Cover for No Agenda Show 1461: Bi-Pox
June 19th, 2022 • 3h 24m

1461: Bi-Pox

Transcript

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

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

0:00
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
0:00 0:00