0:00
businessman woman a Latin accent
0:06
Adam curry, John C. Dvorak. June
19 2022 This is your hoard
0:11
winning keep my nation media
assassination episode 1461 This
0:15
is no agenda.
0:18
The P word and broadcasting live
from the heart of the Texas hill
0:22
country here in FEMA Region
number six in the morning,
0:24
everybody. I'm Adam curry, and
from Northern Silicon Valley
0:28
where it's Father's Day Happy
Father's Day, everybody. I'm
0:31
John C, divorce.
0:33
Buzzkill.
0:37
You know what I've noticed,
increasingly, but this year was
0:40
really apparent. I don't know if
you have this.
0:44
I find myself
0:47
and many other fathers I know
all sending Happy Father's Day
0:52
texts to each other.
0:55
No, no, nobody else would do it.
Well, that's kind of the point
0:58
isn't.
1:00
There's something about Father's
Day, we're over time. You know,
1:05
you used to get maybe even your
wife would give you a gift.
1:10
If it was the mother of your
children.
1:15
You know, it would be it seemed
like it was a lot more and these
1:18
days now. It's just a bunch of
dads texting each other. Hey,
1:21
bro. Thanks. Yeah, Happy
Father's Day, man. I mean, I got
1:24
a GIF this morning. I love my
daughter, but I got a GIF.
1:27
Yeah, what a GIF. I got a GIF.
Yeah, like yeah, like I love
1:31
your dad on Instagram with GIF
of different pictures.
1:35
Some work is bird nothing. No,
of course. It's very cute. I
1:38
love it. And I have to say one
of my stepdaughters also sent me
1:42
a nice message, but in general
1520 different messages from
1:47
different dads. I think I think
it's a trend.
1:52
And we have to because I'm
sending it out to everybody.
1:55
Hello. Hello, Happy Father's Day
to you.
2:00
As you as you pointed out in the
newsletter.
2:03
Now, we also should say Happy
Juneteenth
2:09
same day, I didn't realize that
Juneteenth was made a beneficial
2:14
holiday yes Jeremiah Biden Yes,
yes, yes official why? Well,
2:19
because black lives matter bro
2:24
what's wrong with the
Emancipation Proclamation?
2:26
That's when the freedom of the
that's when the slaves are
2:30
literally freed. When you're
gonna go eat you're going to
2:33
argue with you you're telling me
we're celebrating a holiday that
2:39
this is like celebrating the end
of World War Two by finding the
2:43
last Japanese hanging out the
tree 20 years later something
2:47
and the wars going on?
2:49
It is kind of it? Yes, of
course. It's exactly what it is.
2:54
But
2:56
we're not celebrating the actual
end of slavery which would be
2:59
the Emancipation Proclamation
because because why? Why? I'll
3:02
tell you I'll tell you why
Lincoln was a Republican. That's
3:05
why
3:07
oh, that's a good point. We'll
also it was George Floyd and
3:10
knew we had to pick a day and we
had to do something back to the
3:13
masturbation proclamation white
dream up. This is crazy, like
3:16
local celebration has done in
Texas as kind of a lark
3:22
use is celebrating stupidity as
far as I'm concerned. And I'm
3:25
sorry that anyone finds a fence
that offensive. No, I don't
3:28
think dummies I didn't know
though that the slaves were
3:32
freed and they were exploiting
them. And just so you know, we
3:36
did cover this in depth last
year. Yeah. Your clips actually
3:40
your I see your clips. Right.
Here's a June Juneteenth Biden
3:44
Gaff. Let's see what that was.
He's going down to Texas on June
3:47
teeth, right. The first major
massacred literally speaking of
3:52
the Black Wall Street.
3:56
He's gonna have a rally.
3:59
Day keeps on giving. The dude is
well, should we should we just
4:03
talk about him real briefly
then? By the way, John, Happy
4:06
Father's Day. Happy Father's Day
to you. And Happy Father's Day
4:10
to all the listeners out there
fathers are not and the ships at
4:13
sea
4:14
and
4:16
the boots on the ground.
4:18
You're right. President Biden is
indeed the gift that keeps on
4:22
giving, just gaffe after gaffe,
and what a metaphor for the
4:26
United States with him falling
down from a stationary bike.
4:33
In what you thought it was a
real bike. It was getting off of
4:37
it. No, but it was stationary,
meaning he was standing still.
4:42
Oh, yeah, no, he stopped. He
stopped to get off the bike. But
4:44
here's what I don't understand.
As someone who knows a little
4:47
bit about the cycling sport, as
someone who has worn cycling
4:52
garb, such as the modern shoes,
I've only been using these
4:57
modern shoes for, I don't know
say
5:00
Seven years. So for seven years,
but probably for 17 years, the
5:05
concept of toe clips has not
been around. I mean, you have
5:09
shoes now that fit into that
click into your pedals. And it's
5:15
very easy to just, you know,
move your foot to the left, and
5:18
you can order the right and you
can pop it right out. But the
5:21
President for some reason is
using 1990s cycle sport
5:26
technology of toe clips, which
was which was replaced for kind
5:31
of this very reason.
5:34
Why cuz you get stuck in him.
Yes.
5:37
Huh. Yeah. Especially when you
know, if you're gonna if you
5:40
fall, you have no way to get
your foot out. If you fall with
5:43
the with the modern shoes in the
modern class, you could you can
5:46
probably you'll probably be able
to get your foot out to break
5:48
your fall. More for professional
riders, of course. But I mean,
5:52
it makes no sense who gave the
president this bike? This is
5:56
sabotage. Sabotage screw. Yes.
6:00
I'm sticking with it. Sabotage.
Let's make him say autocracy one
6:05
more time see what happened. And
now he said not what was great
6:08
is when this happened, you know,
reporters are yelling questions
6:12
at him. And he's obviously
annoyed. He's clearly
6:15
discombobulated. But there was a
question in here about was a
6:20
China tariffs.
6:22
Listen to his answer, especially
the second time he answers the
6:26
question. Have you made up your
mind on China tariff, sir.
6:32
We're in the process of doing
6:35
tariffs. We're in the process of
making up my mind.
6:43
We are in the process of making
up my mind. Look, I know it's a
6:47
mistake. It's a gaff, but you
can't overlook these things. No,
6:51
it's consistent. I mean, it's
not as though just listen to
6:54
once a year we get hilarious,
but this is so good. We're in
6:58
the process of making up my
mind. Okay. That's probably true
7:02
bras. Yes. It's probably true. I
don't think he's speaking the
7:05
royal we. Yes, the Joe Biden is
in the process of making up his
7:10
mind. In my mind, whatever. No,
no, this is
7:17
the Democrats have always taught
us when someone tells you who he
7:19
is. You should believe it. He's
probably telling the truth.
7:22
He's the royal we are he's being
controlled by some other panel.
7:27
He's got a mouse in his pocket.
And
7:31
this was my favorite when he was
addressing naughty ants and
7:36
notice the CEO of Joanne Inc.
and and had a story about it of
7:41
course, you know, you always
have to as a politician, you
7:43
always always say hey, there's
there's Pete over there. Thanks
7:46
for doing that thing. Pete Yeah,
that's what you do. It's like
7:49
you call 1850s Obama did it
Trump did it the all these guys
7:56
do it? But when you do it this
way, it's kind of weird. And by
7:59
the way, my sympathies to your
family of your
8:06
new CFO who have been dropped
dead very unexpected to the
8:11
family. Tough stuff. Tough stuff
man dropped dead fucker just
8:15
just face planted himself.
8:18
Yeah, that's the clip of the
week. He drop dead drop dead
8:30
right it's just you know, I
didn't put any Biden clips
8:36
together this week because I'm
not gonna do them only once a
8:38
week no, this is all we need.
This is all we need is fine. You
8:41
know that did nails him and he
got it. He got it.
8:47
Although back it's not none of
this was as good as I'm
8:50
stammering today for some
reason. Now. None of this was as
8:53
good as the Juneteenth
explanation
9:00
that I'd actually like to hit
here as a reprise. Do you have
9:04
did you select it? Oh, you just
played it. Oh, you mean the fish
9:08
going down in Texas on June
teeth right. First major
9:12
massacred literally speaking.
9:16
Black Wall Street.
9:18
He's gonna have a rally. Like
the the first major massacre
9:22
that was even a better part.
First major massacre, major
9:26
massacre, and he's the guy who
made his federal holiday. It's
9:30
the best. It's the best way What
do I have here? What is this
9:34
Kamala Harris enjoy read are the
worst kind of black people. The
9:38
other one. This is a clip most
sent me first time because
9:41
though they wear the same
uniform as you they are not on
9:43
the same team as you. And the
reason that they are so easily
9:47
collapsible is not their family
lineage is not rooted in the
9:50
plantations of American slavery.
Kamala Harris is a biracial
9:54
woman who that was leads into
June the June 19. Hustle was too
9:58
long.
10:00
say this but this Yeah, this
thing was it was it was a George
10:03
Floyd thing. That's why That's
why it hadn't been called George
10:07
fold Floyd day thing. Just
George Boyd did George Floyd
10:12
thing. They do that instead of
this. Juneteenth. That's right.
10:17
It's g f t, everybody. No, I
think that's, you know, they
10:22
were just looking for we would,
I mean, it was only a year ago,
10:25
but we remember what what was
going down. Oh, we needed a day.
10:28
shut everybody up.
10:31
And now it's ridiculed. It's
ridiculed, and it's on Father's
10:35
Day, which is not last that was
that's a good kick the dads to
10:40
the side and put this thing and
well, I was I was bitching about
10:43
this at the table with basically
the same spiel. And my daughter
10:48
says,
10:49
Today off, but he complaining
about? Well, it's not a day off
10:53
for me. But today off her her so
it's Sunday.
10:57
No did tomorrow is in federal
holiday. Oh, but today is
11:01
Juneteenth and tomorrow is the
Federal holiday. Yeah. So that's
11:05
literally how she approaches it.
Does she cow does she not care
11:09
about George Floyd has a day
off? Does she not care about
11:12
George Floyd? No, she's she's
thinks like everybody else. I am
11:17
guessing. Hey, it's a day off.
And it's an additional day off.
11:22
This is great.
11:24
All right. Well, I think maybe
it's time you don't think that
11:27
way because we work through
holidays. Think maybe it's time
11:30
spread avocado wants some toast
because it's the time that John
11:34
loves most of the day.
11:40
We got a couple of jingles for
the millennial minute. Here's
11:43
another reporting live from
Gitmo nation.
11:47
This is the millennial minute. I
think this was a fine example of
11:52
your millennial minute. It's a
holiday to holiday. What are you
11:57
complaining about? Can we do
this for a second? Because I got
12:00
a lot of feedback. Did you get
feedback on the millennial? I
12:03
did? I did. I got a lot of
feedback to
12:07
the
12:10
see, there's a couple we wanted
to read here.
12:13
And the one I thought was pretty
good that came in now, the
12:16
premise of this is, as you set
it up, it appears that a group
12:22
of millennials could be a large
one could be a small one we
12:24
don't know we're just
researching
12:27
is convinced of certain
legalities that are
12:32
not true and be with using a
trendy term nonsensical.
12:38
And one of those is now you had
two of them. One is taking
12:43
pictures in public in this case
it was of kids in the Halloween
12:47
parade. And that was deviant.
That's illegal. Right? It's
12:52
illegal. And what was the what
was the other Oh, the other one
12:56
was telling someone about your
salary that is also against the
13:00
law. It's illegal. It's not
against the law to tell some is
13:02
against the law to out.
13:05
Sorry to ask. Yes, that's
illegal. Now I have a couple
13:08
more examples. But first, this
is a our millennial, paralegal,
13:13
millennial Certified Paralegal.
And note, I've got this, you
13:18
already read it. As a millennial
who studies the law, I want to
13:21
reach out and say that you too
are analyzing something I think
13:24
is vital for everyone to
understand millennials do not
13:26
understand the law. My entire
legal education has been filled
13:30
with moments of reflecting on
just how little I knew about the
13:33
law. Before I started this
course of study, I didn't
13:36
understand civil versus criminal
District versus appeals courts
13:39
state versus federal laws,
jurisdiction, etc. I didn't even
13:43
know law libraries existed until
I studied law during my
13:46
undergrad undergrad. I could
write Warren Piece by the way,
13:50
most people don't know law.
Libraries exist out. Okay, I
13:54
did. But I guess I'm special.
13:57
I could have been thought of as
special
14:00
on the short bus. I could write
Warren Piece on this. So I'll
14:03
just leave it with this. Most of
my fellow Millennials seem to
14:06
barely understand basic elements
of the law or how to even verify
14:10
what law is, for example,
millennials often say collecting
14:13
rainwater is illegal and their
state in their state, despite of
14:17
course it being allowed and even
recommended in many states. I
14:20
think I've heard this too, about
rainwater collection. It's the
14:25
all I have, I can kind of take
that out of sight on this
14:29
because I believe it was a big
deal in some of the networks
14:33
about 10 years ago. I started by
Colorado or somebody because
14:38
there was a thesis that was
floated around by some
14:41
environmentalists that if you
started collecting rainwater, it
14:44
would change the flow into the
water into the lakes and rivers
14:48
and jet there's they were
proposing to make it illegal I
14:53
think in a couple of states.
14:55
Okay, but that's that's where
the lens of millennials even
14:58
alive when that took place.
15:01
nobodies things get into the
public domain and they start
15:04
floating around. Next thing you
know, everyone thinks it's
15:06
illegal.
15:08
finish that up. It seems to me
as a millennial with a legal
15:11
background that a lack of legal
education for the general public
15:14
is resulting in an entire
generation feeling oppressed by
15:17
laws they perceive to be true,
while lacking the foundational
15:20
law knowledge to even confirm it
for themselves.
15:25
I don't know if that's if that's
what's going on. And by the way,
15:28
there's a couple more that came
in. Filming in public in
15:31
general, filming in public is
always deemed as illegal. And my
15:37
favorite is for this millennial
minute is driving barefoot.
15:42
That's illegal, man.
15:45
That's interesting. I think I've
heard this too. I think my mom
15:49
said that when I was a kid, or
she had flip flops on or
15:51
something should know that's
illegal. Because you could slip
15:55
I could slip off the pedal.
15:57
slip off the off the
16:00
slip off of both. The it's
illegal to drive around with
16:05
headsets on?
16:07
Yes, I think yes. But you
probably wouldn't hear them say
16:10
that in they're all sitting with
earbuds in their in their ears.
16:14
Now. Would you now? There you
go. Nope, there. Wow, about
16:17
that. Wow. Oh, wow. Wow. Wow.
Just the opposite. The
16:24
something's wrong here. Some of
what's illegal, what's not, they
16:29
think is legal to drive around
with earbuds or headphones on.
16:34
That is literally illegal. And I
think almost every state and I
16:40
would also say that every
millennial knows not only the
16:42
legality, or the dangers of
texting while driving, but
16:47
they do it constantly. And by
the way, the reason for the
16:51
lack, because of millennials was
that illegal, like to listen to
16:55
music, I listen to music on the
radio, is because when you get
16:57
the headphones and you can't
hear sirens, yeah, that's the
17:01
idea. That's the main now we're
not picking on millennials,
17:03
we're picking on some
millennials. I'm not we're not
17:06
even picking the list or show
that list or shore down to earth
17:10
as well. Something they didn't
get some kind of programming.
17:15
And as you said, this has to
come from the education systems
17:18
to say it has to be a lack of
civics or focus on other things,
17:23
such as, you know, in the UK
now, and this will be conflated
17:26
here, because we're already well
on our way, at, and this is
17:30
about legality of speech and of
things you can say, the UK
17:35
online safety bill has a section
in it 127. This is a guy named
17:42
Toby young isn't that GBN that
kind of that new was it wasn't
17:47
owned by discovery at new news
network in the UK. Anyway, that
17:50
doesn't matter. So this buried
in the online safety bill is a
17:56
new harmful communications
offense. And that is going to
18:00
replace various existing
communications offenses like I
18:04
think section 127, it tries to
identify those things you
18:10
shouldn't be able to say not by
using terms like grossly
18:14
offensive, which, as you say,
are very nebulous and open
18:16
ended, they try and identify
them according to the effect
18:20
they have on the person they're
sent or who overhears them. So
18:24
under the new harmful
communications offense, buried
18:28
in the online safety bill, if
you say something which is going
18:33
to cause someone extreme
psychological distress, and you
18:38
intended it,
18:40
and you don't have a kind of
reasonable reason for doing so,
18:43
like you're not participating in
a political debate, if it's a
18:46
good Cubitus something you said
it's gratuitous, it was designed
18:50
to cause psychological distress,
and it causes extreme
18:54
psychological distress, then you
can go to jail for two years.
18:57
Nadine, Doris argues that this
law, whilst it does restrict
19:02
some speech, and whilst it could
be a bit of a she doesn't
19:05
acknowledge this, but we pointed
out this could be abused in the
19:07
courts, because lots of people
will claim that that you know, a
19:11
gender critical feminist
misgendering them on Twitter has
19:14
caused them extreme
psychological distress. And the
19:17
person doing it knew it wouldn't
actually go to jail for two
19:19
years. And you can see this
could be used as a kind of
19:22
Trojan horse for kind of
smuggling subjective definitions
19:26
of harm psychological harm into
the criminal justice system in a
19:29
kind of, you know, sinister way.
Yes. So you know, when this this
19:35
news, what a comedian does, by
the way, it's exactly what a
19:38
comedian does. Dave look, Dave
Chappelle, Dave Chappelle.
19:44
Dave Chappelle get in real big
trouble if he does a stand up in
19:47
the UK, and he post something
online.
19:51
And it doesn't have to be
misgendering it could also be
19:54
well, for instance, if you said,
Wow,
19:58
that's a dude
20:00
You know about
20:02
which is something you could
say, you know, regarding our
20:06
What is it Rachel's? What is
Rachel? She's Admiral.
20:10
Rachel Maddow? Loving it. Oh
god, there you go. You just did
20:14
you just misgendered Rachel
right there. And you did it
20:18
online you did it in a podcast
so you could go to jail for two
20:21
years. And you did it because
you know it's no secret cheap
20:25
joke that's the reason I did it
on the cheap gag and what about
20:29
debt naming somebody that's got
a really what some? How about
20:32
this? How about certain about
this Lizzo is obese. Now that
20:38
could send me to jail.
20:40
Because you're not allowed to
body shame. It could send her
20:43
into it. I'm sure just saying
this sent some people listening
20:46
to the sound of my voice into a
triggered spiral. Yeah, no, but
20:51
this is what people will people
take this Great Britain and you
20:55
know whether it's if it's
illegal in the UK, surely you
20:57
must be legally illegal in
America.
21:00
See how this works?
21:03
Go that would be us. That's
exactly how it works. As in
21:07
terms of the bullshit of it.
Because it's not illegal in
21:10
America. It could be illegal in
the UK though, and it could be
21:13
di you got to deal with what
happens if you remember in the
21:17
early days of blogging, a lot of
blogs were kicked out of Germany
21:21
because they will show a
swastika or something a swastika
21:25
I've never heard it pronounced
like that. swastik got swastika
21:30
and just like a drink it used to
be
21:35
a swastika with the ice push was
21:40
was never a drink. Stop
21:44
Wow, did you sample the edibles
on the way? Wow day everybody.
21:49
Did you sample the edibles on
the way in today? Good. No, I
21:53
should have soaked. So. Yes. So
these blogs got banned from
22:00
Germany. And I guess it was an
indictable offense. So if you
22:05
actually went to Germany you
were the blog. I think somebody
22:07
I believe a couple of weeks ago
we get arrested and I think so
22:11
as possible just by showing
showing up in the country. Oh, I
22:16
knew what happened to it. It
probably could just got a big
22:17
fine but but it could be it
could ban a bunch of podcasts
22:22
because a lot most podcasts are
offensive to be honest about I
22:25
listen to them trying to catch
them this stuff. Of course
22:28
they're offensive that's wrong
with these podcasts has
22:30
beautiful offensive, offensive.
Podcasts are fantastic. Now most
22:34
podcasts are offensive guys
can't stop cussing and you think
22:37
they
22:38
banned their vocabulary a little
bit? Well, that's the Howard
22:41
Stern sickness.
22:45
Is it? Do you blame our Howard
Stern for this? Oh, no, I just
22:49
named it the Howard Stern
sickness because when he went to
22:51
Sirius, the first three years
all they would did was drop F
22:55
bombs and and just say things
that they could never say on
22:59
this broadcast radio as well.
Yeah. Hey, we're free. No.
23:03
Didn't make it cool, though. It
was not good.
23:06
It is gross. Anyway, we continue
to research we'd love to know
23:10
more things about in the
millennial minute, which our
23:13
current trend is understanding.
23:17
Understanding what things
millennials, a group of
23:20
millennials believe that are
illegal.
23:27
And I'm sure there'll be other
topics in the millennial
23:28
minutes. Thread avocado wants
some toast because it's the time
23:32
that John loves most of the
veil.
23:36
Actually, I did, I did want to
mention something for the
23:39
millennials, with inflation
rising and the free money train
23:44
over because the interest rates
are no longer at zero for
23:48
companies to borrow money and
invest it to Silicon Valley. But
23:54
yeah, I'm sorry, cheaply,
cheaply. Yes, Silicon Valley is
23:58
a meeting. If we just read
around the trades a little bit,
24:01
immediately they're clamping
down.
24:05
There's firms that are
24:07
implementing hiring freezes. I
think we might even see some
24:11
layoffs here and there. And the
the main prot the main reason
24:16
for this is there's so many
products and services that
24:22
really I think service the
millennial generation of today,
24:25
although, you know, the Xers and
Boomers take advantage of them
24:29
as well, but it's created and
used primarily for the for the
24:33
current generation.
24:36
These are all products that had
been subsidized by
24:40
the enhancers. Yes, well, 10
years of very, very cheap money.
24:45
So old adages.
24:48
I remember the phrase used to be
in the olden days of Bally they
24:52
would say, oh, yeah, they're
shipping a $10 bill with every
24:56
hard disk they sell,
24:58
which later
25:00
really means they're losing a
$10 You're getting $10 worth of
25:04
value when you pay whatever you
paying because they're they're
25:07
losing money on each each hard
disk, big, whatever product it
25:11
is. And that's what been going
on. That's very trend. That's
25:14
been a trend for a decade. In
print Yes, for decades. All this
25:19
stuff that you're getting, oh,
this is great. I get a free, you
25:22
know, system here and I get this
debt. The other thing, too,
25:25
because some investors are
25:28
become for the long haul. Well,
the whole story, what am I
25:32
saying they're throwing money
away.
25:35
The whole, since you can't
really make, excuse me, seems
25:39
very hard to make a long term
money on while it's getting
25:44
better now, but on traditional
investment
25:48
vehicles, it makes a lot of
sense to pump a crapload into
25:51
money and money into into a
venture capital fund. So that,
25:55
you know, they disperse it and
of the 50 things they fund.
25:59
There's hopefully an Amazon or
Google or, or something big that
26:03
pops out.
26:05
And it's really called gaining
market share. You know, it's
26:10
Yeah, I mean, that's really what
it's about is buying customers
26:13
and keeping them until, you
know, either we can raise the
26:17
rates, look at Netscape,
Netflix, Netflix, who now are I
26:23
think they're the canal losing
money. Yes. So they're the well,
26:26
they're the canary in the coal
mine, too. And they they right
26:30
away when Okay, shit is slowing
down. We can't even buy more
26:34
people. So we bought everybody
with the cheap money that I
26:37
mean, that's what the reality
is, is it slowed down now
26:40
whether that means people are
going to other streaming
26:42
services, but this will happen
to the to others as well.
26:46
And now like, oh, we better do
some advertising. So that's
26:48
exactly the convenience. And the
beauty of Netflix that you liked
26:52
is that it didn't have all that
interruptive advertising the
26:55
interruptive advertising model.
They don't well, they I know
26:58
they they understand it, but
they don't get it. Well, but
27:03
some of these other streaming
services, like
27:06
the one that's genius is
Amazon's prime, because it's not
27:10
really that's not the main thing
they're selling. They're selling
27:14
they're shipping and prime
services. Just they just bundle
27:19
it in and you still pay for
things sporadically that aren't
27:21
in your prime pack. Because a
lot on there, then that enzyme
27:25
may change. But listen, how
about Uber? Do you think Uber is
27:28
going to it's going to remain
the same price? I mean, and
27:32
that's not even related to the
gasoline prices. Uber has been
27:36
Uber has been losing money.
27:39
They've been they've never made
profit. About DoorDash.
27:44
You think Casper mattress is
going to be around No.
27:49
Blue Apron, you're gonna have to
learn how to go and shop again.
27:54
Blue Apron ever saw this in the
late 90s? With what I want. I
27:59
have one more, one more. My
favorite Spotify? Do you think
28:04
that the Swedes will be able to
continuously pump hundreds of
28:07
millions of dollars into a money
losing proposition which only
28:12
has some glimmer of Well, we
were going to do billions of
28:15
dollars on podcasting. None of
that has materialized. They have
28:19
no way to make actual profit,
except for scamming on the music
28:23
side. So Spotify, these things
will go away. We now that's what
28:28
I've seen in my pet peeve,
Please play it and play it. I
28:33
don't even know where I have it.
Yeah, I have it here.
28:37
Come on me.
28:39
I wanted you to give some
historical examples of this.
28:43
Of what Spotify? No, no, you
were saying that things have
28:46
gone away. And I actually
TerraNova web fans a good
28:48
example web fan. Oh my goodness,
that was the original delivery
28:52
system. And it was like no, it
was a monopoly. I should be
28:57
whether it's P pod that was
another
29:01
pod was up there. But there was
P pod and Webvan but it wasn't
29:03
like a million of them like
there are today. And and they
29:08
couldn't handle it. It was just
it was a loser. And
29:12
and they were hiring people left
and right to drive those little
29:15
webbed vans around just pretty
much like the Amazon truck about
29:19
the same size. And then there
was pets.com Yeah, but but no
29:25
one really depended on those the
way people depend on the
29:29
services. I mean, DoorDash would
be Uber, web and people were
29:33
depending on it. I mean, the
same millennial types.
29:37
Were 99 I mean, the same type,
tell you something else, you
29:41
know what else is going to end?
I guarantee you they are going
29:45
to start putting limits if they
don't already exist. On the
29:48
leeches in coffee shops in
Starbucks. They're going to say
29:52
hey, moving on out people.
You're just sitting here, we're
29:56
taking up our space
29:59
where they're going to start
30:00
charging for it? Well, it
depends because they do provide
30:04
a shill effect.
30:08
Which is which is comforting and
she'll, uh, she'll know this
30:12
What do you mean a shill effect?
A shill effect. Casinos, for
30:16
example, will hire people to be
in the casino, making it look
30:20
like the places more busy than
it really is. And so you'll feel
30:23
more comfortable going in there
because nobody likes to go into
30:26
an empty building. Nobody likes
to go into a dead empty coffee
30:29
shop. You go. I'm not going in
here as places dead empty. This
30:33
is why you have lines around the
Disco's. You know, you want to
30:36
create the situation.
30:39
Yeah, this club clubs, the
clubs, job clubs. But the point
30:43
is, is that there's lions out in
front. And that means it must be
30:47
popping, there must be busy. You
want to get in that line people
30:49
get in line with this
30:51
line. It's the velvet rope so
that she'll if it's a shill
30:54
effect. And so you know, I'm not
so sure that that I mean, I
30:59
think you're right about the
these, the sponging aspect of
31:02
it, but at the same time, it may
be necessary to keep those
31:05
places look to look like they're
busy. Maybe necessary. Yeah, but
31:10
you still at the end of the day,
you've got to make some money. I
31:15
mean, I see. All I see is
evidence of, you know, the
31:20
incubators, the Y Combinator is
the venture capital, you know,
31:24
funded companies are gonna like
a danger, danger. All right,
31:27
everybody farts? Well, we are
too old for farts. And when
31:30
we're allowed to talk, wow. When
I was a kid, well, listen, to
31:35
get into the place. You didn't
give it away like they do today.
31:39
Listen, there's girls that work
for free.
31:43
I'm here to help you. You're
here to help me. So when you say
31:46
the Disco's, you know, I'm going
to suddenly correct you by
31:50
saying no, no, no, that's the
club's. Yeah. But you can learn
31:54
a lot by looking at history. And
if there's anything that most
31:58
people will agree on. We don't
remember Jack anymore. We don't
32:02
remember two weeks ago, nobody
remembers P pod and si do what?
32:06
You know what one remembers P
pas 30 years ago, but still.
32:13
No, nobody remembers anything in
this big uphill battle. And the
32:17
reason that lists getting back
to the main thesis, which is why
32:20
the Millennials don't know these
things that they should know, is
32:23
because they can only there's
only so many hours in the day,
32:25
there's only so much schooling
they can get. And so that
32:27
information that they really
need to know has been kicked to
32:30
the curb so they can learn about
gender studies. Yeah, yes,
32:36
you're you're correct. And I
think civics is probably all
32:39
about gender studies as well
doesn't seem gender studies
32:43
when, when mature, when adults
don't understand civil versus
32:51
federal, you know, all these
types of basic issues, civil
32:55
versus criminal criminal. You
see, I don't even know what
32:57
you're trying to say. Well,
here's here's something else.
33:01
I've been looking at this rank
voting.
33:05
Yes. And a lot of people are,
you know, sending me this. And I
33:09
would say, in the no agenda,
nation audience, there's
33:12
probably a 6040 split. People
think maybe more people think
33:16
it's a great idea. To me,
there's a fallacy in this
33:21
because and this, you'll see
this transition. You even if you
33:26
had this, and I'm talking about
the general election, but if you
33:30
had this this rank voting at the
general election, it shouldn't
33:34
matter because the people don't
actually vote for the cat don't
33:39
actually, you know, their vote
is not what counts. It's the
33:42
electoral college. And somehow I
it just dawned on me that this
33:46
rank voting that seems to be
very popular is some ways of
33:50
Versiv to the Electoral College.
Like this is a better way we can
33:54
get rid of this thing that's a
dumb way to do it
34:02
well, ranked voting is generally
used more by the states and the
34:05
look I know Yes, I know it is. I
know and people can do whatever
34:09
they want even been introduced
to the idea. Oh, put that in the
34:15
red book you watch
34:17
every every you have to question
everything. Every single meme or
34:21
little slogan you got to
question at all.
34:27
Now it's all it also it's kind
of more like a parliamentary
34:30
system ranked voting.
34:33
And well, we have all this a
whole pool we can choose from, I
34:36
don't know.
34:38
I am a traditionalist. You're in
the mood. I'm not in the mood.
34:43
I'm a traditionalist. That's all
I am.
34:46
Alright, let's talk about monkey
pox.
34:50
You know, of all the things I
expected you to say. Okay, let's
34:54
talk about him. Let's talk about
monkey pox. I haven't asked
34:58
Adam. Oh goodness.
35:00
I mean, that's the that's the
reason I wanted to transition. I
35:03
mean, who's in the mood today?
35:09
Okay, all right. I'm ready to
monkeypox small monkey pox club
35:14
is discussing just as a
background how the problem with
35:17
monkey pox which has been
renamed I am sure you heard I
35:21
didn't hear the name I know it
was going to be really no I knew
35:26
it was being renamed but I
haven't actually seen the new
35:28
net another mix I'm excited to
learn the new name of monkey pox
35:32
which as we do know was is
racist is racist because only
35:38
racist connect monkeys to I
don't know black people. Is that
35:42
why it's racist?
35:45
Why else could it be racist?
That other than some sick mind
35:48
who makes that that connection?
Which are the people who want to
35:51
change the name?
35:54
They're sick.
35:56
All right, well, let's go to
35:59
I had the clip on here that
actually revealed the name I
36:02
tried to actually on here, I'll
just tell you what it is. Okay.
36:06
MPX
36:08
and p x.
36:10
Okay.
36:13
Wow. Oh, my monkeypox a bit of
reading I know our creatives.
36:18
Let's play with the problem with
the monkey pox is not so much
36:21
that it's association with
Africa and monkeys and as
36:25
somehow somehow black pill
because of the old monkey thing
36:30
that goes back for God knows how
long
36:33
is over and dead but okay.
36:36
It is the gay thing.
36:40
Hey, all right. So they're very
upset about the fact and I'm
36:44
going to skip the ask Adam for
now we're gonna get to that in a
36:46
second. This go to monkey pox, a
gay messaging and the problem is
36:51
is that it's being associated
with gay so much that now it
36:56
seems that if you have monkey
paw by the way, they renamed it
36:58
MPX. Nobody's using the name.
It's the same on course. And I
37:03
didn't even I mean, the
messaging sucks because I didn't
37:06
even know about it. And I'm
supposed to know this stuff.
37:08
Yeah, I'm surprised you didn't.
But but so they can't they can't
37:12
really bring themselves to
saying MPX because they get them
37:15
guys electronica. Hey, does that
mean multiplex? was empty? No, I
37:19
just tried to register any
version of mpx.com.org got app.
37:23
I mean, that's you can't even
get a domain name for this name.
37:26
It's so dumb.
37:28
Well, it's also means other
things if you got the acronym
37:31
list, but Okay, so let's play
this thing about here's the gay
37:35
issues, gay men and bisexual
men. It is now believed some of
37:39
the monkey pox cases can be
traced back to gay events and
37:42
saunas in Europe. But health
officials stress anyone can get
37:46
the disease
37:49
bounded. This is big event in
Europe. monkeypox stems from
37:54
Germany party in Germany. And
the first thing I'm thinking
37:57
this in Germany. I'm seeing it
today have a monkey at this
38:01
party.
38:04
What are they doing with? Here's
the thing that that I am going
38:09
to check. So my gay brothers, I
have a feeling the whole sauna
38:14
thing is not necessarily where
the boning takes place anymore.
38:20
Is that that that is if anything
connecting gays to saunas is, I
38:26
mean, that's almost easy.
38:30
The report said saunas. Okay,
and you're if you say a gay
38:35
bathhouse, yes, it's obvious
what you go to do there but a
38:39
sauna? No, a sauna is just I
don't think that's a thing even
38:43
in Europe, but okay, you know
where they go to have sex to the
38:46
discos. That's where they go,
just go hey, you guys. So let's
38:50
go to monkey pox does the monkey
pox who report the World Health
38:54
Organization is convening its
emergency committee next week to
38:57
decide whether the monkey pox
outbreak is a public health
39:00
emergency of international
concern. That's the world's
39:03
highest health alert. The only
two viruses that currently have
39:07
that designation are COVID and
polio. I study this stuff and I
39:11
had a nightmare the other night
that I have it. And in the
39:14
nightmare I couldn't like I
didn't know where to go. Stephen
39:17
Thrasher writes about inequality
in health care. He worries that
39:21
the public health system could
be doing more to prevent the
39:23
spread of monkey pox. And it's
really unfortunate because where
39:27
I live in Chicago, and
throughout the Coronavirus
39:30
pandemic, I got notices about
what the rate was whether or not
39:34
to use masks where to get a
vaccine when I was eligible for
39:37
a vaccine and when to get a
booster all of that just went
39:39
straight to my phone.
39:42
Nothing like that is happening
right now. Wait a minute. They
39:46
were direct marketing Deghayes?
39:52
That's what it seems like like
we have your status to
39:57
enhance rotate zoom in a hot gay
send them attack
40:00
message he needs he needs to get
the vaccine for the MPX.
40:06
Wow, what it sounds like
40:10
the who,
40:11
the Who you gonna play it, there
also needs to be resources in
40:15
place for testing and
vaccinations. We have to be
40:17
prepared to support people as
they need when they're
40:22
diagnosed. But he says there's
another part a more difficult
40:25
and complex problem. The public
and private perceptions that
40:29
come from focusing prevention
messaging on men who have sex
40:32
with other men, part of it is
not a quick fix. And I won't
40:35
pretend like I have a quick fix
answer for it. It's to make a
40:39
society that doesn't have
homophobia, because as long as
40:42
there is a homophobic society,
and people are afraid of what it
40:46
means to come forward, that this
thing will make people think
40:49
that they're gay, then they're
not going to want to come
40:51
forward. Wait a minute, did he
say that? If you get monkey pox,
40:56
then you're gonna think you're
gay?
41:00
Wow. No, that's not what he
said. Now that you mentioned it,
41:05
let me just hold on, let me hear
that. Again. There also needs to
41:08
be resources in place for
testing and vaccinations, to be
41:12
prepared to support people as
they need when they're
41:16
diagnosed. He says there's
another part a more difficult
41:19
and complex problem. The public
and private perceptions that
41:23
come from focusing prevention
messaging on men who have sex
41:26
with other men, part of it is
not a quick fix. And I won't
41:29
pretend like I haven't a quick
fix answer for it. It's to make
41:33
a society that doesn't have
homophobia, because as long as
41:36
there is a homophobic society,
and people are afraid of what it
41:40
means to come forward, that this
thing will make people think
41:43
that they're gay, then they're
not going to want to come
41:45
forward. I'm telling you, that's
what he's saying, Oh, no, no, I
41:49
listened to the strike. Now the
structure of the sentence was
41:52
just poor. No kidding.
41:56
And it couldn't, it was one of
those things that was so there's
42:00
a term for that kind of writing.
And it was, it was vague. And it
42:04
was, it was the Yeah, you could
did what you said. That could be
42:09
one way of looking at that
sentence. What he said, if you
42:12
get the monkey punch, and all of
a sudden you're gonna start
42:14
thinking you're gay.
42:17
You know what he really do now?
Yes, thank you. But yes, this
42:20
is. Well, I have some thoughts
about this. I got one more clip
42:25
just to get before because it
wasn't asked Adam officially
42:30
know the axe. Adam is coming,
Adam. Okay. All right, Axe him.
42:35
But it has something to say
about monkey. Don't cut it.
42:39
Does the original clip I was
looking for this fear porn. Lay
42:42
this. Okay. The virus is
behaving unusually from how it
42:48
used to behave in the past. And
we're encouraging countries to
42:52
do surveillance, contact tracing
numbers, it causes flu like
42:57
symptoms like fevers, chills,
muscle aches, and headaches,
43:00
then a rash, a virus behaving
unusually, contact tracing flu
43:04
like symptoms. It all sounds
familiar, but these reports are
43:08
not about the corona virus.
They're about monkey pox, also
43:12
known as MPX. Yes. Okay. I'm
ready for the ask Adam. Okay,
43:18
what do they ask me? Then you
ask. All right, ask them. Okay.
43:23
This is a clip about?
43:25
Well, I'll just play this clip
straight up. And I don't think
43:28
it needs to set up it probably
does.
43:32
Oh, this is titled ask Adam.
Okay, I gotcha. Yeah, sorry, me
43:35
feel that this is not a concern
to them. And we feel that this
43:39
is an infection that can only
affect gay men or bisexual men
43:44
or other men who have sex with
men. Okay.
43:47
Bisexual men. Okay, I'm ready
for the ask Adam. The ask Adam
43:52
is the way they said it is that
the deceit? They're trying to
43:57
generalize about men having sex
with men and they say bisexual
44:00
men. Have Sex With Men. Yes.
homosexual men, gay men have sex
44:06
with men. And then they say
other men who have sex with men.
44:11
Who are the other men. And and
how are they not either gay or
44:16
bisexual? They are trans men.
44:22
I think that's probably the
right yes. I was gonna say
44:25
priests.
44:27
I clearly didn't play the right
way. That was a
44:32
joke. Like, I think it's funny.
Okay, you're going to hell, but
44:37
otherwise it's pretty funny.
Yeah, I can I can atone okay,
44:41
this whole thing have we learned
nothing? My gay brothers have we
44:45
learned nothing from Anthony
Fauci and Deborah Birx in the
44:51
80s doing it. This is the exact
same playbook. The next is going
44:57
to be you might be able to get
it from from
45:00
touching a surface you might be
able to get, even though it's
45:03
medically we well, if you touch
someone who has it, you're gonna
45:06
get it. But this is exactly how
aids which came from the HIV
45:12
virus was was stigmatized, gay
men. Of course, bisexual men,
45:18
they only have sex with men
right now, of course not, who
45:21
was who was at most risk of
contracting HIV and subsequently
45:27
aids and dying women, women. So
why? Well, I mean, how can
45:34
anyone not even listen in the
news media, listen to this and
45:37
not say, wait a minute, we were
so wrong about AIDS. And boy,
45:41
were we
45:45
we were so wrong.
45:48
Why are we doing the exact same
thing? And the answer is because
45:52
all men must be exterminated and
removed. Throw Juneteenth on
45:56
Father's Day because you know,
black men don't deserve anything
45:59
black fathers don't count the
gays they're too masculine toxic
46:04
masculinity that gay guys it
lesbians, you're on Deck. This
46:09
is very destructive.
46:12
And this comes from the so
called people who revere and
46:16
love the LGBTQI plus community
bullshit. This is this is so
46:22
bad. Screw that. I don't care if
it was a blister on your thumb
46:27
disease. The fact that you're
doing this is so stupid.
46:33
It doesn't even make medical
sense.
46:36
Or or societal sense.
46:40
How many up?
46:43
Once but I can only have one to
show I don't think you can add
46:47
to
46:49
the bomb.
46:51
Yay. No, I love people say I
don't understand this. Because
46:56
AIDS was never a gay disease
either.
47:00
AIDS is not a disease. HIV is a
virus. And you know, there's
47:05
questions as to what killed the
people who got the AIDS. So ah,
47:08
you can get AIDS from
vaccination.
47:11
Yeah, and yeah, we have to
always remember is actually
47:13
designed for Dietrich to wipe up
parts of Africa that HIV is HIV.
47:18
Yes. Yes, of course. So what do
you do? So, you know, so people
47:21
don't see this, that this is a
setup. And where's the gays?
47:28
Where's the 75? It's all in
these reports from NPR. You
47:31
heard the guy but that's not
that's not my old neighbor.
47:34
Steve. By the way he has to
sound gay or he can't be on it.
47:37
Of course.
47:39
It's not video sound like a San
Francisco gay guy. He doesn't
47:44
get on the you're not you're not
in the package.
47:48
Oh, I'm disgusted by this. It's
insane. By only gay guys. Oh,
47:54
yeah. Only gay guys. What is the
implication of that?
47:59
What are they really implying
that you can only get it through
48:01
anal sex or anal or you're able
to oral or I don't know what is
48:06
the implication? There's
something about being gay and
48:09
blinking. Oh, I know. But
there's something about being
48:11
gay that makes you special that
this that the MPX wants shared
48:15
diseased that's what is said.
That's what race as this is like
48:19
to go back to Nazi Germany.
They're diseased. All cork
48:23
smokers will die.
48:28
All right. All right. Well, that
was great. Thanks. Pressure
48:32
chest. No, well, okay, here we
go. I am very
48:37
disturbed disappointed in the
January 6 committee to J 616. J
48:43
616. Committee a.
48:46
They screwed it up. They brought
in the ABC guy could have told
48:49
you. That's not the way to go.
The curry Devorah consulting
48:53
group said if you want
primetime, you've got to do it
48:55
completely differently. No, oh,
no. They can't even stay on
49:00
during the day.
49:03
As we come up at the top of the
hour, we're gonna have to end
49:05
our coverage of this January 6
hearing on the NBC network. My
49:09
colleagues and I will continue
our coverage on the hearings on
49:13
our streaming platform NBC News
Now. Wherever one else US Open
49:17
golf begins momentarily. I'm
Lester hold for NBC News in New
49:21
York. Good day.
49:23
Oh, no, this is what I said from
the get go. You did? I did. I
49:28
had to break away from dos. I'm
gonna repeat why said it. Please
49:32
do. The two of us listen to a
lot of these hearings. Yeah, we
49:36
don't actually listen to as many
as we could, because they're
49:39
very tight. They're very time
consuming to get one little clip
49:43
we have to spend hours and they
are extremely boring. And the
49:48
way these these congress people,
senators and congressmen and
49:53
women speak is with a lot of
pauses and very thoughtfully
49:58
because they don't want to say
anything wrong. So they
50:00
has to be clipped down and, and,
and edited to make it sound even
50:04
remotely, not to put you asleep.
50:09
It's just a very it's boring.
That's the point and they
50:12
couldn't do it. Now just
something
50:16
in general about the technical
process right and about the
50:19
process
50:22
as an American citizen and not
as a Deconstructor, but as an
50:25
American citizen, I find it to
not just odd, but I find it.
50:30
It's a mistake. And I it's, it's
messed up if you're going to
50:37
show testimony of people's
depositions. Don't you think
50:41
that the Gen six committee
should release the full
50:45
transcripts of all of the
depositions not just this
50:48
soundbite here soundbite there
and say, you know, we edited it
50:51
down for your convenience for
brevity, I'm on my iPhone.
50:55
Isn't that isn't it?
Procedurally? Isn't that just
50:58
completely messed up? What's
completely messed up as the
51:02
whole January 6, committee, Liz
Cheney and and kissing, kissing
51:09
gang girl, whatever his name is.
Those two shouldn't even be on
51:12
the committee, the two
Republicans, they should recuse
51:16
themselves for being Trump
haters. I mean, any other
51:20
situation? No, no. Come on. We'd
have nothing to talk about. If
51:23
they did that. What would the
Tim Poole show be about? Come
51:26
on? Megan Kelly would die.
51:29
She's still on the show. Oh,
yeah. She's never having me on
51:33
again, though. It's obvious.
Well, she may have you know, I
51:36
counted her on Putin. I counted.
I counted her on Putin. Yeah.
51:40
But she's, you know, she's
still.
51:44
Yeah, see, what you do is you,
you talk smack about it is you
51:49
talk smack about me only
Kellyanne cut you off. Are you
51:52
saying? I was just saying that
you were right to begin with.
51:56
There's no drama in these
hearings. There's no back and
52:00
forth. That's why they needed a
job. Yes, they need to have the
52:04
battle going on to get people's
attention. This is just a one
52:08
sided kangaroo court and Liz
Cheney should have done that she
52:12
could have done. Imagine if we
if you and I were going to take
52:16
guts to get out of her own way
we would have trained her to do
52:20
it in a way. And she'll be your
questions would be like, well,
52:23
didn't you have this Berra,
Berra? And then it would be a
52:27
setup? Because the answer would
be so clear, you know, and then
52:30
she's and then she'd go, Well,
you've convinced me I mean, we
52:32
there's so many different ways
you could have done that, to
52:34
show to show anger to show drama
to show a tension arc, as we say
52:39
in the biz, and then pay that
off, you know, after the recess,
52:44
you know, keep people on you
know, riveted. No, none of that.
52:50
And then for ABC guy did nothing
from what I can tell he said,
52:53
create some videos.
52:57
And scripts, they wrote a script
to wrote a script with some beer
53:00
with some roelens It's terrible.
Yes. I mean, there's no there's
53:04
no, look, they went through the
trouble of getting a big room
53:07
and putting up the screen.
53:10
But come on, how about some
graphics?
53:13
Some sound effects. People would
not have complained about it.
53:18
They were like, Oh, that's
pretty cool. But yeah, I mean,
53:21
why not? And no one has done
this. Why not do it like gap and
53:26
herd
53:28
turd? Why not do it like those
guys like the high end junkies?
53:32
And you know break away and
like, Okay, we're gonna break
53:34
away from this boring shit like
Court TV. Yeah, tell you what's
53:37
going on put a box in there
boring television to begin with.
53:40
But it's more exciting than
this. You're probably right.
53:43
Because what had happened now?
They should in fact, not as you
53:46
mentioned it. That's a great
idea. They should have had a
53:51
couple of hosts. Yeah. Yeah.
Like Vinnie, they're on court.
53:56
Yeah. No, you want you want the
guy from Missouri. What's his
54:00
name? The the old Democrat
crouch who keeps complaining
54:03
about wokeness command the
consultant he was married to the
54:07
reporter, though the flasher
now, is he a flasher?
54:12
Carville, is he a flasher? Well,
he they portrayed him as one in
54:17
the movie that movie that came
out about the Clinton campaign
54:21
was called to color red or color
brown with the name of that
54:24
thing was somebody and then they
said he was a slasher. He was a
54:28
flasher in that movie. Yeah.
Wow. And that was a dramatized
54:32
version. Yeah. And it was an
that guy that was in the movie
54:35
was supposed to be Carville.
What's he working with?
54:39
Well, I don't know. I never saw
it. Okay. I thought you saw I
54:41
mean, I didn't see it. I saw the
movie.
54:45
So that should get Hazel. I
don't know what he was working
54:47
with. Maybe could have been
huge. I have no idea. I mean,
54:51
Newt Gingrich used to be good.
He won't be good anymore.
54:55
Oh, could you get in for a great
old school still not bad. He's a
54:59
little slow.
55:00
He's talking a little slower
than he used to be. But he used
55:02
to be unknowingly and Coulter
get her in because she hates
55:05
Trump. So it would be kind of
extra good. You know, she could
55:08
be seen as down the middle.
Coulter would be good. Yes. I
55:12
mean, we know how to do these
things. Let's ship pero en de
55:15
Are you go? Shapiro, Poole.
55:19
Put them all in a room with a
guy who sells gold that he may
55:23
have an opinion to. This would
be great show. Yeah. Let me tell
55:27
you, the economy's going to shit
by gold.
55:31
Okay, so because of this, no
one's listening to us anyway. So
55:35
because of this crappy
production, you're leaving room
55:39
for all. This is what breeds
conspiracy theories. And the
55:42
best one came from Richard
Hoagland on coast to coast,
55:48
which is a fabulous spot. It's a
radio show, but you can get as a
55:51
podcast, Twitter, Twitter, the
official NASA, the official
55:56
Chinese equivalent of NASA news
agency, and they are saying they
56:01
picked up signals. Well, that's
news to the rest of us. I mean,
56:06
think about this. One of three
major planetary governments, in
56:12
the early part of the 21st
century, announces formally
56:17
through its
56:19
political and governmental
distribution agency that they've
56:23
heard intelligent at signals.
And nobody responds. I haven't
56:30
heard any
56:31
of you know, and I'll tell you
why. Why do you think the damn
56:36
hearings on the destruction of
the country are occurring right
56:40
now in Washington and for the
next several weeks?
56:45
As destruction?
56:49
Now we know the aliens are
coming, we're being distracted.
56:53
Well, this makes it extra
troubling. Yeah, because the
56:57
distraction stinks. And if you
have people are paying attention
57:00
when they come to it's gonna
suck. They will not go the way
57:05
the aliens intended. I do think
it's kind of cool that what that
57:09
report was out there that China
received Hey, man, we're
57:12
receiving some shit. I'm gonna
break out the ham gear. It's
57:15
about time to start talking back
to him.
57:20
Charlie Charlie for the aliens
stay away
57:28
so this is the problem. Yeah,
edge. That was good. Thank you.
57:31
So this judge
57:33
that testified ended up on NPR
and they interviewed him and I
57:39
give name was loose Stig. It's
just a dud. And he's a bushite a
57:44
casting Another thing about this
whole the casting sucked. Yeah.
57:48
And this guy's a bushy. He's a
bushy. And so you know, worked
57:52
for the Bush administration. We
all know that because the Jeb
57:55
Jeb Bush, you know, being turned
to
57:59
a moron, an idiot in front of
all the people that did various
58:03
debates where Trump just call
them up. You know, boring,
58:07
stupid and the rest of the low
energy, low energy Gen low
58:10
energy jab.
58:13
Which wiped out the bush guys.
Yeah. Again, curry Devorah
58:17
consulting, we know how to pep
up your candidate.
58:22
So with hookers?
58:25
That would hurt. So you have the
bush dynasty basically destroyed
58:33
by Donald Trump, which which
people should be very happy
58:36
about nobody is no, I personally
consider it his his greatest
58:41
greatest achievement is his
greatest achievement to get rid
58:45
of that bush dynasty those guys
so this just this bush he comes
58:49
on. He failed on the Clintons by
the way. He failed on that.
58:55
I'm sorry when he failed on the
Clintons. He didn't quite get
58:58
rid of that die. Didn't quite
get rid of it now at the
59:01
kingdom, kingdom, Kingdom heart.
So this guy's name is Lustig and
59:05
so I have like a little four
pack. Four packs of him talking
59:10
to NPR. Okay, okay.
59:13
Is it this NPR?
59:16
Yes, it's your butt tick. But
it's an interview with this guy
59:20
who's hates Trump and yeah, he's
a Republican, and they pounded
59:23
home. And they tried to do this.
I don't know how they get trying
59:27
to pull this off. But not all
Republicans are bad.
59:31
Most of them, I guess are. So
let's listen to this. During
59:35
Thursday's January 6 committee
hearing, one witness issued a
59:38
dire warning to the country. Jay
Alutiiq is a retired federal
59:42
judge who advised Vice President
Mike Pence that he could not
59:46
overturn the results of the 2020
election despite pressure he was
59:49
receiving from the President. In
his testimony this week. He said
59:52
that almost two years after the
riot at the US Capitol. Quote
59:56
Donald Trump and his allies and
supporters are a clear and
1:00:00
present danger to American
democracy. Looting said we're at
1:00:03
a crossroads similar to the ones
the United States faced during
1:00:07
the Civil War. And he said
America needs help. The question
1:00:11
now is what kind and how should
the country navigate its way
1:00:14
through these crossroads. Judge
ludic was appointed to the
1:00:17
federal bench by George HW Bush.
And before that worked for the
1:00:20
Bush administration, and also in
the Reagan White House. Mike
1:00:23
Alutiiq joins us now. Thank you
for being with us. As your
1:00:27
question,
1:00:28
the term clear and present
danger. Did that stone stem from
1:00:35
anywhere but the Tom Clancy
novel? I don't know. I don't
1:00:41
really know. I mean, I thought
it was the Tom Clancy Clancy was
1:00:44
very good at titling things and
coming up with little gimmicks.
1:00:48
And
1:00:50
it probably was a tongue.
Because the way it said here,
1:00:55
and this may be a millennial
thing. It's my belief that a lot
1:00:59
of people believe that clear and
present danger is a legal term.
1:01:06
And it may be it may be but I
don't think so. But the way it
1:01:10
was said in this report clear if
the January 6 committee is
1:01:14
citing Tom Clancy
1:01:17
seriously, I mean, clearly you
might know.
1:01:21
I mean, I get if I was to guess,
I would think that Tom Clancy
1:01:26
came up with it as just a clever
title.
1:01:30
I can't say that it doesn't
exist. I'm clear and present
1:01:33
danger, legal definition. Oh,
here we go. Here we go. There is
1:01:39
a clear and present danger test
originated in Schenck v. United
1:01:43
States as the printed or spoken
word may not be the subject of
1:01:46
previous restraint or subsequent
punishment unless it express
1:01:49
unless its expression creates a
clear and present danger of
1:01:53
bringing about a substantial
evil. Geez, we need our lawyers
1:01:57
on this. I'd like to understand
the the jurisprudence There we
1:02:01
go. I'd like to understand the
jurisprudence of clear and
1:02:04
present danger, we move on.
1:02:06
Okay, back to the judge, the
Republican judge. Thank you,
1:02:12
Adrian. It's a pleasure to be
with you this afternoon. But you
1:02:14
said in your testimony.
1:02:18
I'm a disc jockey and Malik
hounds on White House. Thank
1:02:21
you. It's good to be here. Maybe
I could get I gotta get NPO.
1:02:24
Thank you, Adrienne. It's a
pleasure to be with you this
1:02:26
afternoon. Hello, you said in
your testimony before the House
1:02:29
Select Committee investigating
the Capitol riot that we are in
1:02:32
a war over our democracy. But
that quote, only the party that
1:02:37
instigated this war can end it.
You're talking about the
1:02:41
Republican Party. So what's the
first step to finding the
1:02:46
peaceful endless Stop stop music
clip? Let's take a look at the
1:02:50
premise of this question. And
the guy buys into it, by the
1:02:53
way, because he's in agreement
with the premise he wants to get
1:02:56
NPR. When did the when did this
began this the battle this this
1:03:02
division which has gone back and
hit by the way, I think most
1:03:05
people historians can see this
going back to Martin Van Buren a
1:03:08
year before I was John Adams.
1:03:12
But let's forget all that and
just look into what's who's
1:03:15
triggered it most recently. I'm
putting the the oldest son of
1:03:18
Obama. Well, yes, absolutely.
1:03:24
All right. Well, we're in
agreement that we're in
1:03:26
agreement. Now we're in
agreement. You're talking about
1:03:29
the Republican Party. So what's
the first step to finding the
1:03:34
peaceful end to this war that
you say our country needs? I
1:03:37
identified two wars that had
been going on for at least two
1:03:43
years. The second war is the war
that I termed the war for
1:03:49
America's democracy, democracy.
And I said that that war, okay,
1:03:54
stop.
1:03:56
This guy talks just like Bill
Barr, he's not only a judge keys
1:04:02
in the millio.
1:04:04
Because you notice it. I know. I
mean, I understand it. I think
1:04:08
the cadence is closed. But Bill
Barr clones sound just like
1:04:14
just like
1:04:16
in the bill, but I think the
middle you is correct. Clear
1:04:19
your mind and for at least two
years. The second war is the war
1:04:25
that I termed the war for
America's democracy, democracy.
1:04:30
There just said that that war
for democracy began on January
1:04:35
6 2020. Ryan, and I go on to say
that through the the logic of
1:04:42
reconciliation that I propose,
it's incumbent upon the
1:04:48
Republican Party to begin the
reconciliation process, because
1:04:56
the Republican Party was
responsible for the
1:05:00
instigation of that second war
on January 6 2021. It's
1:05:06
especially in the O's I propose
because OHS Yeah, no democracy
1:05:12
democracy is so far because
1:05:15
it has to stand against things
is one of them is to repeat the
1:05:19
debt the old Republican Party is
long dead. And Trump was really
1:05:25
the embodiment of what people
want. The direction people
1:05:28
wanted to go, which was to be a
little more populist, a little
1:05:31
more
1:05:33
oriented toward Wish granted,
being. Yeah, well, it was
1:05:38
definitely a populist, but
populist for sure, but also
1:05:43
more, more of a People's Party,
that and more of an American
1:05:48
People's Party as opposed to a
socialist style of People's
1:05:51
Party. Right. Representing labor
workers. Sure. And and not to
1:05:58
just click click completely away
from this I want to come back to
1:06:01
but the thing that got my
attention was something that I
1:06:05
didn't see reported anywhere
except on Liz wheelers. podcast,
1:06:10
I'm going to play that. Oh,
goodness. Yeah, I'm digging
1:06:13
around.
1:06:15
slow news day.
1:06:17
No, it was just digging around.
1:06:21
Where's this clip blues? Really?
You want me to play Liz Wheeler?
1:06:24
Not this one. This is archive. I
don't want you playing now.
1:06:28
isn't theirs. You can find it
another one. It's www up. No,
1:06:33
no, no. It's some text. Here it
is text. Texas play the Texas
1:06:36
clip.
1:06:38
Texas Hispanic winner. Yep.
Hola. Hola. Rojas, the red wave
1:06:44
of 2022 has begun my friend and
it's starting in Texas. Maybe
1:06:49
you have not heard of this name
before. A month or two months
1:06:52
ago, Maya Flores won the house
seats in the 34th congressional
1:06:57
district in Texas. She's the
first Mexican born individual to
1:07:02
now serve in the United States
Congress. She won in a special
1:07:05
election on June 14, just this
week. And what's striking about
1:07:10
her victory here isn't actually
her background per se. It isn't
1:07:13
actually the fact that she was
born in Mexico. It's the fact
1:07:15
that she ran as a Republican in
the second most Hispanic
1:07:20
district in the entire country.
1:07:25
Yeah, it's really not nobody's
bragging about that. Yeah,
1:07:29
Tucker Carlson is YOLO besides
Carlson and Hannity all the fox,
1:07:35
the fox evening line size Fox,
but the mainstream media is not
1:07:38
as as of No, that does. No, I
would say that it's used in the
1:07:43
fall.
1:07:45
Because you don't you don't
watch MSNBC and CNN I do. Yes,
1:07:50
it goes like this. Do you know
1:07:53
you know, in jackass,
businessman, woman, a Latin
1:07:57
accent
1:08:02
at that, I think that was a
perfect impression. The
1:08:06
Republicans, the Hispanic
community in general, especially
1:08:10
the Catholic family oriented
Hispanic community, is more
1:08:15
likely to once they get a clue
to go Republican.
1:08:20
No Republican, not old,
Republican, new Republican
1:08:24
Dennis artigo democrat,
republican
1:08:28
and so these new Republicans are
a huge threat which is the most
1:08:32
Republicans are new Republicans
now. And there's still these old
1:08:36
dogs that are out there and
that's what they're talking
1:08:37
about on the in these this
hearing and that's what this old
1:08:40
judges talking about. Yeah, he
is a you know, old fart that
1:08:45
went to the Republican Party to
return back to the you know,
1:08:49
Cleveland era. Yeah, he's
classic. These classic
1:08:52
Republican like classic Coke
Classic Republican car.
1:08:58
Yeah, he's not like less new
repeatedly with
1:09:02
tenure with him. But
reconciliation process look like
1:09:07
what's required is a critical
mass of our nation's leaders
1:09:13
from both parties, to summon the
the moral and political courage
1:09:20
to extend, extend their hands,
to each other, and then to their
1:09:26
other colleagues. And all of
those colleagues began to extend
1:09:31
their hands to America and
acknowledge that America is in
1:09:36
peril, and that America needs
their help. No, it's not this,
1:09:42
put your hand in the hand of the
man that made you want us that's
1:09:47
what he's saying.
1:09:49
What he's saying earth or he's a
gore. I'd like to teach the
1:09:54
world to sing in perfect
harmony, okay, by Coca Cola is
1:10:00
Well, that's exactly. Alright,
let's continue with this guy,
1:10:03
idea that we can get to a better
place in our country when you
1:10:07
have people at these important
high levels who are denying the
1:10:12
2020 election results still. You
don't, and you can't.
1:10:20
Okay, let's stop there and ask
this guy, JEFFREY TOOBIN to
1:10:24
favorite he's such a favorite of
the Democrats and such
1:10:29
a fan favorite debt after
masturbating on on camera.
1:10:35
He's still on CNN showing up at
the from the waist up. And if
1:10:41
you recall, when he repented, he
repented. Yeah, sure he did.
1:10:48
And once in own earnest, always
an onus to her. Now.
1:10:53
He's the one that was on the C
span show, which we had a clip
1:10:57
of going on and on, because C
span guy mentioned that well,
1:11:01
the the this this was just a few
years ago, that the 2020
1:11:06
election was re
1:11:08
surveyed by the Miami Herald who
did a very thorough job and
1:11:13
determined that yes, George Bush
2000 election, you mean, the
1:11:17
2000? Okay, that's what I meant,
sorry. The 231 2000 election was
1:11:22
re surveyed. And it turned out
that yes, George Bush did win.
1:11:26
And Toobin said, No, he didn't.
I looked at that. No, he didn't
1:11:30
when George Bush did not end up
denying the Democrats have been
1:11:35
denying the election of George
Bush in 2000. To this day, I
1:11:40
think Al Gore still comes on
stage and says, Hi, I'm the one
1:11:43
who should have been depressed.
So how is that different? You're
1:11:47
doing what about as a man?
1:11:50
Yeah, you're right. Okay. Onward
with this with the judge. I just
1:11:53
want I'll just put this in
place. I think as a general rule
1:11:57
for us, and I'm just as guilty.
So I'm not picking on you. But
1:12:01
who else would pick up? It's you
and me? I think complaining
1:12:06
about hypocrisy is what every
single podcast does. Every guest
1:12:13
does it. Every host does it.
Every podcast eight hours of
1:12:18
who's who hypocritical. I didn't
use the word hypocritical. I
1:12:22
know you didn't, but I think you
understand what I'm saying.
1:12:26
Yeah, okay. Well, I just watched
us get back to the clips. Well,
1:12:29
that was your fourth clip. Is
there more? Oh, that was the
1:12:32
fourth clip. That was the so
called kick. Oh, they kick her
1:12:35
Okay, well, nevermind. Now.
There's no more I don't have
1:12:38
anything to do with this guy.
1:12:40
By the way, a quick call back to
the renaming of monkey pox to
1:12:44
MPX there was a suggestion in
the troll room I wanted to float
1:12:47
by us, which is by pox.
1:12:52
I think that's a great idea.
1:12:56
I don't think we can do it as a
show title and probably get in
1:12:59
trouble. That is a great isn't
that would have been terrific.
1:13:02
It would have it's really
targeted the gay community the
1:13:06
bike the bike community. Yeah,
it's the it has its with an X by
1:13:11
the way. It's by p O X not by
pox. No.
1:13:16
So this this riveting testimony
was also preempted on many PBS
1:13:20
stations by Curious George
1:13:25
according to The Washington
Post, which I wholeheartedly
1:13:27
believe, of course, we can't
keep the I'm happy that the kid
1:13:33
not you know what?
1:13:35
You've you know.
1:13:38
Isn't Curious George problematic
at this point?
1:13:44
Don't you think? A brown
character that is a monkey
1:13:50
you know, that does stuff and
gets up to mischief. Is that
1:13:54
kind of racist? Why is Curious
George
1:13:58
would put that out ABS PBS
1:14:02
PBS stations, I think it's time
to call to call out not George
1:14:09
what it is perfect candidate to
make a fuss. But I think Moe
1:14:13
facts you'd have a lot of fun
with that.
1:14:20
Yes, I mean, there's a lot of
stuff to focus on these days.
1:14:23
But heck, man, let's have some
fun with Curious George. Yeah.
1:14:27
And and whatever white supremacy
has disrupted the January 6
1:14:32
hearings for that racist show,
corrupting our children.
1:14:38
Debt. I think there's your
there's your the shoehorn right
1:14:41
there.
1:14:43
Well, that's what we would have
done if we were producing it.
1:14:47
We would have not been preempted
by Curious George who said, Wow,
1:14:50
it's really interesting PBS who
gets you know, money from all
1:14:53
these big elites who by the way,
have not really donated yet.
1:14:58
You know, all the big foundation
1:15:00
Since they are really sponsoring
racism over that, when in fact
1:15:04
they're covering up they're
trying to hide the real racist
1:15:07
destruction of democracy. We
democracy is on the brink and
1:15:11
PBS wants our children watching
racist monkeys.
1:15:16
There you go, and you can't it.
And who knows Curious George
1:15:20
might have the monkeypox. We can
just keep it going. By far the
1:15:24
most irritating thing I didn't
clip it is the use of the P
1:15:27
word. P word. P said the P word.
What's the P word? Oh, see? He
1:15:33
said the Mike Pence. You're a
pussy. But that had to be. Do
1:15:38
you didn't see this? No, I
didn't. Man. I should have
1:15:42
clipped it now. Yeah, well can
we can't say put it in the
1:15:45
hearing. So we have to say he
called Mike Pence the P word.
1:15:50
Well, as you saw guys said what?
What is the P word and not
1:15:54
unknowingly? Yeah, I didn't
think that was a word that was
1:15:59
banned from Congress. What are
what are they talking about here
1:16:02
is bullcrap.
1:16:04
They used they used to just say
it when Trump said grab her by
1:16:06
the pussy. All the news
stations. Today like to say it
1:16:10
over and over. Yeah. Giggling
Yes. This is weird. It's weird,
1:16:16
man. We did get corrected
1:16:19
by it. Not really a my anon by
an angry producer. But just so
1:16:23
you know, man. There were people
arrested with guns on January
1:16:27
sixth. He wasn't an unarmed
insurrection. Okay.
1:16:32
Is the guy with a gun? Good. Now
there were four people.
1:16:35
Four people, four people. It
takes a turn to overthrow the
1:16:39
government and it's four, four
guys. Four guns and some Yahoo
1:16:42
guys have forgotten since the
Oathkeepers. You're good to go.
1:16:46
Yep.
1:16:47
All right. It's worse than 911
Man.
1:16:50
Worse than Pearl Harbor.
1:16:53
Who?
1:16:55
Alright, do you have anything
more on this debacle? Actually,
1:16:57
what else? Did I have anything
here? Oh, yeah, another thing we
1:17:01
would know that YouTube
1:17:04
removed a video,
1:17:09
which was uploaded by the
January 6 Jan 616. House panel
1:17:13
themselves, which included
1:17:17
President Trump saying the 2020
general elections were quote
1:17:20
stolen.
1:17:23
So they took it down. Our
election integrity policy
1:17:27
prohibits content advancing
false claims that widespread
1:17:30
fraud errors or glitches change
the outcome of the 2020 US
1:17:33
presidential election. If it
does not provide sufficient
1:17:36
context, we enforce our policies
equally for everyone. And if
1:17:40
remove the video uploaded by the
January 6 committee channel,
1:17:44
what is wrong?
1:17:47
If we were trying to make this
work for the for the January 6
1:17:51
committee, don't you think we
would have clued in our YouTube
1:17:56
buddies through the backdoor?
1:17:59
Ah,
1:18:00
that's unbelievable.
1:18:04
As face to the January 6,
committee is incompetent.
1:18:09
And with that, I'd like to thank
you for your courage and say in
1:18:11
the morning to you the man who
put the C in the incompetent
1:18:15
January 6 committee ladies and
gentlemen, please say in the
1:18:17
morning to Mr. John C. Dvorak.
1:18:24
In the morning, out of Creamery
chips as he boosted the graph in
1:18:27
the air subs in the water,
1:18:29
and all the games and nights out
there. And again, a big Happy
1:18:34
Father's Day to all the dads out
there. Let's see how many of you
1:18:37
trolls are dads let's just count
all the trolls hands up their
1:18:40
trolls. Let me see a scary way I
ugly drawers hide if you can
1:18:44
2062
1:18:47
You know what that means? A lot
of dads are just lonely today.
1:18:52
Whole bunch of people hanging on
a shirt
1:18:59
How do you come up with these
things?
1:19:02
Your comedic genius map de flash
in my mind, I can't do anything
1:19:07
about it. The trolls are hanging
out at troll room.io You can go
1:19:11
there and you can. It's a
webpage you can just click play
1:19:14
you can listen to the live
stream or whatever is playing is
1:19:17
24/7 and log right in there into
the troll room. Or if you're
1:19:21
using one of the new podcast
apps, new podcast apps.com curio
1:19:26
caster pod verse currently
support all of this in the app.
1:19:28
So you use it to listen to the
app to the podcast or all your
1:19:32
podcasts. And when we go live
you get A a bat signal and you
1:19:36
can get the live the live stream
and the chat right in the app if
1:19:40
you have the time for it.
Otherwise, the podcast will pop
1:19:43
up automatically. Or you can
follow us if you want to join in
1:19:46
some longer form conversation at
no agenda social.com This is our
1:19:51
Mastodon instances small we've
kept it to 10,000 with those
1:19:54
coveted no agenda social.com
addresses but you can follow
1:19:59
anybody from
1:20:00
anywhere because we are members
of the fediverse. And that means
1:20:02
it's. It's federated so you can
follow us from any Mastodon
1:20:06
server. Yeah, and there plenty
of them define. You could always
1:20:09
even set one up yourself. It's
crazy how that works.
1:20:13
And let us thank the artist who
so generously contributed to
1:20:18
Episode 1460.
1:20:22
See, we titled that episode wet
bulb a lot of feedback on the
1:20:26
title people have kind of
misunderstood
1:20:30
that we understand the concept
of wet bulb. Hey, man, that's
1:20:34
been around forever. Red bulb
conditions are really bad if
1:20:38
you've never heard I'm surprised
you never heard of it. The point
1:20:41
was, wet bulb was being used I
again that stack actually.
1:20:48
Does he ever email you? He used
to email me all the time. So now
1:20:53
he again he found his his his.
Okay, he's fickle. And so I
1:20:58
think one time or another sad. I
don't know if this is, you know,
1:21:02
I said something to him. Right?
I must have offended him. And he
1:21:05
found a better a better target.
You me? Well, no, he actually he
1:21:11
sends me many clips. And
1:21:15
he's got good material, good
observation, everything about
1:21:17
it. But I think at some point, I
test the way I deal with these
1:21:22
with this kind of x I do most of
my own research. Let's face it,
1:21:25
you blocked him. I don't think
1:21:29
you must have. You don't do
research. When someone annoys
1:21:32
you, whatever it is block.
1:21:37
Come on now.
1:21:39
So
1:21:41
when you Oh, there you go. You
back. You got blocked, blocked.
1:21:46
Right. Anyway, what he liked, he
sends Great Clips, but he likes
1:21:49
to comment on how dumb you are.
And I always say, I would say
1:21:53
email him, man. Why are you
telling me so now I'd get
1:21:56
satisfaction thing? Did I say
this time? You didn't know? You
1:22:00
didn't know what wet bulb is?
cannot believe it? I'm
1:22:03
surprised. I didn't know it.
Well, you know, I probably
1:22:07
didn't know what wet bulb is
because they used to be an air
1:22:09
pollution inspector. And we used
to have these high grot these
1:22:12
these spinning thermometers. And
you to get the relative humidity
1:22:16
you'd gotten you spin this
thing. And you'd have these two
1:22:19
thermometers. And one of them
had a little piece of cloth at
1:22:23
the bottom where you would wet.
1:22:26
And so there was a piece of
those like cheesecloth at the
1:22:28
bottom. And you would keep one
of them wet and one of them
1:22:32
would be dry, no dry and you
spin this thing around. And so
1:22:37
because the wet and wherever it
was, we had to kiss that person.
1:22:41
It would spin it around that the
wet side which we would cool off
1:22:45
as you spun it. And then you get
these two temperatures and you
1:22:48
can make calculation tell what
the humidity was. So yeah, I
1:22:51
know what it was. Yeah, I know.
Well, wet ball, but wet bulb.
1:22:56
Oh, well, this might have been
laid back. Was it wet is an LED
1:22:59
what are we talking about? I'm
gonna clue you I think I know
1:23:02
what this is really about.
1:23:04
It's just and I'm just telling
you because this isn't analysis.
1:23:08
It's not how I feel about you or
anything. I think he's an old
1:23:12
guy who just wants to bitch
about some other old guy could
1:23:16
be you know, and I'm always
saying man, you're an old fart.
1:23:21
You don't even know what a wet
bulb is.
1:23:25
How can you listen to a guy you
want what he's really saying?
1:23:28
I've always noticed guys that do
this. Oh hold on. Let me find
1:23:31
that once you fire him and put
me on your show that may know I
1:23:36
get a lot of those. Oh my
goodness. It's they never
1:23:39
suggested John Stack but I do
get a lot of the get rid of
1:23:44
Batman that kind of show.
1:23:46
You do a special show with John
seven I don't want to wait a
1:23:50
minute wait a minute I got I got
to find one of his he sent an
1:23:54
and the only reason I say this
You sent an exceptional amount
1:23:56
today.
1:23:58
I want is this OMG lol
1:24:05
oh man well here here it is.
Here's is your history being off
1:24:08
the rails since the very
beginning of the show but it's a
1:24:10
Father's Day show we do a one to
four Act may never have heard of
1:24:14
it but may have he may have
slept through that class.
1:24:17
surprised it was new to him
since he often says he worked in
1:24:20
a laboratory where the term is
routinely used to measure
1:24:24
relative humidity
1:24:30
determined not routinely used
just the device and you put some
1:24:33
water on this little piece of
cloth is known as you got your
1:24:37
wet bulb on today.
1:24:40
keenly used I don't think so. I
did work in a lab. And I can
1:24:43
tell you right now the term wet
bulb is not routinely used. You
1:24:47
can see here's his pitch the
next paragraph. You're right. At
1:24:50
any rate when I worked in the
Middle East decades ago, I was
1:24:54
cautioned about the Red Sea
coast of Saudi and Yemen is
1:24:57
showing to me that is worldly in
1:25:00
Both of those places as well as
parts of India, I mean, now he's
1:25:03
a worldly guy. And elsewhere the
humidity and air temperature
1:25:06
often reaches a point at which
the human body and most mammals
1:25:08
can no longer expel body heat
through sweating. The air is
1:25:11
raw, already saturated, cannot
absorb more water, heatstroke
1:25:14
and death results. Chicago, he's
from Chicago. No, no, no, no,
1:25:20
no. He mentioned Chicago as a
terrible place.
1:25:25
Wow, okay, so Well, anyway, it
was nice getting clips from stek
1:25:29
I guess that's gonna end.
1:25:31
I guess. So. Thank you. Well,
there's There you go. People
1:25:34
ladies and gentlemen down there.
That's the thanks you get.
1:25:39
It's been going on for so long
for years where I say, just
1:25:43
email him these complaints. Why
email him was complaining is he
1:25:47
doing? Okay?
1:25:51
Well, okay, block, the block is
coming. Okay. Let's see.
1:25:58
WTF This is alternate. 245.
Thursday show, Dvorak brings up
1:26:03
the 2020 elections. And you say,
yes, let's look at it for a
1:26:06
moment. Then you immediately
bring up Michelle Obama running
1:26:08
for president in 2024. Let's
coined a new term for this
1:26:11
reminiscent of Mandela, the
divorce check effect.
1:26:16
fuel fill fuel. This is all from
today. Fuel Cell fact check. I
1:26:20
won't read a kill Divorce Act
first uninformed comments,
1:26:22
because what's the point? But
God, this is great content. The
1:26:26
problem with fuel cells, the
problem with fuel cells, which
1:26:29
my former employer developed,
was at the Saudis is not ice out
1:26:35
the tailpipe nor cold weather
that's idiotic. In fact, they
1:26:38
use fuel cells in their frigid
expanses of outer space at minus
1:26:42
400 degrees Fahrenheit Helou.
1:26:51
I hope this is funny for other
people, because I find this very
1:26:55
good. It's really It's so
1:26:59
it's relieving from like, the
Isotta tailpipes comes from a
1:27:02
guy who drove a fuel cell car.
Officially bad when leased to
1:27:08
him by Toyota. I driven him
around. I didn't know anything
1:27:11
about the ice GM, or the water
flying out the back like that. I
1:27:14
didn't. I was just reading his
letter. I think you're right,
1:27:17
though, by the way, and I
believe it to be true. I'd be
1:27:20
just because you have some fuel
cells aren't just hydrogen fuel
1:27:23
cells. There's plenty of them.
Hey, John. Hey, John. Hey, John.
1:27:26
Let's move on with the fun
segment. And let's not get into
1:27:28
fuel cells who gives a crap?
This is the next one. And I
1:27:31
think he's right. And I'm
putting him on the on the bench.
1:27:34
Okay, I'm putting him as backup
he is showing you right here. So
1:27:39
we were talking about driver's
education in the horrible
1:27:41
movies. You know, he's gonna
He's gonna do you one better.
1:27:44
He's prepping for his first take
over in my in my high school,
1:27:49
you know, so his high school
clearly better than yours. One
1:27:52
of the driver's ed teachers was
also the ski club, chaperone and
1:27:56
sponsor, that dirt bag used to
shack up with one of our 16 year
1:28:00
old class Lutz on ski wakens.
That was common knowledge. No
1:28:04
one seemed to care back in the
day how things change. I wonder
1:28:07
if DeVore AK has similar stories
for just checking over some 16
1:28:13
year old from tennis and I Oh,
man. He is totally telling me
1:28:20
that you know, if you're tired
of divorce suck, I'm better and
1:28:23
I'm here.
1:28:25
And I've got stories. LA's got
some desk for sure. Ah,
1:28:31
my goodness. Oh OMG lol divorce.
Literally literally couldn't
1:28:38
recall what he said to you five
seconds earlier about the
1:28:41
January 6, five second hearing
time wasters. That excerpt
1:28:45
should be next Sunday's Clip of
the Day.
1:28:50
Wow, is he pissed off at me for
what? Just say? No, this has
1:28:55
been like this for years. Yeah,
it's been four years since I
1:28:58
stopped hearing from him. Maybe
you should unblock him and let
1:29:02
him email you. I think you guys
might have some things in
1:29:05
common.
1:29:13
Oh, owe Britain's such eff off.
Stupid troll. Here we go. Thank
1:29:19
you very much Taunton, Neil, for
the for the artwork for episode
1:29:23
1460 Which again, we titled wet
bulb we won't go through that
1:29:27
again.
1:29:29
There were there were a couple
of pieces of art and this is the
1:29:32
carpooling, cut your expenses by
33%. Very nice because I try
1:29:36
carpooling was very nice. It was
really quite nice. And there
1:29:40
were some other things that we
looked at free co 50 I thought
1:29:43
that was funny. Yeah, yeah,
exactly. Nice little things in
1:29:46
there. Little extra bits. Well,
this was not an original choice,
1:29:51
because we couldn't come up with
anything.
1:29:53
And you'd like to phone by
unlike the phone.
1:29:58
There wasn't really wasn't
1:30:00
Good selection. This ticularly I
think was hard from because of
1:30:04
basis on basis of what we talked
about in the show. There was a
1:30:07
lot of material that you could
turn into art.
1:30:10
Let me see what we were looking
at this squirt was kind of a
1:30:14
amusing but we were gonna go
with that.
1:30:17
No, and it was it was funny
though, because it was such a
1:30:19
throwaway line. I didn't expect
anything to pop up about squirt.
1:30:24
Yeah.
1:30:27
Let me see.
1:30:30
Was that lucky was that monkey
pox crush the name renaming of
1:30:34
monkey pox. I think that might
have been on there. Contagious
1:30:37
boils syndrome we had on there
CBS with the CBS logo and the
1:30:41
monkey face. That was close.
Yes. But it wasn't it wasn't a
1:30:46
great piece. No, they we didn't
have it. There were no great
1:30:49
pieces. The only good piece was
this. Well, I liked I liked the
1:30:52
LGBTQ.
1:30:55
The cross with like, like a
strength, weakness, opportunity
1:30:58
and risk. type of grade was a
pink cross.
1:31:04
Oh, that one? Yeah. Yeah, he's
like that was hopefully. Okay.
1:31:10
There were lots of
1:31:14
Kareena Abdul John Pierre and
the diversity.
1:31:20
Diversity woman
1:31:22
right. It's a bit it's just you
know, just to put a woman on
1:31:25
there with with a with a rainbow
flag. I mean, it's not really
1:31:29
wasn't getting me. No debt, no
debt. The only good piece was
1:31:33
done to Neil's? Yeah. And she
did two things. She do two of
1:31:36
them. And she earlier one that
wasn't as good. Yeah. And then
1:31:39
this one nailed it. And she
pumped up, pumped it up. We
1:31:43
appreciate we appreciate to talk
to Neil, thank you very much for
1:31:46
submitting your artwork. All the
artists. Look at the amount of
1:31:49
work that goes into it. No one I
see. I want to start seeing art
1:31:51
again from Dame Kenny Ben, who
got irked with me much the way
1:31:56
John stick was you need to
unblock her. I did. I finally
1:32:01
found out how to do it. Have you
have you blocked any other
1:32:03
artists? No, I haven't blocked
artists. I don't block artists.
1:32:07
Well, she said she blocked you.
Or she and she I think she may
1:32:11
have stopped me if I because you
blocked you blocked artists. I
1:32:15
think you blocked some other
artists too. No, I've never
1:32:18
blocked any artist. If you're an
artist blogger Yeah, no, I
1:32:20
blocked that one guy who claimed
to be an artist. I have no idea
1:32:24
whatever art he did. And he was
bitching and moaning you're an
1:32:27
artist blocker, you blocking
creative spirit. This is Stax
1:32:32
gonna email me now. And that was
that guy was just a
1:32:36
troublemaker, so I couldn't
stand it. So I just blocked him.
1:32:41
Okay.
1:32:43
Tom Thomson, Neil, thank you
very much. You can follow along.
1:32:46
If you're listening live, just
refresh refresh. During the
1:32:49
show, you can see the artists
uploading as we speak. I mean,
1:32:52
there's already a bipoc monkey
up there. People are so fast and
1:32:55
so good. We appreciate it is
part of the value for value
1:32:58
model. There's no look at look
around. How many podcasts have
1:33:02
fresh, good, really good album
art every single show? Well, you
1:33:07
can count them on one hand if
that. And that's because of how
1:33:10
we've done things. Now, we don't
have ads. We don't take
1:33:13
corporate money. I'm still
waiting for the check from the
1:33:15
oil companies according to our
energy secretary. Yeah, you
1:33:18
know, that check should be here
any minute now. Cuz that's what
1:33:22
they do. So we can discredit
wind and solar, we don't need to
1:33:25
get paid to do that. All we want
to do is just deconstruct the
1:33:28
media and bring the best that we
can to you as clean as we see
1:33:32
it. And we spend a lot of time
on it's our entire vocation. So
1:33:36
we'd like time talent that's
really witnessed here in these
1:33:39
pieces of art and treasure. So
if you'd like to submit some of
1:33:42
this and spend some of your time
and talent no agenda art
1:33:45
generator.com If you'd like to
support us financially, which we
1:33:48
certainly need the T the
treasure T It's divorce
1:33:52
act.org/n A and let's kick it
off right away with our first
1:33:55
executive producer for episode
1461 Tim Alcott is from
1:34:00
Aldington Maryland. Wonder
Aldington ism never heard of
1:34:04
Odenton Odin? Oh, I thought it
was an Ellen they're owed into I
1:34:08
haven't heard of Odenton either.
1:34:12
I have it either. From Odin tude
and says Happy Dad's Day y'all
1:34:18
at $619.22 I might add 619 22
That would be today's date. Very
1:34:23
nice. Yeah. And that was the
suggested Father's Day donation
1:34:27
with this donation. Oh, it was
no the Father's Day donation was
1:34:29
wide open. Six 619 22 was the
Juneteenth donation Oh, okay.
1:34:35
Well, he's he's satisfying both
groups. Now. The June team we're
1:34:39
gonna do one guy who is even
going to throw in on the Jews.
1:34:43
This is the guy this is the guy
Tim and with this with this
1:34:46
donation I move into knighthood
and claim the title sir Rody,
1:34:49
Joe of the eastern seaboard
trucking lanes. We got it for
1:34:53
the roundtable. He requests
shepherd's pie and Sam Adams
1:34:56
Well, that's a simple one. We
love that. Any requests Yeah,
1:34:59
calm
1:35:00
For all thank you very much Tim
Alcott Odenton is an output from
1:35:04
audits in Maryland. Thank you
very much sir.
1:35:07
You've got ah Harma
1:35:14
George Walter is George's which
could be because he's in
1:35:20
Luxembourg. He's in Lloyd a
longer
1:35:26
I'm guessing through as $546.20
zoodle Dharma Ludo Lorna doodle
1:35:31
on Ludo.
1:35:33
ITM John and add this donation
is honor my 54th trip around the
1:35:36
sun brings me to knighthood. I
like to be known as Sir galter
1:35:42
run of the gutless
1:35:44
Okay, or our gut bland? I can I
have buckwheat whiskey from
1:35:52
Brittany?
1:35:54
That's interesting. Wow. That's
a new request here. Well, I
1:35:59
didn't know there was a that
Britney made a buck wheat
1:36:03
whiskey and wanna know, coin
Armand Coogan? Well, how do you
1:36:09
pronounce it? I don't know. I
was hoping you could do it for
1:36:12
me so I'll know how to pronounce
it when I enough. The night in
1:36:16
Arman at the roundtable I get
him on wagon a month. Ever heard
1:36:21
of this stuff? No, I have not
heard of the whiskey either. Yet
1:36:25
Carmi wants him yet. Carmi then
he finishes with love is lit it
1:36:29
love is indeed live.
1:36:32
You've got ah Harmon
1:36:38
the Yak is extremely popular.
Makes my stomach hurt. Becky
1:36:43
Becky Becky Kinney.
1:36:47
Becky Kinney from Katy Texas.
three 80.8 That's three boob
1:36:52
3808 I think I don't know.
1:36:55
Becky says Happy Father's Day to
my husband Mike lover of well
1:36:59
you know Yep, it's oh it's a
switcheroo. She says okay, Mike
1:37:03
so Mike will be the recipient of
this executive producer credit
1:37:07
dilution, please.
1:37:09
You've been dee doo Stan. She
says she's got a great wife.
1:37:14
Please play Biden whole load.
It's not happening and shut up,
1:37:18
slave. I'm gonna give you the
whole load today. That's not
1:37:21
happening now. Slaves. Not quite
sure what that says about his.
1:37:25
His Father's Day.
1:37:29
I don't know what kind of what
kind of good luck. Yeah, hats
1:37:33
off to you, brother. Mike.
1:37:38
Alrighty, then I'm just saying.
I'm just saying. Christina
1:37:42
Darrington in lost wages in
Nevada. Three, three. And I'm
1:37:48
making this donation on behalf
of Tyler D from lost wages to
1:37:52
make him an executive producer
switcheroo in a row all right.
1:37:58
In a row in a row. Please deduce
him
1:38:03
you've been D deuced. A second
husband de douching in a row.
1:38:09
And but she's being deduced but
for not donating sooner not sure
1:38:13
how that works.
1:38:15
Happy Father's Day to my sexy
husband in loving father to our
1:38:18
children and for introducing me
to the truth to the truth
1:38:22
meaning that no agenda show so
my eyes could be opened
1:38:26
please play a few jingles. You
go mac and cheese and Trump
1:38:31
roused and karma to be I noticed
a theme with with the moms and
1:38:36
the wives today.
1:38:39
Mac and cheese mac and cheese by
iron Rand was hard to get it
1:38:43
aroused and it is hard to get it
around. But we
1:38:47
got karma. What are these women
saying to their husbands?
1:38:52
No stories are interesting.
Here's this sir are Daniels a no
1:38:57
agenda success story if we've
ever seen one now the executive
1:39:00
director of Project Veritas he's
from colts neck New Jersey 333
1:39:05
dot 67 Let's see what's up with
him. He says in the morning
1:39:08
gents just finishing up our
Central Jersey meet up up at the
1:39:11
three br distillery in Keyport
New Jersey. I'm following this
1:39:16
up with a donation of 333 67
Which gets me to my fourth
1:39:19
knighthood. What is the fourth
knighthood John? That's a baron
1:39:24
that's a I think that is Baron
Baron Vikon Baron I think it's
1:39:27
parenting is Baron
1:39:29
thank you for your courage if
anyone and no agenda nation is
1:39:32
in a position to expose
corruption, be brave do
1:39:35
something Veritas
tips@protonmail.com or email me
1:39:40
directly at Dan at Project
veritas.com No jingles no karma,
1:39:44
sir are Daniels. How about that?
I I love it that the that were
1:39:49
somehow connected now. And you
know, we have a backstory back
1:39:52
conversation with him. I think
you hooked him up with some
1:39:55
sound engineers. He said hey,
I'm having a meeting next week.
1:39:58
Yeah. So if you want to do
something good for
1:40:00
Project Veritas make it so that
a podcast can play an audio
1:40:03
clip. Because most of it is like
1:40:15
that's unplayable for us. And I
think he took it to heart and I
1:40:19
really appreciate his continued
support throughout more than a
1:40:22
decade. Probably. He's been
supporting us.
1:40:28
Triple night F 14 F. Okay, no, a
triple night becomes the Baron.
1:40:34
Wait, yeah, it was a baron. If
there's nothing for four nights,
1:40:41
five nights you become a Viking.
Okay, so he's still a barren,
1:40:45
barren plus.
1:40:47
Barren plus night where he can
give the night to somebody else.
1:40:50
Yep, that's true. He could he
could bestow it upon someone.
1:40:54
Next on the list is Dan downy
and ghouls, Netherlands. Three,
1:40:59
three 3.34.
1:41:00
And he says note in the mail and
two, I go and this die. I find
1:41:04
this to be distressing. I looked
at my mail, I couldn't find
1:41:07
anything. Well, that's because
he's sending it here. Here's his
1:41:10
email. I'm gonna read this to
you. And I'm gonna get asked a
1:41:12
couple of questions to people in
general. I don't want to. I
1:41:15
don't want to condemn anyone for
doing this sort of, but you're
1:41:17
gonna do it. Anyway. Typical.
Thanks, John.
1:41:21
He writes, luckily, the air is
cleared a little in Canada over
1:41:24
the last week, even though he's,
I guess in Canada. Why is this?
1:41:27
Why is he saying? Thanks, John.
Did you ever conversation with
1:41:30
him?
1:41:31
I think maybe. Oh, okay. Oh,
yeah. No, he's watched other
1:41:36
ways to donate. So I sent him a
link to the donation
1:41:40
bank donation thing, and I told
him, I'm gonna have some I'm
1:41:43
gonna put some international so
you had an ongoing conversation.
1:41:46
Okay. Yeah. But yeah, he said,
thanks. Luckily, the air has
1:41:49
been cleared a little in Canada
last week, I realized it could
1:41:51
donate another way. It's been
successfully submitted. A short
1:41:54
note is in the mail. Thanks for
the show. Best wishes, Dan.
1:41:58
Okay. And short note. I don't
have a short note. It's in the
1:42:03
mail. And if he's in Canada, it
could take years to get here is
1:42:06
anyone who mails from Canada
knows oh, it just put it in the
1:42:10
email. Because if he had had
more time, you've written a
1:42:14
shorter note.
1:42:16
Well, he that was pretty short
seems to me and I. Anyway,
1:42:19
thanks for the donation. And
because he has no note he gets a
1:42:23
double karma.
1:42:26
You've got double Pharma.
1:42:30
Once again.
1:42:33
Theresa mizuko is in Snohomish.
No homeless. Am I saying the
1:42:38
right? A whole major Snohomish
Washington 333 dot 33. And
1:42:43
Teresa says this is the second
installment towards my husband
1:42:46
Dale's knighthood and a Father's
Day donation.
1:42:50
Does that is that a switcheroo?
Then? say so? Okay.
1:42:56
This is an extra emotional
Father's Day as our human
1:42:59
resource graduated high school
and my husband's father passed
1:43:03
away. Happy Father's Day we love
you know jingles just karma for
1:43:07
all so heartwarming that this
has been done. You've got karma.
1:43:13
I love the love of dads in the
women. Yes, sir. Dave goes there
1:43:20
he goes in Naples, Florida. 333
1:43:24
is a long note. This week I
filled up my truck was stupid
1:43:28
expensive gas. And the universe
spoke to me again displaying a
1:43:31
fuel range of 333 miles and pick
attached given the higher
1:43:37
producer output lately. I
figured I needed to given the
1:43:42
lighter lighter producer output
Yes, lighter producers, but I
1:43:46
need to do my part. In return, I
may humbly ask for a little plug
1:43:50
for a new vodka and whiskey
company. Metal spirits. You
1:43:56
should talk to Darren O'Neill
about this. We're a lifestyle
1:44:00
brand that is called metal
spirits.com metal like Metal
1:44:05
Head. We're a lifestyle brand
that also has some of the
1:44:08
smoothest vodka and rye whiskies
you'll ever taste we'll be
1:44:12
launching toward the end of
summer but I'd love to get a
1:44:14
bunch of no agenda producers to
check us out and leaves our
1:44:17
email for exclusive offers the
nickel spirits tribe and for no
1:44:23
agenda nation, email is
critical. So you don't have to
1:44:26
rely on as much on Facebook and
other social media outlets and
1:44:30
yes, I will be sending you both
samples. Yes for your brutally
1:44:34
honest assessment. Oh boy. Yes.
You know what, I love that I'd
1:44:38
love that people do that. You
know, there's the new road
1:44:43
caster pro mark two is coming
out.
1:44:47
And this may be the one I think
they may have done it. Every
1:44:50
YouTuber every dipshit on
YouTube every dipshit who has a
1:44:55
podcast gets one to try out. I'm
still waiting for the one I paid
1:44:59
for
1:45:02
Wait a minute, let me finish
this note and I'll say this
1:45:05
sorry. And yes, he continues,
I'll be sending you both
1:45:08
samples, no jingles but a big
one venture karma karma would be
1:45:12
appreciated. Cheers and an F and
F Kidoz. Which is a vodka.
1:45:19
David, Dave goes to the car.
1:45:22
You've got karma.
1:45:25
Okay, so let me get this
straight.
1:45:29
You
1:45:32
I'd say the vendor of podcasting
but everyone says the CO
1:45:35
inventor but let's just say that
and and someone who dabbles in
1:45:39
electronics and kind of knows
what's what and is, and
1:45:42
considered probably the best
sound guy of all the people
1:45:45
doing podcasts. You're the
definitive sound guy, you're the
1:45:49
guy who you would send this
thing to? Immediately to get
1:45:53
some feedback. Yeah, but
instead, they stiffed you and
1:45:57
send you nothing. Correct?
Because they're, I believe, my
1:46:01
original thesis, I believe
they're afraid you're gonna sue
1:46:04
them?
1:46:05
Oh, that's really too bad. And
almost every other manufacturer
1:46:09
of some device.
1:46:12
Now there's been two I've had
contact with no one, no one has
1:46:15
sent me anything, honestly, not
a single one. You know why? It's
1:46:18
here's the the reason is not
because they're afraid I'm going
1:46:20
to sue them because I won't and
I'm have no intention of suing
1:46:23
them. You know, it's I'm sure
it's taken a lot of money, time
1:46:26
and effort. And they've
developed not one, but two, this
1:46:29
is the second hardware device to
get to something that I could
1:46:33
have advised them on seven years
ago. So they could have gotten
1:46:36
it right the first time. That's
okay. Because it's not about
1:46:39
money. For me, it's not about
it's about making it easy for
1:46:43
podcasters to do a podcast and
record it and do it properly and
1:46:46
be able to do it by themselves
and not have to have some
1:46:49
engineer go back and and be
like, you know, the VO some some
1:46:54
Hollywood producer to create
this soul soundtrack. What
1:46:58
they're afraid what they're
afraid of is, is that I'm going
1:47:02
to be honest.
1:47:04
You see the YouTubers and the
podcast as they send it to,
1:47:08
those guys aren't going to slam
it. You know how this I don't
1:47:10
have to you You are the
exception because you are the
1:47:13
one person who will do a review.
You'll take the junket, you'll
1:47:18
go on that you'll go to China,
they'll they'll, they'll wine
1:47:21
and dine you and then you'll
give their product that shit
1:47:23
review. Because you figure
they're not going to ask you
1:47:25
back anyway. And that's the way
to do it. I would give an honest
1:47:29
review. And I wouldn't even I
would tell them privately, I
1:47:33
would tell them to free junket I
always gave an honest review.
1:47:37
Yes, because you didn't care if
they invited you back. Right? So
1:47:42
it would be good. It could have
been good. It could have been
1:47:43
bad if it was good or bad
doesn't make any difference
1:47:45
because you never get invited
back. You get invited once. Once
1:47:50
this is for this is what Leo
Laporte changed when he started
1:47:54
sucking off tech companies about
their latest phone, the whole
1:47:58
industry, the whole tech. news
and opinion shows this you know
1:48:05
this, it's all good. Because no
one ever is honest, really
1:48:10
honest. Because they don't want
to get cut off. They don't want
1:48:13
the supply cut off. They'll
never say Apple sucks, because
1:48:16
then they won't get any more
demo machines are getting
1:48:18
invited to the whatever stupid
meeting you have to go to. Yeah,
1:48:23
this is this is rampant
throughout technology. And so
1:48:26
they'll send these things
because our way before Lee, of
1:48:29
course, and yeah, but I like to
think still buys most of his
1:48:32
stuff here, but it deserves to
get slammed just from Biafra
1:48:36
time and from time to time from
time to it from time to time. I
1:48:38
need to do that.
1:48:41
Thesis you.
1:48:44
We can line up behind Darren
O'Neal. Okay. It was Darren.
1:48:47
Yeah. But Darren. Anyway, the
point is, if they had asked me I
1:48:52
would reviewed it and I would
have told them privately I
1:48:54
wouldn't I wouldn't put them to
shame. But now i Hey, I think
1:48:57
they're idiots.
1:48:59
Right? But not but now that I
had to buy it. Just wait. You
1:49:04
just wait and your earlier
complaint I have to say this is
1:49:07
one of the reasons people should
be listening to this segment, is
1:49:10
I'm gonna play a clip. Oh, man.
You're complaining live content?
1:49:14
Yes. Your earlier complaint
about the reason for having a
1:49:18
good device is so people can
actually produce something
1:49:21
without a million people. I have
a what's wrong with this
1:49:24
podcast?
1:49:26
clip And this is and this is our
friend Liz Wheeler, the end of
1:49:30
her podcast and this is gonna
tell you what's wrong with
1:49:32
podcasting in general. Tell me
how you're gonna make money
1:49:34
after listening to this. Thank
you for listening. I'm Liz
1:49:37
Wheeler. This is the list
Wheeler show.
1:49:43
The Liz Wheeler show is produced
by Jonathan Hey, executive
1:49:46
producer Chad Abbott, Director
of Photography, Kevin McRoberts.
1:49:50
Editor, Alejandro figure. Hola,
sound mixer. Robyn Fenderson,
1:49:55
Director of Marketing Emily
wachler. Production and talent
1:49:58
coordinator Matt Toffler.
1:50:00
and senior publicist, Patricia
Jackson. This has been a
1:50:03
soundfront production. Oh my
goodness, nine people total
1:50:08
including her.
1:50:12
Well, this is it's it's not that
you don't need a lot of
1:50:16
producers to help you create a
great show. If it's not value
1:50:21
for value and people aren't
doing this voluntarily because
1:50:24
they take ownership of the
production, which I'm sure is
1:50:27
not the case for their podcast,
then you have to pay him. And
1:50:30
then these people need to have a
union. And this is why you can't
1:50:34
monetize the network. You can
fail.
1:50:39
This is New Media. New media
doesn't require so much
1:50:42
overhead. Now low. There it is.
Hello, onwards. Dragana.
1:50:51
Ivan. Avik I think you're gonna
have aerobic Parker, Colorado
1:50:57
333. In the morning Adam and JC
this donation is a switch a roo
1:51:01
for HFS devil. All right, hold
on a second. This will change F
1:51:08
s Devil is interested switcheroo
Day. Happy Father's Day to the
1:51:13
man with the sexiest but that I
cannot resist but squeezes I
1:51:17
walked by. Keys
1:51:20
HSF dubbed HFS devil colon. I
want to thank you for giving our
1:51:25
human resource an ideal father.
Thanks for tuning in there.
1:51:30
Thanks for giving her someone
who she can whom she can
1:51:32
respect, admire and look up to
in life. We love you silly
1:51:36
billy. Really? Now back to us.
I've been listening to you guys
1:51:39
since Adams first appearance on
Rogen.
1:51:44
Organ donation, I'll keep it
short and sweet. Sure, to
1:51:48
Hurray. Fail. Keep doing what
you're doing. And we will keep
1:51:51
donating and listening to you to
Adam and JC please never find an
1:51:55
exit strategy. And never ever
stop your bickering at each
1:51:58
other. I do so love when mommy
and daddy fight.
1:52:05
drag drag. Dragana, Dragana. No,
thank you very much. And there
1:52:11
was no other jingle. Right? That
was another beautiful Father's
1:52:14
Day donation. And we thank you
very much for that. Okay, let me
1:52:18
do a couple of here. Joshua
Huffman in Blue Springs,
1:52:20
Maryland. 333. There's no email
from him. Do you have something
1:52:24
I do not. And if we don't have a
note and I did look, then we go
1:52:27
to the double. You've got
1:52:32
farmer,
1:52:34
Jack green, Jacqueline, young in
Chucky, Chucky, Tennessee. 300.
1:52:42
And again, here we go. I'm
donating for my husband Kevin.
1:52:47
Kester. This will put him
overnight status and dubbed him
1:52:51
as Sir Kevin Knight of the
southern Appalachian hemp
1:52:55
farmers
1:52:57
Rock calling out my brother in
law Phil Bentley as a douchebag
1:53:04
I think was kind of an
interesting because all right,
1:53:06
that's a great combo. I love it.
The artist says they're probably
1:53:10
twins.
1:53:11
And she's saying this is why I
married him you lose her.
1:53:17
Go jingle refer to show 1432
Okay, coaching over there.
1:53:23
You've got
1:53:25
it's gonna be fun. It's gonna be
a full roundtable today. Rita
1:53:29
Harrington, Rita Harrington and
sparks Nevada and Rita has no
1:53:33
note I've looked Did you find
anything from Rita nothing.
1:53:35
First Associate Executive
Producer. It is rove ducks. Two,
1:53:38
two 2.22. We thank you for that.
You should double karma. You've
1:53:42
got double Pharma.
1:53:48
To Richard of Burbank, north of
the five that's us fun. 20202 in
1:53:55
Burbank. Dear John Anam. Thank
you. It would not be the same
1:54:00
without you. Know, he said I
would not be sane without you
1:54:04
all. I'm sorry. No jingles no
karma Sir Richard of the Burbank
1:54:08
northend. Five. Clayton Katyn
Clifford Katyn Uxbridge, Ontario
1:54:14
Canada $200.33. It's probably
dollar redos, but we accept them
1:54:19
at face value. First time
donation please credit my father
1:54:22
Craig Clifford for this
Associate Executive Producer
1:54:25
ship So Craig it is another
switcheroo these are nice. Very
1:54:30
nice. Dads love this. Dads love
this stuff. It's better than Old
1:54:33
Spice. As Canadians we have been
watching our country slowly
1:54:38
degenerate under the tyrant
Trudeau and his lib tardes but
1:54:42
the joke's on them though,
because our seething hate for
1:54:45
their government has only
brought us closer, closer
1:54:48
together. Happy Father's Day,
dad and thank you too for all of
1:54:52
your superb media
deconstruction. Jingles. Okay,
1:54:55
we got some jingles here. A get
vaccinated, I'm sure
1:55:00
That's followed by a no and a
Dvorak mac and cheese and a goat
1:55:04
karma I think we can do that for
you
1:55:07
know
1:55:09
your slaves can get used to mac
and cheese macaroni and cheese
1:55:15
melted together mac and cheese
mac and cheese mac and cheese
1:55:28
by the way and to the Canadians,
or to the Americans who think a
1:55:33
parliamentary system might be
good to see the drawbacks to it
1:55:37
look no further than up north in
Canada. Right on how Trudeau
1:55:41
stays in office and nobody likes
him. Do they have rank the
1:55:44
voting there? No, no? No. Okay.
They have rank voting. No
1:55:51
kidding. Morgan Slagle in South
Boston. Virginia. Confusing that
1:55:59
South Boston that's real South
$2.33 for Father's Day please do
1:56:04
Jewish my dad Bruce.
1:56:07
You've been deemed deuced
1:56:10
he hit me in the mouth a month
ago. After talking about y'all
1:56:13
on our many trips back and
forth. Love the show love your
1:56:16
dad. Oh, sir Johnny B is in
Brockport New York $200 Sir
1:56:21
Johnny be donating as the signs
were smacking me in the face. I
1:56:24
found club 33 He did he sent
this picture.
1:56:28
We are having our first no
agenda off 33 meetup July 9 In
1:56:33
Brockport, New York details on
the meetup site. I'll take a
1:56:36
birthday call up I turned 43
This week you're on the list
1:56:38
Johnny B thank you for the
support.
1:56:41
And you get that picture. A sir
Nate the Rogen Medford, Oregon
1:56:45
$200. Keep up the good work,
gentlemen. Soon to be certain
1:56:48
Nate the rogue. Well, he's
already sir Nate the rogue on
1:56:52
this list, but he's just named
the rogue. Okay. Onward. Jessica
1:56:55
Sorenson is in Montana $200 from
her and she said she'd like the
1:56:59
credit to go to her amazing
husband, Ryan source and
1:57:02
switcheroo please give karma to
all the fathers out there that
1:57:06
show Ryan, you've got karma. We
are the gift that keeps on
1:57:12
giving.
1:57:13
That's a lot of Switcheroos.
Today, I have to say this was
1:57:16
our list of Associate Executive
producers and executive
1:57:20
producers for show 1461 Want to
thank each and every one of them
1:57:24
for making this show happen on a
Father's Day at Juneteenth and
1:57:27
whatever else you want to call
it was going to be the seventh
1:57:30
game of the of the NBA Finals.
But of course, Boston dropped
1:57:36
the ball as it were and gave the
title to the Warriors once
1:57:40
again. Congratulations to them.
All right, yeah. Gee, I missed
1:57:44
all that oak warrior. By the
way. Thank you to our execs and
1:57:48
Associate Executive pitchers as
you just heard this these are
1:57:50
real credits, so you can use
them anywhere credits are
1:57:53
accepted and recognized. IMDB is
certainly one go ahead and take
1:57:57
a look at what other Hollywood
bigwigs also have these credits.
1:58:01
Yeah, you can use them just to
impress people or put on your
1:58:04
LinkedIn to impress people in a
bar to impress people or just to
1:58:08
impress your family. In case
they're wondering what you're
1:58:10
really doing with your time if
you'd like to learn how to help
1:58:12
us in our value for value model
go here.
1:58:17
And a and our sincere thanks for
bringing the heats that form
1:58:21
1461 formula is this. We go out
for hit people in the mouth
1:58:41
was feeling
1:58:43
it was feeling it was time that
we
1:58:48
bring everybody who never heard
it back up to speed. So they
1:58:52
understand what we're talking
about noodle boy, what that
1:58:56
means or what the Genesis is of
noodle boy. Yeah. So I'd like to
1:59:00
you know, we do this every year.
So let's play the noodle boy
1:59:03
clip three times a year. Now
this I have it as 2011 the
1:59:08
original noodle noodle boy clip
Could you give us the premise
1:59:12
because this is how long? This
show has been tracking wokeness
1:59:16
we didn't have a term for it 10
years ago, when many of the very
1:59:21
same people who were being woke
right now weren't even
1:59:23
teenagers.
1:59:26
Yes, this was a clip taken from
a rose into a mic or an
1:59:32
interview or I can't remember
there was a protest in Seattle I
1:59:36
think wasn't Seattle
1:59:39
might have been Portland. It was
some woke west coast areas
1:59:43
that's for sure. But there was a
guy who worked at noodles Inc,
1:59:46
which was I think it was the
name of it was a restaurant
1:59:49
chain that serve noodles and
there was one in Berkeley and
1:59:55
the guy was work there and he
was in the he was like a busboy
2:00:00
or something blind along those
lines, and he was pontificating
2:00:04
as to what was wrong with this
place, because you know, he
2:00:08
wasn't the boss kind of thing
which you run into, occasionally
2:00:12
with everyone. Every generation
has these people. But this guy
2:00:17
was the worst of the worst. The
way we saw it, and it because of
2:00:21
what he wanted, and it was just,
it was a bunch of socialism is
2:00:25
what it amounted to, and, and
privilege and extreme privilege,
2:00:30
right? Yeah. Not white
privilege, just just just real
2:00:34
privileged.
2:00:36
And it's only a minute 20. But
here it is, just listen to the
2:00:40
original, the OG the genesis of
woke gear is the noodle boy.
2:00:44
Well, like I described earlier,
there are two fundamental
2:00:48
classes that are just a plain
fact in society, you either work
2:00:51
for someone else, or you work
for yourself. And most people
2:00:54
work for someone else in a way
that they aren't free. You don't
2:00:59
really get to decide your work.
For example, I work at noodles a
2:01:02
restaurant, and basically, it's
a dictatorship there. We're told
2:01:06
exactly what we're going to
cook, how are we going to cook
2:01:09
it, what time we're going to get
there. And basically, if they
2:01:12
don't like what they're doing,
they try to tell us what to do.
2:01:15
If they don't listen, they get
rid of us. And so we were not
2:01:18
able to actually cooperate in a
way that we make decisions
2:01:20
together. I tried to convince my
my fellow employees that we
2:01:24
should have a union at noodles.
So as a source of power to start
2:01:28
with. And then I think in terms
of the bigger picture, when you
2:01:31
look at revolutions, the way
that you actually get rid of any
2:01:35
sort of dictatorship, is by
having workers take control of
2:01:41
the place where they work. Would
your plan your vision for
2:01:45
noodles, sir? Would it include
the owner, what capacity was
2:01:51
the owner wanting to cooperate
with us as an equal and provide
2:01:55
his skills that he had, we would
definitely cooperate with him
2:01:59
we'd have to abdicate his
position as being an owner and
2:02:03
controller of us and he would
have to recognize that we
2:02:08
together and basically, if he
doesn't want to cooperate with
2:02:11
us, he's against us.
2:02:14
The owner he should be on equal
footing the owner I mean, if he
2:02:18
doesn't want to collaborate then
he's our enemy.
2:02:22
Yeah, workers control the means
of production very Leninist
2:02:25
thing and you know this over the
years it has grown and we went
2:02:29
through you know, what came in
or the the bullying at school
2:02:33
and then there were bullying
laws and you know, we foolishly
2:02:37
as an extra and a boomer used to
say well up in the sticks and
2:02:40
stones will break my bones man,
and yeah, we got slapped away
2:02:44
for that shut up, Boomer. You
know what you're talking about
2:02:47
it's violence it's violence and
so now you get to you get hit by
2:02:52
the pasta Glock
2:02:55
with a gun you
2:03:02
I got the my pasta Glock locked
and loaded. So 10 years later,
2:03:08
happy to see a recovering noodle
boy Bill Maher.
2:03:13
No go even though he's it's very
weird to see him still hammered
2:03:18
down on certain topics where he
just seems off the rails and
2:03:22
illogical that the the the
election. The election? Yeah,
2:03:27
he's he is he's, I think
irrational. He's rational,
2:03:32
irrational. And we should
actually should talk about the
2:03:35
issues. I guess you saw the
episode. But at the end, you
2:03:37
know, he did his new rules or
whatever, I'm not going to just
2:03:40
kind of play 50 seconds of it's
an eight minute segment. You
2:03:43
shouldn't be watching him,
because he won't be on much
2:03:45
longer. You think my generation
is an eye roll? Let me live on a
2:03:50
little secret about the younger
generations. No one wants to
2:03:53
hire you.
2:03:57
Your sense of entitlement is
legendary. And with notable
2:04:01
exceptions, your attention span
and worth ethic suck.
2:04:08
Here's the story. You never stop
hearing around Hollywood.
2:04:11
unqualified little shit who has
been here all of six months,
2:04:15
doesn't understand why he's not
a producer yet.
2:04:28
This Washington Post story had
such resonance because it's
2:04:31
behavior we all recognize. There
is a war going on within the
2:04:35
millennial generation. And he's
so right because we're seeing it
2:04:40
right here. Millennial actual
producers,
2:04:43
who rightly call themselves
producers of the no agenda show
2:04:47
tons of millennials. And they're
not these crazies to I think we
2:04:52
need to call on the millennials
to do something about their peer
2:04:56
group.
2:04:57
We can't do it. I mean, it's
that's also
2:05:00
lane when people tell you what
to do, you know, most of these
2:05:03
most of these generations have
their peer group, they pay more
2:05:05
attention to them than anything
else now. I mean, that's what
2:05:08
happened when over at MVNO when,
when I took those and posted
2:05:14
those videos of Eddie, remember
him? Yeah. And he's a
2:05:18
heartthrob, Eddie the mark
thrall. He was. Every other
2:05:21
girls went for him, that's for
sure. But he his his lunches
2:05:24
consisted of Red Bull and hot
pockets. Yes. And so everybody
2:05:30
in the office was telling him to
stop eating these, this can make
2:05:33
us sick. This this lunch is
great. And so I took a movie of
2:05:37
him eating and bragging about
the Red Bull and Hot Pockets
2:05:40
lunch and posted it on YouTube.
And the feedback from his peers
2:05:47
changed it and he went, it was
unbelievable. It's like a
2:05:51
reverse of everything. And he
would never eat a hot pocket
2:05:54
again to hated Red Bull and ate
salads for lunch.
2:05:58
But it wasn't because of
anything. We said, no, no, it
2:06:02
had to come from the peer group.
I had to post it on YouTube to
2:06:06
save this guy's life. And I
believe I honestly believe I
2:06:09
saved his life. So still emails
from you got a very good email
2:06:13
from Madigan email from time to
time. Yeah, he's a good guy.
2:06:16
Anyway, so. So that's what has
to be done now as the post that
2:06:20
millennials not being good
workers.
2:06:23
My daughter, I think is one of
the best workers I've ever run
2:06:27
into. Yeah, but she's not she's
not an idiot like these. No,
2:06:31
she's not and she's let now
you're really a good worker. She
2:06:34
works for an operation now where
she does their posters and does
2:06:37
all these things. However, let
me ask you a question. And this
2:06:40
is something you should ask her
because I have heard this and it
2:06:42
seems to be rather universal
with millennials. Even the
2:06:46
really good workers they seem to
2:06:51
think that work is no longer
work no longer defines who you
2:06:55
are. A job is just a thing you
do so you can live your life.
2:07:01
And I think that is prevalent
amongst the entire generation.
2:07:06
The idea of of course, we all
know 50 years of the company
2:07:11
gold watch, that's not true. But
you know, even just just the
2:07:16
whole just no job is it's it's
no longer a part of the fabric
2:07:20
and they don't even care what
you do for a living.
2:07:24
I don't think that's unique to
millennials. I was that way most
2:07:28
of my life here that way now.
2:07:35
The reason I say this is we had
dinner with the former New York
2:07:38
banker
2:07:39
Friday night.
2:07:42
And he says Are they committed?
No. We went we stayed over at
2:07:45
their house when one of those
rich people things Yeah, yeah.
2:07:49
Oh banca can I say.
2:07:53
Again, I have one good Martini
please. Right. Make sure it's
2:07:56
dry. Bollinger don't drink
martinis we have but actually I
2:08:00
took a picture of the wine. I
took a picture of the horse and
2:08:03
volunteer. Yes, he that's his
house champagne, bro.
2:08:07
It is. We'd like some bubblies
like Bollinger he says, Oh, yes,
2:08:12
very bright spot on. Did you
know The former New York Bankers
2:08:16
British
2:08:19
Tablas Creek vineyard nailer
bought it 2019 Mourvedre.
2:08:25
That's a desert Texas wine,
isn't it?
2:08:29
I don't know.
2:08:31
It was very good. Yeah, my vedra
had what eight and grow that
2:08:35
there. Do you think it was in
Texas? One minute might have
2:08:39
been
2:08:40
they grow a lot more Vedran and
Tim temper Neo in Texas. So this
2:08:45
so this is the former near
banker, this is how he rolls.
2:08:48
You know, if you want to get a
Friday night dinner reservation
2:08:51
in Austin, I don't have to tell
you can just forget it. Just
2:08:55
forget it. Because most and now
he's from New York, but most of
2:08:59
the Californians, they came into
Austin, and they started doing
2:09:03
the following. They start making
reservations at all the good
2:09:06
restaurants for five weeks in
advance. And as it comes up,
2:09:10
they'll just cancel whatever
they don't want to go to. If it
2:09:13
cost me 10 2050 bucks, who
cares? Which of course makes it
2:09:16
impossible to get a reservation.
So what the former New York
2:09:20
banker did is he joined the
investment group for this
2:09:23
Restaurant Group, which owns
several top restaurants in
2:09:27
Austin. And you know, the
investment I don't know how big
2:09:30
it is, but he gets a VIP hotline
2:09:35
where you can call that was
pretty sexy.
2:09:39
guy you just call him?
2:09:42
No, I think no, because you have
to show your card and you know
2:09:45
and I don't think that just you
can't do that. It's got to be
2:09:48
used. See, why not? Now, if you
come to town, we'll get
2:09:52
privileges if you can, like pass
it off your friends as a cop as
2:09:56
a perk. So after the Bollinger
and the wine
2:10:00
He, I wrote it down. But I'm
gonna have to open it up. Go on.
2:10:04
Oh, yeah, I wrote it down. I'll
have to ask him again. I think
2:10:07
beer over the weekend we were
talking about the reverse repo
2:10:10
market, which the last time we
talked about it, he was
2:10:13
shocking. It's $1 trillion. Now
it's above $2 trillion. I said,
2:10:18
and he says, You know, I just
want to tell you about the
2:10:20
reverse repo market. He said
what he says not you have to
2:10:23
understand what's going on. The
banks are mad at the Fed. That's
2:10:26
why they're doing this. And I
don't remember the rest of the
2:10:29
story. So I'm gonna have to get
that from. I know, I know. Well,
2:10:33
here's what happened. Because as
the I know, what happened one
2:10:36
glass of bull and you're done.
2:10:39
That didn't help. The reason
was, as I'm listening to him,
2:10:44
and I did, I could have closed
my eyes. And I all I heard was
2:10:48
Paul Krugman and I just
2:10:52
nightmare.
2:10:55
He's like, this is not a
problem. Inflation is good
2:10:58
because it creates wage
inflation. I'm just like, I
2:11:01
don't know man. Fast Pass the
duchy by the left hand side. Oh,
2:11:06
yeah. Bitcoin is a scam. He did
tell me that. I'm glad to know.
2:11:10
And I said, Why is it who's
who's profit who's benefiting
2:11:13
from the scam? And yes, Terry,
that is the issue. Well, this
2:11:16
was a this was a big moment for
me. The New York banker I know
2:11:21
he doesn't like Bitcoin and now
and he and we talked he
2:11:24
understands very well What the
shit coin meltdown is all about,
2:11:28
you know, this is the defy crap,
which is it's all outside of
2:11:31
Bitcoin, as far as I'm
concerned, and this is melting
2:11:33
down blood of people are going
to get hurt real bad, and they
2:11:37
deserve it. Because this is all
crap that they they think
2:11:40
they've invested in with
Bitcoin. I said, All right. So
2:11:43
if it's a scam, who's benefiting
says, well, it's not really
2:11:47
about that. And now and now what
now my interest picks up now,
2:11:50
like, hold on, hold on a second.
2:11:53
What is the scam? He says?
2:11:56
countries governments will never
allow it to be used as currency.
2:12:01
That told me that it's not a
scam that told me that I think
2:12:06
the banking world is a little
worried about it.
2:12:09
That would be a good
interpretation. I think you get
2:12:12
that's valid. That's the that
was to me. It's like, holy crap.
2:12:15
Now it's like, okay, you can't
tell me who's benefiting. So
2:12:18
maybe not as meek. You can call
it dumb. And there are actual
2:12:23
countries. I mean, you want to
call El Salvador it's a country
2:12:26
you know, it's there's a lot of
issues with it. But they except
2:12:30
that his legal team, but that
was his argument. I found that
2:12:32
to be quite telling, especially
in light of all the things that
2:12:35
are going on with the other
thing that will never happen
2:12:38
central bank digital currency,
and Abdi I've read Yeah, here's
2:12:43
our our boss over there, the
Federal Reserve Jay Powell.
2:12:47
Looking forward, rapid changes
are taking place in the global
2:12:50
monetary system that may affect
the international role of the
2:12:53
dollar in the future. Most major
economies already have or are in
2:12:57
the process of developing
instant 24/7 payments. Our own
2:13:02
fed now service will be coming
online in 2023. And in light of
2:13:07
the tremendous growth in crypto
assets and stable coins, we are
2:13:10
examining whether a US central
bank digital currency would
2:13:13
improve upon what is an already
safe and efficient domestic
2:13:17
payment system. Our as our white
paper on this topic notes a US
2:13:21
cbdc could also potentially help
maintain the dollars
2:13:25
international standing.
2:13:28
This is when does the dollar
need help in international
2:13:30
standing? Is it in trouble
growing in value by the day it's
2:13:34
becoming an issue? Ah,
2:13:38
why is it an issue?
2:13:40
Because when our dollar becomes
worth more than our exports,
2:13:44
cost more to buy and it kills
our export market. And it
2:13:48
increases our import market
which is always a problem
2:13:51
because we were taking too much
shit in from China as it is now
2:13:54
we're getting we're gonna get
more stuff cheaper. So what's
2:13:57
wrong?
2:13:58
Why isn't it wrong if you don't
mind breaking the back of the
2:14:01
whole country's manufacturing
sector? Wasn't that the point?
2:14:06
I don't know. Was that the
point? I'm sure this is the
2:14:08
point. Of course, it's the great
reset. Even since the point of
2:14:12
the Democrats and other
Republicans we're not pushing
2:14:14
that. Well. CNBC is welcome as
usual to a very busy fed as we
2:14:19
track this killing the Dow
breaking below 30,000 lowest
2:14:24
level in more than a year. So
what's ahead for equities for
2:14:27
bonds and the market as it
undergoes this great reset with
2:14:32
new opportunities potentially.
We've got a big hour ahead as we
2:14:36
track this continuing sell off.
Just saying
2:14:41
that were you aware of a great
reset.
2:14:45
I think listening to you I've
been more than aware and
2:14:47
listening to idiots at the UN
yeah, there's a great reset.
2:14:52
Well, what is this great reset?
When's it gonna happen?
2:14:57
Give me a date. I'm not there's
no date is
2:15:00
happening in slow motion the
recent although Okay, so here's
2:15:03
what here's what the Whisper is.
There's going to be a repricing
2:15:07
of all currencies there has to
be some kind of equity
2:15:10
equalization. The rumor is that
it will be gold back, which
2:15:14
makes really only if I'm just
telling you the rumor. I don't
2:15:19
know. I really don't know
nothing. All I know is I like
2:15:23
Bitcoin and you can laugh at
that too.
2:15:27
Yeah, why bother?
2:15:30
So you know, it's
2:15:33
it's happening in I mean, when
you kick off when you depart
2:15:37
from an entire country from the
Swift payment network, there's
2:15:41
something being reset now and I
don't know if it means people go
2:15:47
away countries disintegrate, you
know, we just don't see him
2:15:50
anymore. We might as well I
mean, Russia, the you know,
2:15:53
there's there's geo blocks
everywhere. You can't, you can't
2:15:57
get to a lot of things. You
can't talk to him. He can they
2:16:00
can't pay you. You can't pay
them not talking about for oil
2:16:03
and stuff. Just you know, people
use services. I like to signage
2:16:06
in front of the liquor store in
front of a bottle of Stoli
2:16:10
with a big, giant yellow sign
maded Latvia.
2:16:15
Just so you know, it's good. So
it's not not from Russia, even
2:16:19
though it's Russian, you know,
we'll do that. Let's see. What
2:16:22
about a great recent let's go to
this, that when you get this out
2:16:24
of the way this does speak
election I've talked about
2:16:27
before, nobody's talking about
us, some people on NPR. And this
2:16:31
is what's going on in Colombia,
because Colombia is about to
2:16:34
fall into communism. And it's
the last place you'd expect
2:16:39
this, but let's listen to about
the elections coming up in
2:16:41
Colombia. And you're gonna start
hearing that this kind of
2:16:46
socialist beliefs. Actually,
before we play these clips, I
2:16:49
want to play this. This is a
clip about poverty in the United
2:16:52
States
2:16:55
is a point of view this poverty
clip with government kicker on
2:17:00
NPR, large numbers of people
from around the country gathered
2:17:03
in Washington today, calling for
more policies to aid poor people
2:17:08
and low wage workers. As Ryan
bank of member station wa AMU
2:17:12
reports. Many of the attendees
and the organizers have
2:17:15
experienced poverty themselves.
The Poor People's and low wage
2:17:19
workers assembly was organized
by the Poor People's Campaign, a
2:17:23
revival of the movement started
by Martin Luther King Jr. Before
2:17:26
his death in 1968. Attendees and
organizers like Ashley Marshall,
2:17:31
say there is still a long way to
go before poverty is eradicated.
2:17:35
Marshall says the issue hits
close to home, I lived, I'm
2:17:40
still living it. And at the end
of the day, our brothers, our
2:17:43
sisters, our moms, our dads like
we all deserve. We all deserve
2:17:49
to live and thrive in this
country. And we just need our
2:17:52
government to create policies to
make that happen.
2:17:58
This is the socialist idea,
which is the government does
2:18:00
everything and we've seen this
creeping into everything before
2:18:04
why? Oh, the government nice oh,
there's a garbage in front of
2:18:07
me. There's a bunch of payment
from my house. Where's the
2:18:09
government? How come they're not
coming and cleaning it? So here
2:18:13
we go to Colombia? We're gonna
just say, no, no, no, I'll bring
2:18:16
it back. I'll bring it back. Go
ahead. I was gonna talk. Let's
2:18:18
go to Colombia. Listen to this,
because you're going to start
2:18:21
hearing the same kind of things
from the socialist candidate in
2:18:25
Colombia. And this is really,
this has been sneaking up on us
2:18:29
and we've always got to fight it
because it never ends. Well to
2:18:32
this Colombia election is
socialist Colombians will go to
2:18:35
the polls tomorrow in the final
round of a presidential election
2:18:39
that's had many surprises. There
are two anti establishment
2:18:42
candidates on the ballot. A
senator and former guerrilla
2:18:45
rebel Gustavo Petro and a former
mayor and businessman turned
2:18:49
populist to vote for at Monday's
reporter Manuel reuther is in
2:18:54
Bogota, and he joins us now.
Welcome. Thank you. Because of
2:18:57
these two candidates, this has
been described as an historic
2:19:00
election in Colombia. Why is it
different from previous
2:19:04
presidential elections? Well,
the thing that's unique about
2:19:07
this election is that none of
the traditional political
2:19:09
parties that have been ruling
Colombia for decades is
2:19:13
participating. I mean, they had
a candidate that they supported
2:19:16
in the first round of the
election, but he didn't make the
2:19:20
threshold to participate in the
second round. So now, we are
2:19:24
basically left with two
different kinds of outsiders,
2:19:29
you could say, that don't belong
to the traditional political
2:19:32
parties will tell us a little
bit about each of the
2:19:34
candidates. Let's start with
Gustavo Petro, the leftist
2:19:37
candidate. Well Petro has been
in politics for four decades. He
2:19:42
started his career as a member
of a rebel group known as the M
2:19:47
19 movement. And that group made
peace with the government in
2:19:51
1991. And since then, Petro has
been in all the government
2:19:55
positions you can imagine
congressman, Senator Mayor Botha
2:19:59
and his PLap
2:20:00
Farm is pretty much based on
decrease in social and economic
2:20:04
inequalities. And what he
believes is that the state can
2:20:09
play a big role in decreasing
those inequalities. So he wants
2:20:12
to increase taxes on
corporations raise import duties
2:20:17
on food that can be produced in
Colombia to give local farmers
2:20:21
and the advantage. So it's in
one way, it's quite a
2:20:25
traditional kind of left wing
platform that he's running on.
2:20:31
Yeah, well, there's what does
that sound like? Sounds like
2:20:33
every country in the world now.
That's the point now, which is
2:20:37
that this split that that idiot
judge was talking about saying,
2:20:40
you know, the Republicans are a
bunch of bad people. That the
2:20:45
split tests in this country is
exactly the same as everyplace
2:20:48
else. Same in the Netherlands.
It's the same in the UK, it's
2:20:52
all the same. Yeah, this is a
big as a big split, as all and
2:20:56
the one side is the one
reflected by that poverty union,
2:21:00
saying that, you know, we want
the government to do all this
2:21:02
everything for us. We deserve
it. And I think is a very
2:21:06
popular I think this is
elections interesting, because
2:21:09
it's going to do a goes to South
America, they always go
2:21:12
socialists when they can. And I
think that's what's going to
2:21:15
happen in Colombia. This is the
part two and they talk about the
2:21:17
other guy. I understand. He's
also been very critical of the
2:21:20
drug war and the Colombian
military. Yes, absolutely. He's
2:21:24
described, sort of the US led
war on drugs as a failure. And
2:21:30
so what you might see with
Petros president is a higher
2:21:35
focus on investing in rural
areas to give the farmers their
2:21:40
alternatives to growing these
illegals in these isolated rural
2:21:46
areas. Well, tell us about those
numbers. He's been described as
2:21:50
a right wing populist, similar
in style to Donald Trump. Is
2:21:55
that a fair characterization?
Well, in terms of character,
2:21:59
he's somewhat similar to Trump,
you know, he said, lots of off
2:22:03
the cuff statements that are
offensive to different groups of
2:22:05
the population. So for example,
you know, in an interview last
2:22:09
week, he said that he would
prefer that women stay at home
2:22:13
and take care of the children,
but that this can't happen
2:22:16
because the economy is in such
bad shape. Oh, that he's similar
2:22:20
to Trump. But he's different in
that he's common to this
2:22:24
election, on his own without the
support of a major political
2:22:29
party based on a very anti
corruption message, you know,
2:22:33
his platform is basically, let's
go after corruption. what he
2:22:39
believes is that there's enough
money in the state to take care
2:22:42
of social problems, as long as
waste and corruption are
2:22:48
reduced. Is there a clear
favorite, there's not a clear
2:22:52
favorite. In most polls, both
candidates are within one
2:22:57
percentage point to each other.
And the problem in Colombia is
2:23:01
that you can only publish polls
until one week prior to the
2:23:05
election. So it's going to be a
very tight election, which might
2:23:08
generate some problems if one of
the candidates doesn't accept
2:23:12
the results.
2:23:15
Like the Trump guy, right. So
let's I have some stuff to share
2:23:19
about this thinking the
government will fix it. First of
2:23:22
all, I grew up in a country
where this was the culture and
2:23:25
to this day, still is the
culture and it's only gotten
2:23:28
worse. Yep, in the Netherlands.
It's like Oh, yeah. And the you
2:23:33
got right. You're right, man.
It's You're right. It's You're
2:23:35
right. It's You're right. CNBC
published an interesting article
2:23:39
yesterday, pandemic era checks,
that's the STEMI checks, rewired
2:23:44
how these Americans see money,
quote, stimulus changed how I
2:23:49
think about what's possible. Key
points, pandemic era stimulus
2:23:54
checks, help many Americans pay
bills, reduce debt and build
2:23:58
savings. For some the payments
altered, how they think about
2:24:01
money, the stimulus change how I
think about what's possible
2:24:05
personal spending habits and the
way in which I manage my money,
2:24:08
says Denise Diaz recipient who
lives outside of Orlando,
2:24:12
Florida. And then this whole
article is showing that people
2:24:15
have seen that clearly,
governments can step in and fix
2:24:19
something now. I know that they
don't understand the Fiat or
2:24:23
central banking money system or
how it really works, you know,
2:24:26
there's probably more just
slogans and talking points, but
2:24:29
ultimately, they got checks, and
and they got good checks. And
2:24:34
certainly, if people had
multiple children's running
2:24:37
around, got really nice checks,
some of them you know, 10 grand,
2:24:42
you know, because you got money
for every single child. And so
2:24:45
this really changed the way
people think. And it makes
2:24:49
nothing but since them that this
report from The Washington Post
2:24:52
comes out that the White House
has been working on gas rebate
2:24:58
cards to him
2:25:00
hand out to people. And they
can't make them they can't do
2:25:04
this with the typical debit card
or, you know, wishes, I guess
2:25:09
they probably get out of them is
what's happened. There's no chip
2:25:11
this chip shortages. So the
little debit card chip, there's
2:25:14
not enough of those probably
because they gave them all to be
2:25:17
illegal immigrants coming in. So
they're working now on how they
2:25:21
can use their emergency powers
to alleviate the energy costs
2:25:26
that people are experiencing
right now, which is exactly what
2:25:29
today's
2:25:32
young working class person would
expect from their government.
2:25:36
Wow. I mean, it was COVID we got
paid, you know, now, look at
2:25:40
this man, that's Putin. You
know, it just it was all Putin
2:25:43
is price hikes. So you know, we
probably get paid, and they're
2:25:47
working on it.
2:25:49
And this is a dramatic shift
2:25:54
for America.
2:25:57
dramatic shift.
2:26:01
And it's only going to get
worse. Fuel. It's like It's like
2:26:05
one thing after another. This is
the latest that's going to be
2:26:09
great for for energy costs in
America. This is for your
2:26:12
electricity. A massive cleanup
effort continues today after at
2:26:15
least 20. Cars from a coal train
ran off the rails yesterday
2:26:19
evening near Lawrence. Authority
say that enrollment happened
2:26:22
near North 1900 Road. Large
amounts of coal spilled across
2:26:25
the area, but fortunately, no
one was hurt. North 1900 Road
2:26:29
remain shut down near the
crossing as an investigation
2:26:31
continues. Did you see this?
This Coltrane? No, I missed this
2:26:36
complete. Oh, my goodness. It's
a mess. I look at that. You just
2:26:40
do a quick Bing it. Coltrane,
Kansas, derailed. I mean, it's
2:26:46
it must be 1520 cars filled with
coal if derailed. They're
2:26:52
perpendicular, perpendicular to
there. They're sideways on the
2:26:57
tracks. All the coal is spilled
out. And it could take a while
2:27:01
to clean up. And that of course
will slow down other things that
2:27:04
need to be transported by rail,
such as a very important feed
2:27:12
for
2:27:14
for the chickens. Let me see
it's the mess. Who was this?
2:27:19
California feed and poultry
producer? Who was this again?
2:27:22
This is from trains.com. You
should definitely
2:27:25
look@trains.com California feed
and poultry producers seeks
2:27:28
emergency order due to Union
Pacific service failures. This
2:27:32
the same thing we heard from the
deaf guy the not deaf as and
2:27:36
can't hear but the diesel engine
fuel or whatever, whatever that
2:27:40
is that it additive.
2:27:43
United union just coal on the
ground here. Yes. Union Pacific
2:27:47
says it's working to improve
service to Foster Farms who
2:27:50
asked regulators to deny their
emergency service order. This is
2:27:53
what they said they and this is
a common carrier, as you pointed
2:27:57
out, they're screwing everybody.
And I don't understand. We got a
2:28:01
letter from a guy that works at
Union Pacific. And he goes on
2:28:06
about how they a lot of this has
to do with it. Because Union
2:28:11
Pacific was the companies that
fired a bunch of people because
2:28:13
they wouldn't get the jab,
right, which is very ego, every
2:28:18
industry. This shot seems to be
some port sort of, you know,
2:28:23
look at your airline, look at
your airline cancellations, same
2:28:26
issue after another because they
wouldn't get the job so and so
2:28:29
they didn't get these guys
rehired. And there's a shortage
2:28:33
of people. And he says one of
the real problems is that some
2:28:35
of the people that are still
working here are the people that
2:28:37
knew the newbies that they
brought in because they did hire
2:28:40
people don't know how to
organize a train properly,
2:28:44
because they derail if you don't
set them up where you got the
2:28:48
right number of engines and
inches in the middle inches. The
2:28:51
back, you know, you got to know
how to do this. And I'm looking
2:28:53
at this coal thing you're
looking at Union does BNSF the
2:28:56
one I'm looking at right now, I
guess is a Union Pacific. It's
2:29:00
this is what it was. Somebody
put this train together that was
2:29:04
incompetent. And this thing just
fell off the tracks because
2:29:08
according to this guy who works
there, it's not that it's non
2:29:12
trivial. No, that's the same as
flying an airplane it's non
2:29:16
trivial but if you fire all the
good guys
2:29:20
Yeah, bad things might happen.
Well, that's what they did. This
2:29:24
is management, modern
management.
2:29:27
So this is hurting farmers and
farmers are speaking up
2:29:31
everywhere.
2:29:33
Here's a farmer on Tiktok trying
desperately trying to explain
2:29:39
what is happening. So I got a
conversation today and the woman
2:29:43
honestly, I bless her heart
honestly thinks that food prices
2:29:46
are not gonna go up. She thinks
that this is the highest they're
2:29:49
gonna go. I tried to explain to
her that that was not the case
2:29:51
that they're absolutely gonna go
up even more. And I told her
2:29:55
there are things that like we
have to buy, there's something
2:29:57
we had to buy that two years ago
cost is $24
2:30:00
Just last year was about 46.
This year it is costing us $96.
2:30:04
Okay, local farmer 50 head of
cattle, it's costing him $8,000
2:30:10
a month to feed them. Please
understand food prices are going
2:30:14
to go up. You want to actually
get the farmers fault. It is not
2:30:18
the farmers vault. We're barely
making it to grow this stuff. So
2:30:22
you guys are able to get it in
August, September, October.
2:30:25
Okay, guys, this is not going
away, stop sticking your head in
2:30:29
the sand and thinking, Oh, it's
gonna be okay. It's not gonna
2:30:31
fucking be okay. Whoa, okay.
Whoa, she's mad. She's mad, and
2:30:36
rightly so. Now, here's how
misguided we are as as, as a
2:30:40
country as a people as a, as a
generation, maybe? How do we
2:30:45
help the farmers now we know the
farmers are in trouble because
2:30:48
of the fertilizer crisis, all
part of the energy and the
2:30:51
petroleum crisis, all part of
inflation all part of all of
2:30:54
these issues. But it's all Putin
fault. Just remember that. So
2:30:58
what do people come up with? Oh,
we have to do something to help
2:31:02
the farmers. So now we
introduced the P cyclers. Yes,
2:31:08
this is people who and of
course, human urine has
2:31:12
properties that will work very
well as fertilizer. But to think
2:31:17
that we're all going to sing
Kumbaya get together and pee in
2:31:20
buckets, and it's going to work
and we're going to save our food
2:31:23
supply this year. What do they
teach people in school? People
2:31:28
have no idea where their food
comes from? They don't know.
2:31:33
And there's also a severe lack
of knowledge of history of food
2:31:37
being used as a control
mechanism. And yes, I do think
2:31:40
there's evil in our government.
And I do think that the food
2:31:45
shortages will be used to
control us. And the United
2:31:48
States itself has a history
which I was unaware of. And this
2:31:52
is the 1872 slaughter of the
Buffalo. And I'm bringing this
2:31:58
up because of all the dead
cattle that that are popping up.
2:32:02
Because of the extreme heat.
It's a subtle, sudden cattle
2:32:05
Death Syndrome.
2:32:08
Have you ever heard of this the
slaughter of the buffalo? Yeah,
2:32:11
I'd never heard of this. How
much do I think they almost
2:32:13
wiped the buffalo out know that,
in fact, they didn't. In fact,
2:32:17
from between 1872 and 1873, over
3 million buffalo were killed.
2:32:24
I'm reading from an article
here. The reason was purely
2:32:28
economic. But the result was to
destroy the basis of the way of
2:32:31
life of the peoples the Indians
who inhabited the area where the
2:32:34
annihilation took place, the
southern plains, it had zero
2:32:39
influence. Nothing, nothing
changed. They couldn't kill
2:32:42
enough. In fact, this is where
Buffalo Bill gets his name.
2:32:48
William F. Cody.
2:32:50
In Buffalo, yeah, 4862 Buffalo
he shot in eight months, he got
2:32:56
the nickname Buffalo Bill. But
even he could hardly have made
2:32:59
any noticeable difference in
their numbers. Now, that's when
2:33:03
they had you know, single shot
rifles and, and didn't have cool
2:33:07
chemicals and weather
modification and other things.
2:33:12
So food is often used as a
control mechanism. And I'm
2:33:16
worried that that's going to
happen to us in Austin is all in
2:33:21
peanut butter chocolate banana
made with crickets, crickets.
2:33:24
Crickets do for me will create a
65% protein by weight frigates
2:33:27
contain all nine essential amino
acids and each bar 640 gallons
2:33:31
of water compared to whey
protein. Okay, so how are these
2:33:33
prepared? They are dehydrated
and blended into powder and made
2:33:36
into a protein bar, how many
grams of sugar, it's nine grams
2:33:39
of sugar and it is date sweet.
And due to their high potassium
2:33:42
content, they slower the
absorption of sugar into the
2:33:44
bloodstream. That's great. I'm
diabetic. So that helps. We just
2:33:47
launched on Monday. We're a
local small business right here
2:33:49
in Austin. I would totally buy
this.
2:33:53
Stay in Austin Lee buy it. I was
totally buy this because you
2:33:56
know, it's proteins crackers,
and I'm really called A Bugs
2:33:59
bond. Let's go back to 1979.
2:34:04
Does this sound familiar?
2:34:07
legislation to Congress calling
for the creation of this
2:34:10
nation's first solar Bank,
2:34:13
which will help us achieve the
crucial goal of 20% of our
2:34:17
energy coming from solar power
by the year 2000. These efforts
2:34:23
will cost money, a lot of money.
And that is why Congress must
2:34:27
enact the windfall profits tax
without delay. The windfall
2:34:33
profits act sounds eerily
similar to what's going on right
2:34:37
now. This was to punish oil
companies punish them because
2:34:43
they were jacking up the prices.
You know, they were screwing the
2:34:47
American people with their high
oil prices had nothing to do
2:34:50
with inflation or anything like
that. And we're gonna need to
2:34:53
set up a fund it's gonna cost a
lot of money to transition so we
2:34:56
can get away from these horrible
people. And I guess that thing
2:34:59
sucks.
2:35:00
I guess it went away eventually.
Because, yeah, the crude oil
2:35:03
windfall profit tax of 1980.
2:35:08
So isn't that isn't what they're
doing just same old price
2:35:12
control that Carter was doing in
motors. So but this is, well, we
2:35:16
think everything we've said
about this decade in the 70s,
2:35:21
being the same thing has been
proven time and time again, so
2:35:24
why not? Well, and here's the
final one, and I'll shut up
2:35:27
about it.
2:35:29
Because this obviously ties
right into climate change. We
2:35:32
could have known it.
2:35:34
Time magazine time.com,
published two days ago, how to
2:35:38
stop our food from hurting the
planet.
2:35:43
It's not us anymore, John. It's
our food.
2:35:47
I'll only read three paragraphs,
farmers have grown food and
2:35:50
roughly the same way for 1000s
of years. Planting Seeds
2:35:54
watching them grow, raising
animals from birth to slaughter,
2:35:58
hoping, hoping that nature
provides them the right amounts
2:36:02
of rain and sun.
2:36:04
That sounds right. That sounds
romantic. And I like how that
2:36:07
sounds.
2:36:09
Now entrepreneurs say they have
a better idea. agric
2:36:14
AG,
2:36:16
no punch lines, okay.
Agriculture in its current form
2:36:21
is bad for the planet. They say.
fields for crops and animals
2:36:26
grazing occupied land, where
trees could be planted in
2:36:30
farming sucks up vast amounts of
increasingly precious water. Why
2:36:36
not make food in a completely
different way? growing lettuce
2:36:40
in skyscrapers and creating meat
from cells in a petri dish?
2:36:46
Well, this is good news
according to Time Magazine.
2:36:51
The
2:36:53
petri dish meet exactly. And
skyscraper lettuce. Is that Is
2:37:00
it too long for a title
skyscraper lettuce? Yeah, I
2:37:03
think so. This is a little petri
dish me Let us pray would be
2:37:07
better
2:37:08
pitch. So
2:37:11
you know, for years and years
and years on the show, you know,
2:37:14
I'll bring up stuff and you roll
your eyes and it's appropriate.
2:37:17
I do. I think I think we may be
getting down to some brass
2:37:20
tacks. Finally. I think some of
this stuff is finally going to
2:37:23
happen. Well, here's your
climate. Here's another here's
2:37:26
my climate story. It's not the
same but it's similar. But it's
2:37:31
it's dumber.
2:37:33
Change. Well, they're all dumb
but here we go a climate Siracha
2:37:38
pepper fans of Siracha grab a
tissue because you may be about
2:37:43
to start crying and not from the
hot sauce. Beloved condiment is
2:37:47
now in short supply. Usually I
bought one case roughly around
2:37:51
30 to 32. Now up to $50. Now
price, it keeps going up and we
2:37:57
can afford you know that's
Michael Chow, co owner of the
2:38:00
restaurant have yet here in
Washington DC talking about his
2:38:04
Siracha orders probably have to
switch to a different brand. But
2:38:09
people are used to the taste
right now. So when it tasted
2:38:12
know right away, it's not just
restaurants paying higher
2:38:15
prices. Grocery stores in some
parts of the country have also
2:38:18
been running low on stock. The
company that makes her Racha is
2:38:22
Haiphong foods, and they alerted
customers in late April that
2:38:26
they'll have to stop making the
sauce for a few months due to
2:38:29
quote severe weather conditions
affecting the quality of chili
2:38:32
peppers uribl Moray torta Rolo
studies, Climate and Ecosystems
2:38:37
at the National Autonomous
University of Mexico. So you're
2:38:39
actually it's actually made from
a very special type of pepper
2:38:43
that grows only in northern
Mexico and South the US. These
2:38:46
red jalapenos are only grown
during the first four months of
2:38:51
the year, and they need very
controlled conditions,
2:38:53
particularly constant
irrigation. And irrigation, of
2:38:57
course requires lots of water
but northern Mexico is in its
2:39:00
second year of a drought. The
already difficult conditions
2:39:04
were push over the limit by two
consecutive Lania events and the
2:39:08
dry season has not only been
intense, but also remarkably
2:39:12
long. As a result, the spring
chili harvest was almost non
2:39:16
existent this year. Moray
Tortorella thinks it's very
2:39:19
likely that climate change is a
factor.
2:39:23
Of course, so this is a way yes.
This is just a comment on this
2:39:28
story where the guy says you
know, you know the guy who made
2:39:31
this we're talking about the
rooster brand terace that
2:39:34
American study made in Southern
California I believe, and that
2:39:38
used to be made from Serrano
peppers red Serrano's and they
2:39:44
demand was so high for it that
they switched to the red
2:39:47
jalapenos, which is just the
right palette Pena, right.
2:39:51
And nobody bitched about it. I
mean, I noticed it right away
2:39:54
when they made the switch over
so this is not quite as hot as I
2:39:57
remember. You're a connoisseur
2:40:00
Well, but the point is that
nobody notices. So yeah, well,
2:40:04
this is NPR or red. This is NPR
right? Yeah. Yeah. Well, what
2:40:09
they're doing is they're
distracting you with stupid
2:40:11
stories like this. And then you
Oh, like oh with the Siracha is
2:40:15
no good. Well, we're gonna do
this Raja about climate change.
2:40:18
And then meanwhile, one day you
get the knock at the door and
2:40:21
it's like, it's time for you to
eat bugs. There's no more food.
2:40:24
They're not even going to give
you bugs people. They're going
2:40:27
to slide larva under your door.
Today. larva, yeah, grow them
2:40:31
grow these.
2:40:33
Now before we take our break,
which we're about to do, I do
2:40:37
want to get the COVID stories
out of the way because a big
2:40:40
deal happened. Yes, yes. A big
deal did indeed. Okay. And I
2:40:44
have I only have I have two
clips that cover it. And these
2:40:47
are the ones that say COVID
vaccination for kids and then L
2:40:51
O N IG I think or something like
that and
2:40:55
start with that one then is part
two of this. And this pretty
2:40:57
much summarizes everything and
has all the dimwits in there
2:41:00
that you want to hear from it's
been a long wait, but parents of
2:41:03
very young children will finally
get to start vaccinating their
2:41:06
kids against COVID 19.
2:41:14
The first vaccines for children
younger than five today got a
2:41:17
thumbs up who was clapping What
was that small group of I
2:41:21
sweeten the clip? Oh.
2:41:26
Good water vaccines for children
younger than five today got a
2:41:30
thumbs up from regulators. NPR
health correspondent Rob Stein
2:41:34
joins us now to tell us more.
Hi, Rob. Hey, John. Hey, Rob.
2:41:38
This is something that a lot of
parents have been anxiously
2:41:40
eagerly awaiting for a very long
time. So what happened today?
2:41:44
Yeah, yeah. Yes. So, advisory
committee to the Centers for
2:41:49
Disease Control and Prevention
voted unanimously to recommend
2:41:52
babies, toddlers and
preschoolers get one of two
2:41:56
vaccines. These are vaccines
that were finally authorized by
2:41:59
the Food and Drug
Administration. Holy crap. Is
2:42:01
this guy, an NPR reporter? Yes.
And he's decided
2:42:06
to make fun of somebody.
2:42:09
Who
2:42:12
scenes, these are vaccines that
were finally authorized by the
2:42:15
Food and Drug Administration
earlier this week. And CDC
2:42:18
director Rochelle walensky,
immediately endorsed that
2:42:20
recommendation. Yeah. That is
the final step in what has been
2:42:25
a long frustrating process
frustrating for parents, the
2:42:27
company's regulators and
clearing the vaccines. Here's
2:42:30
our doctor Adam Ratner from New
York University reacted, he's
2:42:34
speaking on behalf of the
American Academy of Pediatrics.
2:42:37
I am tremendously excited. This
is a day that a lot of us have
2:42:42
been waiting for since the very
beginning of the pandemic, it is
2:42:46
taken a long time. But we're
finally at the point where we
2:42:49
can give vaccine protection to
the youngest children.
2:42:56
Do I get to say something here?
You say anything you want? The
2:43:00
reason they need this? For the
kids under five from six months
2:43:04
old? I know exactly where you're
going. And you're dead, right?
2:43:07
Is it puts it on the schedule,
and they get even more
2:43:11
protection protection? Oh,
that's right, they get even
2:43:15
more, they also give them more
money, they get more money, but
2:43:18
it's more protection. The
liability once it's on the
2:43:21
vaccine schedule is where you
want to be. And this is not
2:43:25
common rd, by the way. This is
still the emergency use
2:43:28
authorization they have pill
emergency use
2:43:31
emergency use after all these
years. It's the emergency use. I
2:43:35
tell you we have emergency youth
if they keep vaccinating these
2:43:38
children will need some
emergency youth
2:43:41
crap, ah crap a cola. And then
they get and they have no data.
2:43:46
And they have no data. John,
they have no data. I know. In
2:43:49
fact, I wish I had the Ron Paul
clip. I have the Ron Paul clip.
2:43:54
Well, you want to play part two
of this and then play the Ron
2:43:56
Paul clips. Yeah, well as some
other things we got to play, but
2:43:59
let's hit this first. So Adrian,
these are low dose paediatric
2:44:03
versions of the moderna and
Pfizer biontech vaccines that
2:44:06
can now be given to kids as
young as six months old. You
2:44:10
said, Rob, that this was a
unanimous decision today. So why
2:44:13
did all of this take so long?
Yeah, good question. Well, a big
2:44:17
problem was coming up with the
right dose, a dose that would
2:44:19
stimulate the immune system
enough, but also be safe, and
2:44:22
the colonies finally did it. All
the evidence indicates that the
2:44:25
vaccines are very safe for these
littlest kids and should help
2:44:29
protect them from getting
seriously ill. We don't have any
2:44:32
extra do these indefinitely
babies. But you know, that's
2:44:34
based primarily on how the
immune systems have little kids
2:44:37
in company studies responded to
the shots, which looks good, but
2:44:41
there still are really isn't
enough data yet to get a clear
2:44:44
sense of just how strong the
protection from the vaccines
2:44:47
when
2:44:48
it gets Omicron and how long
that protection will last.
2:44:51
That's concluded whatever
benefits the vaccines might
2:44:55
provide was crucial, even though
COVID may not pose as much of a
2:44:59
threat that
2:45:00
To most kids as it goes through
adults, here's Dr. Beth Bell
2:45:03
from the University of
Washington at the end of today
2:45:05
of the two day meeting. Yes, we
don't know everything that there
2:45:09
is to be known about this. Yes,
data may change. But we have a
2:45:14
bottom line here, which is that
this infection kills children.
2:45:19
And we have an opportunity to
prevent that. Assuming enough
2:45:23
parents are willing to get their
littlest kids vaccinated now.
2:45:30
These people are creepy. I'm
sorry. I mean, anyone don't
2:45:34
anyone wants to get vaccine,
you're an adult. Do whatever you
2:45:36
want to do. He talked to
2:45:38
none of our business last month.
So the one that gets me I don't
2:45:42
have I don't think I have that
clip. But time after time, he
2:45:45
keeps keep keep hearing that.
Oh, if you if you just got COVID
2:45:52
just ended the disease. Now's
the time to get the vaccine to
2:45:56
double your protection. Have you
heard this?
2:45:59
No, it sounds like buying the
dip.
2:46:04
That's exactly what it is. By
the by the vaccine dip. Yeah, by
2:46:09
the by the, by the device to
believe that.
2:46:15
You have another one here
another clip? I see.
2:46:18
Yeah, this is the this is the
original short report, which has
2:46:21
a woman going on and on about
how relieved she is that she can
2:46:25
give her little baby the shot.
The CDC today signed off on to
2:46:29
COVID vaccines for children ages
six month through five years.
2:46:34
That's the last group without
access to the shots. That means
2:46:37
parents should be able to get
their children vaccinated with
2:46:39
Maderna or Pfizer starting next
week, as John Edwards says
2:46:44
she'll feel more comfortable
once she can get her youngest
2:46:46
child, the extra layer of
protection from a vaccine, I
2:46:50
think would mean a lot, it would
make me feel more comfortable
2:46:53
with it. And then today here,
millions of doses have been
2:46:56
ordered for distribution to
doctors, hospitals and community
2:46:59
health clinics around the
country. The CDC is continuing
2:47:03
to urge parents to get all
children including those who've
2:47:06
already had COVID-19.
vaccinated. Alright, I have a
2:47:10
couple things here. First, I
think what is happening,
2:47:13
everyone is so tired of this,
that the people who are
2:47:17
completely against
2:47:19
every pretty much every measure
the government's have taken I
2:47:23
say governments, including
vaccination there, I mean, was
2:47:27
it and that would I include
myself in that I'm done. I don't
2:47:30
care what you throw at me,
monkey pox is fine. And I was
2:47:33
like, I went to the sauna. I'm
still okay. I don't care. I'm
2:47:38
not interested. La La, la, la,
la, la la. The same goes for the
2:47:43
people who are all in buy into
the safe and effectiveness. They
2:47:47
are also no longer listening to
any reason any rationale,
2:47:51
they're also like that. So it's
cognitive dissonance on both
2:47:54
sides. Everyone's often there.
And I think it's, it's binary.
2:48:00
Again, it's pretty binary.
Either you believe it or you
2:48:03
don't, you're against it all.
But the cognitive dissonance I
2:48:06
think this is a perfect example
of it. Is this FDA,
2:48:12
Dr. Peter marks, and he will
recognize that there is an
2:48:16
increase of myocarditis in
children. But just listen to I
2:48:22
think this is cognitive
dissonance because he believes
2:48:25
completely in the magical powers
of this vaccine. I sure hope
2:48:30
they've tested of interaction
with any of the other 60
2:48:33
vaccines on the schedule, I'm
sure they have had plenty of
2:48:36
time to test all that.
2:48:39
Listen to, to his thinking there
are data on the incidence of
2:48:44
myocarditis in this age range.
And I can pull that out, but
2:48:51
they're there. This is this is a
known phenomena in the 12 to 17
2:48:57
year old age range. And the the
the rate that it was seen in,
2:49:04
in the
2:49:06
the 12 to 17 year olds who were
vaccinated seem to be about
2:49:10
fivefold higher than the
baseline rate that we would
2:49:15
expect. And that's why this is
not a slam dunk. It's not like
2:49:20
this is unlike the thrombosed.
Remember that we have with the
2:49:23
j&j vaccine, there was the
thrombosis thrombocytopenia
2:49:27
syndrome, there in the absence
of getting vaccinated, the
2:49:31
chance was vanishingly small,
zero, basically. So there
2:49:36
anything you saw you knew was
real. Here. It's very
2:49:41
challenging when something's
only three to five times more
2:49:45
common in a vaccinated
population. You don't know
2:49:48
whether it's just cases that
have kind of cases that would
2:49:52
have been there that aren't
really associated with the
2:49:55
vaccine that have come up, or
how much actually the vaccine
2:49:59
has increased.
2:50:00
that risk. I'm not denying, by
the way, I'm just so that
2:50:02
there's no one. I'm not trying
to deny that there's some signal
2:50:05
here I'm just trying to say is
the magnitude of this over what
2:50:09
we might be seeing nor you know
as as baseline, summertime.
2:50:14
viral myocarditis is hard to
know exactly. So but just to
2:50:19
give you an idea of the order of
magnitude, it's it's worse,
2:50:23
we're seeing about five fold
more than you might expect. If
2:50:27
this were normal summertime,
2:50:31
In what world of medicine is an
adverse event from vaccination,
2:50:37
three to five times higher than
the baseline, then what he calls
2:50:42
summer viral myocarditis. In
what world? Is that not earth
2:50:47
shattering? That's a 300 to 500%
increase.
2:50:54
Is that is that not cognitive
dissonance?
2:50:59
I don't think, well, it doesn't
matter. Is it insane? i There
2:51:03
you go. Thank you. You're you're
getting closer to it.
2:51:07
That just just baffles me
baffles me. How can you be like
2:51:11
that? Hey, you know, this data?
2:51:16
Alright, here's the Rand Paul
clip. I presume this is about
2:51:19
the royalties. That's the one
you're talking about.
2:51:22
Yeah, well, no, there's a bunch
of stuff. But get that royalty
2:51:25
one is good. The royalty one I
think is the one that we want to
2:51:28
play. Because this is something
we've been talking about four.
2:51:31
Since 2012. We started covering
vaccines. Yes. And the we've
2:51:35
been talking about this since
day one and let you know, let's
2:51:38
give people who aren't sick
medication and charge them a lot
2:51:41
and have no liability for it
whatsoever. indemnification for
2:51:45
all. One of the deals is that if
you participate with the CDC,
2:51:50
FDA or anywhere in government,
which results in a
2:51:54
pharmaceutical product that is
then subsequently approved by
2:51:58
the FDA, then you get written up
as a co inventor, and you get
2:52:03
royalties from that. What's
interesting is that these
2:52:06
royalties, it's always been poo
pooed. Like,
2:52:11
Hey, how can you get the best
people in the world working out?
2:52:14
And if they can't make any
money? Let's call government
2:52:17
that's people who serve the
people but no. Okay. So this
2:52:21
whole industry has been
captured. And what Rand Paul was
2:52:25
trying to get to, with this
questioning of Anthony Fauci,
2:52:31
the two time COVID survivor is,
do these very same people also
2:52:37
approve new products, you know,
the ones who get the royalties?
2:52:41
Now the question for you, the
NIH continues to refuse to
2:52:46
voluntarily divulged the names
of scientists who receive
2:52:49
royalties, and from which
companies over the period of
2:52:53
time from 2010 to 2016 27,000,
royalty payments were paid to
2:52:59
18 109 NIH employees. We know
that not because you told us,
2:53:05
but because we forced you to
tell us through the Freedom of
2:53:08
Information Act, over $193
million was given to these 18,
2:53:13
employee 1800 employees. Can you
tell me that you have not
2:53:17
received a royalty from any
entity that you ever oversaw the
2:53:22
distribution of money in
research grants?
2:53:27
But first of all, let's talk
about royalties. The question
2:53:31
No, that's the question. Have
you ever overseen and ever
2:53:33
received a royalty payment from
a company that you later oversaw
2:53:38
money going to that company? You
know, I don't know is the fact
2:53:42
but I doubt it. I will have
here's the thing is why don't
2:53:45
you let us know, why don't you
reveal how much you've gotten
2:53:48
and from what entities the NIH
refuses? We asked them, we asked
2:53:53
them the NIH, we asked them,
whether or not who got it and
2:53:57
how much they refused to tell
us. They sent it redacted.
2:54:00
Here's what I want to know. It's
not just about you, everybody on
2:54:03
the vaccine committee. Have any
of them ever received money from
2:54:07
the people who make vaccines?
Can you tell me that? Can you
2:54:10
tell me if anybody on the
vaccine approval committees ever
2:54:13
received any
2:54:15
questions? Sounds like number
one, you're going to let me
2:54:18
answer a question. Okay, so let
me give you some information.
2:54:22
First of all, according to the
regulations, people who receive
2:54:27
royalties are not required to
divulge them even on their
2:54:31
financial statement according to
the BI Dolac. So let me give you
2:54:36
some example, from 2015 to 2020.
i The only royalties I have was
2:54:46
my lab and I made a monoclonal
antibody for use in vitro
2:54:51
reagent that had nothing to do
with patients. And during that
2:54:55
period of time, my royalties
ranged from $21
2:55:00
was a year to $7,700 a year and
the average per year was
2:55:06
$191.46. It's all redacted. It's
all redacted and you can't get
2:55:13
any information on the outside
your time.
2:55:18
Oh god money from the people who
made the manufacturer pa Your
2:55:21
time is long over expired. I
gave you an additional two and a
2:55:24
half minutes the witness has
responded we are going to move
2:55:26
on Senator Sanders. So what I
find interesting is not only
2:55:31
that, you know, there's this
regulation what Deb you familiar
2:55:34
with that act was at the Biden
door but that actually be
2:55:36
repealed? Yeah. It sounded like
the bicycle conflict of
2:55:40
interest. Hello, conflict of
interest. He was like Mary, Mary
2:55:45
Cheney. What's her name? Liz,
Mary Cheney.
2:55:49
On the
2:55:51
on this stupid committee, she's
a conflict of interest. But he
2:55:54
hates Trump. She hates the
Republican Party as it now
2:55:57
exists. She shouldn't be on
that. But beyond that, a
2:55:59
Republican beyond that the
arrogance of Fauci to say, well,
2:56:03
it wasn't a lot of money.
2:56:06
What the hell? Oh, I stole some
money, but it wasn't a lot. Come
2:56:10
on. It's a misdemeanor. I didn't
steal a lot. It's the same
2:56:15
thing. These people are really
dangerous.
2:56:19
Well, they've got their hand in
the till that's the problem.
2:56:22
It's called CAPTCHA. It's called
an EU even Bill Maher couldn't
2:56:27
get to it. But it was a great
show. I really enjoyed that last
2:56:30
night. He had a couple in a row.
He's had a few good ones. He had
2:56:34
the the guy on Danny
2:56:37
stone, it was his name telling.
He's been an Egyptian writer of
2:56:43
movies and very successful, I
should say. And he also, I
2:56:48
think, produced and directed the
dope sick with Michael Keaton.
2:56:52
And so and there's Bill Maher,
literally saying, Well, you
2:56:55
know, the we can't trust this
industry. You can't trust the
2:56:58
big pharmaceuticals. They
marketed all this stuff. And
2:57:01
they, you know, they were
killing people. And now we're
2:57:03
stuck with this huge problem.
And he and he can't make the
2:57:06
leap to the vaccines. He can't
make it. He can't see it.
2:57:13
It's at least a possibility. Now
demorest got a roadblock in
2:57:19
front of his own ability to you
know, we call it magical. We say
2:57:22
he's got a big plank in front of
his head. Even bought for your
2:57:26
coop,
2:57:28
another Dutch. That's a good
one. I'm going to show my mood
2:57:32
by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could
2:57:35
do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be
fun.
2:57:44
We do have a few people thinking
I want to mention this some
2:57:47
names that we will mention under
$50. Today, because thanking
2:57:51
their father, there's only one
of them. But there's a second
2:57:54
one here that I noticed that
it's not on the list for
2:57:56
birthdays, and I would hope that
you'd scroll down and pick it
2:57:59
off. It's Mary Katherine beacon
falls. She should be on the
2:58:02
birthday. Listen, I don't think
she is I will make sure she's on
2:58:06
right now. And so let's start by
thanking a few people who helped
2:58:10
us out on show 1461 Starting
with James Scott, and he's in
2:58:15
Parlin, New Jersey. And he is
and if you follow along, if you
2:58:21
put her name on, you can see if
there's any shout outs to dad.
2:58:24
Yeah, hold on, hold on. I mean,
are you asking me to do all the
2:58:29
work? No, it's like I can do it
at the beginning. But you can do
2:58:32
it after I'm done by James Scott
and just Harlan New Jersey. And
2:58:36
he has de douching he needs
2:58:41
ben de douche I got five arms
luckily. Yeah, they do it for
2:58:47
Anthony ham and carry brilliant
day. And credit this donation is
2:58:52
from Sir our Daniels and Fred.
There's also a meet up report
2:58:57
involved. Yes. And a BIST
Contini in our best contine
2:59:02
import Brian, Illinois $100. And
she's donating on behalf of her
2:59:07
sister Jill. And there's a happy
birthday caught for her coming.
2:59:11
Terry Wentz in Langley,
Washington. Langley, Washington.
2:59:15
$100. Greg had and by the way,
Terry sent in a gorgeous owl
2:59:20
card. Thank you for that. It's
gorgeous.
2:59:25
It's an owl you just pop up car
with it. It's a gorgeous card.
2:59:30
Greg Hudson in Newport, North
Carolina 90. Now we need to read
2:59:35
this one which I will do because
this is one of those examples.
2:59:40
After six years of the $4 per
show sustaining donation
2:59:45
subscription. This $90 donation
I make today will earn me a
2:59:49
knighthood in listen to no
agenda since the very beginning
2:59:52
as they follow John around the
internet through his many
2:59:55
transitions. Yes, he's very
trans. It has kept me sane
3:00:00
In the face of the constant
disinfo pushed by the M five M.
3:00:04
I live near Morehead City, North
Carolina. On the sound side of
3:00:07
the Outer Banks that we call the
inner banks here and mucked
3:00:12
Mamak is a local word for messed
up to put it politely. Therefore
3:00:15
I'd like to be known as Greg,
the Monique Knight of the inner
3:00:18
banks. If the locals wish to
find me tell them to look for
3:00:21
the little blue Honda with a
huge no agenda sticker on the
3:00:23
back at the round table. I'd
like to be served North Carolina
3:00:26
barbecue, it's the best in the
country. He says, and again us
3:00:30
then we appreciate it. Thank you
so much. You're on the list with
3:00:34
your barbecue. Interesting that
he would say that because North
3:00:38
Carolina has for some people
think five distinct types of
3:00:44
barbecue. And he didn't define
which one it was east west. So
3:00:49
we'll just call it North
Carolina. I'm just going to
3:00:51
throw that in. Thank you. Agency
is up 808 from Dumfries,
3:00:57
Virginia. Is there a bunch of
jingles Okay. Dave of the city
3:01:03
of the clay pits 808. Jonathan
Peckham in Bristol, Rhode Island
3:01:09
808 and does a birthday there.
Elizabeth Lambert and Crown
3:01:14
Point Indiana switcheroo which
Switcheroo 808 to Father's Day
3:01:19
to John
3:01:21
John Lambert, the boob donations
a gift from me not the human
3:01:25
resources.
3:01:27
Kevin McLaughlin Hello. Hey
Kevin. Duke of Luna is a lover
3:01:32
of American lover of boobs. He's
in locust North Carolina. He
3:01:35
knows about barbecue too. And
bleach oh eight. Sir Gary Blatt
3:01:39
and Wayne, Pennsylvania
3:01:43
and he needs to drop karma at
the end. We'll give it to him
3:01:46
then. 777777 David Parker dan in
Pensacola, Florida. 75 Gabriel
3:01:53
Shelton and Fulton New York
switch room and deep switcheroo
3:01:57
This is from Gabriel. Oh, going
for Joe Happy Father's Day. Dad,
3:02:01
dad.
3:02:02
Sure. Rick, sir Rick in
Arlington, Washington. 6996.
3:02:06
Peter, or edge ich. Nagy. Reg.
Reg. Nagant. What a great name.
3:02:14
I can't pronounce it under any.
Everybody's Peter. Reg and sneak
3:02:17
in the morning. How you doing?
Westminister, Colorado 6969 Beth
3:02:23
Visser in Leduc? Leduc. Alberta.
Happy Father's Day. And 90th
3:02:29
anniversary wedding anniversary
drew smokin hot husband,
3:02:32
Patrick? Yes. They've never had
a fight to serve not sir.
3:02:37
Yeah, I'm sorry. di l f. Deal
with Patrick. There we go. Hey,
3:02:42
the Duke
3:02:44
Brian tyranny and Steven city.
Six 190 Happy birthday. Happy
3:02:49
Father's Day sir. Not Jake. Sir
Kevin McLaughlin. What. Luna as
3:02:55
lover of American boozes 606
small boobs. small boobs is
3:03:01
still in locust North Carolina.
3:03:04
Stewart Walton Stafford,
Staffordshire, UK 5510 Do my
3:03:11
late father, Ken who died 21
years ago on Father's Day.
3:03:15
Golfing spike. Oh, well, that's
Hey, that's dying in the South.
3:03:18
Finishing the 11 elevens green
at the local golf club. Ah.
3:03:24
He says Happy Father's Day still
missing every day dad? Of course
3:03:26
you do. It invites any number of
golf jokes, which many of them
3:03:32
include a death issue? We won't
do that. Chris angler in
3:03:36
Ancaster Ontario 55 Ken Happy
Father's Day to my dad Fritz. is
3:03:42
patience kindness and generosity
are an inspiration. We love him
3:03:45
Bigley.
3:03:47
Break Lubyanka in hope Rhode
Island. 5510.
3:03:53
He's given himself up. Oh, hi,
Dad. You're dead. But Hi.
3:03:58
Anyway. It's from Sir Smarty
Bart fast. Thank you. Joe Biden.
3:04:04
Dean Roker 5510 Christie combs
in Indianapolis, Indiana. 55.
3:04:09
Christopher Webster in walks,
shop walks. Walk shop. North
3:04:15
Carolina with a birthday
birthday.
3:04:19
And a D douching. Yes, indeed.
That's for Robert.
3:04:23
You've been D deuced. Andrew
bands in a bureau Missouri
3:04:27
55 $50.05. And now these are $50
donations. You can call out to
3:04:33
the dads as they come along. And
I will just do name and
3:04:36
location. Michael Jan Zach in
Sun Prairie Wisconsin.
3:04:42
Andrew Sir Andrew gusset Hoosac
in Greensboro, North Carolina
3:04:46
Megan Carlotta in Galloway, Ohio
with a Happy Father's Day to
3:04:50
Rick Carlotta. Angela Pickering
and sour Lake Texas simple Happy
3:04:55
Father's Day. I'm Steven Chu
mock in
3:05:00
Xenia, Ohio, Ohio Michael Dunn
in Bowling Green Kentucky Happy
3:05:05
Father's Day to David Dunn from
Melissa and Michael WE LOVE YOU
3:05:08
LG why? And then Scott lavender
in Montgomery, Texas. And last
3:05:14
is Kevin O'Brien in Chicago and
there was one down the road at
3:05:18
the bottom of this when we'll
read because it served Father's
3:05:23
Day call out and it was part of
the deal with Graham Wolf.
3:05:26
Graham wolf Wichita, Kansas
Happy Father's Day to Patrick
3:05:29
Wolf and thank you for your
courage I think that's all of
3:05:32
them we never do a reminder for
all of our guys but that's it
3:05:35
over guys and gals Let's not
miss Let's not miss gender here
3:05:39
well guys gals guys or girls
call each other guys so Hey
3:05:43
guys, we appreciate it. No, they
don't. You can't say hi. Hey
3:05:47
folks, it's folks. Work friends.
Hi friends. Hi friends. Hi,
3:05:53
friend. Hello, thank you to
these friendly producers who
3:05:57
have supported the Show episode
1461 We appreciate this very
3:06:01
much as dads it's nice to get
something extra on this day.
3:06:05
Some people stepped up and we
appreciate that
3:06:10
we didn't get any I don't think
we got any people saying Happy
3:06:13
Father's Day to us.
3:06:15
Curiously no obviously not.
3:06:18
Again thanks to last show
somebody did again thanks to our
3:06:21
executive and Associate
Executive Producers all of these
3:06:24
producers and if you'd like to
learn more about how to support
3:06:27
the show and our value for value
model here's a website to go to
3:06:29
you can sing the jingle
for.org/in a s by request for
3:06:35
the dads who need jobs, jobs,
jobs and jobs Let's vote for job
3:06:43
karma.
3:06:51
know
3:06:52
we've probably spoken about most
of them but here is the list in
3:06:56
a nice package. Christopher
Webster Happy Birthday to his
3:06:58
dad Rob Webster celebrates on
the 21st or Johnny B is turning
3:07:02
43 Hey Johnny B. And a biscuit
team now happy birthday to her
3:07:06
sister Jill, Jonathan Peckham is
celebrating and Blake Gilson
3:07:10
Happy Birthday to Mary
Katherine. She celebrates on the
3:07:12
20th Happy birthday from
everybody here and Happy
3:07:15
Father's Day from the best
podcast in the universe.
3:07:20
And we have no title changes but
we do have four nights to join
3:07:27
the roundtable today. So I'll
take a fortnight blade. That's a
3:07:31
good one. Tim Alcott, George
Walter, Kevin Kesner, and Greg
3:07:36
Hudson, all of you up on the
podium here Gentlemen, thanks to
3:07:39
your support of the no agenda
show in the amount of $1,000 or
3:07:41
in some of you much more. You
are hereby pronounce dedicated
3:07:45
as Sir roadie Joe sir gal will
Terry and of the gut land, Sir
3:07:51
Kevin Knight of the southern
Appalachian hemp farmers and
3:07:54
serve Greg the Mamak night of
the inner banks, gentlemen, for
3:07:57
you, of course hookers and blow
rent boys and Chardonnay,
3:08:00
shepherd's pie and Sam out of
buckwheat whiskey from Brittany
3:08:03
and 20 1am on North Carolina
barbecue and again, we also got
3:08:07
some McHale girls and coffin
varnas Lachlan Padilla, bong
3:08:10
hits and bourbon, sparkling
cider nexport Ginger Ale and
3:08:12
Jerboas breast milk and pablum.
And yes, there's that mutton in
3:08:16
me. We have a mead, mead works
here in Fredericksburg. Have you
3:08:21
had it? No, no, no, Tina, we
keep seeing it. As we drive by
3:08:24
into 90 We're going to stop off
in half. So I think it's new,
3:08:27
something that can be good if
somebody knows what they're
3:08:29
doing, but it's fairly rare to
find a guy can really make mead
3:08:32
Well, it's called Texas Mead
works. And we'll check it out. I
3:08:38
will let you meet, get some meat
Of course. Thank you to these
3:08:42
nights go to no agenda
nation.com/rings And that'll
3:08:46
take you to the page where you
can give us the information on
3:08:48
where to send your signet ring
that's for you to sign as well
3:08:51
to where of course and you can
also use it to seal up your
3:08:55
important correspondence which
people do all the time to the
3:08:57
PIO box. I love getting that red
sealing wax on the back with no
3:09:01
agenda night ring pounded into
it and your certificate of
3:09:04
authenticity and thank you again
for supporting the no agenda
3:09:07
show not for nothing. The best
podcast in the universe. No one
3:09:18
the party has been raging all
kinds of places. We got some
3:09:22
reports Hey Adam and John. This
is Sir Robertson acoustics aka
3:09:27
will here at the barrel house in
Fresno and this is Deathlok at
3:09:32
no agenda social and we're live
in the mac and cheese live in
3:09:36
the morning in the morning to
you now we go to San Diego Kim
3:09:39
John Nanum it's all of us from
the roundtable in San Diego
3:09:44
Rancho Bernardo, thank you for
your courage. This is the name
3:09:46
of the crush grapes ITM guys
it's Sir Michael Brandon sir.
3:09:50
Correct corner the Ronin 73 and
seven FSN ITM This is Lily Dame
3:09:55
Lily the happy Hummers Sir
Robert the dusty single track I
3:09:58
can teach Joe Biden how to ride
a bike and also
3:10:00
around the country in the
Morning John and Adam This is
3:10:02
during from San Marcos,
California hide your daughter's
3:10:04
from Biden they'll call him into
a bicycle rack in the morning in
3:10:08
the morning from San Diego ATM
This is de mon hey we're out
3:10:12
here in California where the sun
is shining and the poop is
3:10:16
flying
3:10:18
unless you think that he grew to
too big for his britches now the
3:10:22
executive director of Project
Veritas nothing could be further
3:10:25
from the truth sir are Daniels
here with the jersey Soviet
3:10:29
slaves meet up report? Hey, John
and Adam. This is James the
3:10:32
First Central Jersey meetup. And
welcome to the Gulag for the
3:10:37
central slaves meetup. This is
Dan Strax or Daniels, Executive
3:10:41
Director of Project Veritas
happy to be here. Be brave, do
3:10:44
something in the morning to you
gentlemen from Rob. Adam. I hope
3:10:48
you're gonna have a really good
chiropractor because the neck
3:10:50
must be killing you for carrying
water for Putin.
3:10:55
In the morning to you gentlemen,
this is Anthony from Southern
3:10:57
New Jersey and I am proud to say
that James hit me in the mouth.
3:11:01
This is Dave and thanks to the
North American Numbering Plan
3:11:04
Central Jersey exists. This is
Carrie from Central Jersey in
3:11:10
the morning, and I hate Kelly in
the mouth today
3:11:15
is awesome Dave and the port
shortage is real for real.
3:11:22
And you know Sir, our Daniels
told me this doesn't sound just
3:11:26
like Horowitz This is Dan Strax
or Daniels Executive Director of
3:11:30
Project Veritas happy to be here
is this that sounds like
3:11:33
Horowitz a little bit.
3:11:35
I'm just hearing everybody and
everybody today. Here's what's
3:11:38
coming up the meet up wise. We
have well you probably late for
3:11:43
this free state of Florida. Del
bow deer deplorables Dames and
3:11:47
douchebags that started at the
cove restaurant at 130. Eastern
3:11:50
time. You probably know you can
you can still pop into the
3:11:55
southwest Virginia meet up at
shelter one in Blacksburg on
3:12:00
Tuesday and you're in plenty of
time for that the NoCo
3:12:02
impossible meet up and ape fest
six o'clock at Greenlee pizza
3:12:06
company in Greenlee Colorado.
The next show day Thursday
3:12:09
hairball rocks, the Wisco meet
up 530 Oshkosh Wisconsin, make
3:12:14
sure you check out the website
for details and where you will
3:12:17
be meeting also on Thursday the
23rd the return of John and
3:12:20
Taylor to Denver City Park at
six o'clock Denver City Park and
3:12:24
here's one of our nights one of
our Israeli nights are Brian of
3:12:27
London with his own promo for
his meetup, which is one if
3:12:30
you're in the neighborhood you
might want to attend. This is
3:12:34
Brian of London but I'm not in
Israel and I'm not in London.
3:12:37
I'm gonna be in France and I'm
inviting all no agenda producers
3:12:42
to a meet up on Sunday, the 26th
of June at 7:30pm on a yacht
3:12:49
definitely not a Russian
oligarchs yacht but a 24 metre
3:12:54
catamaran parked in camp dag in
the south of France somewhere
3:12:58
near Montpellier find it on no
agenda meetups, and I look
3:13:03
forward to seeing any and all no
agenda producers.
3:13:08
That sounds like a fun meetup.
3:13:10
I might go to that on a
catamaran he so he's been
3:13:13
sailing that thing around.
3:13:17
I'm not sure where he's going to
but South of France doesn't suck
3:13:20
if you've got a boat, you can
hang out on it. Hey, these are
3:13:23
just some of the perfect time
the year it is these are just
3:13:26
some of the no agenda meetups.
I'm looking at the list. It's
3:13:28
way too long to go through.
That's where we have no agenda
3:13:31
meetups.com you go there you can
search by location. You can see
3:13:34
what's coming up. I think you
can go to reports all kinds of
3:13:37
things is beautiful. We
appreciate the work that sir
3:13:39
Daniel does on that and Mimi, of
course, and everyone who is
3:13:42
really organizing these producer
organized meetups, it we just
3:13:48
report them We're so happy
people are doing this. This is
3:13:50
where you get community. This is
where you get to hang out
3:13:53
without any triggering doesn't
matter who you are where you
3:13:55
come from. There's always love
in the no agenda meetups go to
3:13:58
no agenda meetup.com If you
can't find one, start one
3:14:01
yourself and
3:14:03
go hang out with all day.
3:14:08
You
3:14:10
won't be triggered
3:14:13
you
3:14:15
everybody. This
3:14:19
is like a
3:14:22
like a potty yo.
3:14:25
Ooh, okay. Alert. The affiliates
were a little later.
3:14:30
On overtime. Let's do your ISOs
what you got? What do you got?
3:14:33
Oh, I got a bunch. You want me
to do mine first? Yeah, I love
3:14:36
it. You must be certain of your
of your choices then. No,
3:14:40
actually mine are just to kind
of almost evergreen classics
3:14:44
that would work in the middle
all the time if you don't have
3:14:47
anything good. Okay, I'll do
these like a moment the old
3:14:49
jingle demo packages where they
send you a demonstration here at
3:14:53
pepper Tanner. We have the best
jingles for your hot
3:14:56
contemporary format. Here are
some ISOs you could use
3:15:00
During your show, cut one
3:15:06
okay, my bad right? Yeah, cut to
die to
3:15:11
know. Cut three you absolutely
die to
3:15:16
cut four pull the curtains apart
3:15:21
cut
3:15:23
five there are a bunch of crazy
free each had to go back to the
3:15:27
well
3:15:29
cut six crazy people. Okay,
that's what I got. I think you'd
3:15:32
like the first one the best but
what do you have? Okay, well I
3:15:36
have ones that are actual in the
show. Oh, okay. Mine's no good
3:15:40
now now I'm like, yours are
good. I bet that first one may
3:15:43
be there may be you here.
3:15:46
Let's go is go. It's got here we
got two of them. Not and they're
3:15:52
legit. The Well, I got. Thank
you. Thank you for listening.
3:15:59
Okay, that's good.
3:16:02
And then feelings. I have
feelings.
3:16:09
Wow, I don't know, man. I think
3:16:14
I have feelings. No, I think
feelings wins.
3:16:19
Yeah, I think it might be the
better one. And it's because
3:16:23
that my end of show is basically
should be a start of show.
3:16:28
Right? That's That's how those
typically we will usually use
3:16:31
you doing that. But that's the
end just good. It's who is that?
3:16:35
Is that Sophia with with a pH?
No, no, this is right off a NPR.
3:16:41
NPR go NPR.
3:16:44
Okay.
3:16:49
We should probably wrap this up.
I'm trying to think if there's
3:16:51
anything we didn't talk about.
3:16:54
The war go Philly guy really
moved the war to Thursday. The
3:16:58
war the war can wait for us
3:17:01
confirms what they say in one of
my clips, which is people are
3:17:04
losing interest in this war and
it's causing a problem or we're
3:17:07
about to get really interested
in it as the they're now
3:17:11
negotiating behind closed doors,
the National Defense
3:17:14
Authorization Act, it's one of
our favorites to look at. And
3:17:18
it's an it's already, it was
already at an eye popping $850
3:17:23
billion in the backdoor and the
backroom negotiations. In the
3:17:29
Senate. They have already added
45 billion to that. So we're
3:17:33
looking at almost a trillion
dollars to the military
3:17:37
industrial complex. Right. Does
this sound right to any to
3:17:42
protect us? This goes to
people's pockets. Yes. Yes. Does
3:17:46
any of this disturb anybody? I
know the answer. Don't answer.
3:17:52
That's my parting shot. You got
anything to leave us with? Good.
3:17:55
Okay. Thank you all trolls for
hanging out with us. Happy
3:17:59
Father's Day to all the dads out
there. You're more important
3:18:02
than you think.
3:18:04
Even if you're not in the home,
call up your kid you deadbeat.
3:18:08
And if you're a kid, call up
your dad. Or at least make a GIF
3:18:13
for him. Dads love that shit.
3:18:17
We do. The GIF is cute, then and
now.
3:18:22
Yeah, I like that. The problem
is the kid always looks dynamite
3:18:25
and you look old, old A F
3:18:29
word donate. Dad's like delayed
Father's Day gifts to
3:18:33
divorce.org/na.
3:18:37
But he loves to donate to the no
agenda show. And coming to you
3:18:41
from the heart of the Texas hill
country here in a FEMA Region
3:18:44
number six in the morning,
everybody. I'm Adam curry, from
3:18:47
Northern Silicon Valley where
we're just about to have a big
3:18:50
heat spell, which is just what
we need to dry things up and
3:18:54
ruin the crop. I'm John C.
Dvorak. We return on Thursday
3:18:59
with another episode of the Best
podcast in the Euro University.
3:19:02
No agenda show coming up next
we've got live battle of the
3:19:06
douchebags. Part Five was their
seats to their lavish sir
3:19:09
bemrose and Fletcher, end of
show mixes Professor JJ Tom
3:19:13
Starkweather and until Thursday
dvorak.org/na I'm Adam curry.
3:19:21
And you
3:19:24
I'm still Jhansi Dvorak the
oxbow follows Dr. Fauci the
3:19:29
government recommends everybody
take a booster over age five.
3:19:33
Are you aware of any studies
that show reduction in
3:19:36
hospitalization or death for
children who take a booster?
3:19:41
The optimal degree of protection
when you get infection is to get
3:19:46
vaccinated after infection.
3:19:49
What is the chance that my
child's going to the hospital
3:19:51
are dying
3:19:55
in 2010 to 2016 27,000 Royal
3:20:00
Few payments will be made to
1800 nih NIH employees
3:20:11
there are no studies on children
showing a reduction in
3:20:15
hospitalization or death with
taking a booster that the
3:20:19
optimal degree of protection
when you get inspection is to
3:20:23
get vaccinated after infection.
What is the chance that my
3:20:27
child's going to the hospital
are?
3:20:30
Over $193 million dollars is
given these 18 employee 1800
3:20:35
employees.
3:20:43
When critics finally complained
it was finally included because
3:20:46
there was no health benefit from
taking a booster between 1849 in
3:20:50
the CDC study.
3:20:53
Here's what I want to know. It's
not just about you, everybody on
3:20:56
the vaccine committee, have any
of them ever received money from
3:21:00
the people who make
3:21:03
over $193 million. We've given
these 18 employee 1800 employees
3:21:10
that the optimal degree of
protection what you get
3:21:13
infection is to get vaccinated
after infection. There are no
3:21:18
studies on children showing
reduction in hospitalization or
3:21:22
death with it no booster.
3:21:26
Just look at the work that he
does it look like he's how he's
3:21:29
delivering for the American
public. I want to hear a bit
3:21:32
more of these lies about
reckless spending,
3:21:37
price hike inflation coming
coming out of a once in a
3:21:40
generation global pandemic. It's
insulting to the average citizen
3:21:46
to listen to some of this drivel
coming out of the White House.
3:21:49
If you can't trust the country's
government. Why should you trust
3:21:54
gets money because I've invited
today announced another billion
3:21:57
dollars in military aid for you
to rely upon our own clean
3:22:02
domestic production of energy
that's the problem for these
3:22:05
companies and these companies
are saying you know you're
3:22:08
asking me to do more now invest
more now when in fact five or 10
3:22:12
years from now we don't think
that demand will be there and
3:22:15
the administration doesn't even
necessarily want 00 Is historic
3:22:21
economic boom that we're seeing
jobs historic inflation
3:22:25
no that is not that is that is
that is not that is not how
3:22:30
we're seeing the American rescue
plan changing people's lives aid
3:22:34
reportedly will include anti
ship missile launchers howitzers
3:22:37
and more rounds for the High
Mobility Artillery Rocket
3:22:40
systems the US is already
providing
3:22:50
tax income again
3:22:54
right in Chile and no more gone
3:23:02
and we won't know why.
3:23:05
Shut up slaves don't ask still
plus John's Catholic mother with
3:23:13
two years in and his way pastime
but
3:23:18
he's still oh
3:23:21
she's wearing that.
3:23:24
Joe's gotta go he takes too many
questions.
3:23:32
Oh, she loves her. Dad. When he
is gone. She'll be happy. She's
3:23:39
number two. President Kathlyn
come it's your turn. That's what
3:23:47
you thought. You miss her.
3:23:51
Gone.
3:24:06
The boruch.org/in A
3:24:12
feelings