Cover for No Agenda Show 1482: Gorby Chips
September 1st, 2022 • 2h 56m

1482: Gorby Chips

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0:00
Every single one is dead.
0:02
Adam curry Jhansi Devora September 1 2022. And this is
0:06
your award winning combination media assassination episode
0:09
1482. This
0:11
is no
0:12
agenda,
0:13
trusting the mice and broadcasting live from the heart
0:17
of the Texas Hill Country here and FEMA Region number six in
0:20
the morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry,
0:22
and from Northern Silicon Valley where we have a motto, don't
0:26
become an executive at a Russian oil company. I'm John C. Dvorak.
0:34
Oh, did something bad happened to somebody?
0:36
Yeah, the chairman of Lukoil. Oh, accidentally fell off of a
0:44
balcony at a hospital while smoking. Oh, no. He went out to
0:50
smoking and it fell off the balcony and died. I mean,
0:52
oh, no. How do these you've got to wonder how do these things
0:57
happen?
0:58
Coincidentally, he was against the Ukrainian.
1:03
Oh, he was against the regime. He wasn't he was.
1:07
Yeah, he said something negative. And that was that.
1:09
Well, these
1:09
are not good things to do. This is very bad. I don't know
1:12
why these guys haven't got a clue. baffles me.
1:17
You know, a lot of you know, it's interesting. You bring that
1:19
up because someone sent me a clip. And when was I in Glenn
1:25
Beck back in March, I think. Yeah. March March 5 2022. And
1:31
did you see any of that interview? Probably is
1:35
quite a bit of okay.
1:37
So he brought something that
1:38
was working. I was more kind of interested in the aftermath,
1:41
where he goes on and on about you being his his brother. Yeah.
1:45
I haven't
1:45
heard much from him since.
1:49
Just like a real brother.
1:50
Yeah, exactly. When I emailed when he does email back, but
1:53
that's about it. He said something in that in that
1:57
interview, which at the time didn't register with me. I had
2:00
no idea who he was talking about. But it's kind of telling.
2:04
Well, it, evaluate maybe for yourself. Let's see. We'll go
2:09
back to March 2022. And he brings up Alexander Dugan, the
2:15
guy whose daughter was just blowed up.
2:17
Have you? Have you read any Alexander Dugan? No, let me
2:22
recommend you read the fourth political theory. He in fact, in
2:25
fact, just wrote another one. That's just out and it's about
2:29
the great reset versus something else. And he is somebody who's
2:34
extraordinarily dangerous. But he's using the language. He is
2:41
appealing to the big government people and he's using religion,
2:47
the homeland, or families or children he's using and you'll
2:53
read, probably, I don't know, half the book. And you'll go, I
2:58
agree with half of this. You know, that's always the tricky
3:02
part. Right? Yeah. Other Half is insane. Insanity. He's a big,
3:08
he's the guy who was behind the Crimea. Asian and Putin
3:15
strangely, was using a lot of his language when he was talking
3:19
about the Russian Empire.
3:21
So what does this tell us about back? Then in March, he was
3:26
bringing up Dugan and how Dugan is kind of like, you know, he
3:29
uses words like homeland, you know, clearly pointing towards
3:33
Dugan being a bad guy but a good guy at the same time. I don't
3:36
know. I just that struck me. I didn't register at all, when we
3:40
were talking on the show.
3:41
But nobody ever heard of this. Dugan. Before this happened.
3:44
This is what
3:45
this is way before this happened. That's the point. What
3:48
Why was Glenn Beck been bringing it up?
3:52
It could be just a coincidence. But Beck is one of those guys
3:55
who's always been kind of plugged into some underground of
4:00
information as we remember when he used to be at Fox and he
4:03
right set of these people's names all over a blackboard and
4:07
start drawing arrows and they started going from here to there
4:10
to here to there, which they always end up with Soros at the
4:13
end of it, and rightfully so, and maybe do gins guests up to
4:16
do his sorrows. Ah, there you go. It might be worth looking
4:21
into.
4:21
Yeah, you go. Well, we do have mostly this is a little update
4:28
on Ukraine Mizel stick here while we're at
4:30
it turning overseas now amid fierce fighting in southern
4:32
Ukraine International Nuclear inspectors are set to take a
4:35
first hand look at Europe's largest nuclear power plant,
4:38
which has been rattled in fighting in recent weeks
4:40
sparking fears of a major disaster. The inspectors met
4:43
today with President Solinsky who called the nuclear plant a
4:46
top priority for the safety of Ukraine and the world.
4:51
I like how they they say and Ukraine and the world whereas if
4:54
that thing blows up, and I still haven't heard from atomic rod,
4:58
I'd like to know if that I mean, is it so that a nuclear power
5:03
plant by definition will blow up and, and create a cloud? If it's
5:07
a bomb? I don't think so. I really don't. It's just one of
5:11
these like, Okay,
5:13
here's some clips on this thing.
5:15
By the way, you seem a little over clipped today.
5:20
You know, it was one of those things I didn't expect this. I
5:23
clip until I've until the box of clips fills up
5:26
and then you decided to fill up another one.
5:31
Well, it was an accident. Yeah, that's okay. It was a surprise.
5:35
Yeah. Ukraine nuke plant loses power,
5:39
a team of UN experts is in southern Ukraine to inspect a
5:43
nuclear complex that's been shelled for weeks, and Piers
5:47
Frank langfitt has more from Odessa.
5:49
The inspectors are traveling from Kyiv through mostly
5:52
Ukrainian controlled territory to separate your power plant in
5:55
southern Ukraine. However, Russian forces control the plant
5:58
and the team will have to cross the wars frontlines to get
6:02
there. The Russian installed occupation government, which is
6:05
not internationally recognized, said it would not issue the team
6:08
have passed today. And the group would arrive at the plant
6:11
Thursday, the International Atomic Energy Agency says the
6:14
team will look at safety systems assess damage, and check on the
6:17
conditions under which the Ukrainian workers operated last
6:20
week fighting temporarily cut power the facility operators
6:24
then use diesel generators to keep water pumping to cool the
6:27
reactor cores to prevent a meltdown.
6:30
Wait a minute. So the nuclear reactor needs power to run.
6:36
You heard the exact same thing I did.
6:38
That was That's weird.
6:41
Like a new killer nuclear plant creates power. Yeah, sure, isn't
6:46
it? Yeah. Can't
6:46
you just put that into the input? Sounds reasonable. Ah,
6:54
well, I have a couple clips that need to get out of the way.
7:00
Because I think that if we've looked at the EU and what has
7:02
happened now and what has been announced there in the past
7:05
week, we can look forward to this happening worldwide. And
7:10
nothing exemplifies it better than the German foreign
7:13
minister, who was discussing the commitment, her commitment, her
7:17
personal commitment, not out of the voters, but her personal
7:20
commitment to Ukraine, whatever it takes, listen to this.
7:24
But if I give the promise to people in Ukraine, we stand with
7:29
you as long as you need us, then I want to deliver no matter what
7:34
my German voters think. But I want to deliver to the people of
7:38
Ukraine. And this is why for me, it's important to be always very
7:42
frank and clear. And this means every measure I'm taking, I have
7:47
to be clear that this holds on as long as Ukraine needs me. We
7:52
are facing now winter time where we will be challenged as
7:55
Democratic politicians. People will go on the street and say,
7:59
We cannot pay pay our energy prices. And I will say, Yes, I
8:03
know. So we help you with social measures. But I don't want to
8:06
say okay, then we stopped the sanctions against Russia, we
8:11
will stand with Ukraine. And this means the sanction will
8:14
stay also in winter time. Even if it gets really tough for
8:17
politicians.
8:18
I love how she's worried about how tough it's going to be for
8:21
politicians with people rioting on the streets. She doesn't even
8:23
see what that means. And she says blatantly it is
8:29
she say when she says I don't care what you voters think, Oh,
8:32
listen,
8:33
it's right in the beginning. Yeah, that's what she says.
8:34
But if I give the promise to people in Ukraine, we stand with
8:39
you as long as you need us. Then I want to deliver no matter what
8:45
my German voters think. But I want to deliver to the people of
8:48
Ukraine,
8:49
basically shattered. Whatever we have to do for Ukraine. Screw
8:53
you Germans. Yeah, that's exactly what the hell kind of
8:57
leadership do they have over there? How did the Germans put
9:00
up with this?
9:02
Oh, the Germans are, they're beyond repair. And I think in
9:05
general, every country is beyond repair. They they don't know the
9:08
mechanism to stop the insanity. They think they voted for people
9:12
who will stop it or, and you know, the the only resort is, as
9:16
this woman says, even when people are on the streets. Well,
9:20
that's and she won't care, even when people are on the streets.
9:24
It's amazing to me. So but this is by directive. This is coming
9:30
from the top and Queen Ursula had a prime time speech this
9:34
week. Did you see any of Ursula of underlying speech laying it
9:38
all out? I have three clips. And I think we should go through
9:42
them as she is very clear, where we stand what we're doing and
9:47
what is coming next. She actually will tell us what is
9:51
coming next. And it's one of our old friends. So let's start off
9:55
Queen Ursula at the this was the Bled forum like what Not sure
10:00
where that is sounds like a Scotland or Ireland thing with a
10:04
blood form is. And here she is laying out the situation as it
10:10
is today,
10:10
this Yars headline perfectly sums up the most relevant
10:15
question of our times will the rule of power replace the power
10:23
of rule? And I believe that the answer to this question boils
10:28
down to one line. What could
10:30
it be? Yeah, yeah, go ahead.
10:34
No such thing as the rule of power. So how can it be
10:38
replacing the power of rule, which is even more stupid? What
10:42
is she talking
10:42
about? Hey, just put a little
10:47
making stuff up. Yeah, yes. Rule of power, just the power of
10:51
rule, the power rule rule? That would be I would say might be a
10:56
spin off of power of law or something. Yeah, that's,
11:02
yeah, that's waffle and the power of rule. I mean, the power
11:05
of rule is not a ruler, a rule like a queen, like Ursula or
11:09
some other queen, the power of rule. You're right shade or ship
11:13
is what you? Yes. Now we got
11:15
it. The power off rule? And I believe that the answer to this
11:20
question boils down to one line. Okay. It all depends on the
11:27
power of democracy. Oh, it all depends on our capacity to
11:33
uphold fundamental principles, to resist aggression. To protect
11:40
our values, and our friends. Oh, here it goes. It is no
11:43
understand the statement to say that the world has been watching
11:48
our response to Russia's aggression.
11:51
Very closely. There it is. First two minutes of the speech.
11:55
The stakes are clear to everyone. Yes. At the beginning
11:58
of this year, Russia and China have openly declared and so
12:05
called unlimited friendship. And only weeks later, Russia
12:12
launched its war against Ukraine weeks later,
12:14
listen to this. That's her timeline now. First, they got
12:20
together with China. We saw an alert alert. We got a problem
12:24
with China and then weeks later, as if planned because of their
12:30
union, not because of anything else NATO did or or is the
12:33
Lensky said about nuclear weapons,
12:36
or 2014. Or us going into Ukraine and causing a coup.
12:40
Yeah, that was that was all Alexandria doesn't count. Now it
12:43
doesn't count doesn't count. That was all Putin Dugan. Dugan
12:46
Putin.
12:47
The message couldn't be more explicit. Yes. So if we are to
12:51
preserve basic principles, such as self determination, and the
12:58
inviolability of borders,
13:00
put in Harbor, how about freedom of speech? How about freedom of
13:03
movement? There's a couple other things she left out of there,
13:06
but she only gives us a couple things
13:08
such as self determination, okay, and the inviolability of
13:12
borders. Okay. Poutine cannot win this world. Ukraine must win
13:18
this war.
13:19
This clear Putin cannot win this war.
13:23
This is absolutely clear.
13:27
Yes, yes. I'm surprised she does. I think somebody
13:31
auditioned, who and cannot win this war. If we have to kill
13:35
every Ukrainian seems that way. Every single one is dead. We're
13:40
not gonna let put win this war. That's right. That's pretty
13:43
much what she's saying.
13:44
Not win this world and Ukraine must win this world. This is
13:50
absolutely clear. Okay.
13:52
Yes. Thank you.
13:54
Thank you. The elites agree, we agree.
14:02
And this is why we have mobilized our economic might
14:06
like never before, really. In a matter of days and weeks, we
14:10
have approved the most far reaching sanctions ever
14:13
implemented. And the sanctions are causing colossal damage to
14:18
the Kremlin's ability to wage war. Putin himself has admitted
14:23
it and the damage will only grow over time damage. Besides this,
14:29
we have supported financially Ukraine with more than 10
14:33
billion euros since the beginning of the war, and I'm
14:35
not including the bilateral support of our member states.
14:39
And we are working on the next tranche. Oh, the next tranche
14:44
for Ukraine. This is very clear message to our member states.
14:48
That's right. Forget about your people freezing because we don't
14:51
care what the voters want. No, we must win Ukraine. This is
14:55
where the money is going.
14:56
And we use for the first time ever read Sources from the
15:00
European budget on military equipment to sustain Ukraine's
15:06
brave defense effort. Well,
15:08
I thought there would never have a war, like an army or anything
15:12
like that. Now they have a military budget, that's EU
15:15
military budget, which she said,
15:19
We will support Ukraine as long as it takes. We are doing it for
15:25
Ukraine. We are doing this to uphold our European values. But
15:30
we are also doing this to show to Russia and the world. That
15:35
breaking internationally shared rules, comes with a massive
15:40
cost. That has to be very clear. This effort must come together
15:48
with a new European strategic thinking,
15:51
Aha, here we go. A new strategic thinking and there's a plan
15:55
attached to it. But first, we have to call it for what it is
15:58
this effort must come together with a new European strategic
16:03
thinking. And today, I would like to pin down three of its
16:07
main tenants
16:09
100, anchor a guest there. I want to take the first one right
16:11
off the top.
16:14
No, I can't even I haven't got a clue where she's going.
16:17
First, to defend the rule of law and the rule based order over
16:22
time. We must neutralize Russia's blackmail ability and
16:29
strengthen our own capabilities to act.
16:32
They're blackmailing us. We have to we have to strengthen our
16:36
capability. So Russia can blackmail us. We can
16:39
say the same thing about China here. Hell yeah. Blackmail. Yes.
16:44
We can't even put together anything, nothing. Everything.
16:47
We have moved out parts from China. Yeah,
16:50
we must support democracies that are most exposed to foreign
16:54
threats. And I'm not only thinking about Ukraine, but also
16:59
about the Western Balkans.
17:02
Standby Balkans on deck, that's gonna be fun.
17:06
We must also look at
17:07
Taiwan in this new by the way, Taiwan is much more of a
17:12
democracy than Ukraine.
17:15
No, she doesn't care about that. Now, she that's our job. That's
17:18
us. That's Nancy. That's Joe. They divided it up, you know,
17:21
she's she's closest to the fire. She's got to make sure everybody
17:25
shivers this winter to help Ukraine, because Putin cannot
17:29
win this war.
17:30
We must also look further to global geopolitical shifts, and
17:34
use our economic might to preserve and expand the rules
17:39
based global order.
17:40
What economic might do they have? I mean, are you serious?
17:44
What is the economic might of the European Union?
17:48
I think is a third or fourth biggest economy. I mean, it's
17:52
what's their mind? It's not manufacturing. So it's pretty
17:54
it's a it's a consumers.
17:57
Their consumer might,
17:58
yeah, consumer might, okay, I'm just checking digital
18:01
farming a lot of farming make wine
18:03
for Law
18:04
point means primarily ending our dependence on dirty Russian
18:10
fossil fuels.
18:12
Dirty Russian, do you hear this? Dirty, dirty Russian foreign
18:18
fuels?
18:20
What was it dirty?
18:22
It's dirty. I think implied in this is two things. One, it's
18:28
killing the earth and two blood money as blood money on that
18:32
that dirty oil.
18:33
My first point means primarily,
18:36
when you say by the way, when you say dirty oil it's
18:40
redundant. It is no it's not. It's a very specific term to
18:48
refer to accuse crude oil of being very high in sulfur
18:52
compounds. That's what it means. And it's a pain in the ass to
18:56
deal with it because you end it with mountains of sulfur because
18:59
you have to extract other stuff not from Russia has Russia has
19:01
this this type that I know I thought their stuff was pretty
19:04
court pretty close to Texas. And it was dirty.
19:09
And maybe she just means dirty blood money now
19:11
she can't possibly then.
19:13
Yes, she is
19:14
to global geopolitical shifts us our economic might to preserve
19:20
and expand the rules based global order. My first point
19:24
means primarily ending our dependence on dirty Russian
19:30
fossil fuels. Yes.
19:39
Our work here is well underway. Okay. We are diversifying our
19:44
supplies at lightning speed. The gas supplies from sources other
19:49
than Russia has increased by 31 billion cubic meters since
19:55
January this year. And this compensates by now the Russian
19:59
cuts have gas supply to Europe. Oh, okay. We're also cutting
20:03
substantially our need of imported gas, because we have to
20:08
prepare for potential full disruption of Russian gas. And
20:12
for this, we have asked member states to reduce the gas
20:16
consumption by 15%. And save it to the storage. We knew this,
20:22
that can save up to 45 billion cubic meter of natural gas. And
20:28
ultimately, the best
20:30
does that mean anything to you? Because it doesn't mean anything
20:32
to me is that a lot? That could be a lot it could be nothing.
20:35
It's she makes it sound like it's my head, I can't tell
20:38
you a way to get rid of Russian fossil fuels is of course to
20:42
speed up our transition to green energy sources. Here we got to
20:45
read kilowatt hour of electricity that Europe
20:49
generates from solar from wind from hydropower from biomass
20:54
from geothermal or green Hydrogen. Hydrogen makes us less
20:58
dependent on Russian fossil fuels. So invest in that yes,
21:01
invest. If you look at the facts, the evidence today the
21:04
price of wind and solar is cheaper than polluting fossil
21:09
fuels. So
21:10
really, what are you saying?
21:14
I haven't seen any any
21:16
evidence who that is no, this. I mean, this was subsidies. Yeah,
21:19
like fact check for a fact check false.
21:22
And that's why with our repower EU initiative, here we go, here
21:27
we will invest together 300 billion euros to accelerate the
21:32
green wind transition.
21:34
So problem reaction, here comes the solution.
21:37
For instance, we are now financing one of the largest
21:40
offshore wind farms of the world, in the North Sea. And
21:45
tomorrow, I will be in Denmark to discuss exactly similar
21:50
initiatives, a huge offshore wind farm in the Baltic Sea,
21:54
these things
21:55
suck. These offshore wind farms, half of them don't work, it's
21:59
hard to maintain, when they break down, it ruins the
22:02
coastline. I used to fly over them all the time, when I lived
22:07
in the UK. Yeah, you know that you know what it was like half
22:10
of them are not turning it all. And then and then in certain
22:14
conditions, cold weather with no wind, they actually have to
22:17
power them to turn otherwise they break down. This is dumb,
22:21
but it's okay, we have
22:23
if it's really windy, where you really wouldn't be able to pull
22:25
the energy they have to stop, blow up.
22:30
Now, Queen Ursula has a real solution here, which this is our
22:33
old friend is coming back. It's not the wind
22:35
thing. Our dependency on Russian fossil fuels is only the first
22:39
step, the skyrocketing electricity prices are now
22:43
exposing for different reasons. The limitations of our current
22:50
electricity market design,
22:52
wow, this is really interesting. So they sold all of their
22:55
electric company, certainly in the UK, although not part of the
22:58
EU, but Netherlands has the same, those guys are jacking up
23:01
the rates. And the government really has limited power to do
23:05
anything about it. So she just says, well, it was for different
23:08
reasons, but exposes the problem. The problem is you shut
23:12
down the gas from Russia with the you know, your response to
23:15
what they're doing. And your Swift removal and all of these
23:18
sanctions,
23:19
it was developed for completely different under completely
23:22
different circumstances. And completely different purposes.
23:27
It is no more fit for purpose. And that's why we the
23:33
commission. We the commission working on an emergency
23:36
intervention, emergency intervention to actual reform of
23:40
the electricity market
23:42
was just a structural reform of the electricity market. Now,
23:47
whenever something is done to under emergency, we have the
23:50
commission. I'm pretty sure they can just ram it through whatever
23:54
they want to do. It's under emergency, right? That wouldn't
23:57
be any different than in the United States or anywhere else.
24:01
Emergency can get
24:02
on their laws, but I'm sure they can, you know, but anyway, yeah,
24:06
well, this is an emergency and I'm sure they papered it over.
24:09
So we need to change the way our electricity market works.
24:14
We need a new market model for electricity that really
24:18
functions and brings us back into balance. And then we have
24:23
to look, of course beyond energy.
24:26
All right. So let me just tell you what this is.
24:30
We're having a good idea of a public utility. Is that some
24:34
screwball idea that's no good? Nope,
24:37
nope. Here it is. I'll just read the article for you. The EU's
24:40
carbon market is back
24:43
after all yours. Yeah, that's stupid carbon market.
24:47
years on the sidelines of the EU's regulatory machinery where
24:50
it was largely written off the emissions trading system ETS has
24:54
returned as the cornerstone of the bloc's climate policy.
24:58
That's right. Brussels is betting that a major overhaul of
25:02
the cap and trade scheme. Holy crap, John, that goes back a
25:05
couple of years set to be presented as part of the fit for
25:10
55 climate policy package will speed up emissions reductions,
25:14
incentivize companies to invest in clean technologies, and help
25:17
the bloc achieve its ambitious climate targets? Yes, they're
25:21
going to reprice carbon, and you're gonna have to pay for it.
25:24
And you will have a personal carbon score. And this will all
25:28
kind this is what they call re reengineering or rethinking the
25:32
energy markets. It's just
25:35
not gonna save anyone any money. Nope.
25:37
The green digital transition will massively increase.
25:42
I'll notice she says the green and digital transition. These
25:46
are all little things that are being added along the way.
25:49
I don't know what it means when she says digital, she's talking
25:51
about the smart grid and QR codes.
25:54
And then we have to look of course beyond energy. Yes, the
25:59
green digital transition will massively increase our need for
26:04
raw materials. Take lithium for batteries.
26:10
Yeah, why?
26:12
Because we're at a Europe is going Why
26:14
Wait, hold on, is it out of the blue? You're going to change,
26:18
you're going to add a little cap and trade, you're going to put a
26:20
few more. And because of that, you're going to need more raw
26:24
materials. Why? What's the connection?
26:28
Because we're you're going to have to be driving electric
26:30
vehicles, electric airplanes, everything has to be electric.
26:35
So they need more batteries.
26:37
You see, so we just started tearing up the earth again, is
26:40
very environmentally friendly. Actually,
26:43
there's a kicker to this. Because I was listening to this.
26:46
I'm like, All right. When do you announce your Africa Initiative?
26:51
Waiting for, hey, we're gonna go help some poor black people
26:54
there in Africa and take all of their materials. No, no, that
26:59
didn't come, it's even better.
27:01
The green digital transition will massively increase our need
27:06
for raw materials. Take lithium for batteries. Batteries are
27:10
silicon metal for chips. Take rare earth to produce magnets
27:15
for electric vehicles and wind turbines. Demand for them may
27:21
double by 2030. Oh, now the good news in that is it means that
27:27
the European Green Deal is progressing. It's good, the not
27:30
so good news is one country dominates the processing. Out of
27:37
the 30 critical raw materials today. 10 are mostly sourced
27:41
from China. So we have to avoid falling into the same
27:47
dependency, as with oil and gas.
27:51
Ah, okay. So it can't be China. So we can't get the gas and
27:56
dirty, dirty fossil fuels from Russia. We can't be dependent on
28:00
the China man because you know, okay, hey, hey, we just went
28:03
through this. What are we going to do?
28:06
We should not replace all dependencies with new ones.
28:10
However, what country? Do you think we could substitute for
28:16
China's material?
28:19
This isn't an India comes to mind
28:21
India. Okay. I'll give you three guesses.
28:25
Obviously, I gotta guess it. No. Brazil comes to mind. They got a
28:29
big country. Let's put
28:31
it this way. What we what you need is you need first of all
28:34
the materials in the earth. You can get the I don't think I
28:38
mean, is it all just one region? I think we
28:41
got it all over the place. Lithium is ever so it isn't it's
28:45
Afghanistan most available thing, right? It's like,
28:48
everywhere. I think it's got a bunch of it. There's a bunch of
28:50
it. A lot of it in South America run by one or two companies,
28:53
they pretty much locked that down. Right. So what you need a
28:56
tear up the place to get this
28:58
is a country who doesn't care if you tear up the place, and has a
29:03
lot of slave like workers who will be obedient and who will
29:07
give their children up to work in France close.
29:12
So we must make sure that access to these commodities will not be
29:15
used to blackmail us. We have to diversify the supply and build
29:19
new ties with reliable like minded partners around the
29:23
globe. For this purpose, for example, I'm traveling in two
29:26
weeks to Canada like minded partners. Interesting offers
29:31
you Canada, we're gonna tear your country apart and enslave
29:35
your children to go and dig for cobalt and all kinds of crappy
29:40
shit. It's coming down on you, Canada. Save the world. How
29:46
about that? How about Canada?
29:51
Yeah, let's rip off Canada.
29:53
I love it. I'm all for it. Go go go.
29:59
So As her nerve oh she
30:01
went on for another 20 minutes but I think it does kind of a
30:08
set everything up you know, it's like hey, this is this is what's
30:12
going down this is how we're going to do it Canada you supply
30:15
you supply the dirt I don't know where we are know where America
30:20
is in the scheme of hers but you know, EU Commission rolling our
30:23
eyes. We're sure the EU Commission has had everyone's
30:28
best interests at heart. No doubt, no doubt all right.
30:36
That's all I got for the moment on on the EU and I just think
30:40
let's
30:40
just we're kind of in that area we might as well I have one EU
30:44
pure EU story, but I want to play some Gorby clips so we can
30:47
get him out of the way or be Gorbachev. Oh, Corby, IDI always
30:54
been referred to as Gorbea. In the United States when I was a
30:58
kid
30:59
Yeah, I didn't get that programming. Gorbea No, of
31:01
course not. akorbi Gorbea grow
31:06
to be the drunk. Was he the drunk or was it the who was the
31:09
drunk?
31:09
No, no, that was a YLC Elson was the drunk Okay, right. Yeah, he
31:13
was just an alcoholic, right. Who also spoke in a in a slang
31:19
version of Russian his Russian wasn't even very good. No, all
31:23
the Russians I know all that guy. He sounds like he you know
31:26
you ever said well, you explained it to me. What are you
31:28
talking to? I said Why have you ever been to the south or
31:30
someplace where a doc someone allowed me to grind get your
31:34
rank? You can't understand a word they say Well, that's
31:37
Yeltsin. Okay. You want to play this was just getting this a
31:44
little, little I think this is Hannah epitomizes the EU French
31:49
pool story.
31:50
So I'm sorry. I was ready to do the pool story. Okay, here we
31:56
go.
31:56
France uncovers over 20,000 undeclared private swimming
32:00
pools. According to the BBC, the country made the discovery using
32:04
artificial intelligence. The finding allows authorities to
32:08
collect a sizable amount of tax revenue. Swimming pools have to
32:11
be declared under French law. They increase property value and
32:14
therefore taxes. French authorities can now collect the
32:17
equivalent of over $10 million in taxes. The artificial
32:21
intelligence software was developed by Google and French
32:24
firm Capgemini. Software identified pools in nine regions
32:28
of France and aerial images. French officials monitor using
32:32
the software to identify undeclared pools nationwide. A
32:36
French newspaper report says that an average sized pool can
32:39
garner the equivalent of around $200 a year in Texas. The BBC
32:43
reports the crackdown started after a French politician spoke
32:47
about potential pool bans due to drought and water shortage.
32:51
authorities wanted to take it further and use the software to
32:54
identify other taxable property like home extensions, patios or
32:58
gazebos.
32:59
How does that fit in with Gorby? I'm a little lost.
33:02
No, no, I said this the EU story there's a story to do with Gord
33:07
Well, you know, is a throwback to Russia.
33:09
Now this this story is in is in the wild? Because this is
33:13
obviously the top secret intelligence that Trump had on
33:17
the front. He knew about
33:18
the pool what is the Yeah, no, I don't know if he told me that.
33:21
But first of all, let's talk about this. How what I mean, to
33:25
me the story jumped out like a sore thumb is which doesn't jump
33:28
out but it did in this case. Pools they have to be licensed
33:35
and oh yeah. Oh,
33:37
that's the same everywhere in Oh, in Europe. Are you kidding
33:40
me? You can't you can't even think about building without
33:43
permission. And this and while we're I just want to say one
33:46
thing because I keep forgetting to mention it. You know that
33:48
whole IRS thing and you know, the IRS 87,000 new agents, etc,
33:52
etc. That's not the headline for me, the headline is, the IRS
33:56
will now give you the option for them to just send you a bill do
34:00
all the taxes for you and they just send you the bill and you
34:03
just pay the bill and you're all done. They've done the taxes for
34:05
you. I would like to warn everybody I saw this happening
34:10
in the Netherlands. And the way it would happen is a blue
34:13
envelope would pop into your into your into your mailbox and
34:17
it would say here's what you owe. And at that point, you
34:19
could only contest it because the filing was already done. But
34:23
what was worse is over time you get blue envelopes every month.
34:28
Well you know now we need the preliminary you gotta pay in
34:31
advance we think you're making too much so you got to pay some
34:34
now so you don't get screwed later. That is the beginning of
34:37
the end this that's how regulated Europe is.
34:41
And you think people would reject this idea in this country
34:44
know that all flocked to it? Of course. You want to hear how
34:47
dumb people are in America. Do you want to add can I just give
34:50
you an entre mount of stupidity. Go okay. I do not know where
34:56
this comes from. It I thought it might have been a Jesse waters
35:02
thing but I wasn't it was so incredibly good. If I can find
35:06
it here we go. Oh yes from the Twitter account clown world.
35:14
Listen to this. This is just people on the street in America
35:17
think it's New York City.
35:18
How many letters are in the alphabet?
35:21
One a four digit how many seasons there are
35:24
1212
35:27
Yes. What language to the people in Idaho speak? Potato what
35:35
language I don't know the first thing that came to mind was
35:38
potatoes. Mistakes make up the United States. Number five. Yes.
35:48
What continent are we on right now? What continent? Think like
35:56
North Africa. Three times three times 318.
36:03
Yes, how many sets are in $1?
36:06
How many sets are $1?
36:08
One 510 2036. Yes.
36:15
Do you know what country we gained our independence from?
36:19
Mexico, right? No, that's so wrong. Russia now. Your your
36:25
final guess? Canada? Yes. You know what year the US is
36:30
founded? Eight at 27. Yes, just shape with four sides cold.
36:39
I don't know. I haven't had I haven't done something with
36:41
shape
36:42
since like, fifth grade. Honestly, yeah. If you had to
36:45
guess. I don't know who like I don't
36:50
know what like what shapes have four sides, but I don't know the
36:52
name for it. Yes, can you name three countries besides the USA?
36:59
Alabama. That's one. No, Mexico. And Connecticut. Yeah. Three.
37:09
It's too easy for you. I mean, this is of course this man on
37:13
the street you selected but there are actual people walking
37:16
around who don't have this basic common knowledge couldn't tell
37:18
the time on a clock face drawn.
37:21
Oh, well, let me tell you here's a good story. Me Me was at we
37:26
have a grocer up in Sequim, Washington called Sonny farms
37:31
very famous. Green Grocer, they got great stuff, they have their
37:34
own meat cutters. And I mean, they have their own cattle
37:38
ranch. Nice. So you get a lot of good quality everything from
37:41
them. But it's so you go in there and it's a mixed variety
37:45
people that go that chapter so. So there's this girl in front of
37:49
me, me and she's staring at the clock. You know, around clock.
37:56
Oh, Patrick. Well, you know the answer the I mean, how, where it
38:00
is headed. And it's like she's, uh, she made me so she's
38:03
probably around 25. The woman. And so she's staring at this
38:07
clock and she's staring and staring and staring. And she
38:10
finally turns to the to the checker and says, You know what
38:15
time it is. And the checker says yes, 115. So they go, Oh,
38:22
thanks. And she leaves. And so maybe as the checker, she says,
38:26
These people, these millennials can't read a clock, which should
38:30
have been taught in grammar school, or at home, by you know,
38:35
the parents how to read a clock, because the clocks are
38:39
everywhere. And the checker says, oh, no, almost all of
38:44
them. I've never run into one that can read a clock.
38:47
Yeah, but I mean, basic knowledge of what continent? Are
38:50
we on? How many states does America have?
38:53
How many letters in the elf? How
38:54
many letters in the
38:56
clip would have been a lot better if they hadn't? ruined
39:00
it? I know, they always you know, we can't get a break.
39:03
These guys put too much music. Project Veritas even though we
39:08
have hooked them up with sound engineers. They can't get their
39:11
stuff right.
39:14
disappoint, what are you going to do? No, but you're going to
39:16
do but I
39:17
understand if you're an elite. And you haven't you have disdain
39:21
for people anyway. Then, you know, you look at these people
39:25
and go kill them. Kill them. Just kill them kill him. Paul
39:28
dude, I forgot. Did you see the MTV Video Music Awards?
39:32
Dude, dude, I saw it on his on the thing. And I said, you know,
39:36
I could waste my time watching this as opposed to over
39:39
clipping. But Adam will see it and he'll give us a report.
39:43
Well, the only thing you need to know is that so I started
39:47
watching this thing and I'm looking for you know, satanic
39:51
rituals. I'm looking for Illuminati signs. And right off
39:54
the bat. There's triangles everywhere. There's black and
39:57
white checkers but there's triangles everywhere. triangles
40:00
triangles, which is part of the Inuit activates the MK Ultra
40:04
programming, but they've taken it to the next level. The whole
40:08
show was sponsored. But had one main sponsor. They had the you
40:13
know, the typical, shitty Toyota car that they think millennials
40:16
are want and a couple other dumb things. But there was one big
40:19
sponsor, and it was Doritos. And they were, what they would do is
40:24
look at the Doritos chip, which, in case you didn't know is a
40:27
triangle. Then they have an ad where it says, look, you see the
40:31
triangle everywhere, they're showing all these triangles in
40:33
life, the whole the whole that would go from that from the
40:36
triangle from the burrito and they would cross dissolve into
40:39
the triangle on the stage. Doritos are activating MK Ultra
40:43
nationwide. That's my report. MTV has gone overboard and sold
40:51
out to the triangle Illuminati. Yes. And Doritos. The it's this
40:57
is like three more days till Halloween. Silver Shamrock. I'm
41:01
telling you. Something's bad. I don't like it at all. Okay,
41:04
yeah. All right. Want to do Gharbi No.
41:08
Yeah, let's play some garbage. I said Jeremy
41:12
chips. Yes. New New from Smith.
41:16
Now you got to appeal to different angles, and they still
41:20
don't know. The obit clip from NPR so when it's a kicker, but
41:25
let's play the ones from New Tang Dynasty first. Oh, or be
41:29
obit one.
41:32
You got it. Mikhail Gorbachev has died at age 91. He is
41:37
credited with ending the Cold war without bloodshed and he
41:40
oversaw the removal of Europe's Iron Curtain. Here are the
41:43
details.
41:47
After decades of Cold War, tension and confrontation
41:50
Gorbachev the last Soviet president broke with the past,
41:54
he helped to remove the iron curtain that had divided Europe
41:57
and bring about the reunification of Germany. He
42:02
struck nuclear arms deals with the United States and brought
42:05
the Soviet Union closer to the west than at any point since
42:09
World War Two, Gorbachev struck up a rapport with the West and
42:13
with Ronald Reagan, who had called the Soviet Union the evil
42:16
empire. Together they negotiated a landmark deal in 1987 to scrap
42:22
intermediate range nuclear missiles. When pro democracy
42:26
protests swept across the Soviet bloc nations of communist
42:30
Eastern Europe in 1989. He refrained from using force,
42:34
unlike previous leaders who had sent to tanks to crush uprisings
42:38
in Hungary in 1956, and Czechoslovakia in 1968. But
42:43
those protests fueled aspirations for autonomy in the
42:47
15th republics of the Soviet Union, which disintegrated over
42:51
the next two years in chaotic fashion. Gorbachev became
42:55
General Secretary of the Soviet Communist Party in 1985. At age
43:00
54, he was a reformer setting out to revitalize the system by
43:05
introducing limited political and economic freedoms. His
43:09
policy of Glasnost, or free speech, allowed previously
43:13
unthinkable criticism of the party and the state had also
43:18
emboldened nationalists, who began to press for independence
43:21
in the Baltic Republics of Latvia, Lithuania, Estonia and
43:26
elsewhere,
43:27
and wasn't Gorby on our payroll. I've always heard that.
43:32
I don't think so. But I mean, it's possible. You never know. I
43:36
got a kick out when I went to Russia. It was during this era
43:40
during Gorby. And he, they had instituted some minor
43:46
alterations into the idea of having a small businesses. And
43:52
so I go over there. And there's a they allowed in Red Square,
43:58
they allowed some of these, like booths, vendors, yeah, vendors
44:02
and vendors. And I was told I was, I was told that this is
44:07
going to happen in advance. That's really excellent
44:09
briefing. If you wanted to buy something from a vendor that was
44:14
like 12 rubles. And you had a 20. They couldn't make change.
44:21
Nope, no, because it was illegal. Yes. It was illegal to
44:26
make change. If you wanted to buy something for 12 rubles. You
44:30
had to give them 12 rubles,
44:33
genus.
44:35
Anyway, so let's go into Gorby to
44:37
and in the final months of his life, Gorbachev has seen much of
44:41
his legacy destroyed as President Vladimir Putin.
44:44
invasion of Ukraine has brought sanctions on Moscow and talks in
44:48
both Russia and the West of a new Cold
44:51
War, Cold War.
44:54
So that that report was all political, but the one that's on
44:58
NPR, which is the other Obeah It was really more about legacy and
45:04
it just so different that I had to play contrast a little bit
45:08
with the with these other guys who I should do better straight
45:12
up reporting even though it's
45:13
although boring yeah I'm sure Sam is boring to listen to
45:16
body of Mikhail Gorbachev will lie in state on Saturday in
45:20
Moscow's house of unions. That's the same building located
45:24
between the Bolshoi and the Duma, the lower house of
45:27
parliament, where his predecessors including Joseph
45:30
Stalin are buried. But Gorbachev won't be buried in that
45:33
building. Instead, he will be interred next to his wife and
45:36
novo devashish convent. That's the cemetery where Nikita
45:39
Khrushchev is buried. So far, the Kremlin hasn't said whether
45:43
there will be a state funeral for the last Soviet Union
45:46
leader. Gorbachev died yesterday at the age of 91.
45:51
Now, you'd think there would be
45:53
you think it would be but I bet you there's not. Because the way
45:57
it looks, I could be wrong, and I may be bright brainwashed on
46:01
this. But it looks as if Putin is irked at Gore, because Gorby
46:06
is the one who tore down the Soviet Union completely.
46:09
That's only if you buy into what my family does
46:12
what I'm saying. I'm saying, Yeah, I said that may be buying
46:16
into that.
46:17
I know I'm trying to protect you from that. I'm trying to stop.
46:20
No,
46:20
I like to read to you set up a blockade here. But I've always
46:24
kind of covered my ass with my disclaimer, as always, there's
46:27
no
46:27
evidence. We know, we know your little tricks. There's no
46:33
evidence that this evidence no evidence doesn't mean no just
46:38
mean there's no evidence. Yeah, one hour photo. I don't I don't
46:45
have much left on, on what's happening with the with Ukraine
46:51
or Russia. You see what else do and the only thing that's kind
46:54
of annoying to me about Ukraine and Russia is with this latest
47:00
commitment of match rial or whatever we're doing. We're
47:03
sending over to Ukraine. You know, as as we heard, and it's
47:07
been confirmed, it's coming from all over bases around the
47:11
country around the world. And so we're kind of, I'm worried like,
47:14
are they gonna be able to resupply stuff? Did they give
47:17
away too much? You know, are we vulnerable? And then this story
47:20
right now
47:21
to some news that is just in the US Army has temporarily grounded
47:25
its fleet of Chinook helicopters have to respond small number had
47:29
engine fires. An army spokesperson says they have
47:31
identified the root cause of the fires and they are implementing
47:35
corrective measures to resolve this issue. The US official says
47:38
this affects approximately 400 helicopters.
47:43
Now these are workhorses that have been around since Vietnam.
47:48
You know, and now all of a sudden oh, ground them all
47:50
that's never happened. Never grabbed for some O rings, so
47:54
they probably got from China. Sound familiar? That
47:58
sounds like something that get from China that it failed.
48:02
Well, there's lots of fake parts that come through. We hear that
48:04
all the time. Oh, yeah. We got cheap Chinese shit over here.
48:08
Yeah. What can we do? What can we do? Well, while we're on that
48:14
topic, let me take you back to a previous episode. Episode 1481.
48:22
So let's play what's going on now. This is Artemisa first this
48:25
the first launch is coming up I think later this month or
48:28
sometime tomorrow, tomorrow, tomorrow. If everything is okay.
48:33
Oh, you see the future John C. Dvorak.
48:36
Breaking news tonight NASA says it will try again this Saturday
48:40
afternoon to launch its new moon rocket. The cruellest test
48:43
mission Artemis was scrubbed on Monday because of an engine
48:46
cooling issue. NASA says it's making adjustments at the launch
48:50
pad and changing some launch day procedures to head off any
48:53
problems. The mission is a first step towards getting humans back
48:57
on the moon.
48:58
Do you think what do you think it's gonna go Saturday? Do you
49:00
think they'll make it Saturday, Saturday, Saturday or there'll
49:02
be another issue?
49:03
I have no idea but I probably I would guess another issue.
49:06
I think another issue? Yeah.
49:09
You don't want to blow this one up. It's got those two dummies
49:11
in it.
49:13
We'll be dumb aside. Can't have that. And one of our producers
49:17
sent me a little detail on the cost since we were asking about
49:22
it the new NASA SLS rocket. Here's some differences is not
49:26
reusable. The cost per launch No wonder there careful is
49:31
estimated to be between one and $4 billion per launch. Now Space
49:38
X cost per launch is about 10 million cost to go around the
49:44
moon SpaceX cost 80 million. The SpaceX starship is taller than
49:49
NASA SLS SpaceX SpaceX starship has more than twice the payload
49:54
capacity. 100 tons versus 46. The NASA SLS can get too deep
50:00
Space in one go. But Space X will need to refuel in space to
50:03
get the 100 tons into deep space, but that's part of their
50:07
design. But here's the thing NASA is actually going to use
50:11
SpaceX to get to the moon. Why? Why are we wasting this money
50:16
then if it's going to be completely different rockets
50:19
that do it?
50:20
Well, I'd like I explained, the way they're gonna do it, they're
50:23
gonna it's a bunch of steps. They're gonna have a space
50:26
station, they gotta lock with that. I guess that's where the
50:28
SpaceX thing comes in. I don't know. I mean, it's just a lot of
50:32
steps. This is a convoluted approach to going off. But that
50:37
but the idea is, I mean, if you could say that you are, what you
50:42
would, what would you argue a new counter argument is that
50:45
well, yeah, but it's setting up some places where you can also
50:50
have a jumping off point to go to Mars, which you're going to
50:53
have to have anyway.
50:56
Yeah, I can't wait. I learned something about the Atlas rocket
51:02
Atlas. The Atlas was that the one that took John Glenn into
51:05
space first.
51:07
The Atlas, I think was the first one Yeah.
51:10
Now the way the Atlas works is it had a fuel cell in the middle
51:14
which was which they kept under constant pressure. In fact, if
51:18
they didn't pressurize it while I was on the launchpad, it could
51:20
just it could just topple over just folded on itself, which
51:23
there's happened a couple times. But in order to not be too
51:29
heavy, upon lift off, they had a certain type of chemical or
51:36
chemical compound that they sprayed all over the outside of
51:39
the rocket. So when the fuel of course the fuel would freeze any
51:42
water condensation, so that water would disperse upon
51:46
launch. Do you know the name of this household item that was
51:51
developed specifically for that purpose? Windex WD 40. Water
51:59
dispense dispensary formula 40. It was developed for that. I
52:03
didn't know that.
52:05
Well, I didn't know that either. And I don't know anything about
52:07
what you said about some fuel cell. I don't know what the
52:10
point of that would be.
52:10
Well, that's because they couldn't have it freezing on the
52:14
outside when they lifted off. Because fuel was literally I
52:19
know that the WD 40 would make sure that any water it repels
52:23
any water that appears on it, so if the ice cracks, its water,
52:26
boom, it falls right off, or it doesn't form at all. There's a
52:30
whole YouTube on it. It's crazy. I didn't know I did. It's not
52:34
it's a mirror link. There's not even a lubricant.
52:38
WD 40 penetrant
52:42
it's an anti AI it's a water dispenser. It makes sure the
52:45
water goes away from that surface WD I didn't know this.
52:49
The more you know from the show because it
52:51
sounds it sounds like a reverse engineered hoax. But okay.
52:58
Wow, he is such an accusation.
53:00
Hey, man, just saying watch sounds fishy.
53:03
It was from the science lady on YouTube. Don't make me look her
53:09
up.
53:09
I don't know what I'm thinking. If it's on the internet.
53:13
No, it wasn't just on the internet. It was the science
53:16
lady on YouTube. You're gonna You're gonna make me look it up
53:19
now.
53:21
Because you sent me a link. Later send
53:24
you a link. People saying I got hoax. No, no, no, no, no. What
53:28
people are saying is I got hoaxed.
53:31
Nobody said say no. I'm
53:32
looking at the troll room.
53:33
I said it sounds like a hoax.
53:36
What a displacement water displacement. That's what it was
53:39
not disbursement water displacement. I don't think it's
53:43
a hoax. The science lady would vote she had a t shirt on it
53:46
said science lady. Yeah. So how can you how can you deny? How
53:51
could that be a whole?
53:52
How can you the t shirt itself? I'm telling you the trouble you
53:57
have to go through to get a t shirt that says that. It's
54:01
beyond belief.
54:02
It said, Janet, the science lead gen Janet lab or something? I'm
54:05
going to find it for you. I'll send it to you.
54:07
Okay, so let's talk about it. Let's get a couple of these
54:12
items out of the way, which are the cute items. My favorite item
54:17
is the busing of the of the immigrants to New York,
54:21
Washington DC and elsewhere. Did you know that when they bring
54:25
those immigrants where they went? Abbott are actually even
54:29
to San Antonio itself is doing it too. They've actually asked
54:32
him where they want to go.
54:35
Really funny in this
54:37
report, at least at least they do in San Antonio is to get
54:40
where you like to go. I like to go to New York. We just like to
54:44
stay here it goes it was I think it goes like this. Look, Texas
54:48
is a shithole we all have guns. Desert Hot go away. You
54:51
don't want to be here. Yes. Ha
54:53
you want to you want to go we'll send you to New York City, the
54:56
Big Apple where they're going to treat you well. You want to go
55:00
Yeah sounds your season you're so they put them into bus. Okay,
55:03
let's play bust in New York City one.
55:05
El Paso, Texas is busing illegal immigrants to New York City and
55:09
they say the Federal Emergency Management Agency or FEMA will
55:12
pay for it.
55:13
This this service provides everywhere from providing meals
55:19
for transportation, toiletries, anything that's needed for these
55:22
migrants whether it be cots COVID vaccines COVID testing,
55:27
that that's what we've been providing and chartering buses
55:30
is no different. Our our original buses we started back
55:34
in pre COVID time so back in 2019.
55:37
The city has charted for buses for volunteer illegal immigrants
55:40
in the past week and a program separate from Governor Greg
55:43
Abbott's plan. According to Abbott's office, Texas has spent
55:46
$12 million to send over 8900 illegal immigrants to New York
55:51
City and Washington DC, both New York City and DC our sanctuary
55:55
cities.
55:56
I believe they also sent their first bus to Chicago yesterday.
55:59
Well, there's a Chicago reported here. Oh, in order to discusses
56:04
some of the Chicago problems.
56:06
Officials say they also considered chartering a bus to
56:09
Chicago, but not enough illegal immigrants wanted to go there.
56:12
FEMA has said it will reimburse local governments and NGOs for
56:16
the cost of aiding and transporting illegal immigrants
56:19
but has not commented on El Paso's buses.
56:24
So it looks as if the federal government so not so New York
56:29
and Washington I'd like the idea that no one wants to go to
56:31
Chicago now
56:33
No, no
56:41
we're going to hell we're going to hell for this
56:43
so So New York City and Washington DC can stop their
56:48
bitching about this because FEMA according to this report is
56:53
paying for it they're all in Yeah, yes. Shipping in New York.
56:57
I know you Texas, just bitch and moan about everything. Put them
57:00
in a box and send them to New York. Well, I stand by the way
57:07
when they get to New York, they're greeted with the head
57:09
with a healthy handshake. There's a video of this act em
57:13
off the bus. I see it loosen you're welcome to New York,
57:17
Nueva York. Well, that's nothing. You know, there's
57:23
there's nothing there's a cruise ship that goes between I think,
57:26
Norway and was it now maybe Helsinki, Finland. You got to
57:33
look at where this is the Dutch article that I'm looking at. So
57:37
the the ministry of the Dutch government, you know, they have
57:42
a problem. They have all these. They still have people asylum
57:45
seekers, as they call them coming in a lot of them from
57:48
Ukraine. Love them say they're from Ukraine. They're from other
57:50
places. But hey, I'm looking for I'm from you, Ukraine asylum.
57:53
And you're and so they get in, but they got nowhere left to
57:57
store them. They've already put them in hotels. We learned that
57:59
from Los Angeles in California, San Francisco. So now starting
58:04
in October, the Amsterdam City Council has agreed and and I
58:12
guess they've they've got the financing to put these 3000 new
58:16
migrants I mean, asylum seekers on this cruise ship. Which is
58:21
like a proper cruise ship. It's not just like a ferry boat. To
58:25
these. This is going to be great. And you beat that
58:30
they have to give your boss a
58:31
tour. Yeah. Oh, no, it's I think that just of course, they just
58:36
leave an important shubman A ship. Yeah, they just float
58:39
around. I don't know. God float around.
58:42
All right. Well, that's about as idiotic is. Yeah,
58:45
they're filling up. Oh, this is it's the same program
58:48
everywhere. They go to the hotels and they say well, what's
58:52
your what's your occupancy? Well, we're about 40%. Empty.
58:55
Good. We'll pay you double enough double or whatever. We'll
58:59
want these double. Okay.
59:04
Yeah, it's throwing money away. I mean, it's like we're all
59:09
gonna go broke because these these governments are just
59:12
tossing money down to two down the tubes.
59:17
Yeah, yes, I think so. That would make sense. Tossing it
59:24
down the tubes.
59:27
Okay, well, let's go to the little COVID discussion. Okay,
59:30
good. They got two new shots and I got three clips. Okay, about
59:34
the new shots. Yeah. And unfortunately I they're they're
59:38
all from NPR and they all got kind of jumbled because they did
59:42
they brought this one guy in this guy's got kind of a funny
59:47
voice that does these reports.
59:49
Oh, is this just the guy we essentially speak to that guy.
59:52
i It's either him or the there's two guys there's one guy that's
59:55
completely adenoidal I can barely speak that. I hate to buy
1:00:01
dogs. I don't know why cabrito radios I don't think this is
1:00:03
powder. Then there's a shiny, shiny object.
1:00:09
I think I have that guy. I think I have that guy. But would you
1:00:12
play your clips and I'll see what I need to okay, like,
1:00:14
unfortunately I got two different reports from the same
1:00:18
guy. So there may be some crossover here because they,
1:00:20
they gave one report and then like later they gave another one
1:00:24
with a completely different series of infamy. It was a
1:00:28
completely different pile of information. This goes COVID New
1:00:32
shots. NPR,
1:00:36
the Food and Drug Administration has authorized the first major
1:00:39
upgrade and COVID-19 back roosters let's
1:00:43
just stop there. It's never been called an upgrade. Ever. This is
1:00:49
the first report I'm hearing it except for joke reports. Yes,
1:00:53
upgrade update your app now upgrade your immunity
1:00:57
first major upgrade and COVID-19 vaccine boosters? Appears Rob
1:01:02
Stein reports.
1:01:04
The vaccines are reformulated versions of Maderna and Pfizer
1:01:08
biontech vaccines targeted to protect against the Omer Kron
1:01:11
variant. The reprograms jaw shots are designed to bolster
1:01:15
fading immunity especially against the highly contagious
1:01:18
overcrowded sub variants that most people are catching now,
1:01:22
the federal government plans to make the new boosters available
1:01:25
starting next week. Public health officials hope they will
1:01:28
contain a possible fall and winter surge. Some experts worry
1:01:32
that new boosters won't live up to expectations but others say
1:01:36
the new shots clip provide enough of a bridge to minimize
1:01:39
the impact especially among the most vulnerable.
1:01:43
No Yeah, I have this guy too. And his they were I don't know
1:01:47
where he's recording he's got a lot of hiss and hum in the
1:01:50
background just a technical thing I'm annoyed by
1:01:53
Okay, so now he does it more elaborate report later and let's
1:01:56
play this. This is called the this is clip was called second
1:01:59
report back at two versions. I got Secretary report and second
1:02:02
report. Part two, there's some good stuff here. Okay, you know,
1:02:06
no, no one's worried about safety. It's clear that vaccines
1:02:08
are very safe for creating safe mouse studies, just
1:02:11
the same guy clips, he's safe,
1:02:12
very good at predicting.
1:02:14
And he's, he's kind of either the he's got the add noise and
1:02:18
the services. But he's there. Everyone's worried about safety,
1:02:24
but they don't do crap about it, but ski but they're safe. You
1:02:27
know, no one's worried about Estonia. safe.
1:02:29
Safety is clear. The vaccines are very safe purchase a mouse
1:02:32
studies just aren't very good at predicting how vaccines work in
1:02:35
people. And earlier vaccines. The tests on those earlier
1:02:39
vaccines indicate that are only a bit better than the original
1:02:43
shots at best. And so the worry is people will think these new
1:02:46
shots protect them more than they really do. Here's John
1:02:49
Moore. He's an immunologist at Weill Cornell medicine,
1:02:52
maybe a modest benefit to protection against infection,
1:02:57
but it will be modest, which is why I say don't believe that
1:03:00
you're getting super strong shielding against infection.
1:03:07
Just kind of out of the blue report that came in this came in
1:03:10
is this go round? Yeah. Where they're like backing off on even
1:03:14
recommending this shot and saying well, you know, he just
1:03:16
tested on mice.
1:03:17
That's the problem. That's the story. That's the problem.
1:03:21
That's what people are picking
1:03:22
up. Yeah, so no one was will get the shot, which is what they
1:03:26
said. So let's play the second part of this
1:03:28
vaccines were only tested in mice might make it even harder
1:03:31
to convince people to get them. It's been a tough sell already
1:03:34
convincing people to get their first or second boosters. And
1:03:37
there's still plenty of people out there who haven't gotten any
1:03:39
shots. And that's the main reason between four and 500
1:03:42
people are still dying every day from COVID I don't
1:03:45
think so. I'm sure many people are wondering how soon they can
1:03:48
get these new boosters.
1:03:49
What's the schedule?
1:03:51
Yeah, so the CDC will decide by the end of the week exactly who
1:03:54
should get these new boosters and how they should be used once
1:03:57
they become available next week. The FDA authorized the maternal
1:04:00
booster for anyone 18 and older and the Pfizer biontech booster
1:04:03
for anyone 12 and older. But some experts think that people
1:04:06
who really need them are those at high risk like older people
1:04:09
and those will have their health problems Yeah, another big
1:04:11
question is how long to wait to get the shot Hold
1:04:14
on a second. So these things you know and when I did my eyes, but
1:04:18
you know we need we need to give it to people who need them
1:04:20
sooner to kill them obviously listen to what's this is this
1:04:24
like boys need to get these to kill people who have health
1:04:27
problems. They're no good old people,
1:04:28
get rid of them. Just take the people who really need them are
1:04:31
those at high risk like they really need them older people
1:04:34
and those without their health problems. Another big question
1:04:37
is how long to wait to get the shots. The FDA says two months
1:04:41
since the last shot is long enough. But others say That's
1:04:43
too short. People should wait four to six months after their
1:04:46
last shot or infection where the new posters may not just work
1:04:50
very well.
1:04:52
It's incredible. Nothing works. They haven't tested on humans.
1:04:56
That's the story that's getting legs who like what you only test
1:04:59
and I don't care. A million scientists can say it doesn't
1:05:03
matter. I think it does matter. They've lost control of that
1:05:06
messaging. I do have Peter Mark? Well, well, I just want to say I
1:05:11
have the FDA chief scientist to address this.
1:05:14
Okay, because then after that, I get to clips on life expectancy.
1:05:19
By changing the composition of what is in these boosters, we
1:05:25
are able to elicit and essentially refresh the immune
1:05:28
response will hopefully do
1:05:30
a better job like a browser window
1:05:32
of eliminating the virus. The problem is, if we wait a few
1:05:39
months till we have the kind of clinical data that we had
1:05:42
before, well, you can see what happened with delta. And with
1:05:46
Omicron VI, one, you ignored
1:05:47
the data people died, and you said it was safe and effective
1:05:50
anyway? Or do you mean something else,
1:05:51
we're going to be on to the next thing. And so we may not be able
1:05:55
to provide people with the kind of protection that we'd like
1:05:58
that will hold them for a longer period of time. We're the first
1:06:02
I think to acknowledge we don't want to have people constantly
1:06:05
getting booster shots. Listen
1:06:06
to the laugh. What does this tell about? Listen to this
1:06:10
brab go back? Yeah, back it up and pledge. So we all aware
1:06:13
there's a tail left coming up with the
1:06:16
kind of protection that we'd like that will hold them for a
1:06:19
longer period of time. We're the first I think to acknowledge we
1:06:22
don't want to have people constantly getting booster
1:06:25
shots. Oh, yes, you do.
1:06:32
Know the way I understand it, they say, Well, you know, we
1:06:35
don't want you to have to keep getting booster shots every
1:06:37
three months. But this next one will be good throughout the end
1:06:40
of the season, which in my calculation is about three
1:06:43
months. So he's lying, he's got the tail.
1:06:47
So the goal here is to use our best knowledge. And we're very
1:06:52
comfortable with this to provide people with the longest duration
1:06:56
of protection that we can we heard loud and clear from
1:07:01
parents that they did not want us to see kids.
1:07:04
Wow, whoa, whoa, whoa, hold
1:07:09
that we can we heard loud and clear from parents that they did
1:07:14
not want us to see kids left behind.
1:07:18
What is this? They said, my kids being left behind on the booths.
1:07:28
I mean, I can only I can only hear
1:07:30
evil in this guy. And so we will make sure that as we get
1:07:35
submissions in and have the data that we expand the age range
1:07:39
down, we can hopefully drive down some of the adverse
1:07:45
outcomes from COVID-19 in the next weeks, but then also
1:07:49
hopefully protect
1:07:50
the pockets is a weird thing for him to say, we will hopefully
1:07:54
drive down the adverse events from COVID-19. Typically, you
1:07:58
don't talk about talking about an adverse event with a virus,
1:08:02
the virus kills you an adverse event, particularly the way he
1:08:06
said it, that's for vaccines. I mean, maybe I've just never
1:08:12
heard anyone call say that. The symptoms of COVID that get you
1:08:16
sick in certain ways, calling those adverse events. I mean,
1:08:19
what is normal then? For COVID?
1:08:23
I mean, you know, this the use of this language the way he does
1:08:27
is, I don't know. Yeah, very bad
1:08:29
submissions and, and have the data that we expand the age
1:08:33
range down, we can hopefully drive down was some of the
1:08:37
adverse outcomes from COVID-19 in the next weeks, but then also
1:08:43
hopefully protect the population against a swing of COVID-19 that
1:08:48
could come up. As we come into the fall, Thanksgiving time,
1:08:53
when once again we go indoors, and people tend to get together
1:08:57
social aid, which we know is kind of a ripe way to transmit
1:09:03
more COVID
1:09:05
So they're just all in last telling their way through all
1:09:09
its look, you know, it's like we can't be waiting for data to see
1:09:13
if they work we want to protect you jab that and get the buy
1:09:16
valen things go go go go. They don't do that with the flu. They
1:09:20
don't test it on people that throw it into mice. If it's
1:09:22
good, you take it and everyone's happy. I'm flabbergasted of just
1:09:29
how blunt the blunt they're blunt, they just like I'm just
1:09:35
plowing ahead. Nothing to see here at all, at all. And of
1:09:41
course there's adverse events. Geez. Alright, I have a couple
1:09:45
more things here this there's something but let's get this guy
1:09:48
got more. You got more life expectancy clip
1:09:52
one. Yeah,
1:09:54
but the first time in a century, the life expectancy of Americans
1:09:57
has dropped for two years in a row. That sobering fact comes
1:10:01
from a provisional analysis out today from the Centers for
1:10:04
Disease Control and Prevention. As NPR Selena Simmons Duffin
1:10:07
reports the driving force of this trend is COVID-19. But
1:10:11
there's more to the story. No life
1:10:13
expectancy in the US has been on a forward march for decades,
1:10:17
ticking up a bit year after year, all the way up to 79 years
1:10:21
and 2019. The pandemic brought that march to a sudden halt. In
1:10:26
2020, life expectancy dropped to 77 years. And in 2021, it
1:10:32
dropped again to 76 years. Dr. Stephen wolf calls these numbers
1:10:37
disturbing. He's a professor at Virginia Commonwealth University
1:10:41
in most other high income countries. 2021 was a year where
1:10:45
life expectancy began to rebound. Having that context
1:10:49
makes the US results all the more tragic.
1:10:52
There are some striking racial disparities in the data.
1:10:55
Elizabeth aria of CDC is National Center for Health
1:10:58
Statistics, who was the lead author of the report says the
1:11:02
most dramatic drop in life expectancy was among American
1:11:05
Indian or Alaska Native people
1:11:07
to see that the decline over the two year period for this
1:11:11
population was 6.6 years was jarring. She
1:11:16
notes life expectancy for that population is now 65 years the
1:11:21
same as it was for the whole population in the 1940s. But
1:11:25
there is a bit of good news and the data for
1:11:28
the Hispanic population and the non Hispanic black population
1:11:33
who both lost a lot of years during the first year of the
1:11:36
pandemic. The loss was a lot smaller during the second year
1:11:41
for white Americans life expectancy actually dropped more
1:11:45
in 2021 than in 2020 Even though that seems and treatments became
1:11:50
available
1:11:56
any coincidence there you think that I don't think so drop more,
1:12:00
even though there were more vaccines available? And you
1:12:03
know, the black the black and Hispanic don't stop taking in
1:12:08
that ticket booster? Well,
1:12:09
there's there's a specific issue. After we hear your second
1:12:13
clip, I'll be happy to share what I what I've learned.
1:12:16
Placed clipped you
1:12:18
know, if you take a step back, the US wasn't doing very well on
1:12:22
life expectancy compared to other countries even before the
1:12:25
pandemic says John haga. He's a retired division director at the
1:12:29
National Institute on Aging part of NIH. We're now
1:12:33
behind countries like Slovenia, Costa Rica and Greece. he
1:12:38
laments
1:12:39
that nobody seems to get fired up about changing things to help
1:12:43
Americans live longer. Selena Simmons Duffin NPR news,
1:12:48
yeah, Slovenia. Yeah, Costa Rica. Well, what's wrong with
1:12:53
this picture? The American Medical Association is what's
1:12:57
wrong with this picture and and big farmers what's wrong with
1:13:00
this picture?
1:13:01
And, and big agriculture. Extremely Online Jake. sent in a
1:13:10
note about his father who works at one of the large stepfather
1:13:13
who works at one of the largest drug companies in the field of
1:13:15
diabetes and insulin medication been doing it for 30 years
1:13:19
started in the labs move to sales now as managing multiple
1:13:22
territories an expert in the field and he is just received a
1:13:27
promotion to see a new division within this company. I don't
1:13:30
know which company it is. The Division is called the obesity
1:13:35
division newly created so our producer Jake was asking a
1:13:42
couple things you know, so what's going on with the with
1:13:47
the numbers he said, first of all, insulin which is I guess
1:13:51
one of the products that he will be selling has to be kept
1:13:53
refrigerated. Currently the estimates according to this
1:13:57
company, so that would be their their marketing statistics,
1:14:00
their tam their total addressable addressable market
1:14:03
in the United States. 100 million diabetics 80 million pre
1:14:08
diabetic, which is almost everybody, isn't it? Until you
1:14:12
get you know, really young people and really old people
1:14:15
would 46% of all children in America have diabetes. And, and
1:14:21
this is because we're eating shit. And yeah, black and brown
1:14:24
people poor people, especially during the lockdowns What did
1:14:27
they eat more shit that's all you could get.
1:14:29
Yeah, but they're living longer because you're not taking the
1:14:34
VAX Well, yes.
1:14:36
But now here's the problem. What happens when the lights go out?
1:14:42
You know, they eat more.
1:14:44
No, I mean, what happens to your refrigerated what happens to
1:14:47
your refrigerated insulin could get kind of nasty as a lot of
1:14:54
things that won't work anymore. It particularly I don't know
1:14:57
your electric vehicle
1:14:59
overnight, right? Students north of Los Angeles facing mandatory
1:15:02
evacuations and major traffic jams as a wildfire quickly
1:15:06
spread along the five freeway
1:15:08
very ominous flames. A huge plume of smoke and the five
1:15:12
freeway again worth reiterating completely shut down.
1:15:17
At least eight firefighters suffered heat related injuries
1:15:20
fighting the flames. And extreme late summer heatwave, fueling
1:15:26
the fire. Burbank hitting 112 degrees 106 in Anaheim, the
1:15:32
hottest August temperatures ever recorded in those cities. And
1:15:35
now the extreme heat is expanding. The National Weather
1:15:39
Service is warning people in Northern California, that daily
1:15:43
monthly and even all time temperature records could be
1:15:46
broken during this Labor Day weekend.
1:15:49
How does climb how does the heat fuel the fire? I mean, isn't
1:15:53
that kind of a shortcut to say it was 106 degrees so that just
1:15:56
fueled the fire? It's not technically true right.
1:16:01
Now how can it be It can't fuel anything that's not fuel
1:16:06
temperature Exactly.
1:16:07
California's power grid operators have issued a
1:16:09
statewide flex alert today to learn for voluntary conservation
1:16:14
of power during peak hours.
1:16:15
We encourage you before you leave home if you can turn those
1:16:19
thermostats up to 85 degrees. Officials also asking
1:16:23
electric car owners not to charge their vehicles during
1:16:26
peak hours. The request coming just one week after California
1:16:30
lawmakers voted in favor of banning the sale of gas powered
1:16:34
cars by 2035. The governor yesterday defended that move,
1:16:39
saying the state has little choice but to act on the climate
1:16:42
crisis. He also addressed his critics in Texas, where the
1:16:45
governor has called the banning of gas cars ridiculous
1:16:49
in the state of Texas year to date. They have consumed some 22
1:16:54
point 9 million tons of coal ah polluting the planet making
1:17:00
conditions worse 22 point 9 million tons versus California's
1:17:05
18,000
1:17:07
Oh man, it's we're dirty Texans. Put us right next to Putin give
1:17:12
us a shot in the head to the head as
1:17:15
a burning coal and you're polluting the planet and looting
1:17:17
the gun legs.
1:17:19
Now my favorite heatwave climate change clip from this week comes
1:17:24
from Denver. Here's how it roll baby we are expecting
1:17:28
a blistering 95 degrees tomorrow and during the dog days of
1:17:32
summer of course it's so important to keep your home
1:17:34
cool.
1:17:34
Well when 1000s of XL customers in Colorado tried adjusting
1:17:37
their thermostats Tuesday they learned they couldn't Denver
1:17:40
seven consumer investigator Jacqueline Allen talk with some
1:17:43
of those customers. Jacqueline they're upset they had no
1:17:45
control over the temp and their own home.
1:17:47
That's right. And you know, excels calling calling is a rare
1:17:50
energy emergency and yes, emerging for 10s of 1000s of
1:17:54
smart thermostats here in Colorado for the first time,
1:17:57
there was nothing homeowners could do about
1:18:00
it. Another hot one today with temperatures in the low 90s.
1:18:03
Even Mike Nelson would tell you Tuesday was a hot one, the heat
1:18:07
goes on, which is why Tony Tallarico tried to crank up the
1:18:11
AC
1:18:11
I mean it was 90 out and it was right during the peak period.
1:18:15
That's when he found out he had no control of his thermostat, a
1:18:19
message from Excel on his thermostat saying temperature
1:18:22
locked during an energy emergency.
1:18:24
And normally when we see a message like that we're able to
1:18:27
override it. In this case, we weren't so our thermostat was
1:18:31
locked in 78 or something and it turns out
1:18:33
he's not alone. Excel confirms to contact Denver 720 2000
1:18:38
customers were locked out of their smart thermostats for
1:18:40
hours on Tuesday. It's a voluntary program. Let's
1:18:43
remember that
1:18:44
this is something that customers choose to be a part of, based on
1:18:47
the incentives $100 up and
1:18:49
Monroe mind says customers enrolled in the Colorado AC
1:18:52
rewards program sign up to get money back but give up some
1:18:56
control for the greater good.
1:18:58
So it helps everybody for people that participate in these
1:19:00
programs. It is a bit uncomfortable for a short period
1:19:03
of time but but it's very, very helpful.
1:19:05
Very, very helpful. $100 $100 rebate per month if you
1:19:10
participate in the program where they can control and new people
1:19:12
were like, well that's not cool, man. I didn't I didn't sign up
1:19:15
for that. They didn't know what they're reading. They didn't
1:19:19
read it. They didn't read it.
1:19:21
Now of course nowadays went to 100 bucks. That's right
1:19:24
100 bucks you can control my thermostat 100 bucks give me
1:19:27
that shot fee give me a hamburger. I'll take the shot.
1:19:30
This video. Yeah, so to bring it all around. This is why we have
1:19:34
shorter lifespans in America. We're dumb. We're ultimate
1:19:40
dummies.
1:19:41
I think this is a segment which was highlighted by the dummies
1:19:45
who didn't know how many letters in the alphabet. It was
1:19:49
that I'd like to thank you for your courage say in the morning
1:19:51
to you the man who put the sea in the Gorby chips ladies and
1:19:54
gentlemen, please say hello to my friend on the other end there
1:19:56
Mr. John C. Devorah.
1:20:00
Good morning New Mr. Curry in the morning all ships and sea
1:20:05
boots on the ground feed near Serbs in the water and all the
1:20:08
games a nice out there
1:20:10
in the morning to all of the trolls in our troll room and
1:20:13
what did I say? Because I say something wrong people that get
1:20:16
the trolls are very there must be a lot of trolls in there
1:20:18
because there is a lot of people who are full of crap so let's go
1:20:22
down alright starting around 2026 That's for Thursday 2026 I
1:20:32
don't know if that's good or not. It's above our eight teens
1:20:34
right
1:20:37
2026 is quite good for Thursday. Oh,
1:20:39
there you go. All right, I told you there was more people than
1:20:41
normal I could tell because a lot of people talking smack in
1:20:44
there but that's the whole point. That's what trolls are.
1:20:47
That's why it's called the troll room troll room.io You can jump
1:20:50
in there and and be full of crap and that's a beautiful thing.
1:20:53
And you can also be helpful that's that's also a beautiful
1:20:56
thing. And you can join them troll them.io gives you the live
1:21:00
stream no agenda stream along with the along with the live
1:21:04
virtual room which you can also get by alert from pod verse get
1:21:08
the pod verse app as it pod verse.fm I think and then when
1:21:12
we go live boom. The same app that gives you your podcast
1:21:15
gives you the live stream and the troll room all in one or
1:21:18
follow us at no agenda social.com soon to reopen for a
1:21:24
new subscriptions. Then you will automatically be following John
1:21:28
C. Dvorak at no agenda social.com and Adam a dojo in
1:21:32
the social calm. This you can follow us from anywhere from any
1:21:35
any Mastodon account, it should work. And you can even set one
1:21:39
up yourself if you want to really have ultimate control.
1:21:42
Let's face it, Twitter isn't going to get any better. How is
1:21:48
Twitter destroyed yet? Are we close? Did you guys talk about
1:21:50
that you want to Andrew? Nope. No, I guess no one cares
1:21:54
anymore.
1:21:55
I mean, I think we mentioned it. Maybe we got that Wisner. It's
1:21:58
not in the news that much anymore.
1:22:01
Let's thank the artist for episode 1481. See, we titled
1:22:07
that one injectables. Boy, was that ever true? Oh, yeah. This
1:22:11
was kind of an interesting choice for us. It was the blow
1:22:14
agenda burger. former home of Korean Dvorak save 30. This was
1:22:19
based upon the potential sale of the show. Strangely, I have
1:22:24
still not heard anything. From the podcast broker shocker. This
1:22:29
was Mike Riley's work which now Mike is a professional does a
1:22:33
lot of comic books. And there were other choices here. But I
1:22:37
there were other blow agendas. This one just cracked us up. But
1:22:40
why what was wrong with other pieces that just didn't? It's
1:22:45
you know, there's a lot of very busy
1:22:47
was I thought it was wait a week selection personally. Our
1:22:52
selection was weak. No, their selection that was available and
1:22:56
offering week offering. No selection. I mean, I mean, if
1:23:02
you say you're offered a selection, but selection means
1:23:05
there's more than there is. Well, there's a lot. Okay. i
1:23:14
People are making stuff a little too busy. They're trying to Jack
1:23:17
in all kinds of
1:23:18
job. There's a new lot of new artists are coming. It's
1:23:21
unreadable. Yeah, we have to explain.
1:23:22
So the site when you look at the size of the overview page, the
1:23:25
submitted art, that's pretty much the size, it's going to be
1:23:29
in any podcast
1:23:30
app. So if you can't read it at that size, you can't read it.
1:23:35
And the icons will tend to be be even smaller if it's just an
1:23:39
icon overview. So you know, the stuff that just has a lot of
1:23:43
like, you know, trees kill people in the background and
1:23:46
little tiny like Tesla on a moon rock. Now it we're just not
1:23:52
going to be able to see it.
1:23:53
Yeah, I mean, lone wolf did a piece. It's got two rockets as
1:23:56
ITM on it. And then it says, Now is OTA and it's in a black
1:24:02
background with dark green letter and you can't read it.
1:24:05
Yeah, very hard to read. Exactly. And the one next to it,
1:24:11
which is Thompson Neil. So she tried to do a take off on
1:24:15
improperly that was an FBI OnProperty but you can use a
1:24:19
Scrabble board and it's all funny but you can't see it. It
1:24:23
will never show it will never translate we need big bold
1:24:28
obvious obvious things. Yeah. Like well I
1:24:35
like low agenda below
1:24:36
agenda. Below agenda is exactly what we what we needed. Thank
1:24:41
you very much. Mike Riley and thank you to all the artists who
1:24:43
helped out this is part of our full value for value system.
1:24:47
It's the new international lifestyle. We've been living it
1:24:49
for a while. time, talent or treasure. If you can't
1:24:52
contribute to the treasure you can always contribute your time
1:24:55
or talents such as no agenda, art generator.com You can if
1:24:58
you're listening live you can refreshers, the artists are
1:25:01
making stuff as we go as the topics come up. And you can
1:25:06
always go back in hindsight and take a look at, take a look at
1:25:11
all the different opportunities. These also, you know, the show
1:25:14
up at no agenda shop.com with T shirts, hats, mugs, hoodies, all
1:25:19
kinds of cool things where the artist gets a piece of the
1:25:22
action, they donate to us and of course, the shop keeps on
1:25:25
rolling. It's it's a beautiful thing, almost no one has this.
1:25:29
So we're very, very protective of it and very appreciative of
1:25:32
these artists are doing that for us. Let's thank our executive
1:25:36
and Associate Executive producers for today's episode
1:25:40
1482. Now we like to assign titles for people to come in
1:25:46
over $200 that will be Associate Executive Producer over three is
1:25:49
executive producer. These are credits that are really gonna go
1:25:53
look at IMDB. Right now, you'll see all kinds of Hollywood
1:25:55
bigwigs who have also finance and executive produced episodes
1:26:00
have no agenda. So it's a real thing and we kick it off. Okay.
1:26:05
Bless you with Kenan Cassidy and Kenan is from Boise, Idaho, John
1:26:12
and Adam, thank you for the value you've provided to me over
1:26:14
the last three years. This is $1,000 this is long overdue. All
1:26:19
right. I humbly request the title of surpass ringleader of
1:26:24
clown world. Yes, please reserve rebuys and red wine at the
1:26:29
roundtable. John's choice of wine. Okay, John, do you have a
1:26:33
choice that we should give for this fine producer need to
1:26:36
have that name? I 2005 Rich Borg who
1:26:40
hold on a second a 2005 Rich Borg
1:26:44
Yeah, all right. i c h e b o u r g
1:26:47
and what kind of wine is this?
1:26:51
It's probably one of the best Burgundy's you'll ever have in
1:26:54
your life.
1:26:57
Is it expensive? Because uh, the guys over at the roundtable gave
1:27:00
me a weird look.
1:27:02
It's you could probably get a ball for 500 bucks.
1:27:06
No wonder they gave me a weird look. All right, Jean requests
1:27:13
Webalizer go karma and a de Du
1:27:17
de deuced.
1:27:22
By 3333 33, otherwise, you've got karma. And we'll see the
1:27:34
podium later on Kenan
1:27:36
Derek Campbell is up next and he's in Marcy New York. I don't
1:27:40
know where the hell that is. 591 72 And he's got some
1:27:44
jingles. Defend your freedom. Great. Giant voice system.
1:27:50
That's an oldie.
1:27:53
factcheck false longtime Boehner first time donor kind of get a
1:27:56
de douching you need
1:27:59
you've been de deuced
1:28:02
please me to the birthday list as I complete my 50 a trip
1:28:05
around the sun at 991 Adam, you always mentioned being
1:28:09
recognized for headbangers ball but what about dial MTV?
1:28:17
Yes yes the precursor to total wreck to TRL Total Request Live
1:28:23
yeah that dial MTV for murder
1:28:26
now it was dial MTV to get New Kids on the Block played which
1:28:30
of course everybody hated so they they messed with it even
1:28:33
though New Kids on the Block was number one were correct request
1:28:36
for months and months they never showed up. And that's strange.
1:28:39
They never
1:28:40
came you were supposed to show up at that was videos
1:28:43
no they were supposed to show up on the on the list for dial MTV.
1:28:45
They never appeared even though everyone seemed to be requesting
1:28:48
it was the weirdest thing. You think there was some corruption
1:28:50
going on?
1:28:51
Sounds like it. I have a lot more to say. But one to respect
1:28:54
John's wishes and keep it succinct. Well, thank you.
1:28:58
All right, interesting. Choice of jingles. Thank you here. We
1:29:01
haven't played this in a long time. intelligence work takes
1:29:05
place within a strong legal framework. We operate under the
1:29:09
rule of law and are accountable for it. In seven countries
1:29:13
secret intelligence is used to control people in hours and only
1:29:18
exists to protect their freedoms, protect their
1:29:22
freedoms, protect their freedoms, protect their freedoms
1:29:42
where's the voice? This is not the giant voice right here it
1:29:46
comes. In is a test of the outdoor warning system fact
1:29:53
check false. There you go. There's your giant voice system.
1:29:58
They used to have one of those was in San Francisco near the
1:30:02
MVNO offices.
1:30:04
Yes. first Tuesday of every month, wasn't it?
1:30:08
I think it was more often than that. But there was once a week
1:30:11
but maybe not put Yeah, that was sounded almost identical to
1:30:14
that. And they had the voice and the whole thing and it was
1:30:17
pretty close. I think it's like a few blocks away.
1:30:20
I'm curious that that this, this next this next entry on our list
1:30:28
of donors today did not get his proper title assigned. Ladies
1:30:31
and gentlemen,
1:30:32
I present the Grand Duke of the Pacific Northwest Swain melons.
1:30:37
So
1:30:37
there you go. The Grand Duke of the Pacific Northwest, Dwayne
1:30:41
Melanson, Newberg, Oregon 580 Thank you very much Grand Duke
1:30:45
Happy Birthday Adam. Oh 584 58 times 10 Thank you. Could I have
1:30:49
a biscuit Oh Have a biscuit on this important day. They always
1:30:53
give me a biscuit on my birthday and then he ends up with a
1:30:55
little bit of deaths from heart to failure Steve yard Thank you
1:30:58
very much appreciate it.
1:31:00
Sir Jimmy is summer Fairfield North Carolina 34567 fantastic
1:31:07
number we sold the first AC signed Harlow book in over 1000
1:31:13
shows fellas that's funny their share lined up thanks to no
1:31:19
agenda social we have two more for sale right now on free
1:31:22
Harlow books.com. Did it while you can people you got to Adam
1:31:26
curry signature in there. I'm gonna be whatever comes after
1:31:29
night which is a Baronet. Thank is yeah, he's not on the upgrade
1:31:33
list. He just pushed this in there. Nobody noticed.
1:31:36
So does that mean you make him a Baronet? baronet's or Jimmy will
1:31:40
be
1:31:40
thanks fellas sir Jimmy a dude named Jeff from na social says
1:31:45
thank you very much to Jimmy for a wonderful product and Adam and
1:31:49
John for such a great show. He would also I don't know quite
1:31:55
getting why he's relaying this information but okay, why not?
1:31:59
He would also like to recommend everyone go check out yo no
1:32:03
agenda.com a marketplace of businesses from fellow no agenda
1:32:09
producers like hollow books if you are or another no agenda
1:32:13
producer has a business that you would like included in the
1:32:17
directory visit the site and submit their shop or service
1:32:21
that's why a no agenda.com Yeah yeah job knowledge okay ya know
1:32:29
agenda and shout out to the smokin hot girlfriend he met at
1:32:34
the no agenda meetup last year. Holly be for being so sweet that
1:32:39
you for your courage. You know,
1:32:40
I hear more and more of this wonderful was a donation? No,
1:32:45
but I think you see one of our producers wrote in and said,
1:32:50
what I do with my date is first date I take them to a meet up if
1:32:55
they survive it past that. They got to listen to an episode you
1:32:59
know, and then and then then there's something worth
1:33:01
considering. It's Trial by Fire though that could backfire real
1:33:05
bad. We'd like it though. Thank you very much, sir. Jimmy, but
1:33:11
wouldn't it wouldn't backfire because you would get you get it
1:33:15
out of the way whether or not you're gonna get along with this
1:33:17
woman or guy
1:33:18
or go Yeah, exactly. Carol Kemmerer is in Kutztown,
1:33:24
Pennsylvania with our favorite history 3323 And I went from Sir
1:33:28
Jimmy to Carol. Did I miss something? What did I miss?
1:33:33
What?
1:33:34
I'm sorry. That's the problem. I'm looking as the next one was
1:33:36
also from Kutztown, Pennsylvania. Ah, got Kimmerer
1:33:40
looks like they're in cahoots. These tools. I wonder if they
1:33:44
live at the same address? Let's see. My son Sir Michael Black
1:33:48
Knight of the dude's name. Ben punched me in the mouth for my
1:33:51
birthday in May. I gave birth to him. And this is the thanks I
1:33:55
get being called out as a douchebag on the best podcast in
1:33:59
the universe. Please de douche me immediately. You've been de
1:34:04
deuced. And then and then Carol shows her her her heritage with
1:34:10
the show by requesting Don't be a denier. Don't look over here.
1:34:14
Nothing to see here. And coincidence? I think not. These
1:34:17
are oh, gee, Carol, I love it.
1:34:22
The sciences?
1:34:25
Look over here. Nothing to
1:34:27
see.
1:34:28
Look at that coincidence?
1:34:30
I think not. So that was a different one. Yeah, it's a very
1:34:35
different one. Now it's interesting. The side Don't be a
1:34:38
denier. We've had that. I would say 13 years.
1:34:46
Because one of our we had very early on it's actually stemmed
1:34:48
from climate gate climate
1:34:50
gate. So that was 2012. So 10 years was a climate gate 2012
1:34:53
was earlier. I don't remember. And and don't be a denier. The
1:34:57
science is in and they send it doesn't matter now a decade
1:35:01
further. It's still the sciences in Shut up. It's just it's an
1:35:07
evergreen, two beautiful evergreen.
1:35:10
Scott camera's next in Kutztown, Pennsylvania 33333. And he
1:35:16
complaints my son Michael hit us in the mouth earlier this year.
1:35:20
But this is my first donation so please d do.
1:35:25
You've been D Let us honor. Let us honor Michael for his work.
1:35:32
He has successfully made both his parents support the show.
1:35:38
Yes, good work. Good work. My wife Carol will be sending in a
1:35:42
similar donation when she has time. Which she did She sure
1:35:46
did. Please play you're scaring me Joe Biden resist very much
1:35:52
and yet karma thanks got Kutztown Pennsylvania
1:36:00
we must we must and we will much about that. You've got ah ha
1:36:15
I love that the family is definitely playing it together.
1:36:18
Very cool. Very cool. Um next we have Bruno Beaudry baudry About
1:36:25
Deirdre be Audrey from Mascouche Mascouche Quebec Canada 333 Dots
1:36:33
33 It's probably
1:36:36
dollar s but we accept those and we're grateful for it and that
1:36:40
came in as American money
1:36:41
Oh it did? He wants answer that's true goat karma it's
1:36:44
pronounced Mascouche got that? As in de douche. Oh please do
1:36:49
douche
1:36:51
you've been de deuced
1:36:55
first Mascouche de douche
1:36:56
it's you know if you got to do she might as well do with
1:36:59
Mascouche that's the way to go. I am a Canadian exiled in
1:37:03
Florida. Oh that's interesting. So yeah, so you don't have it
1:37:08
that bad then thinking like we got to feel bad that's why it
1:37:11
came in in in American dollars I just played my fourth ice hockey
1:37:16
game here and I got bid 16 times because my equipment was covered
1:37:21
with these eight holes a is that a term a hockey term? I'm not
1:37:26
under get bit that a hockey term
1:37:29
no never heard it
1:37:32
you might get bit but you won't get bit by a hockey you get bit
1:37:35
by so my hands
1:37:38
I got ants I don't know if that's true.
1:37:52
And play hit it dammit.
1:37:54
I was thinking if you do on desiccated that's what I want.
1:37:59
And then you've got
1:38:00
ah
1:38:05
damn ants ruin everything.
1:38:07
Alright, so now we have an interesting situation Van
1:38:09
Jackson came in at 333 33 from Broken Arrow Oklahoma. And I
1:38:15
don't know if he's related but I I'm thinking probably not to a
1:38:19
another donation of 330 333. They came in as cash. And one of
1:38:24
the bills was stuck to some glue and there was this it was that
1:38:29
and that's no,
1:38:30
that's not glue jar. But it wasn't glue. What was it? Was it
1:38:39
bad jokes bands bad fan mail joke, I'm sorry. Didn't mean to
1:38:43
make it.
1:38:44
So. And then there was a note written on a heart in it black
1:38:50
ink and dark red paper couldn't be scanned. Hmm. Okay, so now we
1:38:55
have the cache. The note that couldn't be scanned, which I
1:38:59
have here. Okay. Okay, good, good, good. And the note has
1:39:03
scant information on it. And the envelope, of course, was
1:39:06
separated from the note as is happens when you open these
1:39:09
things and pile them up. And so I don't know who this is. But it
1:39:13
reads the following way. Thank you for the show. This is a
1:39:17
switcheroo. Oh, all right. That makes it even for I don't know
1:39:22
if it's for this guy or not. Oh, that's the problem. Oh, oh, it
1:39:26
may not be for him. So we just had to add this. Please de
1:39:30
douche my mom and G
1:39:35
D deuced.
1:39:37
And she needs to be added to the birthday list. Okay, and then it
1:39:42
says Happy Birthday. So we don't have her age. We don't have her
1:39:46
name except Angie. We don't have the name of the donor. We don't
1:39:48
have to named where the donor is located because that information
1:39:51
was not provided. Okay, and it was cash so it wasn't on a check
1:39:55
that we could take the information off of. Well, it may
1:39:58
have been on the envelope that envelope is On freedom sucks,
1:40:01
man. So can you put Angie Angie's on the list? I just
1:40:06
added her for a happy birthday and that'll be that you got it
1:40:09
you got it. You got it. Do we get mess we can do we do a
1:40:11
little double up karma just since we did a double you've got
1:40:17
karma Yeah. All right. Then we have David Dickman, who's in
1:40:25
East Northport New York. 333 33 dear Adam, happy birthday you
1:40:31
whippersnapper Thank you very much. That's appreciate it.
1:40:35
Since my last executive producer donation last September, my
1:40:38
keeper and I got immunized the natural way by catching and
1:40:41
recovering from COVID 19 Delta unvaccinated unboosted with a
1:40:44
long list of comorbidities. It was certainly not any fun, but
1:40:48
not much worse than your typical bad case of the flu humanity
1:40:51
brought to its knees for no good reason stupidity reigns and a
1:40:55
Happy first anniversary shout out to my daughter Ducklin and
1:40:58
her husband sir day from dementia B or whatever. And as
1:41:03
they're still practicing, please give them some baby making our
1:41:06
two d two karma Ayers a fellow granddad in the making. I hear
1:41:10
you get busy people. Today's donations 333 33 plus 1482. That
1:41:16
must be lower on the list take me past the $1,000 donation
1:41:19
threshold for knighthood. Please note me sir Dave with the clay
1:41:22
pits and add popcorn and ice cream to the table for my
1:41:25
celebration, as this is the second Sunday of the week.
1:41:28
Indeed. The no agenda show truly is the best podcast in the
1:41:31
universe. Keep up the good work. When you pass the 20th
1:41:33
anniversary. It will seem like the upcoming 50th anniversary
1:41:38
was just the other day. Yeah, maybe. Lastly, I'm a peanut
1:41:43
Pfister from long before I ever encountered John and will remain
1:41:47
so. Sincerely soon to be sir Dave of the clay pits. All
1:41:51
righty then.
1:41:53
You've got
1:41:56
karma. Get busy kids.
1:41:59
Anonymous 333 from BC Canada didn't say it down. I'm guessing
1:42:06
spasm. Greetings and such. Please switch through this
1:42:10
donation to my sister Kelly. Okay, she's not a producer, so
1:42:15
please deduce her.
1:42:18
You've been de Deus. Does Kelly have a last name? Why is he's
1:42:22
anonymous, so I wouldn't say
1:42:24
no last name. Okay, got it. Added to the belated birthday
1:42:28
list for the August 31 wishes on. Kelly is a Canadian with
1:42:32
epilepsy who is currently taking a training for a solo bike ride
1:42:36
across the US she'll be embarking from beasts in
1:42:38
February planning to bike from Big Sur California to Key West
1:42:42
Florida. Yikes. That's over 5000 kilometers or 3000 miles in
1:42:49
freedom units. Her goals are to raise awareness collect
1:42:52
donations support any epilepsy of epilepsy foundations to
1:42:56
document stories from those afflicted with epilepsy. Since
1:43:02
the stats show that 1% of the global population has epilepsy.
1:43:06
I know that seems like a lot to me when I first heard it. If you
1:43:09
have a story to share time. You know someone who doesn't who
1:43:13
does tangent, or you simply wish to support her and the charities
1:43:18
treasure. Please visit story telling seizures. All one word,
1:43:26
storytelling seizures.org So proud of you, Cal wishing you
1:43:32
many fruitful training sessions and safe travels PS Happy
1:43:36
Birthday, Adam.
1:43:37
Oh, thank you very much. No other requests, I guess. Okay,
1:43:42
except for all that's on the list. You got it. You got it.
1:43:44
You got it. Ryan Gutierrez is in Las Vegas, Nevada 333. And he
1:43:50
says it's a long note. So we included a TLDR. And we
1:43:53
appreciate that so I can read the TLDR he has had some woke
1:43:57
issues is what he's complaining about. I tried to sponsor a
1:44:02
fighting game live stream for $300 to promote my new free
1:44:06
fighting game ebook available on gootecks.com GOTC. Ks. He
1:44:13
doesn't mention what the name of the book is, which I think is an
1:44:17
oversight on his part. But because the woke mob hates me
1:44:21
the guy refunded my money. So I thought I would send it to the
1:44:24
best podcast in the Universe since you guys are largely
1:44:27
responsible for me snapping out of the M five M propaganda.
1:44:31
We're happy to do that man. It's called EVO in Las Vegas. Oh,
1:44:34
that was the tournament evil in Las Vegas. But what was the name
1:44:36
of his book? I don't see it anywhere. All right, well, let
1:44:43
us know we'll gladly put a link in that later on for your
1:44:46
general request. Biden get vaccinated Obama you might die
1:44:49
Sharpton resist very much amillennial karma if possible.
1:44:52
Oh, yeah, I can't wait for that. Thank you for your courage. May
1:44:55
you never find an exit strategy from gootecks Oh gootecks.
1:44:59
That's his website. gootecks.com you might die
1:45:03
but resist we must. We must and we will much about that you've
1:45:12
got
1:45:18
a new one you want the latest
1:45:20
you want the latest is what kind of karma is this?
1:45:22
Well this that lineal that was millennial karma.
1:45:25
Yeah, that was millennia. What's the next one?
1:45:26
Well this is old guy karma for you and me. I don't I haven't
1:45:30
put I just have the element I haven't put the karma bit in
1:45:32
yet. Here it is airborne air horn air horn I think that's
1:45:35
more our level. So when you want the air horn we just play that.
1:45:41
Shawn Douglas and Glen uns Saskatchewan Canada 25845. Arrow
1:45:52
on here we move to four seven Okay. can't thank you enough for
1:45:56
the work you do to endorse or associate producer credits. 58
1:45:59
bucks for Adam's birthday Saturday and 47 cents for mine
1:46:03
on Friday, ITM no jingles? No karma.
1:46:06
Beautiful. Thank you. Robert Platt is in Westerville Ohio
1:46:09
Westerville. Ohio 256. Hello, John Latimer just donated 256 to
1:46:14
excellent podcast. I will need to be dee doo dee doo. She says
1:46:20
it may require a double dose as I as I'm an academic. No, you're
1:46:24
good man. You're good. You're good. With this one. I'd also
1:46:27
like some jobs karma for my students now. That's
1:46:30
jobs, jobs and jobs. That's the job.
1:46:36
Karma Are you gonna force them to listen? Force your students
1:46:39
to listen to this. Good work for
1:46:42
Mooresville listen. Get a couple here because this is a blank.
1:46:47
Sean Dossey in Midland, Texas. Let's you got to know 23469.
1:46:51
We'll give him a double karma.
1:46:52
That's what it requires. You've got karma.
1:47:00
Let me wrap this up with Darius unity and Upper Marlboro,
1:47:04
Maryland 20792. Y'all are the Delta keg of pods. As far as any
1:47:11
object I think that's the conflict goes bless up I
1:47:14
think that's a compliment. I'm not sure yeah.
1:47:18
And last on our list of producers and executive
1:47:22
producers Associate Executive producers is named Jill of the
1:47:25
mobile mansion in 1000. Oaks, California tuner bucks. Happy
1:47:29
Birthday September 3. Adam game chill of the mobile Matt
1:47:32
mansion.
1:47:33
Yeah, it's a weird 158 You don't really feel old? Because you
1:47:39
don't feel old but it's also not that six numbers. And I haven't
1:47:41
got to level six yet. COMM six is lurking what's worse is my
1:47:46
kid just turned 32 Now that's frightening to me because I can
1:47:50
see 40 I'm like my kid's gonna be 40 1am i How am I still
1:47:53
walking around? Makes no sense. Thank you to these executive and
1:47:58
what kind of what kind of brainwashing did you go through
1:48:01
as a kid?
1:48:03
I just remember when my dad turned 40 It was one of those
1:48:06
moments and so how old was I was probably 10 cannot make it was
1:48:16
me it was just there was a moment he was 30 or 40 maybe was
1:48:19
30 and I remember like man, that's so ancient. Ya know? What
1:48:26
kind of programming Yeah, bad programming believe me. Thank
1:48:30
you to these executive and Associate Executive producers we
1:48:32
really appreciate the support you've given us your time, your
1:48:35
talent, but most of all your treasurer today, if you'd like
1:48:38
to become a producer and we'll have more to thank in the second
1:48:40
segment is a very simple website. You go there you can
1:48:43
read about everything, especially how to become a
1:48:45
producer.org/and
1:48:48
a thank you all for producing episode 1482 of the best podcast
1:48:53
and universe our
1:48:53
formula is this. We go out for yet people in the mouth.
1:49:18
Was a lot from our president saying crazy stuff backs up by
1:49:25
his spokes whole. Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Sean Pierre.
1:49:29
He's got to go. Everyone's noticing.
1:49:31
I mean, she really she really doubled down on President Biden
1:49:36
saying that, you know, the Republicans are radical. I think
1:49:41
let's hear
1:49:42
what she doesn't have any trouble doing as you recall. And
1:49:44
I've said this before, she used to be on MSNBC as a contributor
1:49:48
and more normal to her more normal self. And she was just a
1:49:51
hater. She is a hater.
1:49:54
Now here's a prime example.
1:49:56
President thinks that there is an extremist threat to our
1:49:58
democracy. As the President hasn't been clear as he can be
1:50:02
on that particular piece when we talk about a democracy when we
1:50:06
talk about our freedoms, the way that he sees it, the Maga
1:50:10
Republicans are the most energized part of the Republican
1:50:13
Party. The that extreme This is an extreme threat to our
1:50:17
democracy, to our freedom, to our rights
1:50:20
to our rights. I mean, that's, that's pretty inflammatory.
1:50:25
I think so I think it's should be fired on the spot
1:50:28
guy. No, can't do that. I have a CBS evening news report an
1:50:32
overview of the President and his stop. Ah, I guess
1:50:36
Pennsylvania is good for him. He gets all fired up. People show
1:50:39
up for him. So when people come out, which is good, he could
1:50:42
talk about you know, being a lifeguard in the in the blackest
1:50:45
neighborhood. He was the only white guy and corn pop and he
1:50:48
can talk about how a hairy legs ar 15 bullets travel faster than
1:50:54
you know, like ballistic missiles from Russia. I mean,
1:50:57
the guy is he's losing the plot. For God's
1:51:00
sake. Whose side are you on? I don't know.
1:51:03
In the battleground state of Pennsylvania today, President
1:51:06
Biden sought to flip and Angel political script slamming
1:51:10
Republicans as soft on crime. Let me
1:51:13
say this to my Magga Republican friends in Congress. Don't tell
1:51:19
me you support law enforcement. If you won't condemn what
1:51:22
happened on a six. Don't tell me.
1:51:26
He cited conservatives who
1:51:28
have downplayed this report didn't include the President
1:51:31
saying that an armed mob and armed army of insurrectionists
1:51:35
tried to change the the presidential vote in the United
1:51:39
States and killed police officers while they were doing
1:51:43
it all lies all lies, every single one of them but it
1:51:47
doesn't matter. You're gonna clap, clap.
1:51:50
Don't tell me. He cited conservatives who have
1:51:53
downplayed the January 6 insurrection, and called to
1:51:57
defund the FBI as it investigates former President
1:52:00
Donald Trump.
1:52:01
There's no place in this country no place for endangering the
1:52:06
lives of law enforcement. I'm opposed to be funny to police.
1:52:09
I'm also opposed to defunding the FBI.
1:52:13
President Biden's more aggressive tone comes as his
1:52:16
party's prospects improve. The latest CBS News battleground
1:52:20
tracker shows Democratic support from white women with college
1:52:24
degrees has jumped 9.6
1:52:27
white women I'm determined to ban assault weapons in this
1:52:31
country. Determined I did it once before. And I'll do it
1:52:40
again. Today
1:52:41
President Biden laid out his crime plan which includes $13
1:52:45
billion to hire and train 100,000 new police officers.
1:52:50
What you should say here is I did a crime bill in 94 I got a
1:52:56
new one. You're gonna love it. If you don't like it, you ain't
1:53:00
black
1:53:00
Republican Senator Ron Johnson stumping for reelection in
1:53:04
Wisconsin hand the idea
1:53:06
I'm sure it's going to spend more money that we don't have
1:53:09
exacerbate inflation not accomplish whatever goal it's
1:53:15
trying to accomplish.
1:53:16
So what I would like to point out here is that this is the
1:53:20
script that the mainstream plays foxes playing it to the script
1:53:24
is you know first Republicans are going to wipe the floor with
1:53:28
everybody now it's all man the Democrats are gaining a little
1:53:31
ground oh it looks like nose length looks like they're neck
1:53:34
and neck and we have to we have to start now. Get the squeeze
1:53:39
everybody thinks it's really close a real close race because
1:53:43
that gets the advertising money in would you agree?
1:53:47
Well we agree every time there's an election every two years we
1:53:50
have this thesis that we remote which is that all these polls
1:53:54
which are now half owned by the media Yeah. If you haven't
1:53:57
noticed some some ABC some some CBS to get to people on both
1:54:04
sides to think that this is a tight race that needs more
1:54:07
spending yet to spend more money to your guy gets in so let's get
1:54:12
these you know neck and neck and so spend more money because your
1:54:15
guy's going to lose if you don't spend more money because look
1:54:19
he's losing in the polls. And then it comes out whatever it
1:54:22
comes out at the end it's got nothing to do with the polls are
1:54:25
wrong all the time every year. Well, the pollsters were wrong
1:54:30
this year. I mean, come on how many times this is a Lucy and
1:54:33
the football moment? Yeah, exactly. Every two years we go
1:54:39
through this as the same script it's so yeah, so Titus Oh,
1:54:44
close. All the polls were wrong.
1:54:46
It's tiring because it's always the same and all sides play as
1:54:50
they all play it.
1:54:51
Yeah, it was to get to extracting money from people's
1:54:54
Yeah. To extract money from people.
1:54:57
Yes from from media, media or Ready for me for me to extract
1:55:01
some extracts for media? Yes, yes, yes. So
1:55:04
the media is in on the scam because they're the ones who
1:55:07
benefit
1:55:12
it is their scam. It's not even I mean it's their scam This is
1:55:15
the scam they pull that's what their that's their job. As far
1:55:19
as I'm concerned. Well,
1:55:20
they like they sent me remember we had a clip from Les Moonves.
1:55:26
Was it all right years ago
1:55:27
that was when
1:55:29
the greatest is Trump election is fabulous, because we made so
1:55:33
much money this quarter on advertising. Yeah, I want to
1:55:36
hear that one. Again.
1:55:37
The advertising climate couldn't be better right now. And I've
1:55:40
never seen it this hot for a number of years. Third quarter
1:55:43
scatter was phenomenally good. And fourth is even better than
1:55:46
that. So as the year ends, and we move into 16 Guess what, in
1:55:51
16 We have an extra AFC Championship playoff game. We
1:55:55
have the Super Bowl and we have a year of political advertising.
1:56:00
That looks like it's shaping up to be pretty phenomenal. You
1:56:03
know, we love having all 16 Republican candidates throwing
1:56:07
crap at each other it's great, the more they spend the better
1:56:10
it is for us and go Donald keeps keep getting out there and you
1:56:15
know this is just as fun you know the you know, watching this
1:56:19
let them spend money on us and we love having them in there.
1:56:23
We're looking forward to a very exciting political year in 16
1:56:26
Oh Donald remember those days? Yeah. Go Donald everybody. Yeah,
1:56:34
yeah, yeah. So that's the scam and that's going on is going to
1:56:38
continue we're going to see less more of it is going to be a lot
1:56:41
of this. And then you had Biden on the stump with it. crap he's
1:56:45
been saying of course he's I only I'm gonna get some clips
1:56:47
from that because I was over eclipsed. I couldn't get a Biden
1:56:50
good Biden's Have you had one but I've talked to Biden and
1:56:53
Scranton we're just shows up as the first thing he says.
1:56:58
Here he is
1:56:59
almost we're almost near him. We're almost in heaven. We're
1:57:02
almost a SCRAM almost raises grand aces. Are you going down
1:57:08
the line? You know?
1:57:14
You're down the line any rage?
1:57:18
Actually, it's something we need to talk about. Because it's
1:57:20
someone emailed us about it. Neither of us. Well, I think I
1:57:23
kind of half caught it. We kind of let it go. This was about the
1:57:26
definition of fascism, which seems to have changed. Yeah,
1:57:30
I'll replay a little bit of jump here. Kareem Abdul John Pierre
1:57:35
Van Damme.
1:57:36
Only semi fascism.
1:57:38
When Biden called them fascist was here,
1:57:41
we're gonna hear more of that phrase, is this something the
1:57:44
President's gonna kind of embrace? Or is any sense that it
1:57:48
was, you know, a little impromptu, it's gonna turn into
1:57:51
a kind of basket of deplorable thing that you regret some tries
1:57:54
to be quiet about?
1:57:55
Look, I was very clear when when laying out and defining what,
1:58:02
you know, Magga Republicans have done and you look at the
1:58:05
definition of fascism. And you think about what they're doing
1:58:09
in attacking our democracy, what they're doing and taking away
1:58:13
our freedoms, taking away wanting to take away our rights,
1:58:17
our voting rights. I mean, that is what that is. It is very
1:58:21
clear, and he is why he made that is that that powerful
1:58:26
speech that you heard from him last night, and he has not shied
1:58:31
away from saying that. Now,
1:58:33
I think we both maybe incorrectly could be Mandela.
1:58:37
Mandela effect I think we both thought that there was a
1:58:39
specific type of form of how government and production run
1:58:44
together in a fascist state.
1:58:47
Well, there will be the synonym for fascism used to always be
1:58:50
corporatism. Right. And that is when the government and the
1:58:54
corporations which is what's going on they called it Yeah, if
1:58:57
anybody's doing Fascism is the Biden administration, but I
1:59:00
think it's been going on but
1:59:01
what she's doing, she cottonwood president is doing is conjuring
1:59:05
images of Mussolini and Hitler and say, well, let's clearly
1:59:08
these guys look at these guys to Hitler. Don't worry that you
1:59:11
have mandated to inject things into yourself by people who all
1:59:15
speak with, you know, kind of like a Nazi accent which makes
1:59:17
it even crazier. Oh, the President's talk like that. But
1:59:23
I don't think we ignored anything. I think we're just we
1:59:27
let us know. I don't think we missed anything. I think we
1:59:29
ignored it because it's dumb.
1:59:32
This has been going around. This is from this isn't black and
1:59:36
white video that is on this going around and I thought it
1:59:40
was fun to play
1:59:41
in 1943. The following directive was issued from party
1:59:45
headquarters to all communists in the United States. It read
1:59:50
when certain obstructionists become too irritating, label
1:59:54
them after suitable buildups as fascist or Nazi or anti semitic
2:00:00
and use the prestige of Anti Fascist intolerance
2:00:03
organizations to discredit them in the public mind, constantly
2:00:07
associate those who oppose us with those names, which already
2:00:11
have a bad smell. The association will after enough
2:00:14
repetition, become fact, in the public mind.
2:00:20
Yeah, there you go.
2:00:23
Yeah, it's an old classic. It's I want to talk a little bit
2:00:27
about Mara Lago and I had a bunch of clips for a while I
2:00:29
only want to go to the ones were doing a little deconstructing of
2:00:32
NPR slant. Okay. So I have these NPR slant clips. And what I'm
2:00:39
going to do here is show you how biased and slanted NPR is they
2:00:45
have this one reporter,
2:00:47
you don't need to spend any time we believe you. But what
2:00:51
I like to exemplify why I like it is good. So and my favorite
2:00:57
example is actually in these clips, and I'm gonna play it but
2:01:00
it's this woman the way she is like, Ah, she's just this won't
2:01:04
this analysis is Trump home, God. Just hear it in her voice
2:01:09
that she just hates him. But let's go with NPR slant one.
2:01:13
Since the FBI search of Mar a Lago, former President Trump has
2:01:16
claimed that he completely cooperated with investigators.
2:01:21
Okay, all right. Now, this is the main complaint I have, which
2:01:24
is that use of the word claimed instead of said, Yep, that is a
2:01:30
loaded word. And that is an example of being slanted in your
2:01:34
reporting NPR, by using the word claimed, which is a loaded word
2:01:40
that implies he lied.
2:01:44
At any point, did they use the term without evidence?
2:01:48
I don't know if others are tips. But let me just finish this.
2:01:52
When you say clay Oh, he claimed is just a way of slanting the
2:01:57
story immediately, she doesn't right at the beginning to
2:02:01
immediately put in the mind that doubt in the minds of the
2:02:04
listeners all goes a liar. Instead of saying says which is
2:02:10
what he did. He said, What do you read? Or posted or did
2:02:13
something? Yes, something objective not, you know,
2:02:16
claimed, without evidence would have taken it too far. I think
2:02:20
especially at the beginning for this, let's, let's go to the
2:02:23
rest of it. And you can just hear it in her voice here. We go
2:02:25
to
2:02:26
the Justice Department says any new court filing but that is
2:02:30
just not true. The department also provided new details on the
2:02:33
high pole Island station stopping.
2:02:36
So they said it's not what it's not true that he claimed.
2:02:40
Yeah, exactly. Yeah. The way it's structured now
2:02:43
is that Trump claimed blah, blah, blah. And the Justice
2:02:46
Department said it's not true. So it's true that he claimed it
2:02:50
lame. Yeah, it's it's like that he said something I don't want
2:02:54
but you know,
2:02:54
you don't have the sophistication of the typical
2:02:56
NPR listener. Otherwise, you wouldn't question this. You
2:02:59
understand these things? Yeah, it's
2:03:01
all built in. Okay, gone.
2:03:03
True. The department also provided new details on the high
2:03:06
profile investigation. And joining us now with more details
2:03:09
is NPR justice correspondent, Ryan Lucas. Hi, Ryan. Hi, there.
2:03:12
Okay. So this new document that the Justice Department has filed
2:03:15
in court is something like 36 pages.
2:03:19
Wide the laughing John. Why the laughing? Is that a crazy long?
2:03:25
36 pages? I'm just I understand, I
2:03:27
read it.
2:03:28
Did you laugh? I read it.
2:03:30
But why did she say that in that into me? It's demeaning. She's
2:03:33
like, she is thinking would be like this. Can you believe it's
2:03:39
36? That's how much evidence they have against this liar. Oh,
2:03:45
my God, it's a whole 36 Pages for whatever. So that it's worth
2:03:53
that I cut it there because of this laugh that she throws in,
2:03:57
which is again, bias this is not reporting this is laughing
2:04:00
either. Okay, so
2:04:01
this new document that the Justice Department has filed in
2:04:04
court is something like 36 pages long what is what is in there?
2:04:08
A lot in this document gives us a really the most detailed look
2:04:13
yet into the government's long running efforts to get back from
2:04:16
Trump classified materials and other presidential records that
2:04:19
were taken to mar a Lago after he left office. Remember, Trump
2:04:22
was supposed to turn all the government documents that ended
2:04:24
up at Mar a Lago over to the National Archives back in
2:04:27
January. But the FBI learned that more classified documents
2:04:30
were still at the Florida estate and so in May it got a grand
2:04:34
jury subpoena for any documents that remain there. In response
2:04:38
Trump attorneys say they did a thorough search of Mar a Lago,
2:04:41
including the storage room where boxes were kept, and that they
2:04:44
gathered together all the remaining classified documents
2:04:47
and then when a senior Justice Department official FBI agents
2:04:49
visited Mar a Lago in June, from slurs handed over one red weld
2:04:54
envelope double wrapped in tape. That envelope contained to 38
2:04:57
classified documents, including some that were marked top secret
2:05:00
and they said that was everything.
2:05:01
38 classified documents one envelope so
2:05:04
Oh 38 Oh, this is so insulting to my intelligence.
2:05:14
Ah 38 Oh my god all marked top secret. Oh. All right, let's go
2:05:22
on to the last of this.
2:05:24
No, you got three. You got two more this now we're doing 335
2:05:28
No, there's there's four but I stopped one and you thought you
2:05:33
would stop it but it was dead.
2:05:35
I tell you pay paid three. No, no, no, I
2:05:37
played two. I
2:05:38
stopped two. Yeah, no, but then I'm three. I can do this aside.
2:05:44
We're about to play three. Three is okay.
2:05:48
38 classified documents, one envelope. So Trump's
2:05:51
representative said that that was everything. But then the FBI
2:05:55
heard from witnesses that there were still more classified
2:05:58
materials there. That's right.
2:05:59
The Department says the FBI had evidence that government
2:06:02
documents were likely concealed and removed from that, where
2:06:05
they were being held and that efforts were likely taken to
2:06:08
obstruct the government's investigation. And remember, one
2:06:11
of the crimes The FBI is investigating here relates to
2:06:13
obstruction. And when FBI searched Mar a Lago on August 8,
2:06:16
agents found more highly classified documents. The
2:06:19
Department says some of those documents were so sensitive that
2:06:22
even the FBI agents and DOJ attorneys needed additional
2:06:25
security clearance, security clearances little
2:06:28
laugh tale for him there as well. He tries to hide it, but I
2:06:32
missed
2:06:34
out on here. Some of those documents were so sensitive that
2:06:37
even the FBI agents and DOJ attorney
2:06:40
you're getting the FBI and DOJ, they couldn't even look at that
2:06:43
you had to be reclassified.
2:06:45
Some of those documents were so sensitive that even the FBI
2:06:48
agents and DOJ attorneys needed additional security clearance
2:06:52
security clearances before they could review notes that the FBI
2:06:56
recovered right security clearances before they could
2:07:00
review. The department notes that the FBI recovered twice as
2:07:03
many classified documents in a couple of hours.
2:07:05
Oh man,
2:07:06
as Trump's attorneys did in weeks of their quote unquote
2:07:10
diligent search there and Department says that cast doubt
2:07:12
on the extent of Trump's cooperation
2:07:14
lock this guy up throw the key away he's horrible.
2:07:18
Now telling you things come to mind with that clip, which is
2:07:22
they know they're going after top secret documents. So why
2:07:26
didn't they take bring in the top secret cleared guys right at
2:07:29
the beginning? Oh, excellent
2:07:31
point.
2:07:32
It makes no sense unless they doing it just for a fact. Oh my
2:07:36
god is top secret. We got to bring in bigger specialists so
2:07:40
you guys really know what they're good at. They cleared
2:07:42
for this kind of thing. Your eyes only kind of thing. Yeah.
2:07:44
Just bullcrap.
2:07:46
That would say it's possibly bullcrap. Yeah.
2:07:48
I would say it is bullcrap. But again, I continue with the last
2:07:51
of it. Okay, I
2:07:52
want to talk about a particular photo because in its filing to
2:07:55
Justice Department, including this photo that shows classified
2:08:00
documents found in Trump's office at Mar a Lago. And these
2:08:02
documents were clearly marked secret and top secret, which was
2:08:06
seems pretty important. Can you talk a little more about this
2:08:09
photo?
2:08:09
Right, it says a couple of things. One, it makes clear that
2:08:12
there's no way to argue that there could be any confusion
2:08:14
that these were classified documents they have bright red
2:08:16
or yellow cover sheets with secret or top secret and bold
2:08:19
red letters on them. On top of that, the government says
2:08:21
classified materials were found in Trump's desk drawer mixed in
2:08:24
with other documents. Now I spoke with David laufman. He
2:08:27
used to lead the Justice Department's Counter
2:08:29
Intelligence Division. And he says the fact that classified
2:08:32
documents were just mixed in with Trump's personal effects
2:08:35
matters because it makes it reasonable to infer that Trump
2:08:38
had a personal interest in keeping those classified
2:08:41
documents even in the face of a grand jury subpoena here's
2:08:44
laufman.
2:08:45
I think some of the additional factual revelations in the
2:08:47
filing make stronger the government's potential criminal
2:08:51
case against the former president. I'd say it's for a
2:08:54
law for retention of National Defense Information, as well as
2:08:57
his potential complicity and obstruction of justice.
2:09:01
In other words, the new details here suggests Trump's legal
2:09:03
peril may be greater than we previously knew.
2:09:06
So what's next in these proceedings?
2:09:09
Well, there's a hearing tomorrow in federal court in Florida on
2:09:12
Trump's request for an independent special master to
2:09:15
review the documents seized at Mar a Lago for potentially
2:09:17
privileged reasons. The Justice Department opposes that it says
2:09:21
there's no legal basis for it. And it says the FBI has already
2:09:24
gone through everything that was taken at Mar a Lago.
2:09:29
The FBI already went through this, you don't need some third
2:09:32
party, some neutral party to do a little refereeing here and
2:09:36
there, whatever the FBI says goes, who are we kidding here?
2:09:40
And isn't it if I recall from years and years ago, isn't it
2:09:44
that many ex presidents actually get presidential briefings? They
2:09:48
get copied on security stuff for a long time after the after
2:09:52
they're gone?
2:09:53
Yeah. And a lot of them keep a lot of a lot of stuff, secret
2:09:56
documents. I mean, I guess Clinton they've dug up the fact
2:09:59
that he still has bunch of stuff. But while we're listening
2:10:01
to that, let's just play this clip the FBI quits guy.
2:10:05
Oh, yeah, this is this is quite an interesting case. A top
2:10:08
FBI agent has reportedly resigned after allegations of
2:10:12
political bias. A former FBI agent told our reporter how this
2:10:16
might affect the bureau and its investigations.
2:10:18
Multiple news outlets report that top level FBI Agent Timothy
2:10:22
Tebow resigned from the Bureau last week. That's after
2:10:26
criticism from Republican Senator Chuck Grassley, who said
2:10:29
Tebow showed political bias in his investigations. On Tuesday,
2:10:33
Grassley responded to T Bo's reported resignation, saying
2:10:37
this type of bias in high profile investigations casts a
2:10:41
shadow over all the Bureau's work that he was involved in and
2:10:44
that the effort to revive the FBI is credibility can't stop
2:10:47
with his exit. In July, Grassley accused Tebow of purposely
2:10:51
marking evidence against Hunter Biden as disinformation and then
2:10:55
placing it in a restricted access file. FBI director
2:10:59
Christopher Ray was asked about T Bo's alleged bias earlier this
2:11:02
month. He said the FBI wants to gather all information so they
2:11:06
can go after such conduct. Mark Ruskin is a former FBI agent and
2:11:11
the author of the book the pretender my life undercover for
2:11:14
the FBI. He says he doesn't believe that the evidence
2:11:17
against Hunter Biden is misinformation, and says the FBI
2:11:20
should renew the investigation.
2:11:22
And now it will be under careful scrutiny, not just from within
2:11:27
the FBI was also from from Congress in the Senate.
2:11:32
So how does this affects public opinion of the Bureau? Can
2:11:35
Americans trust the bureau and their other investigations, for
2:11:38
example, into former President Trump buskin says Tebow scandal
2:11:42
could actually help the FBI renewed trust if the
2:11:45
investigation now can go forward without any ideological
2:11:50
interference. That's a very positive development and renew
2:11:54
trust of the FBI by the public.
2:11:57
But Ruskin says it's also possible that the FBI just use
2:12:01
Tebow as a scapegoat as he was already in retirement age. And
2:12:05
TD reached out to the FBI to confirm that Tebow resigned, but
2:12:09
the bureau said they don't comment on personal matters.
2:12:14
What do you think's going on? What do you think's going on?
2:12:16
The little escape goat item in there I thought was interesting.
2:12:18
Because yeah, that's a possibility with the guy's gonna
2:12:21
retire anyway. Let's see if he gets his retirement. That's what
2:12:26
you want to find out if he gets full retirement benefits. The
2:12:28
whole thing's a scam. Yeah. Yeah. So that's all you need to
2:12:33
know.
2:12:34
It's all cover, I guess. Well, you know, morning, Joe, they
2:12:38
know what this is really about Mica. They got it covered.
2:12:41
There are reports that he might have some information or might
2:12:44
have some papers with information on the French
2:12:47
president. And just knowing and studying Donald Trump and having
2:12:51
known him in the past. That is exactly who he would be obsessed
2:12:54
with. Just on a personal level, you can just tell that that's
2:12:59
something he would be very interested in because that's the
2:13:01
kind of person he would be completely obsessed with.
2:13:06
I don't understand why I guess
2:13:09
does she have any explanation whatsoever? Why he no be
2:13:13
obsessed with the cron because it's to me what he's
2:13:17
implying that it's sick stuff and that he would be obsessed
2:13:20
with the SEC. Oh, because well McCrone likes to pee in the bed.
2:13:23
Yeah. Only in Russia, be it that could be it. And then the
2:13:27
weirdest story kind of, you know, hooking into your, your
2:13:31
FBI guy who quit. It's like then this all of a sudden pops up.
2:13:36
Alright, time to check the polls. We begin with a lawsuit
2:13:38
from the only surviving member of the monkey and
2:13:41
the drummer Mickey Dolenz is suing the Justice Department to
2:13:44
obtain secret FBI files of the band. The FBI website shows
2:13:48
there are two files on the monkeys, including one that is
2:13:52
completely redacted
2:13:53
in the other file and informing claims to group played to lit to
2:13:57
live audiences using subliminal messages associated with left
2:14:00
wing politics. No comment from the FBI.
2:14:03
Yeah. I remember those stories as a kid. Hey, man, you can
2:14:07
watch the monkeys. It's basically they do subliminal
2:14:09
messaging in there, huh. I just wonder why. It's just one of
2:14:14
those things. Why does this pop up? Why? Why Oh, son does Mickey
2:14:18
Dolenz need to? I mean, suing the FBI, I guess is a FOIA
2:14:21
request.
2:14:23
Yeah, but it's trying to read between the lines on the story.
2:14:27
And I figured, I don't think originally they knew about the
2:14:31
second file. He they all monkeys knew about the first file, which
2:14:35
was the file that I don't know. But they're following him around
2:14:39
and keeping track of him for some reason, who knows why. And
2:14:42
then they think somebody in the agency or somebody told him, but
2:14:47
there's a second file is secret one, and that's what He's suing
2:14:51
for.
2:14:51
Oh, you wants to see it. Okay.
2:14:54
All right. Is that all about? I don't know.
2:14:59
I really don't know.
2:15:00
Let me a break.
2:15:01
I have no idea nothing sounds good.
2:15:04
I have an example of the subliminal messages. There must
2:15:08
be some nutcase out there that can show us one example and you
2:15:12
slow it down or something.
2:15:14
It was it was back in the day. I remember this being a meme. I
2:15:17
don't remember ever being given an example. No, I
2:15:19
don't either. I don't either. I have no idea. No idea. Let's
2:15:28
see. Things I Learned. Oh, when you sign up for Tic Toc, which I
2:15:35
know you have not done. Do you know who is doing their
2:15:39
onboarding, checking to see the if accounts are real people?
2:15:43
LexisNexis.
2:15:47
Which I thought was really interesting new service from
2:15:49
them.
2:15:49
Yes, it's authentication service of new accounts. And if I
2:15:54
understand how LexisNexis works, once you kind of connect with
2:15:57
them, the whole point is you get to do stuff with data, you
2:16:01
subscribe to that, but they also get your data and then they use
2:16:04
that for more products. LexisNexis I think it's one of
2:16:10
those old companies that's just been around. They may be doing
2:16:13
more than we think. Or more certainly more than we're aware
2:16:16
of.
2:16:17
Yeah, well, that's what you do. If you're an old company, and
2:16:20
you and you gather data. Yeah. Yeah, we'll go on.
2:16:25
I was just gonna give a little monkey pox update since we were
2:16:28
talking about the monkeys. Oh, yeah. Might as well. Yeah. Well,
2:16:31
here's a here's a little monkey pox update. And
2:16:33
we have some breaking news out of Texas to tell you about
2:16:36
health officials their hex firm the United States first death of
2:16:39
a person infected with monkey pox. The victim is an adult who
2:16:43
live in Harris County that's in the eastern part of the state.
2:16:46
Officials also said that the person was severely
2:16:49
immunocompromised. They are investigating what role if any
2:16:53
monkey pox played in that person's death. According to the
2:16:56
CDC, more than 18,000 cases of monkey pox have been reported in
2:17:00
the US
2:17:01
and there was a hilarious Reuters fact check that circled
2:17:06
in on Texas Twitter. Democratic hopeful for Texas This is fact
2:17:10
check fact check fact check writers. Democratic hopeful for
2:17:16
Texas governor Beto O'Rourke announced on Twitter August
2:17:18
28 2022, that he had to postpone upcoming events due to a
2:17:22
bacterial infection. Shortly after the announcement, social
2:17:25
media user speculated he instead had monkey box when presented no
2:17:30
evidence to substantiate
2:17:32
that
2:17:35
it was the funniest thing like Beto grid Oh cancels for there's
2:17:39
a lot of people canceling with what is it? Bacterial
2:17:45
infections? Uh huh.
2:17:46
Yeah. Monkey pox. Monkey
2:17:47
pox. Yeah, we know how you got that Beto.
2:17:49
That was hilarious. Can't go hand shaken, or whatever.
2:17:54
Whatever bet I was doing on the road. Yeah, because you know,
2:17:57
only only only certain kinds of people can get that as we know.
2:18:02
Here's a story about the Russian dossier guy from New Tang
2:18:05
Dynasty. Another story I haven't heard before
2:18:07
who that Russian Russian dossier,
2:18:10
a judge ruled that a key source for the anti Donald Trump
2:18:13
dossier needs to explain why he needs to use classified
2:18:17
information in his upcoming trial. Authorities say Igor den
2:18:20
Chinko provided information for the documents compiled by the
2:18:24
former British spy Christopher Steele. He is slated to go on
2:18:27
trial later this year on five charges of lying to the FBI
2:18:31
about the information. He appeared in Virginia for a
2:18:33
closed door hearing after he notified the court of his intent
2:18:37
to use classified information in his defense. The judge ordered
2:18:40
that he should specify what classified information he
2:18:43
intends to use at the trial and why that information is
2:18:46
necessary and relevant. And chenko is a Russian national and
2:18:50
was charged in November 2021. He pleaded not guilty and faces up
2:18:54
to 25 years in prison if convicted. Hillary Clinton's
2:18:57
campaign and other Democrats funded the anti Trump report
2:19:02
so this is just a story that has no I don't know what what I have
2:19:07
no idea what
2:19:08
why why are they running with that? Why is New Tang Dynasty
2:19:12
apparently the only thing that your television will receive.
2:19:17
Tang Dynasty so okay, I'll give you
2:19:19
I don't like New Tang Dynasty. They're very annoying. I mean,
2:19:22
they have good insulation, but
2:19:24
I tried it. I gave it to one every other show.
2:19:27
This is five today.
2:19:31
No every other show. Oh, yeah. No, I didn't have any on the
2:19:34
last show. So there's another story that's not reported
2:19:38
anywhere. This is the drug. This is a good one. This is the drone
2:19:41
story.
2:19:42
Oh, yeah. No, I have this. This is the water drone. Is that it?
2:19:47
Yeah, thanks. So let me say
2:19:48
the US military is sharing details of a tense confrontation
2:19:51
that occurred between the US Navy and the Iranian Navy and
2:19:55
international waters. US Navy says it had to stop an Iranian
2:19:59
ship from Taking an American military drone in the Arabian
2:20:02
Gulf. According to officials, US forces were passing through the
2:20:06
region Monday night. That's when they spotted an Iranian Navy
2:20:09
support ship towing the unmanned vessel. The military uses the
2:20:13
maritime drone for navigation and to collect data. American
2:20:17
forces told the Iranians they wanted to back off that lasted
2:20:21
for hours. The Navy had to move a sea Hawk helicopter to fly
2:20:25
over the drone and position a patrol boat closer to the area.
2:20:29
The Iranians eventually freed it and left the scene. The military
2:20:33
says the drone did not have sensitive or classified
2:20:36
information on it, but it is US government property.
2:20:39
Okay, I'm glad you glad you brought this. I'm glad you
2:20:41
played it. Because this is my problem with New Tang Dynasty.
2:20:45
They have the exact same information in almost the exact
2:20:49
same amount of seconds as ABC. But Martha just makes it sound
2:20:54
that much more exciting.
2:20:56
The Navy has foiled a brazen attempt by Iran to capture a US
2:20:59
drone. It was a four hour confrontation playing out in the
2:21:03
Persian Gulf ABCs Martha Raddatz has the video. The Iranian
2:21:07
military vessels have the American drone in its clutches.
2:21:11
I mean, come on, right off the bat. It's in its clutches and
2:21:14
this is so much better than your news. This your news is no good
2:21:17
and military vessel had the American drone in its clutches
2:21:22
latching on and showing it through the waters of the
2:21:25
Arabian Gulf she should have said dragging it. The captured
2:21:28
sea drone Explorer is an unarmed unmanned vessel equipped with
2:21:33
sensors, radar and cameras to collect data. And once the US
2:21:37
Navy saw Iran was trying to steal it. Their response was
2:21:42
quick, the USS Thunderbolts approaching the Iranian ship,
2:21:46
nearly pulling up alongside it. This standoff lasted hours until
2:21:51
the Iranians finally disconnected the tow line
2:21:54
releasing the drone you got to admit that's how you report that
2:21:58
story.
2:21:59
Yeah, if you're going to be mainstream media and dramatize
2:22:03
was Yeah, exactly what that was
2:22:05
exactly what the news that's what we do we pull these
2:22:10
dramatizations apart and mock them. Yeah. By the way, did I
2:22:17
see Valerie Jarrett in some Cabinet meeting? You know, the
2:22:21
one where we're the Joe walks in and then Joe Biden's
2:22:24
in a lot of cabinet meetings. I've seen her before I
2:22:27
didn't know that. I mean, it's all the Obama people that just
2:22:30
Susan Ryan they
2:22:31
got Jared they get the twerp and they got two or three other
2:22:34
Obama on and
2:22:35
what's the the DHS lady who we don't like the who's back? Who
2:22:40
surfaced again? I don't know who this one is? Yeah, she worked
2:22:44
within the Positano? Yeah, she's the assistant part of the
2:22:49
Attorney General. She's assistant attorney.
2:22:51
All right, right, Donna? No. What's her name? Yes, yes. Yes.
2:22:59
They keep mentioning her name. She's an assistant to read
2:23:01
generally, her name is I know, I'm on chat room or
2:23:05
they're doing other things. I was doing some notes, man,
2:23:10
cuz she's been mentioned two or three times and I brought it up
2:23:13
that she's doing Risa Monaco.
2:23:16
Lisa Monaco. There you go. You beat the trolls.
2:23:19
I did with one hand brain with one
2:23:21
hammer. What am I in your back. And there's more going on in the
2:23:26
region from Iran. We go to Iraq,
2:23:28
violent protests have turned deadly in Iraq after a prominent
2:23:32
Shiite cleric resigned from politics are killed as they
2:23:36
clashed with security forces in Baghdad and beyond. A nationwide
2:23:40
curfew is now in place to cleric supporters stormed the
2:23:44
government palace, even swimming in the pool there.
2:23:47
They didn't really mention that they've blown up walls of the
2:23:50
Green Zone. That's not being reported.
2:23:53
This is this is a story we have to look at. I'm going to have to
2:23:59
go to Al Jazeera this next No,
2:24:00
you're gonna have to you're gonna have to go to Baghdad. And
2:24:03
we're sending you on on location.
2:24:05
The problem we're having is that the US government does not want
2:24:10
our media reporting this story that the following are they're
2:24:14
having a revolution in Iraq and they're going to put in this
2:24:17
cleric and it's going to be a mirror image of Iran except it's
2:24:21
going to be shoot Sunnis is that as Shiites part of this is to
2:24:24
get the Iranians out of there.
2:24:27
Yeah. Yeah, this is not good. And it's
2:24:33
no this is not good. Not just reported.
2:24:38
Top secret documents Trump, Trump, Trump, that's all that
2:24:41
we're allowed to listen to.
2:24:42
Yeah, look, we have a photo of the of the, some of them on a
2:24:45
rug on a rug just strewn about. Look at that photo row. No
2:24:50
rug.
2:24:50
By the way, that rug looks a casino rug. Well, that could
2:24:54
totally be Trump's rug. I'm sure what happened when he used to
2:24:59
own these cars. You know, said, Hey, let's buy it, do a little,
2:25:02
you know, buy a few extra yards and we'll use it and
2:25:05
I, my overall opinion from Trump for President Trump is that he
2:25:12
too is an archivist. I've seen his offices. The his office, I
2:25:18
think, might resemble one of your offices, you know, piles of
2:25:23
stuff. Stuff over here over there tchotchkes everywhere.
2:25:27
Don't you think he's an archivist? He's kind of a semi
2:25:30
of it. I mean, you look at his office in New York, and when he
2:25:34
was running, and they had the taco bowl, remember that? He was
2:25:37
doing for Cinco de Mayo. He's like, Hey, buddy,
2:25:40
is there a place pretty clean?
2:25:43
Yeah, but his office is off. Does your airplanes clean to you
2:25:47
don't mess up the jet. But your office and that's a difference.
2:25:50
We've never seen it of course. I'm not allowed to show
2:25:52
embarrassed. People have seen it. I haven't your party.
2:25:58
They run screaming
2:26:02
do you have for real?
2:26:03
Yeah, you'll think less of me if you see my Oh, I disagree.
2:26:07
I mean, I think I can only think higher of you.
2:26:10
Oh, yeah. Yeah. The offices how many offices that you know of
2:26:14
anybody you know? Actually have in the office. A god gone. I
2:26:21
have a gong in my office. A Trump might have one. I have an
2:26:25
actual gone. And it's in the office.
2:26:27
I love that some trolls going like wait, wait, John has a
2:26:30
plane? Yeah.
2:26:35
John has a plane. Oh, yeah. It has just a Gulfstream. It's no
2:26:39
big deal
2:26:39
to G force old. It can't even keep up used. Yes, it's an
2:26:45
occasion. Okay, do you have anything on sterilizing our
2:26:52
young children? Do you have anything?
2:26:54
No, I have no updates to lives of Tik Tok being kicked off
2:26:58
Twitter for your sources. here and that's my source
2:27:02
for these sources dried up. That's horrible. Well, I
2:27:06
was relying this is a good example of relying too much on
2:27:09
Russian gas. Same thing. Yeah.
2:27:11
Well, I have one clip, which is from your neck of the woods.
2:27:15
From the GCC in San Francisco. You're familiar with the GCC?
2:27:21
You should be you should be this was a stand for
2:27:24
the gender confirmation center. Oh,
2:27:27
the gender confirmation? No,
2:27:29
I'm not you haven't been been by you should swing by,
2:27:31
I should swing by but then you they may grab me next thing you
2:27:34
know, I'm
2:27:34
you're speaking high voice next thing you know, you're an
2:27:37
admiral. Dr. Scott and Moszer will speak for a minute and a
2:27:44
half about what they do over there, the gender confirmation
2:27:49
Center in San Francisco. So I'm
2:27:51
super committed to gender surgery in the past.
2:27:56
You really got to listen to this guy, we can
2:27:58
get a shot but super committed stopped me in my tracks. We have
2:28:01
to list how is that different than committed? Well, this one,
2:28:05
you're committed, you're committed, right? You're
2:28:07
committed? It means you're all in? How can you be super
2:28:09
committed?
2:28:11
Because it's for this guy. He has convinced himself that this
2:28:15
bonanza of cash is justified because he's also helping people
2:28:20
and I will
2:28:22
make a giant I'm sure I will not say in other words,
2:28:24
I don't know. No, you can, we'll have to, we will have to. But I
2:28:29
was gonna set it up by saying I know plastic surgeons. I've
2:28:36
given a lot of money to plastic surgeons from my for my ex
2:28:39
wives. And these guys are very proud.
2:28:43
Wives, you use the word plural.
2:28:45
I said wives Yes, for my ex wives.
2:28:48
So Mickey had plastic surgery that I can neither
2:28:51
confirm nor deny. But that's not the point.
2:28:55
That is just gossips. It's just gossips.
2:29:00
You know, it's not just face you know, there's all kinds of other
2:29:02
places where plastic surgery takes place. And but these guys
2:29:06
are profit driven. So when I hear a guy who pivots from
2:29:10
cosmetic surgery to sterilization of children, and
2:29:15
then is talks about being super committed. And I think this is
2:29:19
the kind of guy that is a problem. Here we go.
2:29:22
So I'm super committed to gender surgery. In the past, I used to
2:29:26
do cosmetic surgery. I'm a board certified plastic surgeon. And
2:29:30
I've always been drawn to things that are deeply impactful. In
2:29:33
the GCC gender confirmation Center in San Francisco, we kind
2:29:36
of have these like secret missions. Now now that it's
2:29:39
these public secret missions, which are one of them is that we
2:29:43
try to we try to live with our values 30 to 40 years in the
2:29:47
future. So and that puts us in a mindset of extreme affirmation
2:29:52
because affirmation at that time is a foregone conclusion. This
2:29:55
is a time in the future when gender is just a thing. Nobody
2:29:58
makes a big deal out of it. People are being screened as
2:30:01
children and adolescents for their gender journey and
2:30:03
appropriate steps are taken to get them involved in a
2:30:06
multidisciplinary process to get them where they need to go.
2:30:09
That's, that's the future. I do not have a minimum age of any
2:30:13
sort. In my practice, there's no chronological age that says you
2:30:17
don't get surgery. Now, having said that, I don't think I've
2:30:20
ever done a console on a 12 year old yet, but we would if one
2:30:24
came our way, throw throw your 12 year old I just haven't had
2:30:28
reason to. And then we've done a number of 13 year olds who are
2:30:31
who did consults on I think I've done one or 213 year old
2:30:35
surgeries. For the most part, it's 14 enough that by the time
2:30:39
everything comes together, plus insurance approval, plus
2:30:42
everything, surgery actually gets completed. We do not
2:30:46
require any particular identity, we only require that somebody
2:30:50
has gender dysphoria and uses a multidisciplinary process for us
2:30:53
to assess.
2:30:56
There you go. Your neck of the woods 12, we take a 12 year old,
2:31:01
Hey, as long as the insurance as long as we get the insurance
2:31:04
done is good to go.
2:31:07
This know what to say to that clip. I'm not giving you a clip
2:31:10
of anything that's for sure. It's disgusting.
2:31:13
I think we should just leave it for what it is. Take a beat.
2:31:18
Keep some silence so people can see it. So let that sink in.
2:31:22
Once you feel that for a moment, once you marinate in it,
2:31:27
I'm going to show my old budoni to no agenda. Imagine all the
2:31:31
people who could do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
2:31:40
so we have to remind everybody that we have Adams birthdays on
2:31:44
this Saturday when the newsletter comes out. And we did
2:31:47
do an advance on that and you get a lot of birthday donations.
2:31:49
Oh, really? Oh, that's nice. If any I'm gonna have you read
2:31:53
that. The CAC I'd love to do the 50 AIDS. Yeah, let's do that.
2:31:56
But let's start off with Anonymous in Virginia Beach.
2:31:59
9185 got a birthday coming up. Korea and US as some jobs karma.
2:32:07
We'll put that at the end for you. Curtis cool. Okay, you HL
2:32:13
there should be got here named Joe Cool, but that spelling at
2:32:18
31 I hopefully Curtis will name his kid Joseph. East
2:32:22
Stroudsburg. Pennsylvania. And he's he wants to add Olivia to
2:32:28
the birthday list, which we do. She turns 11 She's there isn't
2:32:30
that nice? Sir Kevin McLaughlin shows up right at the top lover
2:32:35
of American boobs locust North Carolina 808 Simon, Paula water
2:32:43
was also at 808 and he's in West Hartford Connecticut and he's
2:32:46
got a knighthood. What is this? Here's a vote my allocate 60 969
2:32:54
to my knighthood with the remaining Penny joy. He's got
2:32:57
it. He's got I got some extra money like a bunch of money for
2:33:02
your penny jar.
2:33:02
I got another one. That makes beautiful. He will be Sir Simon
2:33:07
of the New England, New England IPAs with new park brews at the
2:33:11
roundtable. You bet you bet. You bet. You bet. So good.
2:33:14
Max Wyndham in Spring, Texas 6969. Craig Kohler in
2:33:20
Evansville, Indiana. 6502. Chad Hewitt in Folsom 606, Jimmy
2:33:27
Buell, 606 and Vista Keller, California, California,
2:33:32
California, California. Thomas Gould in Palm Harbor, Florida.
2:33:39
And now we have $58 donations to celebrate Adam Curry's 58th
2:33:44
birthday 50th Birthday on the Saturday, and we will finish
2:33:47
this group off on Saturday, or on the next show on Sunday. But
2:33:52
we're going to ask for continued support and this is a great way
2:33:56
to do it.
2:33:56
And I really appreciate it. Thank you. I feel a lot love
2:34:00
that. It's great that I'm 58 It's like 50 bucks is fantastic.
2:34:03
Thank you, sir. Hold my beers and
2:34:06
the more money you make.
2:34:08
I hear you. Happy birthday, sir. Hold my beer. We have Florian
2:34:12
Anki from Deutschland Recklinghausen. Thank you very
2:34:17
much. ITM. Gregory love Jones from Buxton, Derbyshire and in
2:34:22
the UK these are all 58 Galloway Ohio Megan Carlotta happy
2:34:26
birthday from jam. Dame Jen of the free Republic of England
2:34:30
from Ross on Wye inherit for sure GB. Thank you very much.
2:34:35
Aaron Gruner are Grune from Mead, Nebraska, Brian Palmer,
2:34:42
Los Angeles, California, sir damn from Shasta Lake,
2:34:45
California cerveza from the backside of Pikes Peak in
2:34:49
Florissant, Colorado. Thank you very much. St. Peters, Missouri
2:34:54
is John SEC Stroh Kim burden from Greenville, Michigan, Mike
2:35:00
Robinson from Salem, Oregon. Dame Christina pearl of the
2:35:03
clear blue skies and Sir Robert Charles of Deputy Indiana. We
2:35:08
have the Ric from Brooklyn, New York. Thank you Rochester New
2:35:12
York sir Karl with the K Baron of huncles internment camp of
2:35:15
New York. We have Carrie way del from Elizabeth Colorado. No
2:35:21
Wotton mocker. Three Rivers California Walter Hill Beck from
2:35:24
Essen in Deutschland. Robert case Columbus Jennifer Wilson
2:35:28
Calgary, Alberta, Crystal Coleman Everett, Washington we
2:35:33
have Serge jovo, the plundering knight who also adds himself to
2:35:37
the birthday list on the 15th Thank you very much, sir Mike
2:35:39
from Georgetown, Texas. He says thank you for pod fathering
2:35:44
deconstructing with John and podcasting. 2.0 Stay dangerous.
2:35:48
Sir Mike of Georgetown. Aaron Tanner humble Texas Jennifer
2:35:52
Jones, Mount Vernon, Washington, sir do Cink Bastrop Texas Dame
2:35:57
slay me Bastrop Texas, Sir Kevin McLaughlin, lover of Duke of
2:36:01
Luna lover of America and boobs. An extra donation from him
2:36:05
locust, North Carolina, Stephen crumbing, from El Cajon,
2:36:10
California and Gerald Preston Bennington New England,
2:36:13
Nebraska. Asda, Batista Kanab, Utah Kanab, Kanab, Utah John
2:36:19
Greer enterprise Alabama, John Alberni, forest forest Ville,
2:36:23
California. Jamie or Jaime shot con The Woodlands Texas can't
2:36:30
Marty choco Minnesota. Jake Davis in Hawaii. i Yeah, sir
2:36:37
Kyle of Bertram, the three donkeys and the three donkeys
2:36:40
and Bertram overshot that I thought it was it yes, the Jake
2:36:44
Davis was the last one. And thank you all so much is
2:36:46
El Cahoon, by the way alcohol.
2:36:49
Thanks. Yes.
2:36:51
Oh, yeah, that's a good list. 50 people there or something? Okay,
2:36:55
well, sure. Kyle of Bertram and the three donkeys in Bertram,
2:36:59
Texas came in with 5358. And he does say happy birthday, you
2:37:04
will fart? Yeah. So I guess it kind of counts. David DiClemente
2:37:10
in Cincinnati for 233 Preston Isaacson in Boca Raton, Florida
2:37:16
as my voice goes. Clear it. Preston Isaacson and book return
2:37:21
5033 The following people are $50 donors and I'll plow through
2:37:26
them. Frank Rossi, Long Beach, California Julie Mindanao, Costa
2:37:32
Mesa, Brent Chicky and Lake Worth Florida Kyle Oman in
2:37:36
Cincinnati, Ohio Joe Woods in Ocean Grove, New Jersey. Herbert
2:37:40
Hess in Spring, Texas, Jason Maurer in Portland, Oregon Val
2:37:47
land Shan in Lincoln, UK. Tony Lang in Castle Pines, Colorado,
2:37:54
Andrew Sawyer in Duncan BC. Andrew Watson in Fairhope,
2:38:00
Alaska Shane grub grub in Cleveland, Tennessee, Steven
2:38:06
Abbott in Viroqua, Wisconsin and I pronounce that wrong. Claire
2:38:13
Thornhill in Toronto, Ontario Ray Howard in Kremling.
2:38:17
Kremling, Colorado, Amy's Zipkin, in Greensboro, Georgia,
2:38:22
Joseph Barnes in Oakland, California, Brett Farrell, sir
2:38:26
Brett Farrell, who I believe is in OKC, or Florida. And last but
2:38:31
not least i Ichi Kanagawa, they're in San Francisco and
2:38:35
thank all these folks are making show 1484 or 82 a possibility
2:38:41
and a reality. Thank you very much and a huge
2:38:43
success. And I really appreciate all the birthday wishes. That's
2:38:46
really kind and thanks again to the executive and Associate
2:38:49
Executive producers who we thanked earlier. And of course
2:38:52
thanks everybody who came in under $50 For reasons of
2:38:55
anonymity or you could be on one of those sustaining donations
2:38:57
they do help a lot during the slower days like the one that's
2:39:00
not our birthday. If you'd like to learn more go to
2:39:02
devorah.org/a
2:39:06
Go calm. I think some people might appreciate that you've got
2:39:11
somebody saw me did request jobs, commerce, it'd be nice.
2:39:15
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's go for jobs. Karma.
2:39:31
And we say Happy Birthday actually Curtis cool says Happy
2:39:35
Birthday to his daughter Olivia. 11 Yesterday anonymous Happy
2:39:39
Birthday to his sister Kelly also yesterday. Sarah Marshall a
2:39:43
happy birthday to Trent Trueblood celebrated yesterday.
2:39:45
Derek Campbell 15. Today Shawn Douglas turns 47 tomorrow, sir
2:39:50
jofa the plundering knight will celebrate on the fifth. We
2:39:54
congratulate anonymous and of course we say happy birthday to
2:39:57
Angie, Angie. We don't know when or what or how many anybody
2:40:00
happy birthday from all your friends who had the best podcast
2:40:02
in the universe
2:40:12
don't want to be induced
2:40:14
only one change today and we caught it luckily that has
2:40:17
served Jimmy of free hollow books. Free hollow books.com He
2:40:21
becomes a Baronet today and we congratulate him and thank him
2:40:25
for his for a lot of support he has given us over many many
2:40:29
years from his free hollow books and just for being who he is and
2:40:35
propagating the formula we have what do you have we got three
2:40:41
nights here today so it'd be good let's get three up on stage
2:40:44
gentlemen got your your packages ready by request. Do you have a
2:40:48
blade for these fine gents?
2:40:50
It's right here. I got a blade right here. It's a good one.
2:40:52
Ooh, very nice. Thank you. All right. Join me please. appear on
2:40:58
the podium. Keenan Cassidy David Dickman, and Simon pelota.
2:41:03
Gentlemen, all three of us for the no agenda show in the amount
2:41:05
of $1,000 or more. I'm very proud, therefore to pronounce
2:41:08
Cade the as circus ringleader of the clown world Sir David the
2:41:12
clay pits and Sir Simon of New England IPAs by request
2:41:17
gentlemen, we have revised and red wine, the 2005 Roush board
2:41:21
popcorn and ice cream and new part brews along with that you
2:41:24
might enjoy our geishas and sock a Reuben has lemon and Rose de
2:41:28
Vaca, vanilla bong hits and bourbon sparkling cider and
2:41:30
escorts, maybe even our ginger ale and Jerboas but for sure
2:41:33
mutton meat is always high on the list. And after you're done
2:41:38
consuming the mutton and the meat and your request go to
2:41:41
Northern nation.com/rings You can find out all about the rings
2:41:45
that you could take a look at and you can also send us your
2:41:47
information so we know where to send it what ring size and
2:41:50
again, with that comes your wax to seal your important
2:41:53
correspondence with that is a signet ring and your certificate
2:41:56
of authenticity and we really appreciate this help we
2:41:59
appreciate the Knights and Dames for the no agenda roundtable.
2:42:02
Thank you gentlemen for joining today. No one
2:42:11
and the party is underway at brew city beer bikes and band in
2:42:17
the middle of time pub Milwaukee, Wisconsin today
2:42:19
tomorrow Columbus Central Ohio meet up at 630 at Lucky's grill
2:42:23
and sports bar on my birthday Saturday the 33 and a meet up
2:42:27
that is Brockport New York the London take courage two o'clock
2:42:31
UK summertime at the angel in London. The Paris of Tennessee.
2:42:38
Lies Lil's Lilz Bar and Grill I think allies Bar and Grill
2:42:42
that'll be in Paris Tennessee Big Friendly meet up six o'clock
2:42:46
the collective in Oklahoma City Oklahoma. Bamberg Germany Hello
2:42:51
Deutsch lon six o'clock Bolero and bumbag and Bayern oh please
2:42:55
go to that if you're around we got so many cool German
2:42:57
listeners producers and then Sunday our next show the annual
2:43:01
pig roast South Jersey whoo that's that's at a private
2:43:05
residence if you're in Jersey if you're South Jersey that would
2:43:07
be the one to go to. Day one of the lakes beautiful. We have
2:43:12
meetups throughout the United States and the rest of the world
2:43:16
and sometimes people send us a report here's the flight of the
2:43:18
no agenda from I think this Los Angeles or cat No. Let's see
2:43:23
what it was they were to train meet up if I recall
2:43:25
everybody that's Leo Bravo at the no agenda meet up in the
2:43:28
morning.
2:43:29
Hey, this is Jeff. Dutch exile in California. And future night
2:43:35
of the peanut gallery. Thank you for your courage you
2:43:37
This is Stephen of the orange curtain. And I know you can hear
2:43:41
that. Hey,
2:43:42
we just saw some trains of borax go by us that nuclear power
2:43:46
plants have JB
2:43:48
Gaylord and sell those seed report. Seven engines in the
2:43:52
front two in the back. The economy's good in the
2:43:55
morning. We got the bugs coming straight to California in the
2:43:58
morning.
2:43:59
Whoa listen to that Hans.
2:44:01
This is John at the no agenda and Santa Fe bullets in
2:44:06
California and I'm definitely not the spook to turn the ranch
2:44:10
in the morning. James
2:44:15
This is widow Garrett where Confucians say the C stands for
2:44:23
man they worked real hard I'm putting that together I
2:44:26
appreciate the edits and the RE edits. Thank you to all of our
2:44:30
producers this is all producer organized it we do have a night
2:44:33
to to consider Daniel took it upon himself to create no agenda
2:44:37
meetups.com For those of you new to the value for value model,
2:44:40
this is how it works time talent treasure and these I mean look.
2:44:44
People are meeting their lifetime mates at these places.
2:44:47
People are using them to weed out the riffraff on dates. What
2:44:51
are you waiting for no agenda meetups.com If you can't find
2:44:54
one near you start one yourself. It's easy and beneficial.
2:45:00
go hang out with Tyson days you won't be triggered you will be
2:45:12
buddy feels the same it's like a bar
2:45:20
I have a feeling you are so over clipped that you did you bring a
2:45:23
lot of ISOs to the show today you got a lot of ISOs What do
2:45:26
you have? Just two. Oh, okay.
2:45:29
And not that good.
2:45:30
Oh two okay, what's what's your first hello? They
2:45:33
might be great compared to yours. Might you play yours? No
2:45:36
no I want you play yours I'm always playing mine first you
2:45:38
play I got
2:45:39
my let's start with start with water.
2:45:42
Please stay safe do not drink the water
2:45:47
it's a little little long and chopped up. Did you have to chop
2:45:50
that or is that how it came out?
2:45:52
Sounds like it has a chocolate Okay, bad job. I did not know.
2:45:59
I didn't know it was possible. I can blow you out of the water. I
2:46:05
don't think that's even worth considering. We have an Elan
2:46:09
laugh this one mice are people mice aren't people or the clear
2:46:18
winner
2:46:19
poutine cannot win this world
2:46:22
they think that's got to be the winner
2:46:27
well I'm not a big fan of it.
2:46:29
No Which one do you like then?
2:46:33
I kind of like the mice one a little bit would play it again.
2:46:37
Mice aren't people I liked that one is God's clear yeah to the
2:46:43
point he said he got echoey
2:46:45
yeah well let me let me Jack it up let me Jack it up a bit. Let
2:46:48
me give it a little more you know this this road caster I can
2:46:51
just do everything I can jack everything the way I want to see
2:46:54
how we go here
2:46:54
mice or people Yeah, I
2:46:56
think that'll do. That'll do. That's really good. Okay, do we
2:47:02
have I have stuff left man? There's tons of stuff war on
2:47:07
guns. Rainbow fentanyl is my favorite. We've been following
2:47:14
the rainbow fentanyl. Have you taken any rainbow fentanyl?
2:47:19
That now why we want to take white rainbow fentanyl
2:47:21
well because kids love it.
2:47:23
Well tonight a warning about colorful pills and powder that
2:47:26
look like candy or sidewalk chalk but it's actually the
2:47:29
highly addictive and lethal drug fentanyl. It's being called
2:47:33
Rainbow fentanyl. Just this month it was seized by law
2:47:36
enforcement officials in 18 states. Investigators say drug
2:47:39
cartels in Mexico and elsewhere are using candy colored to try
2:47:43
and get young people hooked. Officials say if you find fennel
2:47:46
in any form call 911 immediately
2:47:50
trying to get young people to smuggle it in Yeah,
2:47:54
total horse crap. And by the way, this is just for party
2:47:56
people in the Netherlands which are the Judo is the narco state
2:48:01
the crime capital of the European Union union. They are
2:48:06
responsible for most MDMA pills for all the ecstasy etc. And
2:48:10
they are at their super experts at creating colorful pills and
2:48:14
it's it's just something for the partiers, you know, it's not for
2:48:16
kids. Oh, I'm gonna go eat some colored stuff now.
2:48:21
And if anything this Yeah, if anything disingenuous bullshit
2:48:25
report on CBS as part,
2:48:27
I think it's also it may be someone who just wants to draw
2:48:30
attention to Yeah, but this was the whole this was reporting
2:48:33
every Oh, they're trying to get kids hooked? I don't think so.
2:48:38
Kids got no money.
2:48:41
Fentanyl is not expensive. The problems the
2:48:43
size out there, whether your kid's gonna have 50 cents in his
2:48:46
pocket, they got no money.
2:48:48
The problem with with fentanyl is that you don't know you're
2:48:51
you think you're getting some coke, or something else or
2:48:55
that's the problem, or what do you call it? What's the bar of
2:48:58
Xanax? And it's exactly the fake Xanax. That's the problem into
2:49:03
that. That's funny. And in Austin. They just they just
2:49:06
announced on the side of a church. I should get the clip
2:49:09
for that. The first maybe the first in the country certainly
2:49:13
first attached to a church Narcan vending machine. I mean,
2:49:18
how cool are we here or there in Austin a Narcan vending machine
2:49:25
so the Queen's disappeared again but now she's in Ballmer all
2:49:29
okay guys, here's a clip good I had to play.
2:49:34
I want to hear well, I mean, you hear the queen but I just didn't
2:49:37
know where it was. Or the queen. Yes, the Queen she's dead. But
2:49:39
okay, the first
2:49:40
time in her seven decade reign Queen Elizabeth will not be at
2:49:43
her London home Buckingham Palace to appoint the UK next
2:49:47
prime minister, Villa marks has more.
2:49:50
The Mala greatly spends part of the summer at a Scottish Castle
2:49:53
called Balmoral and it's there. Her office says that she will
2:49:55
hold a final meeting with Outgoing Prime Minister Boris
2:49:57
Johnson and appoint his successor the 15 to her reign.
2:50:01
The Conservative Party will announce its newly selected
2:50:03
leader on September 5, and it will be either the current
2:50:06
foreign minister Liz truss or former finance minister Rishi
2:50:09
Sunak. According to convention, Johnson would then announce his
2:50:12
resignation the following day before offering it formally to
2:50:14
the 96 year old Monique who has been struggling with her
2:50:17
mobility in recent months.
2:50:20
Oh, is that what they call it these days mobility when you're
2:50:24
dead?
2:50:26
Hey, wait, you can't play the end out because I do have an
2:50:28
important clip as it is time sensitive. Oh,
2:50:31
I'm sorry. You didn't give me any indication of such I said it
2:50:34
earlier. Here's the National
2:50:35
Cinema de Have you heard about this is only the beginning. I
2:50:38
don't have any discussion. I just clipped the beginning that
2:50:41
counts.
2:50:42
$3 movie tickets are coming soon to a theater near you this
2:50:46
Saturday. We're talking any shattering format including more
2:50:51
than 3000 participating theaters. It's being billed as a
2:50:54
celebration National Cinema Day.
2:50:57
Oh, I'm so excited. I'm not gonna go to National Cinema
2:51:03
date. No, of course not.
2:51:04
save all that money is only three bucks. Not gonna happen.
2:51:08
Now I lost all of my my connection. So I'm not actually
2:51:13
sure what's coming up next. I know agenda stream.com Sorry
2:51:16
about
2:51:16
that. We had a little outage show you this is gonna be
2:51:19
dynamite.
2:51:19
Oh, it's always dynamite and it's probably live this crazy.
2:51:24
It's crazy. I tell you. End of show mixes we've got these
2:51:29
laughs Jesse coy Nelson, who's on a rebound return. Some guy
2:51:33
Steve are the classic for y'all. And coming to you from the heart
2:51:37
of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region number six, where
2:51:41
I'll be celebrating my 50th birthday and just a couple of
2:51:44
days in the morning everybody. I'm Adam curry
2:51:47
is from Northern Silicon Valley. We're supposed to have this huge
2:51:50
heat spell at sweeping the nation and so far I see nothing.
2:51:55
I'm John C. Dvorak.
2:51:56
We return on Sunday right here with another deconstruction of
2:52:02
your world and your media on the no agenda show please remember
2:52:05
us at DeVore ak.org/na Until then, adios mofos and such I got
2:52:25
no agenda
2:52:33
also known as the most fun show in the city first Thursday
2:52:37
comedy bar okay and you feel me the concussion put a damper on
2:52:41
my week not doing my usual routine. Bell Ricci red scooping
2:52:46
up in a Tesla three blown away with 22 wins Well, camera
2:52:49
technology. I said as wow that my boy had to deal with your
2:52:53
wacky Jackie sent them out the house at night to grab the
2:52:56
selfish in that. I'm trying to do this for 52 weeks, man. Now
2:53:00
we like that Biden pull up game plan in Afghanistan. You're
2:53:03
playing crimes against humanity. Your levels are off the charts.
2:53:06
Can I have my 2019 stand at John Madden save us from the empires
2:53:10
of calamity Ecclesiastes, hold them live in with the vanity
2:53:14
vanity kindly said it one semester you're twice Jesus
2:53:17
walks like Mel Gibson. Oh, I got a passion for Christ. We'll see
2:53:22
you Thursday. Some do Thursday. See you then. No agenda comedy.
2:53:31
You'll bring a friend.
2:53:32
When you subsidize something, you get more of it. More
2:53:35
students apply to college. So schools raise tuition, tuition
2:53:38
cost has risen at triple the rate of inflation. Schools use
2:53:42
that money to attract more students and more tax
2:53:45
money is paying for this. What you're saying is the work that
2:53:50
this administration has done, the work that the Democrats and
2:53:53
Congress has done is actually there and you see that the 1.7
2:53:57
trillion deficit reduction that we've seen is going to benefit
2:54:04
us. When you forgive
2:54:06
debt. You're not just disappearing debt, so is
2:54:09
paying what and then I'll give you the second part is Vladimir
2:54:18
Putin, Vladimir Putin, Vladimir, Vladimir Putin, Russia, Russia,
2:54:25
Vladimir, Vladimir Putin, Ukraine. President Vladimir
2:54:29
Putin, Ukraine, Ukraine, Russia, Azerbaijan, Vladimir Putin,
2:54:34
Vladimir Putin Solinsky the Ukrainian President Biden
2:54:38
Vladimir Putin, Russia, Ukraine.
2:54:41
What was Ukraine who was Ukraine where it was Ukraine President
2:54:44
Putin President Solinsky Joe Biden Vladimir Putin Vladimir
2:54:47
Putin, Vladimir Putin, Russia Vladimir Putin, Ukraine Vladimir
2:54:52
Putin bombing Ukraine Russian President Vladimir Putin, Russia
2:54:55
Ukraine, crime shows when it comes to Ukraine, invading
2:54:59
Ukraine Here's what Putin wants Ukrainians a feather democracy
2:55:03
in Ukraine brutal invasion
2:55:04
of Ukraine. Lateran the Russian offensive against Ukraine
2:55:08
continues Russia atrocities President Zelensky of Ukraine. I
2:55:12
really
2:55:13
hope that you are willing to get together and can solve your
2:55:16
problem. That would be a tremendous achievement. And I
2:55:18
know you're trying to do good you underestimate Vladimir
2:55:21
Putin's intention
2:55:22
to come up with his brutal assault on Ukraine, Russia,
2:55:25
Russian missiles continued to rain down on the port city of
2:55:28
Odessa. More scenes of carnage in Ukraine is
2:55:31
a centrally located strategic country. In your old Trump
2:55:36
repeatedly asked his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky.
2:55:40
To investigate the former vice president, which is
2:55:43
Russia's President Vladimir Putin. Do we need to be prepared
2:55:47
for the continued destruction of Ukrainians?
2:55:50
Putin is the great disrupter to this military is falling apart.
2:55:55
There's a price to pay for peace and democracy. Please, again, my
2:56:00
request go and trust
2:56:01
bucha.org/and
2:56:15
Mice org people
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