0:00
Satanism is so cool with the
youngins. Adam curry, John C.
0:05
Dvorak. Sunday,
0:06
September 11 2022. This is your
award winning cable nation media
0:09
assassination episode 1485. This
0:13
is no agenda,
0:15
updated recharge and
broadcasting live from the heart
0:18
of the Texas Hill Country, or
region number six in the
0:21
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry
0:23
in from Northern Silicon Valley
where it's cold as usual. I'm
0:27
John C. Dvorak. Buzzkill.
0:32
I mean, cold as usual. You guys
are in the middle of a heatwave,
0:36
California. You're supposed to
be dying.
0:39
I should put the camera out and
show you. It's probably about
0:42
60.
0:44
You were complaining about about
the heat the other day, though,
0:46
aren't you?
0:47
Yes. Because it was hot for two
days. Okay. Got two whole days,
0:52
it was too hot for me. And so
the fogs rolled in. And it was
0:57
actually just, yeah, the fog is
kind of rolled and it's cold. I
1:02
have the heater on in the house.
That's how that's our heat wave
1:06
with so it's a poorly understood
how this climate change works. I
1:09
was convinced that everything
was bad in California.
1:13
And it wasn't a whole. I didn't
record any of this. But I maybe
1:16
I'll go back and look for
there's some guy who goes over
1:19
all the data from 1939 on
YouTube. Yeah. And Holy
1:25
mackerel. That was a heatwave.
Oh, yeah. 89 was a mess. And
1:29
they and government has changed
the stats to try to well, you
1:33
know, it wasn't really that
1:35
they'll start at 1940 the graph
94 believable,
1:39
why are they trying to Buffalo
us? Why is our own government
1:43
trying to Buffalo us I'm seeing
the same thing with another
1:46
report. I was watching this
morning. Some guy in Australia,
1:50
this guy's going over government
data in Australia, pointing out
1:53
the increase in just random
deaths is up like 50%. And it's
1:58
got nothing to do with COVID. It
seems to have something to do
2:00
with maybe the vaccine and the
gut, but the government is
2:03
hiding. They're covering up the
data. Hey, man, you did two
2:07
titles. Get it? Man? Why is the
government trying to trick us?
2:10
You're doing two topics at once.
I don't know which direction to
2:13
go. You want to go with the
COVID? Do you want to go with
2:17
climate change? Or should we
just recognize that this is at
2:22
911, September 11. And that the
powers that be have determined
2:28
you're not allowed to have that
kind of trauma anymore. There's
2:32
no footage of airplanes flying
into buildings. Isn't that
2:37
there's not even one single
article on Google News.
2:41
At all. I saw as one short
snippet in a bumper on one of
2:45
the TV stations says we will
never forget what instead of
2:49
going to any of these. Let's
play a couple of jet Jen Briony
2:52
clips.
2:54
Just to get into the mood. Okay.
Sure. Sure. Yes.
2:59
To be on book TV. This is briny.
Oh, ma explain
3:02
who Jen Brian is and our
relationship to her.
3:05
Jen. Brian, he does
congressional dish. I didn't
3:09
know she was a Republican. I got
a kick out of that. I don't
3:14
know. I'm her. Okay. Did she's
on book TV. And to tell you
3:19
about her podcasts because about
Congress, you know, and and it's
3:22
C span is about Congress. And so
they put her on? They could put
3:26
us on but they wouldn't.
3:27
She's also she has quite a
following John. She has you
3:30
know, she's well known in all
kinds of circles.
3:32
She's she's done her job. She's
done her job well, so she comes
3:36
on
3:38
Jen This means that it is time
for you to leave grasshopper You
3:41
have snatched the pebble from
the vortex.
3:43
Send us some cash. Well, yeah.
So so she goes on and she she
3:51
talks about how it all got
started. And then there's I have
3:53
two clips. And then the other
one is just like she just like,
3:56
you'll see but it's tried to
clip one is the value for value
3:59
clip.
4:00
However, people want to pay me I
do accept it. But yeah, it's
4:03
100%. Listener based. And it was
actually there's another podcast
4:07
called no agenda, Adam curry and
John C. Dvorak really perfected
4:10
it, but we call value for value.
So what's really cool about it
4:14
is that I tell people that this
is a valuable podcast and I ask
4:17
people to pay whatever they
think is fair. And so the amount
4:20
per person varies widely just
depending on what people can
4:23
afford and what they consider
the show to be worth. Very proud
4:27
of the funding model.
4:29
Nice edit. Very proud of this.
4:32
Nice edit, John. Very funny. I'm
very proud. I'm very proud of
4:37
Jen Briony I think that is a
fantastic elevator pitch for
4:41
value for value. Great. I
4:43
think it was actually nailed she
nailed it. Yeah. So but later on
4:48
in the show, the guy who sent us
this grant con V con v v. Why I
4:57
got doubled up on this clip.
Sorry about that. This both
5:01
either Brian e t y FYC. He sends
a tweet in and she and a woman
5:06
reads the tweet. And it's got a
little code word in there no
5:10
agenda code that brainy should
have caught. No, no. Right over
5:16
our heads zoom.
5:18
Jen, we have a question from
Twitter. Grant says How does
5:22
egregious government spending
differ between the parties?
5:25
Thank you for your courage.
5:29
You know, I find that
5:33
she just goes on.
5:34
She's smart, because like, dude,
if I couldn't hear her brain
5:38
going, Look, I already plugged
these two old farts. You know, I
5:42
don't need to be promoting them
anymore. Because when people
5:45
hear me speaking in tongues,
with his valleys, you know,
5:48
thank you for your courage. And
then they'll think I'm culty.
5:51
Now she's smart. She has an
image to protect. John, you have
5:53
to understand you have to let
her go.
5:55
I'm in disagreement with your
analysis. Okay. All right. I
5:59
think it just shut right over
ahead. She didn't she would have
6:02
chuckled, just chuckled or
getting anything she didn't have
6:06
to go well, that's funny. She
the guy says Dave, your courage.
6:10
Your ITM or anything? She didn't
do any of that dumbness. But she
6:14
could have I mean, I would have,
but or even snickered, nothing
6:19
just right to the topic. So I
disagree. Anyway, that so that's
6:24
where we start today's show with
a little very nice motion for
6:26
our show. And Brian has
congressional district go check
6:29
it out.
6:30
Fantastic. All right. Let's hit
a teaser here from CBS straight
6:33
ahead on the CBS weekend news,
September 11. families bring
6:36
attention to a possible plea
deal with Gitmo detainees.
6:41
You see this this is very
different. We don't have to
6:45
delve into too much. And I only
have one other clip here about
6:47
these these Gitmo families. What
we're seeing is different from
6:53
previous years. And there's a
conscious decision that's been
6:56
made somehow. Or maybe he is
unconscious. Everyone just
7:00
hanging out the bar like no
planes in the buildings,
7:03
footage. That's the wrong
trauma. We need to have no more.
7:07
More polio and monkey pox and
stuff like
7:10
that. That is a disease that
already got passed. The other
7:13
thing we went past Yes.
pasturelands
7:15
Exactly.
7:16
Pilot Charles Burlingame was
more than a war hero to his
7:19
family who affectionately called
him chick.
7:21
He was really our touchstone.
And it was, he still is ds
7:26
before
7:26
the anniversary. His sister,
Deborah Burlingame and advocate
7:29
for the 911 families showed us
his name among those etched in
7:33
bronze surrounding the two
Memorial pools in New York City.
7:37
On 911, al Qaeda terrorists took
over Berlin games, American
7:41
Airlines flight 77. Okay,
7:43
so now compare that to what the
pros are doing.
7:48
Right now on America this
morning, the end of an era, the
7:51
world pays tribute to Queen
Elizabeth the Second for
7:54
stability, or determination, or
leadership.
7:58
This is what keeps people glued
to the sad. This is what we
8:01
need.
8:03
I just can't believe it. A
changing
8:05
of the guard for the first time
since Harry Truman was president
8:09
of the United States.
8:10
Is it just me or do you also get
the vibe that most of the world
8:16
doesn't really give a shit about
this the way they're the
8:19
bombastic portrayal. They have
the you know, the Brits
8:23
excluded.
8:26
Yeah. Because I mean, I think
it's notable, it's noteworthy
8:30
and it'd be interesting in the
history books, and she was a
8:33
woman who accomplished what she
accomplished her and she was
8:36
there for a long time. Yeah. And
she didn't destroy the monarchy.
8:41
She kind of helped Britain tear
itself apart. But yes, it was
8:45
intentional. A slow watering
down, but it was intentional.
8:48
And it wasn't like, you know,
some incompetence or anything.
8:51
She held it together. That's it.
The rest of it is just like I
8:56
mean, I have one clip. A similar
thing. It's actually it's more
9:01
than one loose I got no no, I've
missed up. I'm sorry. I I mixed
9:05
up. Queer with queen. So you
have one queen? I only have one
9:10
What? No, it's not what a world
what a world where mainstream
9:15
does this.
9:19
Remembering the Queen, Elizabeth
the Second passed away at 96
9:24
Big bombastic productions and
the no agenda show has one queen
9:28
update and five queer clips.
That lets go each way to
9:35
everybody. That's where we're
at.
9:38
We're on top of it. Yes,
9:39
we know what's going on
9:41
King Charles the third was
formally proclaimed sovereign of
9:43
the UK in a ceremony Saturday in
London. The palace meanwhile,
9:46
has announced the funeral for
his Mother Queen Elizabeth will
9:49
take place September 19. And
Pierce Philip Reeves has the
9:53
story. The Queen's final
9:54
journey through her kingdom is
about to begin. On Sunday. her
9:58
coffin will be carried from her
Castle in northern Scotland to
10:02
Edinburgh. On Monday it will be
carried in a procession along
10:06
Edinburgh's Royal Mile to St.
Giles cathedral. Her son now
10:10
King Charles the third will take
pass along with other Royals.
10:14
Officials say Scotland's public
will be allowed into the
10:17
cathedral to pay their respects
before she's taken to England by
10:21
military aircraft on Tuesday to
Line State in Westminster until
10:25
her funeral on Monday the 19th
of September.
10:29
Do Did you see Charles signing
the Declaration or whatever
10:35
signing himself in?
10:37
I think I did. Oh, man,
10:39
I bet you didn't because you
would know what I'm talking
10:41
about. Okay, so he has these two
big documents you huge folders
10:46
in front of one left one right
on this desk. And in front of
10:49
that is an inkwell. It's you
know, the pen holder it's all
10:52
really classy, but it's in the
way and he can't sign anything
10:56
and and so he's just kind of
like, like, like, like he's
10:59
shooting a fly away on the desk
but he's not touching it that's
11:03
just his motion to his people to
move that away. And this goes on
11:06
for you know, he
11:08
can't move it away himself. No,
no, oh, no. And he's
11:11
like, and then a certain point
now he's sitting down he signed
11:13
he signed the other document
that other things in the way and
11:16
he's looking at someone okay,
this thing move it the same move
11:19
it I mean, total
11:22
douche Oh, I should have I'm
sorry I missed that everywhere.
11:26
He's this guy's a disaster and
why would he name yourself
11:30
Charlie he has other names you
can use you can use any name he
11:33
wants actually but Charles the
First and Charles the second
11:36
were terrible kings
11:38
that's your answer he's not
stupid he's keeping the family
11:41
tradition going who knows what's
going on
11:46
but it named receives middle
name is Arthur he could have
11:48
been King Arthur the second or
something like that. That had
11:51
been funny but now he's got no
sense of humor you ever seen him
11:54
interviewed a
11:56
lot of people are now seems to
be and maybe it's just the
12:00
typical thing that happens you
know conspiracy theory although
12:02
I will take credit for being the
longest running with the the
12:05
Queen has been dead for a long
time meme.
12:09
Yeah, pretty much Yeah, I think
2010
12:14
But the and I don't know if
it's, I won't really tell the
12:18
entire story. But I met the
Queen. She invited me to
12:21
Buckingham Palace I went into
the front gates with the
12:24
chauffeured car you know waited
in this hall with it was without
12:28
give the preface though. did
give us a little idea George's
12:32
let's get to add him over.
That's exactly how some other
12:35
reason. No, it's just
12:36
let us get the Hey, he's in
town. I hear he's in town. He's
12:39
part father. Bring that mofo
over. It was the relaunch of the
12:43
Queen's website, the Royal
website. And so there was a
12:50
party and it was what's the Tim
Berners Lee, was that maybe they
12:56
it came through him. That would
be something that he would have
12:58
said, Oh, yes, curries here. And
I still have the invitation was
13:04
beautiful, you know, until I got
to like a block of wood. This
13:08
year, Her Majesty requests your
attendance. And so you know,
13:12
they pick up in the car. It was
a Mercedes, by the way, oh, the
13:15
horrors. And they went right
through those front gates of
13:19
Buckingham Palace. And then we
went in this big hall and waited
13:22
for it, I don't know, 20
minutes. But it was a hall that
13:25
was interesting, because it had
just all these master artworks
13:29
that you recognize, that looks
like Rembrandt, Van Gogh, we
13:31
don't really recognize the
painting. And then we go in and
13:34
then we all get to meet the
Queen. And she's standing on a
13:37
box, of course, and she had her
gloves on and she wasn't holding
13:42
her handbag. Like she was in
that picture and meeting the new
13:45
prime minister. And I did
something which is not you're
13:48
not really supposed to do, but I
promised myself I had to do it.
13:52
And I looked into her eyes when
I shook her hand. And that's
13:57
supposed to do it. No, no,
you're not supposed to
14:00
release was looked down or
something.
14:01
Yeah. And saw nothing. It was.
It was kind of it kind of it was
14:08
a robot. I don't know. I don't
know, man. They weren't slanty.
14:12
So I don't think she sorted the
list or she hadn't transformed.
14:15
And the only other thing I can
really say is that she should
14:17
she served mums champagne, which
is kind of like really? I mean,
14:24
that's like $20 A bottle and
14:26
HEB. Well, it's not it's not
that cheap, but it's I mean,
14:29
it's a real champagne. It was
they have a higher end version
14:33
of it was just a standard
standard mom's is not really
14:36
that great
14:37
for Boris Johnson did like an
eight minute speech in the House
14:43
of Commons was very nice, very
moving. It was the beginning
14:47
that caught my attention.
14:48
Thank you, Mr. Speaker. I hope
the house will not mind if I
14:50
begin with a personal
confession. A few months ago,
14:53
the BBC came to see me to talk
about Her Majesty the Queen, and
14:58
we sat down and the camera This
started rolling. And they
15:02
requested that I should talk
about her in the past tense. And
15:07
I'm afraid I certainly choked up
and I couldn't go on I'm really
15:11
not easily moved to tears. But I
was so overcome with sadness
15:16
that I had to ask them to go
away.
15:21
So first of all, how ghoulish of
the BBC to do that. And it's
15:29
such a television thing like
hey, man, we want to have all
15:32
these packages ready to go. For
when the Queen when she finally
15:36
croak so, you know, let's, let's
have everybody speak, and answer
15:42
their questions as if she's
already gone.
15:45
Yeah, that's exactly right.
That's ghoulish. I didn't even
15:49
think about it. But that's
exactly right. That's what you
15:51
have to do. And yet if you want
to get these guys in, under
15:54
package, so you have to you call
it you give your little mate
15:56
your little Rolodex, and you
call up this guy and that guy
15:59
and say, we're going to we're
doing a pack and you explain
16:02
what you're doing and then they
usually agree and give you the
16:04
now it's also possible that the
story's a little different.
16:08
Because Johnson says he was
overcome with grief and said he
16:11
couldn't do it. Possibly they
said, Look, she's dead. She
16:14
died.
16:16
Theory. That's a good one. Yeah,
I was like,
16:20
what? And it was overcome with
grief and couldn't.
16:22
My reminds me of this story
about it was Jackie with that
16:27
little kid accurate back in the
30s that work with WC Fields and
16:31
they had to get him to cry. So
they taught this is a direct
16:34
story from him to my wife who
she knew or and Meili knew his
16:40
kid. And they, he's in this on
the set. And so when somebody
16:46
comes over and quietly tells him
his dog died. Oh, no. The kid
16:51
just can't stand in the kid.
Just okay. Ready to roll in
16:55
camera? Shit. Kids are crying.
Oh, it's horrible.
17:01
Huh? Yeah. So yeah, dog
17:04
wasn't dead. That's the key
chord. No, of course.
17:08
Yeah, good old Hollywood tricks.
Good. No trick or not. I just
17:13
thought that was interesting.
Then, you know, as this to me,
17:18
in my opinion, is the kickoff of
the great reset. The pope should
17:23
go next. And there's already
questions if the Pope is
17:26
actually alive. Some say he
hasn't been around since April
17:31
2021. But I think just the
retirement scheme it's it's
17:34
probably the best way to go. And
we'll have to fill up the
17:37
interim period with no with
other dignitaries and luminaries
17:40
who pass on
17:41
we learned today the cable news
Trailblazer Bernard Shaw has
17:44
died. This is Bernard
17:46
Shaw on our Cable News
Washington bureau.
17:49
The chief anchor of CNN for 20
years he helped launch the
17:52
network in 1980. CNN remembering
him tonight as a beloved
17:55
colleague dedicated to
journalism. One of the first
17:57
black network news anchors he
was on the ground at Tiananmen
18:00
Square live from Baghdad during
the first Gulf War so respected
18:04
by his colleagues in journalism
and viewers who so trusted him
18:07
Bernard Shaw was 82
18:09
What a bummer for Bernard Shaw
should be a guy who should have
18:13
retrospectives and special
packages rolling about him. But
18:18
now it's gonna be all clean. Oh,
yeah. No, it's like it's like
18:24
when I go you know it's gonna be
on a show day. It's gonna suck.
18:27
Gonna be on a show a day and
somebody else will be you know
18:31
someone huge. So when you
finally die
18:36
curry also passed on Yeah,
exactly. I will say that
18:42
multiple people have reached out
to me and said in the UK Jimmy
18:45
Savile stories are popping up
oddly. I don't know why, but
18:48
maybe with the queen gone. I've
noticed this too. Do you have
18:51
Okay, good then it's not just
not just
18:53
nowadays, but there's been a lot
in fact, that was something this
18:56
morning. I was listening to
somebody bitching about
18:59
something. And then I think I'm
one of our one of those packages
19:04
that we got playing at the end
of the show mix. There's a Jimmy
19:06
Jimmy Savile? Yes, yes, yes,
yes. Yes. Yes. Come on. No, I
19:10
know I have heard more than a
couple of times by Jimmy Savile.
19:15
And there's that picture going
around that one of our Martin
19:18
JGI they are no Paul couture
sent around on no agenda social
19:22
was about Jimmy Savile per se,
but it's a picture and I
19:26
questioned the validity of this
thing. But you can find it on no
19:28
agenda social I may repost it.
It's a picture of Epstein and
19:32
what's her name? Elaine julaine,
sitting on a bench in a cabin in
19:39
the woods. And then the picture
next to it is the queen in her
19:45
more casual clothes sitting on
that same disband Balmoral cabin
19:51
at Balmoral
19:54
maybe? Well, no, it's
19:56
wooden. It's wooden. It looks
unlike something like Denver,
19:58
Kentucky, but didn't
19:59
they all have the pictures where
they were all hanging out and
20:02
they were sitting on the Queen's
throne. didn't have those as
20:05
well.
20:06
Remember that? Yes. Go on guys
get on the drone. I'm good. Oh,
20:12
poop on it.
20:15
I think there was a picture of
just laying on the throne. I
20:17
really do. I'm sure this one,
because that's how that's how it
20:21
Yeah, but you know Photoshop is
dangerous. So no,
20:24
I think that was admitted. Well,
okay, it's you know what? Who
20:27
gives a shit? Now I have
uncovered something I believe
20:33
that is kind of important for
our producers who may be
20:35
considering one of the new
updated shots. The updated heart
20:40
Dart. It really it was it was
really odd. How I stumbled upon
20:46
this, but it was it came made
our transition to COVID Eclipse,
20:50
what do you want to do something
else?
20:52
No, no, I got nothing on the
Queen go on.
20:56
Just just say. So of course, I'm
referring to Karina Abdul John
21:02
Pierre Vaughn dam. And this was
a question that came from the
21:08
White House press corps. And
it's like, Why do you keep
21:12
talking about and this could
have been one of our questions,
21:14
in fact, might have been a no
agenda producer. What is this
21:16
updated business? What happened
to boosters keep everyone's
21:20
like, just get updated? Make
sure
21:21
yesterday was I saw this too.
And this agent? Yeah, they don't
21:25
know what to do. And I think
that confusion, I think this
21:29
goes to the CDC or the other
group, FDA, or somebody that I
21:34
think it's that well, you know,
if people haven't, we're not
21:37
going to make the other shot
anymore, is what I think the
21:39
manufacturer said. There's just
not going to be made, we're not
21:42
going to make it we're getting
we got this new shot that's
21:45
updated, and we're gonna it's
gonna be the initial you want to
21:48
get a shot now out of the blue,
you haven't added any shots
21:50
whatsoever. You're starting with
this, and it was getting
21:53
confusing. Well, wait, why would
I start with a booster? So I
21:57
think they're just trying to try
I think they're trying to it's I
22:00
think it's a marketing problem.
They gotten it's changed.
22:03
That's what I that's what I
thought initially as well. And I
22:06
thought the whole thing was
marketing. Of course, you know,
22:08
the get updated is just like an
app, you know, like charging
22:12
your phone and we've heard all
the analogy. So like,
22:15
you saw the poster, the FDA
poster,
22:17
that's I think it's fake. I'm
pretty sure that's fake. But the
22:22
thing is, it could easily be
real. So it doesn't really
22:25
matter. It's very believable,
incredibly believable. But
22:28
there's something that Karina
Abdul said that, that that leads
22:32
down or perhaps something else
22:35
you've been referring to this
22:35
new shot is the updated COVID-19
vaccine. Can you explain a
22:39
little bit more the decision to
no longer be calling it just a
22:41
booster?
22:42
Well, we we have to remember we
haven't seen a vaccine a new
22:47
vaccine since December 2020. Our
health and medical experts made
22:52
an independent determination
that we now have new updated
22:55
vaccine as you just said to
fight COVID It is the first time
22:58
that we have seen this type of
updated vaccine like I said
23:01
since December of 2020 and if
you and the message to folks
23:06
that we're we're we are
providing is if you are 12 or
23:09
older.
23:10
So this this right here, this is
where I'm totally in agreement
23:13
with you this is marketing she's
even saying it and what we're
23:17
messaging now to people okay, so
this this is what your message
23:20
it seemed
23:20
like I said since December of
2020. And if you and the message
23:25
to folks that we're we're we are
providing is if you're 12 or
23:29
older, and it's been at least
two months since you last got a
23:32
shot, you should get these new
updated vaccines right away.
23:36
That's the doctor's advice. They
made this decision
23:39
independently, but you do
23:40
still need to get the first
original dose before you can get
23:43
this shot the FDA the CDC,
they're still referring to this
23:46
as a booster. So I guess why the
discrepancy? Are you concerned
23:49
that may cause some
23:50
Well, I'm not going to get into
like regulatory language on what
23:54
to call this. I'll leave that to
a booster or a vaccine. Okay,
23:59
well, just laying I'm just
laying out with
24:01
so I'm not gonna get into any
regulatory language. Oh, it's
24:06
regulatory language. That's
different.
24:10
And I hold on, you're assuming
that she's using her words
24:14
correctly.
24:17
I'm assuming that she was read
in on why we have to call these
24:21
things updated and not boosters
and she's very careful to say
24:26
it's been since 2021 that we had
new vaccine to keep saying new
24:31
vaccine. Yes, I
24:32
agreed there. Yeah. But
24:35
she's not gonna get into the
regulatory of calling it a
24:37
booster versus vaccine. I think
she's right in and the reason in
24:41
my mind is and I did not know
that I
24:43
but she got to not only be read
and she could be reading it.
24:47
Literally.
24:48
That's more likely than
anything. That's why she's glad
24:51
that she goes on for another
minute fumbling over this shit.
24:54
These vaccines now, what do we
know about the vaccines we know
24:58
that they're is no human trials
at least not that we have any
25:02
results from that seems to be
nor seems to be normal because
25:06
flu vaccines, we do the same
thing. Actually can play a clip
25:09
about that in a minute if we
want to. We know that we tested
25:14
on mice, okay, eight mice.
There's some some stories out
25:17
there that the mice didn't make
it, but it doesn't matter. We
25:20
test on mice. So what is
different about this vaccine?
25:27
It's been approved under
emergency use authorization.
25:31
This is not an approved vaccine.
25:33
That's not different. That's
what the other one was approved
25:35
under. Yeah, but that
25:37
was approved so you can't say
this is a booster it's not the
25:40
same thing. It's a new vaccine
that is it's literally a new
25:45
vaccine and because they don't
know what to do
25:48
saying you're saying that you
the problem that okay,
25:51
regulatory wise. Yep. Since it's
not a true booster is just
25:56
another shot of the same stuff.
No, it's a new vaccine. It's the
26:00
by valence vaccine that has to
be considered something else and
26:04
it can't be you can add but they
want to call it a booster so bad
26:08
because they know they have a
bunch of these booster addicts
26:11
you know, the double boosted
doubleshot double boosted that
26:13
will just jump on board they
want to get in line immediately
26:16
to get their booster. So they're
a between a rock and a hard
26:20
place in the marketing is
concerned.
26:22
Yeah. Well boosters a real
problem. And but it's I think
26:26
it's what they're trying to do
is just ignore the problem. Let
26:29
everybody call it a booster. And
then whenever they're talking,
26:31
they'll just say updated
officially is not Yeah, yeah, I
26:34
think I think that's what it is.
That's probably you're right.
26:37
That's what they're gonna do.
And, yeah, well,
26:39
you can call it a booster or you
are, yeah, this is gonna be fun
26:42
to watch how to deal with this
problem. Gonna be fine, because
26:46
you're gonna be Oh, blah, blah.
Well, we can't say it's a
26:49
booster. It gets sued. Yeah,
well, there's already lawsuits
26:53
lingering all over the place.
Well,
26:54
and the regime is tightening
down. Listen to Dr. Drew.
27:00
There's a new law in California,
about which determines what
27:04
doctors and health care
professionals can, what they can
27:09
and how they can communicate
medical information. And this
27:14
kind of says it all thanks would
27:15
explain how draconian this law
is this 2019 in the state of
27:18
California, literally would be
the case that if you were about
27:22
if I was evaluating a patient,
let's say you come in, you're my
27:24
patient. And you come in and you
say, the CDC has recommended
27:28
that I get this new Omicron
vaccine, this bioburden vaccine?
27:32
I'm concerned because what I'm
reading suggested it was only
27:36
studied on mice. And if I say
anything other than standard
27:44
what would it be standard ship
empty slogans as specified by
27:49
the academic and the
bureaucratic structure, which
27:52
when you're over 60 years old,
it's recommended that you get
27:55
this booster. If I saw the proto
if I said, for instance, you're
28:00
right, it was tested on mice,
I'm probably going to recommend
28:03
it my patients over 65,
certainly over 75, I think is
28:07
worth the risk. There is
antecedent, very, very similar
28:10
vaccines in influenza. And this
is sort of how we do with
28:13
influenza every year. We don't
test it necessarily in humans
28:16
every year. So there's a
protocol out there. But if you
28:19
were 30 years old, I would say,
you know, there was just a study
28:23
came out in circulation last
this week that suggested that in
28:27
men under 40, the risk of
myocarditis is five times higher
28:30
from the moderna vaccine, than
from COVID itself right there.
28:35
That would qualify as
misinformation, even though it's
28:37
factually accurate. It's a
merely meat discussing what's
28:41
available in the medical
literature with my patient.
28:46
Let's say that patient was angry
for some reason, that patient
28:48
could make a anonymous complaint
to the state. And he or she
28:52
could go home and go you know
what, mom and dad and brother
28:56
and sister, you guys, I'd like
you to make a complaint to
28:58
here's, here's what my complaint
is. Why don't you modify a
29:01
little bit I heard somebody said
in the public the other day, I
29:03
didn't like either, so add that
to it. Each one of those
29:06
complaints would be dealt with
as though a police report had
29:10
been filed for a criminal
action. It will require a full
29:14
response with citations and will
take months and months and may
29:19
require hiring an attorney for
each case. That is what they are
29:22
doing.
29:23
How about that shit? I love it.
29:28
I could you will just cackling
throughout the whole clip.
29:30
You're so happy to
29:32
larious and these doctors what
have they, you know they brought
29:35
it on themselves.
29:37
True. True, but they were they
were all at this is I don't
29:41
think the COVID control of
doctors was new. This control.
29:45
This has probably been going on
for a long time and everyone's
29:48
just been okay. You know, I'm
just following orders wherever
29:51
you heard that.
29:51
Well, they always have this. I
noticed that sewage Sutter
29:54
Health does. They have this?
Like a checkbox of things they
29:58
recommend it This one should you
should get this you should do
30:02
this, you should do that. And I
always like to look into it. And
30:05
they don't dare push back on any
of it. They never really insist.
30:10
Well, you should get this use
either that you always would get
30:12
it. You should get it your way
overdue for a tetanus booster.
30:15
I've never had a tetanus
booster. And well, you should
30:18
probably get one. I don't want
to get one. Okay.
30:20
Well, we know, we know from our
producers with kids, like if
30:23
they say, Well, you know, I'm
gonna hold off for a couple
30:25
months. That, you know, many
doctors pediatricians say okay,
30:29
you can't be my patient anymore.
And we're gonna write up and all
30:33
this stuff. Oh, yeah.
30:34
Yeah. Well, that's what she that
doesn't happen around this is
30:37
California. I think that when
you when things get so onerous,
30:41
I think they get they get
pretty, I think they're lacks in
30:43
a different way.
30:44
So this is sort of what we're
seeing is total lockdown, total
30:48
control of
30:50
hideaway, but any pediatrician
who does that should be outed.
30:55
doxxed.
30:57
Well, yeah, no, what happens is
parents are very afraid to do
31:00
that. Because if they do that
and accuse a pediatrician, they
31:03
won't get any pediatrician.
31:05
Do it anonymously. That's what
the internet's all about.
31:11
That's why we invented that shit
dammit. Recently, so that's one
31:17
end of the spectrum, where we're
clamping down. We're making sure
31:20
the messaging is tight, the
procedure to tight the protocols
31:23
are followed. Then we have the
other side of the spectrum. This
31:28
is Big Pharma. And, man, listen
to what they're doing. Just
31:33
they're doing this is about an
online mental health outfit
31:38
called cerebral and you know,
there's many of these apps use.
31:41
I'm sure you've seen the
commercial. I don't know how
31:42
much TV you watch. I'm sure
you've seen the commercials. Or
31:46
maybe heard that much. Yeah, you
hear him on the radio a lot. You
31:51
know, if you're feeling down,
you know, COVID you know, been
31:54
locked up cooped up, you can
talk to somebody and then
31:57
cerebral is this is this is
great. They match you with the
32:01
perfect therapist. Okay, so the
AI and the address, okay, the AI
32:07
and the algo are matched, you
know, they match you with the
32:10
right therapist so you can talk
to somebody
32:12
is a real therapist or Eliza.
32:15
It's a real human being. And I
think therapists licensing is
32:22
some thrift reader. Listen to
this story.
32:25
The woman will call Yvette says
she's long suffered severe
32:28
depression, a result of sexual
trauma in her youth.
32:32
I was constantly depressed. I
was just like this sadness, a
32:38
sorrow that would just take
over. She
32:41
says she struggled to afford
therapy. But then she saw ads
32:44
like me,
32:45
my poor mental health was
pushing everyone in my life away
32:48
until I started using cerebral
32:50
the ads from mental health
providers cerebral promised
32:53
affordable prescriptions and
therapies all online, I thought
32:57
I was honestly signing up for
something that was going to
33:00
change my life in a good way.
33:01
So she joined first going
through an assessment like this
33:05
one, then the system matched her
with a prescriber,
33:09
and the first time I talked to
the prescriber, it's only about
33:12
10 to 15 minutes. Yvette says
33:15
in that first roughly 15 minute
appointment, she was prescribed
33:18
three medications, and in a
second appointment equally
33:22
brief, she was given two more
five drugs in all, but she says
33:26
her symptoms got worse. And she
contacted her cerebral
33:30
prescriber to tell her she was
having nightmares about hanging
33:33
herself
33:34
and I was scared. And when I
reached out to her and I and I
33:40
was just crying to her because I
didn't know what to do.
33:44
She said I don't have enough
time I have to go to my other
33:48
appointment. I've already spent
enough time with you.
33:51
The next day a family member
found her hanging from a dog
33:55
leash in her bathroom.
33:57
I thought I was streaming I
thought I was streaming but I
34:02
was I was hanging in I didn't
remember anything.
34:08
So this is this should have
immediate attention. These are
34:14
pill pushing companies and it
only it only dawned on me now.
34:18
The company name is cerebral.
And they're the people who
34:22
answer the phone are called
prescribers. I mean could it be
34:25
any more cynical Cerebro
prescriber Holy crap.
34:30
I said oh wow. Are we
transitioning from COVID?
34:35
No, no, I mean I'm making these
sneaky
34:37
moves on me I can't keep up
34:39
but it's just important to let
everyone know that make sure
34:42
that if your daughter's using
34:43
don't let your kids do this,
thank you. Thank you. There he
34:46
is.
34:49
You know and maybe you know what
the maybe these people also say
34:51
you know you you you might be
trans you need to talk to this
34:54
maybe the
34:55
you know, I just made a steak I
got to COVID clips go into that
35:00
I got tons of that kind of
stuff. And I started looking
35:02
into I started looking at to
transition the topic. I know
35:09
this queer thing really only
began in 1990. This is
35:15
very recent. Are you
transitioning now into?
35:19
I don't want to transition? I
think there should be the
35:22
Showtime transition back to
COVID talking about the
35:26
formulation of this new vaccine.
And so I got a clip from this
35:31
guy, his character, you know, as
your jaw jaw. Yes.
35:36
Dr. Shah, Dr. John Shaw, that's
him. That's this. That's the the
35:41
White House that's the Birx. And
Fauci of Biden. Shah. Yeah, he's
35:45
the birth birth Birx by
Birdsboro Biden's Burke's jaw.
35:49
So he, he's trying to say the
word curveball here.
35:54
He's Indian, so we're gonna make
fun of him now.
35:57
Yeah, excellent. So I just want
you to listen to his jaw and the
36:04
curveball and I don't even know
what he's talking about. But
36:06
he's, he's trying to convince
everyone that this great this
36:09
new vaccine
36:10
barring any new variant
curveballs, we've seen
36:13
curveballs. But barring those
variant curveballs for a large
36:17
majority of Americans, we are
moving to a point where a single
36:22
annual COVID shot should provide
a high degree of protection
36:26
against serious illness
36:27
all year. That's an important
milestone.
36:29
So he says we're moving toward
this milestone of one booster
36:33
per year, something more like an
annual flu shot. I didn't sound
36:37
too
36:38
Too bad curveballs sounded worse
when I heard it.
36:42
curveballs Okay.
36:44
Cooking ball making fun.
36:46
of the Indian man. All right.
36:48
No, not making a strike. Here's
another by here's the clip that
36:51
I had to take this a two minute
clip. This is one of those EU
36:56
Parliament clips.
36:59
Yes, I have this as the Romanian
mid
37:01
Romanian MEP. It's interesting
to Rails interesting,
37:05
because I did not clipped that
twice. And I think it was
37:08
because I thought you wouldn't
like it. Oh, that's funny. Well,
37:12
that's not it's concerning. I
think our marriage may be in
37:16
trouble. We need counseling. It
37:17
could be. But it's beside the
point. This guy the reason I
37:21
liked this because his wimpy
woman who is the chairwoman is
37:25
the best Can you can you please
stop? She wants to you know, she
37:29
can't. And this guy's got good
points to make. And none of us
37:32
ever answered. This is just like
a relentless rant
37:36
and questioning again. Who is he
questioning?
37:39
He's questioning that Pfizer
guy. I think both Pfizer Maderna
37:42
had representatives and he's
questioning them. Yeah. And it's
37:45
like, typical. I mean, this is
the European Parliament at work.
37:51
It's beautiful to two guys.
37:53
We need this. We need a C span
of the EU parliament.
37:58
You know, C span used to carry
Prime Minister's question. Well,
38:03
that's right. Yeah. Until they
stopped it. What's happened
38:05
Boris, Boris Johnson probably.
38:08
Maybe here we go.
38:10
Answer from Emma, which is
showing for every vaccine, the
38:14
kinds of tests that were done.
So in the case of more in the
38:17
case of Madonna, for example,
you provide the data showing
38:20
that you tested these vaccines,
ces 2017 2018 2019. So how were
38:26
you able to test these vaccines
back then, when we found out
38:30
about this virus in December of
2019? Second question, the
38:35
contracts. You mentioned here
that there are some secrets or
38:39
some confidential information in
these contracts that should
38:42
protect your interests. Now, the
question that I addressed to you
38:45
What about the interests of us
and the interests of the
38:48
European citizens? Because this
is how some of the pages from
38:52
the contract between Maderna and
the European Commission is
38:55
showing so I'm asking you these
38:57
completely blacked out,
39:00
blacked out documents.
39:02
This is fair to all of us to
talk about these facts, but
39:06
haven't we all seen it? We've
all seen the unredacted when you
39:09
know, I remember us going
through it, you know, the
39:12
complete indemnification. If you
can't pay us back, we take your
39:15
harbor. Remember all that we'll
get we'll take your navy ships.
39:18
Yeah, man, it was great
39:20
to talk about boosters to talk
about when we don't know the
39:24
clauses of these contracts. So
the direct question to you Mr.
39:28
Bansal is when are you going to
fully publish the contracts that
39:33
you have, both with the European
Commission and with the member
39:37
states of the European Union?
Another question the issue of
39:41
liabilities. You were asked by
our colleague here about the
39:44
liabilities and you avoided to
answer this question. So my
39:48
question to you is, Why are you
pushing the liabilities on the
39:51
states and on the people who
receive these vaccines and my
39:54
half and I say you might have
adverse effects, why you get all
39:59
the profit Nevertheless, the
vibe of the bivalent boosters,
40:03
this is the last question. You
just hate to hear that these
40:07
boosters were requested by the
US government, who also approved
40:12
the boosters without trials on
humans. So I'm asking you, do
40:16
you think this is fair? Do you
think we can go and as the
40:19
European citizens to be
vaccinated for medical products
40:22
that were not properly tested or
not at all tested in humans?
40:26
Thank you.
40:28
Next time, I'll deduct 40
seconds from us.
40:33
All due respect, it's an
important issue. And the reason
40:35
why they are here is to answers
questions. And I see that they
40:38
are all avoiding answering
concrete questions from my
40:42
colleagues.
40:43
But it's also respectful. Yeah,
yeah. Avoid hot topics, brother.
40:47
So aviation
40:49
maybe I liked that clip could
carry for me because of the way
40:54
he said the word booster. It's
just
40:57
it was it was a pick me up in
the middle of a mania.
41:03
But he doesn't make one point in
there, which is yeah, we have to
41:07
pick up the liability but they
still keep the profits. Yeah,
41:11
the profit should all go to the
government. Boost boost boost.
41:15
You're pretty good booster. You
do pretty good.
41:18
Boost.
41:20
Goodness that that? Yeah. In
hindsight, I don't understand
41:24
why I didn't clip it. Now, just
a couple of just a couple of
41:27
stories, just the headlines.
I'll read cardiologists as well.
41:32
Maybe I should start with you
actually mentioned this at the
41:34
top of the show. adults aged 35
to 44 died at twice the expected
41:40
rate this past summer. This is
from life insurance data. But of
41:44
course a cardiologist who's in
the news says that none of this
41:47
is young people who are taking
supplements, you know from
41:50
functional medicine doctors
that's killing him. Excuse me,
41:54
heart arrhythmias.
41:57
Oh, that's what it is. Yeah, you
shouldn't be taking supplements
41:59
don't do that. Oh, yeah. That's
supplements are killing people
42:02
lifted.
42:02
I hate that d3. Man. It's like
it's killing people. Cancers in
42:07
adults under 50 have increased
dramatically around the globe,
42:10
which kind of when I hear that,
I think of our president Joe.
42:16
Well beat cancer. Mark my words.
I wonder if if you know what
42:20
they have here is like, Okay,
everyone gets cancer, but we
42:22
have the antidote.
42:23
We all but we already had that
clip of him saying he has
42:26
cancer, which has not been
picked up by by too many people.
42:31
Of course.
42:32
Yeah. influx of COVID Babies who
haven't hit milestones can
42:37
barely speak when they should.
And then this was pointed out to
42:40
me, which was really good point.
Because I watched the Apple
42:44
event the wait,
42:46
stop. What's this about the
babies? I haven't heard about
42:49
this.
42:50
Oh, let me open the story.
Speech therapist, I should have
42:54
said reveals she's been
inundated with wave of COVID
42:59
Babies who can barely speak.
Parents paying up to $1,000 a
43:04
month to repair the damage. So
they can't speak they've been
43:10
masked?
43:10
That's why no, probably because
you have to see the mouse moves.
43:14
They didn't see any they just
heard sounds they didn't see
43:17
mouse moving.
43:18
And they heard sounds mobile.
Yeah. Yeah,
43:21
I bet that's alarming. So I
watched the Apple event and it
43:26
was pointed out to me like every
almost all these cool features
43:31
are all pretty much to let
someone else know when your
43:34
heart stops. Even if you're out
running in the desert, it will
43:38
ping the satellite. I mean,
everything is about your Oh,
43:42
yeah. You had an accident. Oh,
we know exactly what kind of
43:44
vehicle the accident was it?
It's all this horrible shit.
43:47
It's never like, if you fall in
love will recognize it and will
43:51
light up your screen with all
hearts and flowers and flowers
43:55
automatically. None of that.
It's all dark. All
44:00
interest emergency features.
44:03
Yeah, isn't it though?
44:05
Yeah. For the paranoid like
everyone's an old woman that
44:08
can't get up.
44:09
Yeah, yeah, we used to laugh at
that shit. Hell, but fallen I
44:13
can't get
44:15
it way too much. Sorry. Cut it
back.
44:18
I can't help myself.
44:22
I don't know that observation is
always worth writing a column
44:26
about.
44:26
There you go.
44:29
That's phenomenal. Now
44:31
I want to just say something
else. I want to mention this
44:33
because you'll never hear about
it again. But there's several
44:37
publications today who are
reporting on a revolution COVID
44:42
breakthrough an antibody that
has been found that may mean no
44:47
more booster jabs. It's been
called a true revolution. Now
44:52
here we go Tel Aviv University
in Israel. And they've you know,
44:57
they've ice they've isolated
this one was this thing called?
45:02
antibodies? t au 1109 and 23.
45:07
It was there was probably it was
probably invented before COVID
45:10
was was engineered as the
backdoor stoppage.
45:13
Right. But I was just saying no,
that's a decent point. I'm not.
45:20
I'm pretty sure we'll never hear
about this again. So just want
45:22
to make sure we mentioned it
because yeah, you'll never hear
45:25
about it again. What you will
hear about is more fear.
45:29
Remember no airplanes into
buildings? No, we're going for
45:33
going for pestilence. The
45:34
governor of New York declared a
disaster emergency today
45:37
ordering an expansion of the
state's polio vaccination
45:40
efforts after scientists
detected the virus in wastewater
45:43
on Long Island. The virus also
turned up in wastewater systems
45:47
in New York City and several
nearby counties
45:50
in emergency state of emergency
over polio a little longer
45:53
report here
45:54
disaster emergency in New York
45:57
and just shaped us so much
better than Nora disaster
46:00
emergency
46:01
in New York. Governor Kathy Hoko
declaring it just today after
46:05
health officials detected the
polio virus in yet another
46:09
County's sewage. They say it's a
sign the virus continues to
46:13
spread throughout the state.
Authorities say they found a
46:16
positive sample of polio in
Nassau County on
46:19
Long Island. Are there Hasidic
Jews out there some other
46:23
religious group that could
scheppers pointing it out Nassau
46:26
County remember Rockland County
is where we have the Orthodox
46:28
Jews. So I wonder what's in
Nassau County.
46:31
They previously detected it in
wastewater in New York City and
46:34
probably Republicans, three
nearby counties. Governor Hoko
46:39
says the order will allow
emergency services workers,
46:42
midwives and pharmacists to
administer the polio vaccine. It
46:46
will also better equip health
officials with tools to curb the
46:49
spread. In a statement the
state's health commissioner
46:52
wrote in part on polio, we
simply cannot roll the dice. If
46:56
you or your child is
unvaccinated or not up to date
47:01
with vaccinations. The risk of
paralytic disease is real. I
47:05
urge New Yorkers he wrote not to
accept any risk at all.
47:10
Goodness gracious.
47:14
What is this? This is just fear
mongering your kid could be
47:19
paralyzed. This Shep Smith is
just selling polio vaccine.
47:26
And I agree it's very overdone.
47:29
So we've got monkeypox, we've
got
47:31
the most expensive county one of
the highest income counties in
47:34
the United States. And you go
Republican told you and the most
47:38
Yeah, that's it? Well, I'm sure
there's a lot of rich Democrats
47:41
there especially in New York,
right. most affluent state high
47:44
school students often featured
prominently as winners of the
47:46
International Science
Engineering Fair.
47:48
So go after them. Hey, rich
people. You bet better get on
47:52
board with the program.
47:53
I mean, kill a few kids. That's
a good one.
47:56
So then we have monkey pox.
Remember, I played the clip from
48:00
the White House is Monkey pox
czar.
48:03
Oh, that the kick the the s&m
guy
48:06
dude, he's not. He's not an s&m
nut. He's into Satanism. A call?
48:10
Yeah.
48:10
Satan is Satan is an MSA and
Satan has no he's got to get the
48:14
scars. He's got scarification
he's got a big thing in the
48:18
pictures of Yes. Why would
anyone hire this guy at that
48:23
level? Well,
48:26
I guess that's who that's who's
at risk. They're trying to
48:29
communicate. They're trying to
communicate to a certain group
48:32
and I guess that's, that's the
group. And he cleans up real,
48:37
real nice. I mean, he's wearing
the suit. But underneath is
48:41
like, okay. It operated like a,
I think a club kind of Satanists
48:49
type club in New York with his
husband or boyfriend. Just as
48:54
weird. I don't know. Maybe
Willie. It's so weird. Maybe
48:58
we're just old fashioned. And we
were just like, oh, yeah,
49:01
that's what it is. We are you
and me. Yes. You and I are old,
49:07
old fashioned.
49:09
We were just old Fuddy duddies,
we can't go with the times.
49:15
Satanism is so cool with the
youngins.
49:21
Billy Bones was very irritated
by a number of commercials he
49:25
kept hearing so he recorded to
for us
49:28
infectious diseases spread by
pests like malaria. Zika and
49:31
Chagas disease are causing a
worldwide health crisis.
49:35
Fortunately, here at home, we
don't face the same level of
49:37
threat but we shouldn't let our
guard down. mosquito borne
49:40
diseases like West Nile virus
and Zika are impacting
49:43
communities across the US and
Lyme disease spread by ticks is
49:47
on the rise, whether around the
world or just around the block,
49:51
get the facts you need to
protect your family and pest
49:53
world.org A public service
message from the National Pest
49:56
Management Association.
49:57
So there's you know what you
heard it too All right. Our old
50:02
friend is back. Oh, our old
friend Zika Oh, yes, I heard
50:07
that in there. Yeah. And here's
another one.
50:09
Hey, neighbor, what are you
doing? Hey, Carl.
50:11
I'm putting screens on our doors
and windows. What? For? Zika
50:14
Zika.
50:15
That's a flu right?
50:16
That's a virus that causes mild
fever, rash and red eyes.
50:19
Doctors suspect it could also be
responsible for microcephaly and
50:22
newborns, but there's nothing.
follow some basic rules like
50:26
what Zika like other diseases is
spread primarily by mosquitoes.
50:30
We need to get rid of those bugs
how mosquitoes breeding clean
50:33
and stagnant water garbage too.
So we have to empty clean and
50:37
cover all open water containers
weekly.
50:39
And what about containers that
can't be moved or clean? You can
50:42
fill them with sand. Hmm. Hey,
can my boys still play outside?
50:45
Yeah, but he
50:46
should wear long sleeves, pants
and use insect repellent,
50:48
especially during sunrise and
dusk in a bumble Ketos are most
50:52
likely to bite.
50:52
Got it. Thanks, Paul. Anytime.
Hey, Carl, what's up? Hey, Anna,
50:56
I'm cleaning up to stop
mosquitoes for Zika That's
50:59
right. We all need to do our
part to stop Zika clean up cover
51:02
up and keep it up.
51:03
This message is brought to you
by the International Federation
51:06
of Red Cross and Red Crescent
societies and UNESCO. Zika Yes.
51:15
Where's the
51:16
$1.9 billion Zika yet?
51:20
Where's the money? Small heads
are coming in to do it you watch
51:25
there you go.
51:29
Something's up. Zika is on deck
man.
51:32
As he goes on deck guys are gone
out of there out of control.
51:35
Is there a Zika vaccine? I
should have looked I can't
51:38
believe I didn't do this
already. I should have checked
51:40
to see if
51:40
it apply but yes, I think it was
I think it was one of those Vex
51:47
vector vaccines.
51:49
Okay, Victor, what's the Zika
virus vaccines? It's a DNA based
51:54
vaccine DNA not RNA DNA. Whoa
that's hardcore. Sweet. Yeah,
52:02
you're right DNA based vaccine
developed the the NIA ID Vaccine
52:07
Research Center strategy similar
to their bubble the West Nile
52:11
virus
52:15
Wow mistake though Dena virus
you know thing the way this
52:19
insert something here it's DNA
and that's something when it
52:23
gets in you stopped that far as
I know, I don't know anyone in
52:29
my entire life.
52:30
Well, it's a banana ever had
SICA? You can tell every small
52:34
heads are coming you go tell
everybody to shoot up because
52:36
it's not a problem. Anything
that happens around you anyone
52:39
who has you know, some kind of
mysterious or sudden death. It
52:43
is not your vaccines
52:44
numero uno you may have you may
have accidentally run into what
52:48
what's what's going on? They're
looking for excuses to explain
52:52
all these DS 5060 70% death rate
increases. They're blaming
52:58
anything they can get their
hands on.
53:00
I have one. I think I have one.
How about this
53:03
new study is adding to recent
evidence that some artificial
53:07
sweeteners may not be safe
alternatives to sugar after all
53:11
adults who consume the
equivalent of about two packets
53:14
a day of aspartame, were found
to have an elevated risk of
53:17
stroke. Aspartame is found in
equal NutraSweet and all the
53:21
blue drinks and those of you
similar amounts of sucralose
53:25
found in Splenda. Many sugar
free foods appear to have a
53:29
higher risk of coronary heart
disease boom nailed
53:32
Splenda as well.
53:36
Aspartame which we know is not a
quality product anyway.
53:40
And this is NBC Today show. I
think they're launching this
53:45
because it's an easy it's an
easy one. Yeah, I've heard bad
53:48
things about aspartame shit,
maybe that's causing strokes. I
53:51
just heard about it. Yeah, I
also hear that aspartame can
53:57
create mysterious clots.
53:58
Several embalmers across the
country told the epic times
54:02
they've been observing strange
fibrous clots in corpses they
54:05
work with. They report the
phenomenon started either in
54:09
2020 or 2021. They say the clots
stand out because they're
54:13
exceptionally big at a maximum
as long as a human leg and as
54:18
thick as a pinky finger. The
embalmers also say that clots
54:22
and sorry
54:23
I'm just gonna say this is not
new. This has been going on for
54:27
I don't know almost a year
54:30
they got the videos you don't
see that oh,
54:32
I see. This is what I don't want
to see because I've seen the
54:35
pictures that these guys are
shown no no, this looks like a
54:38
giant tapeworm.
54:39
Yeah, they got jars just filled
up with these these tapeworm
54:43
like cloth things, but they did
give a warning beforehand, since
54:47
but since you're not viewing I
felt I could chop that off thick
54:50
as a pinky finger. The embalmers
also say that clots and corpses
54:55
have become much more common.
One in Ballmer said he finds
54:59
them in 50 to 70% of all corpses
he works with these days up from
55:03
five to 10% prior to the
pandemic, it's not yet known if
55:08
the new clots are caused by
COVID-19 the vaccines or
55:11
something different. However,
many of the embalmers say from
55:14
what they found, it seems like
the clots are connected to the
55:17
vaccine. Some doctors speculate
that the spike protein loosen
55:22
vaccines can cause a string like
structures which the body
55:25
doesn't break down. The clots
found are lacking iron,
55:29
potassium, magnesium and zinc,
which according to experts shows
55:33
that these aren't just normal
postmortem clots. Because normal
55:36
human blood always has those
nutrients.
55:39
I just wanted to play a New Tang
Dynasty clip really? Yeah, I
55:43
was gonna call you out on it.
But what am I supposed to do?
55:46
But but it's not a bad read. It
wasn't a horrible read. It
55:49
wasn't the worst?
55:50
No, but it was it was it was a
second tier second here. I'm
55:55
sorry. So aspartame, which was
first brought on the market in
55:59
1981. Now they're just concluded
after by the way it was
56:04
introduced to the testing for
instant ID 74. got tested for
56:09
what, seven years.
56:11
And it was rejected. And then it
was approved after I finally
56:14
got in but it nights anyway. But
so now
56:17
hold on, hold on, hold on. 40.
Yes. Wait, before you go there.
56:22
Who was the CEO of the company
that made
56:25
we get this? You're one of your
favorite topics? I do try to
56:28
avoid it.
56:28
Why? Why are you trying? I'm
giving it giving people
56:32
information is
56:33
not okay. The reason is, because
the point I'm trying to make is
56:37
it's got nothing to do it
Rumsfeld. The point I'm trying
56:40
to make is that after 41 years
of being on the market known to
56:47
be a problematic product, which
is what you like to talk about,
56:51
I don't like it either. But
after 41 years, now they're
56:54
determining that it's causing
the strokes that are showing up
56:58
out of the blue. Does that make
sense to anyone?
57:03
I will continue my story. I
apologize. I should have waited
57:05
until you finish but I was
already I already knew what you
57:08
were going to say. The
connection is Rumsfeld, who was
57:12
the CEO of the company that
tried to get aspartame approved
57:17
was rejected then he became the
secretary of defense. I would
57:23
say Dick Cheney is about to die
if the aspartame thing is real,
57:28
and they're gonna blame
everything on aspartame, Dick
57:30
Cheney's on his way out because
he was involved in that he was
57:34
involved in all that trickery to
get aspartame approved when they
57:37
got run the into the
administration. So that's why
57:41
maybe after 40 years, or maybe
he just said screw it. I don't
57:44
care. Just go ahead.
57:48
Do for one thing you made an
element elemental elemental
57:53
mistake. Dick Cheney can't be
killed. He's immortal.
57:58
We just unplugging talking. You
haven't seen that battery pack
58:03
he used to be carrying around
memory so I had my heart in this
58:07
box here and he had this
shoulder shoulder strap and it
58:10
was like
58:12
the motor for a battery I don't
know why he's had his heart
58:16
changed out so many times is
ludicrous. He's like, with a
58:20
Tony Stark with that thing in
his chest. He has to replace
58:23
every once in a while. Say
bullshit.
58:28
Hey, you're selling bullshit,
man. Ease back.
58:31
I'm gonna stop it. Alright,
continue with your spiel.
58:37
Oh, well, I think that was my
spiel is that we're just we're
58:40
just here. Here's well we can go
into by the way clots and
58:45
corpses. Hello.
58:47
Hey, I wrote it down.
58:49
I wrote it sounds like Wow,
these guys are good. Good job.
58:58
Easy, let's let's do a climate
change for a moment.
59:04
You know, climate change is the
mind. Well here this this was
59:08
the Ukraine. Ukraine. It's
59:10
okay. I was going to transition
us from COVID to climb it
59:14
up because you liked it. You
liked the alliteration? No,
59:17
because
59:17
that's what that is what the
programming is. The programming
59:21
is to keep you afraid, you know
this? What was
59:25
the thing that giant plagues
pestilence as some is flooding?
59:30
I think we're horsemen.
59:31
I mean, the Four Horsemen there
was something to do it's of the
59:34
apocalypse. You're right. COVID
would be or I'm sorry, climate
59:38
would be next. Okay. Go with
climate.
59:40
Yes. But I truly think that
what's what's happening is we've
59:46
been trained everyone all the
whoever's running whatever. See
59:50
that okay, people trained
enough. They will do everything.
59:54
They will now listen to us. You
know, Portland, this is a note
59:56
from one of our producers. Our
local power company issued a
1:00:01
public safety power shut off
notification under the guise to
1:00:05
prevent wildfires climate
change, of course, we are set to
1:00:08
have strong winds for the next
day and a half. And what they're
1:00:10
doing is turning off the power
in locations where the fire risk
1:00:13
is high. So what's going on and
off and everyone keeps getting
1:00:17
messages, you know, oh, but this
is training. This is actual
1:00:21
training to do, as you're told.
And if you don't know,
1:00:25
obviously, you opted in, and you
will take control of your
1:00:28
thermostat. I mean, this is
definitely all happening. And
1:00:32
then here's Noah Harare. It's
not hiding it. As the World
1:00:37
Economic Forum adviser and a, a
scholar revered around the world
1:00:43
by the elites,
1:00:44
many of the scenarios that I
outlined before the pandemic, I
1:00:49
didn't outline them as a
prophecy. But just as a
1:00:52
possibility, maybe it will
happen. It's not an extremely
1:00:56
deadly virus. It's not the Black
Death, and look what it's doing
1:01:00
to the world. So now just try to
think what will be the
1:01:03
implications of a much bigger
problem like climate change.
1:01:09
Also, conceptually, it shows
that and hear I completely agree
1:01:14
with you Roscoe, that it shows
you that you can change things
1:01:18
on a massive scale. That again,
you can stop on flights, you can
1:01:27
lock down entire countries, you
can actually do that. And life
1:01:33
goes on in some way. And this, I
would say you may make us more
1:01:40
open to radical ideas about how
to deal also with climate
1:01:46
change.
1:01:47
There you go. Training in stage
one complete,
1:01:53
good to go.
1:01:56
And I think that what's
happening in California and how
1:01:59
that's being handled and the
lies and the jacked up
1:02:03
temperature numbers and just
saying this has never happened
1:02:06
1000 years, this is all part of
it.
1:02:09
It's weather whiplash on the
West Coast. Wildfires to flooded
1:02:15
freeways. tropical storm force
winds kicked up rough surf and
1:02:19
downed trees. This is all too
much at once, especially for
1:02:23
this time of year here.
Hurricane que pummeled Mexico's
1:02:28
Baja Peninsula, but turned out
to be friend rather than foe. As
1:02:32
it faded to a tropical storm. It
dropped several inches of rare
1:02:35
September rain on Southern
California, giving firefighters
1:02:39
battling a deadly Blaze east of
Los Angeles the upper hand. But
1:02:45
massive fires in Northern
California and Oregon are still
1:02:48
burning. The explosive mosquito
fire north of Sacramento is now
1:02:53
the largest in the state,
sending a plume of smoke and ash
1:02:56
40,000 feet in the air and
forcing more evacuations
1:03:00
terrified because everything I
have this my home, you know I'm
1:03:04
retired disabled. Everything I
ever worked for is up there.
1:03:09
Everything.
1:03:10
California's historic and
seemingly endless heatwave is
1:03:14
finally coming to an end. After
smashing records and straining
1:03:18
the state's electrical grid.
Many areas endured 10 days of
1:03:22
100 plus degree heat.
1:03:24
Ah straining electrical grid but
you guys made it California. You
1:03:28
did it. The grid didn't go down
go pat yourself on the back.
1:03:36
Best clip on climate change for
today and then I'm done with
1:03:39
climate change is piers Corbyn
tell me you've seen this? Piers
1:03:45
Corbin the brother of Jeremy
Corbyn
1:03:48
the No I'm sure I haven't seen
it. I would remember Pierce
1:03:52
Corbin.
1:03:53
So Jeremy Corbyn was it does he
run the Labour Party still is
1:03:56
that well,
1:03:56
no, no, he
1:03:57
was. He was mayor. He was what
was he was
1:04:01
now he was never Mayor of
London. Boris in this in this
1:04:04
Arab guy was May or May. Care of
guy Barbie was just a socialist.
1:04:09
That was the top of the labor
for a long time. And now as far
1:04:11
as I know, he's not he may still
be an Emmy Prime member of
1:04:16
parliament, but I don't know.
1:04:18
Well, his brother piers Corbin
Pierce is a astrophysicist and
1:04:23
he goes on RT. And this is
clearly the RT guys sets him up.
1:04:27
And it is just a little funny
banter. But it's great to hear
1:04:30
this alternative view as to why
we are witnessing this. This
1:04:35
these this horrible climate
change
1:04:37
Russia's deadly wildfires. The
smog fill cities and poor
1:04:40
harvests are being seen by some
environmentalists as signs of
1:04:44
climate change. Let's now cross
live to London to discuss this
1:04:47
with Piers Corbin. He's an
astrophysicist and also founder
1:04:50
of weather action. Good to have
you thanks very much indeed for
1:04:53
joining us live there in London.
So what we're seeing here is a
1:04:55
drastic change in climate,
aren't we?
1:04:58
Well, climate is always been
changing. But this has nothing
1:05:01
to do with ma'am. In fact, we
predicted that there would be
1:05:05
extreme heat in East Europe and
Russia this summer. And it's
1:05:10
caused by a certain circulation
pattern. co2 does not cause
1:05:14
circulation patterns, what
causes those is combination of
1:05:18
solar activity and the state of
the phases of the moon.
1:05:24
Excuse me just a minute you say
this isn't caused by man, how
1:05:26
come the reporting this heat
wave is recognized as the worst
1:05:28
of the 1000 years of recorded
history in Russia, and man has
1:05:33
got something to do with this
has
1:05:36
nothing to do with the only
connection is man is here at the
1:05:39
same time as the sun and the
moon are doing things. You see a
1:05:42
very similar situation happened
about 132 years ago, where there
1:05:46
was the same sun, lunar magnetic
state, there was heat waves in
1:05:53
Russia. And there also floods in
Pakistan, as now. And in the
1:05:57
previous few years, there was
also floods in the English
1:06:00
summers, also 132 years ago. So
these things are dictated by
1:06:07
solar activity in the moon,
nothing to do with mankind and
1:06:10
those who say that they're just
trying to make money.
1:06:14
Are we not going to see this
again? Next year, the year on? I
1:06:17
mean, it's only Well, it's quite
recent.
1:06:18
That's a very interesting
question. These things do come
1:06:21
in bursts. And we're working on
that very question those
1:06:25
forecasts, we did say there
would be a series of wet summers
1:06:29
in England, for example, which
we had. Now, will there be a
1:06:33
series of these very hot, hot
summers in Russia? We don't
1:06:37
know. We have to work on that.
But I assure you, it's nothing
1:06:40
to do with carbon dioxide. And
if you stop stop driving around
1:06:44
Moscow, it won't affect next
summer one.
1:06:48
Well, how come then so many
climate change scientists
1:06:51
disagree with you and they get
so much? Well, they say they're
1:06:55
on
1:06:55
a gravy train for heaven's sake.
1:06:59
No, I did not see this and I
wish I had.
1:07:02
But isn't that fantastic?
1:07:04
It's great. Yeah, well, you
know, it's what it is.
1:07:07
Yeah. Now, he's an
astrophysicist. So I fully
1:07:11
expected Neil deGrasse Tyson to
come out
1:07:13
and he doesn't debate him about
climate, you know, he's
1:07:18
that guy's full of crap. Well, I
dropped my mic, and my mic
1:07:22
dropper, I am clearly right. And
then my favorite this came from
1:07:27
my buddy Dave Jones works at a
accounting firm. So as part of
1:07:36
the which was it was at the the
inflation Reduction Act. One of
1:07:42
the one of the things was the
reintroduction of the seven and
1:07:45
a half $1,000 credit towards
purchasing an electric vehicle,
1:07:49
which everyone kind of loved
that was that was that was a
1:07:52
big, big incentive for Tesla
early on. Even in Europe. In the
1:07:57
Netherlands, they were given a
5000 Euro tax credit if you just
1:08:00
bought a Tesla so it was all and
that was all subsidized. And so
1:08:07
two things happened you know, so
this was like I was like, Oh,
1:08:10
the seven half 1000 is and again
this is great. And on the same
1:08:14
day we saw Tesla and GM and I
think a couple others within a
1:08:19
few days of each other everybody
pretty much raised their price
1:08:23
by about $7,000
1:08:26
But this is the this is the
tuition effect
1:08:29
but here's the kicker you may
only deduct this money if the
1:08:38
vehicle I'll just give you the
for the three points. This for
1:08:43
year 2023 The credit you can
receive the credit if the
1:08:46
vehicle the vehicle must be
manufactured in North America
1:08:49
and powered by batteries with
materials sourced in either the
1:08:54
United States or from free trade
partners and the price must be
1:08:59
be below $55,000 for a sedan and
$80,000 for a van truck or SUV.
1:09:06
Good luck. Which one is that? No
one has all that. Unless Unless
1:09:14
there's one specific vehicle
actually
1:09:16
yes, the Ford F 150. Qualified
1:09:19
No, it has to be under 80,000
before know that
1:09:22
if the F 150. Electric is under
80,000
1:09:27
Well, they just raise the price.
1:09:29
Well, I know that they did bump
it above 80 They actually
1:09:33
started off at around 40 was
dirt cheap. They're giving it
1:09:36
away.
1:09:36
Let me see what it cost now.
1:09:39
I write 40
1:09:43
Does that include the battery?
Yeah. Really long. Oh,
1:09:48
that's a good question. I can't
say for sure. But I
1:09:51
get a really long extension
cord. Okay, well then. Okay,
1:09:55
then I guess you're good to go
but are the batteries in
1:09:59
material Real sourced in the US
from free trade partners and has
1:10:03
it all been manufactured in
North America? Probably that
1:10:06
yeah, I guess. I would hope it
seems like this is not going to
1:10:11
be easy
1:10:13
motion maybe it's just designed
for the Ford F 150. Oh that's
1:10:16
possible. I mean a lot of these
laws are just like you put start
1:10:20
breaking the law down it turns
out did some work one guy who
1:10:23
was a lobbyist pull it off he
has like one's getting the high
1:10:27
fives back in Detroit one
1:10:28
for one particular model is
exactly in the sweet spot you're
1:10:32
probably you're probably right
to what you do sick or these
1:10:35
people Yeah, yes sick this sick
I tell you that we might as well
1:10:40
just wrap it up with the the
meeting that took place Friday.
1:10:45
Based upon Queen Ursula is five
point strategy of taking money
1:10:51
from renewable companies and
requiring a solidarity
1:10:58
contribution from oil companies
to pay for everybody's expensive
1:11:02
energy. This had to be mulled
over since there was a proposal,
1:11:07
I'd say things look good
1:11:09
face for the need to keep
electricity prices under
1:11:11
control. Europeans opening the
doors to imposing a levy on the
1:11:15
extra revenues of energy
companies. It's the idea that
1:11:18
got the most consensus during an
extraordinary meeting of EU
1:11:21
energy ministers in Brussels
Friday, levy could apply to
1:11:24
companies with lower production
costs like renewables, but also
1:11:27
for some fossil fuel companies,
which will be required to pay a
1:11:30
solidarity contribution. The
idea is to use the extra money
1:11:34
to help the most vulnerable
citizens and companies. We need
1:11:37
to make sure
1:11:39
that we will not let down our
citizens and businesses. When
1:11:45
putting started his energy war
energy war, he is expected to
1:11:49
divide us and damage our
democratic societies and
1:11:53
economies. He did and will not
succeed.
1:11:57
He did and
1:11:58
will not succeed. Controversy
swirled in Brussels on Friday,
1:12:02
though around the idea of
putting a price cap on gas
1:12:05
imports. Italy wants to apply
once all incoming gas saying the
1:12:09
15 countries support the idea.
But the majority, including the
1:12:13
European Commission prefer to
apply a cap only to Russian
1:12:16
pipeline gas
1:12:17
next question.
1:12:18
They have to take care that we
will not jeopardize our security
1:12:22
supply situation the LNG market
is a global market. We are not
1:12:27
amongst the peak, three biggest
LNG importing regions or
1:12:31
countries and there is a very
strong competition at LNG market
1:12:36
and and right now it is
important that we can replace
1:12:39
the decrease in Russian volumes
with alternative suppliers.
1:12:44
One thing all member states did
agree on though was the need to
1:12:46
reduce electricity demand in a
coordinated manner. But it's
1:12:50
still not clear if this will be
done on a compulsory or a
1:12:54
voluntary basis. The European
Commission will present a new
1:12:57
legislative proposal on the
matter next week
1:13:00
it's already written seems like
the the cap on Russian gas is
1:13:07
the problem everybody sees that
won't work or maybe they're
1:13:11
afraid just seems like this is
not not not got not going away
1:13:17
and not going in a good
direction for
1:13:19
Europe was not going the way
they wanted I do have one
1:13:23
Ukraine Eclipse this is kind of
a side note and it's a Russians
1:13:29
have left the I've been reading
a lot of these Russian guys who
1:13:34
are kind of pro I think they're
pro Russian and eight of these
1:13:38
newsletters that guy kept keep
up with it to try to get a
1:13:41
little balance and they say the
Russians have abandoned car
1:13:45
cough before the Ukrainians
waltzed in and said they took it
1:13:49
over you know and there's
brushes are refocusing their
1:13:52
efforts someplace I'm glad
something fishy about
1:13:54
blood Glad you're looking at
this because I saw kind of the
1:13:57
headlines and I'm glad that you
got into it headlines are like
1:14:01
oh no you know it's like Ukraine
they they won something like
1:14:04
it's kind of positioned hey it's
doing what it's a they the
1:14:07
Russians retreating over here
the pulling back is kind of
1:14:10
positioned as victory
1:14:13
well in fact is according to
these guys and NBA more neutral
1:14:18
people. The Russians just
abandon that this particular
1:14:21
area and the Ukrainians keep
going in there and there's no
1:14:24
Russians around and and they
wonder what the hell so the
1:14:29
next shooting in the air say man
just shoot something because
1:14:32
this looks weird. Fire questions
Ukrainians
1:14:36
are also rounding up anyone who
remotely cooperated with the
1:14:39
Russians and shooting them
they're pretty brutal. Oh, cool.
1:14:43
So besides that, this is what
this report has to say.
1:14:47
Ukrainian forces it broke
through Russia's front lines in
1:14:50
the eastern part of that country
retaking strategic towns and
1:14:53
territory in a surprise counter
offensive that began just days
1:14:56
ago. NPR is elicited when he
reports from new produce Raim
1:15:00
Ukrainian officials claimed to
have recaptured some 270 square
1:15:04
miles and say their forces have
made it to the towns of zoom,
1:15:07
Bala Clea and kupi Omsk, all of
which have been controlled by
1:15:11
Russian forces for months, and
is neatly addressed Friday
1:15:14
Ukrainian president Volodymyr
Zelensky claimed that more than
1:15:17
30 settlements in Harkey region
have been liberated so far.
1:15:21
Russia's Ministry of Defense and
the Kremlin have not officially
1:15:24
acknowledged the counter
offensive, but Defense Ministry
1:15:27
spokesman Igor Konashenkov
confirmed that Moscow's forces
1:15:30
withdrew from Bala Clea and zoom
saying no, this isn't possible
1:15:36
Russian troops needed to quote
regroup in order to scale up
1:15:40
efforts in the don't ask
direction.
1:15:44
Yeah. And that's where we stand.
The Russians are surrounding
1:15:49
those areas that they've been
trying to use to claim they were
1:15:52
independent, and there may be
shaking out to what was intended
1:15:58
to begin with, which is to grab
a couple of chunks at the border
1:16:02
on the east, and then keep a
pipe a lie of supply line to
1:16:07
Crimea.
1:16:08
I think there's been there's a
problem. And we have competing
1:16:12
factions, we have a
pharmaceutical industry pushing
1:16:17
real hard for the new vaccines.
And what that mean is, of
1:16:21
course, they, the promise is
they will remain free. And I'm
1:16:24
sure the polio vaccine is going
to be free and the
1:16:26
reintroduction of the Zika
vaccine. And the monkey pox is
1:16:30
all free. And you know, that's
not free. Of course, we're
1:16:32
paying for it. And so, who
knows, maybe Pharma has people
1:16:36
over a barrel like you better
keep this going, or else you
1:16:39
know, we'll drop a dime. So then
we have the military industrial
1:16:43
complex. And I think they're
also kind of running out of
1:16:46
steam and with these packages in
this billion dollars a month and
1:16:51
they've got to kind of let
everyone know that even though
1:16:54
we don't have the headlines the
way we had a month or two ago.
1:16:59
So the National Defense
industrial association which why
1:17:02
don't they just call it the
military industrial complex
1:17:05
Association GS National Defense
industrial Association,
1:17:09
September 21. They will be
hosting the their annual Future
1:17:14
Force capabilities Conference
and Expo in Austin, Texas
1:17:17
fitting in confirmed Oh, you're
gonna go you're gonna go.
1:17:22
Confirmed keynote speaker is
Volodymyr Zelensky, the
1:17:26
President of Ukraine.
1:17:27
Now he's coming in on video,
1:17:29
but he's gonna do a pitch. He's
putting his pitch live on
1:17:33
more money to the different
stuff defense. We've been moving
1:17:36
your goods we've been money
laundering your stuff, getting
1:17:39
rid of your old stuff and
distributing it down to Africa
1:17:42
and elsewhere. We do. What's the
slow up?
1:17:48
Yeah, where's the rest? mofos
Hurry, hurry up a little bit.
1:17:53
Yeah. It's kind of putting it
out there isn't it though? Isn't
1:17:56
that just
1:17:56
isn't gonna last forever, dudes.
1:17:59
Just put it in your friends.
Thank you for your courage, say
1:18:05
in the morning to you, the man
who put the seeds in the clots
1:18:07
in corpses. Ladies and
gentlemen, please say hello to
1:18:10
my friend on the other end. Mr.
John C. Devorah.
1:18:15
Well, in the morning, you Mr. M.
Karina morning shift to see
1:18:18
boots on the ground or feet near
Shabbos in the water.
1:18:25
And the morning to the trolls
over there the troll room. And
1:18:28
before I count you, I just want
to thank the trolls because I
1:18:31
realized last night I was
thinking about the show and
1:18:35
you're going through stuff in my
head as I'm trying to fall
1:18:37
asleep. Always thinking of you
that always thinking of the
1:18:40
show. And you know, and I always
say at this moment, you know,
1:18:44
trolls, you know, you're
trolling and which which you are
1:18:47
and you're ugly trolls living
under bridges and you stink. But
1:18:51
having the troll room gives me a
lot of energy during the show.
1:18:55
It makes me feel like we're
actually alive that people,
1:18:58
people care about what we're
saying. So thank you very much
1:19:01
for showing up every single
show. Now let's count y'all
1:19:04
There we go. We have 20 202,200
1:19:11
very low.
1:19:12
Is that very low for a Sunday
1:19:14
or Sunday? Yeah. Well, it's nine
Allah we had the same number on
1:19:17
Thursday,
1:19:18
which was a workday. It was it's
911 maybe people are maybe the
1:19:22
help. Maybe they either this
they like oh, these guys aren't
1:19:26
talking about 911 I'm turning it
off. 911 Truth or
1:19:31
Oh, or dad, for me.
1:19:34
They're probably gonna talk
about 911 We'll get bummed out
1:19:35
you know,
1:19:36
I could be That's more like it.
I'll tune
1:19:39
in later when when the
pestilence segment comes up.
1:19:42
That's what I'm that's what I
want. What is the Four Horsemen
1:19:45
of the Apocalypse
1:19:46
was pestilence there's what
starvation was it called?
1:19:51
Famine, Famine, famine,
pestilence. Flooding is the word
1:19:56
for this something of flooding,
climate change. And there's a
1:20:00
fourth thing that the antichrist
Well, I don't know if that's
1:20:04
part of this group, but well
okay, yeah. You take one of
1:20:08
these trolls who you've just
insulted as being stinky. Even
1:20:14
though it is probably true.
Should be coming up with these
1:20:19
four items.
1:20:21
Well, you know what, I will have
this answer. I will study this
1:20:24
for the next show. And I will
explain this so we can keep our
1:20:27
eye on it. It's war, death,
famine, war death. We have it
1:20:34
all.
1:20:34
War War is one of the more death
we have death
1:20:37
famine, pestilence. We got it
all. So we're good to go.
1:20:41
Doesn't the Antichrist show up
now? Or is he already here?
1:20:46
Hey, could it come and gone for
all we know?
1:20:51
All right, so trolls thank you
for being here. Thank you for
1:20:53
taking so long to answer that.
Oh, four horsemen Oprah bugs Amy
1:20:57
and Doug. Okay. Check mark okay.
The trolls are in the troll room
1:21:04
to energize me and you can join
them what's cool about it you
1:21:07
can listen live during the
during the actual recording that
1:21:11
you kind of like a live studio
audience only the you're not a
1:21:15
laugh track. You just the laugh
track in my head. Or you could
1:21:19
join? No agenda social.com. And
we have registration open. We
1:21:25
discussed that on the previous
show. And it is what is it? What
1:21:30
does it join? I forget what it
was. I already forgot what the
1:21:36
what the URL is to join. Here it
is. I got it somewhere. No, I
1:21:41
don't. It was as someone will
tell us. Geez, I'm really
1:21:44
sucking. I think if you go to no
agenda social.com You still have
1:21:49
to pass the quiz. Which is not
that easy as everyone is finding
1:21:54
out but then we have 1000s of
slots available. And it please
1:21:58
use them actively because if you
don't use it for a year, then
1:22:00
you might get purged, you know,
that might be a prime time purge
1:22:03
on you. And when you're in or if
you use any other Mastodon
1:22:07
server, which works just fine,
then you can follow Jhansi
1:22:11
Dvorak had no agenda social.com
or Adam had no agenda social de
1:22:14
com.com and now to thank the
artists for Episode 1484, which
1:22:22
was on Thursday, and the title
of that one was do it for
1:22:26
Ukraine and often in our process
post show we'll get to the art
1:22:39
and I say okay, John, you take
over the art I'm gonna go to the
1:22:43
bathroom, which is only
partially true. I do other
1:22:47
things and sometimes it takes me
longer but then I come back and
1:22:51
you know and and sometimes John
will say well I've got three or
1:22:54
four you're like there's one
great one here I like a lot they
1:22:57
if I recall that's how it went
and this is the one by dirty
1:23:01
Jersey whore and it was the New
World Order falling on the
1:23:05
Wicked Witch of the of the west
or the East is or the queen or
1:23:09
the interpretation was open. And
I thought it was very fitting
1:23:14
for the show and I we even argue
about it I don't think we had
1:23:17
anything else.
1:23:17
It wasn't anything too
competitive this problem
1:23:20
yeah, let me see what a good
people getting
1:23:24
today I want to say hopefully
Paul couture is listening to
1:23:27
today's show so he can take off
and ban it is h 4k character who
1:23:33
has just posted using the ai ai
generator looks like aI
1:23:39
generated crap with no readout
even going through the template
1:23:43
doesn't say no agenda just a
bunch of miscellaneous art
1:23:46
that's not art it's just a whole
page full of this junk and yeah
1:23:54
be should be ousted
1:23:56
I wish to permanently shadow ban
a man
1:23:59
shadow benches ban was shadow
ban I never believed in that
1:24:03
block
1:24:05
you are the you are the block
man let me see what else was
1:24:07
there? Because it was a lot of
Queen stuff. I mean, you really
1:24:12
think what who did this dirty
Jersey horror also to the Q anon
1:24:15
Queen queer and we're not going
to use that we do have some
1:24:20
politeness in us. And then no
agenda with the Taunton Neil did
1:24:25
this the two finger salute which
in the UK is like a middle
1:24:28
finger Yeah, we'll never use
that
1:24:31
no
1:24:33
and in Italy as well and there's
a lot of people are still doing
1:24:38
a lot of small small stuff.
1:24:41
Yeah, they can't read and they
occasionally something comes up
1:24:44
with one of our faces in it
which is always rejected presses
1:24:47
show 300
1:24:48
Yeah, like the queen as a you
know, as a as a dead skull like
1:24:53
no, no. Why would we do that? I
think these people out to
1:24:58
sabotage us, John.
1:25:00
The Queen's dead meat by correct
a record sketch and bologna or
1:25:06
something has a queen's head on
it and it's called Queens dead
1:25:10
meat
1:25:10
totally boring.
1:25:11
Okay, but it's it's a, it's a
it's mildly amusing, but never
1:25:18
to be used. They won't be used
as to you know, I put a piece
1:25:22
on. I've been putting some
pieces on for the newsletter
1:25:26
that I just go back to look at
accepted art from show 500. And
1:25:30
there's no pages of quality
stuff that can be recycled. It's
1:25:34
I remember I started realizing
there's a bunch of lost artists
1:25:38
like Thor and whatever happened
to Thorin Oh, yeah, he was doing
1:25:41
he was counting time. Hmm,
that's it, he just disappeared
1:25:46
off the face. COVID COVID. Now,
clearly, wait pre COVID He
1:25:50
disappeared?
1:25:52
Well, thank you very much dirty
Jersey horror. We do appreciate
1:25:55
what you did. And we will be
using some of these images. If
1:26:00
you're using a legacy app like
Apple or Spotify upgrade with
1:26:04
the podcasting 2.0 app. And you
can see we have chapter images
1:26:08
and links, and Dred Scott
diligently does all the chapter
1:26:11
so put some of these these
whacked out art pieces in there,
1:26:14
which you look down at your
phone, you'll see it right away
1:26:16
as we're talking about it. new
podcast apps.com and let us
1:26:20
thank some of the people that
Jen briny was talking about the
1:26:24
value for value contributors who
support this show support the
1:26:28
work that we do the way and she
said it so eloquently, that it's
1:26:33
while it varies wildly, some
people can't give very much, but
1:26:38
that's a lot to them. Other
people give a lot it maybe not
1:26:40
that much to them. It's It's
whatever value you attribute to
1:26:44
it. And we really appreciate the
time, talent and treasure that
1:26:48
people bring to the show. So our
first executive producer is from
1:26:53
Las Vegas, Nevada. Am I reading
this right? And there's no note
1:26:58
from Paul Helmick.
1:26:59
I have a note.
1:27:00
Thank goodness. Once you read
the note, because this numbers,
1:27:04
is it.
1:27:05
He gave a 5000 which is now
being held in abeyance until I
1:27:09
get his note. To me, was this a
fat finger or one? I sent you a
1:27:15
video? Oh yeah. Of him. That's
him. Yeah. So his note was this.
1:27:24
Use this as you see fit. And
then he sends this Facebook
1:27:28
video of him ranting about this
artist, Paul Duda who should
1:27:33
probably give him to douche bag.
Douche bag him you can do that.
1:27:37
Paul dooda
1:27:40
dooda Okay. Wow. And he's a
grants for 22 minutes plus on
1:27:48
his video, I
1:27:49
saw some of that, and I
couldn't. I couldn't place it
1:27:51
first. And like what is going on
here? Yeah, I
1:27:54
sent it to you for that reason.
Yeah. But I didn't know you
1:27:56
didn't say that. He's I told you
that I tell you on the show. So
1:28:01
he said he says use this as you
see fit. And then he says this
1:28:05
video of him ranting. Then he
says this is me, Paul M him.
1:28:10
Helmick AGL M IC K Sol Sol owner
and CEO of data ready
1:28:15
technology. And he runs his
company. And he says you and
1:28:19
Adam are free to use all the
content as you see fit. And then
1:28:25
he says if you want to
transcribe shorter producer
1:28:28
note, just let me know. So I
sent him a note saying yes, I
1:28:32
would love a shorter and his
wife said love, love a shorter
1:28:34
producer notes something simple.
Push out a few knighthoods or
1:28:38
something plug your company etc.
And then I commented on the
1:28:41
video, which I thought was
inappropriate. And I haven't
1:28:45
heard back. So.
1:28:47
Wow, this is a interesting
story. Well, Paul, so we're
1:28:50
keeping it in abeyance until
we've heard back from him just
1:28:53
to make sure that he's okay.
Yeah, that's a good idea because
1:28:57
that video was pretty pissed off
about some stuff.
1:29:02
Yes, yes. Yes. Yes. Next on the
list is
1:29:06
Benjamin let me let me give him
a double up karma. I mean, if
1:29:09
nothing else, this is
incredible. You got karma
1:29:19
Benjamin Knight is in San
Francisco, California comes with
1:29:22
his for 3850. As a recovering
sociology major, came to his
1:29:28
came to his senses. My res marks
an exit from the proletariat as
1:29:34
I become bourgeoisie for San
Francisco. I am now I am now a
1:29:41
hashtag oppressor in all
conceivable hierarchies of
1:29:46
intersectional Marxism
suffocating and privilege Whoa.
1:29:50
That's what we're doing. Yes,
yes,
1:29:52
I got it.
1:29:53
intersectional Marxism,
suffering and privilege. Great
1:29:57
show. Jingle Pina co lotta why'd
you racist? It's a pig skin
1:30:13
issue around so don't just watch
it.
1:30:29
There you go Secret Agent Paul
one of his better ones.
1:30:32
Yeah, that's a good one been
around for a while too.
1:30:36
Thank you very much. Then we
have woocash woocash in munition
1:30:42
di axon Hello Deutschland
333 333 dot 33 Call me woocash
1:30:48
Thank you for your courage
jingles Adam yelling Corona
1:30:51
Warren app. Vaughn app Oh
Coronavirus app. This is a
1:30:57
German Corona COVID app and
person sounding female saying
1:31:02
no. Okay, do we have a jingle?
Is that what the corona varn
1:31:09
app? I don't think so. I'll
1:31:10
try to remember it. I'll
1:31:11
just do it live.
1:31:13
Vaughn No.
1:31:16
Hey, go. You're welcome to
record it. Tyler Fox de vie
1:31:20
count of the airways in Colorado
Springs, Colorado. 333332 Tyler
1:31:29
Fox Vika, the airways here. I
admit, it meant the world to me
1:31:33
when Adam failed, and tried so
hard to get me an infection
1:31:37
control startup funded during
COVID. Poland.
1:31:40
The word fail is not in that
sentence.
1:31:44
I'm sorry.
1:31:45
Why don't you read that again?
1:31:46
Do she meant the world to me
when Adam tries so? I don't know
1:31:51
why. Believe me, I was just
1:31:53
this is no, this is how you
think of me. This is exactly
1:31:55
this is the problem.
1:31:57
It meant the world to me when
Adam tried hard, so hard to help
1:32:01
me get an infection control
startup funded during COVID.
1:32:07
Well, that's nice of you.
1:32:08
That's why I want to make sure
you run it correctly.
1:32:12
Now I'm asking the no agenda
nation for a help to build a
1:32:16
product I've been working on for
a year. It's way more fun than
1:32:19
the infection control and more
fun is badly needed since lead.
1:32:22
Since fun has taken it to the
head while it's in a jacuzzi
1:32:26
with the cover on over the last
three years. I've invented the
1:32:30
world's first hand hold held
cocktail creator. It's called a
1:32:34
canoe mix. Spelled p n UMAIX. As
in pneumatic or numix. Okay, new
1:32:43
mixer. Go to www P and you
mix.com all one word to check it
1:32:49
out. I am asking you all
cocktail loving, no agenda
1:32:52
listeners which is all of them.
And I pretty much and I've been
1:32:57
told I've heard and I've been to
I've been to enough meetups or
1:33:03
I've been to. I've been to an F
meetups to know that is most of
1:33:10
you. To Hell, I don't know. Some
people write in a kind of a
1:33:15
funny way that I it's impossible
for me to read. To help out a
1:33:18
fellow producer and a pre order
one of these things on Tuesday
1:33:21
the 13th through our Indiegogo
crowdfunding campaign, go to
1:33:25
numix.com/no agenda use a promo
code, no agenda to get yours for
1:33:29
$94 That was 32% discount off of
the MSRP we will donate 10% of
1:33:35
every sale using that code to
the show. Also a service
1:33:39
disabled veteran owned business
Adam, John and the show Adam
1:33:45
John in the show have provided
me unmeasurable value in the
1:33:49
last 12 years. You too are a
light in the darkness. Thank you
1:33:54
and cheers.
1:33:55
This is an excellent product.
This is
1:34:04
okay, so it's this you mix it's
like a thermos flask. And it has
1:34:08
a thin you mix the cocktail I
guess that you put the stuff in
1:34:11
there the cocktail mixes and
then it has a handle and you can
1:34:16
then pour it into a glass now
the video they're showing on the
1:34:19
website is showing people
basically on spring break
1:34:23
squirting the cocktail into
their mouth directly from this
1:34:27
thermos. This looks like a good
product I think people will will
1:34:30
gravitate towards it. The
partiers will love it
1:34:35
sounds like it especially if you
squirt it into your mouth. Yeah
1:34:40
then
1:34:43
party features are open. Sir
Jonathan the the double bladed
1:34:48
paddle paddle is in St. Louis,
Missouri. Also with that
1:34:52
favorite three three executive
producer donation number
1:34:56
requesting emergency health
karma from my soon to be mother
1:34:59
in law. Ah Lin she's 70 threes
Kido echo Oscar Akela aka zero
1:35:06
India hotel Tango sir Jonathan
have the double bladed paddle
1:35:11
well 370 threes to you and see
we'll give her Why is this sorry
1:35:19
I'm failing here all right Lynn
Here you go we're gonna throw go
1:35:21
to make a good you've got karma
1:35:28
sir are Daniels comes up from
colts neck New Jersey 33333 And
1:35:35
he writes ITM gents this gets
you into my fourth knighthood I
1:35:40
remember being on the trading
desk in Jersey City or office on
1:35:43
the water watching the events
across the river unclear who was
1:35:47
coming to us Oh yeah, he's
watching the planes hit the
1:35:51
towers. Look at that. What do
you think and I don't know it
1:35:54
doesn't look good when I look at
that was on fire. Oh look
1:35:57
another jet lost many friends
who I'll never forget to watch
1:36:01
them get signed out of AOL. I am
be sort of surreal thinking
1:36:07
about it. I forgot but AOL I am.
1:36:12
How but just think about that
your colleagues and the end user
1:36:16
they're still logged in and then
it's in poop poop. Nice. It's
1:36:19
all one by one logout. No weird
is that
1:36:24
stay in the building when
there's somebody tell them to
1:36:26
stay in the building. In more
uplifting news, we had a great
1:36:30
meetup today. Yesterday 910 was
seven of us in Toms River at the
1:36:33
Garden State distillery. I'm a
partner there my business we
1:36:40
clearly know my business part.
What do you distill what kind of
1:36:43
stuff you're making spirit My
business partner who's really in
1:36:45
charge of GSD Rick is a douche
bag douche bag that needs to be
1:36:51
called out as such a few folks
at p v are getting punched in
1:36:55
the mouth. Keep up the good work
meet up audio attached yes
1:36:59
I have that have that meet up
report from Toms River. Um next
1:37:04
we have Cheryl Wetzel in from
Mount Laurel New Jersey to from
1:37:08
New Jersey also 333 Dots three
three and I have her notes here.
1:37:14
See in the morning, John and
Adam with this 333 dot 33
1:37:18
donation. I am now Dame Cheryl
cow girl of the Wind River Range
1:37:23
Wyoming. Nice. And I would like
Dingle gin and steak served on a
1:37:29
pitchfork at the no agenda table
please.
1:37:32
And she has a link there's a
Mount Laurel, New Jersey. Well,
1:37:36
it doesn't mean she can't she
can still be the cowgirl of
1:37:39
Wyoming if she wants. Yes. Oh, I
see she's originally from New
1:37:44
Jersey my smokin hot husband
Mike and I escaped the East
1:37:47
Coast in July 2022. Okay, you go
they made it. They're safe.
1:37:53
Unlike our our previous multi
time Knight who's still hanging
1:37:59
out in Toms River on the East
Coast. Our dream of living in
1:38:02
Wyoming fulfilled Oh nice. We
have 10 acres near pine Dale
1:38:06
Wyoming with the animals out
number that people tend to one
1:38:10
our home is a work in progress
and the stables need repair but
1:38:13
we have freedom here and are
strong and on our strong and
1:38:17
happy ranch. Best. Best be
strong and happy.com Oh, that's
1:38:23
the ranch be strong and
happy.com That's a plug for Mike
1:38:26
in his website. Sadly, we had to
leave our no agenda South Jersey
1:38:28
and Philly tried behind. But we
all remain part of the best
1:38:31
podcast in the universe. Love
you Cheryl. And yes, Cheryl will
1:38:36
see it at the roundtable. I got
your your order in Thank you
1:38:39
very much.
1:38:41
Interesting. That's a good move
going to Wyoming. Although it
1:38:45
gets pretty cold in the winter.
As Barito parts and noise in
1:38:51
this suite as Switzerland it
looks like $333 Happy 52nd
1:38:57
birthday to me on 911 And thanks
for the sanity.
1:39:01
Baronet sir Spencer 260 from
Sherwood Sherwood Park all Berta
1:39:06
Canada when I heard that someone
from carseland, Alberta donated
1:39:09
on episode 1483 I decided it was
my cue to contribute again since
1:39:13
I grew up 20 minutes north of
there in Strathmore. Thank you,
1:39:17
gentlemen. Baronet sir Spencer
Sherwood Park Alberta.
1:39:20
Let's action in Alberta, Michael
Hinson Dundee, Michigan 23456
1:39:28
favorite number ITM John and
Adam, could I please get a shot
1:39:31
of healing karma for my dad,
also also a listener to the
1:39:36
show? Thank you both.
1:39:37
And you bet. Absolutely. You've
got
1:39:41
karma.
1:39:45
Jewel nickels. Buxton,
Derbyshire Great Britain. 220.
1:39:49
Associate Executive Producer
ship see my email for
1:39:52
accompanying notes. I did not
see one. I didn't either. All
1:39:57
right. Make sure you wait for
your note Jill. Make sure you
1:40:00
send it via notes at no real.
Net. Yes, send it there and not
1:40:06
a known thing. Yeah. I put a lot
of mistakes people make
1:40:10
and put down Nish do none of
this is on the way show
1:40:13
nation in the subject line. But
if you send it to John and Adam
1:40:17
at no agenda social.com is never
going to get to us. So be
1:40:21
careful.
1:40:24
None of this is on our donation
page. The email address isn't
1:40:28
the fact that you need to put
donation in the subject line.
1:40:31
But but we do have a mission to
say hey, we got to fac we're
1:40:35
working on a FAFSA mission
statement. The mission statement
1:40:39
karma Here Be quiet. You've got
karma. All right. So that's next
1:40:48
AFAC a fact that I'm working
with someone who I've lost track
1:40:52
of Sir 12,000 Miles Matthew
Wilson is now up. And he
1:40:56
finished his off the donations
with the tune of $12.78 and he's
1:41:00
from Uli. You leave Florida I
believe is how you pronounce it.
1:41:05
No jingles no karma, no death
jab from big pharma. Trust the
1:41:09
real CDC people creative aura
consulting CDC. Shout out to the
1:41:15
Adam's Fireside Chat with Texas
slim we need more of these. Not
1:41:19
that John's harrowing health
inspection tales are any less
1:41:22
engaging. But seriously, Adam, I
think there's an emerging market
1:41:25
to get more people exposed to
these kinds of thinkers. Just
1:41:28
some food, ruin a quote or a
thought. Shout out to our new no
1:41:32
agenda inspired youth soccer
team in Chattanooga, the mid
1:41:36
clip kickers mid clip kickers we
get some strange looks when our
1:41:42
team yells i t m at the top of
our lungs in the huddle before
1:41:46
the game
1:41:47
oh no we we need video of this
we need video along
1:41:50
with our mascot DeVore act the
dingo knights are raiding the
1:41:54
sidelines few of us drunken
donors stole him from shore
1:41:58
Chris Wilson's house no jingles
no karma, sir 12,000 Miles
1:42:02
Matthew Wilson.
1:42:05
Somehow I think that's not true.
1:42:08
But I don't think there's a live
Dingo floating around Florida as
1:42:13
they may have them. I just
wonder if they have the math I
1:42:15
loved I want some I would like
some evidence of this. It's a,
1:42:20
I wanna say evidence of the ITM
huddle break. Yeah. 123 rd M.
1:42:26
Thank you to these executive and
Associate Executive producers
1:42:30
for episode 1485. You are what
is keeping our US rolling. And
1:42:35
certainly big appreciation for
people supporting us today. We
1:42:40
will also be thanking people
came in under under $50. Later
1:42:44
above $50. Man, I'm a mess
today. Think I slept too too
1:42:49
solidly. Under these levels.
That's what I was trying to say.
1:42:53
And of course, these credits are
real credits, which work
1:42:56
everywhere. If people care about
credits, and I think most people
1:43:01
do these days, I mean, you can
join the podcast as a bio you
1:43:04
can put in the bio, the podcast
industrial complex is always all
1:43:08
jacked up when they see you've
got credits, got credits to say
1:43:12
you're an executive producer and
as a guaranteed career. And if
1:43:15
you'd like to support the show,
if you'd like to become a
1:43:17
producer learn more. There's a
page for that with the fact
1:43:20
coming vorak.org/and A thank you
once again for bringing all of
1:43:25
your time talent treasures,
Episode 1485 Our
1:43:29
formula is this. We go out for
yet people in the mouth
1:43:50
a few tick tock clips I think we
should play.
1:43:54
You know this is very
fortuitous. I'm very excited
1:43:57
about this because I have some
Tiktok analysis for after you're
1:44:01
done.
1:44:03
First of all, I would do an
admission I'm now looking into
1:44:06
this history of gay I'm sorry,
gay queer, which is supplanted
1:44:11
gay and Lana. And in fact, if
you look at the gay flag
1:44:15
nowadays, it's got that kind of
the transgender flag pushing in
1:44:20
further and further.
1:44:22
Yes, it's pushing or is it
pushing the G and the ELLs out?
1:44:26
It's pushing everything out the
way I see it. And it comes from
1:44:29
the early 90s When a bunch of
professors, the same group of
1:44:33
people that came up with a
critical race there is St. Where
1:44:36
it came from, was critical
theory, the heroic Mark Kusa and
1:44:41
other communist Marxist thinkers
of the 60s. That pushed this
1:44:46
this idea through the
universities back then it kind
1:44:49
of failed and reemerged wasn't,
1:44:52
was the actual it wasn't the
actual term queer it was just
1:44:54
the, the theory of it. They
didn't use the term queer back
1:44:59
then.
1:44:59
Did they? No, nobody used any of
these things back then back then
1:45:02
it was straight up Marxism had
nothing to do with queers or or
1:45:07
race or anything else it's been
rejiggered is that the Marxist
1:45:11
ideas have been rejiggered and
they've put these items in and
1:45:15
technically should be called
critical queer theory.
1:45:19
Is this from the same school as
the Marcuse people.
1:45:22
It's the Marcuse, okay, I got
it. It's the same people only
1:45:26
now they've shipped this look at
it didn't work the first time
1:45:28
we're gonna do it this way. And
the queer things come in. And it
1:45:31
was called, it was never called
critical queer theory, but it's
1:45:34
been it was called queer theory.
And then it'd become became
1:45:38
something else which became
queer studies, Queer Studies has
1:45:42
pushed out when Women's Studies
was the first to go get rid of
1:45:46
women's studies. And then gay
and lesbian studies, which was
1:45:49
part of the curriculum is pretty
much pushed out in favor of
1:45:53
queer studies, which is really
Marxism. And the last one, which
1:45:58
is not completely gone, but
which introduced queer theory
1:46:02
into the academia was gender
studies, which is getting pushed
1:46:08
out by queer studies. So this is
all a long term plot by the
1:46:12
communists, and it began around
1990. And you can start looking
1:46:16
into it. And it's like, kind of
frightening how it snuck in. But
1:46:19
it took that long to get into
the mainstream 1990 to today, 30
1:46:23
years, which is about how long
it takes for these things to
1:46:26
emerge, as Oh, yeah, that's
right. That's right. That's
1:46:29
exactly what's going on. So you
end up with a bunch of, I
1:46:32
wouldn't say lunatics that end
up on tick tock make all kinds
1:46:36
of commentary about the, about
their non binary status, which
1:46:42
seems to be the big thing. And
one of the things that they do
1:46:45
is that a lot of these were
mostly women, non there's men
1:46:48
too, but the non binaries are
the ones that are making the
1:46:52
biggest fuss and are the ones
pushing it into the grammar
1:46:54
schools is how important it is
to tell to teach little kids how
1:46:59
like three or four or five year
olds that you know what gender
1:47:02
is all about. And they have this
interesting I got two clips
1:47:05
here, where a lot of these non
binary women like call
1:47:09
themselves MCS
1:47:11
and I would and I would say
before you continue, that
1:47:14
Project Veritas has been showing
completely unusable for the
1:47:18
show, but have been putting up
video undercoating, hidden
1:47:23
camera video of educators and
the things that they say is is
1:47:27
right in line with this or not,
we're gonna say this When do
1:47:29
this. Someone's that has
conservative views someone's pro
1:47:33
life out not even considered for
1:47:35
anyone's a Catholic out
Catholic. Right out.
1:47:38
Yeah. Yeah.
1:47:40
Let's start with this one mixed
woman. This is the mix. This is
1:47:44
a she's having trouble with her
kids make sure she has called
1:47:47
the right thing. And is it
really issue for her? This is
1:47:50
mixed coach, ma'am.
1:47:53
So one of my students asked me a
question the other day, and I
1:47:56
wanted to get tiktoks opinion on
it. Because like I've done some
1:47:59
Googling and I, I still don't
have a good response for it. So
1:48:04
I work in Texas, right? I didn't
grow up. I grew up way in the
1:48:07
north. But you know how like,
the respectful thing to say to
1:48:10
people is ma'am or sir, right?
My students, all my students
1:48:15
know that I'm non binary. Most
of my students call me MCs, most
1:48:18
of the staff at the schools call
me mix or coach, either one. But
1:48:21
when it comes to that a lot of
people falter when it comes to
1:48:26
because a lot of people will
still say Yes, ma'am. And one of
1:48:28
my students came up to me the
other day and was like, mix,
1:48:31
what do I call you? Because I
don't want to say Yes, ma'am.
1:48:34
Because that feels
disrespectful. But if I just say
1:48:36
yes, that also feels
disrespectful. I don't mind my
1:48:39
cat scratching the corner. But
anyways, my question is, is
1:48:44
there a non binary way to say
that because I didn't grow up
1:48:48
saying stuff like that? That's
not how I
1:48:50
talk? No, you say anyways, which
is great for an educator.
1:48:57
This is a big concern about
stuff like this. There's just
1:49:02
preoccupied with they have to
ask the TIC tock community and I
1:49:05
guess they get some feedback.
Well, here's another one. I got
1:49:07
a kick out of this because I
noticed this before that these
1:49:10
women as your I'm sorry, the
whatever they call it.
1:49:14
Question season, you're doing
the research. So they have to
1:49:18
ask the Tick Tock community.
Does the Tick Tock community
1:49:22
respond with their own videos or
comments or? Yes, what
1:49:26
a lot of comments but the
problem is I'm stealing these
1:49:29
clips. I'm having him pre
screened by libs of tick tock
1:49:33
you're not you're not actually
on tick tock now. That's good.
1:49:36
God, no.
1:49:37
Okay, so I never get off. We'd
have to have it. As it were, so
1:49:42
here we go. Let's go with this
is another person calling
1:49:47
themselves MCS and I think
that's an interesting name. Take
1:49:52
on just because you're non
binary, whatever. You know,
1:49:55
according to the theories here,
it does take another mix with a
1:49:59
kicker
1:50:00
In my last video, I told you how
adults are my problem. And I
1:50:04
have to get them to take me
seriously, which means I have to
1:50:07
consistently remind people to
take me seriously, I have to set
1:50:11
up boundaries. If people do not
use the correct pronouns, the
1:50:17
correct language, the correct
title, the correct name, then
1:50:21
sometimes I am forced to remind
them to, and if they continue to
1:50:27
refuse, and I don't mean by
accident, I mean to actively
1:50:30
refuse, then I get to a point
where I maybe have to cut them
1:50:34
out of my life. Kids, their
brains more elastic than that,
1:50:39
they get it, they don't care.
They're just here for a good
1:50:42
time. And the clear ones, they
see me and they saw me before I
1:50:47
was ready to be seen. So I do
them a service now. And they
1:50:51
call me MCs
1:50:54
How do you do My name is mix.
1:50:59
Now what I didn't like about
this another teacher, what I
1:51:02
didn't like about this clip and
it was disturbed me wasn't all
1:51:05
this pronoun stuff, but about
the kids are malleable. So
1:51:11
they'll go along with the
problem. They don't care because
1:51:14
they're here to have a good
time. Now in my opinion, kids
1:51:18
have a good time maybe at recess
and elsewhere, but in the
1:51:21
classroom, they should be
learning something. Yeah. It's
1:51:24
not but no, no, they're here to
have a good time. Okay, that's
1:51:27
great. Why here's your
kindergarten teacher or she's
1:51:30
down in that grammar school
area. Okay. So here's another
1:51:34
one, this is a and by the way,
that last one was I would say
1:51:38
technically very attractive, and
I can see why people get upset
1:51:41
about the fact that she seems to
be non binary. Now, here's one,
1:51:46
discussing the use of Neo
pronouns and the fact that Neo
1:51:50
pronouns can be opened it
anything you could use the ones
1:51:53
my wife likes to use she it and,
and other anything you want to
1:52:00
make up and this a woman's
showing how you can do that with
1:52:02
something, let's say turning
frog into your Neo pronoun and
1:52:07
how it could be used. She's
going to teach you a lesson on
1:52:10
using new or Neo pronouns. Today
I'm
1:52:13
going to be teaching you how to
use frog frogs pronouns and
1:52:16
sentences so let's go rock frogs
programs that
1:52:19
sounds so costly. What was that
chime?
1:52:22
She has a bell she rings
1:52:25
haha MK Ultra. Today I'm
1:52:26
going to be teaching you how to
use frog frogs pronouns.
1:52:29
That's not is that a bell? That
sounds like one of those god
1:52:32
awful chimes that you have.
1:52:34
I don't know what it is that she
does. It's off camera. She's got
1:52:37
to sing clip to death. very
tightly cut, and she looks like
1:52:41
a real character.
1:52:43
But this is what she would use
in class. Trust me
1:52:46
today I'm gonna be teaching you
how to use frog frogs pronouns
1:52:49
and sentences. So let's go rock
frogs pronouns. That sounds so
1:52:53
cool. And that's because it is
cool because that means that the
1:52:56
person that's using these new
pronouns is saying super curious
1:52:59
about frogs so and wants to know
more about frogs. And I as a
1:53:03
Nanyo pronoun user spec the hell
out of that because that takes
1:53:07
so much courage. I just wanted
to mention that you don't need
1:53:10
my approval. But anyway, frog is
such a great person frog smile
1:53:13
is so contagious. In fact, I saw
a frog make a whole audience
1:53:17
smile. I think frogs should be
very proud of frog. So oh my
1:53:21
goodness, we made it through and
if you need more help on how to
1:53:23
use new pronouns, sentences go
here.
1:53:27
These people need some hardship.
J some real hardship in their
1:53:30
life. This is not okay.
1:53:34
Slapping wood? Maybe Oh no, we
1:53:36
do not advocate violence.
1:53:38
Let's get some violent. So let's
go to queer toy now that this is
1:53:42
offered. This is a different
track here because I got two
1:53:45
more Tic Tac Three more tic
TOCs. But two more that are
1:53:49
relevant, but I'm trying to stay
on the same level of topics. So
1:53:53
let's go to queer talk was
Wendell Perez to Florida. In
1:53:58
January
1:53:59
of 2022. I went to my daughter's
elementary school to deal with a
1:54:03
very sensitive incident. My
daughter attempted suicide by
1:54:08
hanging in one of the school
bathrooms. My wife and I were
1:54:12
told by the school counselor
that it happened because of an
1:54:17
ongoing issue with her gender
identity. We were in shock
1:54:21
because our daughter never
showed any signs of questioning
1:54:25
her biological sex. We were told
that they knew about the gender
1:54:31
issue due to meetings that we're
having with our daughter behind
1:54:36
our backs. We learned that
during these meetings our
1:54:39
daughter, daughter confusion was
affirmed and validated through
1:54:44
the use of fictitious male names
and male pronouns or daughter
1:54:50
was living a double life without
our consent or knowledge. She
1:54:55
was a firm and socially
transition in school. Due to the
1:55:00
nature of the incident, our
daughter was a corrective and
1:55:05
taken away from us with minimal
contact for over a week.
1:55:12
This is Florida. Yes, Lord of
all places this way, Lord, so
1:55:18
she was being she was a danger
to herself and others. That's
1:55:21
that's the Baker Act.
1:55:23
Yes. And so they had a school
they got her to be a boy,
1:55:30
through one of these, I'm sure
one
1:55:32
cerebral prescriber helped her.
1:55:35
And then one of these teachers
one of these non binary
1:55:39
teachers,
1:55:40
Tick Tick Tock teachers tick
tock teachers.
1:55:43
And so she got all screwed up
and tried to kill herself. So
1:55:46
here's this continues with this,
with the second part of the
1:55:49
description, then there's a
kicker until she
1:55:51
was released on their art care.
As a family, we had to pick up
1:55:55
the pieces, clean up the mess
and start a period of painful
1:56:00
healing. However, we decided, as
parents, from the beginning that
1:56:05
we were not going to affirm that
dysphoria. We were not going to
1:56:12
validate the delusion. Contrary
to the recommendation from some
1:56:18
professionals in the field. We
provide it actually, we did
1:56:24
provide unconditional support.
With proper mental health care
1:56:30
and non affirming therapy to our
daughter. Underlying disorders
1:56:36
like depression and anxiety.
Were properly treated. We remove
1:56:42
her from the school environment
and place her in homebound. We
1:56:47
broke her back from her
confusion. She's steadfast,
1:56:53
unsure of her gender, and their
suicidal ideation is gone.
1:57:00
Okay, yeah, so little
homeschooling never hurt. So
1:57:04
that follows up with the third
part of this clip which is just
1:57:07
I didn't understand I didn't
understand the broker back part.
1:57:11
Maybe I shouldn't take that
literal
1:57:15
now it broke you know? It's a
term people use It's okay.
1:57:20
I got it. Kind of harsh but I
got it.
1:57:23
So here we go.
1:57:24
This semester actually, she is
ready to go back to the brick
1:57:28
and mortar school setting
1:57:31
wait what
1:57:34
let's stop that stop that whole
thing what the brick and mortar
1:57:39
school setting is what started
this problem and now we got our
1:57:44
back on track shoe sending back
to school are you kidding me?
1:57:49
Wow
1:57:51
Wow instead of the same school
1:57:54
or I have to Well they didn't
say and they never was explained
1:57:57
but he this was a testimony was
given before some some hearing
1:58:00
in Florida. But you know, I'm
I've got all these clips and
1:58:04
I've been doing this for now a
month or two. And I just don't I
1:58:07
was just dawning on me even
though I did look into the whole
1:58:12
history of the of the change to
queer that flag with and what's
1:58:15
that circle inside the new flag
the newest flag I've seen he's
1:58:18
got a big circle they used to I
don't know yellow is the yellow
1:58:23
part moving in and so as the
transgender part moves out the
1:58:27
gay flag which was artistic and
this is just horrible, I expect
1:58:31
a full report. Well, I'm gonna
figure that all that out but I
1:58:36
am looking at this after all
these steps and all I'm doing is
1:58:40
this part is some massive psyop
1:58:46
interesting you bring that up?
Well, you know Yuri, what was
1:58:51
the guy's name Yuri Bettman
offer the the Russian guy who I
1:58:54
think in the late 80s or 90s
literally said, Oh, no. We're
1:58:58
going after the kids. It takes
1:59:00
you know, a full Russian ex KGB
guy.
1:59:03
Yeah, that guy. I mean, that's
yeah,
1:59:05
we've all seen that. The we
probably have a clip somewhere.
1:59:09
But this seems so much like a
psyop. At this point, especially
1:59:13
with all these doctors that of
all Yes, you. You can maybe back
1:59:16
off from the SIOP idea say, hey,
there's just money to be made
1:59:19
here. And these creepy doctors
and I got a couple more clips is
1:59:23
creepy doctors or
1:59:26
or is it coming from the
reverse? Is it coming from the
1:59:30
creepy doctors first and
whatever they're prescribing?
1:59:36
I'd say oh two,
1:59:37
I'd say there's more people who
would probably be on some form
1:59:40
of SSRIs or some other stuff
that we don't actually know how
1:59:44
it works. Because people have
anxiety. And once you've got
1:59:48
them in that and they never
report on the correlation, but
1:59:51
once you have that, maybe you
can suggest all kinds of things.
1:59:54
Yeah. So SIOP, yeah, it's just
an expanded program. I think
1:59:58
that's, to me, that seems Like
them, it's logical because
2:00:01
there's a lot of evidence for
it.
2:00:04
Let's go to Christy Lenski, this
is the Yale, she's at Yale, and
2:00:09
just a Yale gender department,
they got a whole thing going all
2:00:14
these universities got something
like all in bones, that's the
2:00:16
Yale gender departments. And
there we go with her going on
2:00:20
about this in that,
2:00:21
my clinical psychologist by
training, and I am the director
2:00:26
of the L gender program, which
is an interdisciplinary program.
2:00:31
Working with gender expansive
individuals, three to 25. And
2:00:35
their families, we help
individuals who are questioning
2:00:38
their gender identity or who
identify as transgender or non
2:00:42
binary, we help them with their
gender journey, thinking through
2:00:47
the risks and the benefits of
medical intervention, starting
2:00:52
medical intervention, and also
building supports around them.
2:00:56
And I love what I do. So it's
really, really wonderful to be
2:01:00
working in this field and to be
working with individuals who are
2:01:05
gender diverse, and gaining
their support and helping them
2:01:08
on their gender journeys.
2:01:11
How's your agenda journey?
2:01:13
Gender journey seems to be the
code word. Yeah. It's almost
2:01:17
like it's like if you use that
term, you're, I think you you're
2:01:21
seen as part of the increment.
Yeah, the cognitive senti will
2:01:26
use that. You're no, you're in
the know, you know, what's going
2:01:30
on you St. Gendry. Here's
another one. This is this is a
2:01:33
show that's on tick tock called
the daily Doctor facts. And this
2:01:37
is a woman, a female,
purportedly a doctor. I don't
2:01:42
know, I have no evidence that
she is. The Yale one was
2:01:45
official, so that and when
Yale's in on this, you know, the
2:01:49
country's culture has got
issues. This is bad, bad. But
2:01:55
let me finish this. Anyway,
she's from Minnesota, and she
2:01:59
puts out this daily Dr. Facts,
and this is one of them. We need
2:02:02
to talk about what's happening
in Texas, the governor is trying
2:02:05
to take away vital health care
for transgender kids and
2:02:10
labeling it as child abuse.
Giving gender affirming care to
2:02:15
transgender children, is
medically necessary and supports
2:02:19
their health and well being. You
know, in many states, you can
2:02:22
get certain types of health care
without your parents being there
2:02:25
or ever finding out about it.
It's today's steely Dr. backs to
2:02:30
figure out if you can get care
since rentals, go to your state
2:02:34
health department website and
find the laws related to teen
2:02:38
health consent and
confidentiality.
2:02:41
Man, there's so much money
flowing through this industry,
2:02:44
John, it's just look at all the
NGOs, all the nonprofits,
2:02:48
there's money everywhere for
this.
2:02:53
Where does that money come from?
2:02:55
ESG is corporations who are
propagating this, this is part
2:02:59
of my issue with the podcast
industrial complex, only, you
2:03:02
know, this, oh, you'll be
corporations. We're gonna spend
2:03:07
$200,000 for a six episode
podcast, and we're gonna hire
2:03:11
these bipoc people to produce
it.
2:03:16
Well, this last clip was
annoying because it has a doctor
2:03:20
showing kids how to bypass
parental consent. Yeah, that's
2:03:25
what it was about. It's horrid.
Go to these websites, you'll
2:03:27
find what the law says. And then
many cases, you don't need your
2:03:31
parents. So you can do it
initially. And then the teachers
2:03:34
will help you keep this
information from your parents,
2:03:37
just like pedophiles do keep a
secret between you and me, and
2:03:43
then that the parents don't need
to find out. In fact, it would
2:03:46
be bad if they found out this
sort of thing. And this is
2:03:49
rampant and nobody seems to be
doing Jack about it.
2:03:54
Everyone's afraid. They're
afraid they're if they're, I
2:03:58
mean, look, we had the clip of
the guy and he's, he was in
2:04:01
plastic surgeon. Okay, I can do
this. Once you're over that
2:04:06
society has has convinced these
people they've convinced
2:04:11
themselves that it's okay, this
is all right. This is good. It's
2:04:13
healthcare.
2:04:14
What do you mean genital
mutilation? Well, no, but
2:04:17
if you if you call it
mastectomy, and stuff like that,
2:04:21
but if you call it gender
affirming care. Now, this is why
2:04:27
your gender journey, you mean
the pain and the and the
2:04:32
depression. And Tucker Carlson
has a series about this. I
2:04:36
haven't even had the heart to
watch it
2:04:38
yet. You know, well, it won't be
any better than what we're doing
2:04:41
but
2:04:42
well, what it is is people who
who realize they made a mistake
2:04:46
and all the people
2:04:47
that depths of horrible. I have
no clips of that because it's so
2:04:53
pathetic to listen to them. It's
just terrible. It's terrible.
2:04:57
And in fact, I'm in contact with
those Woman on Twitter who was
2:05:01
was a guy was gonna she tried to
go back and forth and it was
2:05:04
she's, she's, uh, she complains
a lot and makes a fuss about
2:05:08
people who are dipshits. And she
was being attacked, I had to
2:05:14
come to give her some support.
2:05:17
But what did you do you like her
tweet? hearted? Was that was
2:05:23
that your support? Yeah.
2:05:24
So nice. It's nice that you feel
that way, click on her alone.
2:05:32
So, but this is this is a
pathetic situation. And it is at
2:05:38
the highest levels of societies
at Yale. And it is part of its
2:05:43
Marxism and it's a form of
Marxism. They've snuck in
2:05:46
through this back door. It's
absolutely dirigiste to be
2:05:50
honest about it. It's quite
beautiful to what they've
2:05:53
managed to accomplish. It is
stunning. They've done this and
2:05:58
everyone falls in line at the
idiots that don't just say no,
2:06:03
it's not a bad people have
pointed out, hey, just say no,
2:06:06
it's Marxism
2:06:07
plus, because they've got the
cerebral prescribers on board.
2:06:11
That's the problem. We've
drugged the kids up, you know,
2:06:16
because anxieties
2:06:17
started definitely started with
because if this all began in the
2:06:20
90s is a form of brainwashing
propagandizing. It took 30 years
2:06:25
dragging the kids up began
before that, and it left the
2:06:29
kids in a situation where they
can they can be taken advantage
2:06:32
of. Yeah, no doubt about that.
Lexapro the top of my list on
2:06:37
fluence.
2:06:39
Yeah, it's not a coincidence.
That's for sure. These things
2:06:43
don't just happen as a
coincidence. So you can imagine
2:06:46
that a lot of Republicans are
mad at tick tock. And big tech
2:06:52
is starting to warm up to this.
Yeah, yeah, fuck those. I'm
2:06:56
sorry. I'm doing too much of
that thesis. Screw those tick
2:07:00
tock guys. Hey, these guys. No
good, they're controlling our
2:07:03
children. They're very careful
about that. The world the algos,
2:07:07
you know, could not be, well,
you know, they could just be
2:07:10
putting anti American stuff and
control people. And so I don't
2:07:16
like this is interesting, why it
was under we have Silicon Valley
2:07:20
and politics. And it's not just
Republicans now. In fact, the
2:07:26
Kara Swisher is doing her D
Conference, or just how to D
2:07:30
conference this weekend. And
this is a big topic of
2:07:34
discussion. Tick tock. Oh, yeah.
Now everybody agrees spent
2:07:37
trying and trying to try to get
an A A B or even a C.
2:07:43
Gotcha. Sorry, I'm a little
dense. So she says she's
2:07:49
bringing this up with everybody.
Do you think tick tock should be
2:07:51
banned? So she's she's, she's a
real insider in Silicon Valley.
2:07:55
She pretends she's not but she
is. She and a lot of people tell
2:07:58
her stuff. And so is this. I'm
like, What is going on? Are we
2:08:02
really gonna do this is a Trump
thing. Trump wanted to get rid
2:08:06
of tick tock Whoa, no, we can't
do that. And I'm not so sure
2:08:10
it's the spy apparatus. Well, it
is. But it's Oracle. Remember,
2:08:15
Oracle is doing the database.
It's an American company up
2:08:19
front. We know that LexisNexis
is doing the verification of
2:08:23
eyeballs. It's only the
eyeballs. Exactly.
2:08:27
Let me read some headlines for
you that I found. Tick tock is
2:08:32
up ending the music industry and
Spotify may be next. Tick tock
2:08:36
is the new Google for SEO for
some young people. Tick tock
2:08:40
execs suggests Instagram and
Tiktok are eating into Google's
2:08:43
core Product Search and Maps. So
instead of searching on Google
2:08:48
or Google Maps, say Oh, I mean,
Fredericksburg fun restaurant,
2:08:52
and they go look for Tiktok
videos of people experiencing
2:08:55
the restaurant. It is this is a
huge year Amazon ads top
2:09:01
engagement ranking, but tick
tock holds the innovation crown.
2:09:06
And then we get Senate Bill 673
to provide a temporary safe
2:09:11
harbor for others. Those are the
separate, though. We get what's
2:09:15
this guy's name? Open the story
here. Ryan Kavanaugh was this
2:09:22
Mr. President? You have
protected your family by banning
2:09:27
Tiktok for them, but what about
your country? So this there's
2:09:32
all this like patriotic stuff,
2:09:35
and banned Hunter Biden from
Lowen. And lo
2:09:39
and behold, September 8, the
White House posted a readout of
2:09:45
a White House listening session
on tech platform accountability.
2:09:51
Oh, yeah. And here's just the
opening today, the White House
2:09:54
convened a listening session
with experts and practitioners
2:09:57
on the harms that tech platforms
cause and the need for greater
2:10:00
accountability. In the meeting
experts and practitioners
2:10:03
identified concerns in six key
areas competition, privacy,
2:10:08
Youth Mental Health,
misinformation and
2:10:11
disinformation, illegal and
abusive conduct, including
2:10:15
sexual exploitation and
algorithmic discrimination and
2:10:19
lack of transparency. And there
it is. The tech sector is is in
2:10:25
trouble. It's it's really eating
into it. Even the FCC whoa says
2:10:31
the FCC commissioner we have to
take action against tick tock.
2:10:35
They are there eating tic TOCs
lunch. That's why podcast ads
2:10:40
are crap. It's it's not true.
All this money's going to tick
2:10:43
tock read Advertising Age read
Ad Week. Tick tock is where all
2:10:48
the money's going. It's a big
problem. And that huge
2:10:52
problem, they don't need this
aggravation. They should have
2:10:54
gone along with Trump.
2:10:56
So now that Trump was at least
pure about his motivation, now
2:11:00
they're gonna take it down,
they're gonna do everything they
2:11:02
can. And this will be
interesting because the mistakes
2:11:06
can be made. Because you're
you're rising, you're right.
2:11:09
Tiktok are just, they've got
algorithms that just, I mean, if
2:11:12
that's why I was questioned if
you're on tick tock, because if
2:11:15
you're on tick tock, and you
start watching these videos,
2:11:18
yeah, you'll never be able to
tear away from it, because it
2:11:21
will just suck you in. You'll
wake up three, you know, three
2:11:24
hours later, Bagua. I've seen
it. I've seen a grown man. I've
2:11:29
seen this. It's It's It's sad.
So I think this is a big deal.
2:11:37
Now this is the government
working with other corporations
2:11:42
to squeeze a competitor out.
2:11:44
Yeah, it's become a huge
competitor, and they can't deal
2:11:48
with it. I mean, it's not as
though they're not making enough
2:11:51
money. I mean, just look at the
billions and billions of dollars
2:11:55
that these companies bring in.
But they can have something like
2:11:57
this because it's starting to
gain momentum. And they the
2:12:00
problem they all have is they
know that before they came
2:12:04
around, there was somebody
around before them that was
2:12:08
doing the job well, and then
they wiped them out. Right,
2:12:12
which is what happened to every
one of these companies. For
2:12:15
Facebook, it was the remember
the name of that operation
2:12:19
MySpace. So when MySpace and
before MySpace, there was Live
2:12:23
Journal, and before that there
was something else, always geo
2:12:27
cities. But GSEs was kind of a
website operation. But whatever
2:12:31
the case, these things come and
go, except when they get to the
2:12:34
big Big Top, they have to they
want to stay like Microsoft. And
2:12:40
they see something like tick
tock come around is a slightly
2:12:42
different is weird. And it comes
barreling in, and it's like take
2:12:47
starting to get some of the
money that they think that they
2:12:49
deserve. And then they get all
freaky about it. Because they
2:12:53
know it can happen to them.
Yeah, I think they're over
2:12:58
freaked, but it's fine. I think
that's great. No, I like brings
2:13:02
out the worst in Americans. The
worst Americans are on tick tock
2:13:06
making videos. It's an American
2:13:07
company, though. It is an
American Corp. They're using
2:13:10
Chinese technology. All right,
um, I think it's much worse than
2:13:16
than you do. Clear. I think I
think that the money going into
2:13:18
Tiktok is so enormous that they
are freaked and I think they're
2:13:22
rightly freaked because they've
got shitty products. What all of
2:13:27
this is no good you might have,
this is where it has to. This is
2:13:30
the Idiocracy of social
networking. It has to end up
2:13:34
here on Twitter, Instagram,
Facebook reels. It's, it makes
2:13:41
nothing but sense that just like
the movie, Idiocracy eventually
2:13:45
people start, you know, putting
Gatorade on their lawn.
2:13:49
That's electrolytes. That's what
2:13:51
Tiktok is. It makes so much
sense. People are conditioned.
2:13:56
there ready to be sucked into
something and then it happens.
2:13:59
It's Have you seen the family
member or anybody you know,
2:14:04
really into tick tock just
scrolling through it? And oh,
2:14:07
I've seen it.
2:14:08
It's not that I know of. I mean,
they may be doing that. But if
2:14:11
they are, it's like hiding it
2:14:12
from you. Yeah. Like doing like
doing drugs?
2:14:17
Yes. Yeah. Very similar.
Alright, so that's kind of
2:14:22
what's going on. But we have
this issue with the culture
2:14:25
that's taking place that needs
to be addressed in some way and
2:14:28
these idiots at BlackRock and
elsewhere that are pushing these
2:14:31
agendas based on global warming
are ruining it, they're gonna
2:14:35
kill the country.
2:14:37
There was an interesting list.
Since the queen, the Queen was
2:14:42
born and when was the queen
born?
2:14:45
1921 I think
2:14:49
must have been early. So 100
years ago today, I have a list
2:14:54
of things of life. So around the
time
2:14:57
when when he when he has to be
some of the year Elegant afghan.
2:15:00
Yeah.
2:15:03
So 100 years ago today in the
United States, just as a fun
2:15:07
list to run through. So you can
see the difference between life
2:15:11
100 years ago around the time
when the Queen was born and
2:15:13
today. So what is everything I'm
reading is 100 years ago,
2:15:17
average life expectancy for men
was 47 years. fuel for cars was
2:15:23
sold in drugstores. Is that
true?
2:15:26
You'll remember that. I would
2:15:29
hope you don't remember it. Only
14% of homes had a bathtub only
2:15:34
8% had a phone. The maximum
speed limit in most cities was
2:15:38
10 miles an hour. The tallest
structure in the world when he
2:15:42
guessed that one at the time.
100 years ago.
2:15:45
100 years ago is tallest
structure. And she was born in
2:15:49
1926 20 100 years ago, Eiffel
Tower, yes.
2:16:02
The average US worker or the
average US wage in 1922 was 22
2:16:08
cents per hour. Which is
interesting now that $22 per
2:16:13
hour seems to be seems to be the
kind of kind of the norm the
2:16:19
average US worker made between
204 $100 a year. A dentist
2:16:25
earned two well, these, that's
all inflation, so they might as
2:16:27
well just pass those numbers.
But more than 95% of all births
2:16:31
took place at home. 90% of all
doctors had no college
2:16:35
education. Instead, they
attended so called medical
2:16:38
schools. Of course, those were
eventually condemned in the
2:16:43
press. Sugar four cents a pound.
Most women wash their hair once
2:16:50
a month.
2:16:52
The same in Berkeley.
2:16:55
Yeah, but did they use borax and
egg yolks? Pet shampoo? I don't
2:16:59
think so. 100 years ago, Canada
passed a law prohibiting poor
2:17:04
people from entering into their
country. For any reason,
2:17:10
hey, touch any money.
2:17:14
The fallout
2:17:16
five leading causes of death
number five EU stroke. That's
2:17:22
interesting. When did smoking
really start?
2:17:27
Oh, it was in the 1800s
2:17:28
I think but I mean, like really
popular like, like Bernays.
2:17:33
That was Bernays popularized it
with women. I mean, so it was
2:17:37
underway in a big way before
Bernays came along and that he
2:17:40
did that in the 30s. I think
2:17:44
30s Yeah, yeah, suffragettes. So
they were smoking, people are
2:17:47
smoking freedom sticks. Number
four is heart disease number
2:17:51
third cause of death diarrhea.
Oh, sure. Lick that one, didn't
2:17:55
we? Number two tuberculosis? And
number one cause of death? Of
2:18:00
course. 1922. pneumonia and
influenza? Yeah, that would be
2:18:03
right. The American flag had 45
stars. The population of Las
2:18:07
Vegas, Nevada was 30.
2:18:10
There was a time to by day,
2:18:13
not invented yet. Crossword
puzzles, canned beer and ice
2:18:16
tea. Not invented yet Mother's
Day and Father's Day. Yes, we
2:18:23
fix that. Two out of every 10
adults couldn't read or write.
2:18:28
Marijuana, heroin and morphine
were available over the counter
2:18:31
at local drugstores. Back then
pharmacist said heroin clears
2:18:36
the complexion gives buoyancy to
the mind regulates the stomach
2:18:39
bowels, and is a perfect
guardian of health.
2:18:43
Yeah, it was a it was a headache
medicine to did it work as
2:18:46
headache medicine. Yeah. Oh,
yeah.
2:18:50
It's still does that he
remembers 18% of domestic of
2:18:56
households had at least one full
time servant or domestic help.
2:19:00
Also known as slaves.
2:19:01
Yeah, that's that was an
interesting little tidbit there.
2:19:06
18%
2:19:07
and he watched his old movies
from the 20s. He always had the
2:19:10
just regular middle class
families would always have a
2:19:13
maid. God, I wish in fact, there
was a show on television that we
2:19:17
had highlighted the maid it was
one that highlight the nanny,
2:19:20
but there was a show. Yeah.
Hazel Hazel was a maid. And it's
2:19:25
pretty middle class family. She
was the mage.
2:19:29
And the end the Brady Bunch had
a made That's right. Yeah. And,
2:19:37
and of course, there was Benson.
2:19:40
Right? Yeah. These shows are now
yeah. Yeah, these you got the
2:19:45
Simpsons with the y's. What was
it? No, it was no it's a Family
2:19:51
Guy's got that one. itinerant
maid who keeps floating around
2:19:55
No, no. That's not a maid. Okay,
well, them aides are out there.
2:20:01
I wish I had staff.
2:20:04
Yeah. Yeah. Who doesn't it
2:20:06
would be great to have some
staff. So about that, that that
2:20:10
was my list but about that to
$22. Just for fast food minimum
2:20:15
wage in California. Yes. This is
this is this now law.
2:20:19
I don't know what to be honest
about it. I think it might ask
2:20:22
you to get past this. I don't
think there's any doubt about
2:20:24
that. But so this just cut down
on some of the employees the
2:20:27
food will be worse than it is
2:20:29
here. No, no. Here's the note
from Andreas. In the morning,
2:20:34
Adam. You're mentioning how
people in Holland can pay for
2:20:36
things. I used to be a he had a
conversation with a customer,
2:20:40
his customer. As a family that
owns a number of McDonald's
2:20:44
franchises in California. I
asked how the new $22 bill that
2:20:48
Newsom signed into law I guess
this law would change things. He
2:20:52
said they would be closing the
front counter registers, kiosks
2:20:55
and mobile orders only prices
will go up around 20% They're
2:21:00
looking into more automation,
even outsourcing the drive thru
2:21:03
ordering to remote walk workers,
they could pay less. So you
2:21:07
won't even have a person sitting
in the window. No, may I please.
2:21:15
Tabatha so fewer employees
higher freight prices more
2:21:18
automation. Now that's the plan
so there'll be less less people
2:21:25
to work for that $22
2:21:28
So it always goes
2:21:30
why is it really I mean
2:21:32
that's the theory behind all the
Republican ism guys who say Oh
2:21:37
no, no, you don't want to ever
have a minimum wage because then
2:21:40
you know you're gonna cut out
everybody you could get you
2:21:43
know, you're gonna hire a lot of
people low wages at least to get
2:21:46
a start. The way we got it now.
It's just all homeless. You
2:21:49
either work in for 22 bucks or
you're on the street, and then
2:21:53
you never get a job.
2:21:55
Yeah. Quick little. Give us now
trump the the primetime purge.
2:22:01
You got anything. I have two
clips, I think here that maybe
2:22:04
worth listening to. Is that even
in the news anymore? Does anyone
2:22:08
care? Is it all about Trump
about Trump? The raid the RAID
2:22:15
RAID, man the raid, they're
2:22:16
still talking about the raid
now. And again, I think I maybe
2:22:18
have something but where are you
gonna go?
2:22:20
This is about the special master
situation ABC.
2:22:25
The Justice Department is
planning to appeal a judge's
2:22:28
ruling concerning classified
documents seized at former
2:22:31
President Trump's Mar a Lago
home. Prosecutors say the
2:22:34
decision to appoint a so called
a special master to review the
2:22:37
documents and to bar the Justice
Department from accessing the
2:22:40
material would cause irreparable
harm and delay. It's criminal
2:22:43
investigation. Trump's lawyers
have until Monday to respond to
2:22:47
the motion.
2:22:49
So, you know, we still can't
really figure out you know, what
2:22:52
is it that Trump had? Was it?
Excuse me? Was it anything? I
2:22:56
mean, is this all is it all?
political theater,
2:23:01
I got a clip from a guy with
John C span. Actually one of our
2:23:06
producers Senator Ben Brown, his
name is Brad Sherman. He's a
2:23:12
Democrat representative. He's
from California, I think. And
2:23:15
he's talking about Mara Lago is
kind of the theory that we've
2:23:19
bandied about.
2:23:21
I'm just amazed as to why he
took the material and didn't
2:23:26
return it. It's almost as if he
wanted this search to take
2:23:30
place. There is no purpose that
he could not have achieved
2:23:35
either honest if there was any
honest purpose for him to have
2:23:38
those or nefarious that he that
required him he could have
2:23:41
copied those documents. He could
have read them while he was
2:23:44
still in the White House. He
could have returned them in the
2:23:49
first month in Mar Lago he was
almost taunting the Justice
2:23:55
Department and it has worked to
his political advantage and
2:23:58
disadvantage. His grip on the
Republican Party has intensified
2:24:02
as he he really forced this
search on the Justice Department
2:24:07
whether he did so deliberately
because he wanted that sympathy
2:24:11
in the Republican Party, or
whether he kept the documents
2:24:14
because he's just obstinate and
pigheaded and and arrogant.
2:24:19
We'll find out later
2:24:22
yeah, I liked that one the best
that you know, just just the way
2:24:26
it all blew up and it was his
words it was a raid a RAID array
2:24:30
to attack my home high stakes
game though he did get the boost
2:24:36
that he wanted. But did he
because now it just seems like
2:24:44
he's you know, the media is just
taking a different direction. So
2:24:48
I think that's kind of its kind
of dot and maybe this whole the
2:24:51
reason why they were so poised
and so stupid to do this because
2:24:54
it doesn't seem like there's any
smoking gun. I mean, you'd
2:24:59
expect it to popped up by now.
This was on the con law podcast.
2:25:05
And it may be as simple as this,
which makes total sense for for
2:25:11
the Democrats and their and
their Legal Eagles that they
2:25:14
would try something like this.
What is that? What are they
2:25:16
always trying to get people on?
lying to the FBI lied to the
2:25:21
FBI, but also tax cheating. And
that was the other one. Farah
2:25:27
violation. That's what they got
Manafort on because he didn't
2:25:29
register as a foreign agent. And
there's another one and what's
2:25:33
the Espionage Act? Is that
something?
2:25:35
Don't get anyone on that. That's
that's a bullshit one, not just
2:25:38
for the public.
2:25:39
You said bullshit again. I mean,
you really got to tone it down.
2:25:42
Sorry.
2:25:42
I say bullshit a lot. You gotta
tone it down.
2:25:45
But I think the most significant
thing that we found out from the
2:25:48
affidavit is which crimes
exactly the Justice Department
2:25:52
is currently interested in. And
they are serious. So why don't
2:25:56
we talk about that. So there are
three crimes listed. The first
2:25:59
is 18 USC 2071. This
criminalizes the willful theft,
2:26:05
removal or destruction of
government documents. It's kind
2:26:09
of a catch all offense that
punishes the wrongful
2:26:12
destruction of government
records. And it carries with it
2:26:15
a maximum term of three years in
prison. There's an intriguing
2:26:18
part of this destruction of
government records crime that
2:26:22
says if you're convicted of it,
if you're convicted of 2071,
2:26:27
you're barred from holding
public office. So could a 21
2:26:32
Conviction bar Trump from being
president again? Is a question
2:26:36
I'm sorry that no one really has
an answer to, but it says it
2:26:40
does. But there are likely
pretty no questions.
2:26:46
It's unreal. You said bullshit
again.
2:26:49
You know, that's it. There's
between you and me. I asked you
2:26:54
to stop saying shit, which you
were saying every other sentence
2:26:57
down at the beginning of the
show. And you like a pro? Just
2:27:01
stopped with you. I've seen you
do this before. I say you're
2:27:06
you're smacking your lips. Yeah,
you're smacking your lips. Did
2:27:09
no more lip smacking from once
it's done. I know. I know. Yeah.
2:27:13
Now you're telling me hey, I'm
gonna say more.
2:27:18
I'm gonna show my school by
donating to no agenda. Imagine
2:27:21
Oh. Oh, yeah, that'd be fun
2:27:31
then we have a few very few ins
matter of fact, but a few people
2:27:35
think for show 1485 Or is
8585 85 Starting with James just
2:27:43
plain old James went 30 to 46
from death Zell, South Carolina
2:27:48
or Dazzle. A Joseph Gwaltney and
dendron Virginia 100. Dame lady,
2:27:55
get over it. 808 then then she
puts a little note love his
2:28:03
tits. And a kiss. She's a
character, Sir Kevin McLaughlin
2:28:08
to do coluna lover America and
boobs and he comes in with his
2:28:10
808 So we have two today James
Scott and Parlin North New
2:28:14
Jersey. $70. Ryan Tierney and
Steven city Virginia with a
2:28:18
birthday 5765 Paige Holland in
Austin, Texas. Please shout out
2:28:25
my mom page. No, I'm badge
though is this is actually from
2:28:29
Isabella. Okay. Isabel is
shouting out to Paige. Okay. Sir
2:28:33
Kyle of Bertram and the three
donkeys and Bertram Texas 5333.
2:28:39
And then we go to Mike Sisk at
5050. And then we go right to
2:28:44
the $50 donors again a very
short, short show today. David
2:28:49
shringar. in Woodbridge,
Virginia, these are all $50
2:28:52
donors Margaretha Eden hood, in
orange, Vale, California,
2:28:57
Colleen Boland in Ridgewood, New
Jersey, Jason Hutchinson in
2:29:02
Boise, Idaho, and
2:29:04
he needs you've been de deuced
2:29:11
Jim Andrea knockos In Glenville,
Illinois, Jonathan Ferris and
2:29:17
liberal Kansas Gavin MC Goldrick
in San Francisco, California.
2:29:21
He's up there with Phillip Kim
in San Francisco, California,
2:29:25
Greg biotech in Chicago, Richard
Grabowski in Lynchburg, North
2:29:32
Carolina, Christopher Rivera in
Nederland, Colorado, Kenneth
2:29:37
piarco and Pullman Washington
and last on the shortlist of
2:29:40
only 35 Total donors, including
executive producers, Wendy
2:29:45
Abramelin, in Saginaw, Michigan
want to thank these people for
2:29:48
helping us out here on show 1485
as things seem to be slowing
2:29:53
down?
2:29:54
Yeah, dog days of summer, all
kinds of stuff going on in the
2:29:59
world. Uh, we really appreciate
the support that anyone gives to
2:30:03
us always, of course, coming up
on 15 years we have an episode
2:30:09
1500 is like, do we have 1550
More episodes to go to Episode
2:30:14
1500, right?
2:30:16
Like that. Wow, it looks like oh
2:30:19
my goodness, we should celebrate
together on the show separate
2:30:23
locations. Thank you to everyone
who came in under $50. That is a
2:30:28
guaranteed anonymous donation we
will never read below the line.
2:30:31
But there are a lot of people
there who come in with the
2:30:35
sustaining donations we have
quite a number of them. You can
2:30:37
make one up yourself it could be
$5 a month if that's if that's
2:30:41
what you want. You could do a
special coded number we have all
2:30:44
kinds of things available at the
website
2:30:46
for.org/and. A
2:30:49
and for anybody who needs it.
Here's the jobs current
2:30:51
jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs for
jobs.
2:31:07
And our birthday list is also
short today it's like everyone
2:31:09
just kind of shut down you know
Brian Seeley Happy Birthday to
2:31:12
his lovely wife. Her birthday is
today. Luca aspetto 52. Today
2:31:18
Ryan Tierney Happy Birthday to
serve not Jake celebrating on
2:31:22
the 13th and Emily plessinger 33
On September 15. And I'd like to
2:31:28
say happy anniversary to Willow
and Alessandro. And to Tiffany
2:31:33
and Guido both my sisters
married on September 11 And they
2:31:37
never had a fight
congratulations everybody from a
2:31:39
your friends here at the no
agenda show likewise, no title
2:31:48
changes but we do have our Dame
was all by herself which is
2:31:53
cool. Cheryl she go. Cheryl
Wenzel. Do whatever you want. I
2:32:00
mean, of course we have the
other nights of names the
2:32:03
roundtable but it's all you
you're so thank you very much
2:32:06
for your support of the no
agenda show in the amount of
2:32:08
$1,000 or more. Cheryl Wenzel
this gets you to the title of
2:32:13
Dame Cheryl cow girl of the Wind
River Range Wyoming and I'm
2:32:18
proud to pronounce the Kate v as
that. And of course for you we
2:32:22
have hookers and blow maybe you
want rent boys and Chardonnay
2:32:24
but no you actually wanted
drinkable gin and steak served
2:32:29
on a pitchfork along with that
will add some sparkling cider
2:32:33
and escorts ginger ale a gerbil
some breast milk and pablum,
2:32:36
some bong hits and bourbon and
of course the button and meat I
2:32:40
don't know if the mud to me can
compete with that with the steak
2:32:42
served on a pitchfork and please
go to no agenda nation.com/ring
2:32:46
Cheryl Dame show so that we can
get the proper size and I can
2:32:51
get that beautiful signet ring
along with your wax to seal your
2:32:54
important correspondence and
your certificate of
2:32:56
authenticity. And of course
thank you again for supporting
2:33:00
the no agenda show too many the
best podcast in the universe
2:33:04
No one said
2:33:13
that we have one meetup reported
is from Sir our Daniels who of
2:33:16
course hosted the meetup down
there at Toms River New Jersey.
2:33:20
Here we are at the Central
Jersey sleeves meet up in Toms
2:33:24
River New Jersey at the Garden
State distillery This is Sir our
2:33:28
Daniels in the morning. Be brave
do something project veritas.com
2:33:33
very top tip Veritas
tips@protonmail.com We had a few
2:33:38
other folks who were here
earlier they have since
2:33:40
departed. But here is the folks
who will remain yeah we were
2:33:45
five but now we're three so
we'll have to debate this. This
2:33:49
is Sir nobody and in the morning
to everybody and have a good
2:33:53
night.
2:33:54
In the morning John and Adam
This is Rob hope you have a
2:33:56
dynamite September 11 I know the
rest of us are going to
2:34:00
be brave do something we will
never forget.
2:34:06
Thank you. I've always pondered
the question. Should it be
2:34:12
always remember? Instead of
never forget? It just seems so
2:34:17
counterintuitive. No psychology
says if you if you say if you
2:34:24
say not or don't forget, never
forget. Your brain likes to do
2:34:30
the opposite. Am I incorrect in
this thinking? Are you even with
2:34:35
me?
2:34:37
Are you alive? Hello,
2:34:41
John. Hello. What's going on?
2:34:46
John? Sorry, sorry. Sorry.
2:34:49
Were you pooping during the
during the meetup segment?
2:34:53
Well, now as you mentioned it,
2:34:56
I had this whole thing
Nevermind, nevermind. Here is
2:35:03
here's some meetups coming up.
In fact about to start in
2:35:07
Anchorage, Alaska the never
forget we have tiny and Migdal a
2:35:11
meet up in Anchorage. 505
Because we can urban 360 Pizza
2:35:19
albuquerque new mexico underway
sir Jeff toe ache for that
2:35:22
Harlem town 911 That's well
underway and that's in the
2:35:26
Netherlands to work up. Thursday
our next show day the Megillah
2:35:29
shrinkage meet up 4pm At fuel
pizza in Washington DC should be
2:35:34
interesting. The meet meet up
Twin Cities 430 Central. We have
2:35:38
the third Thursday Thursday in
Fort Worth where the Western
2:35:41
simulation begins. Six o'clock
at blu rays in Fort Worth.
2:35:48
Charlotte's Thursday Third
Thursday monthly meet up at
2:35:51
seven Ed's tavern Charlotte,
North Carolina Also on Thursday.
2:35:56
And then we have a whole bunch
coming up this week and I
2:36:02
believe yes, September 17. This
is this is going to drive a
2:36:06
baron Scott nuts. So that's the
next Doc's backyard Sunset
2:36:11
Valley Texas meetups kind of the
Austin meetup. I've got to be in
2:36:14
Georgia on the 17th. So I'm not
going to be able to make this
2:36:17
one again. But there are so many
doing in Georgia. I'm I'm
2:36:22
speaking at the beef initiative
conference. About value for
2:36:28
value. Okay, yeah. And I'm gonna
get us some more free beef free
2:36:33
products and free beef. Yeah.
And this
2:36:35
you know, I'm looking at men to
look out now for the you know,
2:36:38
the, I just had, you know, the
ranch in Texas makes some
2:36:42
terrific product. But can I'm
looking for some sweet breads.
2:36:46
I'm gonna get my sweet you know,
2:36:47
I had a recipe for sweet breads,
we can get world class, okay, so
2:36:51
you can get those for the sweet.
2:36:53
So I'm thinking and I'm gonna
add but I haven't done this
2:36:56
recipe for 20 years plus and I'm
thinking that kids need to have
2:36:59
some sweet resin once in a
while. So I'm gonna get my
2:37:02
figure out what the recipe was
was going to last. And I'm going
2:37:05
to recreate my great sweetbreads
dishes.
2:37:08
We will have fried sweetbreads
on ice coming to you ASAP I'm
2:37:14
sure Texas Slim is already
chopping them
2:37:18
cutting them out
2:37:20
so don't chop them so to speak.
These are just some of the many
2:37:25
meetups that are scheduled all
the way through the end of
2:37:27
October and beyond this is a
great place actually to learn
2:37:32
about stuff like that you know
it's a community there's people
2:37:35
have opinions people and
especially the no agenda
2:37:37
community all different walks of
life you will learn something
2:37:41
guaranteed if you can't find one
near you start one yourself no
2:37:44
agenda meetups.com go hang out
with Tyson day. You won't be
2:37:55
triggered you will be ready say
is like a bar it does not happen
2:38:08
often. does not happen often but
we both have the same ISO
2:38:18
Yeah, the poop I saw boy
2:38:23
you have the poop ISO Yeah, you
2:38:25
have the poop Iso I see you have
in your list. It says poop is
2:38:28
ISO poop it says guy so poop.
Everyone loves poop. Oh, that's
2:38:34
not the same. Interesting.
2:38:36
Alexa, play poop.
2:38:39
We have two different poop
stories.
2:38:42
Wait mine is more appropriate
for the end of show
2:38:45
but where's your boy I have
other ones but Where's where's
2:38:47
your poop story from? But what's
the poop story?
2:38:50
The poop story which includes
that clip you just
2:38:53
played? Yeah. Which story is
that? I want to hear the story
2:38:56
now it's the NPR
2:38:57
poop story because NPR has got
nothing better to do is like
2:39:00
report Real News. So they've
developed a poop story I have
2:39:05
two pieces from it. It went on
for days the provider plate oops
2:39:09
story
2:39:10
that if you tell the smart
speaker to play
2:39:12
poopy diaper
2:39:18
I mean, I laughed hysterically.
That song is called poopy
2:39:22
diaper. It's really like
serious. Musically,
2:39:26
the top of us found that there
are actually a whole bunch of
2:39:29
musicians making poop themed
songs weigh and although there's
2:39:33
no way to prove it, she's pretty
sure she knows who their most
2:39:36
avid listeners are. Children
yelling potty words at Smart
2:39:40
speakers. Everyone loves poop.
Whether they admit it or not.
2:39:44
This is all this is part of
destruction of society. This is
2:39:47
not okay. Everyone loves
2:39:50
so they've figured out that
little kids go up to the stupid
2:39:54
speakers and go up and a thing
or play poop or something in
2:39:58
this place. Yeah, oops, I'm
here. Far too. I know this story
2:40:03
was ridiculous. Here's part two.
Well, Matt
2:40:05
Farley is one of those musicians
who loves poop. He learned that
2:40:09
making songs with nonsensical
lyrics about bodily functions
2:40:13
was a recipe for success. The
more ridiculous the song The
2:40:17
more streams
2:40:18
the poop song was literally me
on the piano singing the word
2:40:22
poop for a minute and
2:40:23
a half. Oh, poop. Poop Poop.
Poop.
2:40:29
Says musicians making poop songs
got a big boost in streams once
2:40:34
more people started buying
Amazon's Alexa smart speaker
2:40:37
90% of their plays was coming
from Amazon music. That's the
2:40:42
clear link this is being driven
by Alexa rather than someone
2:40:46
going into Spotify and typing in
the words poo.
2:40:51
Wow, this is this is fantastic.
native ad. Oh, no. Very
2:40:55
completely native ad and I have
especially Oh, people are buying
2:41:00
Alexa the Amazon smart Speaker
Now they're not lady, native ad.
2:41:05
And here's my problem. We were
promised. Alexa, check the milk,
2:41:12
get some new milk and
automatically have a deposit in
2:41:15
my fridge. instead. Alexa, play
poop.
2:41:21
By the way, I think that this
series even though you object to
2:41:25
it, for good reason, is we have
a lot of young listeners who
2:41:30
will be giggling during this
entire show here with the poop
2:41:33
songs. Yeah. For them,
2:41:38
everyone loves poop. So what's
your other ISO? Oh, this laughs
2:41:43
Hold on. That's the kid laughing
at poop.
2:41:47
No, it's one of the presenters
on NPR.
2:41:53
How about this one? I think I
have a better one. We need
2:41:55
something a little more mature.
2:41:56
Hey, guys, I love the show.
2:42:00
Okay, winner.
2:42:01
I know you'd love it.
2:42:03
When I read that one I'm like
yeah, this is the one this is
2:42:06
the one Yeah, you're right.
Okay,
2:42:08
that's the Dan Dan Carlin
Hardcore History. I think
2:42:13
remember Dan, you remember now
2:42:14
what else you got? I got one
last thing if you want to play
2:42:17
it or you got one one
2:42:19
last thing. Okay, one last thing
once you got
2:42:23
this is the wherever it went.
The knew where to go.
2:42:32
I don't know. I don't know.
You're not Bannon. I got Banyan.
2:42:35
Okay. adorkable
2:42:36
This is the 42nd clip of the new
words and I got to listen in
2:42:40
front of me. And we should
delete discuss the new words for
2:42:43
the Merriam Webster Dictionary
including adorkable which as a
2:42:47
word I've never heard in my
life.
2:42:49
What's in a word, as always,
it's evolving to some that may
2:42:53
be adorkable or endearingly
awkward. Just one of the 370 new
2:42:58
words Merriam Webster is adding
to its dictionary another shrink
2:43:02
Felician when companies charge
the same for less, like maybe
2:43:06
pumpkin spice no longer just
seasonal. The flavor is
2:43:09
enshrined in the dictionary now
to then there's the dumb phone a
2:43:13
mobile device that's lacking
perhaps janky Another edition
2:43:17
meaning of poor quality
2:43:20
janky or Genki? Genki Genki yeah
janky that's been around for a
2:43:26
while we mean I've used that for
quite a while
2:43:29
yeah, I agree well here's a
couple of new other new words
2:43:32
pumpkin spice which isn't a word
that's that's a
2:43:35
veiled bad and who
2:43:37
cares they got got some of these
got on this list here. LARP G
2:43:45
that's been around for a hog hog
let is the warehouses new
2:43:49
hardware maybe hedgehog. gallon
tines day false positive false
2:43:54
negative. How are these new
emergency this is a good one.
2:43:58
This is a new word in a Merriam
Webster it's not a it's a term
2:44:02
not a word, but it's emergency
use Alterus No way No, no idea.
2:44:07
Yeah. And then booster dose.
Have you ever heard this term
2:44:12
booster dose? Ever heard of
this? Who's
2:44:15
those guys these a booster dose
booster dose
2:44:22
Shep variant is another one.
2:44:24
Oh I'm sorry. You have more?
2:44:26
Yes sup very stop. I'm gonna
stop Yeah, we should stop shrink
2:44:30
fish they got a gift economy and
never heard of that either.
2:44:32
Yeah, no, no, no, no, no,
2:44:34
that's that's a sad ass way of
saying value for value. It's not
2:44:38
really the same thing at all.
2:44:39
No, not at all at all. So us. S
U S is meaning suspicious or
2:44:45
suspect. Yes. I was talking
about suss out you know, try
2:44:48
figure out how to change do they
have sketching there to sketch
2:44:51
No, but they gotta eat yet.
Yeah, YEET used to express
2:44:57
surprise, approval or excited
enthusiasm. As them eat, and
2:45:02
then last a good couple more
just out of the 300 is
2:45:06
SpaceForce because, okay, I do
worry. All right. And TerraForm
2:45:12
who TerraForm which goes back to
the 60s. Okay, enough.
2:45:20
I was looking for another end of
show mix clip that I could jam
2:45:24
in here. There was something I
wanted to play that we talked
2:45:27
about earlier was requested and
I played. Oh Zika that's what it
2:45:32
is. Yes.
2:45:33
Deka Zika Zika Yeah, I have all
heads are coming. I got a
2:45:37
longer version of Zika Zika
Zika. Small heads are coming us
2:45:41
right. Along with that we have
end of show from Jesse Coyne
2:45:45
Nelson, who will wrap up the
queen so to speak. And and the
2:45:49
only way that Jesse Coyne Nelson
can, if you know what I mean.
2:45:54
And then we'll play the Zika
Zika Zika, which I can't
2:45:57
remember who did that. I don't
have it listed here. Doesn't
2:46:01
matter because I can tell you on
Thursday, that's going to be
2:46:04
back here. And until then, I'm
coming to you from the heart of
2:46:08
the Texas Hill Country and FEMA
Region number six in the
2:46:12
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry
2:46:14
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where I remain and by the way,
2:46:18
it's not hot right now. I'm
Jhansi Dvorak
2:46:21
coming up next I know agenda
stream.com and troll room dot i
2:46:25
o live the Lotus effect with
Phoenix and phone boy. Oh yeah.
2:46:31
Do not want to miss that. We'll
see on Thursday everybody until
2:46:34
then. Remember us? It's the
borg.org/na Adios mo photos and
2:46:41
such
2:46:48
Oh Zika Oh Zika baby will be
2:46:52
had with a baby with a small
head. They're gonna have
2:46:55
to make a little head you watch
Zika Yes. Where's the $1.9
2:47:02
billion Zika Yeah, where's the
money? Let's have it now. Zika
2:47:09
Yes. Where's the money? Small
hands are coming it do it you
2:47:13
watch the beta King
2:47:32
the genealogy shows that I'm
descended from Vlad Diem. So I
2:47:37
do have a bit of a stake in the
country as it were. The name
2:47:42
what you Today
2:47:53
we came across the letters
between him and Prince Charles
2:47:56
which helps give us an
understanding the relationship
2:47:59
was one with Prince Charles
trusted and respected Jimmy
2:48:02
Savile.
2:48:02
Both kids wanted to go at the
Top of the Pops. But we all knew
2:48:06
what that cigar Munch was up to.
But I'm very very bitter that
2:48:09
the likes of Savile and the rest
of them were allowed to continue
2:48:18
my old astronauts from childhood
to 51 that runs on can you
2:48:22
believe this? Surplus English
white wine converted away from
2:48:26
the cheese process.
2:48:27
There you go. If you didn't
catch that, Prince Charles St.
2:48:30
Martin runs on wine and cheese
2:48:33
pompous privileged payments. No
subpoena
2:48:37
peanuts is cheese. Sorry, cheese
and wine
2:48:49
Prince Charles and Peter Ball A
former Bishop of Gloucester. He
2:48:54
wrote today that he did not know
and could not have known at the
2:48:56
time that ball was a sex
offender.
2:48:59
You know Peter ball had admitted
his guilt he had accepted a
2:49:02
caution which requires clear
admission of guilt.
2:49:06
And do you think someone is well
read as Prince Charles should he
2:49:09
have known that a caution comes
with it and admission of guilt?
2:49:12
You would have thought so?
2:49:21
Yes, a Prince Charles is a
member of the inner magic circle
2:49:23
as well, which not all people
know which is great. So he must
2:49:27
be into magic. So you should be
the opposite thing. How do you
2:49:29
know that? We're actually in the
magic circle? There's a picture
2:49:32
of him in his audition when he
joined obviously is a long time
2:49:35
ago. I think it's way before I
was born.
2:49:38
Born no matter how silly the
idea of having a queen might be
2:49:41
to us. As Americans we must be
gracious and considerate. MoPhO
2:49:55
boruch.org/in Hey guys. My love
the show