0:00
Sheamus started looking at
building hot rods, Adam curry,
0:03
John C. Dvorak. Thursday, July
21 2022. This is your award
0:07
winning game nation media
assassination episode 1470. This
0:12
is no agenda, placing our bets
and broadcasting live from the
0:17
heart of the Texas hill country
here in FEMA Region number six.
0:20
Morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry. And from Northern
0:23
California, we're worried sick.
Biden has COVID. I'm Jessie
0:28
DeVore. I
0:30
kill
0:33
the second you said Northern
California instead of your usual
0:36
North northern Silicon Valley.
It's got to be a bigger area
0:39
because so many people are
concerned.
0:45
Oh, my goodness, John, we have
real news. We have real news,
0:47
Justin. And now back to real.
0:52
President Biden has been tested
positive for COVID 19. Let's get
0:58
straight to Jeremy diamond at
the White House. Jeremy, how is
1:01
the President's health overall?
Obviously he's fully vaccinated
1:05
boosted. But he did just come
off this big overseas trip. I'll
1:09
answer the question. Well,
generally the President has
1:12
dementia. Now he's being taken
off the field after announcing
1:16
as cancer. He's got COVID This
may be it? Yeah, listen, this is
1:21
very significant. Very different
from when we had a president of
1:25
the United States last test
positive for COVID. That was
1:28
when President Trump had it.
That was before he has been
1:31
vaccinated. In this case,
President Biden is vaccinated
1:34
and he is also double got it but
he is experiencing we're told
1:38
very mild symptoms according to
the White House and he has begun
1:41
taking a course of that
antiviral packs low video
1:44
treatment. Portland statements
in the White House. We have just
1:48
gotten moments ago saying that
consistent with CDC guidelines,
1:52
you will isolate at the White
House and we'll continue to
1:54
carry out his duties fully
during that time. They say that
1:58
he's been in contact with White
House staff by phone this
2:01
morning to participate in his
plan meetings from the White
2:04
House with your phone and via
zoom Hold on a second. Are you
2:09
telling me that the President of
the United States uses zoom
2:16
he doesn't have a they don't
have a closed circuit system.
2:19
They use Zoom.
2:22
Yes, pretty lame laugh my phone
this morning and he'll
2:25
participate in his plan meetings
from the White House with your
2:28
phone and via zoom from the
residence. The White House also
2:32
says that consistent with
protocol he'll continue to work
2:34
in isolation until he tests
negative and once he tests
2:38
negative he'll return to in
person work. Yeah, we'll call it
2:43
right now. He's out. He's done.
This is it.
2:49
You don't think so? No. We're
wanting his symptoms. I've read
2:54
the synthesis his symptoms are
he's tired and he's got a cough
2:58
what else? How can he tell his
guide COVID He's always tired
3:03
he's got a cough he keeps
coughing let's just look at the
3:07
reality of the situation you
can't believe they can't
3:11
go on. You can't you can't rely
on anything they're saying they
3:15
had to take them off. They had
to take them off the field the
3:17
guy was out of control. Do you
have the cancer clip?
3:21
I have the definitive did you
get the new one I sent up oh I'm
3:24
sorry. Oh, you need to tell me
about updates
3:30
it's just a it's a longer better
version at all. Okay, yeah, I
3:33
got let me just save it to the
bin. Man pin boy you into the
3:38
bin to the time it been we used
back in the day.
3:44
We had to have a messenger go
out.
3:47
Take a reel to reel. Drive it
over broad dresses and saw nor
3:53
flex What was that little nor
not to Norelco. But the other
3:57
one the other one had this
little tape recorder very
4:00
famous. Everyone had to have the
dictaphone wasn't on y'all. This
4:04
business or this bit. The
broadcaster's used to use these
4:07
things.
4:09
Nor it's not a no Ralco but as
soon as has that good name
4:13
tricycle and they never had
4:15
a Niagara Niagara exactly
whatever happened to them? Well
4:19
they were instrument German
instruments of war so we had to
4:22
get rid of them they were too
good. Here's the longer clip my
4:26
mother drove us and rather than
us be able to walk and guess
4:30
what? Well at first frost you
know what was happening? You'd
4:35
had to put on your windshield
wipers to get literally the oil
4:38
slick off the window. That's why
it's so damn many other people I
4:42
grew up have cancer and why
can't for the longest time.
4:46
Delaware had the highest cancer
rate in the nation. So they had
4:50
to pull him off the field and I
think they're just gonna do it
4:52
to him now look at that given
impacts low COVID
4:56
We know he's a goner.
5:00
I don't know okay let's go back
over that clip the one you got
5:03
apart may have already started I
want to play that clip again and
5:07
I want to play it in chunks and
I don't want word for word
5:11
translation of what he said my
mother drove us my mother drove
5:15
us and rather than and rather
than us be able to walk us being
5:19
able to walk walk as
5:22
my mother drove us rather than
us being able to walk yeah what
5:27
kind of a sentence is that if he
finishes it and guess what oh no
5:31
I guess not guess what guess
what what what the first frost
5:36
the first frost you know what
was happening? You know what was
5:40
happening you know what was
happening? You'd had to put on
5:43
your windshield wipers to get
literally the oil slick off the
5:46
window. Okay, you had to turn on
your windshield wipers to get
5:49
literally the slick off your
window that's why I'm so damn
5:53
many other people I grew up I
have cancer that's why I and so
5:55
damn many people I grew up with
have cancer because the
5:58
windshield wipers let's go back
that's why I'm so damn many
6:00
other people I grew up I have
cancer. That's why I'm so damn
6:03
many people. I grew up with
cancer and why can't for the
6:06
longest time and I can't for the
6:09
what? And why can't for the
longest time? Why can't for the
6:13
longest time. Delaware had the
highest cancer rate in the
6:16
nation? Well, Delaware had the
highest cancer rate in the
6:19
nation. For the longest tail.
Why was it again? Okay, so your
6:23
point is well made. Our
president of the United States
6:26
is demented.
6:28
is totally out of
6:31
the horse thing was people that
I don't know how they put up
6:35
with it. Oh, a dead Biden's I
was listening to one of these
6:38
talk radio guys on a cage. Do
they have the left wingers?
6:42
Yeah. And this guy's going on
and on about how wonderful Biden
6:46
is. And oh, my God, if a
Republican got in, we'd all be
6:49
dead. It's Biden is the best
president we've had for decades.
6:53
It goes on like that I'm taking
the seat pay any attention to
6:57
anything? Hey, you know, Joe is
pretty honest, though. He went
7:01
when he's all messed up. And he
told us how he got COVID. He
7:06
actually set it I mean, he was
out distributing it to respond
7:09
to the pandemic, including
donating more than 1 million
7:12
doses of COVID-19. To the West
Bank and Gaza. Just
7:19
how many doses do you need?
7:23
They had to pull them off the
field. John, they had to. They
7:27
had to, it's just no, no stop,
get them off to get them up.
7:31
Week. They couldn't even get
him. He couldn't even dope him
7:35
up enough to sign the executive
order for the climate crisis. Or
7:44
they're so worried about what's
going to come when that thing is
7:47
signed.
7:49
That
7:50
I don't know if this just felt
the timing felt. right for me
7:56
that this was done on purpose.
You know, I don't think he has
7:58
COVID.
8:00
I don't think he knows if he has
COVID. The question is, will
8:04
they keep them off? Or will they
put them back in and who slips
8:07
in? Who slips and
8:12
Dick Morris wasn't a big Clinton
adviser, Dick Morris. It would
8:19
be a Dick decware Dick Morris on
the silicon spin show once Is he
8:23
a nice guy seems like he's
pretty funny, even though he's
8:25
dopey. Ah, well, I you know, he
was he's remote, unfortunately.
8:31
So I couldn't really hang out
with him. But he, he really
8:36
pissed off one of the other
guests. Oh, it's very
8:41
well known woman. I can't
remember if you're well known.
8:43
Well known. We can't remember
her name. But that's me. But she
8:47
was sitting there grumbling as
he because she was saying into
8:51
the mic. She said Can this guy
ever stop talking? Wow. Morris
8:56
was a real mic hog.
8:58
And it was very noticeable.
Well,
9:02
he's he seems to be a mercenary
when it comes to politics.
9:06
Right. But but he did work for
Bill Clinton did Yes, he did. He
9:09
worked for Clinton for a while.
And then when Clinton got rid of
9:11
him, he was hated Clinton. So
he's the one of those types of
9:15
guys
9:17
almost like, where's my so he
was
9:22
he was on. I forget what show he
was on. But he just up and comes
9:26
out and says, Oh, no, no, this
is what's going to happen. This
9:28
is how it's going to work. And
he actually has a full on
9:31
explanation. And this is what we
can look forward to in 2024.
9:35
He'll be the Republican nominee.
They'll probably get it by
9:38
acclamation. I don't think
there'll be a primary and to win
9:42
the election, and his opponent
is going to be here.
9:46
He's talking about Trump
obviously in the election, and
9:49
his opponent is going to be
Hillary Clinton. Let me explain
9:53
that. Already. The Democrats are
pressuring Biden not to run
9:58
because they see what is
disaster
10:00
So he will be Harris is no
better. And the line of possible
10:05
alternatives is queuing up. You
have Gavin Newsom, Governor flow
10:09
of California, the governor of
Colorado, Pete Buttigieg
10:13
transportation secretary. But
ultimately the left is going to
10:17
have their candidates and
they'll probably run Sanders or
10:21
maybe AOC. And that will trigger
Hillary into the race in order
10:27
to save the Democratic Party
from the left to rerun of the
10:30
Hillary Sanders race of 16. And
I think Hillary will win that
10:35
contest. I think she and Trump
will face it off, and I think
10:39
Trump is going to win handily.
This is all spelled out in
10:42
detail in my book, the return
and Donald Trump's come back in
10:46
2024. And you can read it in the
book and then watch it unfold in
10:51
the in the media and in reality,
okay, so it's always interesting
10:56
when someone first of all brings
Hillary in which I've been a
11:00
believer of off for a long time
that she will run she will run
11:03
one more time. She's a big fan,
big fan, Hillary.
11:07
But Dick Morris is no no, this
is not what's gonna happen,
11:09
Trump's gonna run and the
Hillary will be running against
11:12
them because the Democratic
Party will need saving. And how
11:15
does he know this? Well, because
Trump basically co wrote his
11:18
book with him. Trump gave me the
inside story of what he's
11:22
planning to do in 2024. And we
developed it together and phone
11:28
calls, meetings. And and it's
it's Trump is not once all this
11:34
cards close to his chest. He
can't announce now because the
11:37
countless tell him he can't let
the money come out of his
11:40
campaign kitty for these
rallies. But he he's definitely
11:45
running in his mind is running.
And we're going to do things
11:48
totally differently in 24 than
we do,
11:51
for example, is a quick decision
coming up. In the case of Moore
11:55
versus Harper Supreme Court, we
move on to next term that
12:00
completely cuts the governor's
out of the process, and the
12:03
state courts out of the process
of running elections for House
12:07
and Senate president. It's
entirely the legislature's of
12:11
states. And in the five key
swing states, Republicans
12:15
control the legislature, but the
Democrats control the governor.
12:20
So we've passed all these great
bills prohibiting dropboxes
12:23
photo ID no boundaries are
obvious thing. And the
12:26
Democratic governors have veto
them. But when the court rules
12:30
in this case, which they will
next term, it will completely
12:34
cut the governance out of the
process. And those bills will be
12:37
veto proof and take effect after
sets up like that, that I talked
12:41
about in the book to explain the
nuts and bolts of how Donald
12:45
Trump is going to run and win.
Now make sure you buy the book
12:48
so you can follow along.
12:51
Follow the bouncing ball. He
doesn't sound like he's all
12:54
there. But
12:56
I thought it was just
interesting. Yeah, well, I mean,
12:59
yeah, it is interesting. And the
thing is, it's in a bizarro
13:04
world is actually a possibility.
There was some election changes
13:08
that took place. I have the
clip. Oh, like so? Because I
13:12
don't know if he's pushed this
into the, into the oh, this
13:17
Heil, the the Is this the
electoral Count Act? Yeah, it's
13:23
just, it just will get through
and it's going to change a
13:26
number of things. But what it
does, if you listen carefully
13:29
and read between the lines on
this report, which is I believe,
13:32
is NPR.
13:35
It makes it sound as though some
of the ideas Trump had about
13:39
pence being here and doing this
and doing that. And some of the
13:42
other stuff was well founded
because they've had to actually
13:45
codify some of this stuff where
it gets it was very vague.
13:50
Listen to this. Republican
Senator Susan Collins of Maine,
13:54
negotiated the legislation with
West Virginia Democrat Joe
13:57
Manchin. It updates the
electoral Count Act, a law
14:01
passed in 1887 that many
criticized as vague. The bill
14:06
would increase the threshold for
challenging any state's slate of
14:09
electors to 20% of the members
of each chamber. It would also
14:13
spell out the role of the vice
president who presides over the
14:16
process is only ministerial. And
Senator Collins says a second
14:22
bill would increase penalties to
those who threatened election
14:24
workers and improve how the
postal service handles mail in
14:28
ballots. The Senate's top
Republican Mitch McConnell has
14:32
suggested the law needs updating
14:36
this, you know, it's interesting
because along with this bill,
14:39
which I'm not quite sure where
it is.
14:43
I've heard the term in the media
fake electors Trump had a slate
14:46
of fake electors is called an
alternative slate but okay. I
14:51
think that that's all related.
If it was the Democrats, it'd be
14:54
an alternative slate. If it's
Republican
14:58
electors, and they
15:00
This is a mainstream narrative
audio, J six January 6 for
15:04
Trump. It's fake electric
electric Raizy. I'd fake
15:08
electors online though these
things were very calm. They
15:11
weren't uncommon. And no, I
guess this law of 1887 was part
15:16
of the reason that some of these
things existed. Some of these
15:19
things were done. So they looked
at this law and said, This law
15:23
is the problem. That's, that's
change it, which is what they're
15:26
doing. And, you know, Trump
wasn't that out of bounds. He's
15:31
out of bounds if you're just
gonna believe everything that
15:34
you know, these Democrats say
without a Republican in the
15:39
room, a real Republican in a
room and one of the two
15:42
Republicans in the room was
kissing a girl who was out he's
15:46
not even going to run again and
he was on Face The Nation and
15:48
listen to this little back and
forth with face to face nation
15:53
woman.
15:54
And this is about you know,
about Trump and in the limo.
16:00
Kissinger is the Republican who
was crying he's a Republican,
16:04
along with Cheney, and he's an
he was an anti hates Trump, he
16:08
should be. He shouldn't even be
on this committee, and neither
16:11
should Cheney because they
should do like you're always
16:13
supposed to do recuse yourself
or being biased but no, no, no,
16:18
she's on the gold team.
16:21
She's on the gold team. That's
her job. CNN was reporting the
16:25
DC police officer who had been
somehow involved in the
16:29
motorcade arrangements, was
corroborating the testimony
16:33
given by Cassidy Hutchinson that
there was
16:36
an almost violent confrontation
with the former president in the
16:40
vehicle that day. Is that what
the committee has been told? I
16:44
can't confirm or deny those
because we haven't come out with
16:47
who we have. I haven't spoken to
I'll just say, I'm not going to
16:51
aggressively push back on that
characterization. And we have
16:55
every reason to believe that
what Cassidy Hutchinson said at
16:58
least from what she said she
heard because she wasn't in the
17:01
limo never said she was she was
told this by others told this we
17:05
fully believe that she is a
credible witness and her
17:08
allegations are quite explosive.
Oh yes. witness of the of the
17:12
telling fourth party witness
Yes. She's the witness of a
17:15
telling him I heard I heard from
a friend of mine who heard from
17:18
her sister's buddy yeah, that
this happened. Yeah, that's the
17:23
same person. I heard about this.
Are you gonna show us under Are
17:26
you going to tell us under oath
that you heard this? Yeah, yeah.
17:30
I'm under oath. I'm under oath.
Yes. I'm under oath. And I'm
17:33
telling you I heard that I heard
that she said this about that
17:36
about this about that. Yeah.
17:40
I mean, this is just remind
everybody this is not a real
17:43
trial or anything this is this
is not a Court of Justice. This
17:47
is a show and it's a shit show.
It's no good. There's no cool
17:51
graphics that scheduling back on
TV again tonight that I thought
17:56
it was tomorrow night the 22nd
that it was Friday so it was
17:59
Thursday. Well, it would be
stupid to put it on Friday night
18:04
so you I just thought somehow I
thought it was the 22nd Okay,
18:07
well maybe I mean you could be
we could look it up but I think
18:09
in a wrap it up is this is this
it because I don't know much to
18:14
go months
18:18
really, they're learning so much
learning so much. It's like
18:22
layers of an onion. We're just
peeling it back and the more we
18:26
peel back the more we'd love
just more layers is more than
18:29
keep doing it until the November
election and they turns around
18:32
and next thing you know the
Democrats are right or the
18:36
Republicans are running stuff.
And that'll that'll change the
18:39
tone of it.
18:41
You know, I just had a thought
what if Biden actually just died
18:44
and then like, oh, shit, now
what? To tell everyone he has
18:47
COVID
18:51
Oh, you're Wait a minute. So
you're actually suggesting he is
18:55
dead as we speak. Now show me
some evidence. He's not people.
18:59
Get him on the balcony. Wait. So
it's like the queen? Yes, of
19:03
course. Now it's now it's a
matter of timing. Now we just
19:07
got to figure it all out when
with the Pope needs to resign
19:10
then the queen can die then
Biden can die. And then we're in
19:13
the great reset.
19:17
This one hit me where the Pope
is in the reset thing. He can't
19:21
die. Oh, no, no, no. I said
resign. He's not going to die.
19:25
He's going to resign.
19:28
Yeah, there's only one Pope in
the entire history of the Pope
19:31
dumb. Yeah, it's ever resigned
and it was probably a good
19:35
reason. Yes. And this one will
do the same.
19:39
Well, he should this guy's no
good. Yes. Not even Catholic.
19:43
And I know that my
19:48
Well, yeah, that's really true.
That's That's an interesting
19:52
idea. It just hit me. I mean,
why not? I mean, so we're
19:55
thinking like he's trapped.
They're trying to shut him up.
19:56
What if the guy I mean, clearly
they can keep it quiet to
20:00
As cancer I mean anything could
have happened. By the way has
20:03
anyone answered the cancer issue
what?
20:07
They came out with a statement?
Oh they did. What was it?
20:12
He doesn't have cancer he has
dementia. Sorry everybody.
20:18
Here's what they did to answer
that begin with the heat
20:21
emergency affecting hundreds of
millions of people both here at
20:24
home and abroad. Heat like we've
never seen before. Our high
20:28
temperature 113 degrees in parts
of Texas and Oklahoma. The low
20:32
temperature overnight at calling
it a heat apocalypse. Yeah, but
20:38
you weren't here during a heat
Apocalypse Now. Where are you?
20:41
Some? Oh, it's just hot. This is
actual news. This is ABC News.
20:46
Some are calling it a heat
apocalypse. What dude on the
20:51
sidewalk who is some scientists?
Well, let's check out Texas
20:56
again. This morning and already
historic heat wave is expanding.
21:01
60 million people across the US
are expected to face
21:04
temperatures of 100 degrees or
higher in the coming days. We've
21:08
never put out a 10 day forecast
quite like this. In Texas. The
21:12
10 day forecast at our Houston
station shows triple digits
21:15
across the board for the first
time ever triple digit heat
21:19
looks like it's going nowhere in
the foreseeable future. Much of
21:22
Texas has seen no measurable
rain for weeks. Residents now
21:26
being asked to conserve
electricity and water. We're
21:29
experiencing a stress on our
system because of peak demands
21:34
with Peak weather conditions.
Whatever you do, don't think
21:38
about anything the President
said please peak demand Whoa, we
21:42
need don't turn on your air
conditioner please. Oh, climate
21:45
change across the globe. The two
hottest years on record were
21:47
2016 and 2020. And every decade
since the 1960s has been warmer
21:53
than the previous decade.
Experts say heat waves are
21:56
getting worse due to climate
change driven by human activity.
22:00
I know you're looking at me now
and saying okay, you showed us
22:02
50 years our earth is way older
than this. And we've been way
22:05
hotter than this. And that's
true. However, those came with
22:09
other signals and indicators
like Earth's orbit or proximity
22:12
to the Sun. Well, we have right
now scientists say the
22:15
attribution to this rapid rise
in temperatures, greenhouse gas
22:18
emissions Shut up. It's science.
It's science and it's global.
22:22
overseas. The UK is expecting
its hottest day on record today
22:25
while extreme heat fuels dozens
of wildfires in both France and
22:29
Spain. Two large fires in France
have burned more than 40 square
22:33
miles, forcing 1000s of people
to evacuate. The heat is also
22:37
being blamed for more than 1000
deaths in Spain and in Portugal,
22:41
where the drought is blamed on
climate change. That's right.
22:44
Spontaneous fires starting
because of climate change. And
22:48
how about this, let's just bring
you some breaking news. Now Sky
22:51
News understands the RAF has
halted flight in and out of RAF
22:56
Brize Norton because the runway
has melted in this extreme
23:02
weather now pricing also is in
Oxfordshire is the largest RAF
23:05
base in the country. And another
source has been telling Sky News
23:09
this afternoon that contingency
plans have been implemented to
23:12
ensure that there is no impact
on any military operations today
23:17
the runway has melted it's just
oozing goo How will they ever
23:24
land there again
23:27
the
23:28
you know
23:31
my put in the newsletter one of
these photos of these fires
23:35
Yeah. And it's all along the
freeway and you can see because
23:39
all the fires started right by
the road and there's they're all
23:41
individual that somebody's
throwing matches or something
23:45
out of their cars they drive by
someone stewardess all arson
23:48
somewhere started by people
barbecuing outside. I mean,
23:53
there's all kinds of stuff that
starts fires. But I think
23:56
there's a lot of you know,
there's excess, it seems to me
23:59
because we started saw this. I
started to see this in
24:01
California. There's an excessive
number of arsonists that seem to
24:08
be young. Yeah. So we had went
around it. We had one here in
24:11
the Berkeley area. I know
they're all from Berkeley.
24:15
They could all be from Berkeley.
They're not this is the schools
24:19
they're teaching these kids to
be arsonists
24:23
are citizens one of the worst
things you can do I mean, it's
24:26
one of the worst things. Being
an arsonist is one of the worst
24:29
types of persons who can be
first of all, at the base of it
24:34
is always seen as a sexual
disorder.
24:37
Really, a lot of arsonists get
off literally by a big fire.
24:45
I'd love to see an image of
this. I like this. You can look
24:49
it up yourself, but it is
documentable. And so the courts
24:54
are very leery of arsonists
because of this, this this
24:59
provision
25:00
version and they'll throw the
book at him and a lot of
25:03
arsonists will get locked up for
a very long time because they're
25:06
they're sick people. And
25:10
I think we're for summary, we're
breeding them. I don't know.
25:13
Well, if it's if it's sex
related, you know, that seems to
25:16
be a lot of education in that
going on certainly the Berkeley
25:19
area so maybe, you know, it's
making people not so looking for
25:22
an escape hatches fire.
25:25
Climate change.
25:28
This definitely must be sick
individuals, for sure. But
25:31
luckily, luckily, Old Joe was on
the scene, he's gonna take care
25:36
of us.
25:40
Correct, but you're gonna do
this, you get it, you're the one
25:42
that brought it up. I'm gonna
keep I'm gonna keep it going.
25:44
It's just I was you can't have
quotes from him now.
25:49
This is before he was dead. This
is.
25:54
BC before BB President Biden
addressing climate change today.
25:59
And as we have reported here,
the President's efforts to pass
26:02
legislation have been shot down
at least temporarily by
26:05
Democratic Senator Joe Manchin,
with the President in
26:08
Massachusetts today, where he
called Climate Change a clear
26:11
and present danger. As
President, I have a
26:13
responsibility to act with
urgency and resolve when our
26:17
nation faces clear and present
danger. And that's what climate
26:22
change is about. It is literally
not figuratively a clear and
26:26
present danger. Literally,
literally, not figuratively,
26:30
literally. The President then
went on to list some things he
26:34
could do turn him around with us
from Washington. But Terry, the
26:37
bottom line without enough votes
in the Senate, particularly from
26:40
Senator Manchin, because it's
5050. What can the President do
26:44
on his own, not much to it,
especially given the scale of
26:47
the climate challenge, but as
you say, the President did
26:50
announce some smaller unilateral
initiatives $2.3 billion to make
26:56
infrastructure more resilient,
and those communities most
26:58
affected by climate change, help
low income Americans with their
27:02
cooling and air conditioning
expenses, and open up areas in
27:07
the Gulf of Mexico for offshore
wind power, but all that really
27:11
is miniscule compared with the
challenge a national global
27:14
challenge that requires a
national response and that can
27:17
only come from Congress and
without Joe Manchin or a single
27:21
Republican. This will have to do
for now.
27:25
Have they come up with a new
version of that bill yet? It's
27:28
got to be a trillion dollars
27:31
data No, it's not going
anywhere. No No cheating you
27:34
know the problem you know they
have is that this thing and mash
27:38
it has no choice but to stay on
the on the Republican side of
27:41
this because this bill and all
these bills target West
27:45
Virginia. Yes, I mean, it's a
target state so Manchin can't
27:49
vote for any of this stuff and
never will be able to because
27:51
it's just a poke in the eye of
the voters of West Virginia you
27:54
can't do it. We don't hear about
West Virginia energy producing
27:58
state that targeted this mostly
cold bearing it's just you know,
28:01
he can't be can't support this
stuff. What happened to cinema?
28:05
We don't hear about her anymore.
28:08
I don't know that you know,
this.
28:10
The other day myself. What have
I haven't heard her voice? She's
28:13
just gone. Just they don't talk
about her. She's not a problem
28:16
anymore. But she got her
censored by her own party.
28:21
In Arizona. Oh, so she they
censored her censured? censured,
28:28
I say censor, which means he
can't talk, which means censored
28:31
censured, she got censured and
now it means that you know that
28:35
she got scolded is a scolding.
It doesn't mean any it doesn't
28:38
do anything. There's no, you
know, jail time involved. I
28:42
mean, I think
28:44
Cheney got censured in Wyoming
to buy her party there. Didn't
28:51
do anything she got now she's
the head honcho over there. And
28:54
in the hearings, a lot of people
a lot of people tweeted and sent
28:59
me copies of the art
Transportation Secretary mayor,
29:04
affectionately known as mayor
Pete Mayor Pete Buttigieg of him
29:09
saying well you know, we're the
ones just got it but I'm
29:11
paraphrasing everyone should buy
an electric vehicle. Yeah, I saw
29:16
that clip. And I thought I
thought it was funny but he said
29:20
a lot more in depth stuff that I
think is is much crazier really
29:26
when you think about it, and
also he said it Yeah, of course
29:30
I did from CNBC now when you're
on CNBC, you know,
29:35
it's a different type of
conversation different vibe. So
29:38
what's his face the you
recognize his voice, the main
29:42
host there of the of their
morning show. He's saying, okay,
29:45
so how does this make sense? You
know, we get the gas gas is sky
29:49
high. We've got this looming
climate emergency, you know,
29:55
can't we just make it so that
while we're working on the
29:58
climate emergency, you
30:00
People can still have enough
energy to cool their home in the
30:03
summer. And to heat it in the
winter. That was the basic
30:06
question. And Mayor Pete who has
he's had some kind of makeover.
30:11
There's something going on with
his face, I can't quite put my
30:14
finger on it. Although he does
have this mustache shadow, which
30:19
looks a lot like the guy with
the leather guy with a mustache
30:23
and Frankie Goes to Hollywood.
It's just if you picture that on
30:26
Mayor Pete, it's kind of creepy.
It's, I can't.
30:30
Some people know what I'm
talking about.
30:33
And he's obviously running. I
mean, he's this is not even he
30:37
does not speaking as a
transportation secretary, he's
30:40
speaking as a candidate for
president. For example, if the
30:44
president declares a climate
emergency executive order, we
30:48
are going to stop oil and gas
drilling in the Outer
30:50
Continental Shelf, we're going
to do all kinds of things that
30:53
will limit production of
hydrocarbons at this time, with
30:58
the idea that by 2030, everyone
else is going to be along with
31:02
us. And that will somehow you
think we're going to, we're
31:06
going to be able to change the
weather between or the climate
31:09
between now and 2030. With what
would change the climate between
31:13
20 We've changed the climate
between 2010 and now and not in
31:17
a good way. So yes, we can and
act to make sure that we reverse
31:21
the worst effects of climate
change. Look, some of it's upon
31:23
us right now, there. This is not
a question about whether it's
31:26
going to happen.
31:28
It's a question. They're going
to keep rising. It's a question
31:31
of how many lives and how many
livelihoods are going to be
31:33
destroyed by allowing the worst
effects of climate change to
31:37
have right now people know, I've
never known the United States.
31:40
I've never known the United
States for something that may or
31:42
may not happen by 2030. They're
dying from the heat because of a
31:47
climate related extreme weather
are not going to come sooner.
31:51
1030. In the meantime, they need
energy to cool their homes and
31:56
to heat their homes in the
meantime, right. And as you as
31:59
you know, I mean, the other
thing that's striking is I've
32:01
noticed some naysayers in the US
speaking as if the only power
32:06
sources that are exist that
exist are solar, wind, and
32:09
hydrocarbon. Obviously, in
Europe, they have a mix that
32:12
relies partly on nuclear, we
have more options that are being
32:15
developed in the US, as well as
being smarter and more efficient
32:18
with the energy that we have.
Energy efficiency has often been
32:22
described as the fifth fuel. And
then in the transportation side
32:26
of things, finding less carbon
intensive ways to move our
32:29
vehicles obviously, the the
leading and most visible
32:32
example, that's electric
vehicles, that's why we're
32:34
fighting to make EVs cheaper.
And it's why we're getting these
32:36
charging stations out across the
country. But I've just, I've
32:39
never known the United States to
be a country that looks around
32:42
the world and says, what's the
lowest common denominator? Let's
32:45
do that. Or we don't have
control over every piece of it.
32:48
So let's sit back, accept the
status quo and let some other
32:51
country lead. That's not what
America does. And I think what
32:54
you're gonna see, in the
President's today's analysis
32:56
insistence that America should
be leading the way and
32:59
challenging the rest of the
world to catch up to us instead
33:02
of matching some other country
that isn't doing a very good
33:05
job.
33:07
So he has literally no
suggestions just hey, man had
33:11
nothing to say that was the most
amazing thing I've ever heard.
33:14
It was a bunch of platitudes
been it's we're a great country.
33:18
We're a great country, we put
our shoulders behind the problem
33:22
and we go go go.
33:26
You summarized it right there.
And vote for me at the end vote
33:30
for me. Well, this all of
course, comes down to there's
33:35
just too many people on the
planet. This is what these
33:38
people are pushing. These people
particularly it mean, from The
33:44
Population Bomb, I got a lot of
feedback on The Population Bomb.
33:48
But, you know, the Georgia
Guidestones said 500 million
33:52
people, that's all you need to
have. And this was backed up by
33:55
a surprising source at the World
Economic Forum.
33:58
The gorilla Lady Jane Goodall.
Now we know she's a
34:02
I think probably, what was it
two years ago, we played a clip
34:07
of hers where she was also a
World Economic Forum, it might
34:10
have been a year old, where she
was saying, oh, yeah, no,
34:12
because of because of climate
change, and too many people.
34:16
That's why we get viruses and
this is why we're all gonna die.
34:19
And so she's, you know, sweet
old gorilla lady. So here she
34:23
is, you cannot hide away from
human population growth.
34:27
Because, you know, it underlies
so many of the other programs,
34:31
all these things we talked about
wouldn't be a problem. If that
34:34
was the size of population that
there was 500 years ago.
34:40
What do you think? 500 years
ago? 500 million maybe at the
34:43
time.
34:46
Well, I have the numbers. Oh,
fantastic. You have I don't have
34:50
them right here. I go to the
other desk. Well, it's very
34:54
exciting. Oh, wait, I got him
right here. Good. 500 years ago
34:58
is what year 1500.
35:00
Yeah, let's just call it that.
No.
35:06
Yeah. 15 Yeah. 1500 22 Okay,
1500.
35:17
Shit. There's a mismatch between
the year nominees you say? I
35:22
didn't say 500 million was the
Georgia Guidestones. And Goodall
35:25
says the amount should be the
same as 500 years ago.
35:30
500 million? Hey, maybe that
baby's looking at this same
35:35
stuff I'm looking at? Yeah,
well, but how does she come up
35:39
with that being the right
number? Yeah. Why is it the
35:41
right number in the year 1500,
into the dark ages.
35:47
So it wasn't that much more. I
mean, it didn't grow that fast.
35:50
It wasn't it didn't really start
taking off in growth until
35:52
around after World War Two to be
honest about it. I mean, the
35:57
growth from for example, 1900 to
1950. Well, let's see.
36:03
1900 1600 1950 was 22.5. I'm
sorry, 1.6 million to 2.5. But
36:10
it took off right after the
Second World War. That took off
36:14
in the 1700 was 610,000 1500 was
a 500,006 1017 60 and 60 years,
36:24
it went up by another 100 and 50
million, then it went up and it
36:29
kept going up. How about 1900?
What was 1900 1900 was 1.6
36:36
billion. So that was that was a
lot. Okay. The reason I bring
36:40
this up should be obvious.
36:43
We've been linked by making the
link which is we've discussed
36:46
for over a decade between The
Population Bomb the less human
36:50
people and the climate change
people that the same people. And
36:54
we had a discussion about
Margaret Sanger and the American
36:57
eugenicist movement from 1900
was up until World War Two, but
37:03
really 1900 1920 was a lot of
activity. And I wanted to find
37:07
something because you know, you
took a position and you were you
37:10
were very clear. And you are
right, of course, that back in
37:13
the day, in the days of Margaret
Sanger, these were accepted
37:18
thoughts. eugenics was a very
accepted
37:22
movement in the United States.
Until a Hitler Well, you know,
37:28
opted, it never went, Oh my God,
Q Hitler co opted it or maybe
37:32
was given that or saw it or was
a fan of it. And I was a fan.
37:36
Everyone was a fan. I went to
the source, I went to the
37:39
source, you will enjoy this
source that this man wrote the
37:43
book on it. He wrote the book,
it's called war on the week. His
37:45
name is Edwin black, your
friend, ah, Edwin Black, who
37:50
also wrote the book about the
writing phenomenon. This guy's
37:53
the only guy who is not a spook
that produces so much copy. In
37:58
2003, he did a he gave a talk on
C span three book TV with I kid
38:05
you not eight, eight people in
the audience at the Tennessee
38:10
library. And he talked about the
the American eugenics movement,
38:15
which is a part of his, his book
that he had out in the time
38:18
we're on the week. So I'm gonna
start with what he had to say
38:21
about Margaret Sanger, the
founder of Planned Parenthood,
38:25
at the time, very active in the
American eugenics movement.
38:28
Margaret Sanger was a famous
eugenicist, you have done on the
38:32
stand. This was not just a
movement of a of a couple of
38:36
weird guys, this was entrenched
national policy. And this was
38:39
embraced and advocated by the,
by the power structure in the
38:43
United States.
38:45
All the Presidents of the United
States Theodore Roosevelt,
38:50
Woodrow Wilson, FDR,
38:54
Harding, and in the case of
Margaret Sanger, there's of
38:59
course, a huge
39:02
controversy as to whether she is
a racist or not a racist or
39:06
anything of that nature. And the
documentation shows that
39:10
Margaret Sanger was not a
racist, but she was a bigot. She
39:14
was not a Nazi, or any kind of
Jew hater. But she surrounded
39:18
herself with the greatest Nazis
and Jew haters in the United
39:22
States. People so very violent.
They,
39:26
they got fan mail from Adolf
Hitler.
39:29
And she did want to save
humanity, but only the top 30%.
39:35
And so terms like human waste
and human weeds populated her
39:39
speeches and her publications as
she tried to relieve the teeming
39:45
masses by ensuring that they
stopped teaming.
39:50
So that should end any
discussion about Margaret Sanger
39:53
and should open unnecessarily
this could be this seems to me
39:57
to be a little bit of a very
gray ball
40:00
I'm agreeing I'm agreeing with
you. What are you talking about?
40:02
I'm agreeing with you. I mean, I
still see her thing was about
40:07
birth control.
40:09
And to me you Genesis has to do
is killing people.
40:17
Well, eugenics, there's three
types of eugenics. I've done a
40:20
lot, a little bit of research.
Yeah, it sounds like I know I'm
40:23
getting having to fight from a
defense. I'm not fighting.
40:28
That's the point. I'm not
fighting you. I'm playing clips
40:30
with your friend. No, I know, I
understand that technique. You I
40:33
watched your MO, you're like it.
Okay. So let me throw you out of
40:36
the ring. Just a few clips from
Edwin black, the whole thing has
40:39
to be seen a link in the show
notes. Here he is about
40:43
discussing the foundations and
the funding of the eugenics
40:46
movement in America between
19 119 2019 20 It was really
40:51
well underway.
40:52
So these guys
40:55
obtained immense amounts of
corporate philanthropy to back
41:00
their ideas. I'm talking here
about corporate philanthropy
41:04
engaged in ethnic cleansing, the
Carnegie Institution, the
41:08
Rockefeller Foundation, the
Harriman railroad fortune,
41:12
pouring the equivalent of
millions into the coffers of
41:17
these gentlemen to establish
research facilities on Long
41:21
Island and elsewhere, that would
study how best to eliminate all
41:27
of the defective, unwanted unfit
and unacceptable types of human
41:31
beings, that they considered
eugenics really, out of bounds.
41:37
Now, what were some of their
methods that they wanted? The
41:42
first method that they thought
about one of the one of the
41:44
first was gas chambers, yes,
chambers. Now, Gee, I wonder who
41:49
picked up on that. Remember,
we're talking about the first 20
41:52
years of the 20th century. And
they thought that the best idea
41:57
was to march these guys into
public gas chambers, in groups
42:02
organized on a township or a
county or a village basis. And
42:07
within a period of time, these
guys would disappear. But they
42:10
but they concluded that our
society was not ready for gas
42:13
chambers. Oh, it would take 20
years.
42:17
Some individuals freelanced. For
instance, there were mental
42:24
hospitals in Illinois, one in
particular that I described in
42:27
the book and Lincoln, Illinois,
who fed their new patients milk
42:31
from tubercular cows. And in so
doing, infected these new
42:36
patients, and then they allowed
them to sleep in open
42:40
dormitories
42:42
to cross infect the others. And
by this method, they would have
42:45
a 30 to 40% death rate of new
patients. And tuberculosis, of
42:50
course, was in that era, as bad
if not worse than AIDS is today.
42:57
There were other doctors who
would leave newborn infants who
43:01
are defective or deformed. Yeah,
so it just goes on and on and on
43:06
and on. And, and but nothing was
really quite acceptable as the
43:12
one thing they felt really this
will work. We can all live with
43:16
this. But in the main, they
believe that euthanasia would
43:21
not achieve what they wanted to
achieve. And so instead,
43:26
they opted for forced surgical
sterilization.
43:32
And
43:33
they got it.
43:36
They obtained legislation in 27
states that forcibly sterilized
43:43
some 60,000 Americans. In
addition to forced surgical
43:48
sterilization, there was
marriage restriction, marriage
43:51
annulment if they didn't like
who you were married, they
43:54
unmarried you. And of course,
there was the effort to create
43:59
concentration camps, which they
called farms or colonies for
44:03
those who were feeble minded, so
called feeble minded or racially
44:09
unacceptable. They started out
by calling these colonies for
44:12
the feeble minded there were
several in New Jersey and
44:15
Massachusetts. And eventually
they, hundreds of 1000s of
44:21
individuals were incarcerated,
and then forcibly sterilized
44:27
because they were deemed to be
unfit. Now, what kind of people
44:31
are we talking about who are
unfit? We're talking about
44:33
Southern Italians. We're talking
about Eastern European Jews,
44:38
we're talking about blacks,
Indians, we're talking about
44:41
Asians and we're talking about
white guys with brown hair. They
44:45
believe that white guys with
brown hair, the hillbillies, the
44:48
the Hillfolk, many of which were
in these parts of Tennessee,
44:53
were basically bastardization
and manga realizations of the
44:57
white Nordic ideal that are
45:00
They lie that they lionized. So
his whole talk goes through
45:05
Hitler being a big fan of what's
going on. And then Hitler adopts
45:10
a lot of the Eugenics that had
already started in the United
45:13
States. And in fact, I didn't
clip it. But in fact, he says
45:16
that it was IBM did work on the
big Jamaica. Cleansing project,
45:23
I forget the exact name of it.
But there was in America there
45:25
was, you know, Ellis islands and
all that there was just too much
45:29
of physical paperwork to get the
punchcards going. And according
45:33
to Edwin black, he says, well,
because IBM was able to work
45:37
with with Nazi Germany, and get
their punch cards in order that
45:41
they were able to actually
create the Holocaust. And and
45:45
round up the Jews. Yes, a
second. But he did that. But
45:48
that was a separate book to get
a lot of attention. Yes, it's a
45:50
separate book now. So I'm
listening to this. And I, it
45:54
dawns on me, I'm like, holy
crap. You know, this, of course,
45:57
is white supremacy and white
supremacy, this white supremacy
46:00
came from the royalty and really
from Victorian England, and, you
46:05
know, came over from Europe. And
this is this is real white
46:09
supremacy in the purest form of
the definition. And I think to
46:12
myself, why is everyone bitching
and moaning about slavery in
46:17
America? Why are we only
teaching people who have been
46:21
swept up in the Black Lives
Matter ink movement, only about
46:24
slit? Why are we not talking
about this, which is why we're
46:29
using that book as a text is
more recent history. It's much
46:32
more relatable. It relates to
the Holocaust, that kind of
46:35
answers, you know, it's always
like, well, Hitler hated the
46:38
Jews. Well, why? Well, well, you
know, there were spot no, this
46:43
came from a much deeper place
from far, far away. And so I
46:47
sent this link this video to the
liberal high school teacher in
46:50
Austin.
46:52
Oh, hey, buddy, she comes back.
We're texting says, holy crap.
46:59
Mind blown. And like you didn't
know this? She said, Well, yeah,
47:05
yeah, kind of. I said, and I
pose the exact same and she's
47:10
Jewish. So she's, she's very
into the Holocaust and all this
47:14
stuff, and very afraid of Trump
and the proud boys that the
47:18
Nazis are back and they're gonna
rouse her.
47:21
I'm not kidding, that's a very
real fear for her. I'm not and I
47:25
wouldn't joke about it, it was
there, I'm sure it it was very
47:28
real for her. And I said, Well,
how come this is not being
47:32
taught? She said, I can't teach
this. So what do you mean? Well,
47:36
one, the first thing my
colleagues would say is you're
47:40
rewriting history.
47:42
And two, it does not adhere to
the T k s, which is the Texas
47:46
educational knowledge standards.
And she sent me this link and
47:50
said there's a social studies
class and they do mention this
47:54
in that social studies class and
it's packed in between America
47:59
and Utah about the eugenics
movement in the United States is
48:02
that what the problem is? Yeah,
this actual this actual
48:06
knowledge is tucked away in one
little social debt when I was in
48:10
high school not anymore brother
not anymore. And then and I
48:14
looked at all the info to talk
to him between
48:17
being female in in America you
know gender in the 19 sent to
48:22
all this all this stuff if this
is just not taught, but for her
48:26
to say I can't really do that I
can't do a lesson about this
48:30
because a it's not in the T K S
and B my colleagues would accuse
48:34
me of rewriting history where
long write the rewrite well it's
48:38
not a rewrite because real
history but but they don't know
48:42
this history. Her colleagues
don't know this history and they
48:47
will not believe it
48:50
and they just look at all this
this T K us and all these these
48:54
these people can't teach with
this there's no way to teach in
48:56
this system is abhorrent and all
they're doing every every
49:01
state's got these issues
sometimes it's sugar extreme
49:04
that all you can teach is gender
studies that okay, but this is
49:09
my point this is what a travesty
that this is not forget being
49:14
even discussed even available.
I'm surprised C span has still
49:18
has it a
49:20
span has a lot of Edwin Edwin
Black has been on C span quite a
49:24
lot. But yes lectures. Yeah.
We've had a couple of his he did
49:28
one book and I just really
astonishing what he digs up. But
49:33
anyway, he's a really
outstanding researcher. I don't
49:36
know why he should get out some
sort of world a Nobel Prize.
49:40
He's he should stay away from
general aviation and hot tubs.
49:43
No, you know, he doesn't get the
doesn't get the attention. Well,
49:47
he's got my cares and he's got
my attention and now that's
49:50
gonna roll. So he
49:54
he says, Look, this is new Genex
49:57
and we're going to see that the
next time this comes around
50:00
It'll be the say it'll be
corporations. And it'll be
50:02
political. And it'll be about
globalism and Boom shakalaka.
50:05
That's exactly what we're in.
And here's what's coming next.
50:09
These men thought that the same
principles that guided peace,
50:15
guided the development and
generations of human life. And
50:19
they believed that poverty was a
genetic trait, criminality,
50:25
chastity, morality. So in other
words, you weren't born into
50:30
poverty, poverty was born into
you. And the best way to get rid
50:35
of poverty, and improve the
world was to get rid of the
50:38
people who had this genetic
trait. As far as they were can
50:42
concerned, it didn't matter if
you took an African, put them in
50:46
a white toga taught them to read
Latin
50:50
and put them in Italy that did
not make them a Roman, that's
50:52
exactly the type of language
that they used. So it was not
50:57
the character of your of your
family, it was not your wealth,
51:01
it was not your position or your
education. What mattered was
51:05
whether you were of defective
ancestry, racially unacceptable,
51:10
you genetically unacceptable,
and whether your progeny would
51:14
create more defective
individuals for society. And
51:18
this is what they wanted to get
rid of. They believed
51:23
they believed that you could
breed a better human being in
51:29
the same way that you could
breed a better herd of cattle, a
51:33
field of wheat in ear of corn.
And consequently, the government
51:39
agency that put these guys
together was the US Department
51:43
of Agriculture, because they
wanted to breed a better species
51:46
of man also, and that's exactly
what you're getting. And you
51:50
know how they're going to do or
they're going to feed your bugs.
51:55
And they know it John, and they
know it this is that Christine
51:58
Anderson, member of European
Parliament in the European
52:01
Union, we like her here's what
she has to say. I'm pretty I'm
52:04
pretty sure I know how this pans
out, is like, you know, the
52:08
member of the globalist elites.
Of course, they will still have
52:11
their steak and whatever. And
you know, the regular people,
52:16
they will be fit with bucks.
52:19
So, sorry, I'm gonna say this
right now. I am not going to eat
52:25
bucks. Yeah, you will.
52:27
She's right. The beef will be
sold like caviar marketed out of
52:31
the price range of anybody. And
we'll just be eating bugs in bug
52:35
burgers and Bugs, bugs, bugs
everywhere bugs. And there th
52:41
here yak right now people and
they're teaching their children
52:44
it's disgusting. This is you're
gonna love this.
52:51
This is a podcast, is produced
by gimlet gimlet, one of those
52:57
outfits that Spotify purchased
for hundreds of millions of
53:00
dollars. I think their main
claim to fame is the What's
53:05
that? The new show?
53:08
The one that was so big. I
thought their main claim to fame
53:11
was they set up a studio in New
York City and outfitted every
53:14
single room with Neumann mics
Well, that means their claim to
53:18
fame. Yeah, there's that. So I
think it was $250 million. And
53:25
they gimlet gimlet, a great,
great game, so they produce a
53:29
show called chompers. And one of
our producers send it to me says
53:33
chompers is a podcast about two
minute podcast and it tells a
53:37
little story and it motivates
the kids to brush their teeth.
53:41
So in the evening, you know when
when little Tommy has to go to
53:44
bed and you turn on this
podcast, and it tells it you
53:49
know, they literally instructing
you Okay, now do the top but
53:51
you'll hear it and and our
producer said, Well, you have to
53:54
listen to what they had this
week.
54:00
Welcome back, it's time for
chompers your morning and night
54:03
tooth brushing show. start
brushing on the top of your
54:06
mouth on one side. But don't
brush too hard.
54:17
It's bugs week, and tonight
we've got the answer to the quiz
54:23
from this morning, so it's bugs
week on Chomper. So while the
54:27
kids are actually using their
mouth and brushing their teeth,
54:33
they're going to be
indoctrinated with the goodness
54:36
of eating bugs. It's bug week.
Which of these bugs do people
54:42
eat? Is it ants?
54:47
Crickets
54:49
or Beatles?
54:53
Do you know the answer, John?
54:55
All of the above. Ready for the
answer. Give me a drumroll.
55:00
by stomping your feet the answer
is
55:04
all of them.
55:07
Can you be leave it
55:11
switch your brushing to the
other side of the top of your
55:14
mouth and give your tongue a
brush to okay here we go more
55:17
bugs all over the world eat
insects as part of a healthy
55:21
diet healthy bugs like ants,
crickets, beetles, butterflies,
55:26
grasshoppers, moths, and even
worms are used as food. And for
55:31
good reason to bugs can be
really good for your body.
55:34
Insects
55:36
are full of nutrients from
55:41
your brushing to the bottom of
your mouth and push the molars
55:43
in the way back. Imagine a bug
crunching and sliding down your
55:47
throat child eating bugs is good
for the planet, too. Oh, when
55:52
farmers raise a lot of other
animals that we eat like pigs
55:55
and cows.
55:58
The animals release a gas called
methane in there.
56:04
It's called a greenhouse gas
greenhouse bad for the planet.
56:09
And bugs don't really fart. So
they're good for the planet. And
56:12
good for you. bugs don't really
fart. They're good for you.
56:18
Switch your brushing to the
other side of the bottom of your
56:20
mouth and brush all the way
around each tooth. While I give
56:23
you some more tactile feel about
having a bug in your mouth.
56:27
Always check with a grown up
before you eat something. But if
56:30
you do want to try eating bugs,
there are lots of places where
56:34
you can try them in Mexico,
grasshopper, I have to stop.
56:39
I mean, this is indoctrination
of the highest order. So there
56:43
was a report that came out and I
was sent it by one of our
56:46
producers and I'd followed up on
something that I was going to
56:49
put in the next newsletter,
which is that the
56:52
PBS has been given the
assignment I have found out who
56:56
gave him the assignment but
they're going to promote bug
56:58
eating. And as a nova I think it
comes out this week about how
57:03
great it is to eat bugs. And if
you go to the PBS page and Nova
57:07
page to see all the follow up
stories and other stuff you can
57:11
check out about budgie logs,
yeah, there's a bug movement
57:15
going on. They're really pushing
it. You just you're at you're at
57:18
the at the at the I guess it
would be the forefront yourself
57:24
of noticing and that woman that
woman in the EU noticing this
57:29
trend, they're going to be
promoting bugs to an extreme.
57:32
And so you want to go into thing
I posted this on the no agenda,
57:36
socials social, which is a link
to the Nova Twitter announcing
57:43
the bug show the bugs show Oh,
this is okay. It's called the
57:47
bugs show by eating bugs. Nova
good is science science. And so
57:53
you have to I post this for the
reasons that you want to read
57:57
the thread.
57:59
It is unbelievable. A lot of
people actually pointed out
58:03
because it goes on for days.
That is heartwarming. The thread
58:08
of people saying eat shit, fuck
you. I'm just on and on and on.
58:15
I know heartwarming so
heartwarming is what does
58:19
GFTFGFYGF All GFY that was
saying GFYGFY And something oh
58:29
okay, I get and so yeah, it was
heartwarming. It was
58:33
heartwarming telling the Nova
people to go pound sand well
58:37
you're absolutely right when you
say Go get your your yak meat or
58:40
did you receive your your box
from Texas slim yet? To get your
58:45
beef? No it's supposed to be
he's I think he's shipping it
58:49
either ship day might come to me
today or tomorrow now okay. No,
58:53
it's always coming to him.
Luckily you know just in general
58:56
through no agenda nation this is
what you can get at your meetups
58:59
when they when they pull this
trigger that just gonna make it
59:01
too expensive and you're already
not getting American beef you're
59:04
getting you know beef driven up
from Brazil.
59:07
You know, it's shit just as you
know, this is only for food
59:11
processors. Get to know a farmer
get to know someone and where
59:14
you can get direct access to
animals. Yeah, and but do it do
59:18
it because you will need to get
to know us jelly farmers and
59:22
people that grow berries. Oh,
yeah, no, you definitely want to
59:25
get as much as you can but go
shake a farmer's hand or a
59:28
ranchers hand. Meanwhile, all
we're concerned about in the
59:31
United States about when it
comes to food is stories like
59:34
this on AXA lawsuit that claims
that Skittles are not safe to
59:38
eat well in California woman
says the popular candy contains
59:41
heightened levels of a color
additive called titanium
59:44
dioxide. The lawsuit claims that
chemical compound is a known
59:48
toxin that makes Skittles unfit
for consumption. But the
59:51
candymaker Marv says it complies
with FDA regulations. Oh no
59:56
Skittles is unfit for human
consumption. rhenium diag
1:00:00
sigh which is also used as a
pigment for white paint. Yeah,
1:00:03
white. Very white. It's a nice
white. That's been in food
1:00:07
forever. I don't know that it's
toxic. This is a hit job.
1:00:11
Something going on as a hit job
but both of whom, by why and
1:00:14
what? For what purpose? It's to
distract you from the bugs. Oh,
1:00:18
no. Okay, well, I don't care
about the bugs. But what's up
1:00:21
with Skittles?
1:00:23
My soul Skittles for years to
pimply faced teenagers. Taste
1:00:28
the rainbow. That was the one of
the main sponsors on MTV. I
1:00:32
killed a whole generation was
was that I liked scuffles.
1:00:35
There's no scuffles candy.
1:00:39
Sharp just
1:00:42
someone got mad at me. On
Twitter.
1:00:46
Of course. Stop saying God. It's
giddy. You don't know what you
1:00:51
can't you read?
1:00:54
What an idiot. Oh, you must be
new to the show. Oh, it's an
1:00:58
inside joke. Okay, I'm sorry.
Yes, it's an inside joke. All of
1:01:02
our stuff is inside jokes.
That's the base of the show. so
1:01:05
charming. There's so I while
we're on the topic of education
1:01:08
in Texas and elsewhere, I have a
series of clips if you unless
1:01:13
you went Oh, no, no. Let's go.
Screw COVID president is dead
1:01:18
long live the President a series
of clips from queer teachers.
1:01:24
Oh, my turn. Okay. Not my term
as they call themselves Sure.
1:01:29
And they seem to be a little
different than the the lesbians.
1:01:34
And I think there is this war
you pointed it out and I started
1:01:38
looking for it. Which is the war
between the to get rid of the
1:01:42
gays to get rid of the lesbian
Yeah. And leave all the rest of
1:01:47
themselves to to indoctrinate
the kids and get and get more
1:01:50
kids get old and get all the
benefits.
1:01:53
Good old dude. Here we go. Okay,
where where do we start? So
1:01:57
we're gonna start these are all
tick tock. Ah, okay. It's a
1:02:00
goldmine. Now, do you have an
actual tick tock account? No.
1:02:06
Okay, good. I'm a little worried
about you. I have grown ass men
1:02:11
who I know. Like Mike the former
the you know, the former cop.
1:02:16
Like I might take a look at this
video on tick tock is hilarious.
1:02:19
So what's wrong with you? I go
through I go through a clearing.
1:02:22
Clearing I go to the clearing
house of libs of tic toc.
1:02:26
That's of course, the only way
to go. I don't want to get
1:02:30
involved because I just looked
at I got stuck on a tic tac
1:02:33
patients very hard to get off.
Yeah. Because it's like, Who are
1:02:36
these people? I am going to
worse I'm going toward emailing
1:02:40
me like who is this woman? Like
what's wrong with you? I
1:02:44
literally replied to you. What's
wrong? Why are you surprised?
1:02:49
Sorry. Okay, here we go. Why
don't we start? We're gonna
1:02:52
start with queer teacher one
dork. I am an openly queer
1:02:57
teacher. Now I don't stand in
front of my elementary students
1:03:01
and be like, like women. But I
wear a by flag watch banned by
1:03:07
flag bracelets. In my classroom,
I keep a rainbow flag. That
1:03:12
Mickey Mouse on it because I
love Mickey Bizkaia a rainbow.
1:03:18
My kids know what it means.
Question How old are the kids?
1:03:21
You teachers? Do you know?
1:03:23
Do all these teachers are
grammar school teachers? Okay.
1:03:27
This is me telling them I am a
safe place to talk without
1:03:32
making a big deal out of being
queer. Side No, I shaved the
1:03:36
side of my head.
1:03:39
Okay, going back to the main
topic. Anyway, so because I am
1:03:42
openly queer, my students trust
me, especially my queer
1:03:45
students. I teach fifth grade
this next school year, I've been
1:03:49
teaching fourth grade for the
last four years. Anyway, right
1:03:52
now I'm teaching summer school
and I have third graders. Like I
1:03:56
said, I wear these bracelets to
let them know I'm a safe space
1:04:00
to students to third grade
students came to me and asked me
1:04:03
to use they them pronouns. And
also asked me if I can tell
1:04:07
other teachers this. I said,
kiddos, I would love to do that
1:04:11
for you. I'm so glad that you
trusted me with this
1:04:14
information. one student in
particular, also asked to use a
1:04:19
different name one that is not
gendered as what they were born
1:04:24
in. So I gave this information
to the other teachers and then
1:04:27
got scolded because that was not
appropriate for me to
1:04:30
communicate, at least not in the
form of communication that I
1:04:33
used. I used the main form of
communication that we had within
1:04:38
these groups of teachers. And I
hear today what is what does
1:04:43
that mean? I don't understand
what she did. She didn't use the
1:04:46
right form of communication.
What did she speak she should
1:04:49
have written a memo What do you
know what that means? She never
1:04:52
explains it. Let me finish Are
there areas not in the form of
1:04:55
communication that I used? I
used the main form of
1:04:58
communication that we had
1:05:00
within these groups of teachers,
and I hear today, after I have
1:05:06
already communicated this with
them multiple times, these
1:05:10
teachers are still misgendering
the students and still using the
1:05:13
wrong name for the one who asked
for a different name. I don't
1:05:18
care what you believe. But when
you refuse to respect a queer
1:05:23
child's request for pronoun and
name changes, you are hurting
1:05:29
them.
1:05:31
Alright, so I just need to
preface this that this is one of
1:05:34
your personal it's as if you've
just discovered this is going
1:05:37
on. But it doesn't matter
because you are very disturbed
1:05:41
by it. And I think you're you're
really trying to get to the
1:05:46
bottom of where this is coming
from. What is it all about? And
1:05:51
probably how do we eradicate it,
and I'm kind of just riding your
1:05:55
coattails, Boomer. Now, couple
of things. One, was overlooked
1:06:01
in all this, by the way, that
kid who wanted his new name and
1:06:04
when that pronoun curiosity,
they've changed your pronoun as
1:06:08
those with a third grader she's
talking about now what why does
1:06:12
it third grade or even know
about they them and why do they
1:06:15
think it's important because
because of the teacher, it's
1:06:18
because teachers are not there.
The teachers are more than
1:06:21
teachers. They're influencers.
So you put these influences I
1:06:26
remember that I would have had a
crush on my second grade
1:06:28
teacher. I have a crush on my on
my third grade teacher Mrs. Carl
1:06:31
stead. Yeah, absolutely. Well,
Miss Rose was dynamite.
1:06:36
She was not as pretty Mrs.
Karlstad was great, because she
1:06:38
was also kind of Stern. Yeah,
well, that that's, you know,
1:06:46
that's on me. I'm sorry. So
1:06:50
So teachers are influencers and
they have their their robot role
1:06:54
models and influencers. And in
the first grade, second grade,
1:07:00
third grade as these clips go
on, as for I even remember my
1:07:03
kindergarten teacher, Mrs.
Casper, who I asked, she was
1:07:06
beautiful. She was like, I can
remember my kindergarten
1:07:09
teacher. Yeah, it just hit me
like, Oh, yeah. Miss Casper?
1:07:11
Holy moly. Yeah.
1:07:17
I don't know. But that growl
was, but okay. I'm sorry. The
1:07:21
point is, is that,
1:07:24
yeah, they're there. They are
bringing teachers are more than
1:07:27
teachers. And they're
influencers. And they are
1:07:29
influencing. And they're making
a point of influencing and
1:07:32
coming before you, and I'm just
going to play the other side of
1:07:35
it, because it would be boring
if all we just do is say, Oh,
1:07:37
this is crazy. Teachers, I
believe. Teachers are meant to
1:07:43
influence children through
their, you know, through some
1:07:46
freedom to be able to teach. And
I think, just as we were
1:07:49
discussing, our liberal high
school teacher, she should have
1:07:52
the freedom to influence people
to at least go look at other
1:07:56
alternatives of history so that
we understand what really
1:08:00
happened. So they are meant to
influence but this is clearly
1:08:04
focused on one area only. And
these teachers are preoccupied
1:08:09
with sex. They're probably
arsonists.
1:08:13
So it could be, let's listen to
number two, I wanted to make a
1:08:18
video talking a little bit about
what it's like, being a teacher
1:08:23
and being as a different one is
a different different teacher,
1:08:27
she's a little older, and she's
a little more nervous. And she's
1:08:30
she finally got around to making
a video. And here we go. And
1:08:34
sharing that part of myself with
my students and my colleagues.
1:08:37
Because it's a really vulnerable
position to be in where you're
1:08:40
continuously choosing to share
parts of yourself with your
1:08:46
community.
1:08:48
Especially when it's something
that you, you don't know how
1:08:52
people are going to react, and
you have no control over how
1:08:54
they're gonna react to the
information that you share. And
1:08:59
being queer is still a thing
that a lot of people are
1:09:02
uncomfortable with and scared
of. And so they don't understand
1:09:06
queer people because they don't
see queerness in their
1:09:09
communities at all. Which is why
it's so important to me to be
1:09:14
like I would in my classroom and
be visibly queer. And that's why
1:09:19
I wear these earrings. And I
have pride flags up. Because I
1:09:24
think having queer teachers
helps students to kind of break
1:09:29
down and combat stereotypes that
they see out in the world,
1:09:33
especially like, with me, I
don't fit into a lot of like the
1:09:38
typical lesbian stereotypes. And
so when I come out to people,
1:09:42
a lot of them are shocked
because I don't look like what
1:09:44
they expect, right? And so I
think having that exposure and
1:09:49
that experience of knowing that
you have someone that you're
1:09:54
interacting with, who does
belong to the queer community,
1:09:58
and is a
1:10:00
The real person is really
helpful.
1:10:04
Yeah, so listening to this, she
has been programmed to believe
1:10:08
that
1:10:11
that many children have gone
through this trauma that she has
1:10:15
gone through, and they're going
through right now, at this very
1:10:17
moment. And she needs to rescue
them by making queer by
1:10:22
normalizing it so that it can be
discussed so that they feel
1:10:25
comfortable around it. And maybe
one of these Tiktok teachers
1:10:29
will explain exactly what queer
means.
1:10:33
Oh, don't expect that. So it is,
it's a funny group.
1:10:40
I personally don't and I will
say this, I know that gets might
1:10:44
get some I won't get any flight
canceled, you'll get canceled.
1:10:49
I'm been canceled. So I just
don't think these people should
1:10:53
be teaching. They're they seem
unstable to me. But let's go to
1:10:56
this one. This is this will be a
two parter, because she she is
1:11:00
all part of the same clip. But
she cuts into second part later.
1:11:04
I don't know how, why she did it
this way. But this is the this
1:11:08
girl considers herself not
queer, but non binary, I think.
1:11:13
And, but she was she's a very,
she is a real problem. This one
1:11:19
and this is
1:11:21
non binary three, A F and
wanting to do content around
1:11:25
this day, which is really
important to me, as is my first
1:11:30
year as I'm out as a non binary
teacher.
1:11:34
But it's hard. It's hard to
think how to talk about it and
1:11:38
how to make it pithy and catchy.
And I I sent what felt like a
1:11:45
pretty vulnerable, email it to
my colleagues, suggesting a
1:11:48
whole bunch of resources for
each division and offering to
1:11:52
come into their classes.
1:11:54
And I'm so grateful to the three
allies or accomplices who
1:12:00
invited me into their class
today to read I just read, they
1:12:04
she he me free to be
1:12:08
to a grade one class and Grade
One. One. I just read this book
1:12:13
to a grade one class and one of
the students came out as trans.
1:12:20
Oh, goodness, she was trans. And
we've talked to her parents last
1:12:23
night about me coming in. And
then given the go ahead, and
1:12:28
it was such beautiful proof that
kids of any age are absolutely
1:12:34
capable of accepting anything
that they are taught with love.
1:12:40
Because her class didn't bat an
eyelid
1:12:44
didn't bat an eyelid at me not
being a man woman both or
1:12:46
neither.
1:12:49
Didn't matter an eyelid at her
having been born a boy. And was
1:12:54
were able to make all kinds of
beautiful personal connections.
1:12:57
So please, no matter what age
your kids are, or what did you
1:13:02
teach, it is so important that
you teach them that trans people
1:13:07
are valuable.
1:13:09
Oh, wow. I I'm reflecting now
back on my own childhood.
1:13:15
And I remember how weird it was
to even find out that a teacher
1:13:20
was married. I mean, a teacher
wouldn't even say You know, if a
1:13:23
teacher said well, Mr. Karle
said it will become Oh, be kind
1:13:26
of weird. You know, I think, I
don't know. Now, as you
1:13:30
mentioned, that's a very good
one. Good catch. I don't
1:13:34
remember. first grade, second
grade, third grade, fourth
1:13:37
grade, fifth grade, sixth grade,
seventh grade, eighth grade. And
1:13:41
through most of high school, I
don't know that any of them were
1:13:44
married or not married. I had no
idea. It wasn't part of my
1:13:48
learning. I didn't know about
their personal life in any way.
1:13:54
I don't know if there were city
councilmen. I don't know if they
1:13:57
were volunteer policemen. I
don't know anything. I didn't
1:14:00
know any of that. I didn't care
too. I don't see that it was
1:14:02
important to me. I grew up in
Amsterdam, in the 70s very
1:14:07
liberal people got their boobs
out on the beach, co Ed
1:14:14
locker rooms and sport clubs,
you know, just a very, very
1:14:18
chill.
1:14:20
We all knew that. Mr. Timur, who
was our German teacher, that he
1:14:25
was, I mean, he was beyond gay.
I mean, he basically came into
1:14:28
the class with his chaps, but he
was just you know, and he was a
1:14:31
constant smoker and he was just
fascinating to look at. I don't
1:14:35
remember any of high school
because hey, Amsterdam, but none
1:14:39
of this you still there would be
just it was teachers were
1:14:42
teachers. They're there to when
I was in fifth grade. My fifth
1:14:46
grade teacher got married and a
man he got married. And we were
1:14:49
all invited to the reception. I
remember going and I just
1:14:52
remember being struck by all of
a sudden he became more of a
1:14:56
human like an A he had a wife
and and
1:15:00
And there was his family and it
just though that it seemed like
1:15:03
much better if you just kind of
kept it professional, you know,
1:15:06
you got your school, keep it
professional, exactly the right
1:15:10
word. And then, but now one
other thing.
1:15:13
I mean,
1:15:15
it's one thing to be doing this.
But to literally go on tick tock
1:15:20
and and broadcast poorly about
this is odd. This is
1:15:27
very odd. Now this by the way,
the all of these women with rare
1:15:32
exceptions, I'm gonna play some
other one that's not really part
1:15:35
of another question. So knowing
that Tik Tok has phenomenal
1:15:39
algorithms, I'm sure that
everybody around the world is
1:15:42
getting the same teachers,
right. They're getting they're
1:15:44
seeing those teachers in China.
Talk about this. I'm sure that
1:15:48
China has a different algorithm.
No kidding. No kidding. This is
1:15:52
your
1:15:53
next new Genex at work right
here. I think again, I think
1:15:59
it's better
1:16:01
that we get to this stuff.
1:16:05
I don't want to watch what's
China's just showing you a bunch
1:16:08
of people doing calisthenics and
the airs? And nobody's watching
1:16:11
that and being successful? No, I
understand. From the
1:16:14
entertainment value. I'm I'm all
in. I'm just saying that kids
1:16:18
watch tick tock, you know, so
they're getting indoctrinated by
1:16:21
this is the algo probably
targets them. When I watch one,
1:16:25
you get 1000 of them. I know how
this works. These people don't
1:16:28
look, they don't look right. And
they all have nose rings, the
1:16:31
one that does in the middle that
like a cow.
1:16:35
You know that when Christina had
got one of those years ago, I
1:16:38
literally hooked the dog leash
up to it. Okay, your mind
1:16:42
dragged her around the house.
1:16:46
She said that is the ugliest
ring. I don't understand what
1:16:48
the appeal is. No, that's we're
just older. So that led me we're
1:16:54
just all fart. Body Art and body
modifications been going on
1:16:59
since way before. People want to
scarification is a big deal too.
1:17:02
So what
1:17:04
I want to go back to the start
that goes behind all this stuff.
1:17:07
And that last woman that talked
and she's just seems like a
1:17:11
nervous wreck. And then there's
the second part of her clip. I
1:17:13
want to play that and then I
want to play a sub quote from
1:17:17
her first part, but let's play
the second part of this is the
1:17:19
non pioneer woman. You're really
quite into this. You're you're
1:17:23
really disturbed. I'll tell you
what bothers me. Yeah, I don't
1:17:27
think these people should be
teaching. Okay, let's go through
1:17:30
influential you just had a
situation where a first grader a
1:17:34
little boy decided because of
the teacher that he's trans, a
1:17:39
first grader, when grader when a
six year old, he's trans what
1:17:44
made him decide this? I mean, he
sex doesn't even come into your
1:17:47
brain until you're 11 or 12 Let
alone or you're what you're
1:17:53
jerking off at six. I don't
think so. Oh, so let me just
1:17:57
mark that so we can have that as
the opening show clip. Yeah,
1:18:00
that was so I didn't say
anything.
1:18:05
As okay, why are you mad at me?
Why is it bro why are you so
1:18:09
mad? I'm on your side. I'm on
your ego. Yeah, here we go. Oh,
1:18:13
I'm gonna
1:18:15
say Don't say that. I'm all in
favor of this. I'm just trying
1:18:18
to make the show entertaining.
I'm not you don't think this is
1:18:21
entertaining yet? What I don't
find entertaining is podcasts
1:18:25
where both hosts are all look
now I'm gonna push
1:18:31
another show a fan Hey, you're
ruining the case of flow.
1:18:35
Let's go to tix non binary three
a, a friend's
1:18:41
class still with my lovely and
95 redness and I just wanted to
1:18:45
say Oh,
1:18:48
her n95 What Redman redness or
red because of her mask. Oh, she
1:18:54
had a man and she Ed's lovely,
she's lovely. She's proud. He's
1:18:57
proud virtue signaling her
stupid mask wearing proud of it.
1:19:02
I still with my lovely and 95
redness. And I just wanted to
1:19:05
say,
1:19:07
it's been such a powerful day,
other students come see me and
1:19:13
make a plan to come out to his
class. Because she hadn't felt
1:19:18
confident doing that yet. And so
that was really exciting to see
1:19:24
that happen and to be able to
facilitate that.
1:19:28
Oh,
1:19:30
wow. Coming out used to be a
huge thing. You'd have the
1:19:33
family now the teacher just
facilitates it. Yeah, in the
1:19:37
first grade. Well, of course, I
mean, it doesn't get she's a
1:19:40
first grade teacher or these.
Are these teachers millennials.
1:19:44
Have they all Yes. Oh, I have
Well, first I want to play this
1:19:48
sub clip that I want to play a
duck kicker. And the sub clip is
1:19:52
what she said in her first
little commentary. And I said
1:19:55
and she said it on ironically.
But what she said is the most
1:19:59
important thing she
1:20:00
said which is the tics read the
play tic sub, quote, full proof
1:20:04
that kids of any age are
absolutely capable of accepting
1:20:10
anything. Whoa.
1:20:14
Any age are absolutely accepting
of anything.
1:20:20
So you could turn him into the
Hitler Youth, no problemo. Well,
1:20:24
is there anything else? It's
been done as long as it's
1:20:27
supported by authority figures?
Like the teacher, correct. I'm
1:20:32
all in on that. I just thought
that it was the best of the
1:20:36
clips. Now. I want to play this
one. Well, first, I mean,
1:20:40
there's a couple more in here we
can play in the meantime, but I
1:20:42
want to play this one first. And
this is an old lesbian. And I
1:20:46
say she's an old lesbian because
she's on ticktock on a look at
1:20:50
her. She's an old lesbian. She's
a lesbian. She is very she and I
1:20:54
would say that if you were going
to call her a name, you'd call
1:20:57
her a turf turf. trans
exclusionary radical female,
1:21:01
horrible the lesbian turfs. So
this turf, or she never says
1:21:07
she's a church. I'm not gonna
call her way. But she comes on
1:21:09
and she summarizes what we just
play. What I just played all
1:21:13
these clips. This is what she
thinks about and she is, but she
1:21:16
is an old lesbian who has been
through it. And here we go. If
1:21:21
only I knew which clip I'm
supposed to play. Oh,
1:21:25
I'm looking for old lesbian as a
title. No, I'm like white women.
1:21:30
This will be
1:21:32
gays against groomers, awesome
hair, it is the most unpopular
1:21:37
opinion
1:21:38
I'll ever do. I hope you guys
too went and stitch and save or
1:21:43
whatever you need to do to this
because it's going to get down
1:21:46
fast. If I would have understood
when I was younger, that
1:21:51
fighting for my rights as a
lesbian would mean allowing
1:21:56
children to drag shows
1:21:59
attaching child molesters to our
community and allowing children
1:22:05
to change their sex before they
even know what their favorite
1:22:08
color is. That would have never
done it. Never.
1:22:13
Oh, interesting.
1:22:17
Has she been deep platformed yet
1:22:20
for being a different way? I
think this is a this is a stance
1:22:25
of a lot of old gays or lesbians
who has seen what can happen
1:22:31
when the tide turns the other
way. It's not pretty and they're
1:22:35
starting to speak up John they I
mean the for it just spoke up
1:22:39
and he knew it was going to be
controversial and I think a lot
1:22:42
of them are going to have to
speak up a bit without being
1:22:44
called turfs and all the rest of
it that happens to them but
1:22:49
they're going to have to speak
up because this is not going to
1:22:51
stand what's going on this
insanity did you hear about just
1:22:55
not gonna work? Did you hear
about the yet a new lesbian bar
1:22:59
that was shut down? Yeah, insane
money. This is a good example.
1:23:03
After one week of it was doc
Murray's. A lesbian bar was shut
1:23:09
down. Because the Maria key
workers collective said we felt
1:23:16
misled about this. This is the
people who are working there
1:23:18
they decided not to show up for
work. We felt misled about the
1:23:21
space being safe and welcoming.
Our vision. Now remember, this
1:23:25
is a lesbian bar. Our vision is
a queer worker owned cooperative
1:23:31
that is ran not run ran
democratically provides mutual
1:23:35
aid and hosts free opportunities
for education to our community.
1:23:41
Yesterday we presented a list of
demands including owner owner
1:23:45
resignation, and relinquishing
stake to workers which as of 7pm
1:23:51
on July 4 2022 have not been
acknowledged despite being
1:23:55
passed the agreed upon 24 hour
deadline
1:23:59
and these people even tried to
you know try to oh no we're
1:24:02
gonna talk to the community now
is done is toast. And that is as
1:24:06
it's all about getting rid of
the lesbian part. The gays are
1:24:10
done. They got monkey pox eff
off gay guys. We got those over
1:24:15
to the side. They are you can't
even let them into the bar
1:24:17
because they could have
monkeypox. Now the lesbians
1:24:21
because they're not queer. Oh,
yeah, but the I especially the
1:24:25
gay men, what we call older gay
men. So 4040 and up, they're
1:24:31
getting vocal and they're gonna
stand you watch because they're
1:24:34
also buffin can beat the crap
out of you. So
1:24:38
I'm really hoping a lot of our a
lot of our gay producers male
1:24:42
gay producers, a bond with the
ELS guys it's time you to get
1:24:45
together maybe it should just be
gnl.
1:24:49
Now I have one bonus clip, which
has got nothing to do with it
1:24:52
with the whole train of thought
that went came in went there.
1:24:56
But this is another one of these
1:24:59
teachers
1:25:00
hers. That is I just thought
this was funny because she's she
1:25:03
has a dilemma. She's trying to
teach, you know, the gender
1:25:08
stuff, and she's got some issues
with slang and house. She
1:25:13
doesn't know what to do about
appropriation and this and this,
1:25:17
I found that this to be one of
the funnier clips of some
1:25:21
guy would say, but this used an
old slang term DigiKey fourth
1:25:26
grade teacher
1:25:30
fourth grade teacher that is
just beside herself over this
1:25:35
one screwball issue, which makes
no sense to me because I don't
1:25:39
see how you, you think you'd go
the other way with with with
1:25:43
thoughts on this on this
problem. I'm a fourth grade
1:25:47
teacher and I do a lot of work
with social justice and equity
1:25:50
in my classroom. We live
conversations all the time. And
1:25:54
my kids have gotten very good at
this type of discussion. But
1:25:58
there's one thing that keeps
coming up that I'm not quite
1:26:00
sure how to tackle. It's the
slang with cultural
1:26:05
appropriation of slang terms
like she they're doing that a
1:26:09
lot are like, Oh, that's fire.
1:26:12
And I don't I think this one I'm
having trouble knowing how to
1:26:15
start the conversation because I
don't know what my goal is in
1:26:19
the end. And this is where I
would like a little feedback
1:26:21
from anyone who's willing to
give it on Tik Tok. Am I asking
1:26:24
kids not to use the slang that
comes up because it's probably
1:26:27
culturally appropriated from
POC, or am I asking kids to do
1:26:32
the research to find out where
things come from? And respect
1:26:37
those cultures like we have been
doing anyways? But I don't know.
1:26:41
I just don't know how to start
the conversation because I don't
1:26:43
know how to end it.
1:26:46
I got a dilemma. My mouth is
hanging out. This one
1:26:52
okay, hold on a second. First of
all, what a dilemma from now on.
1:26:57
Whenever you start one of these
segments look at the age group
1:27:00
because we have a jingle
1:27:05
the millennial minute and K
1:27:09
It's getting there now. Okay,
well then I have done I'll
1:27:12
finish the same it was oh, no,
no, you're not gonna I'm gonna
1:27:14
finish the segment. I've been
waiting patiently you get to
1:27:16
Okay, we're gonna get one more
identity. We're done. You're
1:27:19
done. This is this is a
millennial again. She's got the
1:27:24
nose ring and she's got she's
home. She is she's actually
1:27:28
eerily attractive.
1:27:31
If you could take the nose ring
out and but she is disc only
1:27:36
reason I clipped this is because
it kind of comes to mind
1:27:38
something I wish I had clipped
now, which was a
1:27:43
it was a one of the
documentaries on on. I think
1:27:46
it's still floating around on
Robert Maxwell. Okay. And they
1:27:53
interviewed all these different
people that work for Maxwell.
1:27:55
Maxwell is the big giant
publisher who is the father of
1:27:58
Gillean. Maxwell, we know and he
walked off his boat and died, we
1:28:02
think or was pushed off or fell
off? We nobody knows. And I
1:28:07
think it was murdered. But
that's okay.
1:28:11
When Secretary he had that was
in the office all the time, said
1:28:16
that
1:28:18
when galane called Robert the
two of them would meow to each
1:28:23
other.
1:28:24
Really? For a good one or two
minutes? So father and daughter
1:28:29
meowing at each other. Yeah, no,
that's not creepy. No at all.
1:28:37
Okay, so what caught my
attention was this tic tock
1:28:40
video from this
1:28:42
kitty she calls herself and she
I don't know if there's a furry
1:28:46
I don't know if this is a furry
thing she never says maybe it is
1:28:50
but she talks about this and as
a guest a whole group of people
1:28:53
that meow at each other teaching
you guys some ways that my
1:28:56
friends and I me out to one
another. I've seen this one
1:28:59
you're sure she's a teacher? No.
Oh she's not a teacher just just
1:29:03
talk video that's my last
millennial since you mentioned
1:29:07
millennial she's a millennial.
Yeah.
1:29:09
Do you mind means that my
friends and I now 20 has all the
1:29:12
qualifications to teach me
teaching you guys some ways that
1:29:16
my friends and I like nose ring
check. Drop me check me out.
1:29:23
Check your ego guys some ways
that my friends and I mail to
1:29:27
one another to communicate when
we're just seem a little too
1:29:29
difficult. So here we go. Okay,
so first off we have the normal
1:29:33
meow that we just use mostly to
get each other's attention.
1:29:36
Yeah. Okay then we have the
dissatisfied male
1:29:45
then the angry male but we only
use this one on rare occasions
1:29:48
because overall we're very happy
can family
1:29:55
happy or content? Meow
1:29:58
Yeah.
1:30:00
Okay then one of the most
important ones for our kitten
1:30:02
family is that I want to go
potty meow. It took me a really
1:30:06
long time to master this model
because this is my favorite part
1:30:10
to release because it took me a
really long time to master this
1:30:12
meow Yeah, I was like taking a
shit me out like it was really
1:30:16
really hard.
1:30:18
In order for my kids to
understand
1:30:24
by the way, I just I think she's
very serious. I watched this and
1:30:28
it looks it looked really good
serious. She said important meal
1:30:33
for me. And it's the I need help
wiping me out
1:30:41
I didn't know that cats needed
help wiping I thought they had a
1:30:45
built in mechanism for that.
It's called the carpet just
1:30:48
rubbed the carpet. Okay, and
last but definitely not stop
1:30:52
before you finish it. What is
she this girl? Need help wiping?
1:30:57
Does she need toilet paper? Or
was she asked for that? She
1:31:00
could speak English. Well, where
do you when you know what John
1:31:04
is? She needs help wiping she
needs help. It does just
1:31:07
somebody's gotta go over there
and help wipe her ass. I mean,
1:31:09
come on.
1:31:14
Okay, and last but definitely
not least, is our in heat meow.
1:31:18
And we use this when we need a
little bit more special kitten
1:31:22
attention if you know what I
mean.
1:31:28
Um, you
1:31:31
don't get a clip of the day you
don't get a borderline or
1:31:34
anything that was that was that
was pollution. That's podcast
1:31:37
pollution is what that is. But
because you did this because I'm
1:31:41
gonna write that down podcast
pollution. Somehow podcast
1:31:44
pollution. We got it on this
show. We got everything we
1:31:48
surely do. And it's about to get
a whole lot worse. This
1:31:53
obsession of yours. It's minor
obsession. But I understand.
1:31:56
started when you were corrected
by a millennial in your family.
1:32:02
It's happened to all of us that
you said something about someone
1:32:05
and you misgendered them. It's
them? It's they them? Mom, Dad,
1:32:10
it's a them. So this is a
problem? It's certainly I
1:32:15
haven't I don't think I've ever
had to deal with it with someone
1:32:18
face to face where they asked me
to use pronouns or where it was
1:32:21
an issue. I see it on emails, I
ignore it. I haven't I stay at
1:32:25
home. And before I even get into
this clip, before I even get to
1:32:28
this clip, I asked the liberal
high school teacher I said, Girl
1:32:32
girl, I said why don't you just
leave, go into the homeschooling
1:32:37
community, I think you'll make
more money, you'll have a bigger
1:32:41
impact on children, you'll have
more time a hell of a lot
1:32:44
stress. And her answer was,
yeah, I wish I could. But I
1:32:48
don't have six more years for my
retirement. And so she's locked
1:32:53
in. She said, if I did like
this, he said if I could get out
1:32:55
I would she said in a heartbeat.
But she's locked in and she's
1:32:58
unmarried. So you know this is,
so she has to get her pension.
1:33:03
So it's sad when I hear these
things when the situation they
1:33:06
have to work in. And these are
their colleagues. Now. This is
1:33:09
also an issue in the workplace.
And many people don't know how
1:33:13
to deal with it, we have an
entire industry that is the DEI
1:33:17
industry, which really is HR
once HR came in and got a whole
1:33:23
lot of power in the
corporations. And this really
1:33:25
started in the 90s. I saw it
happen. And part of it was the
1:33:29
lawsuits. You know, public
companies would have directors
1:33:32
and officers insurance or other
kinds of liability. And there
1:33:35
would be ambulance chaser
lawyers down at the door. And as
1:33:38
women walked out of my building,
we were listed on NASDAQ. Hey,
1:33:42
did anyone say anything to you?
Like, Hey, sweetie, you look
1:33:44
great today, because you know,
you make a lot of money and
1:33:46
assume. And then that didn't
happen with us. But this
1:33:49
happened. This happens all the
time. You know this Thomas J.
1:33:52
Henry, I'm sure he'll take care
of you. So how do you deal with
1:33:56
that in the workplace? So now we
have just to add insult to
1:33:59
injury, we have an entire force
of human resource officers. You
1:34:04
remember that one who we played
a little while ago, she was
1:34:08
trending for half a second.
We're like, we're human
1:34:11
resource. We can fuck you. We
can make sure you don't get a
1:34:13
job member that like crazy. No.
Well, we played it.
1:34:18
So they have a lot of power and
they like to wield that power.
1:34:21
But in this case, we have not
one but two millennials. One is
1:34:24
the news reader, local news
reader for kayo. B for New
1:34:28
Mexico. And the other one is a
local human resource officer who
1:34:34
will help explain a very
difficult problem in the
1:34:37
workplace. John, this is
tailored for you pronouns in the
1:34:40
workplace. Do you know what your
coworker prefers? Well, joining
1:34:44
me today is Heather's Helen
monta founder of tell us about
1:34:46
yourself. Thanks. Thanks so much
for joining us this morning.
1:34:49
Good to have you back. So first
off, let's talk about D i in the
1:34:53
workplace, and that's better
known as diversity, equity and
1:34:56
inclusion. How do we go about
the discussion of pronouns so
1:35:00
Essentially, the employee will
reach out and say, Hey, this is
1:35:03
my preferred pronoun. This is
how I would like to be addressed
1:35:08
in the workplace, how we go
about it is by respecting their
1:35:12
request, right? So you want to
make sure when they say this is
1:35:15
what I would like to be referred
to.
1:35:18
We address it and we honor that.
Okay, so, so far, it's okay.
1:35:23
I've had a lot of people ask me
to call them different names
1:35:25
different different than where
what you would be expected to
1:35:29
call them? And if someone says,
Hey, man, could you just call me
1:35:33
shithead? I do it, you know,
whatever. It's all it doesn't
1:35:36
really mattered to me. But
that's it's not that simple. We
1:35:39
moving forward use that term,
whether it's he or she, they
1:35:43
them there, whatever they would
like to use, we want to make
1:35:46
sure we honor that whatever they
would like to use quest and make
1:35:49
them feel comfortable in the
workplace. Is it appropriate for
1:35:51
someone to ask what someone's
preferred pronoun usages? Are,
1:35:54
you probably wouldn't want to
ask that person would ask you.
1:35:57
This, this is this is what this
is what you hear these teachers
1:35:59
talking about, you probably
wouldn't want to ask someone
1:36:03
with a nose ring and blue hair,
how they'd like to be addressed.
1:36:06
You wait until they ask you.
1:36:09
In what world is this normal
human intercourse?
1:36:13
So you can't Oh, excuse me? What
proud pronoun do you use? That
1:36:16
would be insulting? You probably
don't want to do that. Wait
1:36:19
until they ask you. Could you
please address me by my pronouns
1:36:24
that term, whether it's he or
she?
1:36:28
So where were you on that
thought? That's interesting,
1:36:31
because what is creating is a
situation where the VA says we
1:36:36
use hierarchical systems in our
businesses. Yep. That turns it
1:36:41
upside down, because now the
employee is in the corrective
1:36:45
mode. So the employer by Miss
pronoun ing somebody's
1:36:51
misgendering them as it were.
1:36:56
As as the boss, now they get to
be corrected. Yep. Oh, no,
1:37:02
you're wrong boss. You should be
using they them for me.
1:37:08
Is that not exactly what our
children are doing to us? Oh,
1:37:13
no, no, you're wrong, dad. It's
the them.
1:37:16
So this is being taught and it's
a power game. It's this is this
1:37:22
is wells, vitalism. Hello,
Marxism. It's well thought out.
1:37:26
This is a power game and the
human. And there's, of course,
1:37:29
lots of valid reasons for human
resources. But I don't think
1:37:32
this is one of them. They're
whatever they would like to use.
1:37:35
We want to make sure we honor
that request and make them feel
1:37:37
comfortable in the workplace.
For someone to ask, honor their
1:37:40
request and make sure they feel
comfortable in the workplace
1:37:44
preferred pronoun usages are, if
I learned one thing in 15 years,
1:37:49
I don't feel very comfortable in
this workplace with you Devorah
1:37:51
just saying you probably
wouldn't want to ask that person
1:37:54
would ask you, okay, so you
know, if you if they haven't
1:37:58
fully made the decision on what
pronoun they would like to use,
1:38:02
but then come around to that
decision and then ask, if they
1:38:05
haven't asked yet. It's not safe
to assume we don't want to make
1:38:08
any assumptions. Right? So this
is going to it's not safe to
1:38:12
make any assumption. So if you
if they've not come around to
1:38:16
it, then you just can't do
anything because you might
1:38:18
assume they win they're really
just a plain old he him so it's,
1:38:24
you're a loser no matter what,
there's no way for you to win
1:38:27
this permission game have meet
people be more patient or have
1:38:31
to be patient you do you have to
be patient. If you are the
1:38:34
employee that is asking for a
new preferred pronoun or pronoun
1:38:38
that's not necessarily natural
for individuals. Yeah, it's just
1:38:42
the patient's as they learned to
use the new pronoun or to
1:38:45
address you by that pronoun.
Also, if as you're learning to
1:38:50
address an individual by a
pronoun, you can always just use
1:38:52
their first name. Can't go wrong
with their first name, right? So
1:38:55
right Colton is over there.
Right? Right. Colton will be
1:38:59
here soon. So you don't have to
use a pronoun at all. That's our
1:39:01
way out.
1:39:04
That's our way out. It'd be Mr.
or Ms. Oh, don't go no, you're
1:39:08
just stuck in trouble. Yes. All
I have to do is just refer to
1:39:12
somebody called curry. Curry.
Hey, Colton. Hey, Jones, to be
1:39:17
honest, that rude. You shouldn't
be Ms. or Mr. Mr. Curry. Wasn't
1:39:22
it more seems to me to be more
polite to say Mr. Curry and
1:39:25
curry.
1:39:28
Whenever you talk about me
behind my back, you always just
1:39:30
say curry. Curry. You never say
Adam, I never say Adam, I say
1:39:35
curry. And with the hard cake as
a See, you don't have to go down
1:39:40
at all if you're not familiar
with it if it feels unnatural.
1:39:43
What if someone is refusing to
use someone's preferred
1:39:47
pronouns? And this will happen I
will be very honest. In the
1:39:50
workplace, this will happen. We
have feelings about the pronoun
1:39:53
we don't agree with it. So we
don't know why we have to use
1:39:56
it. So it's important if you
don't agree
1:40:00
He
1:40:01
says you John here, it's
important. If you don't agree
1:40:05
you have to use it. So it's
important if you don't agree
1:40:10
to still just use their first
name. This isn't something that
1:40:13
would rise to the occasion of
getting written up if you refuse
1:40:16
to use it but this could rise to
the occasion of bullying maybe
1:40:21
I understand what she's trying
to say here but let's back up a
1:40:24
second.
1:40:25
Say you have the pronouns he him
and you see tell me hey, I want
1:40:30
to use he him as my pronouns.
1:40:33
And I say okay, when am I going
to ever use he him when I'm
1:40:37
talking to you? No, never it's
always when you talk about
1:40:39
someone else this is the whole
point this is this is how it
1:40:42
works this is why you get
corrected the whole point you
1:40:44
kill me they them you will never
say they them to someone's face
1:40:49
it's always when the person is
not present. This is the mind
1:40:52
what decision make if they're
not present. That's the whole
1:40:55
point John that's so your kids
who have been indoctrinated will
1:40:59
tell you you're doing it wrong.
By the way if your kid doesn't
1:41:03
slap him to slap them across now
on this slap sure that that's
1:41:07
the whole point it's it has
nothing to do with the person
1:41:09
himself or herself or themselves
will never care or the answer
1:41:13
she says she's never here the
insult. This is programming of
1:41:17
the masses. That's the point.
It's, it's it. The more you
1:41:22
think about it, the more idiotic
it is no as deeply as it may.
1:41:26
It's brilliant. Yeah, if for
Marxists, they've got you pretty
1:41:30
riled up.
1:41:32
I'm more riled up by the fact
that they're allowing teachers
1:41:37
after the gay community that's
got denounced the queer
1:41:41
community by the way, have you
ever heard that one? Refer?
1:41:44
Yeah, we got it. QQ Yeah. Yeah.
They, they promise that you
1:41:50
know, Oh, yeah. Don't worry
about it. We're not going to
1:41:52
indoctrinate the kids. No, but
they start by indicating they're
1:41:56
indoctrinating adults, and this
is how it's done. And that's why
1:42:01
you need to put that crap in
your in your email signature. If
1:42:05
America can do one thing, I
think it should be this.
1:42:09
Just say no, like pronouns just
say no to
1:42:12
half this stuff. But the pronoun
yes, that pronoun think should
1:42:15
be let me finish this important
if you don't agree
1:42:19
to sell just use their first
name. This isn't something that
1:42:22
would rise to the occasion of
getting written up if you refuse
1:42:25
to use it, but this could rise
to the occasion.
1:42:28
You can't finish it.
1:42:30
He said don't use their first
name. Did she say that he didn't
1:42:35
want me
1:42:37
to still just use their first
name still use that first name?
1:42:41
No, yes, use me here we go
feelings about the pronoun we
1:42:45
don't agree with it. So we don't
know why we have to use it. So
1:42:49
it's important if you don't
agree
1:42:53
to still just use their first
name. If you don't agree, still
1:42:56
just use that first name. Still
just use Yes, still just use
1:43:01
that soak. Joy just do it. So
it's important if you don't
1:43:05
agree
1:43:07
to still just use their first
name, okay, this isn't something
1:43:10
that would rise to the occasion
of getting written up if you
1:43:12
refuse to use it. But this could
rise to the occasion of
1:43:15
bullying, that person may be
repeatedly asking you, this is
1:43:19
how I would like to be referred.
Please stop calling me he when I
1:43:24
would like to be called Chi. And
this person just refuses to do
1:43:27
and kind of has that like tone
about it, so
1:43:35
that I
1:43:36
could rise to the occasion of
bullying. This isn't for you.
1:43:39
This is the JC de lesson right
here. Don't have that tone about
1:43:43
you person may be repeatedly
asking you, this is how I would
1:43:46
like to be referred. Please
stop. You know, calling me he
1:43:51
when I would like to be called
she. And this person just
1:43:54
refuses to do and kind of has
that like tone about it.
1:43:58
So just manage it as you can it
as the employee. If somebody is
1:44:02
refusing, just reach out to your
manager or HR and we'll kind of
1:44:05
come in and help mediate the
1:44:07
HR will come in and mediate
authorization and make it more
1:44:10
comfortable for you. But only
speak up. How do you address
1:44:13
pronouns there's a show title
mediate pronouns are big group,
1:44:17
you know, a lot. I say, Hey,
guys, is my my terminology and a
1:44:21
lot of people do. So here's some
suggestions. We can say Hey,
1:44:26
everyone, or everybody. Hey,
friends. Hey, y'all are all
1:44:30
y'all.
1:44:32
hateful,
1:44:35
tends to be gender neutral and
addresses the group at large.
1:44:39
And if you start practicing
using these terminologies, it'll
1:44:42
be more helpful because there
could be a group that you're
1:44:44
unfamiliar with, that has
someone that goes by a pronoun
1:44:47
that you're not aware of. You
just nailed it. John, you just
1:44:50
solved the whole problem.
Unbelievable. And it just the
1:44:56
minute you said that this whole
thing is solved and maybe
1:45:00
See that is the ultimate goal.
Look,
1:45:04
the pronoun thing is difficult.
It's hard to remember. You can
1:45:09
have a list of every employee's
pronouns just address everybody
1:45:15
as comrade comrade comrade,
Comrade Dvorak comrade curry
1:45:20
Hey, what's up with that
comrade? I told that calm this
1:45:24
solves it. This solves the
problem. Everybody's a comrade.
1:45:29
Yeah.
1:45:30
And it's gender free. And we are
actually gender neutral. And
1:45:35
with that, I'd like to thank you
for your courage and say in the
1:45:36
morning to the man who just put
the sea in the comrade solution.
1:45:40
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr. John
seed of Oreck well in the
1:45:45
morning to you Mr. Adam curry
also in the morning all ships at
1:45:48
sea boots on the ground feet in
the air subs in the water and
1:45:51
older days.
1:45:56
In the morning to the trolls,
and the troll room, hello,
1:45:58
trolls How you doing hands up
scary.
1:46:01
How many we got in there and we
have currently 1994 Trolls
1:46:06
aren't standing by for Thursday
we're up this is because
1:46:10
normally one eight they are
listening to no agenda.
1:46:13
stream.com We're live lit as we
sometimes say, live at troll
1:46:19
room.io no agenda stream.com and
in any podcast app that supports
1:46:23
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apps.com You get a notification
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you get the chat room troll
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the same app, you listen to the
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free, don't because we love you.
1:46:37
Now you can also follow on no
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easy.
1:46:44
If you have an account if not,
you have to get an account at
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any Mastodon server, follow John
C. Dvorak at no agenda
1:46:50
social.com Adam at no agenda
social.com. And then you can
1:46:56
follow the conversation you'll
be you'll get the whole stream
1:46:59
through the fediverse it's the
future of social media as the
1:47:01
only way forward. Twitter is
full of bots.
1:47:06
You know, people listened so
poorly. I'm always amazed. Smart
1:47:11
people good people really nice
people, the amount of because we
1:47:15
we finally put up an email
forward on Adam at no agenda
1:47:18
social.com and Jhansi. Dvorak
had no agenda social.com Because
1:47:22
people hear an email address, or
what they think is an email
1:47:25
address. And that's what they
just email.
1:47:29
It's really interesting. I've
never said that's an email
1:47:31
address, but people always take
that as an email address if you
1:47:34
notice this.
1:47:35
Yeah, it's been going on since
the beginning. Yeah, so weird.
1:47:38
This is where one guy said he
sent all these emails and
1:47:41
they're all at no agenda social.
Net are some. I'm glad glad we
1:47:46
put that in mail. They're
talking about what the email is.
1:47:50
And it's so hard adam@curry.com
Oh,
1:47:56
so follow us there and become a
part of the new generation.
1:48:00
Thanks to the artists for
episode 1469 We titled that one
1:48:04
the nerds. It's kind of a no
brainer and capitalist agenda
1:48:08
who's just been on a tear again
chosen for the artwork in it.
1:48:12
Yeah, and this was the bottle
cap.
1:48:16
Very well done. Very nice look
kind of like a Heineken Bottle
1:48:20
cap. I would say bottled by
Gitmo nation. No agenda M five M
1:48:25
pop Korean DeVore X 33 ounces
now, even though it had the
1:48:29
episode number on there 1469 was
fine. It was the right episode
1:48:32
number it was the right episode
number but it's very risky to do
1:48:35
that without uploading one
without a number. Yeah, he
1:48:40
really should have done now the
other ones that we liked it was
1:48:43
a I like to Paul couture I
thought was gonna give him a
1:48:47
double but you didn't like it.
Which one was oh, this is the
1:48:51
shoe football guy. But I want to
mention it was it was a nice
1:48:55
piece and I don't think I just
said no.
1:49:00
Well, you liked the ball cap a
lot. But I want to mention this
1:49:04
piece because he did something
that I've not seen anyone do,
1:49:07
which is his his logo fied and
put in the background and no
1:49:11
agenda show name as part of the
background color is very
1:49:17
creative. Oh, nice. Yeah, look
very nice. And then he's got his
1:49:20
little his little design for the
no agenda. I liked this piece a
1:49:24
lot. He added two versions two
colors.
1:49:27
Just so he knows. Maybe I now
get them back. what else what
1:49:32
else? You know, there's a lot of
different pieces of art. And by
1:49:35
the way, you can follow this
during the live show by going to
1:49:39
no agenda art generator.com You
could already the artists are
1:49:43
putting up.
1:49:45
There's nothing like a
blackboard that says I love my
1:49:47
old dyke teacher.
1:49:51
That is not getting fixed.
1:49:53
But sometimes the artists 137
swinging for the fences.
1:49:58
Sometimes the artists do
1:50:00
just do stuff to make themselves
laugh. And there are other
1:50:03
artists you can also contribute
to no agenda art generator.com
1:50:06
And capitalist agenda. I mean,
it was a beautiful piece. It
1:50:09
really was there. And yes, I'm
not sure it wasn't because I
1:50:14
hated I don't remember why I
thought the bottle cap over the
1:50:18
sumo maybe just because I'm so
here's another one. Here's
1:50:21
another one we got it mentioned
in passing moose did a meta
1:50:27
piece where he has one of our
own artworks hanging as artwork
1:50:33
in between Biden, and what's his
name to Prince?
1:50:38
Salman MBs. Yeah, it's
hilarious. That was the best
1:50:42
appropriation of art we've seen.
Yeah, stealing from ourselves.
1:50:48
And it's that was very, very
fees, but it's too small. So
1:50:51
that's the problem with that.
And because there wasn't due to
1:50:54
so it was not gonna get picked.
That's why I was wrong with it.
1:50:57
I'm just saying, and a lot of
cars melted into the tarmac that
1:51:01
just didn't translate. Now, kids
1:51:05
didn't quite make it. Well, we
really appreciate this work.
1:51:08
It's hilarious. We love it. It's
one of the best. We get a kick
1:51:12
out of it. And it's true value,
you know, value for value is the
1:51:16
method. It's the model that we
chose is what we followed, which
1:51:19
means we don't want to be
restricted. I mean, this whole
1:51:23
conversation that we just had,
yeah, even if Joe Rogan did this
1:51:27
on Spotify, they take that
episode off of Spotify. No, they
1:51:31
weren't the pronouns, or they
would have a freakout where we
1:51:33
had de give it a day, take the
episode with all these tick
1:51:36
talkers. Yeah, I take that I'm
sure we'd have two episodes
1:51:40
gone.
1:51:42
And not saying that that
justifies the clear bigotry of
1:51:46
my co hosts. But it's
1:51:49
true tree.
1:51:51
I'm just throwing stuff out
there. But even the even the
1:51:54
conversation about eugenics and
eugenics would that make it No,
1:51:57
probably not. What is it worth
to you? I don't know. Did you
1:52:00
learn something? It was
certainly some of it was news to
1:52:02
me, I found it very valuable. I
can now tell people have learned
1:52:06
something and maybe they should
look into the next time they
1:52:08
start to spew me with their
fact. That's the bn they should
1:52:12
go listen to the ED black
lecture that would be good. It's
1:52:16
all it's all in the show notes.
So if if you get any value of
1:52:19
the show, maybe just laughed,
whatever it is, that send some
1:52:22
value back you can do that
through time, talent and
1:52:24
treasure. We love the treasure
because it does keep the furnace
1:52:28
burning in our homes. And we
appreciate people who come in so
1:52:31
much with with among amounts
that give them the right to be
1:52:35
titled as an executive producer
or Associate Executive Producer
1:52:38
and for episode number 1470 Only
30 more to go until we hit the
1:52:44
big 1500
1:52:46
Just around our 15th anniversary
we kick it off with Tim marks.
1:52:51
And Tim pops in with as far as I
can see. Is this an instant
1:52:55
donation? $1,000 Well, that's
what it looks like. Sure does.
1:53:00
Let's see what he has to say.
Yes in there. He says read as
1:53:04
much or as little as you like no
worries. All right, let's see
1:53:06
how far we get. My friend and
Baron sir Fahrenheit rightfully
1:53:10
called me out as a douchebag
during the height of the COVID
1:53:13
plan demic but kindly offered up
a little jobs karma because I
1:53:17
was working for Uncle Sam and
had zero plans to take the
1:53:20
Franken stab. I'm happy to
report that as usual it works.
1:53:25
He used that word that term
before it was in fact sir
1:53:27
Fahrenheit who coined it Franken
stab Rankin stab exactly. I work
1:53:35
for a private sector software
consulting company that is very
1:53:38
forward thinking not woken 100%
remote I missed some things
1:53:41
about my old job but in all my
body my choice I do it again. I
1:53:45
want to de douche myself but
becoming an instant night and
1:53:47
thank you for the amazing
information we have all become
1:53:50
addicted to.
1:53:52
You've been D deuced. I'd like
to be known as Sir Timmy Changa
1:53:57
drinker of margaritas and lover
of Bodega bodega.
1:54:02
He does want the Joe Biden
pronunciation Bodega breakfast
1:54:06
tacos if I could request a
little whooping with a
1:54:08
constitution for jingle and some
yet karma for all my fellow no
1:54:11
agenda fans who are still
grinding it out for Bo Jaiden in
1:54:14
their.gov jobs, be free. You
won't be sorry.
1:54:20
Then he has some other anecdotes
about vaccine incidences adverse
1:54:25
reaction reactions, but we were
allowed to pick and choose so I
1:54:28
did find for him. And oh right
original Manning wrap Now get
1:54:35
out there.
1:55:00
All
1:55:08
right now we have Jim
Schneeberger. I do he uh, James?
1:55:14
Yes.
1:55:15
You have his note. Okay, good.
We all have a note. Everyone's
1:55:18
got a note, but for some reason
is no note here, and Eric hasn't
1:55:21
noted as no note.
1:55:24
James Schneeberger in Cary North
Carolina. Now I didn't send his
1:55:27
note in to Eric because it has
no agenda on there. He addressed
1:55:33
it properly.
1:55:35
Oh, no, he didn't ever know he
didn't it's notes that no agenda
1:55:38
show.net Nope, he did it wrong.
Oh, that's what my mistake to my
1:55:42
I should have caught it. Yep.
1:55:45
Well, I saw it going to I
thought it was gonna go to Eric
1:55:48
because of that, and then it
didn't so then I have it. Jim is
1:55:52
a baron by now isn't he? He's he
doesn't hang it over one's head.
1:55:58
Here it just really not much of
a no so I didn't think much
1:56:01
about it that maybe was old
note. I thought anyway, he
1:56:03
writes ITM I thought you might
be interested in the anti racism
1:56:07
racism self assessment survey
for white identifying or
1:56:10
presenting people. Another
whatever you think you're white?
1:56:14
Yeah. And he's got a link, you
can put it in the show notes. So
1:56:17
you have it there. You can
probably do that if you want.
1:56:20
Yeah. Voluntary at this stage.
However, I can envision,
1:56:23
envision, envisage, it says,
envisage, envisage this type of
1:56:28
thing becoming a mandatory
requirement when applying for a
1:56:31
federal job or with woek
employers. Now I have to take
1:56:34
this check out what he's talking
about, because he doesn't
1:56:37
explain it in the note.
1:56:40
Perhaps the no agenda team
should get ahead of the curve
1:56:42
and take it now. Okay, so
everyone go take this thing.
1:56:47
And we'll have a link somewhere
okay. And I'll put a link in the
1:56:50
newsletter if I remember the
words looking at the questions
1:56:53
to better understand the bigger
picture. See also there's
1:56:55
another link antiracism
revolution membership community
1:57:00
YouTube clip, okay. And then
he's got his 333 donation best,
1:57:06
Jim. Bob way. Yes, he's the
barren Shotzi land. Yep. Jim.
1:57:11
Baroness Maryanne Schneeberger
who's the damsel of disaster?
1:57:17
Oh, beautiful. He's covered.
Now. He's a barren, beautiful.
1:57:19
Good to go. Thank you.
1:57:22
Jonathan. kes, kesc Italo cast
Khattala I think Wilmington
1:57:27
North Carolina 333 33. The only
things I've ever donated to our
1:57:31
Ron Paul 2012 campaign
Wikipedia, which I realized was
1:57:34
a waste that now the no agenda
show Keep up the good work.
1:57:38
Thanks. I think that's good.
1:57:41
I awarded it curiously.
1:57:45
Okay, Ralph Decker in Amsterdam
333 33 had no note from him Do
1:57:50
you know no note that means he
gets a double karma. You've got
1:57:55
double pharma
1:57:59
onwards we have another we have
didn't get a lot of donations
1:58:02
today but we get along a lot
along notes and this is one of
1:58:04
them. Yes, Ryan Hill from what
he hour by hour in Hawaii 333
1:58:12
Aloha in the morning. Please see
attached 333 donation as I
1:58:15
humbly requested dee doo
1:58:19
dee doo douche Tao switcheroo.
1:58:22
Please credit this donation to
my beautiful bride for her
1:58:26
birthday next week. I call her
Brenda Chad the diamond hearted.
1:58:31
Okay, is that her pronoun?
Because it is now and that is
1:58:36
switcheroo and she's not on the
birthday list. Now he's gonna
1:58:40
have to send that in for next
week wouldn't wouldn't make any
1:58:42
sense would people do that?
Longtime Boehner first time
1:58:47
donor first saw Adam on JRE
before that psycho Osterholm
1:58:50
started to sigh up. Toilet
preppers was our first episode.
1:58:55
Mahalo for everything these past
two years from the bottom of our
1:58:57
hearts my family thanks you for
all the value we've been able to
1:59:00
duck and dodge like Neo in the
Matrix and our purpose has
1:59:03
become clear. We started a
charity nonprofit to support
1:59:06
veterans through financial
literacy aka how not to get
1:59:10
effed by the clown world. Very
good. We have learned so much
1:59:14
from Gitmo nation have decided
to use the value for value model
1:59:17
to help shrink amygdalas and
spread value and decentralized
1:59:20
information. Please support by
checking out our Etsy merch
1:59:23
store which is diamond heart
shape at Etsy diamond heart
1:59:28
shape. All merch comes with
artwork designs as a free NFT
1:59:32
brother Okay, well yeah, I was
up with the until the NFT part.
1:59:38
Well, I was up with him and so
he keeps using the word merch.
1:59:44
You can hit him up on no agenda
social at Darling Quint Quint
1:59:48
ism. darlin Quinta ism DLNA kW
ENTIS M or email ape at the
1:59:54
diamond heartshaped
foundation.com. I'd like to call
1:59:57
it all douchebags from the
community
2:00:00
dictatorship island prison of
Hawaii to donate donate donate.
2:00:06
Requesting Webalizer bogey bogey
and goat karma
2:00:10
in the
2:00:13
standby 3333 33 or other lizer
out
2:00:29
you've got
2:00:32
William gherkins up. He's in a
pickle for callers Denver,
2:00:38
Colorado 33 Three.
2:00:42
Thanks again, Adam and John, for
the continued delivery of a
2:00:47
fantastic show. I would like
this executive producer credit
2:00:51
another switcheroo to go to that
clip custodian. Oh, that's very
2:00:56
kind of him please the douche
this man.
2:01:00
You've been de deuced Neil,
here's $333 And your path to
2:01:06
knighthood brother. Signed
William gherkin. I was very
2:01:11
nice.
2:01:13
Do you have a no
2:01:17
let me check if I have one for
this. No, I do not have one
2:01:20
either. It's rich. Stuart.
Secure Tino Shortino. Security
2:01:25
no Oakland cow look while you're
reading the next note. Maybe he
2:01:28
gets double karma. You've got
2:01:33
pharma
2:01:39
Caitlin is in Gilbertsville you
Gilbertsville Pennsylvania first
2:01:42
Associate Executive Producer 250
In the morning jingo, anything
2:01:46
by Al Sharpton, and a de
douching for me.
2:01:50
Ben de deuced Caitlin says
sorry, husband, I get the credit
2:01:56
this time. Thanks for the best
podcast in the universe. Can we
2:01:59
have a meow for about 10 years
my younger life My mother
2:02:03
convinced my doctor that I
needed mood stabilizers. This is
2:02:06
regarding SSRIs and
antidepressants. In reality, I
2:02:10
was just struggling because I
was abused by my stepdad. But
2:02:12
thanks mom. For so.
2:02:16
I was on many different types of
medication during these years,
2:02:19
including SSRIs. To make a long
story shorter, the meds didn't
2:02:23
help as I was misdiagnosed, and
then tried to fix the resulting
2:02:26
issues with more meds.
Fortunately, I moved out and got
2:02:30
therapy instead. My experience
is a small part of a much bigger
2:02:33
societal issue. It's a quick fix
world and many parents slash
2:02:37
authority figures do not want to
waste time putting in work to
2:02:40
fix real issues so they resort
to a pill to fix their problem
2:02:44
children.
2:02:45
Powerful chemicals are given to
growing children and troubled
2:02:48
adults and unfortunately this
can have tragic results. I still
2:02:51
see it now as an adult. It's
trendy and normal to be on meds
2:02:55
first and then maybe try
therapy. Many people my age
2:02:58
millennial are shocked when I'm
able to exist without a daily
2:03:02
mental health medicine. Some
truly need it but I believe
2:03:05
these pills are very strong
treatments that are often
2:03:08
overused and misused. Thanks for
the dose of sanity in this world
2:03:12
Kaitlyn, wife of the anonymous
husband and she wanted a
2:03:18
oh, you know what? I'm gonna do
a little bit of this one.
2:03:23
Here you go. For the naysayers,
we
2:03:29
we Jenny Lee down, down, down,
down, down, down
2:03:39
you've got karma. It's a whole
mix. I got the Judea there. Sir
2:03:45
net Ned from Shelby Township,
2:03:50
Michigan. $250, Associate
Executive Producer for him. He
2:03:54
starts off Hi, guys. Hey, guys.
Hey, folks. Hi, friends, hey,
2:03:58
comrades, comrades, comrades.
This donation is part of my
2:04:03
wonderful governor's idea to
refund our money that was
2:04:06
overpaid in car insurance. So I
got $400 for being overcharged
2:04:11
for 15 years plus, what a
bargain. She decided upon this
2:04:17
earlier in the year when
Michigan's insane car insurance
2:04:20
requirements no longer had to
carry lifetime benefits for
2:04:25
serious injury, which Michigan
was I believe the only state
2:04:29
that offered this level of
catastrophic injury coverage.
2:04:34
She claimed lower race as a
result of this requirement
2:04:36
change did not really happen. So
she concocted this plan.
2:04:42
So she handed out checks, but it
totally has nothing to do with
2:04:46
her acting like a dictator
during COVID. Enter approval
2:04:49
rating being in the toilet.
Nothing like using an industry
2:04:53
and consumers money to attempt
to buy votes.
2:04:57
This is one half of the bribe
with 50 bucks.
2:05:00
kicked in for my 50th birthday
on Saturday or on the list Big
2:05:03
Five Oh, I don't think I have
heard any kind of birthday
2:05:08
jingles but I know I always like
the good Reverend whip them with
2:05:13
the Constitution coincidence I
think not the not that doesn't
2:05:18
have or is anything for it's
amazing beat that plus added to
2:05:23
the birthday list and some gold
card would be awesome please
2:05:25
keep up the good work and keep
hitting them in the mouth. Thank
2:05:28
you sir net net. Yes
traditionally for birthday we'd
2:05:32
use this one they always give me
a biscuit on my birthday the
2:05:35
same for future if you want and
of course we have the good
2:05:38
Reverend
2:05:44
you've got
2:05:49
Brittany Baxter is Dame
amazeballs who does not know
2:05:53
where she's in Indianapolis,
Indiana census 230 7.88 We
2:05:57
wonder why Dave amazeballs here
for my 37th birthday on July 23.
2:06:03
This is a meet up promo for
Central Indiana slaves special
2:06:06
events Sunday Sunday Sunday July
24. RSVP for the Midtown
2:06:11
location switcheroo on this
donation. Man A switcheroo
2:06:18
switcheroo on this donation to
secure my smokin hot boyfriend
2:06:22
Josh Springer's knighthood.
Hence for them. Henceforth he
2:06:27
shall be known as Knight of the
bottoms up beer dispenser. And
2:06:32
please add extra hookers and
blow to the roundtable for my
2:06:34
mind. Love is lit. So does he
also get the she says switcheroo
2:06:43
on this donation.
2:06:45
Now I think she gets the credit
he gets the knighthood. That
2:06:50
makes sense. All right. Groovy.
Thank you very much and your
2:06:55
slaves in Central Indiana step
up to the plate
2:07:00
I think he gets the whole thing
but you just liked the idea of
2:07:03
putting amazeballs Yeah, that's
that's my whole motivation John,
2:07:08
I think so. Did Loretto sisters
in boring Oregon 220 266 I wish
2:07:14
he put this name of the city
2:07:20
Oh wow.
2:07:25
Yeah, we know your rim shot
good. Without a rim. Jingles
2:07:30
birthday for my biscuit. Or
otherwise biscuit for my
2:07:34
birthday sleepy Joe noodle gun
de Loreto sisters. Springfield,
2:07:38
Oregon, right in happy 66th
birthday mom. How perfect to
2:07:43
have your birthday today fall on
a show day after exactly one
2:07:47
year of first donating for our
mother Joyce. She will now
2:07:52
become a game today with this
donation of two to 266. She
2:07:56
would like to be called Dame
jazzy of the Humboldt Redwoods.
2:08:02
Thanks for all you to do love
his lit and all that shit. The
2:08:07
de Loreto sisters, they always
give me a biscuit on my
2:08:10
birthday.
2:08:13
He would go here we go.
2:08:18
With
2:08:19
you phrase it
2:08:25
I get to my pasta Glock locked
in loaded.
2:08:30
Mike Robinson full row a duck's
tu tu tu tu tu tu Salem Oregon.
2:08:34
This donation gives me the
rather effeminate sounding title
2:08:37
of Baronet. Please change my
name from Sir fury fury to
2:08:42
Baronet and Michael Robinson.
Oh, it dropped on the pronouns
2:08:45
going with the real deal. I
thought you'd like this little
2:08:48
gem. It's a slide from a recent
webcast with the Joint
2:08:51
Commission, the National
creditor of hospitals, their job
2:08:53
is to make sure that among other
things that we practice evidence
2:08:56
based medicine. In this slide in
the presentation, they made it
2:08:59
100% clear that the evidence
based guidelines are the fourth
2:09:02
most important criteria
hospitals should follow when it
2:09:05
comes to infection prevention.
That's right fourth, first and
2:09:08
foremost, we are here to adhere
to government regulation second
2:09:11
to Medicare rules third to
manufacture instructions for
2:09:14
devices and fourth to actual
science.
2:09:18
Oh, he captures complete joint
commission compliance is gold
2:09:22
numero uno for all hospital
administrators. So what joint
2:09:26
commission so what Joint
Commission says becomes what the
2:09:30
Joint Commission says becomes de
facto law within hospitals? This
2:09:35
puts all that has happened in
the last couple months in your
2:09:38
perspective. Hospitals are told
to obey first and fourth to
2:09:42
check the actual science. Thank
you for your courage. Yes, Mike.
2:09:46
Thank you. That was the shortest
way of saying and I've ever
2:09:49
heard it presented but you there
it is. Science is fourth on the
2:09:53
list. Sounds good.
2:09:56
Come forth with science, Kyle
Raimi and
2:10:00
Canyon Canyon Texas 21722 I'm
getting married today yay. And
2:10:07
as stated in my last donation I
cannot bear the shame of my
2:10:12
bride to be marrying and a
knighted man. So this donation
2:10:16
puts me well over the threshold
of knighthood, threshold a
2:10:18
knighthood. So please name me
terrain man. For the round table
2:10:23
I like to request Rain Man as
the guys who has all the dollars
2:10:27
in the air for the round table
I'd like to request cold beer
2:10:31
and fresh bug free meet
2:10:34
your good here brah No, no. Just
a wedding honeymoon baby, baby
2:10:40
making karma go or Yak,
whichever is more fitting. Also,
2:10:45
please allocate $1 of this
donation to my bride to B and D
2:10:50
do shirt.
2:10:52
You've been D deuced.
2:10:56
So I don't marry a douchebag off
on the right on the cusp. Good
2:11:02
work. Good work Kyle. And for
babies and wedding honeymoon
2:11:08
karma. I we prescribed yak
actually you've got
2:11:17
You'll thank me later.
2:11:19
John Carver is in Sunset Beach,
North Carolina. $200 Associate
2:11:23
Executive Producer ship title
for him. I'll be at the Champs
2:11:26
trade show. Next week booth 2224
Stop by with an ATM and I'll
2:11:31
hook you up little jobs karma
would be appreciated. Champs is
2:11:36
that a strip club?
2:11:41
I don't know what Champs is. So
they might be it might be well
2:11:47
good luck. Sounds like send a
report jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs
2:11:53
for jobs.
2:11:58
Where's this trade show? He
doesn't say anything about the
2:12:01
guy being Vegas almost got to
tell us what's going on with the
2:12:04
champion. More details your job
really. Josh Scanlon comes in
2:12:09
next from Milton, Georgia. $200.
And he says thanks for all you
2:12:12
do to keep me sane gents. My
only request as if any of the
2:12:17
artists could design a t shirt
about the moon landing hoax.
2:12:22
This on no agenda shop. That
would be epic blessings, which,
2:12:28
by the way, coming up, which is
interesting. Good about Artemus.
2:12:32
That'd be epic blessings. Josh
Scanlon in Milton, Georgia. I
2:12:37
got a beautiful t shirt from Sir
Mark. He always whenever he
2:12:41
comes by he always brings a cool
gift.
2:12:45
Like a Russian military map of
GIF or GIF. It's it's a gift. He
2:12:50
gives me a gift. And one time he
gave me a t shirt, which was a
2:12:55
pan of vision t shirt on the
front. You know the famous
2:12:57
camera pan of vision on the
back? It said, actually the
2:13:00
lens? Yeah, the Apollo moon
landing production crew.
2:13:06
It's a beaut I'll take a picture
of it as a beautiful t shirt.
2:13:09
Yeah, of course. Of course. We
need something like that on no
2:13:12
agenda. shop.com. Thank you very
much, Josh. And then finally,
2:13:15
Gwendolyn Wagner is in
Vancouver, Washington. Do you
2:13:19
want to dollars no note from
Gwendolyn, you didn't find one
2:13:21
either. I would have remembered
Gwendolyn if it came in. I
2:13:24
didn't see you with a name like
Gwendolyn world's great names.
2:13:28
Wendling gets a double karma for
that.
2:13:32
Farmer
2:13:35
All right, that's it. Does it?
Thank you very much. Thank these
2:13:39
folks. Please go ahead and thank
them. They're the ones who the
2:13:42
producers and executive
producers really make this show
2:13:45
fly. They do and for that,
2:13:49
for doing that. We give them a
real credit an official
2:13:54
production credit. Looks good
anywhere you put it. Executive
2:13:57
producer no agenda show 1470 or
Associate Executive Producer. No
2:14:01
agenda Show episode 1470 Go
ahead look around just even just
2:14:05
put that into a search engine
executive producer no agenda
2:14:08
show you'll be amazed. Look, do
a search on Twitter. See how
2:14:11
many people have them in their
Twitter profile? You're not
2:14:14
alone. If you think you didn't
What am I doing? This is nuts.
2:14:17
No, it gets work and it gets
chicks it gets dudes whatever
2:14:21
you're looking for chicks and
dudes and dudes. We don't
2:14:24
discriminate chicks and dudes if
you want to learn how to get
2:14:26
some chicks and dudes go here
for.org/and A Thank you very
2:14:31
much for your time town to
treasure for episode 1470 of the
2:14:34
best podcast in the universe
formula is this universe we go
2:14:38
out with people in the mouth
2:14:53
just wanted to mention one news
item which goes back to the
2:14:56
previous lengthy segment about
how nuts we
2:15:00
We've become in the world with
diversity, equity inclusion.
2:15:04
I happen to know a number of
McDonald's owner operator
2:15:08
franchisees. And I know I know
through Tina's work at the
2:15:13
Ronald McDonald House Charities,
because the local owner, very
2:15:17
little for the Ronald McDonald
House comes from corporate I
2:15:20
think 1%, or something's very,
very low. And of course, they're
2:15:24
the branding partner. So a lot
of this money comes from the
2:15:28
local owner operators who pay a
franchise fee. And they raised a
2:15:33
lot of money locally, they do
their local things all for the
2:15:35
local wrong mcdonald house
beautiful, very nice people,
2:15:38
some of them own five, five
restaurants in the Austin area,
2:15:43
and they're just hard working
people and and they really love
2:15:46
the company. However,
2:15:50
the way it works is, whenever
you're ready to give up your
2:15:53
franchise or when it's time to
bring in a new one, you know,
2:15:57
there's a there's a process. And
what you'd expect is certainly
2:16:01
for successful franchisees who
have been doing this for for
2:16:07
several decades, I think they've
had them and they want to pass
2:16:10
that on to the children,
McDonald's said, you know, we're
2:16:13
going to change that right now.
And we're going to have
2:16:17
everybody be on equal footing
for renewal and for new
2:16:21
franchisee licensing.
2:16:24
And what does that mean? Which
means, and they literally had a
2:16:29
whole press release, to ensure
that the ownership of our
2:16:35
franchise locations are diverse
and inclusive. Please no longer
2:16:42
can you pass on your franchise
to your kids. It has to go
2:16:48
through an entire separate. If
they have to go you have to
2:16:51
start at the beginning. And this
has made franchise franchisees
2:16:57
lose their crap. They're calling
for the CEO to get kicked up. I
2:17:01
think he should get kicked out.
I think that's unfair. I mean,
2:17:04
you can't do something like this
first. You make the promise at
2:17:06
the beginning he changed the
rules at the end. This is like a
2:17:09
like a really crummy EULA.
2:17:13
Yes, that would be good. Okay,
I'll do my McDonald's. I got a
2:17:17
big Donald's thing to discuss.
Okay, so about once every six
2:17:21
months I check out McDonald's by
eating by eating
2:17:26
now a couple of things first of
all that McDonald's french fries
2:17:29
have gone into the toilets
because they're using canola
2:17:32
oil. They don't make them
anything like they used to.
2:17:35
They're soggy and lousy tasting.
And I will give a tip here
2:17:39
because I do this elsewhere.
Burger King is making the best
2:17:44
french fries of all the
franchises right now.
2:17:48
It's unbelievable how good their
French fries are. Okay, very
2:17:51
good. Use a little more salt so
but the big test here is my once
2:17:55
every six months and I'm not
going to do it anymore. I've now
2:17:58
ended this this process if you
want to live probably should
2:18:01
yeah. I probably don't eat that
much because I can't finish it.
2:18:06
I bought a Big Mac. Oh, I
haven't eat one of those in a
2:18:09
long time. Oh my god. Well I eat
him once every six months it has
2:18:14
just been getting worse and
worse and worse. And this last
2:18:19
one was so bad dry. The top buns
got nothing on it there's no
2:18:24
sauce down the bottom is very
little of the mayonnaise 1000
2:18:28
Island whatever it is. The
burger patties are really small
2:18:31
and they're dry and it's got too
much wood chips in it. It was so
2:18:37
bad I could not even eat a full
half of the burger and I had to
2:18:42
cut it up and said give it to
the Rossi the dog and did the
2:18:45
dog walk away from it and go
dogs never walk away from it.
2:18:51
So that dog is not a good test
of this I mean if they did that
2:18:54
would be something your dogs no
no it is just disgusting. It's
2:18:58
not even close to being edible.
It's not It's not food, John.
2:19:03
It's not good. No. But it's also
it's just not food anymore.
2:19:10
It's just not food. Well I you
know what? I forbid you from
2:19:14
eating that we need to keep you
around as part of the show.
2:19:18
Not you don't have to forbid me
from eating it. I can't eat it
2:19:25
was horrible. Died no I
sometimes I'll get the
2:19:31
I do have a McDonald's moment
and it's always the same.
2:19:35
First I go through Do you have
any milkshakes if they say no, I
2:19:38
said fuck yeah. And I drive off
the milkshake. Oh by the way, I
2:19:42
do have a ice cream cone once in
a while. But these ice cream
2:19:46
machines they just go date okay
this whole thing some sort of an
2:19:49
ice cream machine scam. They're
not working out. Now that's
2:19:53
that's a whole that there's a
lawsuit about the people who
2:19:56
maintain the machines that was
some that was a scam from
2:20:00
McDonald's was screwed by that.
But what I'm amazed by is if you
2:20:03
watch television at night, you
only get pharma and fast food.
2:20:08
You get the pizza that has the
pepperoni and cheese now in the
2:20:13
crust. Now that come up at
Sonic, they have the double
2:20:16
burger.
2:20:18
Grilled cheese. So it's bread
guys burger cheese bread cheese
2:20:25
burger. Chai bread. Yeah. And
now Now I'm lucky at one of the
2:20:32
new drinks at I want to say
Dairy Queen is
2:20:37
Kay cake batter.
2:20:40
Milkshake of cake batter. Your
drinking cake batter. I have a
2:20:46
huge advantage being in this
area where I am. There's no
2:20:50
Sonics. And there's no Dairy
Queens. You don't have that
2:20:54
either.
2:20:56
out as the city limits you have
to you have to drive 10 minutes
2:21:01
to the city limit. If you want a
Dairy Queen or McDonald's we
2:21:05
only had just not even I've
never seen one in the area. So
2:21:08
where do you go to when you when
you when you do your your your
2:21:12
monthly thing when you go to I
went to McDonald's I go to
2:21:15
Burger King. I went at Taco
Bell's the other one. I tried to
2:21:19
cheesy. They have this new $2
thing. So okay, let me check
2:21:23
this out. It's $2 You know, I
always weigh the food to see
2:21:26
what I get from my money. Mostly
I go to taco trucks to be honest
2:21:30
about for fast food. Well,
that's gonna be better. It's
2:21:33
always better taco trucks are
terrific. But anyway, by the
2:21:38
way, I don't want to get into
tacos again. But
2:21:41
so I try this cheesy double
burrito meat burrito, whatever
2:21:45
it is, is $2. Big, big deal.
This is their advertising on TV.
2:21:49
You know, it's actually edible.
You can choke it down. But
2:21:53
you'll be burping this funny
flavor for like, oh, I don't
2:21:56
know. 8678 hours this is there
it is again.
2:22:01
It's just not worth it. Two
bucks. I don't care. It's two
2:22:04
bucks too much. All right.
Thanks for discussing update.
2:22:07
Let me just do something here
real quick. This is the ministry
2:22:11
of truthiness segment. And the
reason I bring it up is there's
2:22:15
been a story that we haven't had
a chance to talk about, which is
2:22:19
the NPR disinformation team.
Sorry, disinformation reporting
2:22:24
team. Oh, wait, is this the same
NPR that says they wouldn't even
2:22:29
discuss or talk about the Biden
laptop because it was obviously
2:22:33
bowl crap by the Russians here
but that's not miss data group.
2:22:37
You're talking about this NPR
group we're talking about NPR
2:22:40
launches this team to cover
dissident the disinformation
2:22:44
crisis the viral spread of MIS
and disinformation has emerged
2:22:47
as one of the great civic
challenges of our time. Is that
2:22:50
include the Biden laptop from
the lies about the 2020 election
2:22:54
to the growing influence of anti
vaccine activists to the
2:22:57
enduring influence of climate
change denialism, lies and
2:23:01
conspiracy theories have seeped
into nearly all aspects of
2:23:04
modern day life, both in the US
and around the globe. Not long
2:23:09
after the January 6 riot at the
US Capitol, we all set up a
2:23:13
small, we set up a small
reporting team to focus on
2:23:16
disinformation and collaborate
across the newsroom on this
2:23:19
subject. Over the past year and
a half, that ad hoc team has had
2:23:23
many successes reporting on
election disinformation, the
2:23:26
role of the tech platforms and
multi path breaking stories
2:23:29
about COVID disinformation. Now,
we're pleased to announce that
2:23:33
we're making the work of this
team permanent, permanent,
2:23:37
launching with three reporters
and an editor to cover this
2:23:40
vital topic. The mandate is to
seek out original high impact
2:23:44
stories and to work closely with
the many beat reporters in the
2:23:47
newsroom and at member stations
whose work involves
2:23:50
disinformation, sincerely, the
team, which is funny because it
2:23:55
sounds like the management, the
management team, so there's
2:23:59
there was no like clip or
anything. There was no
2:24:03
discussion they didn't have.
2:24:06
No, no, but but I just saw this
article from NPR health news,
2:24:15
which had a
2:24:18
which had a seven minute
2:24:22
programming item attached to it.
And at first, I was like,
2:24:27
Is this going to be any good,
but then I saw that one of the
2:24:29
authors of this piece, one of
the contributors was Brett
2:24:32
Neely, and Brett is one of the
disinfo team members. So this
2:24:39
story, I'm only going to play
about a minute and a half of the
2:24:42
seven minutes. This story is an
example of what this fine
2:24:47
disinformation team at NPR does.
Okay, is that enough setup? Do
2:24:52
we understand what we're about
to listen to? So I don't know
2:24:54
how you can set it up any
better. COVID hospitalizations
2:24:57
are once again on the rise
thanks to a new sub.
2:25:00
variant but not everyone wants
to go to the ER if they get
2:25:03
seriously ill and for Americans
who don't trust the medical
2:25:06
establishment there is a network
of doctors and natural healers
2:25:10
ready to push unproven cures for
COVID and prs. Brumfield has
2:25:15
more on the black market for
bogus COVID treatments.
2:25:18
Stephanie died of COVID but she
didn't have to. Oh was 75 lived
2:25:24
on Long Island. A few years ago,
she was sucked into a world of
2:25:28
conspiracy theories. When COVID
came it got worse. Stephanie's
2:25:32
daughter Laurie remembers what
her mother used to tell her
2:25:35
about the vaccines. Everybody
who got vaccinated is going to
2:25:38
die. We're only using first
names to protect the family from
2:25:41
online harassment. Because she
fears the dead.
2:25:46
That's the daughter talking
about to her mom is dead. She's
2:25:49
dead. She's dead because of
whatever the mom's dead. The
2:25:51
mom's dead because you know, she
didn't listen to NPR. I lied to
2:25:55
us. Stephanie was dead. No,
Stephanie is going to go no,
2:25:57
Stephanie is dead. Stephanie was
the mom. This is the daughter, I
2:26:00
think, oh, and she's gay. Okay,
I just got confused. And I know
2:26:04
it's easy to do with the disinfo
team to tell her about the
2:26:07
vaccines. Everybody who got
vaccinated is going to die.
2:26:10
We're only using first names to
protect the family from online
2:26:13
harassment, because she feared
the vaccine of Stephanie
2:26:16
refusing to get one did that guy
with this plug noses using more
2:26:20
than first names? I'll tell you
right now. Because she feared
2:26:24
the vaccine. Stephanie refused
to get one. Then just before
2:26:27
last Thanksgiving, she caught
COVID She was really not feeling
2:26:32
well. And I was like, you know,
just go to the doctor. But
2:26:36
Stephanie didn't go she was
plugged into an alternative
2:26:39
medical network. This small
group of fringe doctors natural
2:26:43
healers, internet personalities
who reject COVID vaccines, even
2:26:48
though the CDC currently
estimates that unvaccinated
2:26:51
individuals are six times more
likely to die of COVID.
2:26:55
There's just more names. papers
in in journals showing that the
2:26:59
vaccines are safe and effective,
safe and they are not. They are
2:27:03
not safe or effective. That's
one of these vaccine denier
2:27:07
speaking on a conservative
podcast. He's a doctor named
2:27:10
Pierre quarry. In his alternate
medical universe. There is
2:27:14
another drug that cures COVID.
It's called ivermectin people
2:27:19
have used ivermectin, their
license had been threatened. I
2:27:21
have eight complaints to my
medical board. I don't know
2:27:24
what's gonna happen to my
license, but there's a good
2:27:26
reason his medical license might
be under investigation. Everyone
2:27:30
from the American Medical
Association to the Food and Drug
2:27:33
Administration tell doctors not
to prescribe ivermectin for
2:27:37
COVID science for everybody. So
there you go. That's what the
2:27:40
disinformation team has been
hired to do.
2:27:44
to rerun 2020 with the same
stuff and damn all the studies
2:27:52
and also marginalize any other
type of medical choice that you
2:27:57
want to make my body my choice
guess not NPR disinfo team just
2:28:02
a small group of these doctors
now I would say the
2:28:07
what is the term for it?
2:28:10
Never term for alternative
doctors. Not alternative.
2:28:15
Goodness, I can say this a
million times.
2:28:19
Anyway, it's huge. It's huge.
People are going away from
2:28:22
Western medicine in droves.
They're learning about because
2:28:26
they're gonna get lied to that's
the problem and so my called
2:28:29
holistic non holistic is not the
term I am by the way, I despise
2:28:34
the term holistic medicine. It's
2:28:39
now homeopathic there's if Tina
were here, she would she would
2:28:44
tell me right away now it's with
a P i think i know P doctors. I
2:28:47
don't know. But it's not. It's
not it's not you know, you're
2:28:53
all logist
2:28:56
I have a mental block and the
troll room is not helping But
2:28:59
anyway, this is there's the I
mean in Fredericksburg alone
2:29:04
there must be five doctors you
can go to who completely you
2:29:08
know look at different ways
2:29:12
of of dealing with whatever has
been has been prescribed and now
2:29:17
that you can blame them for
Stephanie's death
2:29:22
yeah
2:29:25
I'm just surprised that you
know, that's what they're doing.
2:29:27
They should be going after the
Hunter Biden laptop. You're
2:29:30
absolutely right. Oh, then no.
That said that's the Russian
2:29:33
disinformation. Yeah.
2:29:36
What was fun to watch Katie
Turner doing.
2:29:40
You have a clip? i Of course I
do. Katie core you always say I
2:29:44
always say that. Now, I had to
preface this. This is so funny,
2:29:49
because Katy Tur, who is just
just a miserable lackey
2:29:55
functional medicine that she is
a lackey for the Democrat party.
2:30:00
already, yes. And but she's put
she's so naive to it. She
2:30:03
doesn't really understand it.
Some of these people are these
2:30:06
get it? You know? Yeah. Okay, I
vote Democrat, I like Democrats,
2:30:09
I'm pushing Democrats, that
she's just a lackey. And she is
2:30:13
just not the first time but she
is always stunned by the fact
2:30:18
that people will start trusting
the media. And she asked herself
2:30:22
a very important question. This
is some soul searching from Katy
2:30:26
Tur. There was just a Gallup
poll out today that shows the
2:30:29
trust in media and newspapers
and television is hitting an all
2:30:33
time low. People don't trust us.
They don't believe us. And it
2:30:37
makes me wonder if this job as
I'm currently doing it, is
2:30:44
really effective. But if it's
doing more harm than good, I
2:30:50
don't have a good answer for
that. Well, yeah. more harm than
2:30:55
good. I love it. You know, she
should just quit.
2:31:00
Wouldn't be great. If she went,
you know, I realized that I'm
2:31:02
just part of a horrible
2:31:04
going back to the Democrats and
their idea that, you know,
2:31:07
everything's going well, and
they're gonna do well in
2:31:09
December or November, because
you know, everything's lies. Gen
2:31:13
six. I'm surprised you just
didn't go in denial on this.
2:31:16
Have you heard this make any
sense? Have you heard the term
2:31:19
election denier?
2:31:22
No, yeah, that's a big word. Oh,
he's an election denier.
2:31:26
Instead of January sixth.
insurrectionists is just
2:31:29
election denier.
2:31:32
Functional Medicine. That's the
term I was looking for
2:31:35
functional medicine.
2:31:40
There's something going on in
California that you're always
2:31:44
seeing the trains, the trains
coming in from going out to
2:31:48
China coming into China from
China brains everywhere. But you
2:31:51
know, and you've always been,
haha, we have no shortages here.
2:31:55
We are still in markets are
full. Yeah. Well, it seems like
2:31:58
everyone is worried that that's
going to change on Thursday, the
2:32:01
US Supreme Court made news
again, this time by refusing to
2:32:05
hear a challenge by California
truckers to the new law that
2:32:08
requires truck drivers to be
employees of the trucking
2:32:12
companies they do business with
this ruling really took
2:32:16
everybody off guard, especially
the way they had at the speed
2:32:21
that they kicked this back, you
know, essentially made it law.
2:32:25
The problem is nearly all of the
state's goods are transported by
2:32:28
truck, many of which are owned
and operated by individual
2:32:32
drivers. that's especially the
case at the Port of Oakland. And
2:32:36
there's 9000 trucks that serve
the court on a daily basis, and
2:32:39
90% of them are independent
contractors. So this is a big,
2:32:44
big impact. Bill, a booty owns a
B trucking in Oakland. He
2:32:49
employs his own drivers, but
also uses independent
2:32:52
contractors to handle overflow
business, which just became
2:32:56
illegal. Booty says he won't be
able to use trucks owned by the
2:33:00
drivers anymore. It just doesn't
work. You own your own truck.
2:33:03
It's your truck. I can't take
possession of it and start using
2:33:07
it in a case like my company. We
just eliminate owner operators
2:33:11
and just reduce the workload. So
this is a B five, is this not
2:33:17
yet. This is thank you, Gavin
Newsom, our next president,
2:33:20
isn't this the one that was
originally put in place to help
2:33:25
Uber drivers? And then it
subsequently screwed up all the
2:33:30
unprofitable money sinkhole
publications.
2:33:36
And I don't know that it began
because the journalists could no
2:33:40
longer write freelance. They
have to either be normal, I
2:33:43
remember. Yeah. I remember. I
don't know if it's the same law.
2:33:45
But yes, five. Yes. It's a well,
it's, it's trickled down to the
2:33:50
truckers now. So we'll see what
happens. This, this is a
2:33:53
problem. We will get shortages
of the trucks, but it won't last
2:33:56
long. Because if there's 90% of
the people serving the Oakland
2:33:59
port, which is where all the
action is, is busy. Yeah. And
2:34:04
they just say okay, we're just
gonna take a week off. We're
2:34:06
gonna spend Dr. Benton Park the
trucks on the freeway that and
2:34:10
put a stop to it pretty quick.
They'll date this takes some
2:34:12
emergency actions, the governor
will have to take and do
2:34:15
something. Right. This is one of
the idiotic I have another one.
2:34:19
There's an idiotic law.
2:34:22
I mean, we have some, it's just
these lawmakers. And they're all
2:34:27
Democrats to say don't hate
Democrats, but play this clip
2:34:31
from this guy bitching and
moaning about a B 2223. And I
2:34:35
listen to this and I did some
research to see what he's
2:34:38
talking about. Oh, this one?
Yes, I know about this. Play it.
2:34:42
What am I about to tell you is
one of the most disturbing
2:34:44
things you will ever hear in
your lifetime. This is my son at
2:34:48
about 28 days old and right now
in California legislation is
2:34:51
being passed that would make it
legal to club him to murder him.
2:34:55
Yeah.
2:34:59
Wait
2:35:00
Is that I thought the umbilical
cord has to be attached.
2:35:04
He doesn't discuss that and I
didn't run into.
2:35:07
So
2:35:09
to murder him, this bill AB to
two to three would make it
2:35:14
absolutely legal to kill babies
not just in the womb, but now
2:35:19
outside of the womb up to 28
days old. It would also prevent
2:35:25
law enforcement from conducting
any type of criminal
2:35:28
investigation into the matters
of the death of an infant. Many
2:35:33
of us have been talking about
not just being pro life, but
2:35:36
being anti abortion for a long
time now. And people say, oh,
2:35:40
there are people who love
abortion, they just want the
2:35:42
freedom to choose who on earth
would choose to murder a 28 day
2:35:47
old child like mine that I
showed you in that video. This
2:35:50
is the work of demons and we
must bow our knee and pray and
2:35:53
overturn this legislation. This
is phenomenal. This Go ahead.
2:35:57
I've thought scope. So I looked
into it. And what it was it was
2:36:01
one of these, you know, these
states are because of the Roe v.
2:36:04
Wade decision. All these states,
which states, even the ones the
2:36:07
most liberal
2:36:09
versions of abortion law, which
California is among about six or
2:36:14
seven that just pretty much you
know,
2:36:17
you raise your hand you get a
free abortion.
2:36:21
They decided that they better
strengthen these laws and codify
2:36:25
some of this stuff. Because it
was a pretty loose structure the
2:36:28
way it was in the before that.
And in the process of writing
2:36:32
this law, you could just almost
see it happening tick by tick.
2:36:36
They kept amending and what now
we should do this. And as they
2:36:39
amended and changed and changed
the wording and amended. What
2:36:43
this guy said is true. They
amended and screwed with this
2:36:47
bill so much that they will open
up this huge loophole where you
2:36:51
could literally club a 24 year
old a 24. Well, they'd like to
2:36:56
do that too. But 24 day old baby
is club them and law enforcement
2:37:01
can't do anything about it. And
it's in the law. It's easy. What
2:37:04
he says is true. This fits
entirely with this program
2:37:08
called back to the Edwin black,
the new Genex this is new Genex
2:37:13
and here's how it works. You
know, they all decided back in
2:37:17
the 20s gas chambers. Were not
ready for it. Not ready. Wait
2:37:23
wait a few decades. Then they
did the funny farm or the feeble
2:37:27
minded kind of work. That was a
good one. I remember I remember
2:37:31
the feeble minded I vaguely
remember when I was a kid being
2:37:34
taught told about the feeble
mind. Well, it was a thing like
2:37:37
the feeble minded that comes
from the from the feeble minded
2:37:39
history.
2:37:41
You know, the sterilizations
actually, that worked out pretty
2:37:44
well because they just told men,
you should get a vasectomy and
2:37:47
like oh, go do that.
2:37:50
This is true. This is what
happened. And it's logical
2:37:53
because any if you want to call
the race to make it the master
2:37:59
race, which is what I believe
these people really want to do
2:38:02
and to have less people and so
let you know if we're going to
2:38:04
have less people to save the
world and live comfortably
2:38:07
ourselves as billionaires. Then
we need to and hangers on and
2:38:12
then we need to have self
selection. Hey, you should get a
2:38:15
vasectomy. Okay, good. You're
exactly the kind of person we
2:38:18
don't want in the future. Now
this is even better. Because now
2:38:21
and he was stupid enough. Yeah,
this happened. I know a couple
2:38:25
of guys in the 70s when that
book came out of the Population
2:38:30
Bomb. vasectomies were extremely
popular in the 70s Definitely no
2:38:35
not
2:38:36
not for yeah not for birth
control but for pop natural
2:38:41
birth control video girlfriend
but for population control yeah
2:38:46
the do your part like What do
your doggy WHY DO YOU THINKING
2:38:50
do your part but now this is no
mistake this is not amendment
2:38:56
amendment This is what they've
always wanted your kid is born
2:39:00
let's evaluate for 24 days Oh Oh
a little too white up brown hair
2:39:06
and white oh I'm sorry oh. Oh
the head looks a little off oh
2:39:11
man might be dumped club M Club
m this is what they want if
2:39:15
since we can't determine if the
child is going to be perfect
2:39:19
they need to have plumbing
centers yeah
2:39:24
oh shit
2:39:27
yes we can go in and then you
can maybe it takes it take the
2:39:32
baby determined is it clubbing?
Centered
2:39:37
Yes. And then the club them for
you and you don't have to worry
2:39:40
about the agony of doing it
yourself club.
2:39:45
Exactly. Club. Yes. This you
know I don't think it's a
2:39:49
mistake. I think they want that
if you say you know what this
2:39:52
kid doesn't look gay doesn't
make you just introduced a new
2:39:56
element to this to my analysis.
You don't think
2:40:00
This is a mistake no this is not
a possibility that is not they
2:40:03
actually meant for this they're
not gonna reverse this is
2:40:06
California low gives a whole new
meaning to let's go clubbing
2:40:10
everybody. I mean seriously this
is this this could catch fire
2:40:13
this could be a national thing.
The new Genesis have finally
2:40:17
found something that works for
them
2:40:23
as part of the great reset,
John, yeah, reset your Oh
2:40:27
goodness. I have to play this
for you Queen Ursula.
2:40:30
Earlier friend. Ah, I really I
you know what? I wouldn't mind
2:40:35
having a drink with Queen
Ursula. I think if we would get
2:40:38
along just famously. Yeah, but
blondes. Yes.
2:40:43
By the way, Queen Ursula has
eight children. All beautiful.
2:40:48
Part. What? Yeah, yeah, she's
doing her part of repopulating
2:40:52
the Great White race. You know,
2:40:55
Tina is out of town. She's with
a friend in Utah for a couple of
2:40:58
days. And so this means Adam and
Phoebe can sit on the couch
2:41:01
while Phoebe is on the couch.
And we watched Man in the High
2:41:04
Castle. So now I'm almost done
with Season Two. And there's so
2:41:08
much of this, that in a very
creepy, almost historical,
2:41:14
historical context way. Just is
all of this is is in there about
2:41:20
what's the what's the Germans
had if your kid had some kind of
2:41:25
degenerative disease for which
there was no cure big oil or
2:41:29
something and they kill him?
Then they kill him? No, they
2:41:30
kill him off to the camp, kill
them and get rid of them. So
2:41:33
queen, Ursula knows that
everything is changing. She
2:41:36
know. And but she's very, very
excited. Because this? Oh, yeah,
2:41:41
this is a very short clip, this
new world that we're about to go
2:41:44
in has, I mean, the technology.
I mean, we're gonna have
2:41:49
batteries that last for 18 days.
She doesn't say that in this
2:41:54
clip. But that, you know, they
truly believe that this is the
2:41:58
way to go. Technology, it's just
going to solve everything. And
2:42:02
here she is just so excited.
Since the beginning of the
2:42:06
pandemic, we saw an explosion in
digital innovation and the use
2:42:10
of tech, they enabled factories
and the use of Tech Tech.
2:42:16
And the use of tech, they
enabled factories to stay off
2:42:19
tech and the use of tech and
explosion. And the use of tech
2:42:23
you've not seen since the
beginning of the pandemic, we
2:42:26
saw an explosion in digital
innovation and the use of tech,
2:42:30
they enabled factories to stay
open. They enabled companies to
2:42:34
sell their products, people to
access essential public
2:42:37
services, you name it,
2:42:40
we have to keep pace with this
change. And that means that we
2:42:45
will certainly have to write a
new rulebook for the digital
2:42:49
economy and the digital society.
Oh, new rulebook for the digital
2:42:54
economy and digital society a
new rulebook is coming,
2:42:57
everybody. So covering what
she's gonna tell you because
2:43:00
because of the why she just told
you, because of all the great
2:43:05
tech,
2:43:06
the tech. So we come when you
have new tech, you need new
2:43:09
rules for society. So covering
everything, from data to
2:43:15
infrastructure, but also talking
about security, and democracy,
2:43:21
technology, to fair taxation,
taxation, all these are topics
2:43:25
on the table with digital
change. So Ladies and
2:43:28
gentlemans, the need for global
cooperation and this
2:43:31
acceleration of change, will
both be drivers of the great
2:43:36
reset. And I see this as an
unprecedented opportunity. Tell
2:43:41
me it's not real. When the
President of the European Union
2:43:44
says these will be the drivers
of the great reset, tell me it's
2:43:48
not real.
2:43:51
Okay, okay. It's not real. It's
real in the sense that a bunch
2:43:55
of people imagine something's
gonna happen, or it's gonna be
2:43:58
real or they're living in a
dream world. Yes. You want to
2:44:02
hear some dreaming goes deluded.
They're insane, mate. These
2:44:06
people are nuts. They're insane.
Yes. And they're, they're
2:44:11
running things. This is not
good. No, no, that's the beauty
2:44:15
of the times we're living in.
Here's part of the great reset,
2:44:20
you will earn nothing and you
will be happy. Oh man, General
2:44:23
Motors is all in with Klaus.
This is the Chief Financial
2:44:28
Officer Paul Jacobson. I think
the most exciting thing about
2:44:31
the Eevee transformation is it's
fundamentally going to change
2:44:34
the way we make money at General
Motors. Because if you think
2:44:37
about it, the overwhelming
majority of come from the time
2:44:41
that we sell a vehicle to a
dealer, right and in that
2:44:45
vehicle enjoys a lot of revenue
for very different companies
2:44:48
over the life of of it on the
road, what the electric vehicle
2:44:52
and what connected vehicles are
going to do for us in is
2:44:55
increased the revenue
opportunities for us over the
2:44:58
life of that vehicle second
owners
2:45:00
turnover fourth owner, because
we're going to be able to offer
2:45:02
ways through over the air
updates to customize it
2:45:05
subscriptions, various services,
insurance packages, lots of
2:45:09
different ways that we can
interact with the customer in
2:45:12
ways that historically we
haven't been able to how much of
2:45:15
your top line total revenue is
going to come from selling
2:45:18
vehicles, as opposed to the
services that you've just been
2:45:21
describing. So what we talked
about is 20 to $25 billion a
2:45:26
year of revenue in 2030, around
the services that we can provide
2:45:30
going forward. So it's a massive
growth off of what we've
2:45:34
currently experienced with
OnStar historically and really
2:45:36
excited about what that's going
to bring. Yeah, this is and he
2:45:41
literally said, Oh, what's so
exciting about the electric
2:45:43
vehicles is Tesla put in all
this shit and made it by
2:45:46
subscription and people went Oh,
go go go.
2:45:51
You can't argue it's time to
start looking at building hot
2:45:54
rods. Who Yeah, I'm just have a
custom car made the custom car
2:46:00
will be cheaper. Yeah. It'll be
cheaper and cooler and your car
2:46:05
and you'll own it, and you'll
own it. I mean, the last car I
2:46:08
bought which is a 16 year old
car, I paid cash for it. Of
2:46:13
course a great car it's what you
do.
2:46:16
And it's like you know, I'm not
going for this crap. And anyone
2:46:19
who buys into oh so nice to be
it's just the drain and you know
2:46:22
what the real economic reset
where you don't have the money
2:46:25
for this stuff these cars will
be all over the place used you
2:46:29
know there's just junk there
sound this junk I'll wait until
2:46:33
the first battery cars you know
they all gonna get junk they're
2:46:36
all gonna get tossed out after
Max 10 years you won't see these
2:46:40
cars go on forever. They can't
the crap and and what world is
2:46:45
it good to go from raping the
earth of petroleum products to
2:46:49
raping the earth of mineral
products, which we don't even
2:46:53
have in America? It's all China,
India, Africa. Children digging
2:47:00
for cobalt.
2:47:02
Yeah, Kid disgusting. It's
actually disgusting. Yeah, kids
2:47:05
who escaped the clubbing center
can always go to mind Cobalts
2:47:10
club them later after they get
their work done.
2:47:16
I got some uplifting stuff. No,
I'm sure you do.
2:47:20
This talking about the moon
trip. The moon trip? Alright.
2:47:23
Artemis. Yes, the moon. Okay,
now I'm disturbed by these
2:47:26
clips. I barely got three of
them to the third was an option.
2:47:29
I probably won't play it because
the second one is disturbing.
2:47:32
But let's play the
2:47:35
foreground of Artemis you know
we're going to go to the moon.
2:47:37
We're going to take some tests.
We're going to send some dummies
2:47:39
up there. We're gonna do this.
We're going to do that. Let's
2:47:41
play the rundown Artemis Moon
trip one. NASA made a big
2:47:45
announcement today. It set a
launch date for its big new
2:47:48
rocket eventually meant to fly
humans to the moon. This first
2:47:52
test mission Artemis one won't
have anyone on board. But it's
2:47:55
Brendan Byrne of member station
WMF II reports. It is an
2:47:59
important and long delayed
launch. NASA says its 300 foot
2:48:04
tall SLS rocket and Orion
spacecraft will blast off from
2:48:07
the Kennedy Space Center in
Florida. The agency is targeting
2:48:10
three possible launch
opportunities starting on August
2:48:13
29, sending the deep space
vehicle and three mannequins on
2:48:17
a more than a month long mission
around the moon and back NASA's
2:48:21
Jim free this is the first time
that we're going to try and
2:48:25
launch his vehicle we're going
to be careful, we're going to
2:48:27
work hard to meet the attempts
on those dates, and do our best
2:48:31
to position ourselves to have
the confidence in those days.
2:48:36
This launch is the beginning of
a series of increasingly complex
2:48:39
missions aimed at landing humans
on the moon the first since the
2:48:42
Apollo program more than a half
century ago. This mission dubbed
2:48:46
Artemis, one will serve as a
pathfinder testing critical
2:48:49
systems of the vehicle like life
support and its heat shield.
2:48:53
Artemis two will follow a
similar trajectory but with
2:48:56
astronauts on board, and Artemis
three will carry people bound
2:48:59
for the lunar surface. The
agency says those next
2:49:02
moonwalkers will include a woman
and Person of Color
2:49:08
diversity,
2:49:09
new Genex send them to the moon
2:49:15
so let's do it as this goes on
this this report this clip I got
2:49:20
my attention. Now can I just set
the yes it has my attention as
2:49:24
well because the last time we
send someone to the moon I was
2:49:27
about eight years old. I think
2:49:30
it's just always bugged me that
it seems to be so hard to get
2:49:34
back. I I've never really
understood why humans are
2:49:38
bouncing around on the moon.
Here we go. Part Two. With all
2:49:42
large sorry.
2:49:45
It says to kicker do we want the
two kicker.
2:49:50
Is there another two besides
that? Well, no, there's a three.
2:49:53
Now to with all large programs
that NASA runs. It has been long
2:49:58
delayed and it has been
2:50:00
in way over a budget and
continues to be as we look
2:50:02
forward to the first human lunar
landing, which is currently
2:50:06
scheduled for 2025, but is
likely to slip. I'm sorry, the
2:50:10
first human lunar landing the
first
2:50:14
and stored kicker, that's a NASA
spokes woman. All of these
2:50:18
younger NASA people know that we
never landed there.
2:50:25
I don't know why she said that.
Because all the NASA people say
2:50:29
first sense. She should have
said first sense about the
2:50:34
Apollo missions. 50 years ago.
She didn't say that. She said
2:50:37
first. Yes, I know. I'm very did
I very upset by this. I'm happy.
2:50:42
I'm doing a happy deal. I knew
you'd be happy because I got the
2:50:45
clip. And there it is. And there
she's saying it. Yes. But this
2:50:48
is not the first time we've
caught this. No. Do you have do
2:50:53
you have an iPad? I have several
other examples. But no, but
2:50:56
didn't know that at the end of
third clip is just an option was
2:50:59
where the O is there. It says
they don't say anything is yet
2:51:03
Genki because it's just talk,
talk talk. But I was very upset
2:51:06
by this woman making this gaffe.
And then what's even more
2:51:09
upsetting is that she's being
interviewed by an NPR person.
2:51:12
Why doesn't the NPR person
correct her?
2:51:16
Somehow, I mean, there's
supposed to be this big push now
2:51:20
for, you know, fake news. I, I
am of the opinion that with when
2:51:27
you have Elon Musk, Jeff Bezos,
and Richard Branson. All all he
2:51:35
hymns, when you have them
desperately trying to even get
2:51:39
into the atmosphere, get out of
the out of the atmosphere to get
2:51:42
into actual space, which is
highlighted, like oh my god,
2:51:46
it's so great. They went so
high. And it was so that people
2:51:50
don't even know we landed on the
moon.
2:51:54
There's something going on. It's
like a white washing. And
2:51:57
there's clip after clip after
clip of NASA people going well,
2:52:01
you know, we've never really
gotten past the Van Allen belt,
2:52:04
or that's very difficult. And
well, you know, we used to have
2:52:07
the technology but then we don't
have it and we don't have enough
2:52:10
money for remember that guy,
another NASA guy.
2:52:15
Well, they're gonna have to get
their act together, it seems to
2:52:17
me.
2:52:20
Okay, if anyone lands on the
earth, in my lifetime, I will be
2:52:25
surprised. They can't even fake
it at this point. lands on the
2:52:30
earth is what you said. lands on
the moon will make mistakes.
2:52:34
Yeah, but I'm not. I'm not at
NASA at it.
2:52:37
No, it's true. You're right.
You're not with NASA. Back by
2:52:41
the way, it was it was
2:52:43
just a good comeback here. This
is NASA guy. I go to the moon in
2:52:47
a nanosecond. This is actually
this is not just a NASA guy.
2:52:52
This is Astronaut Don petite
astronaut, NASA astronaut Don
2:52:56
petit, I go to the moon in a
nanosecond. The problem is we
2:53:01
don't have the technology to do
that anymore. We used to, but we
2:53:06
destroyed that technology. And
it's a painful process to build
2:53:10
it back again. Going to Mars
should be one of the next series
2:53:17
of steps that humans do. The
first step should be going back
2:53:20
to the moon for a number of
technical reasons and
2:53:25
exploration reasons. And then
after that Mars may be high
2:53:30
orbit in Venus atmosphere may be
going through Europa, there's
2:53:36
all kinds of targets to go to
places of interest in our solar
2:53:41
system. The only limit
2:53:45
to Hubert future is in our own
imaginations. Sure, then we have
2:53:49
the Orion launch, we are headed
3600 miles above Earth
2:53:55
15 times higher from the planet
than the International Space
2:53:59
Station.
2:54:03
As we get further away from
Earth will pass through the Van
2:54:06
Allen belts an area of dangerous
radiation. Except if you're in a
2:54:12
tin can in 1960s going to the
moon to walk around not
2:54:16
dangerous then.
2:54:20
Radiation like this can harm the
guidance systems onboard
2:54:23
computers or other electronics
on Orion. Naturally, we have to
2:54:27
pass through this dangerous zone
twice, once up, and once back
2:54:31
and listen to that music.
2:54:34
But Orion has protection.
Shielding will be put to the
2:54:37
test as the vehicle cuts through
the waves of radiation hooked to
2:54:40
the test that says the board
will record radiation levels for
2:54:43
scientists to study. We must
solve these challenges before we
2:54:46
send people through this region
of space. For this flight, it's
2:54:50
time to head home
2:54:55
NASA video NASA video
2:55:01
We've never been there poorly
managed space operations, that
2:55:07
operationally they're all hung
up on climate change because
2:55:10
that's where the money is.
2:55:13
Let's play the optional third
clip since it's there. An
2:55:16
internal audit last year found
the agency will spend up to $25
2:55:20
billion through 2025 on the
program, with each mission
2:55:24
costing $4 billion per launch,
and there's still much more work
2:55:29
to do. NASA hopes to build a
space station around the moon.
2:55:32
The agency is working with
private company SpaceX to build
2:55:35
the first lunar lander parts for
that moon station still haven't
2:55:39
left Earth as SpaceX continues.
critical flight testing of the
2:55:42
lander still says forcing the
announcement of the launch date
2:55:44
for this first uncrewed Artemis
mission is a big step. It
2:55:47
finally feels real because not
only do we have a rocket and a
2:55:52
mission, we have a launch date
or at least a launch arrange.
2:55:55
The announcement came on rainy
day as another important NASA
2:55:58
lunar milestone. It was 53 years
ago that Neil Armstrong and Buzz
2:56:02
Aldrin became the first people
to walk on the moon. Yeah.
2:56:07
contradicts what was said
earlier in the report. I think
2:56:10
that's what I liked about the
second clip or the third clip is
2:56:13
the space station around the
moon. What are they talking
2:56:17
about?
2:56:19
What are they talking about? I
don't know. I don't know. I
2:56:22
don't know it's a pain in the
acid cost $4 billion just to get
2:56:27
one of these things launched in
the first place you're going to
2:56:29
put a space station around the
moon which means every time
2:56:32
you're going to resupply it is
going to cause $4 billion if you
2:56:35
can even do it because bulk What
are they talking about? Is ours
2:56:40
is going to do a figure eight
maybe go around the moon and
2:56:42
around Earth so you can resupply
when it comes around it's going
2:56:45
to be doing an add on I'd like
to have to look into it I'd like
2:56:49
to look into it. Yeah, please
look into it and also let me
2:56:51
know how we get through the
firmament nothing happens until
2:56:54
you blow through that you gotta
get you gotta get dome, the dome
2:56:59
the dome, you gotta get through
the firmament. I have a clip. I
2:57:03
do want to do.
2:57:05
I want to do this follow up clip
because it was replayed about
2:57:08
Biden going to Saudi Arabia.
2:57:11
And then he comes back and talks
about this Khashoggi bull crap.
2:57:15
This is the clip I wouldn't I
picked up and it was from
2:57:18
Democracy Now.
2:57:21
Amy alert morning, Amy Goodman
clip inbound.
2:57:26
So, but I thought it provided a
very interesting piece of
2:57:29
information that the mainstream
is not discussing. The publisher
2:57:33
of The Washington Post, Fred
Ryan criticized Biden saying,
2:57:37
quote, The fist bump between
President Biden and Mohammed bin
2:57:41
Salman was worse than a
handshake. It was shameful. It
2:57:45
projected a level of intimacy
and comfort that delivers to MBs
2:57:49
the unwarranted redemption. He's
been desperately seeking.
2:57:52
Unquote. during a news
conference after their meeting,
2:57:56
Biden said he confronted bin
Salman over Khashoggi murder
2:58:00
because you're respecting the
murder of Khashoggi. I raised it
2:58:03
at the top of the meeting,
making it clear what I thought
2:58:06
of it at the time. And when I
think of it now, and most
2:58:09
exactly, I was straightforward
and direct and discussing it. I
2:58:13
made my view crystal clear. A
top Saudi official later
2:58:17
appeared to contradict Biden
saying he never heard the
2:58:19
President telling the crown
prince who was responsible for
2:58:22
Khashoggi murder.
2:58:24
So the guy on the scene, just
call him Biden a liar. Yep. Who
2:58:29
is that guy? They don't say who
it is, but I believe he's
2:58:33
probably right. I don't believe
Biden did that either. It's not
2:58:36
that kind of confrontational guy
anymore. Do Old.
2:58:40
Old is not the problem, John,
don't be as he's here, right?
2:58:44
Because Bernie Sanders is older
than he is. He's 80. By sharper
2:58:49
we have a sick president. Yeah,
he's sick. He's sick, demented.
2:58:54
Let's just all say the President
is sick. I'm going to show my
2:58:58
school by donating to no agenda.
Imagine all the people who could
2:59:01
do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be
fun.
2:59:11
And indeed, we do have a few
people to thank for show
2:59:15
1470 I believe it is 1470
Starting with Deborah mascus.
2:59:23
She's in Winnipeg, Manitoba.
2:59:27
Robert Stokes is in and she's
came in with $111.33 By the way,
2:59:31
is another slow day. I want to
point this out to people out
2:59:34
there who want to support the
show. Robert Stokes. His next
2:59:37
was 100 hours from Covington,
Texas. And he does have a little
2:59:40
thing that we have to read.
2:59:43
He she balsams begging for rain
stick but call out my compadre
2:59:49
who should be comrade let's
correct comrade who, who I will
2:59:53
anonymously call John Smith as a
freeloading douchebag
3:00:00
Okay, well, I hope to hear from
Him God Adam Frederick in
3:00:02
orange, Vermont at 66 Eric Adler
808 He's in Punta Gorda,
3:00:09
Florida. And he says boobs and
here comes Sir Kevin McLaughlin,
3:00:13
dukkha Luna lover of America and
blues. He's on his way to
3:00:17
Archduke 808. Locust North
Carolina as even at well 808 And
3:00:23
Bloomfield Township, Michigan.
3:00:28
Sir Dan, The Quiet Man in
Alpharetta, Georgia both of
3:00:31
these people came in at 808 Nice
sir JMO of north central Idaho
3:00:37
6930 threes and Lewiston, Idaho
according to pay pal, Dean Roker
3:00:42
5510 miles per row, or Perrault
in Westminister, Massachusetts.
3:00:49
505 Andrew bends at 5:05am
Imperial Missouri, the following
3:00:56
people then our $50 donors name
and location if we have it,
3:01:01
starting with Craig noseley in
Cumberland, BC, Christy Jones
3:01:07
and coming Georgia.
3:01:09
Christie Jones again in
demorest. Ga
3:01:13
I have a sense is the same
Kristen might be.
3:01:17
She's moving around. She's
moving target. Robert case and
3:01:21
mill spring North Carolina Nick
Stephanie Lukasik in Santa Ana,
3:01:26
California. Julian Robinson
Aptos California, Scott lavender
3:01:31
Scott in Montgomery, Texas,
Daniel laboy in Bath Michigan,
3:01:35
Kevin O'Brien in Chicago,
Illinois. Matthew, Jan Zach in
3:01:40
Sun Prairie, Wisconsin. Deborah
Platt in Waterville, Ohio.
3:01:45
Andrew Sir Andrew gusik in
Greensboro, North Carolina,
3:01:50
Richard Lundqvist Lindquist in
scrim Washington does his first
3:01:54
donation. Thank you, Richard
Kelly Flanagan and McCall, Idaho
3:01:59
and last but not least, Michael
Statum in parts unknown who want
3:02:04
to thank all these folks for
making show 1470 This show that
3:02:08
it is and a couple of make goods
usually because people sent
3:02:13
didn't send the notes and at the
wrong place or forgot that we're
3:02:17
happy to read them. Alan Dix.
Now he is the guy who got the
3:02:22
knighthood from Cersei the night
of the black thumbnails, and
3:02:25
this may be the note of the day.
Yes, my previous however, Navy
3:02:30
chiefs being known for their
vulgarity, CB chiefs being the
3:02:34
worst among them. The title
which was bestowed upon him Hey,
3:02:38
Chief Dix, nice penis, that he
so graciously allowed me to
3:02:42
change it if it were up to him
shall be adjusted to reflect my
3:02:45
current status as a civilian. I
retired from the Navy in 2013
3:02:48
Hanging up my clans and other
spook credentials for good, so
3:02:52
he doesn't really own shit.
Please change my night to the
3:02:55
night of the knowledge and a
roundtable named her sir Dix
3:02:58
Bert Dix, Bert Sachem of dudes
named Ben. I thought the nice
3:03:04
penis remark had faded from
people's memory, but it's my
3:03:07
fault as I brought it up with
him between episodes 1467 and
3:03:11
1469.
3:03:14
Yeah, maybe a little too much
information.
3:03:19
David Vanden Vanden brand or von
Braun could be, this is a $33 a
3:03:26
month donor and he will be
knighted today he reached
3:03:29
knighthood with his $33 a month
congratulations. He will be
3:03:33
known as the protector of the
3:03:36
Frys a Frisco sheeps
3:03:40
big tenderloin steak and a few
Corona beer will do it for me he
3:03:43
says and always think of I
always think if you want to fist
3:03:47
my nuts, that's for you, John
3:03:51
C curfew Corona beers did I get
the big tenderloin a few Corona
3:03:55
beers on a second if I didn't
get it that people always get
3:03:59
pissed off at the roundtable.
Yeah. And then finally we have a
3:04:04
note from John Doe Insta night
from EPA is from the previous
3:04:08
episode. He was writing for FEMA
Region number four and Florida
3:04:12
claim this instant aid. I don't
know how this works, but after
3:04:15
donating I was told I have to
write an email and notify to
3:04:18
claim it. If there is a note. If
there is a note to be read on
3:04:22
the show. Here it is I got
punched in the head by a friend
3:04:25
and true protector of Petaluma,
California. Petaluma is not to
3:04:28
be protected anymore. I still
recover from the concussion of
3:04:32
how reality looks like it's
effing scary shit hat off to
3:04:35
Adam and John and the whole
knowledge of the nation aka the
3:04:38
slaves and their human resources
originally from Moldova, with
3:04:42
your show and while living in
the US I've understood more
3:04:44
about my country of origin than
the whole life. I was living
3:04:47
there. We haven't even talked
about Moldova that much.
3:04:51
That's how good we are. No, I
think he's really seeing what
3:04:55
happens. Here is
3:04:58
you're already Oh, that's
3:05:00
sucks.
3:05:01
Yeah, I cannot understand how we
the humans or the planet have
3:05:05
allowed to be taken for this
kind of a ride, same pattern and
3:05:09
bullshit in every single country
I've traveled through a few and
3:05:13
after a while the questions pile
up also the answers are very
3:05:16
problematic to enunciate loudly
in public spaces. Once you see
3:05:20
through the matrix Land of the
Free Home of the Brave must
3:05:22
remain so. Thank you very much.
And we thank all of our donors
3:05:27
our supporters for episode 1470
Thanks to these producers all
3:05:32
also any producer who came in
under $50 We keep we don't read
3:05:35
those for anonymity but also you
heard a lot of people aren't
3:05:39
subscriptions if you'd like to
learn more about those go here
3:05:41
to vote.org/and Go calm anyone
who needs it you've got
3:05:58
list actually the de Loretto
sisters they Happy Birthday to
3:06:02
their mother Joyce says she
turned 66 which we glean from
3:06:05
their donation about Dame
amazeballs turns 37 on the 23rd
3:06:09
and certain Ned Ned turns 50
years old on the 23rd that's
3:06:13
coming up soon happy birthday
for everybody here the best
3:06:15
podcast in the universe
3:06:26
don't want to be introduced to
title changing just heard sir.
3:06:30
Hey Chief dicks nice penis.
correct the record and Turner to
3:06:33
certain Vicksburg Sachem of
dudes named Ben and serve furry
3:06:37
fury now becomes Baronet and
Michael Robinson dropping the
3:06:40
pronouns very good for you. So
thank you very much. Thanks to
3:06:43
everyone for supporting the no
agenda show and that those
3:06:47
titles get upgraded for every
$1,000 is fantastic. Thank you.
3:06:50
And now we have
3:06:53
one lone Dame and a couple of
nights to bring up so let's get
3:06:57
our big Elton. Oh, I haven't
seen that one in a while.
3:07:03
Mother Joyce, David Van and
brand. Kyle Rainey, Tim marks
3:07:08
and Josh stringer up on the
podium. Ladies and gentlemen for
3:07:11
you we have we have received
your support the no agenda show
3:07:16
and that means you're becoming a
knight or a dame very proud to
3:07:19
pronounce the Kate v as
3:07:23
Dame jazzy of the Humboldt
Redwoods. Sir David Vanden brand
3:07:28
Black Knights or Rain Man sir
Timmy Chang got drink of
3:07:31
margaritas and lovers of Bodega
breakfast tacos and Night of the
3:07:35
bottoms of beer dispenser for
you her first and blow red boys
3:07:38
and Chardonnay cold beer and
fresh bug free meat big
3:07:41
tenderloin steak and a few
Coronas. And of course,
3:07:45
mutton and meat it's on deck
always ready for you. Thank you
3:07:48
very much head over to no agenda
nation.com/rings Give us a place
3:07:54
that we can send this beautiful
ring in the wax that you can
3:07:56
seal your important
correspondence with along with
3:07:58
your certificate of
authenticity. And thank you and
3:08:01
welcome to the roundtable. The
no agenda Knights and Dames, no
3:08:06
one.
3:08:14
Reports two reports. First one
from Central Iowa Sarah
3:08:18
reporting that took place on
June 25. Just better Live better
3:08:23
late than never. Yeah.
3:08:26
They had a good time. Apparently
only four were showed up. But a
3:08:29
good time was had by all the
next one be July 30. And that is
3:08:32
at Sarah's place. So make sure
you check the calendar for that.
3:08:35
And we have a meet up from
Columbus, Ohio. Hi, this is Bill
3:08:39
from the Columbus meetup for the
first one in a few years from
3:08:42
what I understand ever, maybe I
don't know. But thanks for
3:08:44
having us. Hey, this is Nick
executive producer 1469 And yes,
3:08:49
Adam. I am looking to pick up
chicks and my Ford Probe.
3:08:52
Stanley Asuka, thank you Bill
for organizing the Columbus
3:08:55
meetup. So it's a drive all the
way to Cincinnati every month.
3:08:58
In the morning. This is Jess,
this is Anthony. This is Sir
3:09:01
Bubba Hotep Hotep. And Bill This
is Mary Rose and I love you John
3:09:06
in the morning just Josh and
Megan hi this is Debbie love to
3:09:11
John and Adam and Bob in the
morning is Matt thank you
3:09:14
gentlemen. All right, thank you
here's coming up on the
3:09:16
calendar. Today the love free or
die meet up at the rodeo goat in
3:09:20
Houston Texas kicks off is
underway actually as we speak.
3:09:25
The don't block me John C. Five
o'clock Eastern that's in
3:09:30
Charles Carlton place Ontario,
Canada, the waterfront Gastro
3:09:34
Pub.
3:09:36
30 Charlotte's Thursday Third
Thursday monthly meet up seven
3:09:39
o'clock tonight edge tavern
Charlotte, North Carolina. We
3:09:43
have Saturday the Western
Carolina ham fest Hobnob Smoky
3:09:47
Mountain Events Center. All
right hams. That's an eight
3:09:51
o'clock Eastern times. Gotta be
old hams.
3:09:55
Also on Saturday. This is a big
one. There's a two part of the
3:09:58
no agenda Central Texas
3:10:00
float meet Part One kicks off at
11am rockin river rides in New
3:10:05
Braunfels, Texas is right up the
road from us. I'm gonna see if I
3:10:07
can get the keeper to come along
with us. So you'll float, it's a
3:10:11
meet float, you start there and
then you float all the way down
3:10:14
to part two, which will be at
Green River grill in New
3:10:18
Braunfels, Texas. That'll be at
three o'clock central time. So
3:10:22
you can join the meat float and
then you can go hang out at the
3:10:25
grill. And then of course, is
Baron Scott of The no agenda.
3:10:28
armouring presiding. Also on
Saturday, pickled Palooza one
3:10:32
o'clock at blue ghost Brewing
Company Fletcher, North Carolina
3:10:35
South Jersey bug bake off one
o'clock at Miller's Ale House in
3:10:39
Mount Laurel Township, New
Jersey. The mighty Niagara
3:10:43
region 133 On Saturday, Raymond
clinic veterans park fishers
3:10:48
Park Seabees Memorial organize
their Tonawanda New York, Kansas
3:10:53
City, that's a Moray addition.
333 on Saturday Carabas Italian
3:10:57
grill in Independence, Missouri.
We've got Torrance California
3:11:01
with a flight of no agenda. Oh,
three Oh, it's that also be on
3:11:04
Saturday. Dame amazeballs no
agenda Pool Party Sunday, Sunday
3:11:09
Sunday at her secret place. I
have no idea where it is. You'll
3:11:12
have to get on to no agenda
meetups.com along with the
3:11:15
southwest Virginia meet up at
the River Mill Bar and Grill.
3:11:19
Those are just a few of the
meetups that are listed coming
3:11:21
up between now and the next show
day. We're full for July and
3:11:25
August and there's still room
for more no agenda meetups.com
3:11:28
find one near you or start one
if you get to go hang out with
3:11:33
all the Dyson days.
3:11:37
You'd
3:11:39
be triggered
3:11:42
you wouldn't be where everybody
feels the same.
3:11:48
It's like a body like a pod.
What is this shit?
3:11:54
Been? My one of my ISOs won't
load. That's weird.
3:12:01
Tell me something. The file type
is unsurprising. Oh, man, you
3:12:06
cute man screwball type? Okay,
good. horrobin is over. Ogg
3:12:13
Vorbis All right. Morbus you've
got ISOs then I guess I don't
3:12:18
have any like you had no ISOs
Well, I have I have two and I
3:12:22
don't think this one's any good.
Hasta Lavista baby, because we
3:12:27
didn't play the Boris clip of
Boris Johnson leaving so as bad
3:12:30
as bad as bad. I admit his
battery bad. Okay, well, mine
3:12:33
are great, but they're not
enough to do so. I gotta love
3:12:36
it.
3:12:39
Okay, I'm liking that one.
3:12:41
And then I got the one I like
which I think would be a good
3:12:45
end of show right. The end of
the show. You hear this? So many
3:12:47
Americans know how wrong this
is.
3:12:51
Too long. This is two seconds
punches.
3:12:56
I'd love to love it. Come on.
I'm good. Okay, love it. It is
3:13:00
Oh, man is bitter. Ah.
3:13:04
Can you identify the voice and
the other clip? Of the wrong as
3:13:09
this let me see so many
Americans know how wrong this
3:13:12
is.
3:13:14
Yeah, that's a Republican
senator. I think I can't
3:13:19
remember who is it? Congressman?
Congressman, who was it? Jordan?
3:13:23
Oh, yeah. Screw that guy.
3:13:27
I don't like any of those
people. I really don't. I wasn't
3:13:29
gonna say about that. There was
something
3:13:34
no, I forgot. I've got one. I
literally forgot whatever the
3:13:39
hell, you're you're at the end
of it. I'm at the end of my
3:13:41
rope. Okay, let's go with it. I
got a clip here. This is a one
3:13:46
of a kind clip though. This was
this was a supercut of one
3:13:51
person.
3:13:53
supercut of one person. Okay.
Yeah. This is Kamla Harris. No
3:13:59
seeing this right? I don't think
so I cut it way down. Because
3:14:03
it's like first a player saying
this. And then they should they
3:14:06
say this is a clip of what she
says after she got her
3:14:10
acceptance speech for vice
president what she thinks of Joe
3:14:14
Biden. What she thinks of this
is all these different topics.
3:14:18
And in every one of her little
speeches and spiels she says
3:14:22
this over and over. That's why
we're here today. Because we
3:14:27
have the ability to see what can
be unburdened by what has been,
3:14:32
and then to make the possible
actually happen as to believe in
3:14:37
what can be unburdened by what
has been, and we must always see
3:14:41
who we can be.
3:14:43
unburdened by we have an ability
to see what can
3:14:52
what can be unburdened by what
has been a see what can be
3:15:00
unburdened by what has been. We
see what can be unburdened by
3:15:06
what has been. Bring people to
see what can be unburdened by
3:15:10
what has been, who see what can
be
3:15:15
unburdened by what has been. It
is the ability to see what can
3:15:20
be unburdened by what has been.
That will be your acting
3:15:25
president very soon.
3:15:28
Well, then we have we will have
the ability to see what can be
3:15:34
the burden, burden, unburdened
by men obviously, yes.
3:15:38
Perfect.
3:15:40
Well,
3:15:43
here's what's coming up next,
because we're gonna get out of
3:15:47
here. Planet rage is on no
agenda stream tested these
3:15:51
throngs no idea where that is,
but it's on no agenda stream.com
3:15:55
And of course hanging out in the
troll room to continue on
3:15:58
enjoying and trolling.
3:16:01
And of show mixes DS laughs
Steve outwell and Doug Faxon, a
3:16:08
brand new end of show mixer that
we welcome to our end of show.
3:16:13
Looking forward to the next
program which will be in just a
3:16:16
couple of days. We'll do it on
Sunday. Until then, coming to
3:16:20
you from the heart of the Texas
hill country here in FEMA Region
3:16:23
number six in the morning,
everybody. I'm Adam curry.
3:16:27
And from Northern Silicon
Valley, I'm Jesse Dvorak, please
3:16:31
remember us at the vorak.org/na
We look forward to seeing you
3:16:35
back
3:16:37
on Sunday until then adios mofos
3:16:42
and such
3:16:58
at the 40 threes, it's time to
grow up life is better valued
3:17:02
when every day you just show up
I say come on out for the most
3:17:05
fun show in the city watch and
Shannon summers are you
3:17:07
concerned the Feds getting giddy
future's looking bright in
3:17:10
Oklahoma City trying to be to
where he wanted to mo butter the
3:17:14
city longer is that as
everything company afford rising
3:17:17
real estate costs they can that
we don't have city why are we
3:17:20
getting all the smoke? Many
others not jam mea media is
3:17:24
mostly a joke that Hollyweird
stories are getting much worse.
3:17:27
A bunch has just come and me
dummies making me want to curse
3:17:29
too many times suddenly What's
worse, sad I trust the Raptors
3:17:33
head coach for the real nurse
Bible got a lot of history I'm
3:17:37
talking about the best stories
of murder trauma history have
3:17:40
done with all the last one
that's power and that the
3:17:42
married children and some cars
destroyed by family ties. With
3:17:46
no guns. These stories could
never for me parables, fables
3:17:48
Psalms, even these allegories? I
got one more question. Who else
3:17:53
like in the within the promos in
the IG stories?
3:17:58
I said who was lacking or what
gender promos na IG stories.
3:18:06
Torture from the President today
was a clear articulation of the
3:18:09
stakes.
3:18:11
Stand up man.
3:18:14
This is a time of war.
3:18:17
Love just jumping on my left.
3:18:21
Stand up man.
3:18:23
Anything you put on that
property will rain? No one's
3:18:26
ever wondering. I mean, what I
say the questions I sometimes
3:18:29
say all that I mean.
3:18:32
We need more money to plan for a
secondary venue was due this.
3:18:39
Are you talking about this or
not? That's not a logical
3:18:42
question for someone to ask.
3:18:45
I have to say one of the things
that I take solace from is I
3:18:49
don't think you'll find any
European leader who thinks that
3:18:53
I am up to the job. We got a
long way to go because of
3:18:56
inflation because of Putin tax
increase. To drop this hole
3:19:02
is filled with so many places
and meanings significance to
3:19:04
Muslims, Christians and Jews. We
must all be free to practice our
3:19:09
face. Like did you say?
3:19:12
No, I didn't say what I said go
back and read what I said. Are
3:19:17
certain things that are so
consequential. You have to speak
3:19:20
from your heart as well as your
head. I was speaking out
3:19:24
forcefully what I think to be at
stake
3:19:31
was one of my as the one of the
top military people sending in
3:19:35
security the other day a lot of
people died and nowhere near
3:19:39
what did you say? Television
show be good. You must be
3:19:42
kidding are too. too long in the
two to four was
3:19:47
not a joke.
3:20:00
Just because we stand our ground
3:20:10
Oh my dad before you get oh
3:20:17
vaccination
3:20:20
Why don't you off
3:20:25
taking advice from Microsoft
3:20:30
to cause big
3:20:35
again bout the vaccination
3:20:42
vaccination baby
3:21:09
might just fade away
3:21:14
Did we ask
3:21:23
last and talked about
vaccinations
3:21:48
only he'd the media cloud
3:21:57
they died before I get oh
3:22:07
no no no no no
3:22:11
NO
3:22:33
boruch.org/in A