0:00
She's a rescue. Adam curry
Jhansi Devora Sunday June
0:04
5 2022. This is your award
winning keep our nation media
0:07
assassination episode 1457. This
is no agenda, exposing the
0:14
stupid broadcasting live from
the heart of the Texas hill
0:17
country here in FEMA reached
number six in the morning,
0:19
everybody. I'm Adam curry, and
from Northern Silicon Valley
0:23
where it's raining. I'm Jesse
Devorah.
0:28
Buzzkill.
0:30
Well,
0:31
isn't this interesting? I needed
to bring this up to you at the
0:34
top of the show. But I got a
very angry note from the RSA.
0:41
The RSA the Republic of South
Africa. Really, you don't know
0:45
the art? You don't know what RSA
stands for? Yeah, Republic is
0:49
over go. rainstick authority.
The rainstick authority when we
0:55
do we never hear from these.
Yeah, well, what they heard is
0:58
we were supposed to do one shake
one flip of the rain stick so we
1:01
wouldn't have too much off the
back end of the stick and you
1:03
did like a jiggle at the end.
1:07
Supposed to do a jig? No,
there's no jiggle, it's flipped.
1:10
It's one flipped. There's no
jiggle. There's jiggle you're
1:14
gonna get those little beads at
the top. The RSA disagrees and
1:18
Dallas Dallas got some shit Hey
desert
1:24
oh man golf course. Texans are
used to something so we're not
1:27
complaining too much but how's
so you have rain there so it
1:30
worked once again? Yeah, right.
It started raining last night it
1:34
kept going it was raining this
morning. It's letting beautiful
1:37
beautiful well that's what we
needed. Right so it worked once
1:40
again. Yeah seems to work every
time people don't believe this
1:44
but the rain stick these are
official rains. It's not our
1:46
it's not we didn't make these
things up. No live shoes first
1:50
for millennial millennia.
1:55
By meant by millennials. Oh.
1:58
Sorry. I misunderstood. Yeah.
Dave Sherry Osborne was it.
2:02
Sherry Osborne, I think made
those in Utah. Very, very same
2:06
FBI up sacred stuff. You sacred
stuff up there.
2:11
I saw you hobnobbing this
weekend with the with the
2:14
elites. I went to dinner with
Brunetti and Alex. Yeah. And I
2:21
had to say a couple of things
about this guy. This is this is
2:24
our Uber super executive
producer Dana Brunetti. Go look
2:28
them up on IMDb. Hotshot,
hotshot. So you know, everyone's
2:33
goal with this is Brunetti and
they're all jacked up places.
2:37
Kind of a high end restaurant.
But I know I saw I saw that. He
2:41
has better stories than I can
then I can conjure up, right. He
2:45
has a couple of he has, he has
toppers. And he talked the whole
2:49
night off. It's one I can't tell
you what it is. Because it's too
2:53
good. And you should always ask
him how to do this trip to
2:57
Russia go and then he'll give
you the story.
3:01
That's all I can reveal of this
story. Of course, Alice is
3:05
rolling her eyes.
3:08
He says I've told the story a
couple of times before Yeah, she
3:11
says five times. I've heard it
she is rushed. Isn't she ex
3:14
Russian? No, she's a half
Japanese half Iranian. I think
3:19
in the name like Alex, you just
you just got to be Russian.
3:23
Alexander up. Yeah, exactly. So
Alexandra, and yeah, it was a
3:28
good dinner. Separately, one
when dessert was a
3:31
disappointment. But other than
that, that was hilarious. Dana
3:34
sent me pictures he sent a
really he says I'm gonna send
3:36
these pictures to Adam. He sent
a really it's actually a very
3:39
nice picture. Very typical JCD
pose. You're sitting there
3:44
completely in your own thought
hunched over looking at the wine
3:48
menu. And you know, you can see
this thought bubbles exploding.
3:52
You're reading everything. Wine,
let it happen. White list that
3:58
was honest. On a tablet on like,
yes, yes. Maybe there was a
4:02
little bit of disgust that I saw
there as well. Like, is this
4:05
shit on a tablet? Here's a wine
list. Let me just explain it
4:08
because even the waitress agree
because the two of them. They're
4:11
going why know? The waitress?
Yeah, yeah. And what I said was,
4:16
this is a wine list of something
like 10,000 wines. Wow. And, and
4:22
there's no way of searching it.
It's not indexed. You have to
4:27
scroll literally, through 10,000
whines
4:33
Oh, that's funny. And she's
going Yeah, it's crazy. And
4:36
they're gonna know and I said,
Yeah, and he's like, Yeah, I
4:38
found anything at all because
you got this. You don't believe
4:42
what? It sounds stupid because
it is. You scroll and you're
4:46
scrolling. You're scrolling.
You're like wine up? 100 You've
4:49
been there. 10 minutes. It's
unbelievable. So Dana sends me
4:52
this picture. I send it back so
oh my goodness. That's so
4:55
familiar. This is JC D picking
the wine we will all drink that
4:58
only you will pay for
5:00
For
5:03
over I don't run know you don't
know I know you don't that if
5:07
it's 100 bucks you're like no
that's too much even I've seen
5:09
you go like $65 too much for
that one. I've seen you do that
5:13
no it's all specific to 100
bucks is not too much for
5:16
someone I know but you but
wouldn't when it was on my
5:19
credit card or the company card
me vo company card you you would
5:24
never overdo it. We drank well,
but you never overdid it.
5:29
I guess this time we did.
5:34
Believe me, I will say this if
for some like I wouldn't buy a
5:38
$500 bottle of wine on
somebody's card. But let's say
5:42
it was Mouton. 1945 I would
definitely pay 500 bucks for
5:47
that wine. And if they didn't
want to pick it up I would. All
5:50
right. So everything is all
balanced. You know, it's like,
5:54
what's what's the best for the
price? Best Price. Best Price a
6:00
lot Chinese I don't have any
clips. You might but unlikely,
6:04
but I thought it was just
fantastic to see the queen in
6:08
her golden carriage as a
hologram parading through the
6:12
streets of London.
6:15
Did you know I guess you didn't
see this. I missed this. That
6:19
they have the golden carriage
you know the whole procession.
6:23
And then she can be around
forever. Well, this and what but
6:26
it was the old Queen Elizabeth
when she still had dark hair and
6:29
was hot.
6:32
And it was a hologram and she's
waving inside. Inside this
6:37
golden character is uncanny.
It's really good. It's very well
6:40
done deliver a video of that.
But to me, it's like Okay, now
6:43
let's just all agree. I'm sorry,
the Queen passed away. The
6:46
timing was not right. They
probably use the body double for
6:49
that hobble on to the, onto the
balcony, to just waiting for the
6:53
right moment. And I think that
if we really put our minds to
6:56
it, we can probably deconstruct
when Charles will ascend to the
7:02
throne. Deadpool. Yes, Royal
Deadpool my friend. Not just any
7:09
old Deadpool royal Deadpool.
7:13
I just thought that was super
exciting.
7:15
We got Abba doing their house.
So you know, they're low rent
7:20
Holla Holla holographic
performance. And maybe this was
7:24
the same technology. You know,
just a screen but it made it
7:28
look real with the way it was
lit the way the character was
7:31
positioned here.
7:34
We can live on forever to
there's 1000s of hours 1000s of
7:38
hours of Adam and John. Where's
the eight? Where's the okay?
7:42
Hello AI people.
7:44
Where's the artificial
intelligence with anyone? Any
7:47
ideas? Hello, Hey, Bill, just
while we're alive, we can take a
7:50
royalty
7:52
I'm here by claiming now it
works.
7:55
That's how I idealistically it
works because it wouldn't be
7:58
that way. Are they both dead
yet?
8:02
When he mean that's when you're
dead. That's when they start
8:05
doing this and all of all why we
don't really have anyone to give
8:08
the royalty to Oh, you mean
they're holding back on doing
8:11
this until we're dead? All you
would do when you asked what I
8:13
do is what they do with the to
the Americans tend to do with
8:16
the lights. Why this? I've
mentioned that before in the
8:18
show why this smartcard took
forever to take hold the United
8:21
States they waited for the Pat
to run out. Oh, there's that.
8:25
There's that too?
8:27
Yeah. Well, I'm here to say that
this next coming week is going
8:34
to in the world of media
deconstruction is going to suck
8:38
ass.
8:41
And you're probably wondering
why. I'm wondering why. The
8:46
congressional inquiry into the
January 6 attack on the US
8:51
Capitol, the so called
insurrection.
8:55
We will air in primetime.
primetime. Ladies and gentlemen,
9:01
starting is going to cost the
Democrats vote starting I think
9:04
June 9 at 8pm.
9:08
Additional hearings are set for
June 13.
9:13
How did the network's agreed is
such a stupid thing. Well, now I
9:17
don't I don't know if I have no
confirmation. The network's will
9:21
do this. But you can only
imagine they will end they'll
9:24
have three days to precede that
hearing. With setup with
9:28
innuendo, and stuff like this
tonight a defiance Peter
9:32
Navarro, leaving a federal
courthouse after being indicted
9:35
on two counts of criminal
contempt of Congress. No
9:38
American citizen should have to
go through what I went through
9:42
today. Who is trying to do the
right thing. I'm trying to do my
9:47
duty to this country. I'm in an
untenable position. Trump's
9:52
former trade adviser claiming he
was handcuffed at an airport
9:55
gate on his way to Nashville for
refusing to comply with the
9:58
House committee investigating
the
10:00
January 6, insurrection. Navarro
was part of Trump's inner circle
10:04
that pushed false claims about
the 2020 election. Even writing
10:07
a book detailing his plan to
overturn an election Trump lost,
10:12
lawmakers wanted him to turn
over documents and testify. He
10:15
refused, claiming his hands were
tied, citing executive
10:18
privilege. Overnight, the 72
year old is telling MSNBC he was
10:23
worried about prison. The
average lifespan in America for
10:27
an American male is 76 years
old. If I were to go to prison
10:31
for a year, which is what the
contempt of charge could do, to
10:35
me, that would be about a fourth
of my remaining life.
10:39
Well, I don't know about that.
But arresting the guy at the
10:43
airport is that is that because
a
10:46
they have some kind of no fly
notice or security, although it
10:50
was at the gate, which is kind
of odd. So that means probably
10:53
be to impose maximum
embarrassment. You handcuffed
10:57
the guide? Luckily, there's a
slight day left a little piece
11:00
of this out because it might
have been too outrageous. They
11:04
cuffed him and put him in leg
irons. No. Yes.
11:10
Wow, that's some brown shirt
crap right there public in
11:15
public. They found the guy what
y'all have to do is say, Hey,
11:18
you want to cut? You can come
with us? Yeah, I mean, that's
11:21
not even that it's about showing
getting documents. Yeah, that he
11:26
claims executive privilege, but
they're gonna put him in leg
11:28
irons. Yeah, why don't you just
put a big like an iron ball,
11:32
like a drag alive. You know, one
of those missing? I agree 100%.
11:36
That would be good iron ball.
Ideally, he has to carry the
11:40
ball. Ah,
11:45
that would be perfect. You're
right, an iron ball will carry
11:48
the ball. I can see the artists
mind spinning already.
11:53
I won't use it. But it's funny.
11:56
So I know this is this was too
much. And that's why they left
11:59
it out of that report.
12:01
So this trouble these guys, if
they're going to try to put this
12:04
the primetime primetime. This is
ridiculous. And it's going to be
12:11
and there's not one Republican
representative on there. That's
12:14
not a Republican change. Yours
Kinzinger. jerk off. Both of
12:19
them are really Democrats. And
Kinzinger won't even run for
12:23
office again, because he doesn't
want to get tarred and
12:25
feathered. And Cheney's have
been nothing but trouble. So
12:29
there's so it's always the
Democrat kangaroo court. And
12:34
this is is not going to I don't
think this is going to look
12:36
good.
12:38
You know, it all depends on
their media partners. The M five
12:43
M I think that that's very
possible. They can dress it up
12:45
again, they have this is
perfectly timed. And I think the
12:48
ninth will be a C
12:51
seven a nicer Thursday. Yeah, I
think this is where the
12:55
primaries are underway in many
states. So this will be the big
13:00
distraction for this entire
week, they have to set up more
13:02
than they were going to talk
more, you will be talking all
13:05
week about who's going to be in
this trial of we need a name
13:09
like trial of the century
13:12
one six trial of the century
something we're going to have to
13:15
have some kind of slogan because
they don't really have that
13:18
they're gonna be able to pull a
slogan thing off in one of the
13:21
net if one if the network was
supposed to do anything with
13:24
this, which I doubt because no
network executive in his right
13:27
mind is going to want to run but
it'll be CNN Fox, MSNBC, it'll
13:31
be fine but nobody watches those
70 If the fox Fox shouldn't run
13:36
it.
13:37
If they're true to their suppose
it cause as CNN a runner who
13:41
nobody watches CNN, nobody
watches MSNBC, PBS have probably
13:46
run a lot of people watch that,
but they're not going to watch
13:48
during primetime. It's the
networks that run it. One
13:53
network goes rogue, and they
take all the ratings and they
13:56
can't have that so this is going
to be hard to do.
14:01
But I'm I'm game up, see what
happens. And it's gonna be it's
14:05
just I just it's not a good
look.
14:08
Now it's not a good look, I'm
but um, I think that a lot of
14:11
people this is because, you
know, I watch MSNBC and I know
14:16
I'm one of only you know,
900,000 but I watched a CNN for
14:21
the same reason. I watched as
much as I can. And I think that
14:24
that is it's just going to be
blanketing the media that is
14:28
definitely going to happen
14:31
they will see I'd like to see
how it rolls out. And maybe why
14:34
else Why else do it at 8pm I
mean 8pm Is that because they're
14:39
idiots really think that they
know what they're doing and they
14:42
said well I know what we need to
do we need to do this I have a
14:46
bunch of clips are these
progressives let's do it into
14:48
each let's do it. Let's do it.
So these this is these are not
14:51
new clips but they're
progressives are freaked out
14:54
because they're gonna lose to
have their asses handed to them.
14:56
So they're all kind of
14:58
is destroyed.
15:00
This I got three clips. This is
what I start with this one is
15:03
from NPR. This is progresses the
Democrats. This is featuring
15:07
Jamie Raskin, that horse. You
know the guy who's one of the
15:11
worst of the worse one of the
guys pushing for this. He's the
15:14
one who probably came up with
the idea of doing this TV thing
15:17
with Republicans. Sorry. I
thought I'm sorry I was a queue
15:20
you can go on. I screwed up with
Republicans threatening to take
15:24
over control of the US House to
have its progressive Democrats
15:27
are teaming up to develop new
strategies to expand the
15:29
progressive wing of their party.
Sam piers cloudier Salas
15:32
reports. They say that work
includes new efforts at
15:35
coalition building. House
Democratic progressives, Ro
15:39
Khanna and Jamie Raskin tell NPR
they're tired of the ideological
15:44
purity politics that have
overtaken the party's message.
15:48
The two began meeting late last
year and say progressive
15:50
Democrats need to reclaim issues
of patriotism, reject socialist
15:55
labels, and stay out of the
political correctness business.
15:59
And so we have a skepticism out
there for a large part of the
16:04
country that has fallen behind
that has lost jobs. All of the
16:08
political dogmas of the past are
not serving particularly well.
16:14
Kana and Raskin say Democrats
should stop preaching and
16:18
instead spend more time
listening to voters. And with
16:23
this, I think you're right, that
the backfire if there's a
16:26
backfire if there's a backlash,
which of course that won't be
16:29
televised, will be because
people are concerned about other
16:32
things. Like we don't really
don't care about this anymore.
16:35
You know, that was January.
16:37
Yeah. Over a year ago, over a
year ago, we don't either and a
16:41
half ago, we don't we don't have
memory, our collective memory is
16:44
fuzzy. We're worried about the
gas price. People thinking that
16:48
this is a good wedge issue
didn't get people to vote about
16:51
it's not happening. Nobody cares
about some of this stuff.
16:56
Gasoline if you fill up your
tank, yes. Yeah. 80 bucks. Here
17:02
in Texas. 200. Here, yeah. Well,
I know. That's your punishment
17:06
for living in a devil's country.
It's true. But you get to get to
17:12
be in the devil's country. Well,
there's that. So let's go to
17:15
hear some more stuff. Just a
different report and similar
17:18
stuff, progressives during
election open. Do you feel that
17:22
lower level of enthusiasm in
this election climate? Yeah, so
17:26
in my conversations recently,
with a lot of progressive
17:29
strategists, one thing that has
certainly been true, is the fact
17:32
that they feel like the party in
Washington has not delivered the
17:36
type of bold change that they
had hoped for, that they had
17:40
been counting on and that they
feel like Biden ran on as a
17:43
candidate. And I talked to a
couple strategists recently who
17:45
told me, they believe that may
be one thing that is a huge
17:48
warning sign when we look at
turnout in these midterm
17:51
elections. If people don't feel
like their lives have been
17:53
meaningfully changed in these
big bold ways. They cite things
17:56
like meaningful action on
climate change, for example, any
17:59
kind of debt relief, those
things.
18:04
People may not be as excited to
turn out as Democrats would hope
18:07
which, when you're thinking
about control of Congress, that
18:09
could be they could be in big
trouble. Okay, so thinking like
18:12
a stupid strategist, the idea
is, okay, well, climate change,
18:17
obviously, we're always
messaging about that. But let's
18:20
give 5 billion to people who got
a bad loan from that, from that
18:24
university, the Vice President
pursued, so they're trying to
18:28
throw throw him a bone to $5
billion bone, which is That's
18:31
pathetic if they think that's
going to make the progressive
18:34
wing of the Democrat Party feel
any better. Well, the other
18:37
thing is that keeps cropping up.
I don't have any real good clips
18:41
of this, but I keep hearing it,
which is they think that the
18:45
reason that they're not doing
well, and they're not going to
18:47
get the votes in the primaries,
or in the midterms is that
18:52
they're not progressive enough.
To the prom Damini. Progressives
18:57
aren't progressive enough.
That's what they're saying. For
19:00
example, Biden promised Biden
ran on a progressive platform
19:03
promising free college. Yes, it
deliver. No, he promised that
19:08
the student loan debt relief has
been delivered. Nope. He
19:11
promised this he promised that
at the end of end Bernie Sanders
19:15
type people they go well, you
know, if you we get the votes
19:19
out if we ramp people that were
really super progressive and and
19:23
follow it up with their
promises, another was bankrupt
19:26
the country but that's beside
19:29
those details. So they do so
they have these issues. As a
19:32
second part of this. Democrats
face an uphill battle to hang on
19:36
to power in Congress. So one of
the big things that I've been
19:39
watching is number of races in
which progressive candidates who
19:42
have been making big gains over
the last few years may have an
19:45
opportunity to increase their
power even as Democrats may be
19:49
in for a rough time of it.
19:52
And that's an example where you
know, the progressives that are
19:55
in office and in these locked
down areas, I would say we have
19:59
one here and
20:00
The Bay Area the Barbara Lee
speaks for me woman
20:05
she's very progressive and she's
never you can't vote her out if
20:08
you wanted to to everyone yeah
yeah, so we should do we need
20:12
more socialism. So they're you
know they're falling into the
20:15
trap of their own making and so
what happens and I think this
20:19
this these hearings will be part
of the same thing there's going
20:22
to be people are going to
20:25
I don't care how many times the
you the media can cover for you
20:30
they can't they can't
20:33
cover for stupidity
20:36
when they can't do it. I'm glad
I'm glad you use that word
20:38
because I was looking for a
place to play this. There's a I
20:44
guess it's well known wasn't
that well known to me though
20:46
kind of rang, rang a bell
faintly the Bonhoeffer letters
20:50
from prison does this mean
anything to you?
20:54
It rings the bell but that's all
it does. So Bonhoeffer was a
20:56
priest in pre Nazi Germany, and
or a pastor I should say. And
21:02
when people started throwing,
like the crystal knife started
21:05
breaking windows, a Jewish shop
owners, he was preaching to his
21:10
to his flock like hey, you know,
this is stupid, don't do this.
21:14
Then, of course, he eventually
got arrested by the Nazis and he
21:18
did wind up dying in a
concentration camp. But while he
21:22
was in prison, initially, he
wrote these letters and and it
21:27
and in it, he explains that the
problem is these are not dumb
21:32
people. You know, the Democrats
are not they're not dumb people.
21:36
They had they have intellect
clearly, but they're stupid. And
21:41
so he wrote these letters about
stupidity over malice, and
21:44
someone sent me this video so
it's, it's narrated, but it you
21:49
know, I could read them to you
or we could do this from the
21:51
video, I thought it was
interesting. In his famous
21:53
letters from prison, Bonhoeffer
argued that stupidity is a more
21:57
dangerous enemy, sorry for the
guitar of the good than malice
22:01
because while one may protest
against evil, it can be exposed
22:06
and prevented by the use of
force against stupidity, we are
22:10
defenseless. Neither protests
nor the use of force accomplish
22:14
anything here. Reasons fall on
deaf ears.
22:20
facts that contradict a stupid
person's pre judgment simply
22:24
need not be believed. And when
they are irrefutable, they are
22:27
just pushed aside as
inconsequential, as incidental.
22:33
In all this, the stupid person
is self satisfied. And being
22:38
easily irritated becomes
dangerous by going on the
22:42
attack.
22:44
For that reason, greater caution
is called for when dealing with
22:48
a stupid person than with a
malicious one. Okay.
22:53
So I will keep I don't care
about your guitar. This is good
22:56
stuff. Yeah. So here's, here's
the second part. It's really
22:59
only the last one is just a
short Ender.
23:03
And here he explains that this
is not.
23:06
Not because these people aren't
intellect is not an intellectual
23:09
problem. But it's a moral
problem. Stupidity is in
23:13
essence, not an intellectual
defect, but a moral one. There
23:17
are human beings who are
remarkably agile,
23:20
intellectually, yet stupid, as
others who are intellectually
23:24
dull, yet anything but stupid.
23:28
The impression one gains is not
so much that stupidity is a
23:32
congenital defect, but that
under certain circumstances,
23:36
people are made stupid or
rather, they allow this to
23:39
happen to them.
23:42
People who live in solitude
manifests this defect less
23:45
frequently than individuals in
groups. And so it would seem
23:49
that stupidity is perhaps less a
psychological than a
23:53
sociological problem.
23:56
It becomes apparent that every
strong upsurge of power, be it
24:00
of a political or religious
nature, in fact, a large part of
24:04
humankind with stupidity, almost
as if this is a sociological
24:09
psychological law, where the
power of the one needs the
24:12
stupidity the other.
24:16
The process at work here is not
that particular human capacities
24:20
such as intellect suddenly fail.
Instead, it seems that under the
24:24
overwhelming impact of rising
power, humans are deprived of
24:29
their inner independence, and
more or less consciously give up
24:33
an autonomous position.
24:37
The fact that the stupid person
is often stubborn, must not
24:40
blind us from the fact that he
is not independent. In
24:44
conversation with him, one
virtually feels that one is
24:47
dealing not at all with him as a
person, but with slogans, catch
24:51
words and the like that have
taken possession of him.
24:56
He is under a spell blinded
misuse
25:00
And he's abused in his very
being. Having thus become a
25:04
mindless tool, the stupid person
will also be capable of any
25:08
evil, incapable of seeing that
it is evil.
25:14
Just hearing this from the guy
who observed it firsthand, hits
25:18
home for me.
25:21
It's great. There is I was I was
one of these stupid people when
25:25
I was in college at the
University of California
25:28
Berkeley.
25:30
Oh, gee, I wonder what if there
was any influence there? Were
25:32
you part of a group of stupid
25:36
looking back on it.
25:39
So well, what is the third
kicker? Yes, 2023 minutes. Well,
25:43
of course, you want to know what
can you do? I mean, clearly
25:46
arguing against this. And by the
way, looking at the group
25:49
context, you an argument can be
made to say Maga is also stupid.
25:54
Could be I think you'd like
yeah, we have to observe that
25:58
that it is mostly ultra mega,
26:03
ultra mag or nothing, baby. So
what can you do? How do you how
26:07
do you unshackle the stupid only
an active liberation not
26:12
instruction can overcome
stupidity. Here, we must come to
26:16
terms with the fact that in most
cases, a genuine internal
26:20
liberation becomes possible only
when external liberation has
26:24
preceded it.
26:27
Until then, we must abandon all
attempts to convince the stupid
26:32
person.
26:34
So when I hear this, I'm
thinking okay, so what does this
26:38
mean for the physical
liberation? Euless?
26:41
Go on with that analysis? The
last little thing he said, which
26:45
was we should just give up? No,
no, no, no.
26:51
Until then, we must abandon
until then Hona becomes possible
26:55
only when external liberation
has preceded it. So it has to be
27:00
external liberation first,
before you can liberate
27:05
us before he said, We must
abandon listen to this. He says,
27:09
Don't even try. No. He says, No,
that's not true. John, listen, I
27:13
listen to the whole thing again,
listen, only an act of
27:15
liberation, not instruction can
overcome stupidity. So an act of
27:20
liberation. If you let the whole
thing play like he's just
27:24
coming, he's coming here, we
must come to terms with the fact
27:28
that in most cases, a genuine
internal liberation becomes
27:32
possible only when external
liberation has preceded it.
27:38
Until then, we must abandon all
attempts to convince the stupid
27:42
person, okay, the way I hear
that is, these people cannot be
27:47
freed internally until they've
been freed externally. preceding
27:52
that, he says until then,
everything but my point was that
27:56
I was emphasizing this fact that
it's hopeless for anyone to try
28:01
to push them in one direction or
another because they're so
28:03
stupid. But wait, you can't do
anything. Oh, he says, If you
28:07
must abandon No, he says if you
can free them externally, and I
28:11
have you if you can free them,
they have to be the external
28:16
freedom is not Agreed. Agreed.
Agreed. But I think there is
28:21
something very obvious that is
the external freedom that is
28:24
still with the stupid and we
even recognize them as stupid
28:31
masks.
28:34
That is that is that is the
external shackle of the stupid
28:40
and the it's not like it's a lot
still, but it's quite a bit.
28:44
And it's enough for the stupid
to make a lot of noise.
28:50
And, and I think I have proof.
But before you go on, I have to
28:54
mention something a local
phenomenon.
28:57
And Jesse and JC pointed this
out to dinner. And it was that
29:04
San Francisco says they released
their mass mandates. They're so
29:08
stupid that you can go to San
Francisco and nobody's wearing
29:11
masks. They all took them off at
once
29:14
lockstep
29:16
really in the ease. Yes, they're
doing goes every nobody's
29:19
wearing a mask. And so
29:22
there's hope.
29:24
No, no, no, there's no hope.
Because the thing is, it's a
29:28
lockstep take your mask off.
Yes. Put your mask on. Yes.
29:32
Okay. All right. Okay, that's
it. That's even better. I was
29:37
worse. Not better, but worse,
better. It's better for the
29:39
show. It's worse for humanity.
Because that that exact thing,
29:44
Simon Says, put your mask on
Simon says take your mask off.
29:47
That is going to be codified.
And that's why hair. Fauci made
29:51
a rare appearance on Fox News,
Fauci on Fox News, everybody.
29:56
Let's look at that clip. Because
Fauci says something here that
29:59
just is
30:00
The app we saw right through it
immediately, but it is about the
30:03
power to be Simon Says. So
doctor at the same time the
30:08
Justice Department is pushing an
appeals court to intervene on
30:12
this ruling that lifts Nast
mandates on public
30:15
transportation, mass transit,
that sort of thing.
30:19
What do you think of that?
30:21
What are you asking me what I
think about the Justice
30:23
Department appealing? This court
decision about pulling back?
30:28
Exactly. You know, one of the
one of the issues, Neil, that I
30:32
have I have articulated in the
past and I will in the future,
30:36
it's less about mandates on the
plane than it is about who has
30:41
the right and the authority and
the capability of making public
30:44
health decisions. And I believe
that the Department of Justice
30:48
is operating on the principle,
that decisions that are public
30:52
health decisions belong with the
Public Health Agency, in this
30:56
case, the CDC. So it's more of a
matter of principle of where the
31:01
authority lies than it is about
whether or not there's going to
31:04
be a mandate on the plane or
not. It's about the power, the
31:08
power of who gets to tell you
what to do and he wants that to
31:11
be with the CDC for for a moment
there. The CDC was the
31:15
laughingstock it only lasted a
week. Remember CDC says you
31:20
know, don't eat the brown acid
because CDC flip flop back and
31:24
forth so many times on this very
issue.
31:29
So they want that power
codified. Yeah. Well, this has
31:33
been going on with a bunch of
the proposed laws for this and
31:37
that and that was has something
to do with these health
31:38
department weenies rat poop
inspectors. Inspectors. So let's
31:44
see what this rat poop inspector
actually what his personal
31:47
preference is, what do you
personally dog I mean, when you
31:50
travel and when you go round? Do
you prefer wearing a mask
31:53
yourself? I know you've avoided
public venues of large
31:56
gatherings. I think the White
House Correspondents Dinner
31:59
comes to mind. Do you still have
those reservations even now? You
32:04
know, I do. I mean, the CDC
continues to recommend that when
32:08
people fly, that they wear
masks. Now the mandate has been
32:12
pulled back on the decision of
the court. But that does not
32:16
change the recommendation. Nilo
my own personal preference, when
32:21
I travel on the plane, given my
evaluation of my personal risk
32:26
as a person of my age, with or
without underlying conditions,
32:30
that I feel that I would be much
more comfortable for my safety
32:35
and even for the safety of
others to wear a mask but that's
32:38
a recommendation. That's not a
mandate. Alright, so it wasn't
32:41
your way of saying you didn't
want to be hounded by people who
32:44
know you right? I mean, you just
wanted to keep that on for your
32:47
safety.
32:53
Idiots.
32:57
Well, in Canada, they know fully
well who has the power to tell
33:00
you what to do vaccinated may
not travel unvaccinated to this
33:04
day, we still may not travel on
any public transport airlines
33:07
trains coaches, which is fancy
for bus. And just in case, just
33:14
in case the authorities are
preparing for vaccine deniers
33:19
and anti COVID people protesting
at airports,
33:24
a scene unfolded at Pearson
Airport today that could have
33:27
fooled onlookers.
33:33
Today, we're having in a mock
emergency exercise happening. So
33:37
we're testing our response to an
emergency or security situation.
33:40
So we've got protesters in the
back who have been very
33:44
enthusiastic about playing their
roles, and we've been testing
33:48
our response to it. Yes, as you
can see, people both volunteers
33:53
and airport employees getting
into character for the fake
33:55
protest. The exercise is
actually a requirement by
33:58
Transport Canada. The GTA says
it's an important way to test
34:03
the airport's emergency
response.
34:06
Canada has already been
assimilated.
34:11
I mean, this is a problem up
there. This is fantastic. So the
34:15
I mean, these are people and the
literally hear them yelling,
34:19
freedom, freedom. These are the
crazy fucks they're just acting.
34:22
But you know, people might show
up shouting freedom. So we got
34:26
to be prepared for that.
34:28
Of course, they can hire these
very same people make it look
34:30
like a real protest. As she
said, Oh, this could have fooled
34:33
anybody. But just use it as B
roll in the future. It's so
34:38
dystopian.
34:43
Yeah, it's unbelievable. Yeah.
34:46
Well, I haven't got any COVID
stuff, unfortunately. I'm glad.
34:49
Oh, well, I do actually have two
things. Two things. There's some
34:54
strong suspicion as I think when
when this monkey pox bullcrap
34:59
for
35:00
first came out, it was
immediately mentioned. Yeah. And
35:04
I think there's some validity to
the idea that this is now being
35:09
touted as Oh, something you can
get by the way, it's only gay
35:12
and bisexual men who and the
bisexual men who get it, they
35:16
never have sex with women, so
nothing to worry about. Because
35:19
that you're bisexual. They only
have sex with men.
35:23
That it's really intended to
cover up possible vaccine
35:29
adverse events or shingles
because the monkey pox in the
35:33
shingles is fairly
indistinguishable. Thank You
35:37
even brought that up. Yes.
Because all these pictures that
35:40
we're posting including one I
ran in the newsletter was
35:42
disgusted a bunch of people I
refused to do today again in the
35:45
future was actually shingles.
35:48
And what's happening with
Quebec? I mean, did they have
35:52
another gay party up there? The
number of monkey pox cases in
35:55
Quebec has more than doubled
from a week ago. provincial
35:58
health officials say 52
infections have been confirmed
36:01
so far from 25 cases reported
last week, Quebec started
36:05
administering doses of the
smallpox vaccine in a bid to
36:08
contain the outbreak. The shots
are reserved for close contacts
36:12
of high risk people, people who
are at high risk rather of
36:16
developing the disease. Experts
say most monkey pox cases are
36:20
mild and patients usually do
recover.
36:25
Must be super gay up there.
36:28
I don't know how else they can
get it.
36:32
Israeli study.
36:35
This links COVID vaccines to 25%
increase in cardiac arrests for
36:40
both males and females.
36:44
Pfizer on the warpath, the Nova
Vax vaccine, I guess, no of X
36:50
stock bombed on Friday because
the data from the passive
36:55
surveillance during post
authorization use in other
36:57
countries indicate a higher than
expected rate of myocarditis and
37:00
pericarditis associated with the
vaccine, the FDA said, however,
37:05
interpretation of these passive
surveillance data is not
37:07
straightforward. further
evaluation is need needed to
37:09
inform the risk associated with
the vaccine and their outcomes.
37:13
So everyone believes it will get
approved eventually, what is the
37:18
Nova Vax? It's a non mRNA which
is why it cannot get onto the
37:22
market. Of course,
37:24
I do not know exactly what the
Novavax the no no events from my
37:29
day trading days. That was like
that was a dream stock is like
37:34
that. How was it oh, here's a
trial failed you know, shorted
37:36
Boom
37:39
50% off buy and then sell just
yet to guess the top because
37:44
once they announced that Sox
collapse
37:49
is a great stock to short. You
could long it to sometimes
37:55
the CDC is now sending monkey
pox vaccine to people at high
37:59
risk because you kind of just
heard in that clip. So, you
38:02
know, there's there's some
thought that this is
38:05
Mike, I actually put that in the
newsletter with a link to the
38:08
story. Yeah, what's up with
that? It's like, what
38:14
I mean, just get high risk A's.
So all the gays are gonna get
38:18
this stupid shot. Now give me a
bro. You can't on one hand, say
38:22
gay, gay and bisexual men are
getting it and spreading it and
38:27
then sent and then not send them
the vaccine if you're honest.
38:31
Yeah, but then again, if I was
gay and or bio, whatever, that
38:37
was gay.
38:39
You don't have to say that just
for the purposes of argument.
38:44
And they sent me this vaccine
saying hey, you know, you might
38:47
get monkey, I wouldn't take it
in a million years. This is some
38:50
sort of scheme to get rid of all
the gays. You'd be a great sugar
38:54
daddy, that's for sure.
38:58
What
39:00
would you like my gone?
39:07
Well, I just like to remind
everybody, when HIV when the HIV
39:12
crisis struck,
39:15
the gays got AIDS, AIDS. So
there's a claimed relationship
39:21
between the virus the HIV and
the the syndrome, HIV AIDS.
39:27
Right and the mass and the
thinking is that because the
39:30
gays had live promiscuous
lifestyles in certainly in the
39:35
80s a lot of drugs poppers
bathhouses everywhere that their
39:40
immune systems were already kind
of on the ropes and then along
39:43
comes HIV so also poppers whose
poppers hurting their immune
39:48
systems. So
39:51
if they know how to create a
crisis with the gays, because I
39:56
believe that that was at least
partially manufactured the way
39:59
they present
40:00
did it because there was a lot
of immune system issues in
40:03
general.
40:05
But that's just me. Joining me
though is my girlfriend Naomi
40:09
Wolf.
40:12
I cannot I'd say before you do,
I cannot get enough of what
40:15
she's doing. So she she's like a
cornerstone guest now on on the
40:21
war room with Steve Bannon,
which is just the idea and the I
40:25
just I want everyone to
understand so Lauren dog that
40:28
guy just thinks she's pretty but
but from a spectrum perspective,
40:34
Steve Bannon, ultra Maga Nomi.
Wolf, ultra tarde. I mean, it's
40:40
mega tard. It's this
40:45
title that's, you know, that is
that's a superhero.
40:49
Maga tard.
40:56
Exactly, magnetar. So here is
41:02
Naomi Wolf. Now she's on with
Dell big tree, who was the
41:06
television producer who produced
the doctors and many of these
41:09
medical medical shows he's quite
well respected. And here she is
41:15
continuing her claims of
genocide. Initially before it's
41:18
called advisor documents. I
thought comparing this to Dr.
41:21
Mengele. And I should probably
reiterate that she and her team
41:25
at her company have been combing
through the 50,000 Pfizer
41:29
documents that Pfizer wanted
hidden by the judge for 75 years
41:34
and you know this these
documents are available. The M
41:37
five M is not doing any work on
it. Dr. No, why would day and
41:42
Dr. Niomi volt is initially
before I saw that Pfizer
41:45
documents I thought comparing
this to Dr. Mengele is
41:48
rhetorical. It's excessive.
There's no cause for now I've
41:51
seen these documents. Dr.
Mengele Yes, she did.
41:57
You want to play it again.
Initially, before I saw the
41:59
Pfizer documents I thought
comparing this to Dr. Mengele is
42:02
rhetorical. It's excessive.
There's no cause for now I've
42:05
seen these documents. These
people knew for 14 months to
42:09
this day, right? They know that
these injections kill babies
42:15
that these injections cause
neurological harms cause strokes
42:18
cause clotting. They know. You
know, people I know are
42:22
collapsing. And there's like a
meme on social media of athletes
42:25
collapsing. Doctors are
mystified the I looked at the
42:28
SEC filings with bio and tech,
one of the things by intent
42:32
discloses to the SEC, but no one
disclose to you and me is that
42:36
fainting so hard you could hurt
yourself is a an identified side
42:41
effect of injections. Right? So
you call that I mean, they knew
42:45
that babies were dying, and they
kept going. They knew that
42:50
people were having strokes and
heart attacks, that there was
42:52
cardiac damage to kids. And they
kept going. Right. And they kept
42:56
saying, Yes, we're authorizing
this for teenagers. Yes, you're
42:59
all through. We're authorizing
this for you know, young
43:02
children. Now we want authorized
it for babies to five year olds.
43:06
We have never seen that before
in history. But genocide is
43:10
narrowly defined legally as
targeting a population that's
43:14
ethnic or racial. That's just a
legal definition in
43:16
international law. But genocide
in terms of the its root
43:20
structure means the killing of a
people. Well, the the
43:23
intentional killing,
intentional, it's intentional if
43:25
you don't stop it, right. If you
know when you don't stop. And if
43:29
you say and even legally, right,
a lot of the lawyers are looking
43:32
at conspiracy, you know, Rico
type things racketeering, if you
43:36
know, they're dangerous harms,
and you expose children to them,
43:41
that's a criminal offense, if
you know that someone can get
43:45
die, and you you know, do it
anyway, that's at least medical
43:49
malpractice, if not
manslaughter. I mean, these are
43:52
categories of harms we haven't
seen before, but the effect is
43:56
to target the human race. You
know, they're vaccinating
43:59
everyone. And they literally did
not know what would happen
44:02
except that they were seeing,
you know, the tallies come in,
44:05
of people being injured, broken,
miscarriages, abortions, you
44:09
know, spontaneous abortions and
dead babies. So yeah, I call it
44:13
what I call it as it turns out,
there can be a happenstance
44:16
genocide.
44:18
Right? No, me.
44:21
She's one of the few
44:25
Yeah, yeah. Well, she snapped
out of it to a stupid once. Yes,
44:30
yes. We have to figure out what
physical unshackling took place.
44:35
I think it was. So I think a lot
of it happens from self
44:38
realization.
44:40
You know, actualization, or self
actualization. She was on her
44:46
merry way is a stupid person and
then she something she read or
44:50
did or found out about and is
Wait a minute. Wait a minute,
44:54
someone has been lying to me.
And let me look into this. Holy
44:58
mackerel.
45:00
I have been scammed. Yes. Yeah.
And then you get you go nuts.
45:06
And then the next thing you know
you're just on the other side of
45:08
the fence before you know you're
mega tarred, you're magnetized.
45:13
I looked someone already
registered.
45:18
Maga tard. Doc com has already
taken unfortunately.
45:22
Unfortunately. If you think
about it, I can see that because
45:26
mag mag, you know, pushed hard
on the end. Yeah, that's true,
45:29
but ultra mega tardive, which is
not taken. Oh, well, you know,
45:33
you saying it on the stream
probably diminishes my chances.
45:37
But let's try you got about five
seconds is about a five seconds
45:40
really? Maga? tar.com? Okay.
We're going
45:49
what?
45:52
Okay,
45:53
so be exciting to see if I can
do it. Yes. Yes, baby. Yes,
45:59
boom, register ultra
magnetar.com. Super. I haven't
46:04
Hey, another 14 bucks a year
Adams down, down, down the
46:09
tubes. I've now I've taken to
whenever I get a this domain
46:15
will Oh, I got confetti.
Congratulations successfully
46:18
registered. Whenever I get one.
Whenever I get one of those
46:22
reminders. I sit I take a moment
and think will we really need
46:27
block the vote.com
46:31
There's a lot of stuff that we
come up with during the show
46:33
that is never used ever, ever,
but we may get tired as a loser.
46:38
There's no way to be used for
anything.
46:42
You proved you could do it. i
Okay. Oh, there you go. That
46:45
that's the good part. Yeah,
yeah. Stupid. I like this. This
46:51
definition. These people are
just stupid. doesn't mean
46:54
they're dumb. They're not.
They're stupid. It's different.
46:59
And it used to be when I was in
college, and I think when I
47:04
stopped seeing I had the girl a
girlfriend there. Whose dad was
47:09
head of the Asia Foundation. Oh,
okay. That's a spook outfit. CIA
47:14
front. Yeah, definitely. Oh.
47:19
But, but to be honest about it
looking back on it. Oh, yeah.
47:23
Yeah, not knowing what I know
now knowing he's still you know,
47:27
okay. Yeah, yeah, definitely.
But that's one distribution more
47:30
Republicans than they are
Democrats. They are. Oh, yeah.
47:32
That's uncle dogs. Turf. Right
there. Asian society the North
47:37
Korea does Korea he was this the
chairman of the Korea Society,
47:41
not only not a spook, so here's
the so here's he constantly do
47:46
this when I was over there at a
fancy kind of a penthouse
47:50
apartment. And it was
47:54
just off campus, and I go over
there. And and if I was ever
47:59
talking about anything that's
being at Cal Berkeley during,
48:02
you know, the period where any
time in the history let's face
48:05
it, and so he crossed his legs,
and he had his one leg crossed,
48:10
and then I'd be talking about
something and then he take his
48:12
hand like a karate chop. And and
and casually hit his knee and
48:17
have his Meek kick up his leg
kick up doing a reflex hit.
48:21
He's, he's doing is he's telling
me I knew what he was doing.
48:26
He's doing every say something
bang their head go. I'd say
48:30
something. Bang There you go. It
was it was the code for knee
48:33
jerk. Oh, because I was just
spewing like the stupid people
48:38
do bromides Oh yeah, we got to
do this we got to do that black
48:43
lives matter man. And every
every time I said anything he
48:47
just be slapping his his little
knee there and making his knee
48:50
jerk around him with a smile on
his face. And that's interesting
48:54
that constantly doing this while
I'm there is very like
48:58
borderline humiliating but I I
thought it was eyes if fuckin
49:01
old guy What does he know? That
sounds to me like a spook
49:04
tactic. How do you break a
stupid person you need to
49:08
control
49:10
first and that's it didn't work
49:13
well it didn't work it did it he
was fundamental in your
49:17
understanding of the world.
49:19
He definitely had that didn't
hurt gag the like to pull didn't
49:23
hurt you know speaking of of
Maga tarde the three best words
49:28
in the tar dictionary. Ever.
49:32
She's a rescue.
49:35
What? She's a rescue. i She's a
rescue. Yes, I had to my my
49:42
front right tire I've run flats
but you know that nail in it and
49:47
I don't think they can repair
those. You have to get a new one
49:49
and it really sucks. And I have
and I have to drive to Austin. I
49:54
got a lot going on this week. So
I really the only time I really
49:57
could do this was yesterday
which screwed up my taping with
49:59
Mo
50:00
whole bunch of stuff. So I've
been socializing Phoebe the dog
50:04
and I so I Okay, this will be
big trips 45 minutes to the
50:07
dealership we drive there. And
you know she's still kind of in
50:11
training and you know, hopefully
she's gonna be civil about it.
50:15
And this is how I get out of
this car with this 100 pound
50:18
dog. Man every single part first
year she's beautiful look at
50:22
people say, Oh, it's great. What
kind is it? She's a rescue. You
50:26
say that. You know people will
will sit down with you will talk
50:30
with you. Oh my god. It's so
fantastic. So great. You rescued
50:34
her. And they'll tell you the
whole dog story. I was not bored
50:38
for the whole two hours. I was
there. It's a beautiful sequence
50:41
of words. She's a rescue. Okay,
now I know what you're talking
50:45
about. Yeah. Wow. Yeah. I mean,
I'm impressed. Women, dudes. You
50:51
know the Mexicans. The Mexicans
are the best. They are like,
50:53
hello, Mama's Hello, mamas.
That's what they call the dog.
50:56
And they all do it. Hello,
mamas. I'm not sure what that
50:59
means. She's a mama's
51:03
there's a million ways I could
go with Yeah, all you have to
51:06
say she's a rescue. You can.
Okay. Okay. All right. The
51:11
trolls are like, Oh, that's a
riveting tale. No, this is
51:14
important stuff. Just roll.
51:17
bounce and bounce and bounce.
Who was Britt and such? Okay.
51:22
Was this a pretty good sarcastic
Omar? All right. I did it. I
51:26
kicked him out.
51:30
Yes, well, sarcasm is the key to
the understanding of the troll
51:33
room.
51:37
And
51:39
good news, we were correct to
ridicule the Fox News model on
51:44
the use of the word for bait.
51:47
Okay, I will I'm all ears. Many
people's many people sent it in
51:50
and say it was entirely
incorrect, because verbatim is
51:55
an adverb. Verbatim is a verb,
so she could not read it to us
51:59
verbatim. She could have said I
will verbatim it to you. Ah,
52:02
yes, yes. Yes. Yes. So thank
you. Exactly. I agree with that.
52:06
Yep. Yeah. So we will. I will
verb eight.
52:10
We will correct a ridicule news
model. I felt so bad about your
52:16
JEFFREY TOOBIN likes to for
bait. He's a master for Bader.
52:21
Yeah, is.
52:24
All right. As we go, yes. We're
down. All right. You pick up
52:29
because you brought in Brunetti
and Alex. Um, well, I got these
52:33
pictures this morning. I had to
I had to discuss him. Okay. All
52:36
right. But Alex is a charmer by
the wishes the best? Yes. Yes.
52:40
The not Russian Alex. No, not
two Russian one.
52:46
By the way, she got to meet
Amber Heard when she first hit
52:49
Hollywood. Oh, and did she have
any good stories? She thought
52:53
she was a jerk. Oh, there you
go. And then by the way, just to
52:57
get back to the amber hurt
thing, which is I just
52:59
introduced it. My wife who's I
told you Yeah, we know she's
53:04
Yes. She's She's not. She's like
she's obsessed. She says that
53:08
Amber hurts dad was a dog
fighter with a kennel of like
53:13
eight or nine dogs is a real low
life and he also ran an illegal
53:18
gambling parlor. You don't say
for poker and wherever they were
53:23
living at the time, and got
busted more than a few times,
53:26
but always got off. And that of
the key the kicker, according to
53:31
Mimi, was that Amber made a big
fuss about making sure that when
53:35
it ended divorce settlement that
she got, she got Johnny Depp's
53:40
Yorkie as practice, practice and
Senior Science. Yeah, here fight
53:48
this thing. Oh my goodness.
53:51
Ball against a Yorkie.
53:54
Well, I'm glad Mimi's keeping
tabs on that for us. Somebody's
53:58
got to appreciate your time.
She's what what is really
54:02
appreciated? Very much.
54:05
All right, what else you got?
54:07
Well, let's go to Ukraine if you
want yeah, I got some Ukraine
54:13
stuff, too. I got a couple of
Ukrainian things. Let's start
54:17
with the mercenaries clip to
Ukraine. The US mercenary I got
54:23
it. Video footage purportedly
shows us volunteer soldiers
54:27
shooting a rocket at a Russian
armored vehicle and Ukraine. Oh,
54:30
yeah. This follows a Department
of Homeland Security Warning
54:33
that Americans volunteering in
the conflict could increase
54:37
extremism at home. The Homeland
Security bulletin was obtained
54:41
by Transparency group property
of the people. The Bulletin says
54:45
some Americans were recruited by
Ukraine's Azov battalion, a
54:49
group that has drawn controversy
over its neo Nazi ties. The DHS
54:54
based its assessment on open
source information, as well as
54:57
Customs and Border Protection
agents encounter
55:00
enters with Americans departing
for Ukraine. The Department says
55:03
they are concerned that training
received in Ukraine could be
55:07
used to bolster US based militia
and white nationalist groups no
55:12
gods
55:15
RT RK RT this morning. So take
that for what it's worth
55:21
published Ukraine backtracks on
promised to us key of may strike
55:27
Crimea despite assurances US
weapons of key of might strike
55:31
Crimea yeah Kyiv Kyiv mine
strike Crimea that's what I just
55:35
said what what is key I have my
students that may have got to do
55:39
it that means that means that
with our with our miss the the
55:43
missiles that we just are
sending Yeah, that they're not
55:46
supposed to strike Russian
territory I would say arguably
55:50
Crimea is yeah, I'd say so they
they're now saying Kyiv may
55:54
strike Korea like Washington DC
the actual missiles don't come
55:58
from Kyiv they come from the
command from Kyiv from the guy
56:02
in Poland so they think they're
going to let's go be so that but
56:06
the headline for RT Russia today
is Ukraine BRAC backtracks on
56:10
promised you as I said, Russia?
No Ukraine, Ukraine back
56:13
backtracks, exactly what they
promised wouldn't happen. Of
56:17
course, it only took three days
after the show. For them to
56:20
back. It took that long you're
true. So let's go. This one is
56:25
another little tidbit besides
sending him all kinds of fancy
56:28
gear, by the way, so there was a
thing on CBS this morning that
56:32
showed I didn't get a clip of
it. I'm gonna probably put on
56:34
Thursday show where they have
some Americans that have gone
56:37
over there, obviously and
fighting for the Ukraine. So the
56:40
guys on the show with advisors
their training yeah, there's a
56:45
mercenary so okay. Yeah, Black
Rock. guys over there going down
56:50
with all these missiles, these
tank destroying things. What are
56:53
javelins or whatever they are.
Just that they don't work. He
56:56
says they all need batteries.
Other than on batteries,
56:59
batteries. Yeah. Oh, wow. What a
faux PA. Yeah, football. Here's
57:04
the Ukraine drone. This drone
story. The Biden administration
57:08
wants to give Ukraine drones
drones can be armed with
57:11
Hellfire missiles. If Congress
approves that would be a
57:14
significant upgrade from the
smaller, shorter range drones
57:17
Ukraine already has in its
arsenal. And it's on top of
57:20
President Biden's pledge earlier
this week to ship advanced
57:23
rocket systems to Ukraine, but
has military support for Ukraine
57:27
from the US and NATO peaked.
Andrew axon is a former senior
57:31
Pentagon official and
contributor to the Atlantic. He
57:35
believes the US spending on
Ukraine may have hit a high
57:37
watermark he joins us this
morning. Thanks for being here.
57:40
Yeah, happy to be here. So why
do you think the tolerance for
57:44
this level of spending is
wearing thin when it comes to
57:47
the US and NATO support for
Ukraine? Well, I think if we
57:50
take a step back, and we marvel
at what we've we've done
57:53
already, I mean, bear in mind,
the last time I served in
57:56
government, Russia invaded Syria
or came to the aid of the Assad
58:00
regime, and between 2015 and
2017 We went to every available
58:05
means not to kill any Russians
over Syria, which is of course
58:09
where we were fighting the
Islamic State at the time Fast
58:11
forward seven years later, we
are been shoveling some of our
58:15
most advanced weapons systems
anti tank weapons systems anti
58:18
aircraft weapons systems into
Ukraine. It's really remarkable.
58:22
Did he say most advanced
58:26
Yes, and most advanced it's not
that we're not shoveling the
58:29
most advanced stuff their way
was shoveling the turds Well
58:34
generally Yeah, but this does
predators on on these little
58:38
drones might be pretty good
58:41
yeah, no I did we're not the
most advanced she's a guest
58:44
knows no way no, the whole point
is to you know for us to now
58:48
order saucers we're supposed to
order the new most advanced
58:52
that's what's going on yet from
the from the military industrial
58:55
complex is the Litany so I don't
know what's going on with what
58:58
they're trying to tell us. Oh,
listen to this. This is the last
59:01
clip is a Ukraine is an
interview with this guy
59:03
Sikorsky, a Polish guy who's
been in you know, the government
59:07
on and off in different
positions. And of course, the
59:10
polls we have to realize, hey,
above all people really hate the
59:14
Russians the most because the
Russians are really treated them
59:17
very poorly. And but this is a
kind of a funny clip because
59:22
it's like what do you what are
you telling us here? For more on
59:25
what victory in Ukraine should
look like and today's European
59:28
sanctions on Russia, we turn to
Radek Sikorski, a member of the
59:31
European Parliament, who has
held a number of senior
59:34
positions in the Polish
government, including defense
59:36
and foreign minister Rutter
scores. He Welcome to the
59:39
NewsHour. What's your response
to Europe steps today to ban all
59:44
sea based Russian oil from
coming into Europe after a
59:49
compromise with Hungary? Well, I
wouldn't call it a compromise
59:53
Hungary has simply used its veto
power to extract concession
59:59
which I
1:00:00
Think will be used to make
money. Hungary is actually has a
1:00:03
pipeline to the Adriatic Sea,
and it could import. It's all
1:00:08
from there but it chooses to
import it from Vladimir Putin is
1:00:11
another sign of Hungary breaking
us. And NATO's solidarity on
1:00:19
this war is Viktor Orban and
being honest when he says that
1:00:23
his opposition to this plan was
based on
1:00:26
avoiding oil that would be more
expensive for his citizens to
1:00:30
pay. Well, no, he's right. There
will be a price to pay for the
1:00:35
sanctions. But the point is that
it's better to pay this price
1:00:40
rather than have putting on NATO
and EU border in a few months of
1:00:45
years time. Oh, man, wait a bit
rushes on NATO on the border on
1:00:51
the border. And NATO is the one
pushing toward Russia. So what's
1:00:55
what's what's different? Why is
Russia going to be on the border
1:00:58
of NATO when NATO is trying to
be on the border of Russia?
1:01:01
That's bullcrap. A and B, what's
wrong with protecting your own
1:01:05
people? A sanction when we
sanction Cuba, for example, we
1:01:09
sanction Iran. It wasn't to hurt
us. We're not to have to take
1:01:13
you out to take a knee because
we sanction somebody, which is
1:01:17
what's going on when you're
sanctioning someone supposed to
1:01:19
hurt them, not you. What kind of
stupid sanction? That's the
1:01:23
question, what kind of stupid
sanction do you make that hurts
1:01:27
you more than it hurts to them?
Well, this is done by stupid
1:01:32
people. For starters, there's a
theme for this show, stupid,
1:01:36
stupid, but stupid. Well, let's
listen to the hero of the stupid
1:01:42
as new video has emerged of the
conversation between Mika
1:01:46
Brzezinski, daughter of the old
Brzezinski well known look him
1:01:51
up and Queen Ursula of the
European Union. This is all
1:01:54
about solidarity. So I'm
curious, this moment with such
1:01:59
unity in Europe hasn't come
without a lot of pain. If you
1:02:02
could talk about even that, by
itself, such unity is not come
1:02:06
without a lot of pain. Well, the
pain is only just beginning. So
1:02:10
I'm curious, this moment with
such unity in Europe hasn't come
1:02:14
without a lot of pain. So if you
could talk about the Ukrainian
1:02:18
determination, you were there
with that remarkable meeting in
1:02:23
key President Solinsky. Are you
inspired, even motivated in your
1:02:27
decisions by the determination
and the will of the Ukrainian
1:02:31
people? Absolutely. I was before
Eastern Bucha. In Ukraine, and I
1:02:37
saw with my own eyes, the body
bags lined up, I saw the mass
1:02:42
graves. I saw the destroyed
houses, but also hospitals
1:02:46
kindergarten.
1:02:49
But at the same time, I saw the
bravery of the Ukrainian people
1:02:54
and the hope they put into the
idea we will make it as a
1:03:00
sovereign and independent
country. And then I met with
1:03:03
President Solinsky. I'm
constantly in touch but I met
1:03:06
him in Keefe, and his leadership
is outstanding. So it is an
1:03:12
enormous motivation, because
they are not only fighting for
1:03:15
their lives and their values,
they are also fighting for our
1:03:18
values. And therefore we have to
support them and we are
1:03:21
supporting they can be argued
they're fighting for the safety
1:03:23
of the world. Absolutely. Oh,
question, Will autocracy win
1:03:28
with the aggression of Russia or
democracy? Will there be the
1:03:32
rule of law which we defend? Or
is the is it the right of might
1:03:36
that will be the defining factor
and therefore it's an
1:03:40
existential crisis, an
existential fight, and it's
1:03:43
wider than Russia, Ukraine, it
matters to all of us. Okay, hey,
1:03:49
existential Hello, Ukraine meet
climate change, existential but
1:03:54
you know, they're really
fighting for the world.
1:03:57
autocracy versus democracy.
Yeah, in your own country.
1:04:02
And we were hypothesizing about
mica and Ursula, knowing each
1:04:07
other from the tennis club, and
the dads probably hung out. Ah,
1:04:11
we weren't even close. We
weren't even close. What do they
1:04:14
know each other carnally so much
for joining us on Morning, Joe.
1:04:18
It's a pleasure. Thank you for
having me. I was talking to
1:04:22
David Ignatius yesterday, and he
knew my father really well. And
1:04:27
it was watching you and my
father at the Brussels forum in
1:04:29
2015. And David was reminding me
how pleased my father would be
1:04:35
at some of the things that have
happened at this moment in
1:04:37
history, and that is a strong
Europe. His dreams for a strong
1:04:41
Europe in a post Soviet era are
finally happening. And he would
1:04:45
be so pleased to see you in this
role. But it's so wonderful to
1:04:48
sit next to you because indeed,
I knew your father very well. I
1:04:52
mean, I was enamored, you know,
what his knowledge is concerned
1:04:56
and his ability to analyze
fantastic
1:05:00
not to sit here with you is it's
a drop
1:05:05
would be an Acer Yes.
1:05:09
But to answer your question or
room yeah i To answer your
1:05:12
question I could see where they
might hook up on the download.
1:05:16
They look they both look at look
to type. I think Joe Scarborough
1:05:20
Joe Scarborough should be
watching he'd be in the corner
1:05:23
watching this reminds me of a
friend's episode
1:05:30
Okay, yeah. Oh, the
1:05:35
the Ukraine's Commissioner of
Human Rights was kicked out of
1:05:40
the government over the
following comments which were
1:05:43
chronicled by Deutsche Avella,
Ukraine's Commissioner for Human
1:05:46
Rights tells me the sheer number
of calls, makes them think
1:05:49
Russians are using rape as a
weapon. But almost Okay, when a
1:05:53
Russian soldier rapes a
Ukrainian woman, a girl, boy, an
1:05:58
elderly woman, they keep saying
things like, this will happen to
1:06:02
every Nazi whore, or we will
rape until you can't give birth
1:06:06
to Ukrainians. These are signs
of genocide of the Ukrainian
1:06:10
people. So even the elites
thought that went too far. Like
1:06:15
no, no, no, you can't be talking
like that.
1:06:19
So she's out. Let's go and she's
out to be out west. Yeah, you
1:06:23
know, it's gone. Well, I think
it's gotten worse. If you
1:06:26
remember. Or member remember.
Remember, remember, if you
1:06:30
remember, the Libyans situation
when they had this phony
1:06:34
baloney, just to get rid of
Qaddafi? They were talking about
1:06:38
handing out Viagra.
1:06:41
Yeah, just so they could do it.
Oh, soldiers were handing out
1:06:45
dad to Viagra, they're all
jacked up. So they had to rape.
1:06:50
Oh, my goodness. Let me see if
1:06:53
I remember that. I remember.
It's like, let's see. Hold on a
1:06:57
second. Hold on.
1:06:59
Wow, this is this is from Oh,
here we go. Libya. Libya is a
1:07:06
unique opportunity for
propaganda because the Qaddafi
1:07:10
regime maintain such an
information vacuum that is no
1:07:15
independent press, people afraid
to talk candidly on the phone,
1:07:19
so many street informants that
it's dangerous to even talk
1:07:22
candidly on the street or in
cafes. In that atmosphere,
1:07:25
there's a real opportunity for
other parties to throw up their
1:07:29
own stories. Now, this is not a
clip I want to hold on. Let's
1:07:32
see this a lot here.
1:07:34
South Carolina state lawmaker
that's not either maybe Tapper.
1:07:38
I know we had a story there
specific examples of couples
1:07:41
where women have a higher
1:07:42
hmm, I don't I can't find it.
But I absolutely remember the
1:07:46
stories. He was always Yeah,
giving them Viagra. Bull crap.
1:07:51
Yeah. But was it was it Libya or
was it Syria? I'm trying to
1:07:54
think it was Libya believe me
might have been both
1:07:57
Syria wasn't brought up to cover
up did Libya thing is was hot
1:08:00
and heavy for a short time.
That's when NATO by the way, I
1:08:04
don't know who were there
protecting why were they there?
1:08:06
What was the point? But no, NATO
was, you know, we fronted NATO.
1:08:10
You guys go do this. We'll take
we'll take a back seat. And so
1:08:13
we you know, we were leading
from behind as it were with
1:08:16
Obama in the background, and
Hillary Clinton spearheading the
1:08:20
whole idea and NATO just blow
into place up. And it was like
1:08:25
it was legit because of these,
these soldiers, his Libyans was
1:08:29
all jacked up and raping, the
raping was going on. So it was
1:08:34
the Libyan thing needs a little
more study that was and how does
1:08:37
that have anything to do with
the you know, the section of the
1:08:40
treaty or what why is NATO doing
anything with Libya or Nick
1:08:44
Robertson Nikka, you had a
chance to speak with the chief
1:08:47
prosecutor of the International
Criminal Court? The the issue of
1:08:51
being Qaddafi, the Libyans what
they're doing. What are they
1:08:55
what did he tell you? Here we go
with Nick Nick Roberts, one of
1:08:58
the things he wants to
investigate now he says his
1:09:00
priority is to investigate
allegations of rape, rape that
1:09:03
may be systematic and rape those
being assisted he said by the
1:09:06
distribution of Viagra products
you're no agenda show at work,
1:09:11
ladies and gentlemen, that was
from
1:09:16
show 305 2011 So and listen to
who's this these are the
1:09:23
propaganda this is the the
propaganda twins Brawl for Nick.
1:09:28
Yeah.
1:09:29
So it's just part of the
narrative they always bring in I
1:09:32
guess it's it's, it's in the
playbook. In the playbook and
1:09:37
the playbook. Really.
1:09:39
What's interesting to me, you
mentioned Poland,
1:09:43
mistreated by the Russians, but
Poland is pretty much
1:09:47
universally hated by all Jews in
Congress, particularly the
1:09:53
muckety mucks and the higher ups
you know that the member,
1:09:56
remember, maybe a year or maybe
a couple years back
1:10:00
If there was no Poland has to
repent for the concentration
1:10:04
camps and they were all pissed
off at Poland
1:10:07
yeah I remember
1:10:09
I remember all of it and because
that's the reason that Poland
1:10:12
and to this day as far as I know
isn't one of those visa free
1:10:16
right all right you can come to
the United States but not the
1:10:19
Polish not on you got to apply
that's what it is exactly and
1:10:24
that's because of the the Jewish
members of Congress who are
1:10:28
irked at the polish and the
Polish are seen as I remember
1:10:32
this when I was a kid. The
Polish was seen as the guys who
1:10:35
coddled Hitler they weren't they
never were on Hitler's side and
1:10:39
they didn't but they give us
your Jews okay
1:10:45
that's a great opener
1:10:50
Well, it's interesting I mean
it's this is Poland not
1:10:53
repenting by doing this they've
done as much repenting as they
1:10:57
can Yeah, I mean this this is a
good example but did I don't
1:11:01
believe that this is part of
their repenting I think this is
1:11:04
just them they don't like the
Russians so but I mean it
1:11:07
shouldn't the shouldn't the the
pissed off many members of
1:11:10
Congress recognize this because
they're not they may see it as
1:11:13
the following Hey, the polls
don't like the brushes. It's got
1:11:16
nothing to do with us. Right.
Now it's this is pretty this is
1:11:21
a bunch because they get no
props. They get no props for
1:11:23
taking everybody here.
1:11:26
No, no, no good. Nowhere do I
see I don't see. I don't see. No
1:11:30
one's good anywhere. Not good
enough.
1:11:33
It really isn't. Your Polish
should at least give a thumbs up
1:11:36
or something from Ursula. Yeah,
two thumbs up nah. Now then
1:11:40
they're also kind of fussy.
They're a little bit like hungry
1:11:43
when it comes to like, you know
going along with the program
1:11:47
whatever we say goes there you
know, we can that's what Hungary
1:11:51
did just recently they were this
guy's bitching on this clip that
1:11:54
I had, which is not as hungry
they using their veto was you
1:11:58
have a veto? What do you never
supposed to use it? If you have
1:12:01
a veto and you want to use it,
you use it? That's what vetoes
1:12:04
are, yeah.
1:12:06
No dirty poll polls using their
veto. Days, too. And so hung
1:12:11
areas. One of our producers sent
a couple of clips from the mark
1:12:15
ame show, I think, I don't know
if you heard those. But I, I
1:12:21
listened to him. And I thought
it was kind of interesting,
1:12:23
because it's a they're talking
to a reporter and I can't
1:12:26
actually find who it is, but
who's in his I think he is an M
1:12:30
five M reporter, but he's or
was, and he's in Kyiv. And he
1:12:36
talks about the hotel that the
whole media is in. You know,
1:12:41
it's apparently a nice swanky
hotel. Of course, this is always
1:12:45
when during the Iraq War,
remember, they all in the same
1:12:48
hotel, right? And CNN was in the
basement with the green screen,
1:12:51
or back then the blue screen,
the blue screen? Yeah. But it
1:12:54
was really eye opening about
what is not being reported on,
1:12:58
particularly as it pertains to
things the Ukrainian army is
1:13:02
doing.
1:13:03
Let's see if we, if we like what
we're hearing here, where did
1:13:06
you stay? I mean, like, did you
stay in a hotel and gave or did
1:13:09
you stay in notice? He says keep
like a somebody's apartment? Or
1:13:13
how'd you how'd you work? In key
I stayed at a hotel, I'll tell a
1:13:17
little anecdote about the
premier Palace Hotel, where a
1:13:21
lot of journalists were staying
at.
1:13:24
I came down one morning from my
room and there was like 100 Plus
1:13:30
soldiers and police just like
camped out on the ground floor
1:13:33
of that hotel. And they were
everywhere throughout the hotel.
1:13:37
And it's a kind of a fancy
hotel.
1:13:40
And they were like hanging out
1:13:43
sitting on the grand piano sit
and smoking cigars. And like the
1:13:46
smoky room. It was like an
occupation. I couldn't I had no
1:13:50
idea what was going on. I asked
the reception. And because you
1:13:53
know, these guys had just come
off the front lines, I mean,
1:13:55
that you could smell it on. They
smelled like dirty laundry,
1:13:58
scale cigarette smoke, you know?
1:14:01
And I asked the receptionist
what's going on? And he's like,
1:14:05
Oh, it's no problem. You know,
they just want to talk to
1:14:07
somebody who's here.
1:14:09
And Ukrainian forces had put up
like these banners in the hotel,
1:14:14
like showing what I gather was
like the ownership structure of
1:14:18
the hotel. And basically, they
had come to seize this property
1:14:23
in a very dramatic way with a
large force. And I could not
1:14:29
figure out at all what was going
on. Like I asked Ukrainian
1:14:33
people that I knew like what's
going on here? And you know, one
1:14:37
woman told me that hey, this is
typical for Ukraine, like some
1:14:40
properties change hands without
any you know, paperwork being
1:14:44
signed or without an ideals or
either raids is what I mean
1:14:48
Yeah, and you use muscle you use
that's where like a lot of these
1:14:51
Azov and Right Sector guys, that
was their job before the war in
1:14:55
Donbass started was working with
oligarchs to physically seize
1:15:00
Other oligarchs properties.
1:15:03
So this clip tells me a couple
of things. And I do have short
1:15:06
follow ups. One, the mainstream
is not reporting, but you know,
1:15:11
draw Surprise, surprise to the
European Union, the United
1:15:16
States United Kingdom, the whole
world is really abusing this
1:15:19
country. It's just a shithole.
It really is. And I hate to say
1:15:24
it, but it's not for the people
but it's been so corrupt for so
1:15:28
long mainly by us that you know,
it's it's a free for all now.
1:15:32
Now. Everyone's just grabbing
everything they can we'll just
1:15:35
take this hotel, we'll take
this. And it's if it's the way
1:15:38
it always goes, there's no
ownership there's no paperwork,
1:15:40
we just take it we say it's
ours. And of course, the M five
1:15:43
M is not reporting on this. I
gather there were a lot of other
1:15:46
Western journalists in this
hotel. I mean, none of them
1:15:49
pursued that story. Yeah, there
were a lot of Western
1:15:53
journalists there from from
major publications. And yeah,
1:15:58
like I said, I couldn't find
anything about it afterwards
1:16:04
Wow. Yeah. Well, you ended with
a bullet you know, you got to
1:16:08
couldn't be on this stuff could
be that it's basically that
1:16:12
level of corruption where you
know, like reporting on the drug
1:16:16
you know, one of the worst jobs
as a journalist reporting on the
1:16:19
drug cartels in Mexico Yeah, you
know, you get shot eventually.
1:16:25
Gotta be caught me be careful,
you know. And so this is the
1:16:28
same thing it seems to me I
mean, that's why you don't
1:16:31
report it and it also the the
mainstream media itself at the
1:16:34
at the editorial level, you
know, they've decided that
1:16:38
they're going to have a united
front and a united front doesn't
1:16:43
account for stories like this.
No, no, you can't run that story
1:16:46
because it takes away from our
united front we were all pro
1:16:49
Ukraine has changed her put a
little flag for our Twitter icon
1:16:54
and the whole thing is no you
can't do this and so it's just
1:16:58
basically a corrupt system that
the mainstream media is as
1:17:02
corrupt as the as the entire
Ukraine Government. Sure. And
1:17:08
when that I'd like to remind
everybody that this is a value
1:17:10
for value podcast, you will
never hear this here's evidence
1:17:14
you'll never hear about any of
this on any mainstream am 5am
1:17:17
reporting don't hang around
Newsmax or Fox News too long
1:17:21
either. You're not going to get
that we can do this work because
1:17:24
of the producers who give us
time talent and treasure and
1:17:27
therefore I'd like to thank you
for your courage and say in the
1:17:30
morning to you the man who put
the C in the drug cartel
1:17:33
reporting ladies and gentlemen
Mr. John C. Devorah.
1:17:40
In the radio misandry curiosity
Good morning all ships as he
1:17:43
boots on the ground feet in the
air subs in order all the names
1:17:47
and dates out there and in the
morning to all of our trolls in
1:17:50
the troll room who have been
hanging out patiently although I
1:17:53
don't know how many we had
earlier is one less because I
1:17:56
kicked somebody out so let's see
what we have right now. Trolls
1:17:59
those hands up I see you
scurrying away. Yeah, this is
1:18:03
feeling better 20 to 32 2232
This is our start this is this
1:18:09
is it. This is more like a
Sunday should be That's right.
1:18:12
That's right. Exactly right. Now
even the high was much higher
1:18:16
than that. I know. What do you
say although what do you
1:18:20
although although what we were
pushing 3000 I know. We'll get
1:18:26
back there I have faith
1:18:31
the trolls hang out too. Well to
troll obviously. And a lot of
1:18:35
people like doing that. It's
completely anonymous. You go in
1:18:37
there you troll. You can troll
for good troll for bad. Do as
1:18:41
you wish. You can do it during
the live shows that are on no
1:18:45
agenda. stream.com 24 hours
seven days a week the best
1:18:49
podcast discovery network in the
universe. We'd like everyone to
1:18:53
hang out at troll room.io You've
got the chat there. You can
1:18:56
listen. Intro that's exactly
what it's for. Or you can go
1:19:00
ahead and you can subscribe or
follow John and I on our
1:19:04
Mastodon instance, which is John
C. Dvorak at no agenda
1:19:08
social.com or Adam at Norwegian
the social.com. I heard by the
1:19:13
way through the grapevine from
the dudes named Ben, that there
1:19:16
is indeed some talk inside
1:19:20
President Trump's truth social
to federate across the fediverse
1:19:26
since they are obviously a smart
move since they're also using
1:19:29
Mastodon Well, yes, it's a smart
move, but it really depends
1:19:33
because if, if we federate, just
as an example, if we federate
1:19:37
with the to social. The issue is
diskspace the way Mastodon works
1:19:42
because the, the fediverse feed
comes in, there's so much on
1:19:47
images, etc.
1:19:51
So we'll see. I mean, we'll see.
There's ways to limit it all
1:19:55
fall apart. We could also blow
the whole thing up, it could
1:19:58
collapse the whole list.
1:20:00
Federal versus the federal vs
collapsing ladies and gentlemen.
1:20:03
Anything could happen well it's
a fun experiment. Remember when
1:20:05
I was a kid we had something
called the fediverse
1:20:11
Yes the fediverse about it
gramps fediverse
1:20:16
And that's a good place to
that's that's a good accounts to
1:20:18
follow. No, it's just the more
and more I find myself just
1:20:22
saying yeah follow us I'm
adamant no agenda social
1:20:24
account. I don't give any I
don't talk about getting a link
1:20:27
or anything people know about it
now.
1:20:29
It's getting out there. And but
there's still I think even even
1:20:34
the Maga tardes are are probably
not stupid in the fediverse
1:20:39
during the fediverse You don't
think you're stupid?
1:20:43
But maybe maybe you're I don't
know that. I don't know that I
1:20:46
don't.
1:20:47
Big thanks for his talent to Oh,
yes, Sir Paul couture, who in
1:20:53
fact is the artist who set up
the original and the still
1:20:57
current no agenda Art Generator?
No agenda art generator.com we
1:21:01
know is also done with right I
always forget his name and I
1:21:04
don't even know if he listens to
the show note Randy Asher. Now
1:21:07
what is what it Randy set up
that heater set up with the
1:21:10
original original? There was one
before this? Oh gosh, I don't
1:21:13
even remember that. Well, what
do you take a look at when this
1:21:16
start is showed that some show
number and before that there was
1:21:20
another kid's like, another
operation another website that
1:21:24
collected the original do first
art that we started putting up
1:21:27
and Randy Asher and Paul put
together that and then Paul put
1:21:32
together this the fancier one.
Right The first piece of artwork
1:21:38
that went up on no agenda art
generator.com was episode 207.
1:21:44
Yeah, and it was you and me in
the car, and you apparently are
1:21:49
blowing into the breathalyzer
1:21:51
to get the car started. Okay,
yeah, that's because you're the
1:21:55
one that's drunk and I have to
cover for it. Yeah, there you
1:21:57
go. Now you're behind the wheel.
Oh, okay. Well, so Sir Paul
1:22:02
couture sent now first of all,
we chose his art because I think
1:22:07
it was because it was the best
not because you're tutoring him
1:22:09
a bone. Correct. It was the best
art for the episode. And it was
1:22:14
also cheesecake. It partially it
was also stolen as comics your
1:22:18
blogger was happy to point out
to me but wasn't really because
1:22:25
the microphones the the hair on
my mic, the lack of hair on your
1:22:30
mic and also notice your your
shorter than me which I think
1:22:33
it's appropriate.
1:22:35
Your six weeks 615 M 6161. But
it did skirt the rules and we
1:22:42
did not check it on the way on
the way out.
1:22:47
Because the girl and the palm
and the surfboard I wish I would
1:22:51
assume that he didn't draw that
but I did just a microphone with
1:22:54
the with the wig on it.
1:22:56
And I thought it was
appropriate. You said all your
1:22:58
hair. And I said well,
microphones don't have a I
1:23:00
didn't say that. But I'm
thinking that microphones don't
1:23:03
have hair but they could wear a
wig and soak in Adam and I'm
1:23:06
sure when he's older he'll be
wearing when I don't. By the way
1:23:09
in those pictures Brunetti sent
me you your hair still rockin
1:23:12
brother. It's not too bad. It's
just it's a light.
1:23:17
Hey, I'm a hair I'm here. Yes,
yeah, to hear you do and it
1:23:21
looks good. I'm just a
compliment. I'm not bullshitting
1:23:23
you. Thank you. Thank you. Thank
Thank you very much. It's meant
1:23:26
to make you feel good because
it's true.
1:23:31
Yeah, you're like my real rap. I
can't say it was a no where's it
1:23:36
is called a bursa. So like so
late. It's a chalet it's a one
1:23:41
star Michelin and so the parking
lot looks like a car lot from
1:23:46
the Mercedes Benz Gump alphabet.
I never seen so many many many
1:23:50
else and he may box and he may
box my box oh, it was not that
1:23:55
high end.
1:23:57
Dana listen to this on me back
there it was what Dana left his
1:24:00
at home. No Dana drives around a
giant 4040 54 A 454 50 can tow a
1:24:10
trailer from a you know it's
like a basically it's a truck
1:24:14
Yeah, you because you control a
truck and this giant thing and
1:24:18
he and it also does got a bunch
of he showed some he's got some
1:24:21
gimmicky thing and push a
button. Oh, lights go nuts. But
1:24:25
it's like he said the guy
freaked out because he has to
1:24:28
did valets had Valley at the
valet? So this is the guy who
1:24:31
just freaked out. What am I
supposed to do with this?
1:24:36
It's like a mile up in the air.
I mean, it's unbelievably big of
1:24:40
this this truck. You know, with
any drives and everywhere he
1:24:44
does. What is drives he drives
it into town. He drives it down
1:24:47
to LA. Yeah, I didn't know what
the deal is. It was. I know for
1:24:51
sure. Now Dana Brunetti is all
1:24:56
he's got the ultra tard mobiel
he crushes Priuses
1:25:00
seen his way? Yeah, got another
release to smash the cat,
1:25:04
another Tesla.
1:25:07
Tesla's the furthest thing from
his mind so we were very
1:25:12
appreciative and nice to see art
from Sir Paul couture Now what
1:25:15
was the issue
1:25:19
is yeah we didn't like any of
the other stuff
1:25:23
we did well not not good I mean
the one I liked the most, which
1:25:28
we both agreed was just it might
not hit was the green helmets by
1:25:34
capitalist agenda where it's
Janet Yellen was inflation Bob
1:25:40
didn't look enough like Yellen
to meet I well, I use that as
1:25:43
the pre art this morning I came
across it again like this is too
1:25:46
funny. So and then there's I
like the yum ski yum yum ski we
1:25:51
bill we both liked yum ski.
1:25:55
Which is like a Russian bear
like soldier I guess. Getting
1:26:00
ready to is licking his chops.
Kosaki I'm sorry, getting ready
1:26:04
to eat a baby which is on his
plate. He's got the knife and
1:26:07
fork and the naked baby. Even
even for us that was going too
1:26:11
far. But that was the one we
liked the most that we laughed
1:26:14
the hardest about? Yeah, it was
very funny.
1:26:18
There wasn't much else. I mean,
I did use again to pull
1:26:22
Couture's pride no agenda, the
disco ball, which I thought was
1:26:27
well done. And so I used that on
the newsletter.
1:26:33
There was some other stuff that
was you know, it was clear in
1:26:35
there. But yeah.
1:26:39
Did everyone think was everyone
talking about Mona Lisa.
1:26:45
Mona Lisa was that? No did Mona
Lisa just because we talked
1:26:48
about the but the guy throwing a
pie at her. And then you saw
1:26:52
Parker Polly's Mona Lisa with
the two cupcakes for the
1:26:55
breasts? Yeah, I thought I
didn't like it. No, you didn't
1:26:59
mean you did not you did you
didn't think it was good. You
1:27:03
didn't think was wrong. It was
not
1:27:07
very lewd. Lot of people were
disappointed we had didn't have
1:27:11
a Mona Lisa art was just the
vibe I picked up. I don't know
1:27:14
why
1:27:18
we use the Mona Lisa art, we
would have gotten a note from
1:27:20
comic strip blogger. It started
off.
1:27:26
Everyone knows this is a real
painting. Congratulations to Sir
1:27:30
Paul couture. Thank you to all
the artists for putting up with
1:27:33
us and and accepting the
feedback. It's only to make a
1:27:36
better product. But all of your
time, talent and treasure is
1:27:39
highly appreciated. And as
always on display in a podcast
1:27:42
2.0 app. And I believe as of
Thursday, when we go live, there
1:27:46
will be a new bat signal built
into a couple of the new apps.
1:27:51
So you can not only subscribe to
no agenda in the app, but it
1:27:54
will notify you when we fire off
the bat signal and go live and I
1:27:59
think pod versus pod verse and
curio caster will end there's a
1:28:05
chat you enter into the chat
room. It's all the same. It's
1:28:08
just the it's within the app. So
we're excited about this working
1:28:11
because technically, it's a
miracle that it does new podcast
1:28:15
apps.com And for the art no
agenda art generator.com For
1:28:18
everyone who likes to follow on
follow along during the live
1:28:21
stream. And now we thank our
executive and Associate
1:28:24
Executive producers for episode
1457 And we kick it off. Oh,
1:28:32
there's a lot of blue on the
screen here today with Craig
1:28:34
leykis from Hurst Texas. Hurst
was Hurst first, I don't know
1:28:39
Hurst Texas, where the hearse
Hurst shifter comes in? I think
1:28:44
they make it there. What's the
Hurst shifter is that famous
1:28:47
shifting stick that used to put
in in your hot rod? Oh, a shift
1:28:53
Oh really? Yeah, the Hearst is a
big journal. Big rugged thing.
1:28:59
These are her shifters
interesting. I don't know if
1:29:02
they make it there but it's it
wouldn't surprise me because
1:29:04
everything that's Texas like the
new and new Browns Feld is where
1:29:08
they made the Browns felled
grills I think they name a lot
1:29:10
of stuff after their towns yeah
we're cool out here.
1:29:15
Well Insta night $1,000 longtime
listener in need of a D duping
1:29:19
and joining the roundtable
1:29:22
you spend deed deuced asking for
new business karma as we launch
1:29:26
a new IT managed services
provider for small businesses in
1:29:30
Dallas Fort Worth Texas night
name sir nerd works
1:29:36
oh my goodness sir nerd works
will after you're knighted sir
1:29:40
nerd works hit me up. I got a
buddy in Dallas who's in the
1:29:43
same business. Maybe you guys
can work together or firebomb
1:29:46
each other I don't know.
1:29:48
Congratulations and thank you
very much for for your your your
1:29:52
support of the show. And this is
indeed an instant meeting so or
1:29:56
as the night donations would
have been happy to give you your
1:29:59
new book.
1:30:00
Is this karma thank you again
you've got karma
1:30:06
Mark Hardwick is up and he's
also in Texas he's in the Lido,
1:30:10
Texas for the meet the Lido
shifter 666. That's six, six.
1:30:19
Now, there's something here. I
don't know if he's on the
1:30:22
birthday list, but I
specifically asked Eric to put
1:30:24
him on it. Let me check. And he
would have put this in yellow.
1:30:27
And I think he's saying I don't
think so.
1:30:31
It is a belated 66th birthday.
That's what the sixes are about.
1:30:35
It me rice last week was my 66th
birthday. So here's your
1:30:41
six six.
1:30:43
It's my second donation. I need
to be deduced that we can do
1:30:47
this.
1:30:48
You've been de deuced you will
also move me to night status.
1:30:54
Please Knight me as mark of
Parker County, Texas. Keep up
1:31:00
the great work.
1:31:03
Oh, second.
1:31:07
Last week, okay, so it was last
week. He was not on the list.
1:31:11
And I didn't think it was 60
Soon, but that's not fun.
1:31:16
See why he's not on the list.
Back Office issues. And does he
1:31:21
need any?
1:31:23
He doesn't need a car or
anything. He's good with his
1:31:27
knighthood things will be fine.
He got his D douching. Yeah, he
1:31:30
got his de douche. Troy Whitmore
is in Toronto.
1:31:34
Ontario Canada. Navia 610. Born
in 61 Turning 61 Today on a show
1:31:41
date seemed perfect time to
reserve my birth dad but she's
1:31:43
not on there.
1:31:45
Okay, hold on a second.
1:31:48
You're right. No man I got I got
a lot of work to do while I'm
1:31:52
reading seemed perfectly okay.
Please do. It seemed at the
1:31:56
perfect time to reserve my seat
at the roundtable. This donation
1:31:59
of 800 Canadian dollars
generously accepted at par is
1:32:03
long overdue. I've looked
forward to each show since the
1:32:07
beginning.
1:32:09
It's easy to look at it today's
world and think to yourself I
1:32:13
must be Hi.
1:32:17
Thank you for providing a
corrective lens for an insane
1:32:20
world. Please Knight me, sir. I
must be high. Which should be
1:32:25
should be a common there sir. I
must be high.
1:32:29
hosting our first no agenda. I
must be high Toronto meet up on
1:32:33
Friday, June 10. At McSorley's,
wonderful, wonderful saloon and
1:32:39
grill. I've been to that place
as a matter of fact, outlets.
1:32:43
details in the no gender meetup
page. No jingles no karma.
1:32:46
Sincerely, Troy Whitmore. Wow, I
am really high. Now. Typically,
1:32:53
the $800 donation which is
Scandinavian dollar Roos would
1:32:56
be listed as 800.
1:33:00
Yeah, in the spreadsheet
experience with this, this
1:33:03
phenomenon is that he he can
take that credit himself because
1:33:07
he's doing the bookkeeping, but
unless it jumped somebody into a
1:33:11
category, it usually doesn't get
listed as the Canadian amount.
1:33:17
Okay, you know what I mean?
Somebody donated $290 to get
1:33:23
bumped, but also Holy crap. $800
is only 610 of ours. So when it
1:33:29
came out to you holy crap.
1:33:32
I know. It's time to go shopping
in Canada.
1:33:37
Paul Scharff is from Eagle
River, Wisconsin. 604 94. This
1:33:42
is interesting. This donation is
a celebration of the 28th
1:33:46
wedding anniversary to my wife
Shelly. And they never had a
1:33:50
fight since 604 94. She's been
my rock and I want to tell her
1:33:55
how much I love her. We have
four great children and a house
1:33:58
full of puppies that are proof
she's the greatest mom and wife
1:34:02
and they're all rescues. We are
on this journey together forever
1:34:05
and always Paul Scharf in the
morning. Isn't that beautiful?
1:34:13
Kevin Woods wood in Elko,
Nevada, three, three 3.34 in the
1:34:19
morning, Adam and John we got a
birthday on here. June 4
1:34:22
commemorates 22 trips around the
sun this year. And true to my
1:34:25
word. In my last note, I am back
to join the others in the
1:34:29
knighthood. A few years ago, I
dropped out of college after a
1:34:32
year realizing I hated it, and
that there was money in a future
1:34:37
to be made pursuing honest work
by God's grace and with a lot of
1:34:42
love for my family. I have now a
career path I hope one can one
1:34:46
day can suggest a family of my
own here are started family, my
1:34:50
own here in Elko. For that
reason I would like to be
1:34:52
knighted sir Devon, the Silver
State dropout.
1:34:56
You've earned these $1,000 For a
single simple reason.
1:35:00
The people who are running this
ruining this world are running
1:35:03
the world into the ground.
Sorry, I have no greater desire
1:35:06
then to see the rest of us,
living wretched lives, eating
1:35:11
bugs, and living in pods.
1:35:15
For guys like me to be happy to
them is angering and intolerable
1:35:20
and makes me happy to listen to
you too. And I don't need to
1:35:23
tell you that you do the same
for so many more people than
1:35:26
just me. For that reason, John
and Adam, I'm proud to support
1:35:30
you to and look forward to the
many shows ahead. I'd like to
1:35:33
have grilled pork tenderloin and
suck a and around him. Cool. And
1:35:38
I was gonna psyche waiting to
get this I got I got the hot
1:35:40
sock a hot sock a in a box. No,
whatever you do, for God's sake.
1:35:45
No. Why not? You What's wrong
with hot sock a. It's the
1:35:49
cheapest crap socket you can
get. It's designed to be heated
1:35:54
up so you can touch so you can
choke it down. You want some
1:35:56
Zanko or Zanko? Super seven.
That's the soccer you want.
1:36:02
Okay, I understood login name
because everyone knows what it
1:36:06
is. Alright, it's understanding.
You got it. I'm field shamed.
1:36:10
Sankeys you should be zanger
super seven. Can I just say
1:36:14
super seven. Will they
understand that? Yeah, yeah,
1:36:17
probably. Seven psyche. I'll
never have hot soccer in a box
1:36:21
ever again.
1:36:22
I feel like an idiot.
1:36:25
Okay, I don't care what kind of
psyche as long as as good. Yeah,
1:36:29
it was super. We got it the
super seven for jingles outtake
1:36:34
pigs and human clothing the Alex
Jones I am living in the
1:36:37
twilight zone. And I don't know
that when I do I haven't. If you
1:36:41
still have it, and I'd be
willing for a full sharp and
1:36:44
respect finalized with a good
cover for everybody. Until next
1:36:48
time, gents Best regards assumed
to be sure Devon
1:36:55
freedom
1:36:58
contradiction
1:37:00
goes on the facts of this world
1:37:08
living in a Twilight Zone
1:37:14
he's getting lunch at Chipotle
1:37:18
the tortoise
1:37:21
in the race. Kim Kardashian
1:37:25
we Weaver ESP ICT they are all
Jide ESP ICT there is no real
1:37:33
country with this.
1:37:36
We must
1:37:39
resist
1:37:40
we must
1:37:43
we must
1:37:45
and we will much about
1:37:49
that
1:37:52
you've got
1:37:57
always fun playing the full
version.
1:38:00
John Knowles is in Murfreesboro,
Tennessee and I looked for a
1:38:05
note I have a note from January
25 from him but nothing current.
1:38:10
He sends in the ever so popular.
Three 333 dot 33 donation we
1:38:15
appreciate that. Thank you very
much, John. Hey, doesn't he get
1:38:20
a double karma? Oh, you know,
I'm sorry.
1:38:25
I did not have the I'm dropping
the ball here. Double karma
1:38:30
turbo Here we go.
1:38:36
You've got
1:38:39
farmer
1:38:43
mark. Minute. taglio minute
taglio in Dripping Springs. 333.
1:38:52
He's in Texas. De douche me.
1:38:55
Okay.
1:38:58
You've been de douche.
1:39:02
Mark in Dripping Springs, Texas.
That's a note Dripping Springs
1:39:06
baby. Drive through it all the
time. We should hook up we need
1:39:09
a Dripping Springs meet up.
Yeah, Dripping Springs is on our
1:39:13
way into Austin and on our way
out of Austin. Thank you Mark.
1:39:16
When you go into Austin for it
to get my hair done.
1:39:21
They don't have a person in the
world and Fredericksburg and
1:39:24
we're in the hill country that
can cut hair. Well yes, of
1:39:28
course. I'm glad you asked. But
as you know, I have been held
1:39:31
hostage by my hair for most of
my life, my adult life. I have
1:39:35
complete control of my hair. Now
it is my hair to do with what I
1:39:38
want. And I like Johanna to cut
my hair and it gives me an
1:39:42
excuse to go to the PIO box. Go
to Dr. Ron pick up some meds,
1:39:46
all that stuff. So it's a
Johanna or Johanna Johanna.
1:39:52
It's yeah, it's Johanna.
1:39:55
She trained under Pierre
1:39:58
in PEI rain Perry
1:40:00
Kyle Rainey is also in Texas,
Texas showing the support today
1:40:04
in Canyon to ces 6607. He says
this is my special birthday
1:40:08
donations Texas day. Yeah, in
honor of my 26th birthday on
1:40:12
Tuesday sixth, seventh, one step
closer to knighthood, which I
1:40:15
plan to secure before my wedding
next month as I couldn't subject
1:40:18
My Bride to the shame of not
marrying a knighted man.
1:40:23
For my birthday please mention
the big dumb podcast which is
1:40:28
available on all podcasting 2.0
platforms. You can use the
1:40:32
search may I please have a
biscuit for my birthday a noodle
1:40:34
gun I love bugs as well as yet
karma for the wedding lovers
1:40:38
live thanks for all you do Kyle
they always give me a biscuit on
1:40:42
my birthday
1:40:44
with my noodle gun
1:40:52
I got the my pasta Glocks locked
in loaded
1:41:09
you've got
1:41:13
Harmon
1:41:17
Lake quote unquote in Chicago
23456. As always, thanks to you
1:41:24
both
1:41:26
Adam and John for continuing to
pull back the curtain. We had a
1:41:31
great meetup last night in
Chicago, on the beach with 15
1:41:36
local slaves, including keepers
dames, Knights, a Baronet, and
1:41:40
in a human resource, no spooks
ba right
1:41:48
spoke Noah spoke spooks nobody
got shot. That's Chicago in
1:41:53
Chicago we're gonna get shot and
we'll Chicago was excellent. Any
1:41:56
local listener who doesn't want
to be triggered or held to blame
1:41:59
should keep a lookout for
further meetups this summer comm
1:42:03
years Robert Blake anonymous in
Saskatoon, Canada, Canada rove
1:42:10
ducks, two two 2.22 Hello, says
anonymous please give myself
1:42:14
Hello. Hi. Please give my studly
we should do it like NPR. Hi.
1:42:19
Hi. Please give my studly
husband Ryan no last name. He
1:42:25
knows who he is. A D douching.
1:42:29
Youth Band D deuced. And in
parentheses it says this is a
1:42:33
switcheroo.
1:42:35
Oh, so he changed anonymous to
anonymous reach out to Ryan no
1:42:39
last name. Okay. Okay, well, let
me do that now.
1:42:44
Okay, I'll continue reading as
well as the biscuit for his 40th
1:42:47
Birthday June 3, he's on the
list. I love the show. Thanks
1:42:50
for all you do karma, please.
And then at the very end and
1:42:52
this brings up an interesting
point. If you're going to say
1:42:56
please keep anonymous, don't put
it at the end of the note
1:43:02
because we read these things in
real time. So this spreadsheet
1:43:05
is put together for us. We take
it put it in front of us and
1:43:08
read read read read read like
pros like pros by the way like
1:43:12
we do cold reads like as best we
can. As sometimes we're really
1:43:16
good. And then you get to this
Ah nonnamous We already said the
1:43:20
name of this person and yeah the
blog gotta go back edited out ha
1:43:25
fo PA and gives me something to
complain about. And you don't
1:43:29
want that.
1:43:32
Let me just complaining left and
right. Okay, so a biscuit first
1:43:35
40th birthday and de karma they
always give me a biscuit on my
1:43:39
birthday. You've got karma.
1:43:44
You can go with this. Alex Green
Greenfield Park, New York
1:43:47
$200.01 Greetings from
1:43:51
Shaolin gunk shawangunk. Think
it Shuang they send an immediate
1:43:55
report I think is Shuang Shuang
you don't you don't pronounce
1:43:59
the K. I think it's Shang Gong
Gong Gong Gong Gong Gong Gong
1:44:02
Gong. Greetings from the Shang
Gong meetup in the wallkill. New
1:44:05
York. Please credit this
donation to duck chuck the dog
1:44:09
Oh Cliff switcheroo.
1:44:12
Check the dog. Yep. Chuck the
dog Hey, she's a rescue. He's
1:44:18
he's a good boy. But he tried to
eat the brisket and pork this
1:44:22
from the meetup. We hope with
his eventual knighthood he will
1:44:26
be satisfied with the mutton.
Justin and his family hosted us
1:44:29
graciously with BBQ and beer at
their in this place is amazing
1:44:33
original houses from 1796 in the
location location is pastoral,
1:44:39
pastoral and gorgeous. Anyone
looking for an awesome spot to
1:44:44
stay in the Hudson Valley area
should check it out at in at the
1:44:47
ridge.com in at the bridge.com
Take this notice our invitation
1:44:52
for all residents of New York is
Stan to join us next time at
1:44:55
Patriot karma and respect for
all please
1:45:00
I think we can
1:45:02
do both of those who have a
short to yes
1:45:10
DSP I see
1:45:14
you've got
1:45:21
last on the list is Zoomer.
Zoomer. Daniel Zoomer is in Los
1:45:26
Angeles, California. He donated
$200. I want to thank him for
1:45:29
that. Good morning. Oh geez. I'm
from this cult city of LA. My
1:45:35
gratitude for you guys is
immense. I pray to God he helps
1:45:39
you find your exit strategy dead
in the water. Much love. Zoomer
1:45:46
Daniel, jingles de douching and
some Al Sharpton.
1:45:51
You've been de douche. No real
conference. There you go.
1:45:57
And that's our list of executive
and Associate Executive
1:46:02
producers for show 1450 What is
757? I want to thank each and
1:46:08
every one of them for making
this all possible, and
1:46:10
especially for their generosity,
working towards show 1500 And
1:46:14
our 15th anniversary all taking
place this year. Yeah, probably
1:46:19
just before the midterms
1:46:23
before the demise shall be
interesting. Thank you to the
1:46:26
most of us and I usually October
I know the anniversaries in
1:46:29
October. That's before the
midterms that 1500 should be
1:46:32
sometime after the election. No,
I thought it came really close
1:46:36
to October within a few weeks.
But there's a there's an offset.
1:46:40
Oh, there it was grows. I think
one show every year something
1:46:43
like that. Oh, we're like a leap
year. Yeah.
1:46:48
Thank you to these executive and
Associate Executive Producers
1:46:51
highly appreciated. These are
credits we don't just hand out
1:46:54
you have to earn them. And you
do that by sending your value
1:46:57
back at these levels. And that
gives you the tie the title and
1:47:01
you're entitled In fact, to use
these anywhere that they are
1:47:04
recognized. We are discussed
IMDB. That's where you find Dana
1:47:08
Brunetti but you'll you'll find
many others in there as well.
1:47:11
Your LinkedIn profile, put it on
your T shirt for all I care.
1:47:16
This is important. Let people
know that you are an actual
1:47:18
producer of a real media
property. No joke will vouch for
1:47:21
you if anyone questions it. If
you'd like to learn more, go to
1:47:24
our website vorak.org/in. A
thank you again for your time,
1:47:29
talent and treasure for
producing episode 1004 57. Our
1:47:33
formula is this. We go out. We
get people in the mouth
1:47:53
just a quick little 70,
throwback, little little fun
1:47:57
stuff to listen to to get us in
the mood for the great reset.
1:48:00
And the propaganda that's been
going on for 55 zero years.
1:48:07
Get it wait set up. This is from
a very popular TV setup a very
1:48:12
popular TV show in the 70s not
just in the United States, but I
1:48:17
recall watching it in the
Netherlands as well with
1:48:19
subtitles Mork and Mindy.
1:48:22
Mork and Mindy marking was of
course played by Robin Williams.
1:48:26
Now did you also know Robin
Williams? I know Mimi knew Robin
1:48:29
Williams. Yeah, no, he was over
at the house actually. So what's
1:48:33
your what's your lip? tard back
in the day.
1:48:38
He was always kind of a lip
tart. Yeah. You're just he's a
1:48:42
very depressed depressive guy.
1:48:45
But he but he was he said, Yeah,
he had literally had one of
1:48:49
those switches. You know you he
goes from just being morose is a
1:48:53
better word. No, because always
morose, very morose.
1:48:57
Like er, than the right. But
then the switch goes on, and
1:49:00
then it becomes insanely light
up to play. Yeah. This is an
1:49:05
episode from September 16 1979.
And for those who have never
1:49:10
seen this before, Mark is an
alien from orc, the planet orc
1:49:14
and he lands in an egg. I know.
It's 70s TV. I know. It's hard
1:49:17
for some millennials. It's like
what? And he of course
1:49:22
experiences the world as an
alien. And he's very, it's it's
1:49:28
amusing was an amusing show and
any crash landed in Boulder,
1:49:31
Colorado of all places. And so
Mindy is took him in and they're
1:49:36
all aware that he's an alien,
but he is very concerned with
1:49:38
the 1970s. Yes, Pam Dawber play
by Pam daughter ex current of
1:49:44
scuttlebutt was always did he
ever go to bed with her in
1:49:48
brown, do you think do you think
it is open for debate and no one
1:49:53
has ever made a conclusion she
won't say.
1:49:57
That was Mark Harmons wife
1:50:00
Pam Dawber wasn't an
1:50:03
auto No, I don't think so. Maybe
I'm wrong there. She was single
1:50:05
at the time. So fair Danielle
fair game. Mark. Here he is
1:50:10
discovering as he just heard on
the news about the energy crisis
1:50:14
in the 1970s it's
1:50:17
just the world as we know it,
it's coming to an end. It's
1:50:19
about time the
1:50:22
world is coming to world as we
know the world as we know it is
1:50:26
coming to an end. You see, I
went downtown to buy boxes, life
1:50:29
and hard times the prisons were
near Monaco, there are a
1:50:31
plethora of every magazine and
newspaper was energy crisis.
1:50:34
Don't panic don't panic remain
calm. energy crisis Big Deal big
1:50:39
deal it is a big deal Mr. Smarty
Pants Republican this weekend an
1:50:42
alternative source of energy for
all we have to conserve that's
1:50:45
why I was up making darn sure we
conserve what were you doing?
1:50:49
Well, I shot it all the
streetlights in downtown
1:50:51
boulder.
1:50:52
All the traffic lights to want
to kind of miss them. No. Red,
1:50:56
Yellow Green. Such festive
colors. They were so pretty.
1:50:58
People used to stop the cars and
watch them change.
1:51:02
Relax, okay, relax. Relax,
relax. There's a world beyond I
1:51:06
Love Lucy. Don't you understand?
We're running out of fossil
1:51:08
fuels, talking about dinosaurs
dying and dinosaurs still and
1:51:11
residuals. A whole different
world. And pretty soon 100 years
1:51:15
from now they'll be joining the
cemeteries looking for oil. I'd
1:51:17
like us to consider advertising
slogans now. Put a relative in
1:51:20
your tank and then have
testimonials. I got 20 miles to
1:51:23
the gallon using my tests.
1:51:27
There is an energy crisis and
and 50 or 60 years we probably
1:51:30
won't have any more oil. A lot
of people believe that the oil
1:51:33
companies are just using a scare
tactic so they can hike the
1:51:35
prices. Somebody's getting very
rich at our expense. I don't
1:51:39
understand why would someone
else want to get rich at someone
1:51:41
else's expense?
1:51:43
Let me put it to you this way.
Some of us believe the people
1:51:47
who own the oil are shaking down
the rest of the world. That's
1:51:50
why the call shakes for the
booty
1:51:54
as long as the oil companies
keep backing the politicians
1:51:56
well.
1:51:59
Let's have fun about that.
Nothing
1:52:03
sound familiar?
1:52:05
So
1:52:07
this is interesting for a couple
of reasons. One is that me TV
1:52:13
and television land and a number
of these net networks are
1:52:17
genuine networks.
1:52:21
Meet TV having about five
outlets
1:52:25
are all on over the air
television you if you have a an
1:52:28
antenna and you put it up onto
your 4k TV you will get these
1:52:32
lot of shows and they're a lot
of these shows are in the 60s
1:52:36
they're playing I love Lucy's
the 60s 70s they just started
1:52:38
running Wk RP past Cincinnati
I'm living on the air in
1:52:43
Cincinnati which you watch these
shows in the WK RP episode
1:52:49
sometimes it's riveting because
it's like this is interesting
1:52:54
because it's it's a REIT, you
can start to see the reruns of
1:52:58
today's memes in the bowl crap
into what you just played as a
1:53:02
good example. And I don't know
that these
1:53:07
ended and the people who have
over the air and they usually
1:53:10
don't, you can cut your cable in
some parts of the country
1:53:12
because the over the air can be
over 100 channels of this sort
1:53:16
of stuff. And it's old. But it's
it's irrelevant. And sometimes
1:53:21
you look at and go why can't
they do TV like this? This is
1:53:23
good stuff. This is very funny.
It's compelling. The jokes are
1:53:27
better. They had better joke
writers. It's not politically
1:53:31
correct. So it makes it look
edgier.
1:53:34
I think it has some societal
effect
1:53:39
people have sent me over the
years many times I it's too long
1:53:43
to play because it's like a five
or six minute scene. I think
1:53:46
it's
1:53:48
either the sales guy from Wk RP.
I don't think it's the weather
1:53:53
guy but one of them goes off on
how the world is the New World
1:53:57
Order controlled by the
Trilateral Commission like it it
1:54:00
came the entire thing all the
way through. You know, just it
1:54:03
was only missing The
Bilderbergers by the way. Hey
1:54:07
there. Congratulations Luke from
We Are changed.org He's the only
1:54:11
guy that's out there as far as I
know, in DC at the Bilderberg
1:54:14
conference streaming live
showing the the hotel
1:54:21
gotta love him for doing that. I
want it by the way I wanted to
1:54:24
the attendees list is published
and I had a copy of it. I have
1:54:29
it too. I was gonna go over some
of the names on it, but
1:54:31
unfortunately didn't do that for
the today's show. But it's kind
1:54:34
of interesting. Some of the
people they've got, I believe, a
1:54:36
lot of the same old same old
Kissinger's there. Eric Schmidt
1:54:40
is there Yeah. There's a lot of
regulars. I have the I have the
1:54:43
list here. Good. Let's go
through it. And okay, I'll just
1:54:48
give the titles we don't need to
do all the names unless they you
1:54:50
recognize them immediately.
1:54:53
Former Chairman from of Deutsche
Bank, Deputy Secretary
1:54:57
Department of the Treasury
current
1:55:00
Jose Manuel abattis Minister of
Foreign Affairs, European Union,
1:55:05
then you get
1:55:07
Sam Altman, the CEO of open AI
1:55:11
and Apple bomb staff writer for
The Atlantic who doesn't know
1:55:15
her
1:55:17
social democrat party member I
think that's from maybe Denmark,
1:55:22
Director General of UNESCO. By
the way, you before we go on. So
1:55:27
the Atlantic was mentioned in
one of the earlier clips. The
1:55:31
Atlantic is pretty much owned by
Job's Laurette Lorraine jobs.
1:55:38
I'm, this has become kind of a
oddly corrupt publication so far
1:55:43
as not corrupt in the sense that
they're
1:55:47
in the old fashioned sense, but
in the sense of being stooges
1:55:50
for the government messaging,
you mean a group of stupid
1:55:52
people? Yeah. And do you think
is I don't know. But is it true
1:55:57
that they would have the skill
set I think at the at the quote
1:56:01
unquote, agency, to like cajole
somebody like her? Oh, yes. It's
1:56:08
she's she's also a part of the
global citizen outfit, which
1:56:12
includes a lot of the same
people who are Bilderberg and
1:56:16
and that's who mica west where
mica interviewed Queen Ursula
1:56:21
was at the Global Citizen event.
So this is Oh, yeah, this is all
1:56:25
tied in and at Bilderberg CIA
director, William Burns, just to
1:56:30
just to complete your thought
there.
1:56:33
Of course, the we also have the
media there, the Chairman and
1:56:37
CEO of Axel Springer's huge
media group in Germany, monster
1:56:43
monsters? Correct. We have many
bankers, the Center for New
1:56:49
American Security. We have the
CEO of Pfizer, of course Borla
1:56:52
is going to be there to take his
instructions. This is how we
1:56:55
talk.
1:56:57
The chairman of Heineken Oh,
there's the CEO of Palantir
1:57:01
technologies, who doesn't know
them shocks spyware, of the
1:57:06
elites.
1:57:08
See what else is here?
1:57:12
Oh, Thomas liason who was the
chairman of DSM who just merged
1:57:19
with a Swiss company. I think we
talked about it.
1:57:22
These are the guys that used to
be a chemical company in the
1:57:24
Netherlands. And they're now the
$8 billion leading producer of
1:57:29
taste and texture for soy and
plant based food. So there's
1:57:34
that Shopify CEO,
1:57:39
editor in chief of The
Economist. Oh, yeah. What's her
1:57:43
name? What's her name? Zanni.
Surname San Annie Zeno's Baito,
1:57:49
something like Yanni, she's the
one who ruined the Economist. We
1:57:52
talked, I always do not
1:57:55
portray us, who by the way is
the chairman of KKR Global
1:57:59
Institute, whatever that means.
1:58:02
Petraeus is at the meeting the
Oh, yeah. Petraeus was on the
1:58:07
morning show today. The CBS
Morning Show that runs on the
1:58:12
weekends. Talking about Ukraine
with the UN. I don't know what
1:58:17
did with this case, even why
this guy is even in any of these
1:58:21
circles anymore. It hasn't been
expunged as beyond me, but okay.
1:58:25
In fact, the Democrat Party used
to call them put, betray us,
1:58:29
betray us. Yeah.
1:58:32
A couple other interesting
people here, Prime Minister of
1:58:35
the Netherlands Margarita.
1:58:39
See the Hudson Institute of cord
there's Eric Schmidt,
1:58:43
former CEO and chairman of
Google. There's Kevin Scott, CTO
1:58:46
of Microsoft. A man the
metaverse is going to help us
1:58:49
take over those stupid people
and be easy they'll be with the
1:58:53
headset to that Peter Thiel
course, Peter, what Peter TEALS
1:58:58
got to do with these guys's bugs
Palantir is is you know, he's
1:59:01
the last right his his deal.
Yeah, we got he's up to his
1:59:05
neck. Mo Goya Emma Walmsley, CEO
of GlaxoSmithKline Peter Winnick
1:59:12
President CEO of ASML these are
the guys that make the
1:59:16
lithography possible for chips.
So these are movers and shakers
1:59:19
these are this is not just a
bunch of dicks
1:59:24
Wouldn't you say? No, there's
there's not a bunch of dicks are
1:59:28
all high end.
1:59:30
Really, we had high end junkies
on the last show. These are high
1:59:34
end dicks, high end decks. And
so as is still remains to be
1:59:39
seen whether this is an
influential group that actually
1:59:42
does moving and shaking or just
likes to drink possible. And
1:59:48
it's over Toski is out there
reporting with his live stream
1:59:51
and the first report that comes
in last night. He reported that
1:59:56
I forget which hotel it is
they're all holed up in in his
1:59:59
hotel and why
2:00:00
Washington DC security's around
you know, so we got the live
2:00:03
stream on the front gate. So
watching the security, see if we
2:00:05
can see anybody made box come in
with somebody who was leads for
2:00:07
the Bilderberg conference. And
you know what came in last night
2:00:10
a whole bunch of male
prostitutes.
2:00:13
Which To which I say it's DC.
Hello, thing you can go in front
2:00:18
of any hotel any night of the
week and find male and female
2:00:21
prostitutes going in
2:00:24
Sodom and Gomorrah, they're in
DC.
2:00:27
So we heard we heard from saga
Sorry, I was just thinking it's
2:00:31
like, yeah, yeah, what a great
place. It's dynamite. To we saw
2:00:36
that was the oil crisis, the
energy crisis in and on
2:00:41
television in the late 70s.
Let's go to 2010. This show was
2:00:45
around we commented and this,
this was just trending again,
2:00:49
Tina sent it to me. And of
course, I recognized it
2:00:51
immediately. This was the 2010
Superbowl commercial from 12
2:00:56
years ago. This preceded I gotta
tell you that the punch line
2:01:01
before I play it. This was the
promise by Audi Volkswagen to
2:01:06
produce the clean diesel engine
vehicles.
2:01:10
Which of course, We later
discovered was a huge scam. It
2:01:14
almost bankrupted the company.
People had to go it was the huge
2:01:20
fines I think are still being
paid. And this is how they
2:01:23
presented their green clean
diesel engine to the world.
2:01:27
Okay, so it's 3708 paper plastic
plastic. That's the magic word
2:01:32
when
2:01:34
you pick the wrong day to mess
with the ecosystem plastic boy.
2:01:39
Battery battery
2:01:51
you stole these bulbs.
2:01:54
tragedy strikes tonight where a
man has just been arrested for
2:01:56
possession of an incandescent
light bulb. Because think about
2:02:00
plastic bottles now. The water
setting is at 105
2:02:09
got a TDI air clean diesel
you're good to go sir.
2:02:22
Officers like those Styrofoam
cups you drink it from? Yeah,
2:02:25
please step out a car and put
them on the hood. The green
2:02:28
police this is this is just so
beautiful to see that they were
2:02:33
just liars. Liars like everyone
else with all this green stuff.
2:02:39
We got to do this more often go
back and see what they promised
2:02:41
and which actually delivered. In
this case, it was a known scam
2:02:45
from the get go.
2:02:50
Exam little diesel engines and
since I driven a few of them
2:02:53
when they were when they were
the hottest. They were like a
2:02:57
bat out of hell does it were
great because there was no
2:02:59
limitation on them. They were
just I wish I could still get
2:03:03
one in my life I'd ever drive a
diesel that had that much power.
2:03:06
I wish I could get one of those
still.
2:03:09
Volvo diesel I thought when they
were banning him and they're
2:03:12
recalling him and taking him
back and I said you somehow get
2:03:14
a hold of one because those
things really were fast. You'd
2:03:17
have to go a registered to a in
a state where they didn't have
2:03:20
the check to damage and all the
time because it would fail now
2:03:24
but yeah.
2:03:26
I mean I would back in Volvo
hatom now so I can have a lot of
2:03:30
Mad diesel engines that were
really amazing products. Think
2:03:35
Mitsubishi I had a Mitsubishi
was that it was it was a in
2:03:41
Europe is a Mitsubishi Galant
diesel turbo diesel, and that
2:03:47
was pretty impressive. Yeah, I
guess that was Mitsubishi and
2:03:51
dodge probably worked on that
together. And I've always wanted
2:03:55
to have to own another diesel.
But these days the price is I
2:03:57
mean, I'd love to run it on
biodiesel, but salad oil is more
2:04:02
expensive than diesel now. It's
unbelievable. Since we're on the
2:04:05
topic, I do want to read a note
from Stephen See, you do want to
2:04:10
do want to roll and he had a
2:04:14
I didn't know that you could do
this because I knew they would
2:04:17
pass through but I didn't know
you could actually get a hold of
2:04:19
one to drive around which was I
want to give personal experience
2:04:22
with driving a hydrogen car. Oh
yes, we leased a 2018 Toyota
2:04:28
Morotai
2:04:30
D incentive sounded great $7,500
California clean air reback bait
2:04:35
five minimum Phillips and a
credit card for $15,000 Oh from
2:04:41
Toyota for hydrogen fuel during
the duration of the of the
2:04:45
lease.
2:04:47
That sounds I would do that
2:04:50
cool vehicle with some funny
quirks flooring, it would make
2:04:53
some very strange sounds I've
reported on this. What I could
2:04:56
only describe as a pumping and
wishing flooring it on the
2:04:59
freeway
2:05:00
was hilarious at this point I
didn't know was hilarious
2:05:03
because watching cars behind his
turn on their wipers as Ryan
2:05:07
would bless them was exhausted
water.
2:05:11
Ca because it Beto in the
hydrogen goes through the
2:05:16
water comes up pours water the
Where's the water go? So this is
2:05:20
so there's a 2022 model of one
of these.
2:05:24
Well, there you go, then comes
refilling, yeah, it only takes
2:05:27
five minutes to refill from
empty, which is pretty quick.
2:05:31
But when there's 10 cars in
front of you, you do the math.
2:05:34
And by the way, imagine that
with half our electric cars,
2:05:39
okay. What they don't tell you
is how much maintenance these
2:05:42
fueling stations require. The
hydrogen is trucked in with
2:05:45
diesel trucks and stored at such
high pressures that they're
2:05:49
constantly replacing seals. And
when they do the station goes
2:05:52
offline for days. Oh, Each
vehicle has a fuel app built in.
2:05:57
But for more accurate station
info. And then he's got a
2:06:00
website, this app would tell me
how much hydrogen a station has
2:06:04
if a station has 300 kilograms,
and is the way they do it in
2:06:07
kilograms, right? That means it
is at full capacity. If it has
2:06:10
less than 50 kilograms or less,
you're pretty much rolling the
2:06:13
dice if you need to refill a
Morotai fill up was about five
2:06:17
kilograms that's full tank of
hydrogen. As a bonus on hot
2:06:22
days, the hydrogen I can see
this happening. As a bonus on a
2:06:25
hot days the hydrogen nozzle
would freeze into the fill port
2:06:29
of your vehicle. Because of the
chilling effect of that it's a
2:06:34
common process. Yes, he's like
this. He says fun. In our area
2:06:39
of Southern California there's
only one hydrogen pipeline is
2:06:41
located where the former Toyota
dealers used to be in Torrance
2:06:45
or headquarters. However, in
Japan, Toyota is building a
2:06:48
hydrogen infrastructure with
pipelines. In my opinion,
2:06:51
hydrogen will never be a viable
fuel in the US without
2:06:55
pipelines. All the best, Steven,
wow, this isn't I've never heard
2:06:59
of this vehicle. And the Mirai
XL E has an EPA estimated range
2:07:05
of 402 miles on a single charge.
That's a big deal. Tesla's huge
2:07:10
deal. Yep. It looks nice. It's
not cheap, though.
2:07:15
Starts at the base model, which
does 357 Miles is
2:07:22
let me see, I think is four year
49,500. If you want something
2:07:29
snazzy, you're starting at the
limited or the XLR, or the XLR.
2:07:35
49,576 miles per gallon. And the
limited which I guess has a
2:07:42
little more performance $66,000
Hello, that's a jump 67 miles
2:07:49
per gallon.
2:07:51
That's pretty cool. I saw I
watched the video the other day,
2:07:54
some dude, back in the day had
his Corvette running on
2:07:57
hydrogen. And the way it
operates is the the actual
2:08:00
hydrogen in the tank, so you
could shoot with it over the
2:08:03
shoot at the tank with a
ballistic bullet. You can solve
2:08:05
it and half nothing will
explode. Nothing happens. Yeah,
2:08:08
the only way it works is there's
heaters inside the tank. And
2:08:11
when those teed up, then that
releases the hydrogen in the
2:08:15
form that is used by the engine.
Is that correct? I don't know.
2:08:21
No, to my knowledge, this is
this is your job to know these
2:08:24
things. I'm disappointed. I
know, I should know that. But I
2:08:27
don't Well, let's talk about
about these tanks. The tanks are
2:08:30
a big deal it to make these
tanks, so they need to have all
2:08:33
the pressurized hydrogen over.
Now there's that cart Does this
2:08:37
match the $7,500 California
clean air rebate? I wonder if
2:08:41
that's still the grinders data,
these incentives I can't find it
2:08:44
that'd be interesting because if
you get $15,000 worth of free
2:08:48
fuel plus $7,500 off you can
take that off the base price and
2:08:52
you do the calculation that if
it comes into around like high
2:08:55
20s That would be well well
worth it. Well it has a hydrogen
2:08:58
filled station around it has an
AST tick next next to the price.
2:09:03
So I pricing an info let's see.
2:09:07
Hmm It doesn't show anything.
That would be a California only
2:09:12
thing, wouldn't it?
2:09:14
Yeah, well, I think some other
states do it but California for
2:09:17
sure. They're encouraging people
to buy anything but gas
2:09:20
gasoline. Give me California zip
code.
2:09:24
Well, why would be
947 11 94706947079 for seven or
2:09:30
eight. Your zip is invalid.
2:09:34
NightForce right. 94532.
2:09:39
Your zip is invalid. It's this
El Sarita post office box. It's
2:09:44
in California. I'm trying to
find the location it says it's
2:09:47
into your zip code to find
dealers inventory and special
2:09:50
offers near you. How about nice,
how about this 902100 Here we
2:09:56
go. They got they got stuff in
LA
2:10:03
Okay, well let's let's do this
exercises. We're doing this
2:10:07
where is the nearest hydrogen
filled tank around here? You
2:10:10
tell me Look, I don't know. I
don't see any evidence of
2:10:16
of any any rebates. You got a
college grad rebate a military
2:10:21
rebate
2:10:24
they may have gotten there I've
given up on the on the hydrogen
2:10:27
rebate. I think they've given up
on hydrogen at least for the
2:10:30
moment hydro gene is the way to
go man, these these cars are
2:10:34
going to be the shit in the EU
hydro gene is what we're running
2:10:37
everything on.
2:10:39
So let's go to electric vehicles
then for a moment as the as Elon
2:10:44
Musk. Hey, how's that Twitter
deal going? Has he destroyed
2:10:47
Twitter yet?
2:10:49
He sent a note to his employees.
There was quite a quite a talk
2:10:54
on CNBC. He feels super bad
about the economy, though he's
2:10:58
cutting 10% and forcing
everybody to work 40 hours a
2:11:01
month a week is horrible. And
2:11:05
and so he doesn't like the way
the economy is going. This came
2:11:09
up in a q&a with the president
who fielded the question quite
2:11:13
well, considering his mental
state. And here's some audio of
2:11:17
it, including the question is
asked. He has a super bad
2:11:21
feeling about the US economy.
2:11:24
Say Elon Musk has seen what the
economy Jamie Dimon.
2:11:29
Well, let me tell you while he
was talking about that Ford is
2:11:32
increasing their investment
overwhelmingly, I think Ford is
2:11:36
increasing investment and
beerbelly new electric vehicles
2:11:40
6000 new employees union
employees I might add in the
2:11:44
Midwest, the former Chrysler
Corporation still on this, they
2:11:49
are also making similar
investments and electric
2:11:52
vehicles. Intel is valued at
20,000 new jobs for making
2:11:57
computer chips. So you know,
2:12:01
lot's of luck in his trip to the
moon. I mean, I don't I mean
2:12:05
so what why did he say that?
First of all, he's going to Mars
2:12:10
not the moon
2:12:12
I think no, I think it's part of
the either the Artemis project
2:12:16
or somebody there is a mucho So
is he getting his his contract
2:12:19
cut now that he had a big mouth
2:12:22
he's got a big mouth is that the
one that I'm I'm more interested
2:12:26
in? Is the way he's called out
the SEC as a bunch of
2:12:32
I don't know what he called them
names. He's literally this is
2:12:35
just not a smart thing to do.
Typically, my experiences I
2:12:39
worked in the government and
I've worked with guys who are
2:12:43
who worked in the government,
lots of them and I know what
2:12:46
type of mentalities there is
like the low Napoleon's low
2:12:51
Eichmann's kind of guys don't
take they get a as the term
2:12:55
would be a hard on for someone.
And they'll start going after
2:13:00
him and making their life
miserable. And they can do it
2:13:02
from from a bureaucratic
position.
2:13:06
They haven't done this with
musk, and I think is going to
2:13:09
happen. And he's going to be
apologizing profusely, and he's
2:13:12
going to shut up. Maybe not.
Maybe since I got more money,
2:13:16
he's got to under $77 billion
dollars as his net worth more or
2:13:19
less changes on a day to day
basis. But that's it. And so
2:13:23
he's, you know, up there. And so
he could drop billions into
2:13:28
fighting him. And just as a
mean, spirited person. I don't
2:13:33
know. I don't know how you know,
he's gonna He's asking for
2:13:36
trouble. I don't know why he
just doesn't shut up and enjoy
2:13:38
himself. Well, you know, my
stance is because he's already
2:13:42
on the payroll, and he's doing
this with a purpose. And he's
2:13:45
leading the blind and the stupid
2:13:50
Oh, maybe I want to introduce a
new Dutch term from the old
2:13:53
country.
2:13:55
How she is Melichar how she
Melichar how she is Melkor how
2:14:00
Sheesh, yep. Melkor Melkor. So
how she is is poems, little
2:14:06
homes, homes, apartments, homes,
how she a home is a house and a
2:14:11
smaller house is a house you
2:14:14
Melkor means milker.
2:14:17
House milkers this has been a
thing as long as I've spoken
2:14:20
Dutch have heard about this.
This is always looked down upon
2:14:24
as the A holes who buy up lots
of real estate, particularly in
2:14:27
Amsterdam, to milk, milk these
homes, usually by putting lots
2:14:34
of
2:14:37
bunk beds in and renting at
crazy prices to students. And
2:14:42
this is exactly this term is
being used again. In fact, one
2:14:47
of the princes probably have the
same term in the United States.
2:14:51
Really different slightly
different. Yeah, it's called
2:14:53
shithead.
2:14:56
Translation. Well, now we know
that thing that big investment
2:14:59
firm
2:15:00
RMS and banks have gotten into
this. But there's and so it's
2:15:03
horrible. The rents in New York
City, millennials getting priced
2:15:09
right out of their apartments.
If you're already if you already
2:15:12
have, if you're paying $2,400 A
month between two people who are
2:15:16
on, you know, reasonably low
wages and it goes up 30% That's
2:15:20
$800 400 a person that's just
not attainable. So, you know,
2:15:26
people are looking for other
places to live. And there's
2:15:29
something pointed out by
2:15:31
the Pacific Standard Magazine, a
trend in rental apartments. And
2:15:38
I'm sure millennials will tell
us, but apparently, a rental
2:15:42
apartment no longer
automatically includes a
2:15:46
refrigerator.
2:15:48
You have to bring your own
fridge now.
2:15:52
Oh, ah, that is very strange.
2:15:59
Ah, interesting.
2:16:03
So, now you're just moving to a
new apartment, you got to buy a
2:16:08
refrigerator. And when you move
out, you have to take it with
2:16:11
you to your next place that
involves incompetence. The idea
2:16:14
as a way as grounds or free
refrigerator for the next
2:16:18
residents. Nobody's gonna take a
refrigerator out. Oh, my
2:16:22
goodness, I just remembered
something else.
2:16:25
In the Netherlands. Now I'm
talking 70s 80s. When you when
2:16:29
you looked at the apartments for
rent or homes for rent, it would
2:16:34
have
2:16:35
overnight Acosta which means
2:16:39
assumption of stuff that you pay
for that. And that would always
2:16:44
be the fridge and the stove
because back in the socialist
2:16:48
country of the Netherlands, now
the crime capital of the
2:16:50
European Union, it was very
similar. If you did not get an
2:16:55
apartment with washer dryer, any
of that you had to either bring
2:16:59
your own or pay for it. And
sometimes you couldn't rent the
2:17:01
place without buying that stuff
from the previous tenant.
2:17:05
We are moving into a good
classic socialist system here.
2:17:09
Yeah, it's classic. It's so
classic.
2:17:13
Yeah, we'll continue but I had
that, you know, heard about I
2:17:17
don't know if this is socialism,
but I know as part of this kind
2:17:21
of screwball egalitarianism,
what's going on in Sweden with
2:17:26
the with Sweden gate? Not what
Sweden gate. So it's a low end
2:17:31
like you're, you're talking
about it's kind of just like day
2:17:34
to day life. Interesting gets
picks a day to day life, which
2:17:39
are, I don't know how to even
describe this one. This is like
2:17:42
a screwball story. But you'll
get a kick out of it. Sweden
2:17:47
gate one MP gate worthy of its
scandalous name, or is it more
2:17:51
of a tempest in a tea econo, you
have found something that is
2:17:55
very Swedish and very Swedish
cultural way of thinking, and
2:18:00
having relationships with each
other? As Richard tells strim,
2:18:04
historian and researcher food
culture at the Swedish
2:18:07
University of Agricultural
Sciences, they called him
2:18:10
because strangers on the
internet have found something
2:18:13
new again, to rile their
indignation, and this time, it's
2:18:16
about Swedish food culture. It's
not about strumming that
2:18:21
odoriferous fermented herring
that's considered a delicacy
2:18:24
there.
2:18:26
Stop, stop, stop, stop. So what
the hell did he say showing his
2:18:30
elite knowledge of food? What
was he talking about? Dead
2:18:34
rotten fish that they bury and
then you eat it.
2:18:38
And this time, it's about
Swedish food culture. It's not
2:18:42
about sort of strumming that
odoriferous fermented Harry, and
2:18:45
that's considered a delicacy
there. It's the Swedish habit of
2:18:49
not feeding other families
children when they're over to
2:18:51
play, and mealtime strikes.
Someone on the discussion site
2:18:55
Reddit mentioned having
experienced it. You can guess
2:18:58
the rest from Twitter to tick
tock hashtags flew in voices
2:19:02
were heard growing up as a
child, it will be really common
2:19:05
to go and play at your friend's
house. And then they will be
2:19:08
like, Oh, I'm just gonna go and
have dinner. I'll be back in 30
2:19:11
and they will just leave you in
their room at Swedish pop star
2:19:14
Zara Larsson and a tick tock
addressing Sweden gate professor
2:19:18
tells him also remembers the
practice from his own childhood.
2:19:22
It was quite common. And I have
been waiting in many rooms for
2:19:26
my friends to finish their meal.
2:19:30
And this is now a controversy
somehow Yeah, it's a big
2:19:33
scandal. And but it's it's the
next or not the Nexus but I
2:19:39
think the the origins of the
scandal that are interesting to
2:19:42
me because we've all known about
the egalitarian ism and which is
2:19:47
part of the Democrat ethos by
the way, you know, equality,
2:19:50
equity, liberty and equality and
justice is Democrat, liberty and
2:19:56
freedoms is Republican, which is
the
2:20:00
Real philosophical differences
between the two. And but a gala
2:20:04
terian ism always leads to
weirdness. In fact, I remember
2:20:07
the first time I flew in
Icelandic air, I could get I was
2:20:11
being flown over so I could have
gotten a business or upgrade
2:20:16
now. No, everybody has to be in
the same class. I
2:20:20
was saying you can't have new
classes. Oh my god. No. It was a
2:20:24
egalitarian. And the same thing.
When you go to Sweden you have
2:20:26
to you have to understand this
is egalitarian thing and this is
2:20:30
what they're talking about here.
And but the rationale for it is
2:20:33
is pure idiotic idiocy, this
say, okay. We asked him why a
2:20:38
country that tops the rankings
for happiness and family
2:20:42
friendliness might seem so
stingy in their hospitality. He
2:20:47
pointed us to Sweden's noted
egalitarian ism. If your kids
2:20:51
come home and eat with me a lot,
then suddenly I have provided
2:20:57
them more than you do for my
kids. There is a sort of
2:21:01
inequality. This equality
thought is very important up
2:21:07
here in Sweden. So I help you by
saying that no, your kid has to
2:21:13
go home and eat because then you
don't owe me and he says to be
2:21:17
sure the practice is far less
common than it used to be. Since
2:21:21
food has become a new symbol. In
society. We have open kitchens,
2:21:27
we like to die in our show off.
Kids are watching MasterChef. So
2:21:33
food has a totally different
meaning today, compared with
2:21:37
what it had 4050 or 60 years
ago, for Telstra, Malta pointed
2:21:42
to a small benefit to waiting in
a room for your friend to scarf
2:21:46
down lunch, you could look at
the things you could look at
2:21:50
magazine
2:21:54
how they were living in this
room? So it's quite interesting
2:21:58
to spend your time there for
seven or eight or nine minutes
2:22:01
or what it took to eat. Or you
could listen to BJ Lederman, who
2:22:05
wrote your theme music.
2:22:08
Yeah, so where they finish it?
2:22:11
The more you know. So that was
this? So I've been thinking
2:22:15
about this because i it i think
that relates, because recently
2:22:19
there's been these attacks in
the New York subway system,
2:22:21
because there's not enough
police, because they've cut back
2:22:23
on the police in New York. And
so there's people who literally
2:22:26
get an attack Oh, somebody,
nobody with regularity. Nobody
2:22:30
does anything about it. And I
think there's this is the trend
2:22:33
that this egalitarian idea which
is really rampant in Democrat
2:22:38
controlled areas, because they
push it more than anyone. And
2:22:41
the idea is why should I do
anything? When the government
2:22:45
should be doing it? We should?
Why should and if you start
2:22:49
thinking about certain things
that don't get done, because
2:22:51
nobody wants to do them. Or they
just like a days ago, they used
2:22:54
to do want to get involved and
all the rest of that. If you
2:22:57
think that the basic thought is
the government should be doing
2:23:01
this. Here's the government.
Here's an example. Here's an
2:23:04
example. When I am out and I
walked the dog, if I see trash,
2:23:09
I pick it up. Bring it home, and
I throw it out. Yeah, I believe
2:23:13
the trash is there. First of
all, because someone threw it
2:23:15
out thinking the government will
clean it up. And everyone else
2:23:18
looked and went now the
government will do that.
2:23:21
Yeah.
2:23:23
Yeah, I think that's exactly
right. And this, like, the
2:23:26
government should do this. The
government should do that. Why
2:23:27
should I do it? Because it's
just like the Swedes thinking,
2:23:31
Why should I be feeding their
kids? Now it becomes an unequal
2:23:36
it's not it's not equitable.
It's not there's no equity here.
2:23:39
I feed their kids. I don't feed
my kids.
2:23:43
So it's unfair. It's unfair. So
inequitable, interesting. So I
2:23:47
just thought that was an
extension of what's to come.
2:23:51
Yeah.
2:23:53
Well, skipping ahead, even the
Prime Minister of the socialist
2:23:57
New Zealand country
2:24:00
I like saying it that way. I
just ended up you seem that came
2:24:04
came to America. And now that
she's a she's unleashed the
2:24:08
masses, I guess, they can
travel. She's traveling. And as
2:24:11
she went all around, she was
talking to everybody went to the
2:24:14
UN. I was she was maybe on the
Late Show, I think with or is
2:24:19
going to be on the Late Show
with Stephen Colbert. And she's
2:24:23
having a good little time she
brought along a whole bunch you
2:24:25
know, it's a of course it's for
the the Chamber of Commerce
2:24:29
obviously this is you know,
America is very important
2:24:31
country for us and the socialist
went to lots of important people
2:24:36
in New York was meant to be
about trade and tourists. After
2:24:41
who COVID Nightmare back home
this morning. She woke up
2:24:44
finally here in the city that
never sleeps here to buddy up to
2:24:48
the states and open more doors
to trade. I'm gonna say how's
2:24:52
your day going?
2:24:54
Fantastic. Like the doors to $10
trillion investment firm Black
2:24:59
Rock.
2:25:00
But I don't is not just a brand
ambassador and she's the prime
2:25:03
minister with power and those
she's meeting know it. She
2:25:07
little meeting with Larry Fink
our black rock. Oh, brother. Now
2:25:12
why would she need to go there?
2:25:16
No reason except to sell out our
country. I'm gonna show my
2:25:20
school by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could
2:25:24
do that. Oh yeah that'd be fun
2:25:33
yes and in fact we do have a few
people have thanked for show
2:25:36
1457
2:25:39
And
2:25:41
it's a good number. Starting
with Tim Landreth in Lincoln,
2:25:44
Nebraska is $140.40 Kevin
draggers in Keystone heights,
2:25:52
Florida.
2:25:54
My thumb hits you Okay. All
right.
2:25:58
Want to live in 11 Keystone
heights he's got a birthday
2:26:01
coming up.
2:26:04
Jared is Saviano in north
Arlington? New Jersey. Oh 100
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Joseph Gwaltney and dendron
Virginia 50 People simple. First
2:26:15
time donation needed the
douching couldn't do that.
2:26:20
You've been deed deuced
2:26:23
Sir John Roman 100 Carrie
Jackson and Waterton Tennessee
2:26:27
100. Benjamin Unitas now nitrous
in San Francisco 9999.
2:26:36
Let's see if something's got
something in there. He says dude
2:26:39
named Ben he saw 33 Zendesk
tickets open.
2:26:43
When you see the 33 You know,
and that's why you sent it. A
2:26:46
triple of it. 9999 beautiful.
They go. Jonathan Peckham in
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Bristol, Rhode Island 808 as the
boobs donation. Kenny Hall stead
2:26:57
in Elizabeth City, New North
Carolina and North North
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Carolina boob lover boop
2:27:03
808 Anonymous in Washington DC.
Bobby Joe Biden 808
2:27:09
Cory Harrison in Kinston, North
Carolina North Carolina guy
2:27:15
these North Carolinian guys I'm
telling you what he says. He
2:27:18
says in the morning had to get
on the boob train
2:27:22
808 And then our last North
Carolinian
2:27:27
Sir Kevin McLaughlin, a Duke
Aluna lover of American blues
2:27:31
and Locust 808 I think he's got
something going on there in that
2:27:35
state. Why and Kartini in
Torrington, Connecticut 7421.
2:27:41
Joseph aricie In Tiago Montana.
Got a birthday 6666 Sir Brian
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Tobias and Baron of chiefs
kingdom and Gardner Kansas
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to the 888 Brian Furley 5510
Michael gates 52 ad we're gonna
2:28:01
see from I think we don't have
it but Oakland Oh no, no. Denver
2:28:06
52 ad is the Mile High donation.
Ah.
2:28:11
Right. We used to do that it was
one of our gimmick 5280 feet
2:28:15
Mile High.
2:28:17
Sir Robert Charles, deputy in
deputy deputy Indiana, Indiana
2:28:22
has got the greatest town names.
He's got a birthday. Now. His
2:28:26
Dame Christina pearl of the
clear blue sky blue skies has a
2:28:31
birthday, characterless host in
Richmond, Texas to do 123 Robert
2:28:36
Toronto in San Francisco. And he
is 505 and he's
2:28:44
promoting the real Anthony Fauci
book by Robert F. Kennedy and
2:28:49
everyone who reads this book
always goes nuts. I read it and
2:28:53
I thought time to do another
show.
2:28:56
Villareal Villareal $50 He's in
Texas somewhere. I think Loretta
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Vandenberg and Provence all
Louisiana 50 These are all $50
2:29:06
donors. I just do name and
location and a Drake in
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Whitestone. Indiana. Sure, hold
my beer. appropriately in
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Austin, Texas. Chris pack in
Roche Harbor, Washington. I
2:29:20
think they call it roach. Joseph
or an or Nate or nailless or
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nailless I guess in Valparaiso,
Indiana. Stephen Karami in El
2:29:33
Cajon, California. James, Sharon
meadow and Napa knock New York.
2:29:38
Matthew Janice zoo ski, sir
Matthew I'm sure by better be in
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Chicago. Michael,
2:29:47
below Golub Gollop
2:29:51
in Glen Burnie, Maryland, Andrew
Watson in Fairhope, Alaska, Troy
2:29:57
Watson from parts unknown and
serve Brett
2:30:00
barrel, who was once in Oklahoma
City, I think maybe in Florida
2:30:03
now but he comes up with their
last that check by check
2:30:07
donation. $50 I want to thank
all these people for making show
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1457 reality and and prosperous
Thank you very much every one of
2:30:16
you Derek Hulse who's in
Richmond, Texas. He said this is
2:30:19
his second donation you forgot
to ask for a deducing on the
2:30:22
first one. Could he have a
retroactive one? Yes.
2:30:26
You've been deed douche thanks
to these producers who supported
2:30:29
the show. This is this is the
way it works. We bring you the
2:30:32
value we deconstruct you can see
that in our mission statement at
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no agenda.net. And you return
that value in whatever way it
2:30:41
works for you time, talent,
treasure, we love the treasure.
2:30:44
Put your and $5 is just as
valuable to us if it's valuable
2:30:48
to you. That's how it works. The
value for value I in fact, I
2:30:51
want to call it the value for
value standard work.
2:30:56
What do you think?
2:30:58
kind of rip off but since I
think they were the ones
2:31:00
promoting it the best? I would
say that's probably you know I
2:31:05
do if before we go into the
thing, there's a clip that I
2:31:08
should play because I have this
new segment I want to do and so
2:31:11
we're talking about how to get
money into the podcast and keep
2:31:14
the podcast going pay for the
servers that do what you have to
2:31:16
do. This is a new segment I want
to do called out WW WP Okay,
2:31:23
which is what's wrong with
podcasting?
2:31:28
And this is a short clip with
like the segment already can we
2:31:32
do it right before the podcast
and 2.0 segments. So we have a
2:31:36
problem reaction solution.
2:31:39
I don't know if the DS one this
is pretty good. This is Ben
2:31:42
Shapiro talking about Amber
Heard being named ambassador of
2:31:46
the ACLU for being abused. And I
just want you to listen to this
2:31:50
short clip and tell me what you
think's wrong with podcasting.
2:31:53
The ACLU is bestowal of an
ambassadorship and scribe for
2:31:56
hire services upon a scandal
plagued actor willing to pay
2:31:58
seven figures to transform
herself into a victims advocate
2:32:01
and advance her acting career,
her push for a publication date
2:32:03
that coincided with the release
of Aquaman as part of the
2:32:06
group's continuing decline. Once
a bastion of free speech and
2:32:08
high minded ideals, the ACLU has
become in many respects a
2:32:11
caricature of its former self.
This, of course, is exactly
2:32:15
right. But so has large swathes
of the left, the left used to
2:32:17
say that free speech matter and
truth mattered. And now neither
2:32:20
of those things are true. Now
you're just supposed to shut up
2:32:23
and believe it's always to shut
up and believe that of course is
2:32:25
the cause of lefties to think
that things like free speech and
2:32:28
truth mattered not not so much
anymore. But there is one
2:32:31
overriding truth when you are
buying something from a woman in
2:32:34
your life.
2:32:36
This is just for me. And that
means my go to is Blue Nile,
2:32:40
whether you're ready to pop the
question or you're just
2:32:42
celebrating a milestone on fine
jewelry as unique as she is with
2:32:45
the modern convenience of online
shopping and Blue Nile. Okay.
2:32:49
Can I answer your question? What
is wrong with podcasting? I love
2:32:53
this segment. Couple things. One
is, first of all, what is
2:32:58
amazing to me, is the adulation
that Ben Shapiro receives from
2:33:04
real Republicans. And I'm
talking about rich Republicans,
2:33:08
elite Republicans, I know
several.
2:33:12
Ben, I go to their parties, I
love them. But the adulation
2:33:16
over Shapiro is mind boggling.
Because of this very clip that
2:33:21
we play here who gives a shit
about the story, but then to
2:33:25
fold it right in seamlessly as
if the story was written to
2:33:31
promote Blue Diamond whatever,
whatever this Nile Blue Nile,
2:33:35
whatever this is, is incredibly
lame shows that there's possible
2:33:42
compromise. And overall the
daily wire which is his outfit,
2:33:46
I'm really disappointed in those
guys. They have a what I think
2:33:50
would be a very amusing video
documentary by Matt Walsh. You
2:33:56
know what, what is woman? And he
goes all over the world talks to
2:33:59
a lot of nut jobs. There's tons
of clips everywhere. If you want
2:34:03
to see it, I would want to pay
money. I paid $30 to see 2000
2:34:08
mules, fine, I pay $30. You
know, give me an opportunity to
2:34:13
watch it and then determine what
I thought it was worth and pay
2:34:15
later. That would be the value
for value standard. But no, you
2:34:19
have to sign up and subscribe to
the daily wire. So there's
2:34:23
something wrong with them in
general, although some extremely
2:34:27
successful
2:34:29
I think they're stupid. I think
this was the Republican stupid.
2:34:34
Seriously, this is a great
example and argue the point of
2:34:37
Republicans are stupid. Yeah,
that's pretty obvious. So what
2:34:41
did that piece he goes right
from one thing? I mean, the way
2:34:44
he does that, that segue is it?
I mean, yeah, it's seamless is
2:34:49
beyond seamless. But at the same
time, it's shameful. Troll troll
2:34:56
Logan five Adam careful. This
could result in a podcast war
2:34:59
between
2:35:00
In na and Shapiro, oh please.
Oh, please. Oh please, these
2:35:05
people don't talk about us.
We're way beneath them. Because
2:35:11
that was a great time to buy
gold.
2:35:15
It could have folded into that
easily. Now you know what
2:35:18
actually the right
2:35:21
that's not gonna happen because
it's a great time
2:35:28
I love the value for value
model. It keeps us on our toes.
2:35:31
It keeps us excited. We don't
have to have meetings there was
2:35:34
a meeting about that ad. And
there's meetings about all these
2:35:38
stupid things. So what's wrong?
The whole premise is wrong. What
2:35:41
do you see as wrong? Anything
anything you want to add to
2:35:44
this? No, I think it just speaks
for itself. So thank you to all
2:35:50
of our producers also the
executive and Associate
2:35:52
Executive Producers if you'd
like to become a producer please
2:35:55
consider that also under $50
Very welcome are sustaining
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2:36:01
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2:36:20
here's our now complete list for
today. Mark Hardwick turned 66
2:36:23
Last week Kendra Fisher Happy
Birthday to were studly husband
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Ryan who turned 40 on June 3.
Devon woods 22 The fourth Sir
2:36:31
Robert Charles deputy Happy
Birthday to Dame Christina pearl
2:36:34
of the clear blue skies we also
celebrate on June 4. Errol Happy
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Birthday to his wife Nikki
celebrating today Troy Whitmore
2:36:41
turns 61 Today, Joseph Rizzy
will be celebrating tomorrow
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Kyle Rainey will be 26 on the
seventh and Kevin draggers Happy
2:36:49
Birthday to his mom in advance.
She'll be celebrating on June 8
2:36:52
Happy birthday from everybody
here at the best podcast in the
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universe.
2:36:57
title changes but we do have
four knights to induct here. So
2:37:03
a double double bladed double
bladed that's the one I was
2:37:07
talking about. Greg Lycus Mark
Hardwick, Troy Whitmore and
2:37:13
Devin would gentlemen hop up
here on the podium all four of
2:37:16
you have become a knights of the
no agenda roundtable thanks for
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your support of the show in the
amount of $1,000 or more I'm
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very proud to announce the Kate
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hi and Sir Devon the Silver
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State drop out gentlemen for
you. We've got hookers and blow
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yes, you already feasting on it.
I can see the mutton in me to go
2:37:54
ahead you will enjoy that and
write this down. No AGENDA
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send off the handsome signet
ring that you now deserve as a
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knight or a dame
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and along with that comes from
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important correspondence with
and of course the certificate of
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authenticity, which some people
frame and put on their wall. I
2:38:14
saw it myself personally,
yesterday by coincidence, but
2:38:19
what are you clapping for? I'm
clapping for them.
2:38:24
No
2:38:32
See, we have thought we had
another report somewhere but I
2:38:36
guess not. We do have one that
came in from Chicago. ITM Adam
2:38:41
and John coming to you from the
first Shrawan Gum.
2:38:46
Gum mountain meetup. Not even
close shout out to Justin's
2:38:49
family for hosting us here at
their beautiful farm and
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homestead and I'm gonna pass it
along. I TM y'all this is a T
2:38:56
dog in the chawan Gokce rvsp ICT
Steve from Woodstock, New York.
2:39:01
No longer a douche bag. Just to
record Bono from Shang gum in
2:39:06
the morning. Love your show
having a good meet up here in
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the Hudson Valley. Josh never
listened.
2:39:14
gave you money
2:39:17
in the morning crackpot and
buzzkill This is gay baby from
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New Paltz. Megan, my husband
forces me to listen to your
2:39:23
podcast.
2:39:25
This is Todd in the morning
round in and out from the in at
2:39:28
the ridge. It's been like a
potty.
2:39:32
Oh nice. I'd like people who
never listen and still donate
2:39:35
the best kind.
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You can still probably catch the
COA Indianapolis in a tribal
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meetup, which is being held the
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curious Gaga George 530 at the
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bridge brew works in
Fayetteville, West Virginia. And
2:39:53
then on Thursday, our next show
day in New York separate times
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six o'clock Eastern Chazz
Palminteri Italian restaurant.
2:40:00
In New York, New York, Duke of
the South, Sir Patrick Coble
2:40:03
organizing that'll be high end
people go check that out.
2:40:08
And we might as well do the
Friday June 10. I must be Hi
2:40:11
seven o'clock Nick Sorrell he's
wonderful saloon and Grill in
2:40:14
Toronto, Ontario, Canada. Coming
up in the next weeks we got
2:40:19
mentioned buyer mention Germany
on the 11th. Toronto, Canada on
2:40:24
the 11th.
2:40:26
Do we have any other foreign
meetups we got several in Canada
2:40:30
good to see that.
2:40:33
It's just it's chock a block. We
now have August 2 Victoria BC on
2:40:37
the calendar. This is fantastic.
These are the no agenda meetups.
2:40:41
You don't need a dating app you
don't need
2:40:44
psychological help. If you
attend these meetings regularly,
2:40:48
I think your amygdala will enjoy
it. And if you can't find one at
2:40:53
no agenda meetups.com start one
yourself. They're easy and
2:40:56
always guaranteed a party.
Sometimes you want to go hang
2:41:01
out with all day.
2:41:06
You wouldn't be when you won't
be triggered.
2:41:11
You wouldn't be
2:41:13
used this
2:41:17
is like
2:41:20
so bad news.
2:41:23
But I do not have any ISOs
2:41:27
Wow, is it coincidence? You
don't have an ISO either? No.
2:41:31
That means we get to go pot
liquid to the awesome old ISO or
2:41:35
we could just use this one. I'm
living in a twilight zone which
2:41:39
we play us. That's fine. We're
gonna work. He hasn't gotten
2:41:43
much love from us for a while.
And we certainly do love Alex
2:41:47
Jones. He's been instrumental to
this program.
2:41:51
Instrumental I'm not sure about
that. I think so I think he has.
2:41:57
Hey, what's wrong with this is
it's BS today. It's bugs
2:42:01
tomorrow. I'm not quite sure
what's going on with California
2:42:04
but I love and I've been waiting
for someone to find a story
2:42:07
about this. I could play the
clip from this is what your
2:42:10
state is doing. Now I'm living
oops. That two bumblebees are
2:42:15
now being classified as fish and
California
2:42:19
is an endangered species. Until
now the state's Endangered
2:42:22
Species Act only listed birds,
mammals, fish, amphibians,
2:42:25
reptiles and plants, not
insects. closer look at the
2:42:29
definition of fish is the code
includes mollusks, crustaceans
2:42:33
and vertebrate. So bumblebees
qualify as terrestrial
2:42:37
invertebrate under the fish
umbrella, it can be protected
2:42:40
under the Act so they're getting
creative
2:42:46
how does this that's very
interesting. The fish is very
2:42:49
humbled a lot of bumblebees
around my house they're really
2:42:51
fascinating be my I find it
really interesting that they
2:42:56
classify that as
2:42:59
as fish now, I mean, because
then you can just classify bugs
2:43:02
as fish.
2:43:05
The pescatarians good of the
Bumblebee see you're missing the
2:43:08
point. They had this poor
Bumblebee and they're they're
2:43:11
kind of endangered because
people keep whacking him with
2:43:13
tennis rackets when they see one
because they're easy to hit. And
2:43:17
so we can't do that anymore. And
so we had to do something but
2:43:22
but then he figured out there
was a bug Wait, we can't do that
2:43:25
with bugs. And so they came up
with a new because we want to
2:43:28
protect everything here in
California if we can.
2:43:33
I was just on reclassify that
cockroach. Well. Oh, I'm seeing
2:43:39
memes. Now. The cockroach
milking is trending.
2:43:44
That you can milk cockroaches,
and it's more nutritious than
2:43:48
cow's milk.
2:43:50
Oh, yeah, absolutely.
2:43:53
You can see that.
2:43:55
I can. I can see it. Do you
think that's true?
2:43:59
I hope not. But this is trending
cockroach milk. Instead of a
2:44:05
baby formula. Get these kids
started early.
2:44:10
is great. But the cockroaches in
a blender. The milk will be in
2:44:13
there to be good to go.
2:44:15
These new high power blenders on
the pack that will blend will
2:44:20
blend. Oh goodness. I only have
one last tip. I think it'd be a
2:44:26
good clip. It's a little long.
Okay. The Maricopa election
2:44:30
fraud clip maybe just to give
people a little idea that what's
2:44:33
going on? Yes. Still going on.
These guys are still oh, these
2:44:36
guys, you know. Oh, you mean the
stolen election stolen election?
2:44:41
No, please don't say it. So
Newly uncovered records from
2:44:45
Maricopa County show 19,000
Invalid ballots were counted in
2:44:49
Arizona's 2020 general election.
An election integrity group says
2:44:53
the amount is enough to have
potentially swayed results in
2:44:57
the state's presidential
election and today's Jeremy
2:44:59
Sandberg
2:45:00
Reports. Arizona law requires
ballots to be received no later
2:45:04
than 7pm On election day by the
county to be considered valid.
2:45:08
Yet Newly uncovered records
document over 20,000 ballots
2:45:11
were transported from the US
Postal Service after Election
2:45:14
Day, of which only 934 were
rejected by Maricopa County. In
2:45:20
Arizona as 2020 presidential
election President Joe Biden
2:45:23
came in with 10,457 more votes
than former President Donald
2:45:28
Trump. It is impossible to know
if the results would be
2:45:31
different if the late ballots
had not been counted. Verity
2:45:34
vote obtained documents from the
county and reported their
2:45:37
findings. In response to
requests Maricopa County made
2:45:41
valid receipt of delivery
documents available for public
2:45:43
inspection from October 30.
through November 6 2020. Verity
2:45:48
vote investigators notice the
documents from November 4 2020,
2:45:52
the day after the election were
missing. It took nearly seven
2:45:56
months to get the documents
after Verity vote made multiple
2:45:59
requests to Maricopa County for
the November 4 receipt of
2:46:02
delivery. The receipt shows
18,000 ballots were picked up
2:46:06
from the post office the day
after the November 3 election.
2:46:10
The county also documents
receiving 1000 ballots on
2:46:12
November 5 and 1500 ballots on
November 6, combining for a
2:46:17
total of 20,500 late ballots,
but the actual number could be
2:46:21
much higher to a letter from the
county recorder in response to
2:46:25
Verity votes document requests,
says the November 4 receipt
2:46:28
provided does not represent all
ballots received that day.
2:46:32
Another anomaly as the number of
ballots collected November 4
2:46:35
Compared to other days around
that time. Voters were
2:46:38
instructed to mail ballots by
October 27 To be sure their
2:46:41
ballots arrived on time. By
October 30. The number of
2:46:45
ballots coming by mail dropped
sharply but saw a massive spike
2:46:48
the day after the election.
Could you please tell me where
2:46:51
this clip came from?
2:46:54
New Tang Dynasty ha so we have
we have to get our the news
2:47:00
about our own country from from
the Chinese. Well, it's yeah
2:47:05
it's a it's related the epoch
time so that's just sad, bro.
2:47:11
Oh, bro. Yeah.
2:47:14
Although it turns out that
there's a in Pennsylvania there
2:47:18
was a ballot stuffing operation
being run by
2:47:23
some Republican surprise. Did
both sides do it? Surprise
2:47:27
surprise. Of course. Both sides
do it. We know it. Everybody
2:47:30
knows that.
2:47:32
Hey, yeah. Alright everybody.
That's it for deconstruction for
2:47:36
today. But we look forward to
meeting you all back here on
2:47:40
Thursday. Up next. We've got
live on the no agenda stream
2:47:43
grumpy old Ben's the 2022
reunion tour. Oh, my God. Darren
2:47:51
O'Neill and Ryan bemrose. Oh,
no, no. Oh my goodness.
2:47:58
End of show mixes didn't receive
any new ones. So you get a Jeff
2:48:01
Smith extravaganza today.
2:48:03
Please enjoy that. Coming to you
from the heart of the Texas Hill
2:48:06
Country. FEMA Region number six
in the morning, everybody. I'm
2:48:09
Adam curry. And from Northern
Silicon Valley where it stopped
2:48:12
raining as the Go grab this rain
stick here. No, no, the RSA is
2:48:17
gonna get you. Jesse DeVore
Dvorak, we return on Thursday
2:48:21
right here on no agenda. Please
remember us at the
2:48:23
vortech.org/na Until then adios
mofos
2:48:31
in such
2:48:47
be ready, be the one
2:48:50
the best beauty the friend and
everyone
2:48:58
around us.
2:49:01
Brave pushing aside an open mind
be like everyone
2:49:12
down on bended knee,
2:49:15
bear the brunt of all the
burdens, like broken one should
2:49:20
be
2:49:22
with blinded loyalty. Back to
back to you for a better life
2:49:29
beyond your freedom
2:49:36
for someone else
2:49:50
of the burdens, like
2:49:56
lions
2:50:00
Boston
2:50:25
sometimes sometimes a drag when
you're on the face bag What's
2:50:31
that jingle jangle noise it's
your coin
2:50:56
media assassination
2:51:03
nation
2:51:08
next Congress
2:51:22
now
2:51:31
who is
2:51:39
as fast as?
2:52:06
Morning
2:52:29
to know
2:53:05
MoPhO boruch.org/in A
2:53:10
living in a Twilight Zone