Cover for No Agenda Show 1457: MAGATARD
June 5th, 2022 • 2h 53m

1457: MAGATARD

Transcript

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

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

0:00
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
2:26:08
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
2:26:51
Bristol, Rhode Island 808 as the boobs donation. Kenny Hall stead
2:26:57
in Elizabeth City, New North Carolina and North North
2:27:00
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
2:27:47
Tobias and Baron of chiefs kingdom and Gardner Kansas
2:27:54
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
2:29:02
Vandenberg and Provence all Louisiana 50 These are all $50
2:29:06
donors. I just do name and location and a Drake in
2:29:08
Whitestone. Indiana. Sure, hold my beer. appropriately in
2:29:13
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
2:29:27
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
2:29:44
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
2:30:10
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
2:30:36
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
2:35:58
donations and people who want to remain anonymous more
2:36:01
information sing the jingle with me now evora.org/and nobody go
2:36:07
karma for everybody who needs it. You've got
2:36:11
karma
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
2:36:26
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
2:36:38
Birthday to his wife Nikki celebrating today Troy Whitmore
2:36:41
turns 61 Today, Joseph Rizzy will be celebrating tomorrow
2:36:45
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
2:36:55
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
2:37:19
your support of the show in the amount of $1,000 or more I'm
2:37:22
very proud to announce the Kate v as Sir nerd works Sir Mark of
2:37:26
Parker County Texas sir must be hi and Sir Devon the Silver
2:37:31
State drop out gentlemen for you. We've got hookers and blow
2:37:33
rent boys and Chardonnay by request grilled pork tenderloin
2:37:37
and Saki you know the super seven cookies and vodka warm
2:37:41
beer and cold women Polish potato vodka, redheads and Rhys
2:37:44
beers and blondes Rubenesque women and Rosae bong hits and
2:37:47
bourbon sparkling cider Ness scores ginger ale and turbos and
2:37:49
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
2:37:57
nation.com/rings We need to get your information where we can
2:38:00
send off the handsome signet ring that you now deserve as a
2:38:03
knight or a dame
2:38:06
and along with that comes from wax that you can seal your very
2:38:08
important correspondence with and of course the certificate of
2:38:11
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
2:38:53
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
2:39:10
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
2:39:20
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.
2:39:38
You can still probably catch the COA Indianapolis in a tribal
2:39:42
meetup, which is being held the blind owl brewery in
2:39:45
Indianapolis, Indiana. Also the curious Gaga George 530 at the
2:39:50
bridge brew works in Fayetteville, West Virginia. And
2:39:53
then on Thursday, our next show day in New York separate times
2:39:56
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
0:00 0:00