0:00
Everybody's a Nazi.
0:01
Adam curry, John C. Dvorak.
August 14 2022 This is your
0:06
award winning give nation media
assassination episode 1477. This
0:10
is no agenda. unleaded level
headed and broadcasting live
0:16
from the heart of the Texas hill
country here in FEMA Region
0:18
number six in the morning,
everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:21
from Northern Silicon Valley
where we all want to see the
0:24
affidavit and Jesse Devorah.
0:28
Buzzkill. Really, that's all you
can think of there in
0:33
California. Wow. David, David,
man after day, this is the point
0:37
this is the problem. This is a
problem with the M five M.
0:42
They're obfuscating the biggest
news of the century.
0:46
Lead box to No,
0:49
no, no here at
0:51
home. A major shift in the CDC
is COVID guidelines. The agency
0:55
says there's no longer need to
quarantine after coming in close
0:58
contact with someone who's
infected. Also, the agency says
1:02
Americans no longer need to keep
six feet of social distancing.
1:05
Officials say that changes were
announced in part because an
1:08
estimated 95% of Americans 16
and older have acquired some
1:13
form of immunity masks are still
recommended in high transmission
1:16
communities.
1:17
Yeah, well, they're kind of
burying the lede, which is
1:21
there's no longer a difference,
according to the CDC, between
1:25
vaccinated and unvaccinated
people. Done, obviously. I know.
1:31
And of course you want there's a
little
1:33
kicker there. There's a little
kicker in there. Yeah.
1:35
You know, I'm not so sure. I
mean, that's it. I did you read
1:40
this the CDC recommendation
because it really is incredibly
1:44
clear. Well, here I have a
couple of quick clips is just
1:46
short ones, and we'll be done
with it because it's important.
1:49
Also this morning, the COVID
pandemic appears to be entering
1:52
a new phase, a new phase
announcement of sweeping updates
1:56
to its guidelines, on everything
from quarantining to masking.
2:01
Joining us now to help break it
all down in DC SENIOR MEDICAL
2:04
CORRESPONDENT Dr. John Torres.
Always good to have you sir. And
2:07
good morning. So let's start
with three recommendations for
2:09
quarantine if you're exposed and
you test positive, what's what's
2:13
changed here
2:14
and what's prompted the change.
2:16
So one of the biggest things has
changed is what happens if
2:18
you're exposed and you don't
test positive because what
2:20
they're saying right now is
before they divided in between
2:22
vaccinated and unvaccinated,
you're unvaccinated had to go
2:25
into quarantine will they've
dropped that they put everybody
2:27
on an equal basis and now
they're saying if you're
2:29
exposed, don't have some of
those then go ahead and wear a
2:33
mask out and about but you want
to wear a high quality mask for
2:36
the 10 days tested day five if
you test positive then obviously
2:39
you go ahead and go into
isolation if you could test
2:41
negative continue to wear that
well fitting high quality mask
2:44
for the next five days. But you
don't have to quarantine anymore
2:46
vaccinated or unvaccinated.
2:49
I love this new high quality
mask that I'm hearing about
2:52
everywhere. You know what
happened to the n 95? That was
2:57
simple. Everyone got it? You
need an n 95. Why is it now a
3:01
high quality mask? Is there a
new mask on the market? Is there
3:04
a new icon I
3:04
know but it's so funny to watch,
see people out and about
3:08
with high quality masks
3:10
in in the open air walking down
the street by themselves wearing
3:14
one of those duck masks. Just
like what's wrong with you? I
3:19
got two clips on this. CDC lies.
This is on New Tang Dynasty.
3:26
The CDC is admitting it gave
false information about
3:30
analyzing vaccine data and
happened multiple times. But the
3:33
agency says it didn't do so on
purpose. Here's that
3:38
team that analyzes reports
submitted to the vaccine adverse
3:41
event reporting system also
called veirs team is supposed to
3:45
study post vaccine heart
inflammation related to vaccines
3:49
in July. Epic times submitted a
Freedom of Information request
3:53
to the CDC for all reports from
that team. The CDC then said
3:57
there weren't any from before
October 2021. And that a
4:00
connection between myocarditis
and mRNA COVID-19 vaccines was
4:05
not known at that time. That
statement was false months
4:08
before October 2021. The CDC had
already acknowledged a
4:12
connection between heart
inflammation and COVID-19
4:15
vaccines. A spokeswoman Then
said the team began analyzing
4:19
myocarditis in May 2021. She
added that no CDC employees
4:23
intentionally provided false
information, the CDC released
4:28
the report, then there's data
mining, CDC said in January 2021
4:32
that it would perform a specific
type of data mining analysis on
4:36
various reports called
proportional reporting ratio, or
4:39
PRR. But when a nonprofit asked
for the results, the CDC said
4:43
they didn't run any PRRS request
for clarification. The head of
4:47
the various team told the epic
times that they started
4:50
performing PRs in February 2021.
The CDC is now seeing them both
4:55
the original response and the
heads clarification were false.
4:59
They lie
5:02
I don't know why. But as a short
short follow up to that clip.
5:07
They now say they started
performing PRs more than a year
5:10
later in March of this year, and
they stopped at the end of July.
5:14
The CDC hasn't released those
reports either. spokeswoman said
5:18
they misinterpreted the question
earlier.
5:21
Oh, listen to her. But what? Do
you have any PR reports? yet?
5:27
No. Yeah, no. Yeah.
5:29
What? Not intentionally? I mean,
what? Yeah, but here's the best.
5:33
This is exactly the problem.
Everybody wants to affidavit,
5:37
which now gives me some reason
to believe that might also have
5:40
been important to have this dumb
raid, we'll get to that. Yeah.
5:44
Because hey, this is the only
benefit. The only difference
5:49
between myself and a vaccinated
person is that person can get
5:52
myocarditis. I mean, if that's
the benefit you're looking for,
5:56
that is beautiful. Everything
else is equal to more short
6:00
clips on this. Dr. John
6:01
has a lot of parents, a little
kids, I think us included who
6:03
might be confused with all this
stuff come in and feel like I
6:06
met her before, what would you
say to the parents?
6:08
What I would say is, you know,
look at these new guidelines,
6:09
because they have changed for a
couple of reasons. Number one,
6:12
you know, we're two and a half
years into the pandemic. And the
6:14
CDC is also saying 95% of us
have some level of immunity
6:18
either from vaccines or prior
infections. And so we're at that
6:21
stage now where we can pull back
a little bit and for schools in
6:23
particular, they're saying that
the rules aren't quite the same.
6:26
They were before.
6:28
Not quite that mean? Well, here
it is. Yeah, I
6:31
was gonna ask you what is the
CDC position now unmasking in
6:34
schools, a lot of kids started
school this week. So what are
6:37
the schools supposed to do?
6:38
So right now what they're saying
is children in school only have
6:40
to mask in certain situations?
Number one, they're really
6:42
emphasizing community levels. If
there's a high community level,
6:45
and it's a high risk activity,
wrestling games, indoor concerts
6:48
that those types of things want
to wear a mask also in no
6:51
way did he say wrestling games.
What are these? So
6:54
if you're going to be wrestling
6:57
games level, it's a high risk
activity, wrestling games and
7:01
Dorka who
7:02
comes up with that high risk
activity? What can we come up
7:05
with wrestling games, huh? Well,
that's weird,
7:10
despite of, despite the fact
that his usage is skewed. Who is
7:16
going to go wrestling, which is
one of the most strenuous sports
7:20
you can imagine? With a mascot?
Oh, hello,
7:24
Jimmy. Superfly. Now different
wrestling. I'm sorry.
7:31
Remember what that really attic?
Of course. The reference is
7:36
beyond me. Yeah,
7:37
I guess you never watched
wrestling. Back in the day. I
7:40
watch wrestling. You know,
Superfly I remember Jimmy
7:42
Superfly.
7:43
No, it was definitely back in
the day where all the wrestlers
7:47
were local. We had our guy out
here in before before the WWF
7:52
came along with the WWE II.
7:54
Yeah, that's what I'm talking
about. Jimmy Superfly six.
7:56
I don't remember him being one
of the hot shots.
7:58
Yeah, he would get up on the on
the ropes and then he do a
8:01
strong die. While he started it.
He's the OG Superfly.
8:05
Oh, he's not the OG for that.
That goes back to this. Listen,
8:08
he's sick with your Sumo. Okay.
8:12
Let's get we had Ray Stevens.
8:14
Yeah, we had Ray Charles. I
mean, come on. Yeah,
8:19
wrestling games, indoor
concerts, those types of things.
8:22
Want to wear a mask also in
nurse's office because that's a
8:24
healthcare setting and somebody
could be sick there. But for the
8:26
most part, you don't have to
wear masks and if children are
8:29
exposed, they no longer have to
test to stay or stay home. They
8:32
can go to school as long as they
wear high quality well fitting
8:35
masks and a day five the test
8:36
again again, the high quality
mask. I think no agenda shops
8:41
should make some new masks that
just has printed on it. High
8:43
quality mask.
8:45
Absolutely you that is a
marketing genius. Right on the
8:51
front of the match. It says high
quality high. High quality
8:55
maths. Yeah, it should have all
three words in case anyone
8:57
wonders. Yeah.
8:58
What are you wearing that high
quality mask? Oh, hold on a
9:02
second. I have a genius idea.
Well,
9:07
let's see.
9:09
Can we can I get in quick enough
here? Why don't we see if we can
9:13
get high quality mask.com?
9:17
May be the answer. High
9:20
quality mask.com Let's see high
quality make sure I spelled it
9:25
right. Let's see. Are we lucky?
are we lucky? Let's see. Yeah,
9:30
Nailed it. Nailed it. Nailed it
another $3 a year for
9:40
so it should say high quality
maths. Where can I get one and
9:43
it should have underneath the
URL? High quality maths.com
9:47
which of course will go to no
agenda show.net It's the best
9:52
marketing gag in the universe.
Now maybe you just said no, we
9:57
should just send it back to the
no agenda. Shop
10:01
When they put the high quality
masks out
10:06
Okay, so now we have to kind of
transition because there's a lot
10:09
of a lot of things happening.
10:11
But you have no more CDC COVID
No,
10:13
I have COVID That's what I'm
talking about. Yeah, I gotta be
10:17
COVID Yeah, well, I got COVID I
got COVID I got the monkey pox.
10:20
I got the polio, I got
everything. I'm a mess. So
10:24
myocarditis, we know that you
can get that from the COVID
10:28
vaccine that has now admitted it
was known when they said they
10:30
didn't know we just heard that.
We have to trust New Tang
10:34
Dynasty. Let's have a quick
listen to the king. Peter
10:38
Makala. Regarding monkey pox
vaccine.
10:41
Shockingly, when the monkey pox
story started to evolve. We
10:46
heard a report that the US
government had actually
10:49
purchased 13 million doses of
the Jennie O 's vaccine, the
10:54
genius vaccine. So wait a
minute, that genius vaccine was
10:57
coming along in 2018 2019. And
in fact, this is a Live
11:04
Attenuated Vaccine. And with it
in a study of over 3003 people
11:10
in the package insert you know
what the trouble is. myocarditis
11:13
are heart inflammation. And now
there's already reports of heart
11:18
inflammation with this vaccine
Caniff and colleagues reported
11:23
in 2018 heart damage with the
product and a young man age 36.
11:28
Now, the interesting thing is
clinically, though, the people
11:31
who are at risk for dying are
young individuals with HIV. We
11:36
can't use live attenuated
viruses in people with HIV
11:39
because they're
immunocompromised.
11:41
So ironic to just tell me that
I'm not nuts. And that this is
11:46
some sick joke, where the whole
marketing effort of the monkey
11:51
pox vaccine was towards highly
sexually active men who have sex
11:57
with men. And there's probably a
likelihood of HIV which is
12:02
pretty much undetectable because
of the prep. And people do live
12:07
normal lives. But they're
compromised perhaps from it also
12:11
compromised. Being double
boosted double jab, and then
12:15
we're going to market something
which has known side effects of
12:17
myocarditis, which some of them
may already have. This is this
12:21
is
12:22
gay aside.
12:26
Yeah, when I heard this, I heard
this clip, too. When I heard
12:29
this clip, I said, Yeah, it
looks like but it's part of the
12:32
long term movement away from
gays toward queers.
12:36
Yeah, but you didn't they don't
have to kill him. Yeah, they're
12:39
killing them. It has. It's so
obvious. Let's kill them.
12:44
Oh, my goodness. My heart hurts
when I hear this. Okay. Well,
12:48
good to know everybody. Thanks
for telling us after everyone
12:51
stood in line for weekends on
weekends on Danny
12:56
in line like get Oh, yeah. To
get the shot. Oh, man. I get the
13:01
last shot. That's great.
13:04
I got the last one. They they
only had 3 million. Last one
13:07
available. Sad. All right. So
monkey pox, vaccine. Administer
13:17
with caution. Now let's go to to
the Twin Cities. London, New
13:22
York. My goodness, what's going
on?
13:25
Public health officials are
warning the presence of polio
13:28
virus in New York City's
wastewater means the disease is
13:32
likely circulating locally.
They're urging those
13:35
unvaccinated to get immunized
immediately. In New York City.
13:39
86% of kids five and under have
received three doses of the
13:43
vaccine. Right in some areas
that number drops below 60%.
13:48
This comes just three weeks
after a man was paralyzed with
13:51
polio in Rockland County, New
York. The US is first case in
13:55
nine years. officials fear
hundreds could be infected. The
14:00
likely culprit. Vaccine
hesitance, the polio vaccination
14:04
rate in Rockland County is just
60% compared to the nearly 79%
14:09
statewide, polio used to disable
1000s mostly children each year,
14:15
but was largely eradicated in
America through mass vaccination
14:19
programs starting in the 1950s.
Doctors say people need to be
14:23
proactive about making sure it
doesn't spread.
14:26
If we can go back to having very
high standards with regard to
14:32
making sure that people are
vaccinated and making sure that
14:35
the immunization rates are
better. That's our best method
14:38
of protection.
14:40
And most people who get polio do
not have visible symptoms about
14:43
one in four though, develop flu
like symptoms, including fevers,
14:47
fatigue and headaches. And
according to the CDC, about one
14:51
in 200 polio infections leads to
paralysis. So let's just
14:57
talk about this because there's
something missing in In these
15:00
news reports, and I have a very
similar one a much shorter from
15:03
the UK. What's missing is when
did we stop inoculating for
15:09
polio? Isn't that a standard?
Isn't that in the standard
15:12
package of 60 that every child
gets these days?
15:15
Well, I think you bring up a
good point because there's this
15:18
sit there inoculating kids for
all kinds of crazy things. Six
15:22
like you said, there's like 60
Before your six, just one shot
15:27
after another after another,
some parents opt out of a few of
15:30
them. But for the most part,
everyone's all in and you're
15:33
even know what these things are.
They're just one shot after
15:36
another huge number of
vaccinations when I was a kid, I
15:39
think we had six year
15:41
two children because I'm sorry,
here children usually get the
15:45
inactivated polio virus vaccine
IPv at ages two months, four
15:50
months, six to 18 months and
four to six years. Holy shit, we
15:54
we got like his a sugar cube
son.
15:58
I don't know if they're giving
the sugar sugar cube out
16:00
anymore.
16:01
I doubt it was probably some MK
Ultra experiment. It was nothing
16:05
to do with Polio. But But my
point is said it doesn't appear
16:11
that we stopped inoculating it
for and I know people are saying
16:15
they're getting it from the
vaccine, maybe maybe. But all in
16:19
all, I'm hearing in
16:20
Africa where that was the sure
to be the case. That's they
16:23
don't
16:24
know what I'm hearing. But what
I'm hearing them say is, Well,
16:26
the problem here is vaccine
hesitancy. So you're telling me
16:30
that of all the bullshit they
want to give to children 60s,
16:33
and give to children? Yes, just
one that
16:37
totally Oh, that, you know, I
draw the line of polio?
16:40
Yeah, it doesn't make sense.
It's, it's a report that it
16:43
needs. That presents more
questions than answers. That
16:48
sounds like bullshit. There's
something amiss, here's the BBC.
16:51
But the discovery of these
samples in sewage in London,
16:56
suggests that there is someone
out there who has polio, there
17:01
are definitely people that have
polio inside their body, whether
17:04
they have what you've Nestle
called symptomatic polio. So
17:08
there's nobody in London that is
symptomatic. Or there might be
17:11
somebody in London, that is
sick, and it's being confused
17:14
with something else. But not
only do we think that at least
17:18
one person's got it inside their
bodies, another multi people,
17:21
multiple people have because
this has cropped up more than
17:24
100 times in samples.
17:26
So Okay. We've learned this
trick, asymptomatic polio, huh?
17:33
Me. Okay, so I'm just trying to
figure out, where's this all
17:38
coming from? So we have, and I
have to kind of go back to the
17:41
source, our 2012 show, I think
it was where we looked at the
17:46
big Goldman conference for
vaccines, the medical
17:50
conference, and they were all
jacked up about all this great
17:53
stuff, we're going to give
people stuff before they're
17:55
sick, and it's going to be
beautiful. And of course, the
17:59
one shot fits all. That's always
been the dream. And finally, the
18:05
Maderna CEO. And we should
probably point out that Maderna
18:09
was, you know, financed by Gavi,
or it was a GAVI or Cepi, one of
18:15
these two that, you know, is all
set up by the Gates Foundation.
18:17
So Maderna they're really I
think, more in the licensing
18:20
game and Pfizer's in the
marketing game. Maderna, of
18:25
course, does have its own
product to steal to stay
18:27
reliable, but I think they're
just the licensing arm. Here's
18:30
the CEO telling us the future
18:32
future of the COVID vaccine to
look like for adults, when it
18:35
comes to schedule, dosage
makeup, you know, you mentioned
18:39
basically, that you're looking
to make sure that folks are
18:42
protected against multiple
different strains, multiple
18:45
viruses right
18:47
around the time viruses that
circulate in the world. So when
18:52
you take a fast look through of
COVID, some don't repeat, we can
18:56
put in a single product, a lot
of amount is taking care of all
19:00
those viruses. And that's once a
year to be able to get an annual
19:04
booster single dose that does in
the vial, all those amounts for
19:09
all those virus that are of
course adapted to the strain of
19:13
a season like flu, like COVID
strain and stuff. And the idea
19:16
is a bit like the iPhone, where
as we know, you know, a lot of
19:21
us buy a new iPhone every every
September, and you get in new
19:25
apps, and you get refreshed
apps. And that's exactly the
19:29
same idea which is you'll get
COVID and flu and RSV in your
19:33
single dose and you get what's
the best science of moments to
19:37
protect you for the strain
circulating now and in the for
19:41
winter. So we can combine all
those things and provide to
19:45
people around the world the
annual booster so only one shot
19:49
so in case it was hard to
understand yes why
19:53
why do all these guys sound like
stabbed rose Blofeld from the
19:57
Bond series known as dip And I
expect you to die. What is it
20:02
with these accents with these
guys? These guys are not
20:05
trustworthy. Well, that seems to
be no,
20:08
no, that's that's life imitating
art, you know? Yeah, they're all
20:11
They're all. They all come
across as evil. But I love his
20:16
his analogy Oh no, no, you'll
get one shot a year. And it'll
20:20
be just like upgrading your
iPhone. It's not like we haven't
20:23
said immunity as a service.
We've talked about this for two
20:26
years. We were on to this game
right away. immunity as you get
20:31
refresh your apps.
20:34
Refresh your apps. Oh my
goodness, bull crap. Yeah. Yeah.
20:40
He says it with a straight face.
20:42
So he said, Hold on a second. So
he said 10. There are 10 viruses
20:46
in the world. So let's do a
little process of elimination.
20:49
So the ones that we know that
they'll put into their
20:52
wild, there's more than 10
viruses in the world, but go
20:55
ahead.
20:56
Exactly. Well, so we can start
predicting. So we've got number
21:00
one, COVID number two, monkey
pox. Number three, polio, number
21:04
four, flu? Number five, which
you mentioned there, RSV. So
21:09
what should 6789 and 10 be? I'm
going to say avian flu.
21:17
I'm going to say Ebola.
21:20
We need three more. What else do
we have?
21:26
AIDS. Let's just throw it in
there. AIDS or HIV?
21:32
I need two more. John, what
other horrible diseases will it
21:35
cut? Because this way we can
predict what the next outbreak
21:38
is? We actually HIV has to be in
there. We already had the rare
21:41
HIV in the Netherlands.
21:44
I think this is
21:46
predicting the 10 whatever the
10 or they could be 11. It could
21:50
be nine. futile. Okay. He said,
what you're doing
21:55
all right. I'm expecting Ebola a
maybe a good aids outbreak,
22:00
something like that. And of
course right now the there'll
22:03
be some you know what, there'll
be something new scarlet fever.
22:07
Ooh, Scarlet, be something new.
Oh, what's this? Oh, it's a new
22:12
outbreak of scarlet fever to
just showed up in Africa. At the
22:18
fort Dietrich outlet there. The
Congo,
22:21
the fort Dietrich mall outlet,
where everyone picks up their
22:24
viruses. Yeah. Now the World
Health Organization, just to
22:29
reiterate, is now asking for the
public's help in renaming the
22:33
monkeypox.
22:36
This was settled with MPX
analysis. I'll play the clip and
22:40
open the clip now and they
renamed it MPX. And now all of a
22:43
sudden they have to rename it
again.
22:45
Yep, because MPX wasn't right.
They should just name it what
22:49
they want to call it Trump pox.
That's what they want it to be
22:52
Trump pox. Trust me. If they if
they could have their way.
22:57
That's what it would be. And now
this thing is confirmed to be
23:02
passed on to a pet dog for the
first time. Poor dog for poor
23:08
dog.
23:10
Who knows what's gonna die with
monkey pox? Oh my god, I think
23:13
it would be miserable.
23:14
Have you seen any of the Tick
Tock videos of people with
23:16
monkey pox? It's not it's not
cool.
23:18
Not gonna watch ticked up. Why
would a watch such a thing? Do
23:21
you watch rose? Yeah, but did
they show the pubic area with
23:26
old boils? No. or anything?
Disgusting. We'll see that
23:31
it's just on their face and
their hair and on the chest. And
23:35
yeah, there's just one flight
attendant, who now has to
23:39
quarantine in his hotel room and
like Tucson for three weeks. I
23:44
guess it takes a long time for
monkey pox to end or he just
23:46
doesn't want to go out. I can
understand that too.
23:49
Is it all over his face?
23:52
Yeah, yeah, it's on his face.
Not pretty. That
23:54
wouldn't be good.
23:55
I'm pretty pretty. Alright,
let's talk affidavit. So I got
24:00
the big array Baby B grade.
24:06
Hello, Michelle, we
24:07
are on this raid. Well, before
he goes, I do want to play this
24:12
little clips a little side since
we're talking about the medical
24:14
thing. claim my Fauci effect. Oh
yeah, she is out of control.
24:18
You've heard this. Yeah, this
24:20
is pathetic. This is a very,
very pathetic man. Here we go.
24:24
People go to medical school. Now
people are interested in
24:27
science, not because of me
because people most people don't
24:30
know me who I am. My friends
know me. My wife knows me. You
24:35
know me, it's what I symbolize.
And what I symbolize in a, in an
24:40
era of the normalization of
untruths, and lies, and and all
24:46
the things you're seeing going
on in society from January 6 to
24:51
everything else that goes on,
people the craving, for
24:55
consistency for integrity, for
truth and for people caring
24:59
about people. You It's called
The Fauci effect, which is sort
25:02
of like, you know, trust me,
I'm, I don't get excited about
25:07
that. I mean, it's nice, but
25:11
okay. There's nothing called the
Fauci effect. Was he kidding?
25:16
I think we actually have a
report from a long time ago.
25:21
That might have been called the
Fauci effect. I remember
25:27
something about it. But here,
here's the here's the problem.
25:32
This is something that if even
if you're a narcissist like
25:35
Fauci, you want someone else to
say about you, you want someone
25:39
else's you want the host of this
interview, to say, Hey, man,
25:44
this is fantastic. This Fauci
effect is so cool. You don't
25:48
want to give away the name. It's
like, I will never say, oh,
25:52
yeah, I'm the pod father. Now.
I've never done that. I accepted
25:57
when people call me that, but
it's lame. It's incredibly lame,
26:01
and it's narcissistic. Here's
the other thing. When you hear
26:05
this guy talk, I can't do it.
But I'd love to pull it through
26:08
a processor. This is the devil
speaking. This is literally the
26:11
devil. The devil is lying lying
to you in this Wouldn't you
26:17
agree? I want to hear it again.
Because just think this guy has
26:20
fucking horns. And he's got and
he's got a tripod and he's got a
26:24
tail, and he's ugly, and he's
breathing fire. He's the devil
26:28
and the devil would lie like
this. People
26:30
go to medical school. Now people
are interested in science, not
26:34
because of me, because people
most people don't know me who I
26:37
know. We know. crisis. People
don't know me, it's what I
26:41
symbolize. And what I symbolize
in a, in an era of the
26:47
normalization, of untruths, and
lies, and, and all the things
26:52
you're seeing going on in
society from January 6 to
26:57
everything else that goes on,
people the craving, for
27:00
consistency for integrity for
truth, and people caring about
27:04
people. It's called the Fauci
effect, which is sort of like,
27:07
you know, trust me, I'm, I don't
get excited about that. I mean,
27:14
it's nice,
27:16
man. Yeah, I'm glad. I'm glad
you had I saw that you had it.
27:21
So I didn't clip it myself.
Otherwise, I would have brought
27:23
it it's just mind boggling.
27:26
What lies it's crazy.
27:30
It's unbelievable. Before we get
started on all the affidavit and
27:34
other stuff, let's play Oh,
yeah,
27:37
I do have two more things before
we go that yeah, go ahead.
27:40
Oh, okay. Well, once you play
that because I haven't a John
27:42
Pierre, who, I guess, what's her
name? She doesn't she's never
27:46
she doesn't she's not read in on
anything.
27:49
Oh, let's do John Pierre. Let's
let's do Sean.
27:52
I just want to do I get a bunch
of them. But this one here. I
27:54
want to Blake
27:55
Wayman. You have a bunch of John
John Pierre Kareem Abdul
27:58
VanDamme.
27:59
Yeah. And this one jpk I call
him JP. Here's where she's not
28:04
read in and listen to one uses
the raid word.
28:08
I can tell you this. He was not
aware of, of, of, of, of the was
28:17
at the MAR a Lago raid and I
don't know what you guys are
28:19
calling it.
28:19
Oh, man, she screwed that up so
bad.
28:24
Okay, can I tell you what I
think happened? I think I think
28:27
they read her in and they said,
Look, these eight holes, Trump
28:32
called it a raid. It wasn't a
raid. We need to diminish that
28:36
shit. We mean, you know, we need
to make it sound like these guys
28:39
made it up. And she completely
blows it completely blows it let
28:46
us hear that but
28:47
you can see her grasping for it.
She because she's. And
28:51
yes, because she couldn't
remember. She could might not
28:55
have been able to remember the
word but or that was her lame
28:58
ass attempt at acting. Trying to
pretend Oh, wait, what was that?
29:03
You know, they've done this
before from the podium. from the
29:05
podium. They've done stuff like
I'm sorry, I don't even know
29:08
what you're talking about. Yeah,
I don't know. I'm not familiar
29:11
with.
29:11
They have done a number of the
redhead. Silly. I don't know
29:17
what you're talking about. So
this again,
29:19
I can tell you this. He was not
aware of of. of the was at the
29:28
MAR a Lago raid I don't know
what you guys are calling it
29:33
you know, they spent a lot of
money on training her to I heard
29:36
it like $50,000 in consultants
for media training.
29:41
So that just makes it worse.
Yes. Yeah. Right. Because what
29:45
happens when they're over you
know, the implication is
29:48
constantly you don't know what
you're doing. You're no good.
29:53
It's very hard to to train
somebody using media trainers on
29:59
somebody that's Is that is that
bad way to do it is to back off.
30:04
Yeah. And let her become
supernatural. So she's just like
30:08
kind of relaxes. Yeah. If she
could relax, she relaxes. If
30:11
she's not going to ever relax if
you get somebody breathing down
30:14
her neck, no, she's
30:15
got to stick up her butt as is
so but the problem is she never
30:20
got critiques that she's going
through. And I feel a little bad
30:24
for her because she's the
product of MSNBC fawning. Like,
30:27
oh, she's a black woman. And
she's smart, because that's
30:30
literally how they would talk
about with those exact words.
30:34
Yep. MSNBC host, not a host but
a guest, a permanent guest. And
30:41
as she would say, the dam does
stupid things. But oh, and they
30:44
fall over themselves. And as she
explained just a waltz in here,
30:49
with no training whatsoever it
actually doing something like
30:52
this. She's never been a press
secretary and
30:54
look at what she's falling apart
over Peter Doocy. I mean, I like
30:58
Ducey, but he's not really the
predator like journalists type
31:02
guy.
31:02
He's not like a costa How could
she fall apart over that guy?
31:06
Like, shut up to see if anyone
could could put him in his
31:09
place? All right, let's do more
of these. I have love ragging on
31:14
her.
31:15
Okay, well, then i She also
brings in the Putin price is
31:18
another short 10 second clip
31:21
per gallon from at least one gas
station. President Biden
31:26
promised he would address
pullins price hike at the bow at
31:29
the pump. And he has,
31:32
well, you know, they they got
some of that right. You know,
31:36
the price went down, regardless
of why they said prices going
31:40
down and it went down and now
they're able to call that
31:43
Yeah, well, good for them. Now,
the thing that was good about
31:46
this last press conference was
there was a woman from some
31:49
African newspaper, who called
her out I got two clips of this.
31:53
This went on longer than you
when
31:56
a white woman or a black woman,
black woman,
32:00
a black African,
32:01
how like, how did you how did
she get in? I mean, as far as a
32:05
group, I mean, okay, John, Carl,
whoever it is she a backbencher.
32:09
She's a backbencher. Weighing
the best She's totally a
32:11
backbencher. It's the press
corps operation.
32:17
Typical Democrats you know black
in the back.
32:21
So they have this woman and so
she came in she started asking a
32:24
question Why aren't you calling
on black people and she gets
32:28
into a beef
32:29
with her when she's not calling
on Black Black Journalists.
32:32
black Africans
32:35
oh man oh who said mom in
32:39
it? It is because she is a one
of those John Pierre is one of
32:45
those Mediterranean ministers
32:48
from Haitian she's from Haiti
get
32:50
hate she's a Haiti Haiti girl
Haiti so here we go this is jpk
32:53
Africa when this where she first
introduces the complaint jumpy
32:59
or then says you're gonna call
her she never does call on her
33:02
ever and walks but but here
listen to her she here's where
33:05
it starts. What question
33:07
for Africa three.
33:08
I'm gonna come back guys.
33:09
Thank you. We always have to beg
for patients Africans the third
33:15
questions as well for me
33:22
I couldn't hear what Corinne was
saying. But I heard
33:25
her No, I heard her saying I get
back dish she's heard that she's
33:28
answered somebody else yeah, so
then that goes on and on and
33:32
then the woman doesn't get any I
tell you gotta pick on me never
33:36
does she should have said circle
back. So here we go with it with
33:41
it with gets a little heated
here
33:46
Okay, I'll take I'll take a
couple more questions. Okay, I'm
33:49
gonna take I'm gonna take you
guys okay give me a second let
33:58
me ask you for your time and
even when you give questions to
34:02
families because the force we
don't need to force the question
34:05
we also deserve to have a
question I will get I will get a
34:10
guest African repairs
34:12
on Afghanistan. Okay. Last year
that
34:19
can you start again because
someone was was yelling
34:24
violation.
34:27
man Okay, first she let some
white dude mansplain over her.
34:32
And then and then it Karina
Abdul says I'm sorry someone was
34:37
talking over you? Well, of
course there was outrage in the
34:42
court.
34:43
And so what happened after this
was then the woman was tried it
34:48
one more time I don't have the
rest of this goes on for a long
34:51
time. She never picks on or even
though she promised you would
34:55
write at the beginning. And then
she closes the books and when
35:00
walks out and they kill the mic
so you can hear her yelling and
35:02
screaming. I'm sure she was.
Yeah, so little beef going on
35:07
there. It was pretty poorly
handled very poorly, very poorly
35:11
handled, but great for our show.
Excellent job. So talking about
35:15
screaming, I'm just going to do
a quick call back for a minute
35:19
here because I do want to play
this. You know, we've been
35:23
talking about doctors not being
able to hide the dead bodies
35:26
anymore. And now a lot of
doctors are saying, and nurses
35:30
and other medical professionals
are coming out of the woodwork
35:32
and saying, Okay, we can't stand
for this, we have to tell you
35:34
what's going on. And this was at
the Australian Medical
35:38
Association's Conference, which
had a whole bunch of doctors and
35:43
you know, in a big hotel,
ballroom, all with masks on it.
35:46
Some of them were their white
coats. And Dr. William Bay did
35:50
this.
35:53
Oma I'm sorry, my colleagues of
the AMA. My name is Dr. William
35:58
Bay. And I'm a GP registrar.
36:03
And I'm here today to ask you to
join with the people of
36:07
Australia and stop forcing these
vaccines on people who are
36:12
getting killed by them. Doctor,
Professor Paul Kelly is a liar.
36:17
He is gaslighting all of you.
And there is only a 0.27%
36:23
fatality rate with the
infection. And natural immunity
36:29
has been proven recently in a
Qatar study that it gives you
36:32
97.3% immunity for life against
all variants, all GPS, all
36:40
doctors of Australia, you are on
notice by the people of
36:44
Queensland. This is the
Queensland people's proaches.
36:47
And you have been warned, boom.
36:54
I like this, but a bunch of
these. I haven't heard that one.
36:57
But that's definitely at the top
of the list of goodwill. And
37:00
it's important,
37:01
you know, so even this African
lady, and I'm sure there's a
37:04
reason she's not being called on
she must have some because I
37:10
have to submit the questions
beforehand. Everyone knows this.
37:13
It's still still a little play
this put arm you'll follow up
37:17
questions may differ, but
they're prepared. That's why she
37:19
has a binder. There's something
about this African lady. That is
37:23
there's a problem with her.
37:25
Yeah, she's got a question that
they can't answer. Correct. Or
37:29
don't want to address?
37:30
Do we know what outfit? She's
from? What?
37:32
No, we have no clue.
37:36
That's too bad.
37:37
I'd love to get a hold of one of
the reporters in the room. And
37:39
they would probably know I'm
sure everybody knows, send a
37:42
note. Ducey probably knows who
it is. Hey, they probably all
37:47
know the question. Yeah, a
37:50
couple of quick things, just to
mention, daily source code
37:55
turned 18 yesterday. That was
the first episode of The Daily
38:01
source code, arguably one of the
first podcasts if not the,
38:05
although I'm told Robin Williams
on on on Audible. That was two
38:11
years earlier. And that was
podcasting. Apparently,
38:13
according to
38:14
everything is podcasts, audible
38:17
and hash passed away. Which was
It was weird. It was kind of
38:24
unexpected, because everyone saw
her on the stretcher moving
38:26
around.
38:27
You know, they started jumping.
She almost jumped off this.
38:30
Yeah, sure. Yeah, she popped up
on a stretcher, we saw these
38:33
videos, and she's grabbing it
something. So that doesn't sound
38:37
like somebody's brain
38:38
looked like she was trying to
open a body bag that she was in.
38:41
Honestly, that's what it looks
like. But maybe that was a
38:44
burned bag. And you know, if
you're severely burned, man you
38:49
going in, they might have to put
you in a coma. So we don't know
38:52
what happened. But you know, and
then the big conspiracy theory.
38:57
Why would there be a conspiracy?
Oh,
38:58
there's about a dozen. Hey,
okay. There's a conspiracy
39:00
theory. And Elon did it? No, no,
no, no, they killed her. Because
39:07
they they wanted to stop the
movie. The lifetime network
39:11
movie that is coming out in
September, which lifetime
39:14
network has said will air as
scheduled, which is about human
39:18
trafficking in America. So
that's why they had to kill her.
39:22
I have my issues with that since
39:24
they killed her and the movie
still coming out. It seems like
39:27
that conspiracy is pretty lame.
39:29
Now I just want to give an hush
props for her role in wag the
39:33
dog. She may have been a little
wacky, but that was that's one
39:35
of my favorite movies
39:37
is one of my favorite movies.
39:39
We have confirmation she'd
gotten
39:41
if you look at our wiki page,
besides the fact that you really
39:45
see that she's a troubled person
with a misleading miserable life
39:51
could be despite all her
stardom. She did work a lot I
39:55
never thought about until I
looked at her wiki page. You'll
39:58
see she was working every year
she did a movie maybe too, and
40:02
she did a lot of TV she worked a
lot so it wasn't like she was
40:06
you know that. Well, I would
take it to the snow reason for
40:09
having to drive around a Mini
Cooper. But okay.
40:15
It was a it was a country man.
40:19
Totally Hey, it was a little
upscale mini scale Mini.
40:25
If you live in the city, if you
live in Los Angeles may be handy
40:28
to have a small car.
40:29
It may be handy to have an
electric car seems to me I
40:32
believe the
40:33
country man is electric, which
might answer the question why it
40:36
burst into flames? Towards a
hybrid at minimum,
40:42
that is an electric or no,
40:44
there's a hybrid as a hybrid. I
think the former New York banker
40:47
had once he this is what I'm
saying.
40:49
Like he had a yes he me Yes sir.
Yes, he would. He had
40:53
the country man. He would drive
it every day and he felt that
40:55
was cool. He got to understand
these people.
40:58
Have you ever been in one of
those and driven Yeah, he drove
41:01
me in it. They're they're very
roomy. They're surprisingly
41:05
roomy, but they just seemed
cheap.
41:09
Yeah, it doesn't actually say
hey, hey baby, you know doesn't
41:13
say check out my mini cooper
baby
41:17
have been the Lambo.
41:21
Far from a Lambo
41:26
along with your rundown,
41:27
Oh, okay. We have confirmation.
You no longer need a ticket. You
41:33
could just need ID and you can
go through
41:35
to today. We got a note
yesterday several several notes
41:38
yet that said no. You just go
into your Yeah, they get some
41:41
new computer system. It's just I
guess it goes through the
41:46
because you have to have your
exact same name it otherwise
41:49
you're a carer.
41:50
No, no, no, no, you don't need a
ticket.
41:53
He's no, you just need your ID.
But you need an ID with your
41:55
name on it.
41:56
I understand. But you don't have
to have a ticket associated with
42:00
it. You can go to the gate and
meet someone now if you want to
42:04
stand in line for three hours. I
mean, it's not like whoa, this
42:07
is so cool.
42:10
That's the difference.
42:14
I have to report and like I says
passports work.
42:17
Passports work fine, too. Yeah,
exactly. Exactly. Okay,
42:24
correction on the COVID Dez. I
was trying to figure that out
42:27
and I wasn't doing a very good
job on the last episode. So here
42:32
is the exact statistic this one
is what came out of the
42:35
Netherlands. One out of every
800 People over 60 Who gets
42:40
vaccinated dies. So not 60 of
801 out of 800
42:46
oversight via the 60 mix yet but
that's why that's why it sounds
42:50
about right now I have a
correction to make on the
42:52
newsletter. I said that shall
Solomon rusty. Rusty rusty
42:57
Salomon, Rusty salmon was
stabbed in New York City but
43:02
that was a typo. And it was New
York not New York City. Oh, gee,
43:06
did people. Yes. I've had other
blunders in there. And then
43:11
people notice nothing. I didn't
check. The New Yorkers are very
43:15
well, yeah, they're in our town.
43:19
Then I got one of my favorite
emails, which I'd like to share
43:22
with you. We won't be able to do
anything with it for this show.
43:24
But I do want to play this a
quick recording. This is from
43:28
Amy producer, Amy. Adam. I
thought it was time to kidnap my
43:31
niece again for a child abuse
audition reel. She was so
43:36
excited when she heard herself
on the show. That she goes
43:41
around saying this is going
nowhere and I do not have a
43:44
little head. I can't remember.
Did we have her on one of her?
43:48
One of our producers children
going I don't have a little
43:51
head.
43:52
I don't remember that. No,
really? We talked about little
43:54
heads. Yeah, this
43:55
is Zika. She's an excellent
little troll on this audition
43:59
reel. So if you need any ISOs
for Sunday show, here you go. So
44:02
I just wanted to play a couple.
See if you like any. I think
44:05
you'll enjoy this real.
44:07
Hey, John. Guess what? I'll
punch you in the face and you'll
44:11
like it. Let that sink in.
44:15
I think that is pretty good.
44:17
Suck It Up butter cup. You can
be a drug to get hit in the
44:24
mouth. This is bogus.
44:27
Okay, see now now she's moving
into the divorce tech realm
44:29
where I think it gets good.
44:31
gotta be kidding me.
44:34
John, do you realize what you're
doing to these children? Like do
44:36
you realize what you're doing to
these four children
44:39
is improving their lives? Yes.
This one's
44:43
doing very well.
44:45
Even listening. This is
44:47
my favorite. Because that um, I
know you say that to everyone
44:51
including me.
44:51
Are you even talking about
another one talk or seen Joe?
44:56
What a piece of crap. Drop day
Okey dokey rd jokey stop trying
45:03
to make pod happen. I
believable. This is going
45:08
nowhere. A yose MoPhO
45:12
sourcing there's three in there.
I think there's a couple good
45:14
ones and I think this child will
have a bright future.
45:18
She says she's got a clear
voice. Yes. Which is very
45:21
important do very big very
important to have a clear voice
45:25
if you're going to do this sort
of thing. A lot of kids very few
45:28
kids do their mumble. And she
has a clear voice, which is very
45:33
important. And she could
probably now that she's all
45:37
jacked up about doing this. She
could probably move into
45:42
voiceovers and what would be
really cool. A kid doing
45:47
voiceovers. Yeah, that's money
in the bank and it's only short
45:52
lived.
45:54
You hear that Amy? Get on the
stick girl. Now, this is the
46:00
kind of fun we have with the
children have no agenda nation
46:03
out in the rest of the big bad
world. Like I don't know the
46:06
Children's Hospital of
Pittsburgh. This is a kind of
46:09
fun day like to have.
46:11
Hi, my name is Priya DAR. I'm
one of the doctors at the Center
46:14
for adolescent and young adult
health care at the Children's
46:16
Hospital of Pittsburgh. I wanted
to talk to you guys today a
46:19
little bit about puberty
blockers. puberty blockers are
46:22
basically a medication that says
hey, let's just put a pause on
46:26
puberty. And that can be really
beneficial for younger kids who
46:30
have already started the puberty
process who either might go
46:34
through a lot of psychological
distress as they go through
46:37
puberty if they're struggling
with gender dysphoria, or for
46:41
somebody who's saying, Hey, I'm
not really sure if I feel
46:44
comfortable in my body or, or
what gender I truly identify
46:48
where
46:50
you can also do that with kids.
Yeah, that's actually one of a
46:53
series.
46:54
I know. Have you seen the CDC
the entire CDC series?
46:59
No, I'm talking about from
that's that hospital. A
47:02
Children's Hospital has a series
of these by that. I think that
47:05
woman's doing most of them. I
haven't gotten a whole No,
47:07
no. The CDC has a series of 20
Maybe more. One minute, one
47:13
minute by getting your yeah
getting Yeah, what's what's
47:16
vaginoplasty?
47:18
Puberty is? Yah, TchI somebody's
going through puberty. In other
47:22
words, they're their hormones
are changing. They're changing
47:24
their bodies changing their
47:26
brain, their brain has changed
their brain
47:29
everything's changing. And oh my
god, it's uncomfortable. Yeah,
47:33
she they're having all kinds of
they having some issues with
47:36
this. Yeah, hello, do
47:38
you remember? Okay, so these
days, going through puberty
47:43
means going through this? Oh,
what's my gender? What's my
47:46
pronouns? Back in the day with
the Partridge Family? When Danny
47:51
was going through puberty, you
know, they had to cover up for
47:54
his voice changing that was that
was the horror of the day. How
47:59
far we've fallen.
48:02
That woman who did that clip
should be shot.
48:07
Careful now careful now before
you know it will be on the list.
48:11
Okay, she shouldn't be shot. No,
she should have her head shaved
48:15
and washed down Main Street
naked. Exactly. That would be
48:20
better with them that I would
48:21
actually would be better that's,
that will come become a martyr
48:25
that
48:27
that will come will happen.
48:31
Shameful. It's shameful that
somebody would. Just it's the
48:35
nihilism of the human condition.
You go through puberty that's
48:39
what you do. That's where you
get your deep voice if you're a
48:43
male, if you're a podcaster if
you're a podcast
48:48
if you're a net caster, you get
someone else
48:51
now some guys don't have the
voice they don't have the voice
48:54
you gotta have the voice if you
got the voice you got the
48:57
squeaky voice I like my squeaky
voice Yeah, onward anymore these
49:04
these little
49:05
little little ramps little
giraffe little gems. No, these
49:10
are my little gems for now. i We
can choose I think we should
49:14
probably do RAID stuff. Since
we've not we've gotten through
49:17
the actual news now let's let's
find out what's going on. I
49:21
thought the funniest you know,
because the M five m now has to
49:25
punch back at this highly
successful move by Trump to
49:31
position the FBI just as looking
like a bunch of dicks. and scary
49:36
at that and Americans don't like
it Americans do have some kind
49:40
of in the back they think you
know CIA is different I think
49:43
that's hard for most Americans
to
49:45
see as bad done a good job CIA's
done a marvelous job of keeping
49:50
in the shadows. Yes, I mean,
that's always been their
49:53
specialty. That's what they do.
Even their even their budgets is
49:57
always surprised when we get
this guy like this. Make Mullen,
50:00
Evan McMullen who is going after
Mike Lee and I have gotten a
50:06
whole lot and and he's doing I
think he's doing an excellent
50:09
job of it. He's got press
releases coming up. Mike Lee has
50:13
one of the worst now inspiration
Mike Lee. Mike Lee the bike Lee
50:18
this conservative Utah senator.
50:20
Oh, the CIA guy.
50:22
No ca guys Evan McMullen.
50:25
Okay, so Evan McMullen is going
after Mike Lee's spot in the
50:28
Senate. Is that what you're
telling? Yeah, okay. So
50:30
they will make moles they're
gonna play also.
50:33
He ran for president. Yeah, that
guy. Oh.
50:38
So Mike Lee when he's giving him
a run for his money, because
50:41
Mike Lee's operation I can tell
you from experience because I've
50:44
called them is incompetent and
boneheads, and it's got to be
50:49
Mike Lee's fault. which
surprises me because I thought
50:53
he would because I saw him on a
Trump campaign once and he was
50:55
like, just phenomenal on stage.
Even though he's very, you know,
50:59
soft spoken he was I started off
anti Trump and he was became
51:03
came around pretty quickly, but
his operations such you can't
51:06
find his press liaison guy
finally dug him up on through
51:11
one of the subcommittee's that
there was name was finally
51:14
there, and I looked him up on
LinkedIn. And he just was
51:17
brought on board he doesn't do
anything for Mike Lee's got some
51:21
issues with the seven big molars
pulling all the strings but Evan
51:24
big Molan ex CIA, covert
operative Evans
51:28
undercover from now on we'll
call him Evan the Fed.
51:32
So Evan, the Fed is just
bragging about his CIA
51:37
experience totally alien to me
from all the things I've seen
51:40
about this jig as they shut up.
They don't put themselves out in
51:44
front and brag hours recover
hours undercover CIA covert
51:49
operations, which is what this
guy keeps telling everyone
51:52
like Malcom, Nance. Yeah, he's
51:55
like melago Nancy, foolish shit.
And so and he's milk toasties I
52:01
got no personality that I can
tell. And go and ask him. How
52:07
does
52:07
he fit in? How does he fit into
the raid and all this?
52:10
Well, I'm just saying the CIA
guys. Okay, I got you. I was
52:14
making the point that there tend
to be in the background except
52:17
for this Evan McMullen character
who just goes on and on about
52:21
being a spook. Yeah. Which
52:25
I'm sure there's the they did a
strategy session on it. They
52:28
said, Okay, this is how it'll
work. People trust her
52:31
they did people trust it, but I
don't know what they're thinking
52:34
because it doesn't work for me.
But But Mike Lee's operation
52:37
being such Boneheads? Yeah, I
mean, I sent it I called once to
52:42
get some to get some insight of
the way Lee voted. They say, oh,
52:46
there's a form. There's no press
office, there's a form, you can
52:50
just go ask that. And bla bla
bla, I should read you the
52:53
letter. I got back. Thank you
for being a good citizen, some
52:57
canned piece of shit. They sent
me back. And I clearly
53:01
identified myself as a member of
the media day don't care.
53:05
I think I'm going to answer all
my emails like that. Thank you
53:09
for being a good citizen.
53:11
I like yeah, that's like, you do
that anyway. So but the so I
53:17
think they got issues. But to
bring the point back to what I
53:20
was trying to explain, the CIA
doesn't do this. I don't know
53:22
why they're doing it with this
guy.
53:24
Okay, so the FBI. I think
there's enough history, you
53:28
know, the CIA people see, like,
maybe they killed JFK, but that
53:31
was long time ago, FBI. And now
we know about Hoover and you
53:35
know, the kind of the history
of, there's been problems and so
53:38
I think that's more believable.
53:39
Well, I've got a I just have
never clicked from the last
53:43
show. play this clip is really
educational is the history of
53:47
the FBI told by an FBI guy and
one of the talk shows
53:50
Okay, hold on history of the
FBI. Yeah, it
53:53
is. It is wholly depressing.
Look, it was just a few years
53:56
ago, where the FBI enjoyed
favourability ratings lead of
53:59
95% in the US public, and
obviously it's not the same.
54:05
Now. Look, going back. Let's put
this all into context. FBI
54:09
Director J. Edgar Hoover was
born in 1895. The FBI began as
54:14
as the Bureau of Investigation
in 1908. And Hoover was a 29
54:18
year old kid, if you will, in
1924 when he took it over. When
54:23
he passed in 1972. He had a 48
year run spanning eight
54:28
different presidents from Calvin
Coolidge all the way to Richard
54:31
Nixon. Congress rightly after J.
Edgar Hoover passed away decided
54:36
to put a 10 year term on FBI
directors. Director Hoover did
54:40
many good things. And he also
did some insidious things. And
54:44
we've hoped that we've advanced
the ball and gotten better and
54:46
better as an as an agency. Look,
the 2016 election brought the
54:51
FBI back into the crosshairs
because of the charges of
54:55
partisanship or partiality or
bias from senior level men.
55:00
Bruce, there 36,000 employees in
the FBI 12,000 FBI agents, I can
55:05
assure both of you and the
viewers of this right now. The
55:08
vast majority of them are good
people, honest brokers. They're
55:12
following the evidence bereft of
fear favor. Yes. There have been
55:16
some folks in the upper echelon
to put their fingers on the
55:19
level, we hope that they've been
called to account. And if
55:22
there's something involved here,
we'll certainly call that out,
55:25
too. I just think it's too early
to make a statement right now on
55:29
where we are, but I'll caution
you this, Vlad, we better have
55:33
the goods.
55:34
Did he say Vlad? Vlad,
55:37
this Russian Russian propaganda
clip ends with I promise your
55:42
flat.
55:44
Alright, so I was watching a
bunch of other things. And by
55:46
the way, when they when they
talk about the FBI, the code is
55:51
for the guys, the bad actors.
It's the code is seventh floor.
55:56
Right? That's, that's where the
management is. Okay, hold on a
55:59
second. One, I'm going to
disagree with this guy. You
56:04
know, this people always will,
you know, they're not all bad.
56:08
The Democrats, they're not all
bad. The Republicans are not all
56:10
bad. The FBI, lots of good men
and women bullshit. These good
56:15
men and women need to become
whistleblowers, and they know
56:17
it. So you should walk away,
find something else.
56:20
Total agreement with Dad, if you
are a good guy in the FBI, and
56:26
you see something going on,
that's illegal. Minimally, you
56:31
should be a whistleblower.
56:33
You got to be so that's but
that's not happening. And it's
56:35
and it was like the same with
doctors. And same with teachers
56:38
and everybody who's afraid for
their own livelihood, etc.
56:41
Although we're seeing some of
that change now that it comes
56:43
down to life and death in the
medical field. What could this
56:48
could also be taking into
account CIA is in control of
56:53
this White House was in control
of the Obama White House was in
56:56
control of the Clinton and the
Bush White Houses. It was the
56:59
CIA in the Bush White House.
They may be wanting to do away
57:04
with the FBI once and for all,
and they may and there may be
57:06
some without really saying that
there was obviously no
57:12
collusion, any collusion between
Trump and the CIA, I think it
57:17
behooves them because they hate
the FBI. They think they're full
57:21
of crap and policies and nancies
and whatever. And they've got
57:26
goods into CIA wants to run at
all. All of the stuff that Trump
57:30
has that he declassified, and
we'll talk about that in a
57:33
second. He's all about the FBI
spying, FBI contractors, FBI
57:41
having offices at the Democrat
lawyer's office, you know, FBI
57:46
targeting people, FBI, FBI, FBI.
This is this is the
57:50
documentation that Trump wants
to put out. And I should
57:52
probably explain the way I see
the situation is, yes, the
57:56
President can declassify
anything and these documents
58:00
were declassified no redactions,
but the process, there is a
58:05
legal process is where all the
intelligence agencies are the
58:09
ones that are mentioned in these
documents, they get to do a
58:13
redaction or say no, they have
some kind of veto. And that's
58:17
why this shit has never gotten
out, even though it's been
58:20
declassified. And maybe, you
know, who knows, maybe Biden can
58:23
reclassify whatever it is, it's
that information that is
58:27
publicly available. I mean, you
can find it it's just not like
58:30
it doesn't feel like it's the
the official documents or
58:33
there's there's a lot redacted.
But you can see how many
58:37
Americans were spied on through
the NSA. Remember it was Admiral
58:41
Keith Alexander the true
whistleblowers whistleblower,
58:45
who said Hey, hold on a second.
There's FBI contractors in here
58:48
searching for Americans targeted
by subjects and from and to and
58:54
we have to stop this and he did.
So that's what the FBI may be
58:59
the ones on the ropes here. And
and that would kind of explain
59:04
stories like this from ABC. Oh,
man. Yeah, that way. Well, let
59:09
me do this. Let's wait let's do
the one targeting the FBI first.
59:14
Here we go. This is also ABC.
59:16
This morning the investigation
into Ricky Schiffer. The man
59:20
authority say tried to breach
the FBI Cincinnati field office
59:24
is focusing on social media
posts apparently linked to
59:27
Schiffer that called for
violence in the days after the
59:30
FBI search at Mar a Lago. ABC
News has reviewed a series of
59:34
recent posts to accounts
believed to be shippers on
59:37
former President Trump's social
network truth social, the posts
59:41
CALL FOR MORE And for FBI agents
to be killed on site. In one
59:46
post yesterday, Schiffer
appeared to detail is failed
59:48
attempted to enter the FBI
office writing it is true. I
59:52
tried attacking the FBI.
Previous social media posts also
59:56
claim he was present at the US
Capitol during the January Six
1:00:00
right and reportedly mentioned
the proud boys. Just after 9am
1:00:06
Yesterday, Schiffer dressed in
body armor with an AR 15 and a
1:00:10
nail gun tried to break into the
visitor screening facility
1:00:13
right did you see a nail gun?
1:00:15
Yes, this is something that is
kind of gotten my attention to
1:00:19
it. Let's listen to it again and
we'll stop it on.
1:00:23
Dressed in body armor with an AR
15 and a nail gun tried to break
1:00:27
into the visitor screening
facility when they say nail
1:00:29
gun looks like a bluster gun
with a whole bunch of nails and
1:00:33
like one of those that
1:00:34
means what is a nail gun is a
nail gun and
1:00:36
actual nail gun. Just yeah,
shoot.
1:00:39
Did he have did he have nails
1:00:40
into wood?
1:00:41
Did he have a tank with him on
his compressor with him outside?
1:00:46
I just beyond me this nail
getting in no one's explained it
1:00:50
they just keep telling us he's
got a nail gun. I love to have a
1:00:53
nail gun.
1:00:54
I like the idea of starting of a
compressor outside running the
1:00:57
hose and coming in.
1:00:59
Attach Ching Ching is to nail a
door and whilst you're by the
1:01:04
way should mention this book.
It's called the wedge by Mark
1:01:08
rebilling. And it's it's came
out in 2002 and it's from Pearl
1:01:12
Harbor to 911 how the secret war
between the FBI and the CIA is
1:01:17
in danger national security Ooh
the wench very wet just wed
1:01:23
wedge, the wedge wedge who wrote
the famous this guy Mark
1:01:28
rebilling, who's now at the
Manhattan Institute. And he is a
1:01:33
which is started by spooks. I
1:01:35
have a con i have a contact
there at the Manhattan
1:01:37
Institute.
1:01:38
Do you know I would go Manhattan
group was started by William
1:01:41
Casey before he became the head
of the CIA during the Reagan
1:01:45
that whole outfit CIA
1:01:49
It's seems to be maybe it is
also neocon it's a it's a
1:01:56
thing of the wrong one. I
thought I thought it was the man
1:01:58
the Manhattan club use of
Manhattan
1:01:59
Manhattan Institute Manhattan
1:02:02
Institute it's
1:02:02
a conservative think yes.
1:02:04
I think I think I know some big
donors. Well
1:02:07
if we okay. What what what
1:02:12
would you say like okay, like
like,
1:02:16
like you said you have a thing I
said okay,
1:02:19
now he went oh it doesn't matter
how it doesn't matter. I
1:02:23
misunderstood Okay good. Oh,
good.
1:02:25
misunderstand, they're just
saying okay, you probably do
1:02:27
have somebody that worked. I
mean, there's a lot of people in
1:02:30
and out of that place we gotta
get some info from them now. I
1:02:33
don't know we're gonna get
anything it's just I think it's
1:02:36
I hate you know me. Drinking
club Hello. Well, this
1:02:41
is the former This is not the
former This is the Hollywood
1:02:44
executive.
1:02:45
Mark rebilling No,
1:02:47
my friend the Hollywood
executive. Oh
1:02:48
that guy. Oh really? Once you
get to do the Manhattan
1:02:52
Institute
1:02:52
Hello this is I'm gonna ask him
to find out. Okay.
1:02:58
He's concerned he is a
conservative so conservative is
1:03:01
concerned let's get to anyway
back to
1:03:03
the nail gun. I am reliably
informed there are modern
1:03:06
battery operated nail guns. Who
knew I need one?
1:03:11
Why What are you going to nail
next time
1:03:13
is self defense. Go please get
me some deer. Know I need to see
1:03:22
a demo with these ar 15
1:03:24
and a nail gun tried to break
into the visitor screening
1:03:26
facility he was unsuccessful
when he fled that area. He then
1:03:31
fled 60 miles down a highway in
a Ford Crown Victoria selling a
1:03:35
car for the FBI for about seven
1:03:37
OJ What the hell is this is very
weird report in a Crown Victoria
1:03:42
since when do they mention this
anymore? But a Crown Victorias
1:03:47
hold and by
1:03:47
the way, so didn't say anything
about this. I didn't hear this
1:03:50
report that you're playing. But
the couple of things in it. One
1:03:54
was he met he was at this
January 6 Of course you're gonna
1:03:58
make that association which has
got nothing to do with the rate
1:04:01
and Mar Lago Bell. Okay, so
let's mention it. And then he
1:04:04
meant he said he talked about he
mentioned the proud boys. What?
1:04:10
This is bull crap.
1:04:12
I love that. So this sounds like
they okay, we need a profile for
1:04:15
this purpose that we're gonna
make up okay, both good idea.
1:04:17
What do let me think that this
kind of guy to me. She's a
1:04:20
Trumper let's think like a Trump
or like a nutjob Crown Victoria,
1:04:24
and okay, that's perfect. Now
he's got an AR 15 Of course, but
1:04:27
let's make him the working man.
He's got a nail gun. Beloved
1:04:30
boss. He's got a nail gun.
That's great. Throwing some
1:04:33
proud boys. Yeah, now we got a
profile send that off to ABC
1:04:37
with an
1:04:37
AR 15 and a nail gun tried to
break into the visitor screening
1:04:41
facility. He was unsuccessful
and he fled that area. He then
1:04:45
fled 60 miles down a highway in
a Ford Crown Victoria falling in
1:04:49
car for the FBI. About seven
units. I believe on the
1:04:53
officials were in pursuit when
they say the suspect opened fire
1:04:57
from his car. Managed to corner
the suspect in the cornfield,
1:05:01
they save a four we shot
1:05:04
through in cornfield on a
cornfield. This is
1:05:12
where is he? Where did it start?
It started in Washington DC.
1:05:16
cornfield boys watch out
1:05:17
for the nail gun. From his car.
officers managed to corner the
1:05:21
suspect in the cornfield. They
say they fatally shot him after
1:05:25
he raised a gun towards
officers. The Chaos coming to
1:05:28
the nail four hours after the
FBI director was asked if he was
1:05:32
worried about the violence in
the wake of the MAR Lago search.
1:05:35
Oh man, I'm exhausted after that
report.
1:05:41
Feel the dreams.
1:05:43
Everything's in there?
Everything. So the FBI. This is
1:05:47
them fighting back, obviously.
Hey, man. Hey, man. And you
1:05:50
know, these Trump guys, man,
they're a bunch of you know,
1:05:53
they hate the feds. It's no
good. And let's talk to the
1:05:57
Ross flag. This all was left out
of that report, by the way right
1:06:00
now? No, no,
1:06:01
they've got a new angle. This is
ABC News Chief investigative
1:06:05
reporter. It's not just some
slouch chief investigative
1:06:08
reporter. And you know what
these Trumpers what are they?
1:06:11
They're racist. Yep, check. What
else are they? They hate
1:06:15
authority. They hate America.
And they, of course, above all
1:06:18
hate Jews, Jews.
1:06:21
Still, you'd love to Russkies,
1:06:22
I'm sorry, I was going for a
crescendo of Jews.
1:06:25
It's very, very difficult. This
is all in a polarized
1:06:27
environment, which this
environment right now is so
1:06:30
dangerous and delicate. And
there's it's so supercharged
1:06:34
with calls for violence. That's
why I think as somebody who has
1:06:37
been watching this for years,
this attorney general must have
1:06:41
really, you know, you scrutinize
this question of going in for a
1:06:46
search and then bringing it to a
judge this week. That's why I
1:06:49
personally don't think based on
my knowing this attorney general
1:06:53
and our covering of him, that
he's somebody who would have
1:06:55
allowed this to happen in a rash
way because he had to know as
1:07:00
that as soon as this happened,
it would supercharge a
1:07:03
supercharged environment. And in
fact, as soon as President Trump
1:07:09
put out confirmation on Monday
that the raid had been done and
1:07:13
was underway. We immediately
started seeing factions on the
1:07:16
far right Neo Nazis, white
supremacist, militia organizers
1:07:21
calling for violence as they
always have done against Jews.
1:07:26
The Attorney General's against
the FBI, federal law enforcement
1:07:30
against other perceived enemies,
enemies they perceived to be
1:07:33
enemies of President Trump. It
was like clockwork and then by
1:07:37
the morning, there was already a
body of evidence bottom line of
1:07:42
this really ugly, terrible
violent rhetoric that had law
1:07:46
enforcement incredibly
concerned. You cannot believe
1:07:50
for a second that the Attorney
General and his senior staff at
1:07:53
the Justice Department that they
at all were blind to what was
1:07:57
going to happen in the wake of
this type of
1:08:01
Donald loves Nazis.
1:08:04
Donald loves Nazis. CNN say that
he's PKK having shot Suhail with
1:08:11
it Wow.
1:08:12
So I'm trying to do what's gonna
do for the news or at times ran
1:08:16
it ran out, I was gonna do a
Merrick Garland, Barney Fife.
1:08:23
Does anyone still know who
Barney Fife is, though?
1:08:26
I think he's I think he's I
1:08:29
think he's timeless like Elvis
pretty
1:08:30
close to being timeless with his
one bullet,
1:08:33
you know, kind of maybe, maybe,
1:08:34
maybe i know I so I didn't I
didn't do it. But But he does
1:08:38
look like Barney Fife. The you
know, the hapless deputy for the
1:08:43
Mayberry RFD show or whatever.
Andy Griffith Show.
1:08:46
Let's stick with with these
horrible Trump Jew haters who
1:08:49
clearly are targeting the FBI.
1:08:51
What do you think? I mean, out
of the blue because garland is a
1:08:54
Jew. Didn't
1:08:54
you know that? Okay.
1:08:56
Is a Jew? Yeah,
1:08:57
that's what it is everybody.
That's why they're doing it has
1:08:59
nothing to do with anything
else. Now, if you really want to
1:09:03
know why they're doing this,
Mika Brzezinski from the morning
1:09:06
blow show. She knows exactly why
these crazy Trump errs are doing
1:09:09
this.
1:09:10
We have Scott from the White
House with top secret classified
1:09:15
information about nuclear secret
1:09:17
while you're there on the
subject of people on television.
1:09:20
I just you ask how stupid his
followers are in terms of those
1:09:23
people. They're not stupid. No,
they they're lying what they're
1:09:27
doing. They're lying. They know
the election was stolen. They
1:09:30
know January 6 was an assault on
our capital. And did you catch
1:09:34
what she said?
1:09:36
Yeah, she says she knows. Like
she was Did they know the
1:09:39
election was stolen. I know that
was
1:09:44
their lines. They know that was
stolen. They know January 6 was
1:09:48
an assault on our cabin. How
1:09:50
does that happen? Who are you
listening to that? That is the
1:09:53
program that spits out when you
clearly meant to say it was not
1:09:58
stolen. You know,
1:10:01
I don't know what she's
thinking. Alright. Well, not
1:10:04
much.
1:10:05
So let's go to CBS This Morning
a quick little update on what
1:10:08
the
1:10:09
lady she on the air. Why is that
woman? Why does she have a job?
1:10:15
Although that's not fair.
1:10:17
Yeah it is.
1:10:18
Why does she have a job to keep
us?
1:10:22
Loved Okay. Work is the work?
1:10:26
Hey, they're paying for not us.
It makes the show great.
1:10:29
The newly unsealed warrant
authorizing the search of former
1:10:32
President Trump's Florida home
reveals FBI agents removed 11
1:10:37
sets of highly classified
documents, including some marked
1:10:40
top secret tops and some are
only meant to be viewed in
1:10:43
secure government areas also
removed 20 Plus boxes of items,
1:10:48
binders of photos, the executive
grant of clemency for Trump ally
1:10:53
Roger Stone, and info about the
president of France, John Bolton
1:10:58
served as Trump's National
Security Adviser. He's now a
1:11:01
critic of Trump. Well, I
1:11:03
thought he handled them
carelessly. I don't think he
1:11:05
fully appreciated the
significance of the
1:11:08
classification procedures far
1:11:10
more telling them what was
seized. It says attorney Jessica
1:11:13
Levinson is what the warrant
suggests what they need is
1:11:16
probable
1:11:17
cause that there was a federal
crime that was committed and
1:11:21
probable cause that the evidence
of that crime is where they say
1:11:25
it was in this case at Mar a
Lago
1:11:27
agents executed the warrant at
Mar a Lago Monday, after a back
1:11:31
and forth between the FBI and
Trump over documents starting in
1:11:35
the spring, they were seeing
carrying several boxes from the
1:11:38
estate. The search has sparked a
wave of violent threats against
1:11:42
the Justice Department and the
FBI, as well as a political
1:11:46
backlash from Republicans.
1:11:49
I see no evidence of a wave.
1:11:52
So there's a number of things I
think are interesting one, I
1:11:56
think the taking of the Roger
Stone clemency document was a
1:12:01
souvenir. So one of the agents
will have in their office in the
1:12:05
frame.
1:12:06
How sick Are you? If that's your
suit? I mean, Melania has
1:12:09
panties that will be cool. But
you know, Rogers were
1:12:12
in there for nine and a half
hours and they wouldn't allow
1:12:14
the Lord to be around they have
Melania has panties. There is no
1:12:19
doubt about it. Now, they do
they have them. I don't think
1:12:24
there's any question about it.
Now. Where's my where's my red
1:12:27
ones? Maybe you're at the dry
cleaners. Anyway,
1:12:31
there was some guy there was
some guy on Tik Tok and he had
1:12:35
he's prepped a whole box that he
bought off eBay. So look at some
1:12:38
of these panties. And one little
note in there from the FBI.
1:12:43
It's good to note you sometimes
just to get your luggage you
1:12:46
know because TSA
1:12:47
TSA hey we were we went through
your ship man with your your
1:12:50
luggage.
1:12:51
Now, the other thing is, I think
the only thing that's a
1:12:56
discrepancy besides the the
stone clemency thing which is a
1:13:01
which is a collectible
1:13:05
said the archivist it's a
collectible.
1:13:08
It is a total collectible. Wait
1:13:09
a minute, is it is that like an
original document like the
1:13:13
Constitution is written on
parchment? I mean, why is that
1:13:16
collectible signed
1:13:18
by this you got a signature you
gotta get to collect it's a
1:13:20
super collectible okay, it's but
now let's go back to the one
1:13:24
thing that what's the
discrepancy thing in there that
1:13:27
McCrone files why are they what
is he got those for? I think
1:13:32
McCrone is a CIA frontman and it
was all documented in there and
1:13:36
they had to get that back.
That's the reason for the whole
1:13:38
thing is to save McCrone SAS Hmm
It's the oh wow, long the list
1:13:47
that doesn't make any sense.
What was that in
1:13:48
my in my clip, the one I just
played.
1:13:51
They did mention it in there,
but they mentioned it a lot but
1:13:54
they had the manual McCrone duct
tape did some dossier on the guy
1:13:58
what is it? What's in it? It
said he's a CIA spook is a
1:14:02
frontman. And that's the last
thing the French need to find
1:14:05
out about.
1:14:06
That would really ruin the
coalition over there, wouldn't
1:14:10
it? Yep, that would be a real
big problem huh? Oh, that's a
1:14:15
good little piece of vO nugget.
1:14:19
Now it's just a supposition
obviously based on within make
1:14:21
sense to me what what's what is
he got the McCrone stuff for in
1:14:25
the first place and why are they
trying to get it back?
1:14:27
I love the whole nuclear codes.
Wonderful. You know when I hear
1:14:31
that smokescreen but listen,
think of it this is this is so
1:14:35
pathetic. Just let's just think
logically, Trump, let's say
1:14:38
Trump had some classified secret
nuclear documents. This is not
1:14:43
1958 Russia has kick ass nuclear
shit. Oh, wait. Trump has one
1:14:51
that's bigger than the sum bomb
that's even better. And this is
1:14:55
like some huge secret that oh,
let's not let everyone has a
1:14:58
nuke these days. It just doesn't
make any sense.
1:15:04
Yeah, yeah, that's a good point
and they're emphasizing it the
1:15:08
Democrat talk show guys are
emphasizing it as though it's
1:15:11
some good it's like Who gives a
shit? Yeah. North Koreans have a
1:15:16
bomb.
1:15:17
What's flying an airplane buzzer
in your house?
1:15:21
You know it's the Coltrane is
the first time it's gone through
1:15:24
on a on a show day and it does
make an unbelievable wreck as
1:15:29
the window closed.
1:15:31
Yeah, everything is buttoned up.
1:15:32
What do you live by the tracks,
man? What do you live? You live
1:15:35
in some kind of like Ross Hill,
but
1:15:37
the tracks are down at the
bottom of the hill. You can see
1:15:40
him. But the coal train. Here's
what happens. Somebody explained
1:15:44
to me when I went to the model
train exhibit exhibit that was
1:15:48
open public for one day, this
guy had all the trains from
1:15:52
around here and I said, Hey,
this is a train. He goes by my
1:15:54
house. This is our he is a fat
guy, obviously, obviously,
1:15:58
obvious. He's a train guy. And
he told me about these coal
1:16:02
trains. And so what they do,
we're shipping half of our coal
1:16:06
by the by these you heard the
cars go by those are empty.
1:16:10
That's why they made so much
noise. There was an empty coal
1:16:13
carriers. And they pack they
save them. I decided to track
1:16:17
them. And then they sent him
back to the mines. Then they
1:16:19
shipped them to Oakland and all
the coal gets shipped to China.
1:16:23
For shipping coal to China, like
there's no tomorrow. That's
1:16:27
crazy. The coal our coal is
going out of the country. We're
1:16:31
not using it or sell like
1:16:32
everything else. We're shipping
our beef out of the country.
1:16:34
We're shipping our coal out of
the country
1:16:36
by trains good. Planes bad.
1:16:42
But you heard those cars go by
that was a racket, because
1:16:46
they're all empty going. They're
going back to go pick up some
1:16:49
coal
1:16:49
that was that clean coal? Could
you tell? Was it clean?
1:16:52
Oil you have we have the most of
our coal is pretty clean. It's
1:16:55
just clean.
1:16:57
It's a weird world, ma'am. When
we can't have the coal we're
1:17:01
shipping it off to China. It
makes so much sense. And with
1:17:06
that, I'd like to thank you for
your currency in the morning to
1:17:09
you the man who put the seat in
the classified documents ladies
1:17:12
and gentlemen, hello to my
friend on the other end Mr. John
1:17:14
su DeVore.
1:17:18
Well in the morning in the
morning to you Mr. Curry and the
1:17:26
Manjula ship see boosting growth
in the air subs in the water all
1:17:28
the Dames and nights. Yes, in
1:17:32
the morning to all of our
producers. There are many of
1:17:35
them. Thank you all so much for
supporting us with your time,
1:17:38
your talent, your treasure.
We're coming up on 15 years and
1:17:43
1500 episodes so proud of the
work that all of our producers
1:17:46
have done once again today. And
in the morning to the trolls and
1:17:50
the troll room, we're always
there to hang out. And well, you
1:17:54
could actually join them. It's
quite simple. If you go to troll
1:17:56
room.io you'll see exactly you
can hear the show live, it's on
1:18:00
Thursday or Sunday, but that no
agenda stream that rolls is 24/7
1:18:04
There's tons of live shows. They
have their own apps that have
1:18:07
all kinds of extra
functionality. So you can
1:18:09
actually just listen and troll
along in one of the new apps
1:18:13
find it a new podcast apps.com
We have in there today. Come on
1:18:18
away. Feeling good about this
2416 Somehow this sounds like a
1:18:26
good number. Is that not a good
number is a good number. Well,
1:18:29
it's getting back to normal.
It's getting well it's gonna
1:18:32
easily be 2700. Before you
should feel good. Okay,
1:18:36
well, now at least I know when
to feel good. Yeah, I feel real
1:18:40
good about being on no agenda.
social.com Good news, everybody.
1:18:45
We are about to purge, I think
3000 accounts, some like 2700 or
1:18:52
something like that. It might be
3000. By the time we're done
1:18:55
from the 10,000 allotment that
we have limited ourselves to.
1:18:58
These are accounts that have not
been active, no login for over a
1:19:02
year. So if you're squatting,
you're going to be out of luck.
1:19:05
You may already be out a
1:19:06
lot of them have lost their
password. David de dana Brunetti
1:19:11
is a good example. He was on
there. And he lost his password
1:19:15
and then tried to go to the
password recovery process, which
1:19:17
I tried to do. And it doesn't
work because nobody cares about
1:19:21
it. And so they stopped logging
in and they quit and so they get
1:19:25
bounced out to get them to
account. So
1:19:27
the password retrieval works
just as well or is as shitty as
1:19:31
any other password retrieval
system. That would be dependent
1:19:34
upon the email service provider
you use. It comes from Mailgun
1:19:38
it's an accepted SMTP SMTP.
provider. So I'm just saying
1:19:45
don't say it doesn't work.
Plenty of people have no problem
1:19:49
getting it to work.
1:19:51
I never got it to work.
1:19:52
John, I know you're special. But
please don't spread fake news.
1:19:58
It's not Fake fake news you said
it doesn't work. Nobody cares.
1:20:03
That's really insulting.
1:20:05
I think I'll betcha I'm asking
people out there who join no
1:20:09
agenda social could not get on
and they haven't been logged on
1:20:12
for the last year. And so
they're gonna get booted. I want
1:20:15
you to write to Adam mccurry.com
and tell him what you think
1:20:18
about.
1:20:19
So everybody go ahead right now
everyone who's on no agenda
1:20:23
social.com There's about six
7000 of you. Please ask for your
1:20:27
password reset. You don't have
to do anything for that to John
1:20:30
at the vortec.org so he can see
that it works.
1:20:35
I'm not talking about password
reset until that password
1:20:37
recovery. Same thing.
1:20:39
No.
1:20:42
You, unbelievable. Unbelievable,
man.
1:20:47
But if you want to think that
recovery and reset is the same
1:20:50
thing, fine.
1:20:52
Okay, John.
1:20:54
It's recovery, password
recovery. You take my breath
1:21:00
away sometimes with how you can
stop me in my tracks?
1:21:05
Well, just saying you've lost
three to 2000. Some users I
1:21:09
think a lot of them just because
they couldn't get on.
1:21:11
Okay, first of all, I didn't
lose anything. This is our
1:21:14
producer resource. These are
people who just didn't come
1:21:17
back. But to say that that's
because they can't recover their
1:21:20
password is just bullshit. Some
they have it but the recovery
1:21:25
system works. Not for you. I get
it not for Dana Brunetti. I get
1:21:30
a lot of people who can retrieve
the password, but they forgot
1:21:33
their two factor authentication
or they change their email or
1:21:36
lots of other things that
happens or they don't remember
1:21:39
the email they use. This is the
most common that's in fact why
1:21:43
you didn't get your recover, but
I didn't want to embarrass you.
1:21:46
You were using the wrong email
address.
1:21:48
I use the same email for
1:21:51
Okay. All right. I'm very happy
with the artwork that we
1:21:56
selected for episode 1476 which
we titled woke waiver. There
1:22:02
were some good choices. This was
the one we chose was named Kenny
1:22:07
Ben. We read now we know that
she licenses her rats so we knew
1:22:10
the rat was good but she added
an FBI hat and the whole idea of
1:22:14
a classified rat trap was some
tasty Trump cheese under there.
1:22:18
I think that was it was very
well done. We were very
1:22:22
noticed that on no agenda social
debt comic strip blogger is now
1:22:26
on the process of predicting
winners who have answered this
1:22:32
shows actual selection and he
picked this one to be a loser he
1:22:36
thought it was too gruesome
because we I have my gruesome
1:22:39
really scale units. I don't want
to put anything that's just
1:22:42
gruesome. And he thought the rat
was too gruesome to be picked.
1:22:47
Really? I know I don't see that
at all. Yeah,
1:22:51
I felt the same way. I didn't
think it was gruesome
1:22:54
now I kind of like the one over
from that the not raid political
1:22:58
spray. You didn't like the you
thought that well, you thought
1:23:01
that was gross if I recall.
1:23:03
No, I didn't think it was gross.
I just didn't think it was
1:23:05
artsy. Okay, I mean Dame Kenny
Benz is dimensional she's got a
1:23:11
very good license rat is very
well done and lighting the
1:23:15
background lights the whole
thing is beautiful license a
1:23:19
licensed rad a
1:23:22
our producers come with their
rats licensed. Okay, so shove
1:23:26
off. I kind of like the banana
Joe's. We had two of them one by
1:23:32
Taunton Neal banana Joe, just
the label and she did both of
1:23:36
those, I guess. Kind of like
those. You didn't like them?
1:23:39
No, I did. I liked a banana Joe,
too.
1:23:42
That's the that's the one I said
we should do in the US now the
1:23:46
rats better That's what you said
you push the three with that.
1:23:49
I did say that. I did like it. I
liked it. But the rat was
1:23:52
better.
1:23:56
Was there anything else that we
looked at it?
1:23:58
I thought it was a paucity I
didn't think there was that many
1:24:01
great pieces. And then there's
the butt sniffing Come on
1:24:06
people.
1:24:07
Is that that was that's new.
Isn't it at the bud sniffing I
1:24:10
think that was there. Why What
do we have a button if Oh, yeah,
1:24:14
you had a clip with but sniff
Yeah. Okay. Yeah, it's, you
1:24:20
know, it's, it's, it's kind of
unclear when you look at it.
1:24:23
Like what am I looking at here?
Oral remedy, which is kind of I
1:24:27
use that for this morning's pre
art and that's a comic strip
1:24:30
blogger, and not exactly sure
what it is. I like oral remedy
1:24:34
guaranteed to shrink your
amygdala but I can't see what is
1:24:37
it it's like a flaming lipstick
or
1:24:40
what do you think that was? Vala
cough syrup.
1:24:43
It doesn't look like a bottle.
Oh, yeah, I guess it is. It's
1:24:48
poorly done. Still got what I
was going to pick the no agenda
1:24:54
XLS X file, which by the way
people found hilarious we Is
1:25:00
that? No, not the art they found
our Excel conversation they
1:25:04
apparently I don't know why
people think that's so funny.
1:25:09
It's very frustrating for both
of us. And I will say, as we
1:25:13
thank Dame Kenny Ben for
providing us the artwork and
1:25:16
remind you that anyone can
participate in this go to no
1:25:20
agenda art generator.com. And
why don't you follow Adam at no
1:25:23
agenda social.com Jhansi Dvorak
had no agenda social.com from
1:25:26
any Mastodon server, that you
have a password to and can get
1:25:31
it through the recovery process.
Follow us. And you'll see all of
1:25:35
these things appear you'll eat
probably eventually, the
1:25:38
fediverse will start giving you
comic strip bloggers
1:25:40
predictions. Now, in order to
thank our I bless you, our
1:25:46
executive and Associate
Executive producers, I have to
1:25:49
say, I have a problem with the
new Excel which I now I'm
1:25:54
running the new Excel and I and
as we were you and I were going
1:25:57
through this problem of the
formatting the cells, it no
1:26:02
longer does it properly. It
literally will not fit certain
1:26:07
cells, the text of certain cells
into the cell, and it does not
1:26:13
format them properly when you do
the old format. Trick yet,
1:26:17
because it does, it's not on
there. But you I'll tell you one
1:26:19
thing you can do, you can double
click on the cell, and it blows
1:26:23
it out to the full size. And
then if you click on, then if
1:26:26
you click on the column E next
to it, it'll grow it and it
1:26:32
actually works out that way. If
it works at all.
1:26:37
Yeah, no, it doesn't. Because
I'm sitting now it doesn't show
1:26:39
the top of it. I'm looking at
one right now. So it shows you
1:26:43
the bottom but not that it's a
mess. Excel sucks balls. I'm
1:26:47
gonna have to load open stuff on
here. Libra. Long live Libra.
1:26:53
This is horrible.
1:26:54
And I really appreciate. I
appreciate producers. All right.
1:26:59
I know how to fix this. You
know, I see the problem. We can
1:27:01
get it all and we'll do it in
one big web interface. And then
1:27:04
it'll be perfect. It'll suck it
in automatically. it'll spit it
1:27:06
out. You got a website, you got
a private thing, dude, dude,
1:27:09
we've been trying to do this for
15 years, for 15 years. And
1:27:14
usually, it'll be PayPal that
screws it up. Oh, they changed
1:27:17
something in their API up. This
doesn't work. But you know what?
1:27:20
It's because people are not we
accept from anywhere. So people
1:27:24
use different email addresses
different identifiers.
1:27:26
Switcheroos No, it's a manual
process. Eric the shield does a
1:27:31
lot of work to manage it. And I
think we do pretty darn well and
1:27:36
I'm very I'm very proud of how
everyone participates in this
1:27:39
sometimes train wreck sometimes.
Alright, let's thank our
1:27:44
executive producer, shall we?
Here Christopher Chesney kicks
1:27:48
it off from Baytown, Texas in
Texas Texas. Interesting amount
1:27:54
816 dot 85 Oh, this donation is
is to celebrate Zach's birthday.
1:28:01
Please give credit to Zack Simon
and D Duchenne on second let's
1:28:06
get the where's my dee doo
1:28:11
dee doo
1:28:14
Okay, well this is good we love
the show a new this would be an
1:28:19
appropriate gift. A path to
knighthood love you babe jingles
1:28:23
he would like ants will give you
a little bit of answered like a
1:28:26
biscuit for his birthday. And a
little noodle noodle gun which
1:28:31
he calls the pasta gun. Okay,
let's kick those off Boria Happy
1:28:35
Birthday Zach switcheroo has
been achieved
1:28:40
again and again I don't know if
he may always give me
1:28:56
with a minute of gun races. I
got to my pasta Glocks locked
1:29:05
and loaded.
1:29:09
All right onward with a note
that's too long from Justin
1:29:12
Polgar. In Santa Cruz. He gave
46876 I'm sorry, 45678 which is
1:29:19
a great number. And I'm going to
can I'm going to shorten his
1:29:23
note is because he's got just a
bunch of plugs for stuff in
1:29:26
here. He does need a D douching.
1:29:31
D de deuced.
1:29:33
The donation amount corresponds
to the number of hours my
1:29:36
amygdala has been massaged by
the best podcast in the
1:29:38
universe. Thank you. And the
third plug which is the plug
1:29:41
we're gonna give them which is
the only important one is I am a
1:29:44
chocolate maker in Santa Cruz,
California, or a cat come Radha
1:29:48
Fornia. And guess what? I make
100% Guaranteed amygdala
1:29:54
shrinking chocolate. Each bar is
full of adaptogens super herbs
1:29:59
and botanicals clean a F
carefully formulated so you can
1:30:05
grab life by the bars the bliss
out flavor goes great with
1:30:11
Bordeaux wine HINT HINT JCD to
brain power is the best seller
1:30:17
the source field was designed
with two doctors to neutralize
1:30:21
spike proteins. When it comes to
chocolate we don't screw around
1:30:25
head over to yes cow why ESCA? A
cacao? Yes cacao y es si
1:30:31
acao.com. ITM will get you a
delicious discount and I will
1:30:37
say Bing goes there he's got
some jingles you once and he
1:30:44
says he's going to send me some
chocolate and not to worry it
1:30:46
won't be loaded with dope why
not?
1:30:50
Well don't send that to me.
1:30:52
Send him the one with this
reminds me the time I've tell a
1:30:59
story later so he wants to
climate gate Obama mariachi and
1:31:04
pretty pleased cherry popping
house buying combo for me my
1:31:07
keeper and to Human Resources
love is lit yes motion
1:31:12
to the to the to the climate
give us no no, NO NO NO NO NO NO
1:31:25
NO NO NO. NO NO NO NO, NO NO NO
NO NO NO NO NO NO, NO.
1:31:31
Hey, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
no, no. No, no, no, no, no, no,
1:31:36
no, no, no, no. No. You've got
karma.
1:31:49
Robert Simpson is next from
Argyle, New York. Three, four
1:31:52
5.67. Love these sequential
numbers is the thing today. In
1:31:56
the morning Adam and John first
like take care take care of some
1:31:59
unpleasantries. I know I need to
call out our dear friend Susan
1:32:04
and Paul as they are great
people but unfortunately as
1:32:07
douchebags, Susan and Paul and
Paul. I'd also like to thank you
1:32:16
both as my wife and I often
listen in the car and it take us
1:32:20
about four and a half hours to
get through one show. As well as
1:32:24
we are often stopping your
deconstruction to then discuss
1:32:28
our own deconstruction of your
clips. It's great fun, I think
1:32:31
that it's extremely healthy to
our relationship. 30 years of
1:32:34
marriage and counting. Sorry,
Adam. We've had a few fights,
1:32:38
and my wife Cheryl is the
undisputed undefeated champ.
1:32:41
Yeah, that's why you're still
married, bro. You gotta let them
1:32:43
win. Finally, I'd like to
request some jobs karma for our
1:32:47
son Ian, a recent graduate of
Purdue in aerospace engineering
1:32:51
boiler up. Sincerely, Rob
Simpson from our garden, New
1:32:55
York. You
1:32:55
got it ARBs, jobs, jobs and
jobs. Let's go. Carmack
1:33:06
and now we move to Tigard
Oregon, or yet Tigard event,
1:33:11
Tim? So I think we had a
politician with that name and so
1:33:19
at 34567 another series of
numbers, and she's an Oregon
1:33:25
greetings pot father crackpot.
This donation completes my
1:33:28
knighthood I wanted to claim it
before I leave Oregon, the
1:33:32
Oregon local 33 region this
donation was made via earnings
1:33:36
from running. I'm running
monitors at a Tommy two tone
1:33:40
show in Richfield Washington.
Nice we humbly request the title
1:33:45
certainty as sort of certainty
sounds like a stutter. This is
1:33:52
the successor to certainty this
as you will jingle requests
1:33:58
shapeshifting Jews WT seven D
seven TT seven won't go away.
1:34:02
Little girl yay ITM citizens.
Tim. Finally certainty. Peace.
1:34:09
I don't think we have an in the
morning citizen. We have done we
1:34:17
have we have
1:34:17
maybe he's just saying that to
us possibly. shapeshifting.
1:34:40
Citizen you may return to your
harpsichord.
1:34:46
Just we had a citizen in there
somewhere. All right. Good. We
1:34:49
will see you as certainty.
Certainty. We'll be up on the
1:34:54
podium later. Charles Hickman is
in Grove City, Ohio. One of our
1:34:58
favorite donation amounts 333
Got three, three. He says column
1:35:02
F checking in. I went to pick up
pizza the other day, and the
1:35:05
lady helping me had 333 tattooed
on her. I knew it was time to
1:35:10
donate. Maybe it was time to
date. Did you talk to her? Did
1:35:12
you hit her up? Did you ask her?
1:35:14
Give me some jobs go to 333 RIP.
1:35:17
That's what I'm saying. I'd like
to know what that was about.
1:35:19
Give me some jobs karma I love
arguments over Excel
1:35:21
spreadsheets keep it up.
1:35:23
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
That's the job.
1:35:30
Karma no problem. You love
1:35:32
Arthur largeman Baron and Bali
Bali 333233. He's in London, UK
1:35:38
or barley one of the two ITM
John and Adam Sir Andrew
1:35:42
largeman. Here. My father is in
the ICU with pneumonia and in
1:35:47
grave condition he needs a dose
of Almighty no agenda health
1:35:52
karma, please. Thank you, Sir
Andrew, bear in a barley.
1:35:57
We're gonna throw in a goat
there for you to make sure it
1:36:00
works.
1:36:05
Up next, David Stoelting from
Brandon's in Florida. 33333
1:36:10
threes are in the air today.
Hello gents from Brandon's in
1:36:13
Florida. It's my birthday on the
21st of August so add me to the
1:36:17
list done. I'm at least a night
and having donated $4 a week
1:36:21
since 2010. So call me sir
unaffiliated of the long term by
1:36:26
the way, my buddy Don he's a
douchebag here's just a short
1:36:31
note some jingle requests Boom
shakalaka a little bit of oh my
1:36:36
goodness, do we have that? The
Abdul Bakar Baghdadi and I think
1:36:43
we have that somewhere. I got
that that's the that's the Trump
1:36:45
thing. What else is needed? We
have
1:36:52
to price someone who has hasn't
asked us for Boom Boom Bing Bing
1:36:55
Bong, bong.
1:36:56
Oh, that's another good one.
Yeah, that's another good a
1:37:00
little bit of ants Wait Oh
another ants. Okay. And some yak
1:37:04
karma. Okay, we can do all the
Bing go boom.
1:37:09
Last night, the United States
brought the world's number one
1:37:14
terrorist leader Abu Bakar Al
Baghdadi Abu Abu Bakar Abu Bakar
1:37:25
back Baghdadi. United States you
thought Harma
1:37:52
brisk remote or remotely? I
can't see it. That's an IRA l
1:37:57
but remote in Kingston New York.
333 ITM gentlemen, today is my
1:38:04
50th birthday. And I realized I
have been a douchebag and
1:38:08
freeloader in 2022 is a lot of
you out there. So I am
1:38:14
celebrating my birthday was my
first executive producer ship
1:38:17
which will also bring me to
knighthood accounting blow up
1:38:21
please Knight me Sir Chris of
the Catskills jingle requests
1:38:25
Shut up already at science no to
to the head and little girl yay.
1:38:31
The show continues to be the
best podcast in the universe and
1:38:35
is provided many years of
entertainment and sanity your
1:38:39
media deconstruction is top
notch and I can't get enough
1:38:43
again express enough gratitude
for all you do please give me a
1:38:47
big dose of karma for the no for
the whole no agenda universe
1:38:50
love as little risk per mole Sir
Chris of the Catskills
1:38:54
already
1:38:56
science know you've got karma.
1:39:05
Interesting little sequence.
dame's slay me is in Bastrop
1:39:12
Texas to eight O dot O eight
eighths double boobs to boobs.
1:39:18
In the morning gents out
switcheroo please credit this to
1:39:20
my kickass husband sir dude and
Cink do Cink do Cink do Cink and
1:39:26
put them on the birthday list
for the show day August 14
1:39:29
jingles new information man.
Okay, we got that one. A
1:39:33
birthday biscuits goat karma
love is lit thank you for your
1:39:37
courage Dame slay me
1:39:38
I've got information man. New
shit has come
1:39:41
to light they always give me a
biscuit on my birthday. You've
1:39:45
got
1:39:47
Armand nice was
1:39:50
our first Associate Executive
Producer, whoever second one is
1:39:53
Adam Carter it from Wales,
Wisconsin, it 250 This donation
1:39:59
is on behalf of my Parents 39th
anniversary in honor of them
1:40:03
never having a fight and staying
safe for so long. I'm requesting
1:40:07
you raise a glass of your finest
Al Sharpton jingle 39 years
1:40:12
ain't no joke. Love you both?
1:40:15
Well, I think let me see I think
respect is an order probably for
1:40:20
them for these two. So let's
roll that out DSP I see T
1:40:31
beautiful and we raise our
glass. Then we have Rene sislo
1:40:37
returned to West Florida 23456.
The sequences are great need
1:40:42
jobs, Carmen please interviewing
for my dream job, hoping I can
1:40:45
get an exemption for the
mandatory job? I think so.
1:40:48
There's no reason you just print
out the CDC and say there's no
1:40:54
difference. We're on equal
footing now. There is no need
1:40:57
for a mandatory job. You're in
violation of all human
1:41:01
existence. So yes, jobs, karma,
1:41:04
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs for
jobs.
1:41:13
And don't have in St. Charles,
Illinois row of ducks. Two Two.
1:41:20
My birthday is on a show day
August 14 So I'm donating to the
1:41:24
no agenda. The gift that keeps
on giving to all the producers
1:41:28
so enjoy the ringside seat you
provide to the circus created by
1:41:33
the globalists and social
engineers love is lit.
1:41:37
People are getting pretty
creative. You're Mario Vasquez
1:41:41
is in Lake Orion Michigan, also
a row of dark su tu tu tu tu tu
1:41:44
quack in the morning gentlemen,
this is a switcheroo from my
1:41:48
beautiful wife Shayla. Today is
her birthday and this this not
1:41:53
the diamond bracelet. Not the
Gucci bag. No not not the
1:41:58
Bentley? No, this donation is
the perfect gift. Please dee doo
1:42:05
dee doo SBT Oh,
1:42:08
and could you please have a
biscuit for her birthday and
1:42:10
Obama's you might die jingle
they always give me a biscuit on
1:42:14
my birthday. You might die. Not
quite sure why you had
1:42:19
a good one. It was except for
the morbid idea. Yeah, it
1:42:22
was a beautiful gift.
1:42:25
I should call it in Grand
Junction Colorado. 203 33. ITM
1:42:31
gents first time donor here
wanted to offer my services as a
1:42:34
former Microsoft expert to John
Perry. I'll see if I can't help
1:42:38
him with his Excel problems. I
wanted to call it I put you on
1:42:42
the list. You're on my list of
experts to yell when I need help
1:42:47
me definitely. I'll see if I can
help him with his Excel
1:42:51
problems. I wanted to call up my
coworker Paul. Yes, he's a
1:42:57
douchebag I had to beat him to
donating first I guess the bald
1:43:01
head didn't help him donate
faster. Oh, bald Paul follicle
1:43:10
journey. Anyway, love the show
and all you do thanks for your
1:43:14
courage and can I get the ants
jingle? Thanks so much gents.
1:43:20
Hey man, like you know you know
he might be suffering from
1:43:23
alopecia. Okay, you know, that's
very, very ablest by ableist I
1:43:29
gotta answer you've got karma.
And Seneca let's see del Cena
1:43:45
Ramsay Columbus, Georgia. 201.
Thank you. Thank you for having
1:43:50
a listening platform where you
take the time to pay attention
1:43:53
and discuss things in a way that
I can follow. Ooh, John, like
1:43:57
that we have we have a listening
platform to listening platform.
1:44:01
I like that. I'm gonna write
that down. I'm listening
1:44:03
platform. You know, sounds
expensive. What do you do since
1:44:08
you left MTV? I have a listening
platform. Oh, it's cool. I
1:44:12
appreciate every time you take a
moment to define explain things
1:44:15
Happy Anniversary t see I hope
we have many more TC I guess it
1:44:20
is Oh, that's very nice. Okay.
Del Cena
1:44:25
and that is a concludes that's
it. That is our broadcast.
1:44:29
Associate Executive Producers
executive producers for show
1:44:32
1477 Want to thank every one of
them for giving us a support. We
1:44:38
need the support. We got it.
1:44:40
We take support in many forms
time, talent and treasure. Many
1:44:44
people contribute to these
podcasts. The episodes are chock
1:44:48
full with inputs that we get
from all around the no agenda
1:44:51
nation, lovingly known as Gitmo
nation. These are the executive
1:44:55
and Associate Executive
producers of episode 1477. The
1:44:59
crew edits are real. Go look on
LinkedIn, go look on IMDb. See
1:45:04
if you see no agenda producer
credits, they're in there and
1:45:07
they are recognized and
important as such. If you'd like
1:45:10
to learn how to become a
producer, we have a website go
1:45:12
here.
1:45:12
vote.org/and
1:45:15
a thank you all very much for
producing episode 1477 with the
1:45:19
no agenda show.
1:45:20
Our formula is this. We go out,
we get people in the mouth
1:45:43
all right, where
1:45:44
do we go from here?
1:45:46
Well, we can. How about
1:45:49
how about
1:45:51
my machine? We're talking about
the braking and all the rest. I
1:45:54
do have a Trump analysis from
NPR. Oh good, which will
1:45:58
definitely give us a slant that
we're looking for. This is the
1:46:02
Trump NPR analysis.
1:46:04
We're going to start today by
taking a closer look at a story
1:46:07
that dominated news coverage.
This week the FBI search of
1:46:10
former President Trump's Mar a
Lago estate. Yesterday, a
1:46:13
federal judge in Florida
unsealed the documents related
1:46:16
to the search. Those documents
show that FBI agents were
1:46:19
looking for evidence related to
possible violations of federal
1:46:22
law, and they seized items that
included government documents
1:46:26
identified as classified and top
secret. Before information about
1:46:30
the reason for the search became
public, though Trump allies
1:46:33
reacted with outrage, with some
officeholders making demands to
1:46:36
rein in and even defund the FBI.
But some Trump supporters went
1:46:40
even further reacting with
violent rhetoric and
1:46:42
conspiracies, some of whom went
so far as to liken the FBI to
1:46:46
Nazi Germany. And on Thursday,
an armed man attempted to attack
1:46:50
an FBI field office in Ohio.
While authorities have not yet
1:46:54
identified a motive officially
anyway, social media accounts
1:46:57
under the suspects name show
violent threats in response to
1:47:00
the FBI search at Mar a Lago. We
wanted to make sense of this
1:47:04
kind of violence and ways to
address it. So we've called
1:47:06
Brian Murphy. He is a former top
Department of Homeland Security
1:47:10
Official where he focused on
intelligence and
1:47:12
counterterrorism. And he's long
sounded the alarm on the rise of
1:47:15
domestic extremism. Brian
Murphy, welcome. Thank you for
1:47:18
joining us.
1:47:19
Hi, Michelle. Thanks for having
me.
1:47:21
I love this. The part that I
liked about this as they call
1:47:25
the FBI like Nazis, how does
that work with a Jew analogy? I
1:47:32
mean, yeah, I mean, like the
1:47:36
Jew analyse, by the way, when
you played the clip was just out
1:47:38
of the blue. It's got nothing to
do with anything. But Eva
1:47:42
garland, I guess he always is,
1:47:44
but he's what I'm saying.
Trumpers proud boys. They're all
1:47:50
seen as Nazis, Nazis, fascist
Neo Nazis, but yet they're
1:47:56
calling the FBI Nazis. Come on,
1:47:59
everybody's a Nazi. Alright,
let's go on with this guy.
1:48:04
So I want to mention that you
spent some years at the FBI
1:48:06
before joining Homeland
Security, I wanted to ask you
1:48:09
what's out to you about the
attack on that FBI field office?
1:48:13
What did you notice?
1:48:15
So what stood out to me about
this attack is just the level of
1:48:18
rhetoric is something I've never
seen whether it was in the FBI,
1:48:22
DHS, or at the private company
that I'm at now,
1:48:25
how do you gauge the volume of
it? Is it the fact that it went
1:48:29
to that level? So quickly, in
response to so little
1:48:33
information? Is it like the
number of people who seem to
1:48:36
want to participate in that kind
of dialogue? How do you gauge
1:48:39
the volume of something like
that?
1:48:42
I think you kind of touched on
two of the ways one, it's just
1:48:45
the the number. And so you know,
in the company on that now we
1:48:48
have the I have the benefit of
looking at diverse set of social
1:48:53
media platforms. And from a wide
range of those we just saw the,
1:48:57
you know, almost right after the
search was announced publicly,
1:49:02
the number of people talking
about very violent things
1:49:05
against the FBI. I thought that
was very alarming. One
1:49:09
of the things that interests me
is that these individuals are
1:49:11
continually sort of scribed as
lone Wolf's as it were, you
1:49:16
know, that the sort of
implication is, is that, you
1:49:19
know, this is just an individual
who took it under his own, you
1:49:23
know, under his own authority to
go act in a certain way. Like
1:49:28
I'm thinking about the comet
pizza incident, which, you know,
1:49:31
because we're in Washington, DC,
where this man decided that
1:49:35
people weren't adequately
responding to it, despite the
1:49:37
fact that we have 1000s of law
enforcement officials in
1:49:40
Washington, DC sworn law
enforcement officers, he decided
1:49:43
that he alone had to rescue
fixed, you know, fictional
1:49:47
children from, you know, Child,
child predator rang, which of
1:49:51
course is ridiculous didn't
happen, but he took a weapon
1:49:54
into a crowded pizza restaurant
and he could have killed
1:49:58
somebody Holy crap.
1:50:00
up what is she bringing into
this whole? Glad the lone wolves
1:50:07
are back. What is she bringing
into this?
1:50:11
I, you know, I listened to her
the same thing is like, Okay,
1:50:17
so now it's the now
1:50:19
there's a lot of messaging here
one, don't forget government to
1:50:22
give you some messaging, okay,
we have 1000s and 1000s of cops
1:50:27
in Washington DC, they're
everywhere. The whole place is
1:50:30
crawling with them get big make
a note of that. else was there
1:50:35
and there's a bunch of really
dubious things to push his
1:50:39
narratives here they're trying
to organize and it's like the
1:50:42
lone wolf one is back because
the lone wolf one explains the
1:50:46
fact that no one knew of who
they were being spied on
1:50:52
constantly. We nobody can figure
out anything that's going on.
1:50:55
Okay, was good work. So let's go
on now this one, this next clip
1:50:59
is got a little item in here.
Okay,
1:51:05
over and over again, we seem to
see these as individuals. And I
1:51:07
just wonder, why do we keep
seeing these as individuals? I
1:51:10
mean, is it is it you know, it
seems like when other people
1:51:14
engage in this kind of conduct,
we see them as part of a broader
1:51:16
movement. Is there a way to?
Should we should we change our
1:51:20
thinking about this?
1:51:21
Yeah, I think I know I have, I'm
glad you brought that up. I
1:51:25
don't think it about the
individuals anymore. Think about
1:51:27
the narrative. And what we're
looking at is how these
1:51:30
narratives coalesce in really
these filter bubbles of like
1:51:35
minded, and from these
narratives, you'll start seeing
1:51:38
a sub narrative, which will be
the more violent people
1:51:41
encouraging each other, right?
So there's a sudden text that
1:51:44
develops where you get the truly
violent people who are
1:51:48
encouraging each other and then
1:51:50
oh, man,
1:51:52
if you like me are getting dizzy
from this, just look at the
1:51:55
ground that will all go away.
It's just information is just is
1:51:59
just people blah, blah. This is
this is this is what is the word
1:52:06
term? Look, it's a really tear.
You know, it's, it's like these
1:52:10
people don't have enough worry
in their life. They're making
1:52:13
shit up how well it's lone
wolves. But can't we force them
1:52:17
into a group? I don't know, like
Trump. It's just it's so
1:52:20
obvious.
1:52:24
I find it baffling myself. So
here we go. They wrap
1:52:27
purging each other. And then
more and more, we see the
1:52:31
switchover from social media
into the real world where real
1:52:34
physical violence occurs. And
that is, you know, you can I
1:52:38
can't say it's a guarantee every
time but it certainly is
1:52:40
happening almost every time
where we see that frequency of a
1:52:44
switch over into the physical
world, it's you kind of most
1:52:48
predicted, unfortunately,
1:52:50
does there seem to be sort of a
collectively urgent response to
1:52:55
this among law enforcement and
frankly, citizens across the
1:52:58
country because they seem to
keep popping up in different
1:53:01
places. And I just wonder, is
there a sense of urgency around
1:53:04
this?
1:53:05
I don't I don't know if I would
say there's this sense of
1:53:07
urgency that I would agree with,
but what I have seen over you
1:53:11
know, a decade plus is there has
been a shift which gives us
1:53:14
hope, but I do believe both
within and also at social media
1:53:20
companies. And I'm not gonna
give them a pass either but I
1:53:23
think they're doing more than
they were just you know, a year
1:53:26
ago so I think you know, we're
on a good path it's just that
1:53:31
we're not as we described a
little bit earlier it's not
1:53:33
urgent enough at least for where
I think we need to be
1:53:39
I sent this to you I don't know
if you probably didn't read all
1:53:41
four parts it was hard enough
for me to get through it of that
1:53:46
thing from was a conservative
tree house the story behind the
1:53:51
documents and it really lays out
how the intelligence community's
1:53:54
run everything.
1:53:56
Yeah, yeah, I saw that it was a
good piece. Yeah. I saved it
1:54:01
Yeah. So it's for a very long
articles you can find it under
1:54:04
the raid in the show notes at no
agenda show.net Well worth
1:54:08
reading through because there's
a lot of these documents just so
1:54:10
obvious what what what is
happening in our world and it's
1:54:14
we're being run we're being
played we're being lied to
1:54:19
everyone and they're all
complicit pretty much all of
1:54:21
them and these like this NPR
This is just This is just
1:54:26
capture just she I'm sure she's
you think she's really
1:54:29
interested if she just reading
the bullet points that she's
1:54:32
supposed to.
1:54:34
That's a good, I'm not sure.
1:54:37
And the same with climate
change. So now from what I can
1:54:42
see, we have passed a bill
that's supposed to fix the
1:54:46
climate. Is this how much is
this thing now? It seems like
1:54:49
now it's 700 something billion
dollars.
1:54:54
It's a lot of wasted money. It
looks like to me,
1:54:56
so close. Well, let's just call
it a trillion because by the
1:54:59
time it's downloadable A
trillion dollars, someone tried
1:55:01
to give me an example of a
trillion dollars. Let's see if I
1:55:05
remember this correctly. If you
got $1 per second, every second
1:55:10
of every day, you got $1. In 11
days, you'd be a millionaire. If
1:55:17
you keep getting that $1 Every
second, in 31 years, we go from
1:55:23
11 days to 31 years, you're a
billionaire, to become a
1:55:28
trillionaire. It's like 31,000
years of $1. Every second, they
1:55:34
have made it into perspective.
Now, what does this bill do?
1:55:40
Well, Nancy Pelosi said it the
drunk and how
1:55:43
can they vote against the
planet? Mother Earth, Mother
1:55:47
Earth gets angry from time to
time. And this legislation will
1:55:52
help us address all of that.
1:55:54
Okay. Mother Earth gets angry
from time to time, and this
1:55:59
legislation will address all of
that. That is this the people
1:56:04
you let vote for you with your
money.
1:56:07
She's in a spot where they can't
vote her out. What do you mean?
1:56:11
Well, Nancy Pelosi like most
California that has been
1:56:14
gerrymandered she's in a
district in San Francisco that I
1:56:18
don't think Republicans ever
wanted or even a competitive
1:56:22
Democrat or 100 years it's just
you get that job where she is
1:56:27
and you're you got a job for
life
1:56:29
what so but because of San
Francisco
1:56:31
now it's because it's this
district it's just a bunch of
1:56:34
Nancy Pelosi loving this
district it's it's hard to
1:56:38
explain it's just a district
that votes a certain way a lot
1:56:40
of these districts are out there
you get somehow get into that
1:56:44
job and in that district, and
you can stay there forever and
1:56:47
people just coast calm just get
reelected and reelected for just
1:56:52
infinitely
1:56:53
Yeah, well, maybe maybe it would
be it would be shocking if they
1:56:56
changed her.
1:56:58
That's not that well. She's
gonna have to retire I mean, she
1:57:00
should have retired already.
1:57:01
When is she up for election
again?
1:57:04
Every Yeah, always. Of course.
Yeah.
1:57:07
Social just go another couple of
years. Yeah, she wants I have to
1:57:12
say you know when she got the
new programming after coming
1:57:14
back from Taiwan, and she got
the China good programming one
1:57:18
China. They did her hair at the
same time.
1:57:22
They must have some hair
dressers there or maybe pee or
1:57:24
flu into well
1:57:25
when I'm what I was thinking is,
hey, Nas, we flew Pierre in to
1:57:29
do your hair. And then you know
he's sure I'm doing it. So
1:57:33
Natasha, it's nice thing with
you when she goes out what did
1:57:35
you do pinch me. And that's when
they inserted the Look at her
1:57:40
hair. And her hair actually
looks pretty good. It looks a
1:57:43
little more appropriate for her.
Looks like a wig to me, but oh,
1:57:46
it's not a wig. And by the way,
I get people yelling at me that
1:57:49
John Claude Van Pierre Van Damme
is not wearing a wig. I don't
1:57:55
know, man. It seems like one to
me.
1:57:59
Oh, are you talking about? Oh,
yeah. Yeah, it looks like weird
1:58:02
to me to
1:58:02
know. But most people are saying
it's not. That's what they want.
1:58:08
Who cares? All right. Okay, they
want to change the time. Oh,
1:58:13
yeah. Global warming, please.
1:58:15
Yeah, I got a clip. dust devils
this carefully, and just roll
1:58:19
your eyes at the end.
1:58:21
Devil in England, it's a sight
rarely seen in the country. The
1:58:24
unique wind phenomenon followed
heat waves and warm spells. This
1:58:28
video was taken by Durham and
Darlington County Fire Rescue.
1:58:31
The footage shows a whirlwind
spinning through a field just
1:58:35
scorched by a wildfire. Winds in
a dust devil funnel can reach 60
1:58:39
miles per hour. They most often
occur in the desert or forest
1:58:43
and usually happen during peak
sunlight hours phenomenon is
1:58:46
often accompanied by warm
weather, which isn't common in
1:58:50
England. But for the time being
parts of the country are writing
1:58:53
a second summer heatwave
temperatures are expected to go
1:58:56
above 86 degrees in the coming
days.
1:59:00
And researchers Yeah, stop, stop
depressing. Temperatures are
1:59:05
going to go above 86 degrees,
which is what it is in Hawaii.
1:59:11
99 percentage but it's okay. 86
degrees in the coming days. I
1:59:15
know what will they do?
1:59:16
Well, here's here's the issue.
The UK specifically is in big
1:59:21
trouble. You know, they have
these caps on energy for people
1:59:26
at home. But people with
businesses, they're now seeing
1:59:30
what's happening with the
heatwave where they want to turn
1:59:33
on some air conditioner or
whatever it whatever they can
1:59:37
do. And their bills are now
10x 10x For businesses and the
1:59:45
UK is using this. This extreme
heat 86 degrees okay, extreme
1:59:51
heat to prepare everybody for
the blackouts to prepare
1:59:56
everybody for a very cold winter
to prepare Everybody that
2:00:00
climate changed climate change
is what screwing you climate
2:00:05
Not, not the not the change to
batteries, but climate change
2:00:10
itself. Temperatures
2:00:11
in Europe are climbing as
another heatwave sweeps the
2:00:13
continent threatening to disrupt
travel and business and, of
2:00:15
course, ratcheting up pressure
on the region's strange power
2:00:18
infrastructure. And to dive
deeper into Europe's energy
2:00:21
crisis. Let's bring Bloomberg,
European energy editor she's
2:00:24
Rachel Morrison Rachel, do we
have a concrete plan on what
2:00:28
happens when we get into the
colder months? If Russia turns
2:00:31
off the taps completely?
2:00:34
What we're seeing at the moment
is Europe's energy system really
2:00:37
being tested by this summer
weather, which usually wouldn't
2:00:41
be so much of a problem.
Sometimes we do see the impact
2:00:44
of heat on rivers, we've talked
a lot about the Rhine and our
2:00:48
nuclear plants. But really, it
is worrying to see the strain
2:00:52
that's being put on the energy
market at the moment before it
2:00:56
even gets cold. I mean, we have
really high prices, gas prices
2:01:00
are up to the highest in two
weeks today. And what that is
2:01:04
doing is setting the stage for
winter. So what's being priced
2:01:08
in is people thinking that this
is only going to get worse. In
2:01:11
winter, when it does start to
get cold. When demand rises,
2:01:15
we're seeing government's
scrambling to try to get their
2:01:17
plans in place, deciding who
they're going to rush in which
2:01:21
industries will need gas most
how they're going to keep the
2:01:24
lights on. But those plans
aren't firmly in place yet,
2:01:27
because obviously, they're big
economic decisions that need to
2:01:31
be made. It's a really difficult
moment for the UK because the
2:01:35
same as across Europe, energy
bills are rising for people, for
2:01:39
consumers. And we have a price
gap in the UK and predictions
2:01:43
are that in October, that's
going to rise significantly. And
2:01:46
again in January, which is going
to push lots of millions of
2:01:49
people into poverty and leave
people unable to pay those
2:01:52
bills. So pressure is coming on
to this caretaker government to
2:01:56
do more. But the problem is they
don't know who the leader is
2:01:59
going to be. And while the
industry are saying you're the
2:02:02
same party, you need to sort
this out. Within the
2:02:05
Conservative Party, there are
different ideas about how to
2:02:07
tackle this. So the meeting
today is to really try to weigh
2:02:11
up what some of the options are
for additional help for people
2:02:15
because that pressure is only
going to grow as we get closer
2:02:19
to the point where we know what
level bills are going to be at
2:02:22
for the start of winter.
2:02:24
So they're really playing up
this heatwave all across Europe
2:02:27
and the number one is the Rhine.
Oh, the Rhine the Rhine is it's
2:02:33
going dry, they won't be able to
move any goods and you have to
2:02:37
understand the Rhine is very
important river for moving goods
2:02:40
throughout Europe, particularly
Germany. And I have the
2:02:44
hindsight and the or I have the
historical knowledge of having
2:02:49
lived in Europe in the 70s and
80s. And I remember the same
2:02:54
thing it must have been maybe
7879 All the Rhine it's gonna
2:03:00
dry up we won't be able to move
any goods. It's so hard. Same
2:03:06
exact same exact thing but they
have a new twist. The hunger
2:03:10
stones. The hunger stones are
showing up again. Are you here
2:03:14
hunger stones resurface as
Europe faces historic drought?
2:03:20
Have you ever heard of the
hunger stones?
2:03:23
There's some stones in the river
something that just bowl crap is
2:03:29
what I'll read from the from the
book of knowledge may brief me
2:03:34
I'm briefing you. A hunger stone
is a type of hydrological
2:03:38
landmark common in Central
Europe. huncles hunk huncle
2:03:42
hunger stones serve as famine,
memorials and warnings and were
2:03:47
erected in Germany and in ethnic
German settlements throughout
2:03:50
Europe in the 15th and 19th
centuries. The stones were
2:03:54
embedded into a river during
droughts to mark the water level
2:03:58
as a warning to future
generations that they will have
2:04:01
to endure famine related
hardships if the water sinks to
2:04:04
this level again. And the famous
one which is now in play is the
2:04:09
Elbe a river in the Czech
Republic, which has and it's
2:04:13
chiseled into the into this
hunger stone. Then to me Zeese.
2:04:18
Don Viner, which means if you
see me weep. And so this one
2:04:25
surfaced.
2:04:27
So you ask a question. Before
you continue, I want you to
2:04:30
continue. The hunger stones were
put in at a time when the river
2:04:38
was low and they could put the
stone in right. Well, the stone
2:04:42
is already in there. They I
mean, it's okay. It's in there
2:04:45
but it's marked. Yeah, it's the
chisel that chisel so in other
2:04:48
words has happened before. You
can't mark to stone unless the
2:04:52
river has already been down to
2:04:53
1918 was the last time global
warming
2:04:57
in 1918. Is that that we had
global war million 90 and 18.
2:05:01
No,
2:05:01
no, we had global warming in
1816 when the stones were put
2:05:05
in.
2:05:06
We had global warming in 1816.
Yeah.
2:05:09
Yeah. So they put the stones in
an 1816. Then in 19, must have
2:05:15
been low in 1816.
2:05:17
Yes. Because of climate change.
Yes. So Golly. Hey, do you see a
2:05:23
pattern? 1816 1918 20 Oh my
goodness. What is it? Apparently
2:05:30
these stones were uncovered
again during the drought of
2:05:33
2018. Oh, what are the chances?
People can't even remember four
2:05:39
years ago. This is a hoax. This
is bullshit. I mean, total total
2:05:46
hoax. These things have surfaced
all and it's they seem to have a
2:05:50
100 year cycle. Oh, isn't that
interesting?
2:05:56
I'm sure there was something
that took place in the 1700s to
2:06:00
well, then, yeah, the 1600 some
of them I but it's nothing like
2:06:04
what you're gonna get you better
look out the window at the
2:06:06
mudflats. Because the California
mega storm and the mega flood is
2:06:13
on the way.
2:06:17
Sea level rise. It's a looming
threat to all of California as
2:06:21
global temperatures increase due
to human caused climate change.
2:06:25
Sea level rise is not the answer
to our water challenges in
2:06:29
California, it actually works
against us. 27 million
2:06:33
Californians rely on water that
flows through the Delta, that
2:06:36
water is salt free, and it needs
to stay that way for us to use.
2:06:40
But it's exactly where water
from the Pacific would push into
2:06:44
as ocean levels rise. If that
area were to become salty, it
2:06:49
would take at least two years to
regenerate those freshwater
2:06:53
conditions. Climate models
estimate that for every degree
2:06:56
of warming, the average global
ocean level will rise another
2:07:00
seven and a half feet and our
current carbon use patterns have
2:07:04
already made that just about
inevitable
2:07:07
every so you know two degrees is
the max that we're supposed to
2:07:10
have. I'm not sure exactly where
they're measuring it but two
2:07:12
degrees okay, two degrees. So
for every extra degree, the sea
2:07:17
rises seven feet
2:07:18
two level will rise another
seven and a half feet. And our
2:07:22
current carbon use patterns have
already made that just about
2:07:26
inevitable this century.
According to Global Research put
2:07:29
together by Climate Central one
degree Celsius of warming could
2:07:33
lead to sea water inundation for
the Delta region that looks like
2:07:37
this. It's outlined here on the
red area,
2:07:39
but it says both by the way
you're in the red area. On the
2:07:42
map got up to two
2:07:43
degrees Celsius. Sea water
pushes even further inland. Some
2:07:47
of the more extreme title
projections have ocean water in
2:07:51
Midtown Sacramento. Earlier this
month, the Department of Water
2:07:54
Resources filled in a temporary
dam designed to keep salt water
2:07:57
away from the central Delta
during drought years,
2:08:00
were able to keep this interior
Delta fresh with the release of
2:08:05
less fresh water from our
upstream reservoirs, upstream
2:08:08
reservoirs including Lake
Oroville and Lake Shasta.
2:08:11
Another more long term plan is
the delta conveyance project
2:08:14
first introduced in the 1950s,
it would create a sort of
2:08:17
underground water bypass keeping
fresh water separate from
2:08:21
natural Delta waterways.
2:08:23
The Delta conveyance project
itself is a game changer from
2:08:27
all those prior potential
projects or, or alternative
2:08:33
projects.
2:08:33
The idea is controversial and
involves building over 40 miles
2:08:37
of tunnels through rural
communities. Those opposed say
2:08:40
it would disrupt lifestyles and
the environment. But one way or
2:08:44
another. Researchers know
2:08:46
that delta is like the heart of
California
2:08:49
heart that needs to be protected
as sea level rise creeps closer
2:08:53
and closer to the front of
people's minds.
2:08:57
Sea level is it creeping closer
to the front of your mind? The
2:09:00
sea level?
2:09:01
No, no, I'm looking at what's
happening for the last 50 maps
2:09:08
to be redrawn
2:09:10
This is what would happen to San
Francisco Bay
2:09:16
almost 15 years he's been
looking out his window what do
2:09:19
you see at the month last John
any change? Do you
2:09:21
see no change whatsoever? Let me
look at the old 8095 map
2:09:26
somebody sent me Okay any change
looks the same looks exactly the
2:09:30
same
2:09:30
breezy. I don't understand it.
2:09:34
Well, as somebody pointed out,
it's silt. Silt. One of our
2:09:39
listeners said your year foolish
shit is rising. And the reason
2:09:43
it looks the same is because of
silt. Okay, I don't understand.
2:09:49
I don't understand why don't
make any sense to me there.
2:09:52
Because we also have the shore
freeway here which is right
2:09:55
along the coastline and it's at
sea level it should be flooded
2:09:59
that should be flooded is not
but maybe silt. Something to do
2:10:03
with
2:10:04
that. Okay, well, leave it to
the experts ay. Ay, ay. Ay,
2:10:10
leave it to those experts a
2:10:15
couple of clips I'm gonna play
now. I don't know what they are.
2:10:19
Okay, but let's see what it is.
It's a dogs and it's actually I
2:10:23
get dogs on here, but it's dogs
and chips,
2:10:25
and highly trained sniffer dogs
can detect all kinds of
2:10:28
contraband. Now a select few
have added USBs microchips and
2:10:33
hard drives to their list to
help combat child abuse and
2:10:36
terrorism across Australia.
2:10:39
Whoa, whoa, wait,
2:10:41
here's an interesting premise.
So
2:10:42
dogs can sniff you out USB
devices and chips to hold on and
2:10:48
get the last bit
2:10:48
USBs Microsoft me just this is
weird. Now a select few have
2:10:53
added USBs microchips and hard
drives to their list to help
2:10:57
combat child abuse and terrorism
across Australia.
2:11:02
This clip is insane. So I mean,
of course, the dog is gonna
2:11:06
sniff USB sticks, hard drives
everywhere in the world, okay.
2:11:10
And this is to combat child
abuse and terrorism.
2:11:16
This is a drain
2:11:18
thing.
2:11:19
I want one of my dogs.
2:11:21
I divided into two parts so they
can try to maybe explain and
2:11:24
they do explain it and it's just
a stretch. And so this dogs,
2:11:28
these special dogs and I you
know, dogs, I know dogs can
2:11:32
smell a lot of different things.
But whether they can smell a USB
2:11:36
drive, which is inert,
2:11:38
especially one that has like
porn on it. I know. Can they
2:11:44
sniff it? Can they sniff the
bits?
2:11:47
Well, they claim they can smell
these things. But but it turns
2:11:51
out that the reason for sniffing
these things is because well it
2:11:55
kind of explains how the child
abuse the rest of it comes into
2:11:59
play. In the second part, dogs
are
2:12:01
frequently used by law
enforcement to sniff out
2:12:03
explosives and drugs. But this
clever canine has learned a new
2:12:07
skill, using her incredible news
to sniff out USBs and hard
2:12:10
drives the dogs that we
currently have out there,
2:12:13
predominantly searched for USBs.
microchips, any form of digital
2:12:18
media that carries memory. The
digital storage items can reveal
2:12:21
new evidence in cases and
contain files that police use to
2:12:25
identify criminals. These dogs
specifically target those items
2:12:29
that might otherwise be missed
in a search. Only the top dogs
2:12:32
are selected for this job. We
require the top 1% of dogs that
2:12:37
we see through the program to
succeed in this discipline. The
2:12:40
dogs are picked from as young as
nine weeks old for a strenuous
2:12:43
training program. It's every
2:12:45
day from morning to afternoon
and some night shifts there as
2:12:48
well, too. And it's been about a
three month process to just get
2:12:52
these dogs out and working.
2:12:54
At the end of the day, the dogs
are rewarded for their hard work
2:12:57
with some playtime
2:12:58
their only paycheck is to get a
big play in a big game at the
2:13:01
end of doing something right.
2:13:03
The dogs have helped solve
crimes all over Australia.
2:13:06
Currently, they've been deployed
in more than 70 operations and
2:13:09
found more than 300 items.
Thanks to their success. The
2:13:13
program has been expanded to
Victoria, South Australia and
2:13:16
Western Australia. Currently,
there are nine dogs working and
2:13:20
another two in training. Okay,
2:13:25
this is silly story. I don't
know why. It's I guessing coming
2:13:29
to your house. i You got a USB
hidden over here in the drawer.
2:13:35
There must be 100 million USBs
that people don't even know they
2:13:39
have
2:13:40
or what? I find them all the
time. Yeah.
2:13:43
And I'm almost like I should
stick this in a machine now.
2:13:46
Probably shouldn't.
2:13:48
No, I don't. My machines are
very well protected. I have a
2:13:52
couple of Ukraine clips. Yes.
Let me as I watched, I watched
2:13:56
that documentary that you
somebody found the CBS
2:14:00
documentary just taken off the
air.
2:14:02
Wait, this is the one about
Zelinsky and how we came to
2:14:08
power that one?
2:14:09
No, no. The CBS documentary
about Ukraine squad throwing
2:14:13
weapons selling weapons on the
black market. Oh, you
2:14:16
mean the new version or the or
the original version? The
2:14:19
original one? Oh, okay. Good.
Yes. This is the one they had to
2:14:22
take down because, well, we've
learned some new things. Since
2:14:25
we put it up ie they got a phone
call.
2:14:28
Well, I think I've tried to
figure out why. I looked at this
2:14:32
thing thinking to myself, what's
in it that they don't want us to
2:14:36
see? Okay, so I came up with two
specific things. One was kind of
2:14:43
the opening, which they kind of
harped on, I think this may be
2:14:46
it and then there's a second one
that I thought might be at two I
2:14:49
can't tell which of the two but
I got both of these clips.
2:14:51
They're both short. This is
Ukraine. HCBS special. Just a
2:14:57
special
2:14:58
in the past two months. We Move
weapons and equipment to Ukraine
2:15:01
at record speed drones, grenade
launcher, machine guns,
2:15:06
we're seeing this incredible
historic flow of weapons coming
2:15:10
into Ukraine. Do we have any
sense as to where they're going?
2:15:14
We don't know. There is really
no information as to where
2:15:19
they're going.
2:15:21
You know, all this stuff goes
down the border, and they're
2:15:23
kind of like something happens
it kind of like 30%. Maybe we
2:15:27
just it's fun destination 30%
2:15:29
Are you concerned about weapons
getting into the wrong hands? I
2:15:33
don't care at all. When that
happens. What sort of a unit you
2:15:39
can say, I'm a
2:15:40
bit confused. You know, we
played this clip two shows ago,
2:15:42
right?
2:15:43
And no, I don't know that. But
the next clip is I'm sure we
2:15:46
didn't play because I would have
remembered it. No, I know. We
2:15:49
talked about the 30% loss. There
was also one other thing in
2:15:52
there they had this guy
supposedly was a adviser ex US
2:15:57
Marine Lieutenant or something.
Yeah. Who ran the NGO which is
2:16:01
with it with a British accent.
Yeah. How many Marines do we
2:16:05
have? I don't know, with British
accents, but her lieutenants
2:16:11
have spotted T. It doesn't make
sense. Okay. Now, I began
2:16:16
looking at this I looked at this
and I saw this and I think this
2:16:19
is the reason that they didn't
want to show this I'm thinking
2:16:23
because I saw this I was
stunned. I'm sorry. Second part
2:16:28
play.
2:16:30
Modern drones have proven to be
the most successful tool in
2:16:33
breaking frontline stalemates we
have to adapt to. A former
2:16:39
German soldier who asked to stay
anonymous is instructing the
2:16:42
unit how transformational have
drones been for Ukraine?
2:16:49
Already it was clear in 2015
that it's going to be drone war.
2:16:53
Meaning not like they know that
we are level you know, drone
2:16:59
drones but it tactical drones
for all kinds of purposes. I
2:17:04
think I lost count how many
drones were put in here anti
2:17:09
drone kit taking down drones
very very far away. So use it as
2:17:16
a defend defense again drones
2:17:21
Okay, so what what exactly what
they have you
2:17:24
see this piece of gear? Yeah,
but I have never what was that
2:17:29
thing? It was the weirdest piece
of gear and it's supposed to be
2:17:32
takes down drones from a
distance. Yeah, it
2:17:34
fries them with a laser and or
at first it disrupts their
2:17:37
transmission, or there's the
GPS. So it throws it tries to
2:17:41
throw it off of balance with a
number of things. This has been
2:17:44
around for a couple of years.
I've never seen this thing
2:17:47
before. Yeah, but it's not for
the big drones. It's for the
2:17:50
smaller drones. Yeah, it's
2:17:51
got flaps on this side. screwy
looking thing. I think we should
2:17:56
get one of these.
2:17:58
This was not the reason to to re
edit the documentary. The whole
2:18:02
thing is embarrassing because
it's about weapons not going to
2:18:05
Ukraine. Well this
2:18:07
that this test that you are but
I'm telling you, I'm convinced
2:18:10
it was the show when they showed
this thing is I've never seen
2:18:15
it. I've never seen it before.
Yeah, he's seen this thing.
2:18:17
Yeah. Other I
2:18:18
think venues Yes. Well, no, no,
I've only seen the demonstration
2:18:22
of I don't think I've seen it
any venues or theaters, as we
2:18:25
would call it. theater of war.
But part of it is a directed
2:18:29
energy weapon laser part of it
is signal disruption, and part
2:18:33
of his GPS reception jamming or
something apparently quite
2:18:37
effective. And you can get get
your countermeasure thing
2:18:39
working fast enough.
2:18:42
But wouldn't it work on the big
drones?
2:18:46
I don't know. I just know that
the I don't know if they have
2:18:48
that. They might I mean, you
need it's a little bigger thing.
2:18:51
You know, you probably need one
of those full on it's not a
2:18:54
portable backpack type deal. Now
this is this has got to be a
2:18:59
whole truck that sets up to get
the big boys out. This is the
2:19:04
latest though that the latest
fear mongering coming out of
2:19:08
Ukraine and the theater of war,
2:19:10
a developing story from the war
in Ukraine the shelling and
2:19:13
Europe's largest nuclear plant,
as prompted an urgent new
2:19:16
warning from the United Nations.
The UN's nuclear chief is
2:19:19
warning both sides to
immediately stop any action that
2:19:23
jeopardize the safety at the
Ukrainian facility. Russia and
2:19:26
Ukraine blamed each other for
the bombing. The latest attack
2:19:29
reportedly sell five rockets hit
the plant, which the Kremlin has
2:19:33
been using as a military base.
2:19:36
Yeah, so Europe is talking about
this. Oh, man. We're all gonna
2:19:40
die. Radiation, say hit the
plant. I don't think that that
2:19:45
happens like that.
2:19:47
I don't think so either. And if
I had something bad happened to
2:19:49
that plant, the radiation would
go into Russia.
2:19:52
Yeah, so it's closer to Russia,
for sure.
2:19:56
Yeah. And then the prevailing
scope into Russia. So doesn't
2:20:00
make a lot of the story doesn't
make sense because of that.
2:20:03
No, no. Most of the stuff on on
television today makes no sense.
2:20:09
For instance, Iran
2:20:13
now, what I this this
2:20:18
would you call them rusty salmon
2:20:21
sandwich addressing Salman,
2:20:24
Salman Rushdie, who by the way
has had a fatwa against him for
2:20:29
get ready for it. 33 years. Yep.
So all of a sudden Iran has in
2:20:37
the news two days after the
Biden administration announces
2:20:40
they want to try and rekindle
the Iran nuclear deal. Just
2:20:45
like, is this now part of is
okay, so the agency, the CIA
2:20:50
said, Alright, Barak, listen,
we'll let you I know, it's it's
2:20:54
painful that it got screwed up
and this was the deal you want.
2:20:57
We'll let Joe do it. And you can
take credit for the cocktail
2:21:00
parties. Okay. What other reason
is there to rekindle this? What
2:21:06
do you think to have going on?
2:21:10
So we're starting off with the
assumption that this was a spook
2:21:13
operation. Apple, Sam,
2:21:16
Sam, no, no, no, no, not that.
No, actually what? The reason
2:21:19
why I'm saying spook operation
is this clip from CBS.
2:21:24
Investigators say the alleged
murder for hire plot began to
2:21:28
take shape after this drone
strike in Iraq, assassinated top
2:21:31
Iranian general Qasem Soleimani.
Over two years ago, former
2:21:35
national security adviser John
Bolton quickly tweeted
2:21:38
congratulations to all involved
Iran bound retaliation. The
2:21:42
Justice Department is now
charging Chevron per Safi, a
2:21:46
member of Iran's Revolutionary
Guard with offering $300,000 to
2:21:50
murder Bolton. What did the FBI
say about the serious nature of
2:21:54
the threat,
2:21:55
they were able to confirm that
it was potentially an effort
2:21:59
either to kidnap me or
assassinate me.
2:22:01
According to newly released law
enforcement records for Safi
2:22:04
working from Iran hired
operatives to surveil and then
2:22:07
eliminate Bolton even texting
pictures of cash promising
2:22:11
handsome payments. Separately,
sources told CBS News another
2:22:15
target of the Iranian plot
included former Secretary of
2:22:18
State Mike Pompeo. What poor
Safi didn't know is that he was
2:22:22
dealing with an FBI confidential
source. A lot of this is done.
2:22:27
With the secrecy Bill Evelina
ran it counterintelligence
2:22:30
operations during the Trump
administration, the
2:22:32
threat does not go away at all,
to Ambassador Bolton or any
2:22:36
other official that Iran has
their targets on
2:22:38
with talks to revive the 2015
nuclear deal with Iran. Bolton
2:22:43
warned the White House against
engagement,
2:22:45
I think there's no doubt that
there are other plots and not
2:22:48
just against former government
officials against innocent
2:22:52
American civilians, that tells
you the very nature of the
2:22:55
regime in Tehran, that this is
the kind of terrorist regime
2:22:59
they are
2:23:00
both and now has the same level
of Secret Service protection he
2:23:03
had while working at the White
House. Nate Iran denies any
2:23:07
involvement.
2:23:09
All right. So this
2:23:11
is actually from last week. I
wonder about this story.
2:23:17
Well, this is this not the guy
who just three weeks ago said
2:23:21
oh, yeah, no, I participated in
Coos. Isn't that isn't that kind
2:23:27
of what this is like guy oh,
they're trying to kill me. Let's
2:23:30
let's go for some regime change
and who gives a shit about John
2:23:33
Bolton? Why? Why if Iran wants
to? Who wants to come out and
2:23:38
kill somebody in an American for
whatever reason, because they
2:23:41
had something to do with
assassinations? A begging a real
2:23:45
number 300,000 That's,
2:23:48
I mean, the fatwa on rusty
salmon? Yeah, was $3 million.
2:23:54
Yes. I have. I have this clip
from rusty Solomon as well.
2:24:03
This was the scene shortly
before 11am. Right after the
2:24:07
moment a man was tackled after
allegedly stabbing Salman
2:24:11
Rushdie on stage. Just as he was
about to speak into Taqwa New
2:24:15
York, Stephen Davies
2:24:16
witnessed the attack. They got
maybe 10 seconds into their
2:24:19
introduction when that assailant
jumped out of the audience onto
2:24:24
the stage. He had a black mask
and immediately began pummeling
2:24:29
Salman Rushdie.
2:24:30
75 year old Rushdie was
apparently stabbed in the neck
2:24:33
and abdomen, a number of people
rushed to his aid. The award
2:24:38
winning author was medivac to an
area hospital to the attacker
2:24:41
say anything not that I heard
rush these writings are
2:24:44
considered by many Muslims to be
blasphemous. His 1988 novel
2:24:49
Satanic Verses led to the
Supreme Leader of Iran calling
2:24:53
for his execution, Rushdie was
living with a bounty on his head
2:24:57
now worth over $3 million
2:25:00
So I, to me, it feels like this
is a setup for something against
2:25:04
Iran. I mean, this may not have
been planned but good timing
2:25:08
quick. Let's threaten Bolton
2:25:13
Well, the Bolton thing got which
is older. Did that Bolton thing
2:25:17
is it? Well, that
2:25:17
was older. Okay. Now, the report
before Yes, but the report was
2:25:22
from this weekend from St.
2:25:24
Louis. They were brief. I had, I
had a clip, it was really a
2:25:30
couple of two three shows ago,
because this Russia thing is
2:25:33
new. So if you're gonna go with
your theory, which is you know,
2:25:36
reasonable. It's like, let's do
the Bolton thing, nothing, you
2:25:40
know, 350 Okay, whatever cares
about
2:25:44
this screwed it up. They had the
wrong numbers. They had the
2:25:47
wrong guy. And so then
2:25:49
they go after Russia and Russia,
the story has a lot of legs
2:25:52
happened just this week. Yeah.
And it's been getting a lot of
2:25:55
attention and poor Russia get
stabbed in the eye. They didn't
2:25:58
mention the neck stabbed in the
liver. The guy's a wreck.
2:26:01
They didn't mention in this
report that I heard that too. It
2:26:04
was like, that should be the
lead man. stabbing someone in
2:26:09
the eye. That's like, the next
bad next level.
2:26:13
So so they, they got you now we
got attention. And the other
2:26:18
thing was then that then this
stuff, okay, I played I put this
2:26:21
in the newsletter, you have two
tweets in the newsletter that
2:26:24
talk about the Rushdie thing.
And one of them shows that the
2:26:29
current Ayatollah like the guy
running the religious guy
2:26:33
running Iran tweeted in 2019,
that, hey, that full fat Wah,
2:26:40
you know, because I was under
the impression it was lifted.
2:26:43
That old fat was still in play.
It's got nothing to do with it,
2:26:46
you know, the books still out,
and it did. So he's pretty much
2:26:49
reinstituted the fat Wah in
2019. On Twitter, of course,
2:26:55
you'd think they'd take that
down, and they finally did
2:26:58
eventually, but it was already
too late. And I because you
2:27:01
know, they're too busy watching
Republicans. Now this happened
2:27:04
in New York. It happened in
upstate New York. has,
2:27:08
has gov HK will come out and
banned knives. Not yet. Yeah.
2:27:14
Okay. Seems like you should jump
on that. Now. She should knife
2:27:18
crisis life crisis. Hmm.
2:27:21
So let's see, I think, yeah, the
timing is a little dubious.
2:27:26
Well, especially since they I'm
just trying to figure out is it
2:27:30
that the administration wants
because the Bolton clearly not
2:27:33
in this administration, the
administration wants to rekindle
2:27:36
the Iran deal. And then we have
to get these two events. So is
2:27:42
someone against it or is this I
2:27:44
would say, yes, someone has to
be against it. Somebody doesn't
2:27:47
want the Iran deal. Right.
kindled and they tried to with
2:27:49
the Bolton thing, and that
didn't go anywhere. Go cares.
2:27:53
You're right, really Bolton that
was no good. You know what? I
2:27:56
got an idea. I stab someone in
the eye that gets their
2:28:01
attention.
2:28:03
Yeah, and the Rushdie thing was
a big, big deal amongst the
2:28:08
intellectual elites when it
happened. Original 1988 fatwa
2:28:13
became a big deal. And they hit
Russia to go into hiding and all
2:28:17
the rest of it, and everybody
was upset about it. And nobody
2:28:21
cares about Bolton. And so just
bring them bring the rusty thing
2:28:26
back into play, which is get
this for the Liberals get all
2:28:31
worked up. What not, oh, these
guys are terrible. And they did.
2:28:35
And so And because it's the
liberals who want to do deals
2:28:38
with Iran, so now they've maybe
that would get them off to off
2:28:41
the off that bandwagon? I don't
know. It's something up. I think
2:28:45
you're right. coincidences,
2:28:49
just a couple of great recent
New World Order things that I've
2:28:53
been collecting, mainly the
digital identity program in
2:28:58
Canada Navia. We got to keep our
eye on this, what they're doing
2:29:01
up there. Now this, of course,
started as the as the COVID,
2:29:07
pass, etc. But now it's Canada's
digital ambition. 2022. And it's
2:29:14
very similar to what you see in
in Europe, where governments are
2:29:19
saying, Look, we need to give
you a digital identification,
2:29:22
identification, digital setup,
digital system, so you can
2:29:25
interact with us interact, you
see, and it's spreading. And we
2:29:31
knew this would happen. It's
this is the Senator for
2:29:35
Queensland, Malcolm Roberts,
2:29:37
the World Economic Forum is the
source of our digital identity
2:29:42
bill. Parts of our digital
identity bill were copied and
2:29:45
pasted from World Economic
Forum's digital platform policy.
2:29:48
I think it's called the same
bill or virtually identical bill
2:29:51
has been rolled out and other
countries around the world, New
2:29:54
Zealand, Canada, Britain,
Singapore, Thailand. That's
2:29:59
where The bills are before the
parliament right now, the EU
2:30:03
European Union has a bill for
the whole of the European Union,
2:30:07
Malaysia has it in place passed
already, it's already at 64%
2:30:11
uptake then. So it'll be needed
once they get 100% uptake or
2:30:15
very close to 100% uptake, then
they will just make it
2:30:19
compulsory for anything to do
with the government or banking.
2:30:22
In the Philippines. It's
similar. And in Indonesia, it's
2:30:25
across government only not
banking yet. So they're moving
2:30:28
this out throughout Asia and
throughout the European Union,
2:30:32
and through Canada, in North
America.
2:30:35
Have you done any more research
on the digital ID here in the
2:30:38
US? I know you're working on
something.
2:30:40
No, I haven't touched it for six
months at least.
2:30:45
In Germany, the Green Party
minister is proposing to
2:30:50
establish centers for neighbors
to report on each other for
2:30:56
political interim, and even Wow,
that's nice. Isn't that great? I
2:31:00
know. Here's my favorite. MGM,
and Amazon are launching a new
2:31:07
television show. It's called
ring nation. And they will be
2:31:13
playing viral videos from
doorbell cameras. So you know
2:31:18
what this means? Because of
course, there's prize money
2:31:21
attached to it. Everyone's gonna
want to share their doorbell
2:31:24
videos. Hey, you want you to
look at it? Why not just do
2:31:27
anything that you want?
2:31:31
Me mele do it?
2:31:32
She does she have a ring? Video
camera.
2:31:35
She loves her ring cameras up at
the house up north?
2:31:38
Oh my goodness. She's a goner.
2:31:41
She's just she's just all in.
2:31:43
Wow. Does she have any other
gadgets like that? Or is it just
2:31:47
the ring? Just the ring video,
2:31:49
just that one ring video?
2:31:52
The I don't want to mention a
lot of people are talking about
2:31:56
the $80 billion that the IRS now
receives in this new inflation
2:32:00
reduction package? Yeah. Because
that's how you do it, you know,
2:32:04
you start giving away money, and
that reduces inflation. So first
2:32:10
of all, it's a little bit of a
talking point that I'm hearing
2:32:14
everywhere. 87,087. That's the
number of IRS agents, I have to
2:32:21
point out is over a 10 year
period. They have they have a
2:32:26
lot of catching up to do. So
it's not like boom, there's
2:32:29
87,000 new agents. It'll I don't
think you could train 87,000
2:32:35
They can't even train Danny
agents in my opinion.
2:32:39
But what's your you I've got a
clip on this. Oh, good. Well, I
2:32:42
was about to say about the
bullets and guns, IRS deadly
2:32:47
force clip.
2:32:47
So before I play it, we've known
this we've talked about this
2:32:51
since 2007. The IRS has guns
they've come to my office with
2:32:59
their guns looking for me. They
just couldn't find me but okay.
2:33:03
And everyone's all bent out of
shape. Because I guess now we're
2:33:06
just finding out about this
2:33:08
agents willing to use deadly
force. That's what the IRS is
2:33:12
looking for. Some are wondering
why a tax agency needs that. The
2:33:15
job advertisement for IRS
special agents that are willing
2:33:18
to use deadly force is raising
eyebrows. The tax agency is late
2:33:23
because it could soon double its
workforce. The IRS has
2:33:26
stockpiled 5 million rounds of
ammunition and spent $750,000
2:33:31
this year to buy more. That's
according to Florida Congressman
2:33:34
Matt gates, a former IRS agent
told entity that some agents
2:33:38
respond to dangerous situations
where they might encounter armed
2:33:41
criminals says it's important
for these agents to be able to
2:33:44
defend themselves.
2:33:46
Okay, so that's bullshit.
defending themselves. Now that's
2:33:50
totally untrue. The United
States Department of Education
2:33:55
has guns and ammo and agents who
carry them. The CDC has agents
2:34:03
who carry concealed guns when
they're going to check things
2:34:06
out. Now that may be for their
protection, but let's not
2:34:08
pretend like the US DEA, the US
Department of Agriculture,
2:34:13
they've got guns. In fact,
there's there's cut outs, carve
2:34:16
outs and exceptions in every
single bill that is supposed to
2:34:19
disarm the American public but
okay. The people are supposed to
2:34:22
help the farmers and the
children. They get to have guns,
2:34:24
the IRS, it wasn't bad enough
that they were targeting groups
2:34:29
and auditing people. People
didn't get it then oh, and now
2:34:33
Oh, gee. I mean, let me put it
into perspective. That this is
2:34:38
this is the world that people
like Beto O'Rourke, want for us.
2:34:43
They have all the guns. You're
the asshole who wants to defend
2:34:46
yourself.
2:34:47
I want to make sure that now 11
weeks since we lost 19 kids and
2:34:54
their two teachers shot to death
with a weapon originally
2:34:58
designed for use In combat,
legally proposed by an 18 year
2:35:04
old is about to get worse, who
did not try to
2:35:06
obtain one when he was 16 or 17.
But follow the law that's on the
2:35:10
books ladies and gentlemen, that
says goodbye. Not one. You could
2:35:14
buy two or more if you want to
AR fifteens hundreds of rounds
2:35:19
of ammunition and take the
weapon that was originally
2:35:22
designed for use on the
battlefields in Vietnam to
2:35:25
penetrate an enemy soldiers
helmet and 500 feet and knock
2:35:29
him down dead. Up against kids
at five feet maybe funny you
2:35:33
motherfucker, but it's not
funny.
2:35:39
So Beto sits there and this was
great, by the way. Very well
2:35:45
placed. I don't know if that was
a shill. It seems like someone
2:35:49
started laughing about his
ridiculous statement that the AR
2:35:52
15 was designed for Vietnam. No.
Excuse me. Wasn't that the M
2:35:58
one? M 16? Not the AR 15 Am I
crazy?
2:36:03
No M 16 is a bit similar. But
not the same. It didn't have the
2:36:10
AR 15 is not designed for rugged
use in a field that he
2:36:15
says it was designed for to kill
people at 500 yards in Vietnam.
2:36:19
There's no that's just not true.
2:36:21
No, it's not true. It will kill
somebody. 500 yards. Sure.
2:36:27
Yeah, of course. Anyway, that's
the idea. And everyone's just
2:36:33
gonna sit around and post on
Twitter how outraged they are.
2:36:37
What is the origin of guns? Why
don't you vote some people in
2:36:41
that will stop that shit people.
Because we're undertand bait
2:36:44
is not voted and he's just as
loner. He's just out there. He's
2:36:47
a lone wolf making these these
these commentaries. I mean, he's
2:36:51
running.
2:36:52
But I mean, the IRS has the
guns. They're part of
2:36:56
agriculture has the guns.
Department Homeland Security has
2:36:59
the
2:36:59
list should be disarmed. You're
right. Everybody has guns. But
2:37:03
yeah, everyone has. The
2:37:08
founder of Whole Foods is
retiring. I think it was his
2:37:12
name John Mac. Think guy from
Texas. Yeah. You know, this
2:37:16
started in Austin. Yeah. Yeah,
John Mackey is his name started
2:37:23
in Austin was a revolution in
shopping. And oh, he totally
2:37:30
changed the amount of product
that was being offered the
2:37:34
display. Of course the pricing
brought in fake food that called
2:37:40
Organic made it all sound fluffy
was a huge marketing. I think it
2:37:44
totally changed supermarkets
completely changed. Well, here's
2:37:48
here's a quick, quick little
clip. He was on the reason
2:37:51
podcast. And this was the part
that I thought was the most
2:37:55
interesting my concern and I
should probably say these guys
2:37:58
were all you know, Whole Foods
is all about community and
2:38:02
better world and now all of the
stuff that is gooey, very gooey,
2:38:07
my concern is that I feel like
socialists are taking over their
2:38:12
marching through the
institutions, they're taking
2:38:14
everything over they and taking
over education. It looks like
2:38:18
they've taken over a lot of the
corporations and looks like
2:38:21
they've taken over the military.
And it's just continuing. So I'm
2:38:27
I'm deeply concerned about you
know, I'm a capitalist at heart
2:38:35
and I'm live I believe in
liberty and capitalism. Those
2:38:38
are my my twin values. And I
feel like you know, with the way
2:38:44
freedom of speech is today, the
movement on on gun control. A
2:38:49
lot of the liberties that are
taken for granted most of my
2:38:53
life, I think are under threat.
2:38:56
Even he sees the college didn't
get a lot of play.
2:39:01
Of course. So we can't have
that. Oh, but there is a good
2:39:08
clip where she gets a clip from
the reason podcast no reason
2:39:12
Good job I
2:39:13
gave him I'm gonna give them
clip at a day though,
2:39:15
so they get clipped for the day
and I can just go ahead and
2:39:18
pound sand. Okay, all right.
Thank you. I humbly give this
2:39:26
award to the reason podcast a
few things on food. McDonald's
2:39:34
is reopening their fabulous food
restaurants in Kyiv
2:39:39
Kyiv Oh, really? Yeah. So good
for them.
2:39:43
Yeah, well, it's good. You know,
the people need to eat
2:39:44
money. It's in Russia but okay,
please, fine.
2:39:48
Illinois has changed has changed
the law that will allow people
2:39:52
using SNAP benefits also known
as food stamps for fast food.
2:39:57
The one thing that is not
supposed to happen And, and the
2:40:02
most exciting thing was a, a
scheduled conference for
2:40:09
September in the White House,
which will be a conference on
2:40:14
hunger, nutrition and health.
And they are going so I think
2:40:20
the guy leading this conference
is the guy who produced the food
2:40:24
compass, which is a Tufts
University science based
2:40:29
nutrient profiling system. I'm
sorry, let me repeat that. It is
2:40:36
the most comprehensive and
science based nutrient profiling
2:40:40
system to date. The food compass
is used to encourage consumption
2:40:46
of foods. Actually. Yes,
consumption of ultra processed
2:40:54
foods will strongly discouraging
consumption of all animal based
2:40:57
foods including saturated animal
fats. So I just wanted to run
2:41:03
through quickly the 12345 like
the top six or seven recommended
2:41:08
foods, and then the bottom six
or seven of bad bad foods that
2:41:14
the White House in September
will be sending out Karina
2:41:18
Abdul's John Kerr Vaughn clam
van clam, she will be promoting
2:41:24
it. And let's why don't we start
at the bottom what what foods do
2:41:28
you think are the worst
according to the Biden food
2:41:32
compass?
2:41:35
Well, the worst food is
obviously any animal protein I
2:41:39
would say beef would be at the
top of the list. Pork pork
2:41:42
No, no ground beef ground beef
lamb. Little by
2:41:46
the way, which is the hamburger
2:41:48
Yep. Pretty much shattered
cheese bad bad bad bad bad. A
2:41:54
whole egg fried in butter. Very
bad. Very very bad. Now let's
2:42:01
look at the at the top the top
things what are the best things
2:42:05
you can eat according to the
food compass? Well, I
2:42:08
would say yeah, you got me Yes.
2:42:10
Yeah, give it a shot.
2:42:12
I think the probably I'm
guessing it would be would
2:42:17
should be eventually the food
companies will have it up there
2:42:20
if it's not now which is
crickets?
2:42:23
No, we're not there yet. We're
not at the cricket stage yet.
2:42:25
This is still discrediting other
stuff. Like beef, and eggs and
2:42:31
butter. No best food according
to the the food compasses
2:42:35
watermelon
2:42:37
is just water. Yep. Have you
ever eaten watermelon? I mean
2:42:40
it's delicious, but it's just
sugar water once you just give
2:42:43
me a glass of water and put a
spoon of sugar in it and put a
2:42:47
drop of flavoring and that's
watermelon. Number two Oh
2:42:51
offense to people who love
watermelon. I love watermelon
2:42:53
but I know what I'm eating
there's there's not there's not
2:42:56
as vapid number two on the list
the empty calories I would say
2:43:01
number two on the list equal
scoring with watermelon is our
2:43:05
old friend kale.
2:43:08
Kale.
2:43:10
I can't believe that political
lysis is bullshit. And will
2:43:15
scale better than chard for
example.
2:43:18
Let me see if charge charge is
not on the list. Do you know
2:43:21
what number three is? So
watermelon kale. What could be
2:43:24
number three on the list? Get
ready for number 345678 are just
2:43:28
fantastic.
2:43:31
Results. Read them off.
2:43:32
All right. Number one watermelon
number two kale number three
2:43:35
frosted Mini Wheats
2:43:39
brought what weight? You're
reading from?
2:43:43
bogus. No, no, no, no, no.
2:43:46
Frosted mini weight is processed
food.
2:43:50
Hey, it's number three on their
list, followed by unsweetened
2:43:55
almond milk. Nuts.
2:43:57
What was that on there? That's a
good day. By the way. It's
2:44:00
almond slurry.
2:44:02
It's nuts, SAP. That's followed
by nonfat frozen yogurt. Now
2:44:11
these still have a score of 80
Now we're in the 78 score.
2:44:15
Chocolate covered almonds. Good
for you. Orange juice with
2:44:18
calcium. Honey Nut Cheerios. I
don't understand this. Isn't
2:44:30
this
2:44:30
people should be out you right?
You're reading from a joke list.
2:44:33
No, no,
2:44:33
this is this is really this
truly is from the food compass.
2:44:37
And it's it. I'm actually
looking at the graph produced by
2:44:40
the food compass people. It's in
the show notes. I know so it's
2:44:47
insane. I think they've gone
crazy. They decided hey, look,
2:44:51
we're not it's not going fast
enough with the vaccines and the
2:44:55
myocarditis we got to do more
more I know but the poor people
2:45:02
eat fast food. And I was told to
eat frosted Mini Wheats.
2:45:08
Well, they gotta give this as
ground beef is in debt the
2:45:11
bottom they're going to have to
get the poor people to eat
2:45:14
something other than ground
beef. Or because if you're going
2:45:17
to have
2:45:18
kale, kale and frosted Mini
Wheats,
2:45:21
in a, in a bun
2:45:24
with special sauce.
2:45:27
I'm going to show my school by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
2:45:30
all the people who could do
that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
2:45:40
we have a few people to thank
starting with Tucker Soltau in
2:45:44
Edmonton, Alberta. $150 top of
the list was John Mudge in
2:45:51
Denver, Colorado coming in
number two. He's got something
2:45:55
to say there. See if there's
anything we need to read game
2:45:58
brazen bird in Edmonton,
Oklahoma. 100 Or she's got
2:46:03
something to say. That's for
sure. She went to a meet up and
2:46:07
fell in love. Brian Gill in
Kirkland, Washington. $100 Derek
2:46:11
Paris 8888, Monterey,
California, sur dieses in
2:46:17
Detroit, Michigan, to a diesel
would be even better. A Robert
2:46:23
Umbarger in Langhorne or he came
at 808 Sorry. And then Robert
2:46:27
Umbarger came with 808 and wrote
in boob and then done. Sir Kevin
2:46:35
McLaughlin, Duke of Luna lover
of American boobs. Locust North
2:46:39
Carolina 808 drops down to
Gergana E and Colva in Chesham
2:46:46
UK 7114 Brian gates in Fremont,
California 6969. Vote out
2:46:52
Swalwell Ray Bradbury DeVore AK
in Marion net. Wisconsin
2:47:00
Marinette, Wisconsin 6969.
Christopher dektor Basic by
2:47:07
the way, Ray Ray bread Bread,
bread bread beriberi? Yes, thank
2:47:11
you for the Army doctor clips.
Last show. I've been debating
2:47:14
taking the vaccine accepting the
vaccine into my life by joining
2:47:17
the Air Force. Now I will wait
this can't last forever. You may
2:47:21
have saved my life.
2:47:23
It's possible it's very possible
Christopher dektor 5678 Mark
2:47:27
Bucha Bucha Jerry I think in
Greenwood, Indiana 5222 He's got
2:47:34
a birthday so Brian case by the
way. El Guapo in San Antonio,
2:47:38
Texas has a birthday at 5033
2:47:42
listener says he needs a de doop
2:47:46
de doop
2:47:48
de doop show.
2:47:49
He doesn't really need one.
2:47:50
He says I need to do douching he
says I need one.
2:47:54
Yeah, he doesn't need one but he
got one. Adam Westerman in
2:47:59
Google Mar Add New South Wales
they got some great name
2:48:03
shutdowns in Australia 50. And
these are all $50 donors. I
2:48:08
mean, we've got a shortlist and
so let me run through the $50
2:48:11
donors and we'll be on our way.
Kevin dills in Huntersville,
2:48:15
North Carolina Sir Kevin
Christian Freeman in San Marcos,
2:48:18
Texas Michael Wendell in
Matawan, New Jersey. Preston
2:48:23
Isaacson and Booker Aton,
Florida Keith ball in
2:48:26
Phillipsburg, New Jersey Aaron
Lundqvist in Sebring, Florida,
2:48:30
Darrell de Ville in Newton,
Mississippi. A Jim Tucker in
2:48:34
National Park, New Jersey found
the bobbio el vez in moncks
2:48:39
corner South Carolina, Dame
Patricia Worthington in Miami,
2:48:43
Florida, Brandon Savoie in Port
orchard, Washington, sir Brandon
2:48:47
view. And last but not least Dr.
Daniel Galloway in Marietta,
2:48:51
Georgia want to thank these
people for making keeping the
2:48:55
show alive.
2:48:56
Indeed, in more ways than one
and as you heard earlier, people
2:49:01
who come in under $50 with their
monthly donations weekly or per
2:49:04
show Summit, summit $4, a show
we have a knight joining us
2:49:10
today. It really does. It can
happen it can happen for you. So
2:49:13
we have sustaining donations
which are under $50. And we
2:49:16
don't mention them. Also because
people like to come in under $50
2:49:20
to definitely remain anonymous.
If you'd like to learn how to
2:49:23
support the no agenda show under
the value for value model where
2:49:26
you determine what the show is
worth to you, to your pocketbook
2:49:32
to your budget to whatever you
want to send back. That's the
2:49:36
revolutionary part of this show.
Learn more here vote.org/n A I
2:49:44
got a very nice note from Sir
Chris Wilson. He sent along an
2:49:47
end of show production which we
shall play of course, and he did
2:49:51
send a note haven't heard from
Sir Chris. He's down it was very
2:49:53
difficult. Certainly the
beginning of the lock downs with
2:49:57
this is locking down a man like
Sir Chris Wilson is is not an
2:50:03
easy thing to do ask for trouble
asking for big trouble. And so
2:50:07
we kept in touch and check out
how he is doing and I know he
2:50:11
kept in touch with a lot of
people in no agenda nation but
2:50:15
here he is a quick note family's
doing well aside from losing
2:50:18
dame, Kylie's dad and serve
Felix's granddad to heart
2:50:21
failure. Could you please do a
call out for Ken Harrison who
2:50:24
passed away peacefully this
morning at a ripe old age of 94
2:50:28
father to three beautiful
daughters, seven grandchildren,
2:50:31
and a couple of great grandkids
love light and prayers from the
2:50:34
community will be most
appreciated. And then as the ads
2:50:39
almost 12 months since my mum
passed as well, her being
2:50:42
isolated from everyone during
the last two conscious days on
2:50:44
this earth is what broke me took
a lot from you to not go full,
2:50:48
Ted. Understood, understood.
2:50:51
I want to mention a note from
one of our Luxembourg producers
2:50:55
it came in under the money but
it says and this irks me because
2:51:02
people should help us here a
little bit. ITM according to the
2:51:06
North American calendar week
standard. It is week 30 300
2:51:12
Man what a promotional
opportunity missed. Ah, now I
2:51:18
know you're kicking yourself
over that.
2:51:20
Well, best I can. All right.
2:51:23
For everyone who needs it?
Here's some service good karma
2:51:27
should help you out.
2:51:28
You've got karma
2:51:39
here's our list for today. Chris
Grimmauld. Turned 50 on the 12
2:51:42
Mario VAs squares Happy Birthday
to his beautiful wife Shaila
2:51:46
celebrating celebrated yesterday
Dame slavomir husband Cirque du
2:51:50
Jing. It's his birthday today
the 14th and do nev also
2:51:53
celebrating today. Brian gates
will turn 42 Tomorrow Mark boo
2:51:58
Sheryl or boo Sherry, happy
birthday to her Spartan hot
2:52:01
Greek wife. She celebrates
tomorrow. Kristen McChesney says
2:52:05
Happy Birthday to Zach Simon
celebrating on the 16th El Guapo
2:52:09
his daughter Emma will turn 12
on August 16. And finally David
2:52:13
Stoltz he will be celebrating on
the 21st Happy birthday from
2:52:16
everybody here at the best
podcast in the universe. And no
2:52:21
title changes but we do have two
nights to bring up so if you can
2:52:26
bring our double bladed Knight's
sword here it is. Hi love that
2:52:31
pearl handle. David salty Chris
Gamal gentlemen both of you have
2:52:37
achieved night status you joined
the illustrious group of no
2:52:40
agenda nights and games. Thanks
for supporting the no agenda
2:52:42
show in the amount of $1,000 or
more. I am very proud to
2:52:46
pronounce the K v s are
unaffiliated of the long term
2:52:50
and circus of the Catskills. Oh
gentlemen, for you. We've got
2:52:54
some goodies here. We've got
hookers and blow. We've got rent
2:52:56
boys and Chardonnay. We've got
to keep those at the key. Yeah,
2:52:58
we got diet soda and video
games. We got harlots and hell
2:53:02
doll pepperoni rolls and pale
ales, redheads and Rhys
2:53:05
Rubenesque, Reuben and Rosae
gashes and sock a bucket,
2:53:08
vanilla bong hits and bourbon,
sparkling cider and escorts,
2:53:11
ginger ale and journals, breast
milk and pablum. There's always
2:53:15
the mutton in Mead. You can dig
in credit much in a way on the
2:53:21
button down that was immediate,
you'll feel don't get that stuff
2:53:24
from meatworks yet get the other
stuff the homemade stuff. While
2:53:28
you're doing that, just jot down
your ring size, take that over
2:53:32
to no agenda nation.com/rings so
that we can get the beautiful
2:53:37
night rings out to you along
with the wax you can use to
2:53:40
imprint with the signet ring and
seal your important
2:53:43
correspondence. And obviously a
certificate of authenticity.
2:53:47
Awesome authenticity and thank
you all. I'm Jason Calacanis.
2:53:55
Thanks, thank you for supporting
the no agenda show.
2:53:58
No one.
2:54:05
It's actually much more than a
party. It's the physical
2:54:09
community that you need to have
in your life. It is important to
2:54:13
have that no agenda. meetups are
a place to meet other people,
2:54:19
other children with different
backgrounds, different lands,
2:54:23
but you have one thing in common
and that can help you create a
2:54:26
community that could be very
valuable one of these days.
2:54:29
Let's see out when at the
monsoon meet up in the morning.
2:54:32
Certainly mofo from Tucson with
bareness bed in the morning,
2:54:35
John and Adam.
2:54:38
Hey, John, and Adam, thanks for
all that you do. We learn a lot.
2:54:42
We love you guys. Mark and Mel
from Tucson Arizona. anatomies
2:54:46
coyote poster from the showroom,
Sam embraced. Morning, Sir
2:54:51
Rocket Man editable
2:54:52
eta. We're all here with our
pocket sized screaming goat.
2:54:56
This has been steamed the self
proclaimed official beat boxer
2:55:00
have no agenda. You've got karma
and now I'm proud to introduce
2:55:06
Vince's mom. Hello.
2:55:08
Hey guys. My name is Christian
I'm here with the NA bring join
2:55:12
myself. I was hit in the mouth
but brothers of the serpent
2:55:15
podcast and I'm using my time to
promote their balance value.
2:55:20
rockband $50 dynasty line
2:55:27
I gotta find out who this rock
band is they promote on stage
2:55:31
promoting the no agenda show.
Kind of like that. Need to find
2:55:35
out more. There's no more
meetups today. I don't think you
2:55:39
can join but on Tuesday, you can
go to the divided and Concord
2:55:45
meet up that'll be the August
Rush edition 630 at the side
2:55:48
State Brewery. It has attacked
taco truck in Concord,
2:55:51
California, so bring cash. Then
Thursday next show day the carry
2:55:56
courage local 9196 o'clock
Eastern fortnight brewing in
2:56:00
Cary, North Carolina. The third
Thursday in Fort Worth where the
2:56:03
west where the Western
simulation begins. Simulation.
2:56:09
It begins at six o'clock the
bearded lady Fort Worth, Texas.
2:56:13
And finally August 18. Also on
Thursdays Charles Thursdays
2:56:16
thirsty thirsty Third Thursday
Monday monthly. It's Charlotte
2:56:20
Ed taverns go there if you can't
find one of these near you go to
2:56:25
no agenda meetup.com Start your
own that just like a party out
2:56:31
with Dyson days you won't be
triggered
2:56:41
you wouldn't be where everybody
feels the same. It's like
2:56:52
right, I only have one ISO so
I'll play. Yeah, well, I have
2:56:56
that whole the whole ISOs from
from the nice but they're not
2:57:00
caught up so
2:57:02
well yet to get those next time.
Yeah, I got I only have two.
2:57:05
Well, let me play my one and see
what your two are. Here we go.
2:57:08
Tier one moronic
2:57:13
what was it? moronic?
2:57:15
Tier one moronic?
2:57:16
Tier one, moronic? No you don't.
2:57:21
Okay, I got to get what is next.
2:57:26
What's next? What's next? Yeah.
2:57:32
And then I got very nice. It was
it was very nice.
2:57:38
I'm really not crazy about any
of our ISOs to be honest.
2:57:43
Huh? Think what is next is okay,
2:57:46
now it doesn't have any
dynamics. I mean, we obviously
2:57:51
we can use it but it just feels
feels like it sucks. Well, no,
2:57:55
hold on a second. Let me see
what we can do. Doesn't Suck.
2:57:58
Just we can do better. You can
do better. Let me see
2:58:02
it believable.
2:58:04
No. Okay, there it is. Boom.
Stop
2:58:06
on the unbelievable.
Unbelievable. Okay, let me just
2:58:09
put it use that in the spot. Let
me just double check. Let me
2:58:15
Jack the kid up. And let me amp
her up. Got to amp it. You got
2:58:18
to amp it all right here is it
here this is it.
2:58:22
believable.
2:58:24
Okay. Yeah. Okay. I like the way
she does on believable. Yeah.
2:58:30
Unbelievable. It's fun,
believable.
2:58:32
Hey, you know the beaches are
back up. And yeah, beaches are
2:58:37
dangerous. Have you heard the
latest danger on the beach
2:58:40
sharks? No, no, no, it's much
worse than that.
2:58:43
We turn now to what's being
called a freak accident on a
2:58:47
beach in South Carolina, a woman
killed after being impaled by an
2:58:51
umbrella. Authority say 63 year
old Tammy Perel was on the beach
2:58:56
in Garden City, South Carolina
Wednesday, when a beach umbrella
2:59:00
was blown from its anchoring the
sharp end of the pole, impaling
2:59:04
her in the chest. Good
Samaritans rushing to help, but
2:59:08
she later died at the hospital.
The case similar to the death of
2:59:12
a Virginia woman in 2016, killed
by a flying umbrella that struck
2:59:17
her in the chest on Virginia
Beach. Well, deaths from beach
2:59:22
umbrellas are rare. Injuries are
not in 2010 Lynn Stevens was
2:59:27
impaled in the thigh by a
flyaway umbrella in Maryland.
2:59:30
I mean, did you know that this
was such a plague?
2:59:35
Man, they're hard up for news.
2:59:40
Yeah, they really are. Like,
maybe we got and they filled two
2:59:44
minutes with that crap. If you
can believe it.
2:59:46
I gotta I gotta filler here.
There's another one. There's a
2:59:49
non story about a Mad Bomber.
2:59:55
And an update on the man who
threatened to detonate a bomb
2:59:57
near the US Capitol almost a
year ago. Oh, but had no bombs.
3:00:01
He said to be released from the
jail under house arrest. 50 year
3:00:04
old Floyd Roseberry drove from
North Carolina to Washington DC
3:00:08
last August and he had a bar
judge determined Thursday that
3:00:13
the man was suffering side
effects from improper
3:00:15
medication. His lawyers say he
suffers mental health issues
3:00:19
from a traumatic childhood.
Psychologists told the court to
3:00:22
have his drugs have adverse side
effects when taken together and
3:00:26
could cause manic and psychotic
episodes. You'll be released
3:00:29
under house arrest and will be
monitored by an ankle bracelet
3:00:32
Roseberry has pleaded not guilty
and trial date is not set yet.
3:00:36
Why don't they go and look into
the drugs that these kids are
3:00:39
taking? Yeah, and shoot a
school? No, this guy did no bomb
3:00:44
no nuts and didn't hurt anyone.
Next thing you know they're
3:00:46
going to great detail of his
drug use.
3:00:49
Psychologists told the court to
have his drugs have adverse side
3:00:52
effects when taken together.
Holy crap.
3:00:55
That's huge. That's not a
nonstory. That's big. We got to
3:00:59
find out what those two drugs
were we got to find the
3:01:00
documents.
3:01:03
Okay, I think you're probably
right. That's we need to find
3:01:05
out what those two are because
you know that that people are
3:01:07
getting taken and all kinds of
mixtures that God knows what
3:01:10
they do.
3:01:12
But you know, Pfizer and
moderna, you can mix and match
3:01:15
throwing some j&j Not a problem,
the top off, top, top up, not
3:01:20
top off, top up. You want to
call it a day or, I mean, I
3:01:24
still have City of Phoenix.
Food. I've got
3:01:27
plenty of stuff for the next
show. Okay. And we do, I guess,
3:01:31
plenty of stuff. And that next
show will take place on
3:01:39
Thursday, that we hope that you
can join us for that because
3:01:42
we're looking forward to it.
Whatever there is to
3:01:46
deconstruct, we'll deconstruct
it for you. Guaranteed.
3:01:51
And
3:01:54
coming to you from the heart of
the Texas Hill Country. With my
3:01:59
first tooth makeover, revamped
session coming on Tuesday, we'll
3:02:04
see how I am Thursday. If
3:02:07
you reach out talking like cash
came back I was practicing
3:02:10
today. Sure. We'll see how it
goes.
3:02:13
That's right here from the heart
of the Texas Hill Country FEMA
3:02:15
Region number six in the
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
3:02:18
curry
3:02:18
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where I remain I'm John C.
3:02:22
Dvorak we
3:02:23
return on Thursday right here on
no agenda. Please remember us at
3:02:27
the vortec.org/na and of show
mixes Sir Michael Anthony N v.
3:02:33
Never. The inevitable Sir Chris
Wilson. Up next. Another live
3:02:38
show at the troll room troll
room.io no agenda stream.com
3:02:43
Phoenix and phone boy enjoy that
everybody will talk to you on
3:02:50
Thursday until then. Adios mofos
3:02:55
choice
3:02:57
and such vaccinations go away
2022 After all mankind has been
3:03:52
through Ukraine inflation to get
ready for what's in store. 2025
3:04:13
Donald Trump he didn't survive
when his plane flew up in the
3:04:19
sky.
3:04:22
Su is 2020 a mandatory vaccine
for Hey, Come fly the plane.
3:04:34
contrives Elon Musk's, run away
to Quincy to fail CS. Queen is
3:04:47
me and you heliyon OMA adores
everyone in their presence. You
3:04:54
must crow 2036 Same old tricks
box around an algae is Breathing
3:05:08
in breathing out is being
strange is illegal for everyone
3:05:27
gender reassignment Anna can eat
your beans so you can be dreads
3:05:37
20 You every one is you can
exercise unless you know it's
3:06:12
been 33 years since 2015 is
monetized his stupidity that
3:06:20
went viral on a downward spiral
human beings have run their race
3:06:26
histories put them in their
place when this crazy started,
3:06:32
we could be so fake and
retarded.
3:06:53
boruch.org/in a
3:06:59
believable