1:57:25
I always appreciate, birthday on
May 23. I decided to give myself
1:57:29
a D douching. Youth Band D
deuced. I can I get some goat
1:57:35
karma for the no agenda nation
thank you for your courage
1:57:40
lovers lips as Jackie
1:57:43
you've got karma.
1:57:47
Now that that to me, model
donation segment. Yeah, good.
1:57:55
Let last note was great.
1:58:00
Thank you all very much. You now
are in possession of an official
1:58:03
no agenda executive or
appropriately Associate
1:58:06
Executive producer credit. These
credits. You've said in the
1:58:10
newsletter. These credits look
great on your LinkedIn profile,
1:58:13
but you can use them
professionally on your resume.
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Go online go into IMDb and you
can start if you don't have an
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IMDB you can start one with this
credit. Which is kind of cool
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when people say how can I find
you? I'm on IMDb I'm an
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executive producer. Chicks love
it man. Trust me if you'd like
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to learn how go here.org/and A
tall dudes love it to just don't
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want to be sexist. Hey, thanks
for your time, talent and
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treasure formula
1:58:41
is this. We go out. We hit
people in the mouth shut
1:59:00
so Joe Biden went to Korea.
1:59:03
That's any good jokes and start
out like that
1:59:07
and went to a bar. So you have
to wonder you know, the Asian
1:59:11
population, especially the agent
Asian leadership in China, South
1:59:18
Korea, Japan, these guys, a lot
of them are in their 80s pushing
1:59:23
them into the 90s. And they see
this guy who's still not at at
1:59:29
fumble and he's sorry, fumbling
around like, like,
1:59:33
around like 100 year old man.
Yeah. So they must I don't know
1:59:36
what that what they think but
but he had a couple of things to
1:59:39
say I did make a bunch of clips
as usual. I'm good. And let's go
1:59:44
but let's start with a report of
him. on NPR of him being in
1:59:48
Korea. This is Biden in Korea
one.
1:59:51
The last time a US president
visited South Korea. The
1:59:54
headlines came when then
President Donald Trump took a
1:59:57
few steps into North Korea and
spoke about his friendship with
2:00:01
that country's leader Kim Jong
Gan. Fast forward almost three
2:00:05
years. President Biden is in
Seoul emphasizing his friendship
2:00:09
with New South Korean President
Yoon Sung y'all. And Biden is
2:00:12
taking a very different tack
toward the north. NPR. White
2:00:15
House correspondent Asma Khalid
joins us from Seoul. Hi, asthma.
2:00:18
Hi, Sasha. Hi, Sam. Hi, SAS.
Yeah. NPR. White House
2:00:26
correspondent Asma Khalid joins
us from Seoul. Hi, Asma. Hi,
2:00:29
Sasha. So President Biden spent
the day with the new South
2:00:32
Korean president.
2:00:33
Oh, sorry, Sasha just got off my
only fans. Let me get into it.
2:00:37
NPR. White House correspondent
Asma Khalid joins us from Seoul.
2:00:40
Hi, Asma. Hi, Sasha. So
President Biden spent the day
2:00:43
with the new South Korean
president. What did they discuss
2:00:46
about North Korea and in
particular, the threat posed by
2:00:50
North Korea's nuclear program?
2:00:51
Well, Sasha, I'm here in Seoul
and I will see I really got a
2:00:54
chance to see firsthand how
eager both of these leaders are
2:00:57
to prove that this is an
important relationship to them.
2:01:00
One key development is that
President Biden's that he's open
2:01:03
to expanding joint military
exercises with South Korea,
2:01:07
that's something that former
President Donald Trump had
2:01:09
drastically curtailed as he
tried to pursue this friendship
2:01:12
with the North Korean leader.
2:01:15
Hey, she did pronounce her tea.
2:01:19
Yeah, that was good. I'm happy
she did. All right. Course.
2:01:24
Trump's for date ever bring up
anything the rationale of what
2:01:26
Trump was doing? And he thought
it was you know, there was
2:01:28
provocative and the North
Koreans are bitching and moaning
2:01:31
I
2:01:31
mean, we should we recount the
history. Even Europe was afraid
2:01:35
that Kim Jong Hoon was going to
kill them all with a missile.
2:01:38
You know, as I go into all the
shooting of rockets, we're all
2:01:41
gonna die. And Trump was
tweeting, hey, you know what, I
2:01:44
got real weapons. I got my
finger on the button, bitch. And
2:01:48
then he went over there. And
then he got a beautiful letter.
2:01:51
Yeah. Beautiful, just beautiful.
It was Biden in Korea, too.
2:01:55
There's a three parter.
2:01:57
President Biden also said he's
open to diplomacy with North
2:02:00
Korea and the US is offering to
help with vaccines given the
2:02:03
rise of COVID cases there.
2:02:05
And we're prepared to do that.
Immediately. We've got no
2:02:09
response. With regard to whether
I would meet with the leader of
2:02:14
North Korea that'd be depend on
whether he was sincere. And
2:02:18
whether we're serious.
2:02:19
Both Biden and Yun insist that
North Korea needs to
2:02:23
denuclearize. But in recent
months, we've actually seen
2:02:25
North Korea actively and
aggressively testing missiles.
2:02:28
So the President agreed to more
military exercises. What else
2:02:32
did they discuss?
2:02:33
You know, I was with the
President as he had this somber
2:02:35
trip out to the Seoul National
Cemetery to put ashes into an
2:02:39
urn to honor Koreans who had
lost their lives in the Korean
2:02:42
War. And I will say just that
entire, you know, experience is
2:02:46
really a testament to how long
this military alliance has been
2:02:49
with the United States. But I
will say, you know, really, this
2:02:52
trip is not just about military
alliances. It's also about
2:02:55
building an economic
relationship, which has been key
2:02:57
to the President's agenda. Here
he is delivering a toast at the
2:03:01
formal state dinner that capped
off their day together,
2:03:03
revitalizing this alliance was
one of my key foreign policy
2:03:08
priorities when I took office
last year.
2:03:11
And Sasha, the President says
that the pandemic exposed just
2:03:14
how fragile the global supply
chain is, particularly for key
2:03:17
items like semiconductors, and
that he wants to create more
2:03:20
resiliency. He says that means
working with countries like
2:03:23
South Korea that have shared
values, as opposed to countries
2:03:26
that do not have shared values.
2:03:31
Those shared values in China. So
here we go into this the end of
2:03:37
their report, part three,
2:03:39
I assume that's a reference to
countries like China, what what
2:03:42
did they say about
2:03:43
China? You know, for President
Biden, China is very much at the
2:03:47
forefront of his entire strategy
in this region. And when he's
2:03:51
with President Yoon in public, I
do not hear him, you know,
2:03:54
railing on China by name. But he
did refer today to military
2:03:57
aggression in the South China
Sea and economic competition.
2:04:01
You know, when those two leaders
I will say we're standing side
2:04:03
by side, though, at a press
conference, President Yoon did
2:04:06
not utter a word directly about
China, which I think is worth
2:04:10
pointing out because South
Korea's biggest trading partner
2:04:12
is China. President Yoon of
South Korea did say that he's
2:04:16
willing to become a part of this
new Indo Pacific economic
2:04:19
framework that Biden is setting
up and we don't have a whole lot
2:04:23
of details about what that is
going to be. It's not exactly a
2:04:26
trade agreement. It doesn't
appear to have the kind of
2:04:28
incentives or enforcement
mechanisms that usual trade
2:04:32
agreements have. But it's
basically the Biden alternative
2:04:35
to China's growing influence in
the region. And we expect to
2:04:38
hear more about this economic
plan and Tokyo where the
2:04:41
President will be next.
2:04:43
What was the point of really of
this? I mean, yeah, military
2:04:46
blah, blah, blah. And then he
called the guy the wrong name.
2:04:50
Yeah, I didn't get that clip.
2:04:52
But it was done. It was done
because he said it was like
2:04:54
that. He said, you know,
President Moon Yun me corrected
2:04:58
himself.
2:04:59
You know, he always Correction.
Well, he
2:05:00
does. He did it half a second
later, but it was touted by God
2:05:05
and I'll get the old coot this
you know, but he corrected
2:05:09
himself now get the guy.
2:05:10
There's some things you can give
him credit for some things you
2:05:13
can't but they always take the
clips. They always take these
2:05:15
little concise clips and you
heard them there and I got some
2:05:18
clips that they don't use. Okay.
I have a lot I have a few. Here
2:05:23
is the Biden just called Biden
babble. He's just talking.
2:05:27
If you know I think you've
covered the fact that I spent a
2:05:30
lot of time in the ASEAN nations
as well as the Quartet there's
2:05:34
there's a whole range of things
have changed.
2:05:40
I'll use that clip. No, no, I
wonder why that makes no sense.
2:05:43
No. Why it seems like a good
clip to me. Yeah. Here's another
2:05:46
one that this is Biden talking
about stared progress
2:05:50
stared progress
2:05:53
ratio between Republican Korea
and United States is vital to
2:05:57
our stared strategic progress.
2:05:59
Okay. Mostly that's he just
misread. It was stret stare a
2:06:05
strategic I see the word it was
probably broken on the
2:06:08
teleprompter?
2:06:09
No, it was the word that he
wanted to say was shared. The
2:06:13
word is shared.
2:06:16
Man, the guy the word is toast.
2:06:20
Oh, okay, here's a good one.
This is his. This, by the way,
2:06:25
is not where he's flubbing or
anything. This is where he's
2:06:26
telling us what's up ahead,
which includes that bowl, crab
2:06:30
world tax, Biden International
goals,
2:06:36
as well as clean and renewable
environment, clean energy
2:06:41
technologies and a global
minimum tax tax side of the
2:06:46
equation just like we originally
negotiated, and what
2:06:50
well, what, what do you say?
What did they recently negotiate
2:06:54
to hear that again,
2:06:55
tax side of the equation, just
like we did originally negotiate
2:06:58
it.
2:06:59
So he says we've recently
negotiated this. I know, I know,
2:07:03
Janet Yellen is on the road with
him doing exactly this. She's
2:07:06
negotiating with countries for
this, this tax corporate global
2:07:11
minimum tax
2:07:13
tax side of the equation, just
like we did permission to
2:07:17
negotiate it, and deal with
establishing foreign production
2:07:21
practices act as effect
internationally.
2:07:27
And the last one I have, which
is just this funny phrase as a
2:07:32
way he kind of signs off with
this is my WTF clip. At this is
2:07:38
a funny way of putting things
2:07:40
I look forward to years to come.
2:07:44
Or look forward, look forward to
years to come.
2:07:49
You have his head in a jar.
2:07:52
He looks forward to years to
come.
2:07:55
I have one Biden clip where I
think the truth came out. The
2:08:01
real truth, you know, remember
the guy's toast. And this is
2:08:06
about the buffalo shooting.
Which of course has been as we
2:08:14
know, is domestic extremism. We
know this right? Yeah. domestic
2:08:21
terrorism is very obvious. And
the great replacement for this
2:08:24
insane person. Yeah, because of
the great replacement theory
2:08:27
which Tucker Carlson has been
propagating. Now this is a we
2:08:30
understand that. Actually before
before I even do that, before I
2:08:34
even do that. Why don't we and
where is it here? Why don't we
2:08:40
play a little clip of of so we
understand what the President is
2:08:44
talking about. Do you remember
Carl Cameron used to be on Fox
2:08:48
News? Kind of a long, long face.
2:08:50
I said yes. I saw this by the
way. I Carl used to be a hard
2:08:56
ass on Fox News. And now he's
switched over to I guess they
2:08:59
fired him or he quit. I don't
know what happened. There's got
2:09:02
to be some
2:09:02
battle he left in disgust.
2:09:05
He had a left wing nut case he
2:09:09
well he's the he's the the right
wing guy they saved. In
2:09:15
particular Nicole Wallace,
2:09:17
who is Nicole wall sediment
2:09:19
and she just laughs about all
these things. She's She's a
2:09:22
turd. Anyway, listen to what
this guy's sir. She's a turd.
2:09:26
Listen to what this guy says. I
mean,
2:09:28
obviously, a mass shooter is
responsible for the violence and
2:09:32
the heinous acts that the mass
shooter committed. It is also
2:09:35
true that the ideology left
2:09:37
that this is a phrase that's
come back they also they hate is
2:09:41
also true that
2:09:44
you know the John Cena train of
Adichie What's he laughing for
2:09:47
John C. Dvorak is an outstanding
journalist and columnist. It is
2:09:50
also true that he's a boomer. I
mean, what the hell is this?
2:09:53
It's like it's like, it's weird.
2:09:56
I see where they're using it as
a switchback. So yeah, like pile
2:10:00
on with some sort of negative
fact exactly. She laughs about
2:10:04
it, she makes a big laugh dare
which
2:10:07
was analyze.
2:10:08
I mean, obviously, a mass
shooter is responsible for the
2:10:11
violence and the heinous acts
that the mass shooter committed.
2:10:15
It is also true that the
ideology left in the mass
2:10:19
shooters screen, the ideology
championed by Tucker Carlson,
2:10:24
what happens in Fox News when
something like this happen.
2:10:28
I love how she just connects
that. So the the screed that the
2:10:32
guy wrote the street and it's
questionable if he wrote it
2:10:36
looks like a lot of copy paste.
It looks like it's actually kind
2:10:40
of well formatted, doesn't. It's
a screed, which was about the
2:10:45
great replacement theory. So
that means Tucker Carlson
2:10:47
basically killed those people in
Buffalo. That's what she's
2:10:50
saying.
2:10:51
Yeah, so what you try to do
sociation I can't even imagine
2:10:55
partly why I ended up getting
out of it.
2:10:57
Why is she laughing?
2:10:59
Well, the question, let's go to
the question again,
2:11:02
mirrors the ideology championed
by Tucker Carlson, what happens
2:11:06
at Fox News when something
2:11:07
like this happen?
2:11:08
Oh, okay, so she's laughing
about dum dum, dum ephors at Fox
2:11:12
News. That's why she has to
laugh when he makes it. He makes
2:11:17
it funny.
2:11:17
I can't even imagine what I
ended up getting. It's yeah,
2:11:23
really is kind of horrible to
think that journalists with
2:11:28
national and international
capacity, are putting together
2:11:31
this type of nonsense. I think
the President did a great job. I
2:11:34
wish he had done a lot of this a
lot sooner. And we need a lot
2:11:37
more from the left and the
middle. And we got to watch out
2:11:43
because the Republicans have
become the purveyors of
2:11:46
misinformation. And when our
party system is broken like
2:11:51
that, democracy is seriously in
trouble. The President
2:11:55
acknowledged that it's time to
actually start doing things and
2:11:59
maybe taking some names and
putting people in jail.
2:12:05
Tucker, Carlson
2:12:06
Carlson in first takedown his
name, that's what he said, Yeah,
2:12:10
that's what he said, Put Tucker
Carlson and it's time maybe it's
2:12:12
time to take down some names are
seeing as Tucker Carlson and don
2:12:17
dan, Don, Dan bond, Gino, use
all of our topics, we should
2:12:21
probably have our names written
down, too. I want to have my
2:12:24
name written down.
2:12:25
Now we just deconstruct the
news. So with this bump, people
2:12:28
will eventually realize when
they read the mission statement
2:12:31
that's on the website somewhere.
So President Biden was talking
2:12:37
about this. And you know, the
truth always wants to come out.
2:12:40
You'll just be sitting there
listening to the guy talking.
2:12:43
And if you can decode it, he's
pretty coherent here. Now, so
2:12:46
the question is, was this kid?
Was he motivated by the Tucker
2:12:53
Carlson ideology? Which is what
Carl and Nicole just said, and
2:12:59
Tucker Carlson should be
arrested for it? Or Did
2:13:02
something else happen? Not, you
know, we have the jail? Yes, you
2:13:06
go to jail. We have the six week
cycle theory, which has turned
2:13:10
out to be pretty correct. Now,
this came sooner than six weeks
2:13:13
after the previous event, it was
only four weeks and it tighten
2:13:17
it up a little bit. Now listen
to the President.
2:13:20
It's not just the wackos who go
out there with those guns and
2:13:22
get talked into doing something.
It's the people who fill their
2:13:25
brains with false ideas.
2:13:30
It's not just the wackos who get
tucked into something which is,
2:13:33
which is what the FBI is expert
at.
2:13:36
And yeah, they talk people into
doing the damnedest stuff. And
2:13:40
he literally said, or
2:13:42
is it the ideology? So what I
hear the President saying is,
2:13:46
well, it might have been the
ideology, but this guy got
2:13:49
talked into it, by whom, Obama,
2:13:52
it's not just the wackos who go
out there with those guns and
2:13:55
get talked into doing something.
It's the people who fill their
2:13:58
brains with false ideas. So
people who make them convinced
2:14:03
them for their power and their
prestige and their money to be
2:14:08
able to go out and do these
terrible things.
2:14:11
I'm not quite sure what he meant
by all that.
2:14:13
But it was like more of the same
people with a lot of money and
2:14:17
they get to the ability to talk
in this stuff and they're out
2:14:21
there doing it. You got you've
got a low IQ people. Be careful.
2:14:25
So John Cleese talked into it I
got a shooting.
2:14:30
I want I want Okay, is it about
the buffalo stuff? Yeah, let's
2:14:35
do it.
2:14:36
But this is an ask Adam. Oh, a
second. Adam, will he know Oh,
2:14:46
really? Well, I don't know.
2:14:52
Okay, ready,
2:14:54
spot. The anomaly is the is the
is the category the category is
2:14:59
spot on. The moment okay, it
2:15:06
the mass shooting at a grocery
store in Buffalo, New York last
2:15:09
weekend shook that city in ways
no one can truly prepare for.
2:15:14
How is a community supposed to
know what to do after a tragedy
2:15:18
like that. But sadly, mass
shootings have become common
2:15:23
enough in the United States,
that there's now a practical
2:15:26
step by step handbook designed
to help local officials navigate
2:15:30
the immediate aftermath of these
incidents. It's called the mass
2:15:34
shooting protocol. And it's a
four page checklist that covers
2:15:37
how to help victims share
information with the public
2:15:40
handled vigils and charitable
donations and more.
2:15:45
Well, the whole thing was
interesting. I'm not sure what
2:15:46
the anomaly was.
2:15:48
Well, you don't. You don't get
to play it again. I will. I just
2:15:51
wanted to say, you can play it
again. But first, I just want to
2:15:54
say that this turned into a 15
minute report went on. And I
2:16:01
don't think there's anything
more to say. But there's an
2:16:03
anomaly. Can I listen to it
again, please, you can let's do
2:16:06
one more time, you might spot
it. If you don't, you will be
2:16:09
very irked with yourself.
2:16:11
The mass shooting at a grocery
store in Buffalo, New York last
2:16:14
weekend shook that city in ways
no one can truly prepare for how
2:16:19
is a community supposed to know
what to do after a tragedy like
2:16:23
that. But sadly, mass shootings
have become common enough in the
2:16:28
United States, that there's now
a practical step by step
2:16:31
handbook designed to help local
officials navigate the immediate
2:16:35
aftermath of these incidents.
It's called the mass shooting
2:16:39
protocol. And it's a four page
checklist that covers how to
2:16:42
help victims share information
with the public handle vigils
2:16:46
and charitable donations and
more.
2:16:48
Now, I'm gonna hate myself.
2:16:53
Are you telling me what she's
telling you? Is she telling me
2:16:56
that we're with a four page
checklist? amounts to a hand
2:17:03
book?
2:17:04
I heard that. Oh, that was the
anomaly. Okay.
2:17:07
Yeah, the anomalies. This is a
handbook. A Handbook isn't a
2:17:11
four page memo. That's not a
handbook. It's four pages. It's
2:17:15
not a handbook. Why are they
blowing it up? Their salaries
2:17:19
our handbook? It's an anomaly.
2:17:23
Well, what's interesting is we
have a boots on the ground
2:17:27
report. Let me just play the
beginning of your clip again,
2:17:30
the mass shooting at a grocery
store in Buffalo, New York last
2:17:33
weekend shook that city in ways
no one can truly prepare for how
2:17:38
is a community supposed to know
what to do after a tragedy like
2:17:42
that? Well,
2:17:43
this community in particular,
he's very familiar with gun
2:17:46
violence. So road Wolf is
barren. He's He's a driver. I
2:17:53
don't know what if he drives
truck or deliver but he said,
2:17:58
you know, that was just another
shooting there. Says I serve I
2:18:02
serve this area all the time. I
had luckily taken off off work
2:18:06
that day. But it did happen in a
neighborhood where my work often
2:18:09
takes me that neighborhood isn't
a stranger to shootings, I
2:18:11
myself have been in the line of
fire a few blocks away. While
2:18:15
working. Funny thing was I had a
police escort and the drug
2:18:17
dealers were being shot at. The
drug dealers ran to us because
2:18:21
they knew the cop was there and
our escort ended up getting the
2:18:24
gun man and arresting him. The
drug dealers remain unharmed.
2:18:27
Now, the area is on the verge of
being a no go zone. My employer
2:18:31
prefers that I have police
escort to work in that area and
2:18:34
in some other locations nearby.
Luckily, we have easy access to
2:18:37
police force. And generally our
officers are happy to earn
2:18:40
overtime money to stand around
and protect us while we worked.
2:18:44
Even then, prior to this
incident, we would get harassed.
2:18:47
They there we were installing
devices on the public building
2:18:50
of this way to us and we get
groups of locals who surround us
2:18:53
and call us Honkies and a bunch
of Washington's that's
2:18:58
interesting. So that's now the
white slur. Washington's
2:19:02
No, I think I think Washington's
Museum of fed or something could
2:19:05
be with it. In DC, that'd be the
reference.
2:19:08
That being said, prior to this
incident, our police have been
2:19:11
having trouble maintaining order
for almost a year now crime has
2:19:13
been increasing, especially
assaults and drugs. This is
2:19:16
something I see every day
firsthand, every day a fight
2:19:19
sometimes right in front of
police officers or standing on
2:19:22
post, who then pepper spray the
combatants every day, the same
2:19:26
drug dealer standing in the same
spots, dealing drugs right in
2:19:28
front of the police stations,
but nothing can be done, et
2:19:31
cetera, et cetera, et cetera.
Anyhow, he says I anyway,
2:19:34
finishes up. So he says this
crap area. So it's not true
2:19:39
necessarily that you know that
this community is not accustomed
2:19:43
to this. Maybe this is more used
to the one offs, like Chicago.
2:19:48
Now Chicago wants to
2:19:49
listen what you just read, did
well, how can the mainstream
2:19:52
media is not giving us a better
picture of what's going on in
2:19:55
this area
2:19:55
because the mainstream radio
won't read your donation note
2:20:03
Just a joke, John,
2:20:04
and I get the joke, but you
can't make me laugh during
2:20:07
something that's so annoying as
that note
2:20:12
Yeah. Yeah. The more you know,
the more you learn the more you
2:20:16
know you know, the more you know
you know and so you know so just
2:20:19
going back to this domestic
terrorist stuff which is all
2:20:22
ramping up to the I don't know
if they are they're gonna do you
2:20:24
think they're gonna release the
jet when are they gonna do the
2:20:26
January 6 thing are they going
to do that? October surprise are
2:20:31
they going to roll out earlier
the shitty with timing so I'm
2:20:34
sure they're going to screw it
up regardless.
2:20:37
Well, that's who this was sounds
like a good pool. They want to
2:20:42
date are fearful. Let's put
ourselves into as Democrat
2:20:48
Democrat strategist strategy not
operative. If you roll it out
2:20:55
too soon, it just loses it's not
it's gonna lose. They have to
2:20:57
figure out what the timeline is
for losing steam in this country
2:21:00
and I think is less than 30
days. Oh,
2:21:03
definitely. Look at Ukraine that
thing fizzled, and they had to
2:21:06
come up with monkey pox.
2:21:08
And so yeah, that's true. Is
that true? Is that the best you
2:21:13
guys can do? They have another
thing that could have come up
2:21:15
with it is only got very little
play, which is that the Wuhan
2:21:18
lab just released a report
bragging about how they altered
2:21:23
bird flu so it's much more
virulent can kill after Good
2:21:26
work. Good work right from the
Wuhan lab they send his out the
2:21:30
old show. No, no, no. What are
you talking about?
2:21:36
So in, in our in our cycle of
1970s, returning to our economy
2:21:41
to our fashion to guess it to a
degree with Bruno Mars even
2:21:46
music I mean, the 70s are Back
Bay doped, stoping baby. In the
2:21:52
1970s. Domestic extremism was
also a thing. Quite a thing. In
2:21:57
fact, in fact, it was such a big
thing in the United Kingdom, the
2:22:01
John Cleese of Monty Python,
recorded a little bit about it,
2:22:05
which I'd like to share again.
2:22:07
Seriously, though, we've heard a
lot about extremism recently,
2:22:10
nastier, harsher atmosphere
everywhere more abuse and
2:22:14
bothered by behavior, less
friendliness and tolerance and
2:22:17
respect for opponents. All
right. But what we never hear
2:22:20
about extremism is its
advantages. Well, the biggest
2:22:24
advantage of extremism is that
it makes you feel good, because
2:22:29
it provides you with enemies,
they explain. A great thing
2:22:34
about having enemies is that you
can pretend that all the badness
2:22:37
in the whole world is in your
enemies, and all the goodness in
2:22:41
the whole world. Is it new?
Attractive, isn't it. So if you
2:22:45
have a lot of anger and
resentment in you anyway, and
2:22:47
you therefore enjoy abusing
people, then you can pretend
2:22:51
that you're only doing it
because these enemies of yours
2:22:53
are such very bad persons. And
that if it wasn't for them,
2:22:57
you'd actually be good natured
and courteous and rational all
2:23:00
the time. So if you want to feel
good become an extremist. Okay?
2:23:07
Now you have a choice. If you
join the hard left, they'll give
2:23:10
you their list of authorized
enemies, almost all kinds of
2:23:14
authority, especially the
police, the city, Americans,
2:23:18
judges, multinational
corporations, public schools,
2:23:22
farriers, newspaper owners,
Foxhunters, generals, class
2:23:27
traitors, and of course,
moderates. Oh, if you'd rather
2:23:32
be an extremist on the hard
right, no problem fine, you
2:23:34
still get a lovely list of
enemies are neither different
2:23:37
ones, noisy minority groups,
unions, Russia. We are those
2:23:43
demonstrators. Welfare sponges,
meddlesome clergy, peaceniks,
2:23:48
the BBC, strikers, social
workers, communists, and of
2:23:52
course, moderates and upstart
factors. Now, once you're armed
2:23:58
with one of these super list of
enemies, you can be as nasty as
2:24:02
you like, and yet feel your
behaviors morally justified. So
2:24:05
you can strut around abusing
people and telling them you can
2:24:09
eat them for breakfast, and
still think of yourself as a
2:24:11
champion of the truth fighter
for the greater good or not the
2:24:15
rather sad paranoid schizoid
that you really are.
2:24:19
And I think that sums it up
2:24:23
yep, works today was right back
where we peaceniks Well, that's
2:24:27
that's the
2:24:27
that was the old life left right
paradigm where, you know, the
2:24:31
left hated war and now they do
love it.
2:24:34
They love it. So let's
2:24:35
just touch on this ideology that
Tucker Carlson apparently is
2:24:40
spewing the replacement theory,
the color gi plan. And your
2:24:48
I don't know this he ever
brought that up. Oh, yeah.
2:24:50
Not the color color. No, no, no,
no, no, not the color, you know,
2:24:53
but he has brought up I know,
2:24:56
but but he does it to mock it.
I've heard him do the
2:25:00
replacement theory thing, but he
does it to mock the people that
2:25:03
mock him for think of promoting
it when he's not promoting it.
2:25:06
He's, you know,
2:25:07
I would well, that's not true
because you also believe in the
2:25:11
replacement theory, you yourself
have have laid out the theory
2:25:15
for the United States clearly
multiple times, open the
2:25:19
borders, bring in your voters,
let them stay. That's the
2:25:23
replacement theory. Is that Is
that crazy? What I'm saying now?
2:25:28
Yeah, crazy. Okay. So no, going
on it and they've said it.
2:25:32
That's what Tucker does. All he
does is play them the other
2:25:36
side, saying what you do your
reports not much different as if
2:25:41
you brought in this colored gi
thing, which, which surprises me
2:25:44
hasn't done. So I'm guessing
he's going to do it soon.
2:25:47
Because they listen to our show.
2:25:48
I'll bet you $5 that comes up
this week. Can talk integrin are
2:25:53
shaking that bed. Exactly. So
you were surprised to learn
2:25:58
about the mission suppose
admission of Jews to implement
2:26:04
this plan. And in fact, you had
an aha moment you said oh,
2:26:10
that's why they say Jews will
not replace us not going to be
2:26:14
replaced by Jews, but going to
be the Jews will replace us with
2:26:18
other ethnicities. And this is
still specifically about Europe.
2:26:23
And I could not remember the
name of the organization that
2:26:26
was doing this, I knew we had a
clip of it. Thank you to
2:26:29
everybody who reminded me, the
organization is called PI ADEA P
2:26:33
ai D I A and you can find that
link in the show notes. And the
2:26:39
woman we played the clip from
and we've actually played this
2:26:41
two or three times during the
show's history, which I found
2:26:44
interesting is Barbara Lerner,
Specter. She's the founding
2:26:48
director of the Pieta
organization in Sweden. And
2:26:55
here's a snippet from her
interview, I think
2:26:57
there's a resurgence of anti
semitism, because at this point
2:27:01
in time, Europe has not yet
learned how to be multicultural.
2:27:05
And I think we're going to be
part of the throes of that, of
2:27:08
that transformation, which must
take place, Europe is not going
2:27:11
to be the monolithic societies,
they once were in the last
2:27:17
century, Jews couldn't be at the
center of that huge
2:27:20
transformation for Europe to
make, they are now going into a
2:27:23
multicultural mode in Jews will
be resented because of our
2:27:27
leading role. But without that
leading role, and without that
2:27:30
transformation, Europe will not
survive.
2:27:34
There you go, I'll add a little
more context to it. The complete
2:27:39
theory is that Jews need to be
able to live wherever they want,
2:27:45
particularly in Europe. And
that's become very difficult
2:27:49
over over the recent decades.
And the concept of what pi ADA
2:27:55
is doing is helping all kinds of
multicultural people migrate
2:28:01
into Europe, so that then the
Jews who are not white will also
2:28:07
be safe to live in Europe.
That's the whole thing. And and
2:28:11
so people see that as a
replacement, you're bringing in
2:28:14
people to replace us to
literally to make us less white.
2:28:19
So you can understand where the
and by the way I understand what
2:28:23
she's saying to you was like,
hey, maybe we if we make it a
2:28:27
lot more diverse, then we won't
stick out like a sore thumb. And
2:28:31
we won't get all the all the
flack. So spread the love or
2:28:35
hate so to speak. And that is
your replacement theory. And
2:28:38
it's a real theory. It's not a
conspiracy theory is not Q anon.
2:28:42
It's a real thing.
2:28:44
Now it's not Yeah, yeah. It's
not a conspiracy, anything. No.
2:28:48
But that's how its portrayed in
the media.
2:28:52
Well, the I think the problem
then evolves. And I'm Britain,
2:28:59
trying to understand the Tucker
situation to the left, trying to
2:29:04
pull the wool over your eyes
because they feel that the
2:29:09
public stupid by the way, you're
not much doffed, it's too much
2:29:13
at the beginning of the show,
you kind of indicate you thought
2:29:15
the public was stupid and would
fall for a bunch of bullcrap.
2:29:19
And so they're thinking that
there's along the same lines,
2:29:22
it's not unusual thought it's
not like something weird, but
2:29:25
they think that and I remember I
think most of my life was as a
2:29:29
Democrat, I think I've heard
this constantly. This thought
2:29:34
that the public stupid and so
the public's too stupid to fully
2:29:39
understand the replacement
theory so let's shut up about
2:29:43
issues do it and that's what
multiculturalism is about and
2:29:47
all this others are
unfortunately, spun out of
2:29:49
control with gender ism and all
the rest of it. Which makes it
2:29:55
very difficult to you know, to
get a handle on and but let's
2:29:59
just do this fool them because
they're too dumb to understand
2:30:02
what's going on. Let's trick
them. And everybody be happy in
2:30:06
the end.
2:30:07
Well, there's more coming down
the slides
2:30:09
simple. That's simple. That's
simple.
2:30:12
Let's see if the the Tucker
producers with a bond Gino
2:30:17
producers catch on to this one.
So colored GI and the curler gi
2:30:20
plan that's from the 30s 30s 40s
has been going on for a long
2:30:24
time. They still have a prize
handout to people. There was a
2:30:29
book that came that prize.
2:30:30
The prize is the giveaway.
2:30:33
And they gave it to Angular
Merkel Say no more. Yeah,
2:30:36
yeah. And open the gates of hell
to the immigrants and
2:30:39
Herrmann front room boy, haiku
Herman, another idiot. There was
2:30:44
a book published in 1973 by John
Raspail. It's a fictional
2:30:49
account. It's called the camp of
saints. And this book is
2:30:53
becoming popular again. It
depicts the destruction of
2:30:56
Western civilization through
third world mass emigration to
2:31:00
France and the West. And it
returned to the bestseller list
2:31:05
in 2011. And I think it's an I
don't know which bestseller list
2:31:09
it was. Honest publication The
book received praise from
2:31:13
prominent French literary
figures and through time has
2:31:16
also been praised by critics and
politicians in Europe and the
2:31:18
United States. But it's been
criticized by both French and
2:31:21
English language commentators
for conveying themes described
2:31:24
as racism, xenophobia, nativism,
monoculture, realism and anti
2:31:28
immigration content. The novel
is now described as far right
2:31:33
and popular in white nationalist
circles.
2:31:38
It was the name of this thing
2:31:40
Lecomte descent. So the camp of
saints
2:31:44
looks like it's available. Oh,
yeah. No,
2:31:47
of course it is. Of course, it's
available. It's it's available
2:31:50
in hardcover and paperback. on
Amazon, no doubt, Oh, that'll
2:31:54
get D platformed. So, then, you
know, Pim for town, he was the
2:32:02
politician that got
assassinated. Like 10 days
2:32:05
before the election and his
party, one posthumously turned
2:32:09
into a shitshow. Of course, this
was an openly gay man, highly
2:32:12
intellectual, multi World
Education. And he was the guy
2:32:17
that when I returned back to
Europe at the end of end of
2:32:21
yeah, just before the Millennium
change. He was in the
2:32:27
Netherlands campaigning saying,
We have to stop the
2:32:30
Islamification of the
Netherlands. And he was, of
2:32:33
course, deemed a racist,
xenophobe, and white rip and
2:32:38
replacement theory. And they
killed him for it. Yeah. So
2:32:44
that's a little more than taking
names and locking people up.
2:32:47
They killed him over that. So
it's pretty serious. I think
2:32:51
it's, you know, we can't just
dismiss it. Because Nicole
2:32:55
Wallace missing, you know, no,
we're not very serious then
2:32:58
because Nicole Wallace says we
should. Oh, Nicole
2:33:01
Wallace. A bushy.
2:33:05
bushy, bushy. bushy, bushy. I
guess he has a bushy
2:33:11
nose. That's where she came out
of the Bush administration. She
2:33:14
still, you know, yes, you're
heading for the bushes. Now.
2:33:17
She's a bush pro jab. She was
Jab Jab,
2:33:20
Jab, Jab exclamation mark. Yep.
Let me see. What do we got a
2:33:26
couple of? Oh, yeah, please do?
2:33:28
Yeah, let's first of all, I want
to get these clips out of the
2:33:31
way this is gonna get data. This
is the clips where he had Dan
2:33:34
Bishop, their congressman
grilling these women over the,
2:33:39
during the hearings about Roe
versus Wade, and they're not
2:33:42
going to take
2:33:43
probably is this is this the
session where people ask these
2:33:48
witnesses, what's a woman and
all that?
2:33:50
Yeah, it's a little trite. But I
thought it was interesting. And
2:33:55
this is this is Dan Bishop with
one woman. I can't I didn't
2:34:00
write her name down. But she's a
black doctor, I think and she's
2:34:03
going on about one thing, and
she wouldn't have any of it. And
2:34:07
she's just draw it back at him
and then condemn him. It was
2:34:10
pretty funny. So doctor,
2:34:13
I noticed in your written
testimony, you said that you use
2:34:15
she her pronouns, your medical
doctor, what's a woman?
2:34:21
It's important for you to
understand why I said I use she
2:34:24
her pronouns. Well, I
2:34:29
explained why I'm asking the
question, but I just thought you
2:34:31
couldn't answer the question.
What's a woman?
2:34:33
I think it's important that we
educate people like you about
2:34:37
why we're doing the things that
we do. And so the reason that I
2:34:40
use she and her pronouns is
because I understand that there
2:34:44
are people who become pregnant
that may not identify it that
2:34:48
way. And I think it is
discriminatory to speak to
2:34:51
people or to call them in such a
way as they desire not to be
2:34:55
called. So it's important that
we respect each individual
2:34:58
person
2:34:59
you're going after Michael Can
you answer the question? Who
2:35:01
wants a woman?
2:35:02
I'm a woman. And I will ask you
which pronouns do you use? And
2:35:06
you? Can you tell me that you
use she and her pronouns? I'm
2:35:09
going to answer you. I'm going
to call you Mr. Bishop. I'm
2:35:12
going to respect you for how you
want me to address you.
2:35:17
We need to educate people like
you. There it is. There's your
2:35:20
John Cleese bit right there.
2:35:23
And what did she say wishes if
you use she and her I'm going to
2:35:28
call you mister.
2:35:30
What? Yeah, that that was. It
was either she messed up and
2:35:36
didn't mean it that way. Like, I
call you mister, because that's
2:35:39
what you want. Or she was
saying, Well, if you use she and
2:35:42
her pronouns, I'm gonna mess
with your head. I'm gonna call
2:35:44
you mister. See if you like it.
2:35:46
Oh, what'd she say? Index click
the next person. They had three
2:35:51
people up there yakking away
like this. And it was like,
2:35:53
brother, it was dumb. By me,
well, then they go to this woman
2:35:57
who I wrote about in the
newsletter, trying to explain to
2:36:00
people what they meant what what
is meant by a man can get
2:36:03
pregnant and have an abortion.
And this is the woman that
2:36:06
triggered all that. And this is
the longer version of what
2:36:09
you've heard on all these other
shows.
2:36:11
I'm just saying. So you give me
an example of a woman you say
2:36:14
that you are a woman? Can you
tell me otherwise? Can you tell
2:36:16
me what a woman is? Yes, I'm
telling you, I'm a woman.
2:36:19
Because that is as comprehensive
a definition as you can give me
2:36:23
that's
2:36:23
as comprehensive as the
different definitions as I will
2:36:26
give you today. Because I think
that it's important that we
2:36:28
focus on what we're here for, to
talk about at CES.
2:36:35
And answering a question that I
asked him less it's part of a
2:36:38
message you want to deliver. Is
that right?
2:36:40
I'm sorry. You're not I was
talking and you were talking to
2:36:45
my time. Okay, time to ask you
questions. That's the purpose of
2:36:49
his might ask you to uncover
things by asking you questions
2:36:52
and asking you to respond. So
you're not willing to answer a
2:36:55
question unless it's part of a
message you wish to deliver. Is
2:36:57
that correct?
2:36:58
Sir, what I was trying to
explain to you is that I had a
2:37:00
difficult time hearing you since
we were talking at the same time
2:37:04
we're going to
2:37:04
save on good myths around the
day is a pretty close
2:37:07
approximation of the
pronunciation. I don't be there
2:37:10
RMB day. Okay. What do you say a
woman is?
2:37:15
I believe that everyone can
identify for themselves.
2:37:18
Okay. Do you believe that men
can become pregnant and have
2:37:23
abortions? Yes.
2:37:27
That's all he wanted. That's all
he wanted. He wanted that one
2:37:30
quote. That's right. That's what
you do it for? Yeah. That's what
2:37:34
you do it for. Oh, brother. Hey,
I have a multiparty from NPR.
2:37:41
Always funny about scary Poppins
and the closing of the
2:37:47
disinformation board.
2:37:49
Interested in way before you
play that, according to some
2:37:52
news, I read this morning.
They're still funding it and
2:37:56
she's still running it.
2:37:57
Ben, do you know who's in who's
on the board?
2:38:01
I have no idea. Michael shirt
off. Oh, please.
2:38:06
So there's no money out enough
to do that is money. That means
2:38:09
there's money coming in. That
means there's money. There's, by
2:38:12
the way, speaking of Chertoff,
who single handedly brought in
2:38:15
the the body scanners into all
airports in the United States.
2:38:20
Remember that L three,
2:38:22
the guy is a sales guy par
excellence. We should take cues
2:38:26
from him.
2:38:28
I've noticed that there's new
brands of scanners now is no
2:38:31
longer L three, chose a new
contract. Just one of those
2:38:36
things I noticed while traveling
I wonder what happened to L
2:38:39
three. Anyway shirt off is
incredible. Douchebag and this
2:38:45
is what he does. He loves He
loves getting money for all
2:38:49
kinds of cool equipment. And so
he is he I guess he's he's
2:38:54
running a part of this
disinformation board. And I
2:38:57
completely agree that nothing
has stopped. So let's listen to
2:38:59
this NPR to multiparty with a
little intro by the ladies three
2:39:03
weeks that's how long I board
that was launched by the
2:39:06
Department of Homeland Security
to help fight disinformation
2:39:09
lasted. In those three weeks.
Both the disinformation
2:39:12
governance board and its leader
Nina Janka wits came under
2:39:16
relentless attacks from
conservatives. And PR tech
2:39:18
correspondent Shannon bond is
here. She talked with Janka wits
2:39:21
yesterday.
2:39:22
Why do they have the tech
journalists do this?
2:39:29
No, that's it, you know, the
subtext is is fascinating
2:39:32
because I'm telling you the tech
drones covers it because tech is
2:39:35
all in.
2:39:38
Yeah, I mean, it's just I found
that very interesting.
2:39:40
So since you're right, it makes
zero sense. And when
2:39:42
it comes to tech analysts, it's
I have very low opinion of all
2:39:48
these people as Tech Tech on and
I don't know what they mean by
2:39:52
tech, Georgia Tech. Or do you
mean technology? I don't think
2:39:56
these people know much about
technology. They just read press
2:39:59
releases. Have them do it anyway
so she gets the job of
2:40:02
interviewing Nina
2:40:03
from conservatives and para tech
correspondent Shannon bond is
2:40:06
here she talked with us
yesterday shortly after she
2:40:10
resigned Shannon is pretty good
get Can you start by pretty
2:40:14
good get their show I see she
had the get pretty good get no
2:40:19
Why would you say that? That's
for behind the mic that's not
2:40:23
when you're
2:40:23
totally inside base that's
2:40:25
inside stuff. That's like she's
complimenting and maybe she's
2:40:29
showing off this is pretty good
get pretty good get
2:40:31
a is pretty good get for you
little tech girl. She
2:40:34
resigned Shannon is pretty good
get Can you start by telling us
2:40:38
about Nina junkets and her
background. Yes, she's a well
2:40:41
regarded authority and
disinformation, studied Russian.
2:40:47
well regarded is what got me
2:40:50
well regarded.
2:40:52
She's a well regarded authority
and disinformation. She studied
2:40:56
Russian Information Operations.
She has advised governments
2:40:58
including Ukraine's and
Previously she was a fellow at a
2:41:01
DC Think Tank and where she
focused on Democracy and
2:41:04
Technology in Europe.
2:41:06
So how did she become the
subject of so much conservative
2:41:11
ire?
2:41:12
Fire FIRE? What is higher,
higher, higher?
2:41:17
It's the short version of the
word anger.
2:41:20
Really? Yeah.
2:41:23
There was a lot of criticism of
this disinformation governance
2:41:26
board including from the left
but conservatives seized on
2:41:29
Janowitz herself her perceived
partisanship, her tweets even a
2:41:33
silly Tik Tok video she made,
but it was much more than just
2:41:36
making fun of a cringy video
right Janowitz received this
2:41:40
onslaught of abuse, harassment,
even death threats. DHS did not
2:41:45
explain what this board was
designed to do. And in the
2:41:48
absence of information given
that name. Many assumed the
2:41:52
worst this was an attack.
2:41:54
I love the fact that what I'm
hearing here from the tech girl,
2:41:57
is the disinformation board
disbanded because of the lack of
2:42:01
information. Do they see the
irony
2:42:04
its board was designed to do and
in the absence of information
2:42:08
given that name. Many assumed
the worst this was an attack on
2:42:12
free speech by the Biden
administration. And so on
2:42:15
Wednesday,
2:42:15
Janka wits quit grant, as we
noted, you talk to her
2:42:18
yesterday?
2:42:19
Yes, from the outset, she wanted
to make one thing clear.
2:42:23
Basically, everything you may
have heard about the
2:42:25
disinformation governance board
is wrong, or is just a flat out
2:42:29
lie.
2:42:30
It's wrong or a lie. So where do
you think this is going? Who is
2:42:36
she going to blame? But
2:42:38
yeah, real funny part about
this? Is that it because
2:42:41
somebody else has pointed this
out? I'm not the one to do it.
2:42:43
But it's like so the
disinformation board was dis
2:42:47
disbanded because of
disinformation.
2:42:50
Yeah, but what she just said,
Yeah, that's exactly right. She
2:42:53
may, in fact, she will take it a
step further. She's going to
2:42:56
blame the Department of Homeland
Security for everything. So to
2:42:59
start off, what's a concrete
example of the kind of thing the
2:43:01
board was meant to do?
2:43:03
Yeah, so let me give you a
hypothetical. Right. So let's
2:43:07
say that there was a deep fake
video released about how to
2:43:11
access disaster aid or how to
get out of a city during a
2:43:16
disaster time by released by a
malign after like Russia, China
2:43:20
or Iran, in order to put
Americans in danger. The board
2:43:24
would consult with FEMA, which
had been doing this work for
2:43:27
more than a decade,
2:43:27
I love this example. Is this the
best you've got as an example?
2:43:32
So for instance, there was a
disaster. And Russia wanted to
2:43:36
like screw with everybody. And
we made a deep fake video, so
2:43:40
that you would like die instead?
I mean, what is the point? Is
2:43:45
that really your example lady
2:43:47
at this point? And support FEMA
and getting good information
2:43:51
out? They're really good at that
already. But how do we want to
2:43:55
reach this audience? What's the
best way to do that? Let's look
2:43:58
at best practices and resilience
building or counter messaging to
2:44:02
make sure that counter messaging
are safe during this natural
2:44:06
disaster. That's just one
example. It wouldn't have to do
2:44:09
with again, adjudicating what is
true or false or anything like
2:44:13
that. There was a lack of public
clarity.
2:44:15
She literally just said we she
would adjudicate This is a fake
2:44:18
video, we've got let everybody
know what's fake. And here's the
2:44:20
real information.
2:44:22
It wouldn't have to do with
again, adjudicating what is true
2:44:25
or false or anything like that.
There is a lack of
2:44:27
public clarity, I would say from
DHS about exactly what the board
2:44:31
was supposed to do about the
kind of things you were
2:44:33
describing, and leading the
witness in, you know, what
2:44:36
allowed this and raised
2:44:38
their voices are so similar with
this kind, this kind of
2:44:42
grappling with the they just I
know there's so it's hard to
2:44:48
tell who's talking.
2:44:49
You just want to slap them all
don't yeah,
2:44:52
you're describing and I think
that may have been you know,
2:44:55
what allowed this in ways to be
mischaracterized right allowed
2:44:58
right, but like Republican Ron
Johnson did Describe the board
2:45:00
is this Orwellian Ministry of
Truth? Why was it so poorly
2:45:04
communicated?
2:45:06
That speaks again to the
behemoth agency that DHS is
2:45:09
there's a lot of cooks in the
kitchen when these decisions are
2:45:12
being made. And unfortunately, I
think the agency the department
2:45:16
had had other priorities at the
time the rollout was happening,
2:45:20
and they didn't anticipate this
fierce backlash and weren't able
2:45:24
to mount a transparent, open,
rapid response. Why not? When
2:45:30
these criticisms came down the
pike, I wish it went
2:45:32
differently. And I definitely
think that the information
2:45:36
vacuum that we created allowed
people to fill in the blanks, it
2:45:40
frankly, showed exactly how
disinformation campaigns work.
2:45:44
And sadly, a lot of the vacuum
that was created directed a lot
2:45:49
of vitriol and ire and threats
and harassment even toward me
2:45:53
and my family because people
were looking for something to
2:45:56
latch on to.
2:45:57
So notice that she also uses the
term iron just like our tech
2:46:02
reporter. So they had a whole
pre interview. That's why this
2:46:08
is so so dead. You want to hear
more? No, no?
2:46:14
Normally I you know me, I like
to listen to these things till
2:46:16
they make me sick. But in this
case, he gave me the option.
2:46:20
Yeah, give me the stinks. She
sucks balls.
2:46:27
Worse, man. I had the out there
you had you had when you hit the
2:46:31
punch line I hit the jingle was
tried again.
2:46:34
She sucks balls.
2:46:36
I'm gonna show my school by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
2:46:40
all the people who could do
that. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun.
2:46:42
Nailed it
2:46:50
fix it in post.
2:46:51
They'll never know. They'll
never know what happened.
2:46:54
Somebody will get 2000 people
out there that know what's going
2:46:58
on. One of them is probably
Lydia Terry dama Nellie, I like
2:47:03
that good. One Rochester New
Hampshire center and $33 and no
2:47:08
sense. And she wants job
certification test karma. For
2:47:12
everybody. We'll give you that
at the end. Now. Lydia, Joseph
2:47:15
Hawkins and Jonesborough
Illinois 111. In in $100, he's
2:47:21
in Great Britain, in field
anonymous in homeless Beach,
2:47:25
Florida. 100. Sir Kevin
McLaughlin is right at the top
2:47:29
of the list. Here is the Duke
Aluna lover of American lover of
2:47:31
boobs and he's in Concord, North
Carolina. He comes with 808
2:47:35
which is the boobs donations.
Only one today. Heinrich had
2:47:38
gelling in 100 Yeah, link in
hair.
2:47:44
Netherlands so far. humidify.
Hendrick er link in here to
2:47:48
here.
2:47:49
Da Juric in Arlington,
Washington 6996. A famous
2:47:55
donation from him sir Vegas Ray
the night of Naked City lost the
2:47:59
wages in Nevada 6953 He's got a
birthday coming up. RC and
2:48:06
Redding, Pennsylvania 6789
2:48:09
and an RC says we missed the
donation pot in Charleston, but
2:48:13
there are no douchebags here.
Maybe Gotcha. Thanks, man.
2:48:17
That's a plus. Sir. Jake. The it
Bowgun it Bowgun here and he's
2:48:24
in Kaboo tour I don't know how
to pronounce this is in capital
2:48:29
Tour.
2:48:30
Tour capital tour. Right now
2:48:34
it's 6161 and he can send us a
note or I can look it up. I can
2:48:40
look it up. Edward Pash in
Omaha. Omaha Nebraska 6119 And
2:48:47
he has a birthday
2:48:48
birthday shout out for his
beautiful wife Helen. She may
2:48:52
not be 29 anymore, but I'm glad
she still needs me around to
2:48:55
open jars.
2:48:57
Nathan Garzon. Whitestone
Indiana 5678 He says he got the
2:49:03
newsletters outlet.com box by
the way outlook is I get some
2:49:07
notes I read a maybe couple
shows. Outlook is is huge
2:49:11
problem for getting the
newsletter, sir be boop tonight
2:49:15
of the frozen tundra New
Brighton Minnesota by 678
2:49:18
Heather Rodriguez in Stockton,
California. She couldn't do a
2:49:22
meet up 5569 Or Kyle have
Bertram and the three donkeys in
2:49:27
Bertram Texas 5533. Also in
Texas, Angela Pickering and sour
2:49:34
Lake Texas sounds terrible. The
lake the D 510. David Pete in
2:49:40
Decatur, Texas, three in a row
$55 Matthew Johnson in San
2:49:46
Antonio says four in a row in a
row 5150 from Fender number one
2:49:51
is Martin. You could be in
Texas. He did Parts Unknown
2:49:54
according to this season 505
along with Sir Andrew Benz in
2:49:58
Imperial Missouri So, now we got
the $50 donors. I'll just rush
2:50:03
through them name and location
if I have a location. This
2:50:05
starts with another Texan. John
from college station. A Sir
2:50:10
Patrick may come in New York
City, Robert case and mill
2:50:13
Springs, North Carolina Robert
Hannah in Poway, Poway, Poway,
2:50:19
California, a Steven crummy, and
he's not a crummy guy at all.
2:50:24
And alcohol in California is two
in a row. Michael Burfield in
2:50:29
Tallmadge Ohio. Luke Ferguson in
Brandon Mississippi, Julian
2:50:35
Robinson Aptos California
Daniel, sir Daniel laboy and
2:50:40
he's in Bath Michigan and last
but not least on our list is
2:50:43
anyway is Lucas Deaton from
Dayton Dayton from Dayton from
2:50:48
Dayton sort of last guide and
these are people that helped
2:50:50
make this show possible.
2:50:52
Thank you all very much. John
from College Station, asked for
2:50:56
a D douching. Since his neighbor
Jared hit him in the mouth.
2:51:00
You've been deed do and as
requested some karma for
2:51:04
multiple people you've got karma
Thank you very much for
2:51:08
supporting the no agenda show
$50 or more you get on this list
2:51:12
under $50. We will not read you
but these are highly appreciated
2:51:16
donations, many of them are just
people who provide that much
2:51:19
value that's really appreciated.
We also have subscriptions you
2:51:23
can sign up for and there's a
whole bunch of them you can
2:51:26
actually make up your own please
consider one of those they keep
2:51:29
it going for a base depending on
how everything is going with the
2:51:32
with the the show to show
donations for more information
2:51:35
on that go here bora.org/and A
2:51:47
taking a look at the list for
the birthdays today we see de
2:51:50
mama Susan of the north country
saying happy birthday to her son
2:51:53
James Beals, he turns 25 Sir
Jake the it Bogan 61 on May 20,
2:51:58
Sir Marcus Miller 44 on the 22nd
Jackie Kay turns 33 today Hey
2:52:03
mate, another rhyme sir Vegas
Ray Knight of the Naked City 53.
2:52:07
Today, Edward Kosh Happy
Birthday to his beautiful wife
2:52:10
Helen by intosh celebrating
today as is our final one. Joe
2:52:14
Dirks. Happy birthday to
everybody. Here's the best
2:52:16
podcast in the universe.
2:52:21
Don't get around douchebag
producer is we all think your
2:52:28
brothers and sisters who gave
and some of them night. Some of
2:52:34
them
2:52:38
changes or Marcus Miller are
Deutschland knights becomes a
2:52:46
baron today Baron of Hestia.
Marcus Mueller, Marcus Miller.
2:52:51
Two quick make goods Kathy
Rhodes. We missed her note. For
2:52:55
the sake of brevity, the short
note I gave to Adam at the
2:52:57
Charleston meetup must have been
unclear. My donation for the
2:53:00
mace 19th de Deus and gave
executive producer IP to both my
2:53:04
husband Lee Rhodes and my
brother Mike re, or re re my
2:53:08
brother's birthday fell on the
show day and he was not
2:53:11
recognized as an executive
producer. I'm sorry. And she
2:53:14
says it's okay. Kristen
Godzilla. says hey, the note
2:53:20
messed up doesn't matter like
this one better. Shout out to
2:53:22
Connie and Brian for hitting me
in the mouth last summer. Thank
2:53:24
you for your courage. The show
was always outstanding. And and
2:53:28
she says thank you and send some
karma Kristin in San Carlos,
2:53:31
California. Then it's time for
our no agenda meetups everybody
2:53:37
shut down
2:53:43
we kick it off with our Texas
meetup Baron Scott of The
2:53:48
armory. And let's see what he
has to say in this pre produced
2:53:51
baggage.
2:53:52
Hey, John Adams, barons caught
mixing it and post had a great
2:53:56
gathering of 20 plus producers
at docks last Saturday. We try
2:53:59
something a little different for
the minute. Hope you enjoy
2:54:07
in the morning, this is OSI the
uglier half of the millennial
2:54:11
lesbian. Mr. Is Rachel Hey,
Adam,
2:54:15
how's life is a dog father. So I
think what they did here is they
2:54:18
asked a whole bunch of
questions. And now write down
2:54:22
any ones you want to answer and
we'll do it after the report
2:54:25
sir.
2:54:25
Hi, this is Scott's wife
Christine. And I want to know
2:54:28
Jcv when are you going to come
to Austin and visit with your
2:54:31
Noah Jeanette nation here
2:54:33
in the morning John Van Loan on
behalf of the TNC bots. I just
2:54:35
want to say Adam, are we there
yet?
2:54:37
Hi, this is Leah lovies. And I
want to know why is Adam not
2:54:41
here with us?
2:54:43
Hey, this is Josh Cox or thought
of Valhalla. What's your
2:54:47
everyday carry there? My name is
Jim. Who's at the top in the
2:54:50
morning Adam and John. This
2:54:52
is the future game slammy in
Austin, the Texas sun fried my
2:54:56
brain. I don't have an ask Adam
in the morning. This
2:54:59
is Sir Chris Berna North Austin,
2:55:01
this goes out JCD I know there's
a prohibition on peanuts, but is
2:55:05
it acceptable as a fist?
Anything else? Chris Baker, Adam
2:55:09
Hi guys. This is Sir Jason in
the morning.
2:55:12
I'm Tom Schubert in the morning.
My name is Dave Hey John. Why
2:55:16
does sound money not interest
you ITM guys? Hey,
2:55:20
I wanted to thank everybody for
the house buying karma because
2:55:23
we're moving in tomorrow. Thanks
2:55:25
and Shama in the morning. Any of
those you want to address?
2:55:30
Well, I'll be to Austin I'll be
into Austin one of these days
2:55:33
shortly probably could be next
week. And the other one what is
2:55:38
he said what is found money
2:55:40
no sound money that that's a
question that what he says is
2:55:44
how come you don't believe in
Bitcoin? That was the question.
2:55:48
He didn't say that. No, but
that's what he meant. I wanted
2:55:50
to sound money. That's what he
meant. I believe
2:55:53
in Bitcoin and I wish I'd bought
it at 25 cents. You know, I was
2:55:56
thinking about that the other
day because I was at Costco and
2:55:58
somebody's yakking about big guy
bought it at five bucks to his
2:56:01
friend to while he was here I
buy it now at $20,000.20 3029 I
2:56:06
guess what it is? And I was
thinking I was thinking if I had
2:56:10
bought Bitcoin at say 25 cents
he had $1.02 bucks three bucks,
2:56:13
four bucks, five bucks. I can't
imagine not selling it at 400
2:56:19
Oh, no. If you recall 100 bagger
if you're if you recall, people
2:56:25
were giving us Bitcoin in those
early days when we were both
2:56:28
saying that now this is stupid
Beanie Babies crap.
2:56:32
Right that was mostly me now but
2:56:34
I went along with it. And so it
did but let me let me finish the
2:56:40
story because it's it's it goes
right with what you're saying.
2:56:43
Give me two seconds. So I wound
up with 65 Bitcoin which I sold
2:56:49
that $900 You're absolutely
right. It was the dumbest thing
2:56:53
I've ever done.
2:56:55
So making money is dumb.
2:56:57
If I had held on to it longer
would have been I wouldn't be I
2:57:00
wouldn't be talking to you.
2:57:01
What is this true? What
investment you're wanting to run
2:57:06
number one rule of investing?
don't scoff at profit under any
2:57:11
circumstances? Yeah. But you see
that you have two things going
2:57:15
on one is profit the other is
greed.
2:57:18
But that wasn't the question it
was Why don't you believe in
2:57:21
sound money you're looking at it
as an asset well
2:57:23
because I don't see it as sound
money that's okay good.
2:57:28
To answer the questions that
were asked of me, I love being a
2:57:31
dog father in fact, the keeper
and I just graduated from our
2:57:37
dog obedience class, which of
course means Oh, yep, we
2:57:40
graduated and with flying
colors, why was it not at the
2:57:45
meet up hello we were graduating
and my daily carry Smith and
2:57:50
Wesson nine mil hey you go let's
not do these anymore. I like it
2:57:55
as a one off scott but let's not
do it ask Adams and ask John's
2:57:58
just in and out with the report
please like Fresno because they
2:58:01
resist very much
2:58:02
no agenda meet up at the barrel
house in Fresno. I am stir
2:58:07
Robertson has two sticks. No,
I'm Trevor from England and we
2:58:12
are having a great time in
living on ChatOps live.
2:58:18
Report for is no perfect. Osaka
has a different message but then
2:58:23
again hey it's Osaka.
2:58:28
This is Sir bill of Osaka
whiskey one India Tango mic at
2:58:33
the Osaka Castle cherry blossom
viewing and amygdala shrinking
2:58:37
meet up. We are next to the
castle moat enjoying some beers
2:58:41
while the locals compose haiku
underneath the cherry blossoms.
2:58:45
Nice turnout today with about
six listeners and accompanying
2:58:48
human resources as the rules are
different here we have de
2:58:53
mastered and Sir marks heads on
sticks.
2:58:56
In the morning Adam and John
this is Mike. I've lived in
2:58:59
Japan for 30 years and this is
the best time I've ever had.
2:59:03
Hi everybody. This is surreal
stone scrub. We're all having a
2:59:06
great time.
2:59:07
I TM from John W W to living in
Kyoto Japan came down to Osaka
2:59:14
on a one hour 20 minute train
ride to meet everybody for the
2:59:17
first time. Had a great time. We
had beer and now we just had
2:59:21
burgers. Maybe next time we'll
have we'll meet him. This is a
2:59:25
3d
2:59:26
It's like a party.
2:59:27
No agenda family worldwide. You
should have been in Osaka today.
2:59:32
wonderful group of people.
Wonderful meet up. Take care.
2:59:36
Hi, John and Adam. This is
Brandon and it's been eight
2:59:39
years since my last no agenda
meetup in Tokyo for Adam's
2:59:42
birthday party
2:59:44
JCD. I'm looking forward to
registering the callsign KJ six
2:59:48
LNG when it expires later.
2:59:57
It's like domain name hijacking
and it will serve You write you
3:00:00
phony ham,
3:00:03
like process that I get for
getting people in it being a
3:00:06
ham, but I'll renew it this
week.
3:00:08
That's the problem. You're an
Elmer. You're not living up to
3:00:11
your Elmer standards. Yeah, no
you aren't you are you are 100%
3:00:17
responsible for me becoming a
ham becoming obsessed and
3:00:20
obsessed ham actually. Yeah, so
I'm mad props to you. But if it
3:00:25
feels icky, that you're not,
you're not achy. He does. So
3:00:30
it's, I'm trying to use other
words in Sketch.
3:00:33
Since they brought it into Japan
thing I wanted to congratulate
3:00:36
Toronto Fuji, for winning the
seventh Emperor's cup. And the
3:00:42
sumo matches that just ended the
May sumo tournaments it just
3:00:46
ended.
3:00:47
That's hot. Here's the meet ups
taking place today. If you're in
3:00:53
Richmond, Virginia, then you're
probably already at the local
3:00:56
804 meetup. If you're in
Blacksburg, Virginia, hello, my
3:01:00
goodness. 3:33pm Yep, you're
probably late for the bingo
3:01:04
beer, Colorado, a bingo beer
Corp meetup, which probably
3:01:08
shouldn't do these if, if
they're already done. By the
3:01:12
time we're on the show. Yeah, I
would think the Piney Woods meet
3:01:17
up the third revision that takes
place in Oh in about 20 minutes
3:01:22
that'll be at Rotolo is pizzeria
Longview, Texas. On Monday,
3:01:26
Victoria Day National patriots
bash one o'clock at the four
3:01:29
mile brew pub in Victoria BC. On
Tuesday, the no CO Island of
3:01:34
Misfit toy Ultra meet up and
baby formula giveaway six
3:01:37
o'clock mountain Greenlee pizza
company Greenlee Colorado. And
3:01:42
finally the next show day
Thursday, the Denver City Park
3:01:44
two weeks cycle meet up 630
Mountain Denver City Park and
3:01:48
that is what's coming up between
now and our next show. But if
3:01:50
you go to no agenda meet ups.com
We just count them for May one
3:01:54
two threes. We still have 4567
for May 10. Eight for June
3:02:01
1-234-567-8910 1112 1314. We
already have 30 meetups in June
3:02:06
and they're into July into
August you need to be one of
3:02:09
these it's better than a dating
app. No agenda meetup.com If you
3:02:13
can't find near us Texas start
one now. From out of control
3:02:20
amount of control.
3:02:22
You will be triggered all
3:02:27
you want to say is like no
agenda meetups.com If you can't
3:02:36
find one near you start one
yourself. It's easy like a
3:02:38
party. We're at the ISO stage.
3:02:44
Yes. Why don't you do yours and
I've got at the shore the
3:02:47
Surefire winner. Oh
3:02:49
you feel oh you feeling? Okay.
You feeling cocky? There, huh?
3:02:54
Okay, let me get my first
potential ISO candidates don't
3:02:59
trust Bucha that's no good. What
is this? They were touting
3:03:04
stuff. No. We think it's aliens.
That actually I need to talk
3:03:13
about we think it's alien with
that make it louder. And that's
3:03:19
no, it's not that good. What do
you have?
3:03:22
All right. I got three after my
fail last week of having none.
3:03:28
Building, resulting in a lousy
pick.
3:03:30
Yeah. There wasn't a lousy pick.
It was just a pick.
3:03:34
Let's go with past. Past. Okay.
It just kind of passed me by.
3:03:41
Yeah. Yeah, let's go with it's a
religion.
3:03:46
It's a religion. Oh, I like it
with a little fry at the end.
3:03:50
That's nice.
3:03:50
Yeah, it's always good. And
there's one I believe should be
3:03:54
the pick. Good.
3:03:56
That was really good. Ah, I
don't know. I have one left that
3:04:02
I kept in abeyance.
3:04:12
Some guy screaming
3:04:14
Yeah. You didn't like it?
3:04:16
No, I didn't. I thought it's
really good as a good way and to
3:04:19
show it should have some word is
that we can understand I
3:04:22
thought, yeah, okay.
3:04:24
We'll use it. Reluctantly,
3:04:28
when?
3:04:30
That's released reluctantly,
3:04:32
reluctantly, we don't want on
you to win. Hey, before before
3:04:37
we go, I did want to just
mention this one story. You
3:04:39
know, we did have the big UFO
hearings, which was
3:04:45
yes. And I expect you to follow
that and I thought it was going
3:04:47
to be in the show. Well,
3:04:49
I tried to clipping some stuff
but it was boring. It was all
3:04:54
boring. And and really, this is
all just Project Blue Beam. This
3:04:58
is where the Antichrist is going
We're going to come down. And
3:05:02
this is how we shepherd in the
Antichrist, it'll come from
3:05:04
space. It's something like that.
This is there's reasons that
3:05:08
this is happening. But the real
story, the real story is the
3:05:13
astronauts spacesuits who are at
the International Space Station,
3:05:17
they will not be allowed to go
on spacewalks. No, go for
3:05:21
upcoming spacewalks. The reason
why is because this is this is
3:05:27
crazy. This is why the second
half of show the suits helmets
3:05:32
keep filling up with excess
water. Today, wait to the degree
3:05:39
that one of the astronauts
almost drowned in his own
3:05:42
helmet.
3:05:43
This is not new, a new story.
This happened a number of years
3:05:47
ago, because these guys, they
fluid gets sucked out of them.
3:05:52
And they're very hydrated and
they fill up the suits. And if
3:05:56
and the water gets into the
helmet starts filling it up for
3:05:59
you could drown and this
happened again. I thought this
3:06:01
problem was solved but I guess
it wasn't wrong.
3:06:04
That's wrong. The reason this is
happening is because they're not
3:06:08
in space. They're in a giant
pool where they're filming and
3:06:11
the damn things are leaking.
That's what this is known. This
3:06:15
is they're not up in space.
3:06:20
Um, you know, I love your you're
3:06:23
fine. My shoes YaSM your
consistency.
3:06:28
Your DUIs. Yes, it was Anthony
and deuces okay, I can move all
3:06:36
my clips to the next show we
have read it Yeah, no, I think I
3:06:39
think although I do have the
necessary now nothing's
3:06:43
necessary. Really what's
necessary is we need to go it's
3:06:46
time. We want to keep the show
within limits. Coming up next
3:06:52
the no agenda Stream Boost your
butt off for the battle of the
3:06:56
douchebags with Sir seat sitter
Cratchit Dean Reiner and
3:07:00
blueberry. Sometimes known as
boost Berg in the show mixes man
3:07:05
I couldn't I can't even play
them all. There's so many today.
3:07:08
sound guy Steve with the classic
popcorn from the 70s love that
3:07:12
Li o le puke, Tom Starkweather
and a dynamite Ender from DS
3:07:17
laughs and we look forward to
meeting you again. If John makes
3:07:25
it through the pile that just
fell over. We look forward to
3:07:27
meeting you again on Thursday
for another dynamite
3:07:32
deconstruction of your media
coming to you from the heart of
3:07:35
the Texas Hill Country in FEMA
Region number six in the
3:07:37
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry,
3:07:39
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where I remain I'm John C
3:07:43
divorce. We return
3:07:44
on Thursday right here with no
agenda episode 1454 Remember to
3:07:49
support us go to divorce.
act.org/na We'll see you then
3:07:53
y'all. Oh yeah, adios mofos and
such. Tonight, Vladimir Putin.
3:08:11
Vladimir Putin,
3:08:12
Vladimir. Vladimir. Putin,
Russia. Russia, Vladimir Putin.
3:08:18
Vladimir Putin, Ukraine. Putin.
President
3:08:21
Vladimir Putin has led Ukraine,
3:08:23
Ukraine Russia by Putin.
Vladimir Putin.
3:08:26
Vladimir Putin Solinsky the
Ukrainian President Biden
3:08:30
Vladimir
3:08:30
Putin, Russia,
3:08:31
Ukraine. Putin Putin. What was
Ukraine who was Ukraine where it
3:08:34
was Ukraine President Putin
President Solinsky Joe Biden
3:08:38
glug Amir Putin Vladimir Putin.
Vladimir Putin, Russia Vladimir
3:08:42
Putin, Ukraine Vladimir Putin
bombing Ukraine Russian
3:08:45
President Vladimir Putin, Russia
Ukraine, Ukraine when it comes
3:08:49
to Ukraine, invading Ukraine is
a feather democracy in Ukraine
3:08:55
brutal
3:08:55
invasion of Ukraine. Lateran
vote in the Russian offensive
3:08:59
against Ukraine continues Russia
the atrocities President
3:09:02
Zelensky of Ukraine.
3:09:04
I really hope that you are
willing to get together and can
3:09:07
solve your problem. That would
be a tremendous achievement. And
3:09:10
I know you tried to do it you
underestimate Vladimir Putin's
3:09:13
intention
3:09:14
to come up with his brutal
assault on Ukraine and Russia.
3:09:17
Russian missiles continued to
rain down on the port city of
3:09:20
Odessa for scenes
3:09:21
of carnage in Ukraine is a
3:09:23
centrally located strategic
country. In your old
3:09:28
Trump repeatedly asked his
Ukrainian counterpart Solinsky
3:09:32
to investigate the former vice
president, which is
3:09:35
Russia's President Vladimir
Putin. Do we need to be prepared
3:09:39
for the continued destruction
3:09:40
of Ukrainians?
3:09:42
Putin is the great disrupter to
this military is falling apart.
3:09:47
There's a price to pay for peace
and democracy.
3:09:50
Please, again, my request go and
trust.
3:09:57
Alexandria Ocasio Cortez gets
engaged to longtime partner
3:10:00
Riley Roberts
3:10:02
not a joke. No, I'm serious. I
can do this you go home with
3:10:11
them the brung isn't dance
3:10:16
like the good socialist leader
she is pictures from the wedding
3:10:20
should fetch with hundreds and
1000s of dollars. I have student
3:10:23
loans.
3:10:23
What are the odds that AOC got
down her name name of feminism.
3:10:28
You took the initiative to post
yourself as a modern day woman
3:10:34
from
3:10:35
there the economy Megan and
Harry
3:10:38
the wedding BOC which I'm sure
will get featured on The View
3:10:42
will be has been married a few
times. That's not Biden's fault.
3:10:45
She can give some wedding advice
3:10:49
those Republican men what are
they going to do now? We
3:10:53
all criticized her which
obviously might be one of the
3:10:55
deeper although she is a
Democrat so even if she's
3:10:58
married you can steal data they
have very loosely that's just
3:11:11
it's not enough
3:11:13
I caused pain. Let's talk about
misinformation free speech
3:11:20
versus you know conspiracy
theories confusing people. I
3:11:30
caused pain it really isn't.
Well, I don't want us to wait
3:11:35
until we forget about how awful
this has been.
3:11:40
New lead dogs to political Roe v
Wade news culture politics no
3:11:44
agenda saves rushing Dave on
stage was stupid and brave due
3:11:48
to camp he failed filled with so
much rage needs some sage
3:11:51
stomped out to his arms looking
like a chicken wing great job
3:11:54
security. When a senior thing
I'm aground Amina can fly for a
3:11:58
while restricting our movement
these politicians via who you
3:12:01
vote for in the upcoming
election when the pickings are
3:12:04
slim in choices other than
erection the Fed keep printing
3:12:07
money ask yourself wow shipped
off to the Ukraine next day and
3:12:10
dropped into the sky rest of
these scammers Debbie was trying
3:12:13
to help the leafs emphasize
masculinity to save people upset
3:12:17
Canelo waiting to get paid and
this is a no brainer first
3:12:20
ballot Hall of Famer shout out
to the Burning Man we just
3:12:23
congregate like fam come onto
each Thursday drink specials
3:12:26
every Thursday and up on the
spirit meet Little Italy is on
3:12:29
college debt in the middle of
Little Italy I mean the last
3:12:32
girl I did it call me and Uncle
Tom not a joke about unbroken
3:12:36
brain. No AMI lit a roadie the
last girl that day to call me
3:12:39
and Oprah Tom not a joke. You'll
bite in Brooklyn read me later.
3:12:52
boruch.org/and That was really
good.