Cover for No Agenda Show 1487: Si Senor
September 18th, 2022 • 3h 5m

1487: Si Senor

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swanky Adam curry Jhansi Devorah Sunday September 18 2022 This
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Year Award winning give our nation media assassination
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episode 1487 This is no agenda listening for banjos and
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broadcasting live from the deep south in Bluffton, Georgia in
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the morning, everybody. I'm Adam curry,
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and I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where it's raining. Can
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you believe it? I'm John C. Dvorak. Buzzkill.
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So inspired. It's raining. You say?
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It was a big deal for here.
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Oh, you needed rain? That's right. I forgot about that.
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You kidding who needed rain hasn't rained here for five
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years.
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man Okay, well, that's good. Yeah, when
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you're driving down the freeway, you got to worry about hitting
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one of those skulls of a dead cow.
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You know, I've been hearing accents similar to that although
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not quite as phony for the
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lack of me a man I can talk anywhere I want I can talk phony
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or not phony. Your accent Georgia accent with Georgia
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accents. very distinctive. It's very genteel compared to some of
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the screeching accents from the northern part. Yes. Parts of the
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South. Yes. Including the Texas accent, which is really bad one
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you're really
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nailing it today. You just give one after another. Killing it.
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Yeah. I'll be here all the week. Yeah.
1:29
No, I'm actually in Bluffton, Georgia
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bluffs Dan, have you ever heard of it? That's got barbecue.
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Okay, so you definitely have not heard of Bluffton. Bluffton.
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It's maybe like 200 People live here which 180 work and live on.
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On the white oak pastures. Yeah, yeah, that was due to barbecue.
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Because the ones do the barbecue. Exactly. Little travel
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report. Since I did have to fly to Atlanta and then drive down
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for three hours. Well, fun. Yeah, actually hadn't flown out
2:07
of San Antonio in a while. Man, those guys are so badass. They
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are so tired of everything TSH, like move through, move through.
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They're not even screening half the people.
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I'm not kidding. Just sick of it. Yeah,
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they are showing me your driver's license, move through,
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move through. And so that's all good. Flight on time. Perfect
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landed on time.
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But that would be a little different than Austin. Oh,
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job, please. Get your stop off in Austin. It's also San Antonio
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is a very small airport. I think that's maybe eight gates total.
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Like the old Austin airport, which was a better one. Yeah,
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good times.
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So I hadn't rented a car in a long time. Like, years and years
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that I haven't rented a car to drive in. And it was just
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completely traveling
2:55
now. And again, you must rent a car, then? No,
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no, there's no need to wait when I go to the Netherlands or? No,
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absolutely. Not so much. But I realized that like, I haven't
3:05
rented a car in a long time. And of course, you know, we all know
3:08
that. Oh, you need a million dollars liability. If you kill
3:10
someone. I've been through all that. And what would you
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recommend if they try to push that on you, John? I have
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insurance. Yes, no. But if you kill somebody, they're gonna sue
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you. They're really relentless. You know,
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I've gotten into to I hate to say it, but I've gotten into two
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wrecks.
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Good. So we have boots on the ground. Did you were you screwed
3:31
because you didn't take the extra insurance?
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I'll give you the C 20. Maybe three actually was three. I've
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had three wrecks. And I've never I don't wreck my cars. And I
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haven't been in an accident for 30 years. But when I read cars,
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I think well, because it's a new vehicle and more careless and I
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don't know what it is. But I'm not yours about
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it's not yours.
3:59
It's not mine. So I wrecked it. So I wrecked one in Hawaii. And
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they give you the circumstance if you want to. Yeah, no.
4:08
Are you kidding me? There's I have heard almost all your
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stories. This is completely new to me.
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So I'm in a minivan with the kids and family. We're all in
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this minivan. And this this line. I'm in the left turn lane,
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and there's some idiot at the top and there's like six cars
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backed up and up ended let the lights on and this guy just
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won't move. He just won't move and I'm not talking about for a
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minute or two. I have one Honda and Honda and Honda and
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nothing's happening. So I say hell with it. I'm pulling out I
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go into the opposite lane and goes going screaming up the side
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to get to make the left and then the idiot comes down. hits me in
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the side. A classic, classic, classic. So I turned the car in
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half and I didn't notice that
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this whole side of the cars just smashed up And that's less ever
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heard of it. Ha. Last time ever heard of it?
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Well 35 years ago insurance scams have changed a bit.
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Yeah it wasn't that long ago but whatever the case was a here's
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another my favorite one. So I'm in Arizona this one i This one I
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probably could have done differently but I'm in Arizona
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and so I'm driving down at some speed or other and I'm I don't
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know I reached for my phone or something just another reason to
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carry phone around and I look up and there's some idiot chick
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dad ignore the guy looking fumbling for his phone but not
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looking
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Yeah, I got scammed. I rear ended so it's my it was my fault
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there's no doubt about that. But what is she doing stop dead just
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stopped dead in the middle of the road those people yeah
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horrible so she stopped dead so I so I'm in this Nissan and
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which has always made me wonder about whether these things are
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any good because if I know for a fact if I was in any of my if
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Lexus any Lexus any Toyota for matavai fight to hit the brakes
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I would have stopped no I hit the brakes. I had time to stop
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because I've seen these benefits situation right what was now
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your car did not stop it just slid right into the high speeds
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and banged into it and took and lift it up to the hood of the
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car and shoved it toward the window. What kind of car was
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this? It was a Nissan was a Nissan
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Lexus Toyota yes Nissan No,
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that's the way I see it is because this thing he couldn't
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stop it at all it just couldn't stop boom. And so then to think
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that's the thing slides up in the front end is ruined and the
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bear bag never went off it should have says it wrecked a
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car. Everybody didn't go up. All right. So I go up we change
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information. girl she drops
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you drop the car off and you say man, I didn't notice that right?
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So okay, when we change the information I pushed down to
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hood so it's still like it's fine. I can drive around a
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little bit of straightaway Yes. And I had to drop the car off so
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I dropped a car off like that and there's last I heard of it
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man that's unbelievable. Well I wasn't glad I
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did the I did hear from the police because I got a for
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hitting this woman in it and that was had to be that had to
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be resolved by insurance but that was just to fix her car.
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No, that didn't happen Wow. I doubt that I think it is a
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complete scam that I've never signed those little extras to
7:57
seems like a joke
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so now they add I was just looking at the cars I know what
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I what I booked it for I know that you're gonna have 10 or 12%
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sales tax I got that but listen to this stuff they put in now
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which is baked in which is not negotiable concession recovery
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fee which is a check it out. Is is the rental car company they
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they charge you to recoup the amount the airport charges to
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offer the services they're 11% 11% so now I'm already well
8:29
over 20 vehicle license recovery fee so I'm paying for the for
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temporarily renting the license to this car tire and battery
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recovery Oh my the tack on a percent for the disposal of
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tires and batteries. I mean come on this is such a scam
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it's unbelievable.
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Yes and add bit takes a car that's maybe $35 a day and jacks
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up to 60
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Oh, easily easily. Anyway so to like almost three hours down to
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Bluffton, Georgia. This is a ranch third generation run by
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will Harris and the Harris family and again the 180 people
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who live and work here and I really didn't know much about
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this in fact in you know I said to Tina, you want to come along
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and and go to this this beef initiative thing she's like no
9:29
like me, I guess you thought Yeah, Adam and Slim is going to
9:32
be you have people sleeping in tents or log cabins like now I'm
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going to skip this one. This place is outrageous. It's white
9:42
oak pastures and they you can come here and visit I think
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they've 10 homes. But this is as I said third generation for the
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past 20 years has been complete regenerative. And I wouldn't
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have known much about will Harris. He's very famous in the
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ranching world, but he was just recently invited to Go on Joe
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Rogan, which is coming up after Russell Brand. Did this complete
10:04
takedown to Fox Business News and Stuart Varney who were
10:08
trying to interview will about Bill Gates, you know, Bill
10:12
Gates. So the idea was Bill Gates, the largest farm owner.
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Let's get this. Let's get this guy from the south kind of
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talking like you were, let's get them on to say, Yeah, Bill Gates
10:22
to the devil. And that went completely.
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What was that? Go on?
10:29
And that went completely you want to hear a little bit of it.
10:31
I mean, it's just, it's like a long piece. But you can hear
10:33
Russell Brand and you can see exactly why this guy's so
10:36
interesting. And why Joe Rogan invited want to hear sure
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you have objections to gates owning this land. One of your
10:45
objections is you say, they don't know how to use it. How do
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you know? That's
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good, good question. Then. We'll wait.
10:56
Firstly, courteous and acknowledging the question. Hold
10:59
on a bit. Will Harris Why don't you conform to
11:01
my stereotypes?
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every word I said about Bill Gates acquisition farm land, and
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I stand by it today. I'm wholly apologetic. But the same time I
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do regret that my comments were construed as criticism of gates,
11:19
personally.
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As the world's best diplomat,
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brilliant, isn't it that we have to continually challenge our
11:27
preconceptions. Immediately. I was a farmer from the deep south
11:30
gonna be on the news. All my prejudices come rolling in. But
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it turns out he's some sort of Trump skin linguist culturally
11:39
critically adept genius of macro,
11:42
Susan lists his brand of misapplied technology,
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it reminds you that you get the idea. The guys, of course, very
11:48
smart works with PhDs here on the farm. They really know what
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they're doing. And you know, but that's not the message that
11:57
Varney wanted to hear. So that went viral, and people really
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loved it was great takedown. So now I know who the guy is. And
12:03
there was this beef initiative conference. You know, Texas Lu,
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the guy who sent you the Flintstone ribeye, the Tomahawk,
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yeah. And so the idea is to, you know, for ranchers to learn
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about how they can ranchers don't sell directly to
12:18
consumers. It's all you know, it's all through the main four
12:21
processors, you know, this is completely they don't understand
12:24
how to sell online. And so that's kind of the bringing it
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together. So long story short, about 100, little over 100
12:31
people, ranchers, Bitcoiners, anarchists, but a lot of
12:33
doctors, lawyers, insurance experts, homeschoolers, of
12:37
course, podcasters, more than 60% listened to no agenda. I was
12:41
kind of blown away by that because this was not a no agenda
12:43
meet up.
12:46
And just a couple of quick things I learned from the
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insurance expert.
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So he started talking about the processing plants Catching Fire
12:56
and that was an extraordinary amount of We've discussed it,
13:00
you know, planes crashing into into plants, etc. Answer So you
13:04
heard about that? Yes, I heard about it. But from what I
13:06
understand, you know, there's a reasonable amount of fires that
13:08
started processing plants, is that really outrageous, and he's
13:11
in this business. He says, Oh, let me tell you, a processing
13:16
plant does not burn to the ground, that fire is out within
13:20
20 or 30 minutes. It's part of the insurance requirement to
13:24
have suppressants you know, regular training fire within
13:29
your fire squad safety within X amount of response time. He says
13:34
what's happening here is they're letting it burn to the ground.
13:36
They're taking a big check. And they're rebuilding, but they're
13:41
processing plants are rebuilding for soy bugs and, and other
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plant based stuff.
13:55
That's interesting.
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I thought it was very interesting. He had one other
14:00
thing not related to food. He gave me the number that every
14:05
child who goes through the transgender process do you know
14:08
what that is? That amount is worth to the medical and
14:11
pharmaceutical. Community and insurance.
14:16
Just guy be huge. One take a guess. 100 grand, 7 million, 7
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million a person per person
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that needs to be documented.
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Well this is what I love about it. It's insurance. You know, we
14:33
know about excess deaths from insurance so you can't you kind
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of can't fight those numbers.
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Well, I they like to see the 7 million documented Oh, you're
14:43
saying it is one thing? Yeah. Okay.
14:45
Well, I'm I will ask for
14:48
documentation. I like documentation because I can
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write it up. I know.
14:54
Anyway, other reports for you. Oh, what I did here is people
14:58
are just being used Of course of that topic. We do have to
15:05
mention that guy up in Canada, who my wife and I have both
15:09
concluded is a professional comedian at some level and is
15:14
pulling the biggest stunt you could possibly do. And I'm
15:18
talking about the guy whose shop teachers decided to wear the
15:22
huge fake prosthetic boobs to transition and wear these phony
15:28
baloney boobs that are the size of trucks. Well, he's showing
15:33
kids how to use the circular saw.
15:37
This has got to be a hoax or whatever. This is crazy. No,
15:40
we've no it's not because the guys are written genuine
15:43
teacher, he's at the school, they can't do anything about it.
15:46
He's making a mockery of the Canadian school system. Because
15:53
he's taken it to the to the and it's our theory, we don't know.
15:57
I mean, can't be serious. And he's got these huge phony boobs
16:01
that they're the size of a truck with power today. And with a
16:07
phony baloney nipples, which will make it even more
16:09
outrageous looking. And and this and they can't do anything about
16:15
it. And the guy is just taking he's just doing this as a
16:18
massive gag, gag or SIOP fan test off to accomplish what the
16:29
fabulous bit just the way we simply see it as a good thing
16:33
that Canadians are very funny is as a culture they produce a lot
16:38
of comedians and comics and guys like this, which wouldn't be no
16:41
surprise that some Canadian would would pull this off before
16:44
an American dead.
16:46
That's pretty funny. We got that note from one of our producers
16:49
is very long donation note which we won't read in its entirety.
16:52
But he and his family escaped from Canada and she left the
16:56
country on two Cessna 182 flights or adultos. A caravan.
17:02
Bo they are living in a Boston they've been traveling through
17:04
the states and but he's an actual escapee if you read what
17:09
they had to go through to get out.
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Yes, and they only had a small window to do it. It's like
17:15
12 hours and bad weather and flying in small Cessnas MAN
17:19
Yeah, they had a look there's a way it was had to do with the
17:21
vaccine mandates back and forth to get across the border and he
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and his family five kids they got out there now traveling
17:30
around and going to no agenda meet up surprisingly, time.
17:35
So speaking of just to wrap this up, a lot of people who listen
17:39
to the show came up to me and said, I just want to share it
17:42
with you. They said no, thank you because during COVID The
17:47
show just let me know that I wasn't the only crazy one. I
17:50
said yeah, you're absolutely crazy. But at least there's a
17:52
whole bunch of us and a number of people who you will meet
17:56
talking about beef and they heard about slim and they've
17:59
gone from 20 years of IBS and all kinds of problems and they
18:03
stopped eating shit. And now they're eating animal good
18:08
animal protein and all their problems are almost gone. And
18:11
people couldn't even hold on a job.
18:15
So that was also missing this guy's letter from Canada. His
18:19
wife was having these health issues and newest she went to
18:22
eating quality oh
18:23
that's right yeah, that's right now you've you've never eaten
18:25
shit me I don't you have you always cooked I mean you just
18:29
don't eat shit ever except for your your once upon
18:32
a time. That's your third that's okay. Today all right.
18:36
Okay, pay attention now.
18:38
I am you have this ability to do this and I've always been
18:42
stunned by it.
18:43
I have reached my quota.
18:45
I got you. I have been cooking. I consider a high quality level
18:52
since college so it's a long time. Well, I have a gift for I
18:56
have a I have a Jack in the Box burger once in a while. I mean,
19:00
a Jack in
19:00
the Box. I thought it was McDonald's or was it Burger King
19:03
McDonald's.
19:04
Those I use in McDonald's test about once every six. I can't
19:08
eat a home. I said this on the show. Again and again. I can't
19:12
eat and I can't eat a Big Mac anymore. Of course not. They are
19:16
such crap that you can take maybe a bite or two dog it's a
19:20
dog his dog. Oh, go to bed go to McDonald's and try again. Try it
19:24
a try again. Dogs. No, the dogs will eat it, believe it or
19:29
not for long. Don't feed them to the zoo them too much. But I do
19:32
have a gift that I'm going to be sending to you. It's banner
19:35
butter. It is butter made from raw milk. And there's one with
19:40
herbs and another one was chocolate with cocoa. I mean,
19:45
you could put some French writing on the on the herba
19:48
butter and just call it from JJ. You'll love it. You'll love it.
19:53
We'll make sure it stays cold.
19:55
Of course you'd like raw milk.
19:57
I know you do like raw milk. I
19:58
know I like raw milk
20:00
Anyway, I like the raw milk you know it's betters when it comes
20:03
out of the cow it doesn't it's not gonna kill you now boiling
20:06
the damn bowl to death terrible. There you go. Keep it up
20:12
your accent is doing it
20:15
all right well so the I have been following a good
20:18
time. Yeah,
20:18
well I'm still here. I don't I can't leave
20:20
any documentation for the $7 million for you got it. That is
20:24
disgusting if true, but I actually can believe it. But I
20:30
need to.
20:31
I need it in writing. Okay, I'll see what I can do.
20:36
All right, I got a lot of different things here. I think
20:38
this I think it's significant what we're hearing about Russia
20:44
and Putin Lewis before
20:46
we go to there, just get the queen out of the way because I'm
20:49
getting more interest Yes.
20:52
Get the queen out of the way again.
20:57
There's going to be 500 Now that we have to step back and
21:03
consider that the Queen supposedly and we talked about
21:07
this on the show that it's she presents herself and that
21:11
monarchy in England presents itself as a symbolic a piece of
21:15
nonsense that is useless. But if that's the case, and we of
21:22
course believe that that's not the case we believe or I do and
21:27
I think you'd be the ones that could either win it convinced me
21:29
of it that it's more than symbolic. There's actual power
21:33
there that is not brought to the fore Sure. We agree. And and it
21:41
has to be the case that has to be true if 500 dignitaries buy
21:48
it in every the Emperor of Japan the Japanese Prime Minister,
21:53
everybody in the world is going to this funeral which sounds
21:57
like a nightmare if you ask me although it's a good place to
22:01
meet your you know fellow elites
22:04
to catch up on the latest
22:06
tools to mingle swappa Audrina
22:10
chrome
22:12
I wish I'm just done by that but I do have two clips that kind of
22:16
doesn't discuss the like the security concerns and all the
22:20
rest of it. But I do have a couple of clips that are I think
22:23
on here. You have Queen Queen attribute NPR,
22:28
King Charles and his son Prince William made a surprise visit
22:31
this morning to the miles long line of mourners waiting to pay
22:34
respects to Queen Elizabeth in Britain's parliament building in
22:38
Paris Frank langfitt has more.
22:43
croucher The King is arrived to shake hands and exchange
22:47
pleasantries with mourners, some of whom had begun lining up in
22:50
the cold just after midnight, Prince William asked people in
22:53
heavy coats if they'd been able to stay warm overnight and
22:56
apologize for the long wait. Well, this is officially a time
23:00
of national mourning for the Queen has also been an
23:02
opportunity for the new king to travel around the country and
23:05
shore up support for his reign. The queen was enormously
23:09
popular, even more so than the monarchy itself. YouGov poll
23:13
earlier this year, found that 75% of Britons had a positive
23:16
view of her while only 42% feud her son similarly.
23:22
I love these polls. How much do you love? How much do you love
23:26
him? Do you love him? Please tell me you love I got it. By
23:29
the way. I got some feedback from Tom about Sarah from the
23:32
UK. Her note he says your note from Sarah about the UK is
23:35
completely rubbish. Not sure you know he's he's a Brit. The first
23:39
people to go and see the queen were a POC, which I think stands
23:43
for people of color. Also known as colored people. POC look at
23:48
the video stream every fifth person is a minority. Okay. I
23:51
don't know which is true.
23:54
Oh, interesting. Now, that's a good little clarification. We
23:58
love them. Okay, part two of this clip.
24:02
Part two. Just last Oh yeah. Queen tribute.
24:06
Fan. President Biden is heading to London to attend the funeral
24:09
on Monday. Oh, yeah. So before he left he spoke yesterday with
24:12
the families of two high profile Americans who are detained in
24:15
Moscow appears Amy health has more in separate meeting.
24:20
clip that was a clip over. This is NPR has been doing this a
24:27
lot. They and I don't know what the point of it is. Or if it's
24:31
if it's like part of format, logical
24:34
format change. It's a format change. I had not heard this
24:37
either. Explain.
24:39
Well, I've heard it before and I've discussed it on the show
24:42
before because I've mentioned it I've seen it used by others. One
24:47
of the networks does it a lot. I think it's NBC. They start
24:52
talking about topic one. And then they segue it normally the
24:57
way the stories are presented a story two Stop stories, story
25:01
stops, right? And then one after another, but of late, they take
25:08
specific stories not every story but specific stories that get
25:12
you into a frame of mind. This like sales, you know, or, or the
25:16
idea of you get somebody kind of, you know, lot of salespeople
25:20
will try to get you to ask just stupid questions to get you say
25:23
yes. All the time. Don't you think that such as a yes, don't
25:26
you think? Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. By this yes. Is a trick.
25:31
And so I'm listening to this thinking as some sort of trick
25:36
they're trying to pull this are talking about the Queen and this
25:39
and that. And then they switch over completely to Biden and to
25:45
Biden, and then into the the hostages, hostages and the
25:53
arrestees that the Russians arrested for probably pretty
25:56
good reason. And then I it's just beyond me, and then a lot
26:01
of you see a lot of these are done the same way and it's just
26:03
as somehow blamed Trump is baffling. But then let's start
26:08
this over and
26:09
give you my opinion. I think this is what we would call an
26:12
urgency arc. So it's it's a it's a new, new I don't know how long
26:17
it's been used. But it's a variation of you know that Fox
26:20
News does this. Hi, everybody. Welcome to Sean Hannity. Oh,
26:23
walk breaking news. Breaking news.
26:26
Yes, Sean Hannity is breaking news at the beginning of each
26:28
show.
26:29
Yep. So I think it's similar to this only they're actually
26:31
breaking into one story. And you're right. It may be would
26:35
have to be somehow the stories have to be. I agree with you on
26:39
the psychological effect, but it's meant to jar you into
26:42
listening to something else and keeping listening I presume?
26:47
Yes, some radio some radio guy came up with a trust me
26:50
and President Biden is heading to London to attend the funeral.
26:54
In the beginning, so you can see the transition.
26:56
That is that is the beginning.
26:58
Oh, no, I'm sorry. I got mixed up. Yeah, you're right. I
27:00
thought he was going to talk about Biden or she was going to
27:03
who's a racist, by the way, talking about Biden in the
27:07
Russians gone. President
27:08
Biden are heading to London to attend the funeral on Monday.
27:11
But before he left, he spoke yesterday with the families of
27:14
two high profile Americans who are detained in Moscow. Appears
27:18
Amy held has more in separate meetings, President Biden told
27:21
the families of Paul Whelan and Brittney Griner. He's working
27:24
through quote all available avenues to bring them back home.
27:28
The administration maintains both are wrongfully detained. It
27:31
won't comment on reports of a prisoner swap. But White House
27:35
National Security Council Spokesman John Kirby says
27:37
negotiations are ongoing.
27:39
We have made a serious offer to get Brittney Griner and Paul
27:44
Whelan back home. The Russians have not responded that often.
27:47
We'll end a former Marine has been imprisoned for nearly four
27:50
years on espionage charges. Griner a basketball superstar
27:54
was taken in February on drug charges. Her wife Terrell
27:57
Greiner released a statement after meeting with Biden calling
28:00
the past seven months grueling and asking for unity
28:05
sounds so weak when Kirby says well we offered it to them but
28:08
you know they haven't responded sounds kind of
28:11
needy Kirby is
28:15
Kirby was was called out a you know, my theory is that Kirby is
28:21
the one who is setting himself up to take over the job of
28:26
Korean Mandarin and your
28:28
goal is not going to take much longer. She's so on the ropes.
28:31
They're hanging out to dry. She's so nervous. She's saying
28:34
she's messing everything up. She's the meme does your he's
28:37
letting her suffer?
28:41
He was I don't think I have clips of this which I thought I
28:44
did.
28:45
I do you have a quick 16 second clip about the queen? Because
28:49
that because there I was thinking
28:51
about the I had tried to put them aside to I didn't have but
28:54
let me just say that Kirby came out and did a briefing at the at
28:59
the the White House briefing room about security things and
29:04
somebody called him out some some black guy, African voice
29:08
call him out for trying to take over her job. No, there you go.
29:12
Oh, really. And and so he the guy says I say I can explain it
29:19
without having to clip it. But the guy goes in. He says, you
29:21
know, you've been up here and you're here. And you know, it
29:24
seems as though that she's doing a lousy job and you want to take
29:28
her job and he said no, this is not anything but the truth. All
29:31
I do is talk about security, national security issues. That's
29:35
all I talk about. When I'm up here. I don't talk about
29:38
anything else. And she invited me to come up here and she's
29:40
doing a great job. And then she came out in later and she bought
29:46
some stuff. It was terrible, but she's terrible day. You're gonna
29:51
get rid of it. Sure.
29:52
But it's terrible that the press corps itself is propagating
29:56
this. I mean, everybody knows she why she was hired. That way.
30:00
Because the job was advertised as such, all the jobs provided
30:04
administration are advertised as such and so then you know, okay
30:07
sometimes that backfires. But let's let's get it away from
30:11
ratio dipshits. Hi, here's, here's the Queen, little update.
30:17
And President Biden is expected
30:18
to attend as are the leaders of China, France and Canada world
30:22
leaders are being asked not to use their own state cars to
30:25
attend the funeral instead, right? Government buses, but
30:28
a government official tells ABC News that will not apply to
30:31
President Biden guys.
30:33
Oh, man, I wanted to see him and Jill on the bus bouncing around
30:38
think it's gonna
30:39
apply to a lot of them. I don't I think they're gonna reverse
30:42
you're gonna have 500 dignitaries in buses. I also
30:47
don't look like Comdex.
30:51
They said the only lanyards to lanyards and an a tote bag.
30:56
Yeah. Well, this of course, nucleating I mean, any foreign
31:02
dignitary, especially now that Biden's broken the ice and he
31:05
says, I don't I'm not going to do that. I'm going to be in the
31:07
beast right now. Oh, yeah. Because you've spent, you know,
31:10
$100,000 and taxpayers money to ship over the beast.
31:14
So they have a lanyard, a tote bag and a fanny pack. Over your
31:20
uniform, it looked great. So this in my opinion is is all
31:23
part of the great reset. We have the Pope on deck and did you
31:27
hear that? Khamenei is apparently ill gravely ill from
31:37
Iran. I think that will be good to have a switch in Iran and,
31:44
and also does live pretty long. Yeah. And Don Lemon is kicked
31:47
off a primetime if that doesn't seem reasonable. We predicted
31:51
nothing does. He's gonna throw. He's gonna do a morning show.
31:56
Yeah, with two women,
31:57
oh man, which
31:58
makes it even funnier.
32:00
He must hate that because he takes himself so seriously. He's
32:04
a gay guy who hates women. Any day, takes himself. So he takes
32:10
himself as haste herself so serious. Yeah.
32:13
So now he has to do kind of like a I wonder if he's going to try
32:16
and be the serious news guy amongst the bubbly women. Is
32:20
that Is that what the idea is
32:22
that? No, there's morning shows can't do that. I mean, the last
32:25
show that I think was kind of modeled that way. And they
32:28
changed the modeling of all the morning shows on the network's
32:31
was the today show that had the regular group of people yucking
32:36
it up, and then they had the news reader and they'd always
32:38
throw it to her and she goes through, she'd read serious news
32:41
and segments. I have not seen that for a long time that not in
32:45
the old format that they used to have. I think they've given up
32:48
on that. And everyone's gotta be jocular,
32:50
jocular, serious, you know, because Orange Man bad. We were
32:56
both right. About the president and the train strike, although
33:01
you are more right than I was. And right on cue the CIA
33:05
broadcasting systems with Scott Pelley. He did did an interview
33:08
with the President to spike the ball
33:11
president, you have just averted a nationwide railroad strike
33:16
that would have been critical to the economy.
33:21
How did you do that?
33:22
And what were those last hours like in the negotiations?
33:26
Oh, man, how did you do that? You are you are truly the best
33:31
president.
33:31
And what's funny about this report, is that if you listen to
33:35
NPR, I don't know if I have any kind of prayer when it comes to
33:37
this either. But if you listen to NPR, it was definitely the
33:40
labor secretary or one of the other White House people that
33:44
had that was primary to the negotiations and Biden didn't
33:49
even step foot into thing. So this is bullcrap. Right from the
33:52
get go?
33:53
Oh, of course, he even gives it away that he wasn't he appellee
33:57
kind of sets it up in the illusion with all the previous
34:00
reporting is that Biden was up until 5am working on the
34:05
negotiation, but the reality is they came in that morning and
34:08
said, Hey, we're done. Okay, cool. I'll announce it. That's
34:11
basically it. But here's his response. Oh, look,
34:14
well,
34:14
luck, luck, business and labor together. One of the things that
34:19
happens in negotiations, particularly if they've been a
34:22
long game, like these have is people saying do things where
34:27
they the pride gets engaged as well. And it's also hard to back
34:31
off of some of these things. So what we did was just say, look,
34:34
let's take a look. Let's take a look at what's happening. You
34:38
have a good deal being made for labor and their for their
34:42
incomes gonna go up 24% Over the next five years, they've worked
34:46
out the health care piece, they worked out days off in a row sat
34:50
down in my view, and I read the office today, saying, well, we
34:54
finally figured out this is fair on both sides, and took that
34:59
time to A focus in the alternative was just not think
35:04
about. What do you mean? If in fact, they've gone on strike,
35:08
the supply chains in this country would have come to a
35:10
screeching halt, we would have seen a real economic crisis.
35:14
So the problem I have with this is this didn't get any legs.
35:18
They didn't position it properly. This is about all I
35:21
saw. Oh, yeah. Great. Mr. President, where was the big
35:23
headlines Biden saves America?
35:28
Well, you were right in position to write it all. And I think
35:31
Biden was caught flat footed. And so is this entire staff of
35:35
it, no.
35:38
People that don't know what they're doing.
35:42
And it was just entered. And I think that it should have gone
35:45
to the new right to the edge, because that's what it makes it
35:47
more dramatic. It's kind of added. I think that the unions
35:50
caved I don't think just 24% over five years is a good deal.
35:53
You have a 10% inflation rate over 10 years compounded as 50
35:58
At least 50%. If not, you know, Oh, yeah. But way too much. He
36:03
did have that hidden half as much money as they used to get
36:06
and then all these deals about, you know, the going to the
36:08
doctor and all the rest of it. You still get fired didn't
36:13
change.
36:13
Are you sure because Biden said we also fix the health care
36:17
problems what he said I don't know if that imply that I think
36:20
that
36:20
means to get better health care. But that doesn't mean you can
36:23
take time off to go to the doctor. I want I do I heard
36:26
that. on NPR. They had the labor the guy who was the head of the
36:30
railroad engineers union, whichever one that is there's
36:34
two of these unions that were involved in this and I think
36:36
maybe a third and he said yeah, we didn't get this we didn't get
36:40
that but it was a good thing we got you know, we had to get
36:42
this. This we had to do something. It I think they do a
36:46
shitty job personally. As an ex union organizer, I can say that
36:53
but
36:53
that's why we kind of said like, this is probably just some
36:57
bullcrap. This is just marketing. And that's exactly
37:00
what it was. But I don't understand how they could take
37:03
something because where was the pre analysis? We're the only
37:06
ones who said hey, man, this could be really bad. You don't
37:08
really hear that. They just didn't play it up. I don't know.
37:12
Maybe this is an inside group trying to make make Biden in the
37:16
union's trying to make something
37:18
I think it's well maybe a status the the newspapers don't want to
37:22
deal with this. But this didn't have the Union. The whole union
37:25
movement has been pushed to the side anyway and is doesn't want
37:28
to be you don't want to emphasize that these guys can
37:30
get their way. And listserv, sports athletes making millions
37:34
and millions of dollars. There's that those guys? Yeah, let's
37:37
just play that up.
37:39
Well, this didn't have the typical Obama Valerie Jarrett
37:43
flair. You know? They're better.
37:45
Surprises. Valerie Jarrett's in the White House.
37:49
Yeah. She's in all kinds of committees again and stuff.
37:52
They're unclogging you got more Biden stuff? I'm sure you do.
37:56
I have a bunch of Biden's so because he gave it they jacked
37:59
him up for a speech I
38:00
didn't say excited.
38:02
Oh my god, this speech jacked him up. When it was no I'm
38:06
talking about jacked him up. He was like, jacked, and he was
38:11
jacking away like a main madman. He was fumbling and bumbling,
38:14
but it wasn't the kind of slow dull witted bumbling and
38:18
fumbling it was just he was fast, talking bumbling and
38:21
fumbling. And he was yackety yak and they gave him exactly 16
38:25
minutes for this stuff, whatever. They gave more off
38:29
your time. You timed it. Excellent.
38:32
Yeah, it was 60 minutes of talking. So he went just went
38:35
nuts. I call it jacked up. Here's a good example. This is
38:38
Biden jacked up speech. One.
38:40
Please have a seat if you have one. Oh, hello, hello, oh, about
38:45
a year and a half ago. Whereas a large crowd large crowd large
38:49
crowd like this, but they're outside. I thought that chairs
38:51
had Have a seat. And the press said Biden was so stupid even
38:54
though they didn't have any chairs. But I glad to have some
38:57
chairs. I'll be Oh, Cuban born came to United States at age 11
39:01
serve 16 years in Congress. And and you know, the idea is that,
39:07
you know, house icon of three decades grandmother of a DREAM
39:11
Act. You know, Congress is gonna miss you both to the Secretary
39:15
of Health and Human Services. Javier Becerra. Is the honoree
39:19
tonight's American Dream medallion, all of you here
39:22
tonight embody the same theme root in the strength of our
39:25
achieving our dreams.
39:27
Oh, man.
39:31
Yeah, he's kind of Jack's. That's interesting. He's
39:33
flying high. I have three of these clips and I have to think
39:37
of where he started. Well, actually, when you skip to the
39:38
beginning, at the very beginning, when they brought him
39:41
out on stage, he decides in his kind of drugged up stupor, to
39:47
sing Happy Birthday, to Ninette, this Hispanic woman who's going
39:53
on and on about how great Biden is and how Democrats all suck.
39:57
And so this is Biden's hat. Be birthday to her.
40:02
This happens to be the next birthday. Oh, you turn 25. To
40:12
the Biden family, we sing happy birthday. So let's go ready.
40:17
Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday to you. Happy birthday.
40:27
Happy birthday to you. God love you.
40:32
Man. That's cool. Where was this again?
40:36
He calls her Dan net. By the way when he's singing,
40:39
he doesn't know what he's doing. Where was this? What was the?
40:42
Where was it? What was the occasion?
40:43
It was Latin. It was like the congressional Latin America or
40:50
Hispanic Caucus mixed with some other groups. Some other
40:53
numbers. I believe it was in Washington DC was in Virginia
40:56
was someplace near the White House and it was a meeting of
41:01
all these Latin x p
41:04
tanks.
41:06
The tanks so and they were all you know Januarius go back to
41:12
Biden jacked up species because you would. He's in a roll here
41:16
this jacked up speech to
41:18
that law of funding close to raise a close look close the
41:22
racial gap turgor Cardona. I'll tell you how it helped to safely
41:26
reopen our schools in absolute necessity, including 28% of
41:32
public school students who are Latino 28% They're all going to
41:36
own the country man, we better darn well make sure they have
41:39
every opportunity they have not a joke.
41:45
So he's just like, this is a different kind of stumbling This
41:48
is his jacked up stumbling.
41:50
He's he's he's going too fast for his mouth at times here is
41:54
going
41:54
way too fast for himself. And he's just he starts to say one
41:58
word and then stops and says another but he doesn't back up.
42:01
But that's the thing is interesting. He doesn't ponder
42:04
anything. He just keeps plowing ahead. Here's part three of
42:07
this.
42:07
You're in the Detroit get Detroit back on track, and
42:10
during the Great Recession, and while I was vice president, he
42:13
helped lead our efforts in Puerto Rico as well. We are
42:16
committed, we're committed. Together we passed once in a
42:20
generation infrastructure law to mobilize America's roads,
42:23
bridges, ports airports, is going to replace poisonous lead
42:26
pipes. So every child on American perception specifically
42:29
those in Hispanic communities, which are most often affected,
42:32
can turn on a faucet at home or school and drink clean water for
42:36
God's sake.
42:38
impressive speed for that age. Very impressive. He's he's
42:42
blowing through it. I mean, this sounds Adderall. This sounds
42:46
methey. Kochi, really?
42:49
Yeah, kinda and they at least know to get him off in 16
42:53
minutes. Even though he's still flubbing away but at least he's
42:56
got spirit that so I had these short little snippets, which I
43:01
picked up and ask you what he's trying to say here. These are
43:07
all like five six seconds. I mean, there's ones let's start
43:11
with the two second one this is the one we're Biden says biggest
43:15
llegaste
43:17
the legacy biggest job on dropping unemployment.
43:20
Ooh, yeah. Those nasty ELLs league is bigger biggest biggest
43:25
biggest yes hard
43:27
here's here's something about the deficit
43:31
we're gonna be able to do all this while reducing the deficit
43:35
by reducing the deficit
43:39
risk stooping playing a yeti because I got a kick out of it.
43:44
Yeah. You got more? Yeah, just gonna tell you to play that one
43:49
again. Oh,
43:50
the deficit? Definitely. I'm sorry.
43:52
We're gonna be able to do all this while reducing the deficit
43:56
by reducing.
43:59
Okay, here's another way only couple more. Just so as drugs,
44:03
gigs,
44:04
their costs are no matter what, no matter whether they have
44:08
drugs
44:09
for the gogs all their
44:12
costs are no matter what, no matter whether they have drugs.
44:18
They're not not as
44:21
poorly clipped. Alright, here's the last one. This is actually
44:25
get again at one second one, two, let's get this this jacked
44:28
about drugs. He's all jacked, jacked about drugs.
44:32
For too long. We paid a higher price for restriction drugs than
44:36
any nation in the world restriction
44:38
drugs. It's a new it's a new thing, restrictions on drugs.
44:43
And I guess the last one is Secretary who
44:46
was Secretary Marx's leadership.
44:49
Give him run ragged. I think he says Richard
44:51
Clark. This is a challenge for you what it would Who is he
44:54
talking about?
44:55
I was secretary Marx's leadership.
44:58
Secretary Richard Marx. Alright. If
45:01
I was just kidding realism, I will check trademarks is
45:04
leadership.
45:06
hammer marks my Ark? Is he trying to say my orcas?
45:10
I was secretary of works as well. Yes,
45:12
yes. Yes. Yeah. Yeah. So
45:14
a sec tamer works his leadership. Wow,
45:17
you know what the sad thing is? That's our president. This is
45:21
our vice president.
45:22
I do believe that we should have rightly believed,
45:28
but we certainly believe that certain issues are just settled.
45:31
certain issues are just settled. Clearly we're not. No, that's
45:34
right. And that's why I do believe that we are living sadly
45:38
in real unsettled
45:40
time. So baby, we are so screwed. Wow.
45:47
Out of control. I do believe I do believe
45:54
that's pretty insane. Oh.
45:59
My goodness, you gotta love welcome to
46:01
the United States of America. Indeed.
46:07
So the other thing that just will not go away is this. And,
46:13
wow, this is going to this shipping of migrants to Democrat
46:19
run cities, Martha's Vineyard to Washington. I mean, but But the
46:26
way this is being played, is the media is at all in except for,
46:32
you know, a couple of the obvious ones. They're really
46:35
pushing this, you know, the Republicans are horrible,
46:39
horrible, horrible people for abusing these mic, and they keep
46:44
saying migrants instead of illegal immigrants. Because, you
46:47
know, let's be honest, what this is, and and that just here, this
46:53
is a good example. And I was really shocked by this. Ken
46:57
Burns, a famous doctor, do you know that he's a massive lib?
47:00
tard?
47:04
Hello, hello.
47:06
I didn't know that.
47:07
I mean, what did you think he was, he's been working for
47:11
nobody but in but public broadcasting all his life. He's
47:15
never done anything commercially.
47:17
Right. But typically, he's doing documentaries. And it's about
47:21
you know, historically, like Vietnam and
47:24
style UK, if you know any of his documents, like his thing on
47:26
jazz. And some of the other things he's done have always had
47:30
a slant to him, you can spot it that is maybe baseball or the
47:34
national parks or things like that he's he looked at, you can
47:37
not find it. But mostly, it's always been in there. Well, he
47:42
was yesterday, listen to him, I know what you're going to do.
47:45
Because I did listen to him more recently, where he's felt the
47:49
need to be more outspoken. He's comes off as a ridiculous,
47:54
progressive,
47:55
all of your documentaries are about history. But all of them
47:59
also make you think about where we are now. And we woke up to
48:03
the news this morning, that Governor Ron DeSantis of Florida
48:06
sent to plane loads of migrants to Martha's Vineyard off the
48:11
coast of Massachusetts, including kids and whatnot. And
48:13
I'm not saying this is not a one for one. I'm not a parallel here
48:16
in any way. But it does address some of the same themes that are
48:20
part of this documentary abstraction of human life. It's
48:24
basically saying that you can use a human life that is as
48:28
valuable as yours or mine or lens. And to put it in a
48:32
position of becoming a political pawn in somebody's authoritarian
48:36
game. This is the coming straight out of the
48:38
authoritarian playbook. This is what's so disturbing about
48:42
it so I listen to this and there's more to it. And actually
48:46
like Do you not see that these people are already being used as
48:52
political pawns continuously? That's That's what baffles me I
48:57
mean these people have no idea what's going on none they don't
49:01
understand they're border towns that are doubling in size
49:04
regularly tripling in size because of migrants. It's really
49:09
interesting that this block this mental block is is in the elites
49:13
way
49:13
I love this this mental block is fascinating. I mean, how do you
49:17
get it how do you keep it and how do you maintain it you have
49:21
to maintain it if you read Jack Leu wells book propaganda is
49:27
rubbish I recommend everybody not only for what it has to say
49:33
but it also a structure he made maintains that propaganda cannot
49:39
work except in an enclosed environment. In other words, you
49:42
have to be cut off from from input that would maybe disturb
49:48
the propaganda. And I think the separation of that we have you
49:52
know, with the progressive only listening to MSNBC and other
49:58
guys only listening to five They create their own within a
50:02
society. This is what's really pathetic. And I blamed the
50:06
mainstream media for this because they've taken sides
50:08
instead of doing what they've always claimed to do. We're
50:11
going to be neutral observers, and we're going to present the
50:14
news. They stopped doing that. Before Trump actually they
50:18
stopped doing it. That's what actually brought around Trump.
50:22
Trump wouldn't have existed. We presently yes, correct it
50:26
without this situation already occurring. That's what Fox
50:28
stumbled onto. And they figured, hey, there's a whole group
50:30
that's not being served. And they created a little bubble for
50:35
them. And that's what's going on. And these guys like this,
50:38
who don't listen to anything, but they're all within their own
50:41
circle. And it reminds me, I think it was during the George
50:44
Bush administration, where somebody on one of these
50:46
stations, they were observing this already in play, and this
50:50
was years ago. I think maybe it started during Reagan, but they
50:54
said they were at a cocktail party. And one of them says
50:58
this, this election must be rigged. George Bush can't be
51:02
president as well. Why not? I don't know one person. I don't
51:06
know, a single person that voted for him.
51:10
Exactly. So just add to that, besides the abundance of
51:15
leftist, mainstream media, whatever is is left and still
51:19
watch. It's dwindling. But online, of course, you know, we
51:23
know that it's obviously skewed. And we know what gets taken down
51:27
and what's get the platform. So yeah, it's the same with the
51:30
vaccines. That's why these people are still like, get a
51:32
booster. You gotta get your buy valium booster? No, it's insane.
51:38
But anyway, we continue with this because we have to really
51:42
take it as far as we can
51:43
find disturbing about DeSantis is to use human beings to
51:47
weaponize human beings for a political purpose. It's like
51:51
when somebody disagrees with him in Florida, like the Walt Disney
51:55
Company, he punishes them. This is not the actions of a person
51:59
participating in a democratic process in which there's an
52:02
exchange of ideas. This is about punishing political enemies,
52:06
putting on shows political shows political theater, and in this
52:11
case, this is with the lives of human beings. And what's so
52:14
ironic is these are Venezuelan refugees, which DeSantis should
52:18
be supporting because they're trying to flee the the
52:21
corruption of a left wing government and all of the pain
52:24
there. And so this the the level of cynicism is beyond that. And,
52:28
and what we find in all our films is that the themes that we
52:31
engage in the past are present today. And so when you look at
52:37
the story that we're telling of the US in the Holocaust, you
52:39
understand that the time to save a democracy is before it's lost.
52:46
We promise you,
52:47
I cannot wait to see his take on the the Americas America's
52:51
involvement in the Holocaust. So they're going to paper over the
52:54
eugenics program.
52:56
Are they going to? Well, probably not, I think he's
52:58
probably going to, but will they paper over the New York Times
53:02
involvement in squashing stories about it? That's the thing I
53:06
want to see. Right? In New York Times, the big liberal
53:09
institution that it is was largely responsible for not
53:12
letting anyone know about what was going on and about the
53:14
immigrants refusing immigrants to come in that I think they're
53:17
going to, that's I'm pretty sure that you're gonna blame the
53:21
Republicans somehow, but
53:22
we know listen, that's the angle like we didn't let immigrants in
53:26
during World War Two, and that was the Holocaust. By not
53:30
letting people into our southern border, it will create a
53:33
holocaust. How about that?
53:36
Yes. That's how I like it. That
53:38
seems like I'm on point. I will say if I could give some advice
53:41
to Governor Newsom. He's, I think he's, he's just from a
53:47
creative or consulting group perspective, just looking at his
53:49
overall image. I think he needs to, let me just say it, pump the
53:53
brakes on stuff like this.
53:55
So the governor of California sent a letter to the Department
54:00
of Justice saying you need to prosecute Texas and Florida
54:04
governor's and all I can say is, I think his hair gel was
54:08
interfering with his brain function.
54:12
Now, what he's gonna get is going to be Oh, he's just like
54:16
Trump, which I think is exactly the appeal of people for people
54:21
is that he isn't just like Trump in that regard. And He's
54:24
slipping a little bit.
54:27
Who Newsom?
54:28
No, no. DeSantis
54:31
he's made it Newsome.
54:32
I'm sorry. I meant to Santas. The Santa should he keeps making
54:38
these jokes.
54:39
Yeah, yeah.
54:41
The hair gel joke is also because
54:44
you know, the problem is is if you keep making jokes is a is
54:50
gotta be part of your personality. And I don't know
54:52
that he seems like a joker to me. Correct. I mean, I always
54:57
thought to be honest about it. That Who's the other who's the
55:01
senator from Florida the guy that was the stripper
55:07
who who?
55:09
Who is the Florida say guy got blamed that we're coming up with
55:13
his name instantly is irksome. Rubio, Rubio Rubio is naturally
55:18
funny. And when Rubio most strippers when Rubio started
55:23
doing material about Trump, yeah, it was when he for a while
55:27
actually running against him. You know, they're actually when
55:31
he had a shot at it, his days are over. And he did the joke
55:35
about the hands, small hands were stuck to this day. And, and
55:44
he was doing some other material. I thought it was well
55:47
done. It was very funny. And he could do go toe to toe if you
55:50
wanted to. But he got pushed back. And so he so in other
55:55
words, he wasn't he was naturally funny, but he wasn't.
56:00
He wasn't used to doing that in the public eye. And so his, his
56:05
handlers and his, you know, his keepers and all the rest pushed
56:08
him push back on him and, and, and since he backed off like a
56:11
wimp like a weenie. It killed him. That was the end of it.
56:17
DeSantis really isn't naturally funny at that. I can tell he's,
56:21
he's got a nice No, it's,
56:23
it's a little out of character. And I will say I'm personally
56:25
triggered because how many times have I heard someone make a
56:29
comment about me about my hair and hairspray and how it's
56:33
affecting my brain. So maybe that's it, and that was just me,
56:37
I should have put a trigger warning for myself.
56:40
So that's possible, too. I have the NPR take stuff on the
56:44
DeSantis. And they take a very dim view of it too. Of course.
56:48
Yes. This is called the DeSantis stunt. I have a three part
56:53
series of clips are a little longer than usual, but they're
56:57
very revealing.
56:58
Right now we want to focus on a group that was flown to Martha's
57:01
Vineyard and island off Cape Cod in Massachusetts known as a
57:04
popular vacation spot. As authorities and Massachusetts
57:07
move the migrants to joint base Cape Cod where 125 National
57:10
Guard members will be stationed. Many have expressed outrage at
57:14
what they call a cruel stunt. But we're wondering if there is
57:17
a legal basis for this. So we call Denise Gilman co director
57:20
of the immigration Clinic at the University of Texas School of
57:23
Law. Denise Gelman welcome thank you for joining us thank you for
57:26
catching up for a second now I want everyone to listen for the
57:34
the weasel words that are in this report. There's a lot of
57:39
supposedly we heard that could have been we think that maybe
57:46
they did you know this all this they never really come around it
57:50
they don't know in other words this entire even though they're
57:53
long I'm sorry. is bullshit. They don't know what is going on
57:58
and they're just trying to build a case against the Santas and
58:02
they really these left really thinks they can do something
58:06
legal about this as is his trafficking human trafficking.
58:09
You know, this kind of things.
58:10
You have very much you bullshit left in your quota.
58:14
But our stuff sounds
58:16
good for the show. Yeah, I'm good. I'm good with that. Okay.
58:20
Just letting you know call Denise Gilman co director of the
58:22
immigration Clinic at the University of Texas School of
58:25
Law, Denise Gilman, welcome. Thank you for joining. Hi, thank
58:28
you for having me. Simply put, our state's allowed to do this.
58:33
Congressman Joaquin Castro, whose district includes over
58:36
half of San Antonio, where the migrants were flown from tweeted
58:41
that the Department of Justice needs to investigate Governor
58:43
DeSantis for using fraud and deception to lure people out of
58:46
state only to abandon them without fulfilling his false
58:49
promise. Same for Greg Abbott. He went on to suggest that this
58:54
could be considered trafficking. Is there any merit to this?
58:59
I think there are very valid concerns about what exactly the
59:03
the legal construct here is I think raising trafficking is
59:07
valid. Trafficking is moving somebody without their authority
59:11
without their consent, for gain. And here, I think you're
59:14
basically talking about political gain. In some ways,
59:17
I'm not even sure that's the very best way to think about
59:20
this, because that could be private authority, private
59:22
individuals that are engaging in trafficking. And here you're
59:26
really talking about government action. Both governors have been
59:29
very clear that they're doing this under state authority using
59:33
public funding. And so when that happens, I really think it's
59:36
almost better to think about it as a question of the government
59:40
taking somebody into custody without their authority and
59:44
without any proper justification or cause for a criminal offence
59:48
or the light and then moving them What if,
59:51
upon further review, people did consent even if the terms were
59:56
somewhat vague, even if they did consent saying you know what,
59:58
wherever I'm going is better and where I am now, does that change
1:00:01
the calculus?
1:00:03
There is true informed consent, the calculus is different. I
1:00:07
still think we have some significant due process concerns
1:00:10
about what is happening at some sort of misrepresentations that
1:00:18
are problematic as to what exactly the situation be for
1:00:23
migrants that cause problems. But I don't think you have the
1:00:28
same level of concern regarding deprivation of liberty by the
1:00:33
government without proper authorization I do if there is
1:00:37
not consensus,
1:00:37
we're winding it up with a vocal fried up talk all the way
1:00:41
beautiful. Again, what mental block do you have to not see
1:00:49
that these? I truly think, I do believe that people like this,
1:00:55
they think that these people are in the country and they're here
1:00:59
to seek their fortune and it's all grooving. It's all cool. You
1:01:01
know, it's just it's the border or whatever. They think migrants
1:01:04
Oh, these are just immigrants, you know, that they're not
1:01:06
seeing how they're getting in. It's baffling is baffling.
1:01:12
And you know, what's even more baffling? You know where this
1:01:14
woman is from date. You missed it now. University of Texas in
1:01:19
Austin.
1:01:20
Yeah, that's not Texas, though.
1:01:22
Yeah. Well, there's still some irony, irony. This is going to
1:01:26
part two
1:01:26
very ironic throws me that law of funding close to raise a
1:01:30
close the close the ratios I'm sorry.
1:01:33
Yeah. Sorry. Joe crept in. I don't know what's going on. I
1:01:36
didn't mean
1:01:39
to the flights originated in Texas. And it's a bit unclear of
1:01:43
whether the folks were talking about
1:01:46
this is this. I'm sorry to interrupt this, but so DeSantis
1:01:51
sent these migrants from Texas. I know. That makes no sense.
1:02:01
Well, here's your here's the way it was explained in some other
1:02:04
reports. And they don't really get to it Well, here at NPR. But
1:02:09
what DeSantis made a deal with Abbott, because Abba's shipping
1:02:13
people out on buses. And he's you know, to get these, I want
1:02:17
to identify he's sticking together and had a drink,
1:02:21
obviously. And I want to I want to there's a bunch of these guys
1:02:26
are starting to show up in Florida. And we don't mind our
1:02:29
Cubans because you know, there. But it would be kind of
1:02:33
interesting, don't you think it'd be kind of fun to identify
1:02:37
some people that when they come through and the asking where
1:02:40
they're going, they say Florida, we can intercept them at
1:02:44
Florida. And then we'll put take them aside and ask them if they
1:02:48
want to continue what they're doing or they we can fly them to
1:02:52
get a job in Boston, where there's a lot of work in a
1:02:55
sanctuary city, and we'll underway to Boston would drop
1:02:58
them off or drop them off in a beautiful place that every old
1:03:02
is filled with liberals that love migrants
1:03:05
and they can meet the Vice President, Mark Hurd and Marcia
1:03:10
meet the Obamas.
1:03:11
And they could go there. Yeah, the Obamas got plenty of
1:03:14
property, they might even put them up you never know. And the
1:03:17
worst that could happen. And by the end a lot of the reports
1:03:20
that have come from these migrants that have been kicked
1:03:22
out by the army from Martha's Vineyard said they were happy to
1:03:26
go there at least as what you know some reports have been
1:03:29
could be slammed.
1:03:31
I have reports where that of course is disputed with with my
1:03:35
migrants.
1:03:37
Yeah, man yo, yo over here. You must have some fun and now you
1:03:39
have further northwards seems safer. But so that's I think
1:03:44
they just did this little cute deal. And Florida's by the way.
1:03:47
I I personally believe it was a total stunt. It was there's no
1:03:54
denying it was a political stunt. And it was a good one. Of
1:03:59
course, okay,
1:04:00
of course the yes, no, of course. The question is, have
1:04:04
they put themselves in the bind? You know, the mainstream is
1:04:07
powerful. They're gonna they bring it out. Ken burns the
1:04:09
column Jew haters. I mean, you gotta be careful with this
1:04:12
stuff.
1:04:13
Yeah, well, Ken Burns has got, you know, is such a weenie or
1:04:16
the elitist
1:04:17
man, they love him. Ken Burns. I love your effect, man. So that
1:04:21
changed anyone's mind. No, no, no one's changing anyone's mind.
1:04:25
So the flights originated in Texas. And it's a bit unclear of
1:04:29
whether the folks we're talking about here, folks who went to
1:04:33
Martha's Vineyard, it's unclear whether they even set foot in
1:04:36
Florida. So it suggests a coordinated effort in that case,
1:04:41
who would be responsible or accountable for this, depending
1:04:46
on your point of view, does this and part of the reason I asked
1:04:50
is does that not sort of suggest some federal issue here because
1:04:53
you're talking about people crossing state lines.
1:04:56
So there are a couple of considerations as well given the
1:04:59
money multi state nature of this particular action. There are
1:05:04
provisions constitutional provisions that have to do with
1:05:08
transiting across state lines. And that would suggest that it
1:05:13
could be problematic for states to force people out of their
1:05:18
states in and to other states. And that could be implicated as
1:05:22
well. But in terms of sort of who is on the hook, in terms of
1:05:27
possible constitutional violations of the civil rights
1:05:31
of migrants in this
1:05:33
cause, sorry, constitutional rights and civil rights of
1:05:37
migrants
1:05:39
of the illegal aliens,
1:05:41
I guess that they have civil
1:05:42
rights. Yeah, well, you just can't go shoot one in the head.
1:05:46
Well, it depends where they are on your land. You beautifulness
1:05:51
but this is just horses or horse manure be implicated
1:05:55
as well, sort of who is on the hook in terms of possible
1:06:00
constitutional violations of the of the civil rights of migrants.
1:06:04
In this instance, in the Martha's Vineyard instance, it's
1:06:07
really the state of Florida that took people into custody and
1:06:11
transported them quite likely without their authorization
1:06:14
without meaningful and therefore I would put Florida on the hook
1:06:20
quite likely.
1:06:22
an NPR is reporting migrants were told they were going to
1:06:24
Boston where they would be able to get a job and other
1:06:27
necessities. California's Governor Gavin Newsom says these
1:06:31
migrants were transported under false pretense. Absolutely. And
1:06:35
I think it's a key issue. This is a point that we've been
1:06:37
making. In those cases where there is true consent. There are
1:06:42
a number of other moral and political issues, but the legal
1:06:46
issues are less significant. But here where it does appear that
1:06:50
there are moral issues, but the legal issues are less
1:06:53
significant. So it's all about morality. Is that what she just
1:06:57
said?
1:06:58
Let's back it up.
1:07:00
pretense. Absolutely. And I think it's a key issue. This is
1:07:03
a point that we've been making. In those cases where there is
1:07:07
true consent. There are a number of other moral and political
1:07:11
issues but the legal issues are less significant, but
1:07:15
okay, yes, what she said so what do you do on on the show lady?
1:07:19
Its moral and political. Oh, okay.
1:07:22
Bring on a priest
1:07:24
here where it does appear that there is a lack of consent. In
1:07:27
other words, government authorities essentially coerced
1:07:32
people into taking a shot taking these buses for government
1:07:37
authorities essentially people into government custody without
1:07:41
any console know without any authorization. You can't get
1:07:44
into serious issues of whether this is essentially a false
1:07:48
arrest or even kidnapping. That would be problematic under the
1:07:53
law certainly under civil rights provisions.
1:07:55
Anyone who still says problematic really needs
1:07:58
immediate training. Even the even the Gen Z years don't use
1:08:03
it anymore.
1:08:04
problem so problematic. They're making a lot of assumptions here
1:08:09
and my understanding is they've always stayed whoever got on the
1:08:12
buses and whoever got on the planes was asked they didn't
1:08:16
force it and put a gun to their head get on the bus.
1:08:19
I bet you they have a signature too.
1:08:21
I that's what I was thinking I was thinking they may have a
1:08:25
sheet with signatures on it or individual sheets clipboard a
1:08:29
clipboard. I'm taking clipboard I'm thinking exactly the same
1:08:33
guy with a clipboard is a Joe's as Cortez Cortez. He's in your
1:08:38
birthday. As you're up. You're up getting checked the box
1:08:42
Cortez? So I think it was one more clip less. Oh,
1:08:48
yes, it gets worse. I'm so excited.
1:08:53
Rachel self, a Boston attorney who specializes in immigration
1:08:57
law said in remarks that were posted on social media that the
1:09:00
migrants were instructed to change their addresses with
1:09:03
immigration authorities when they relocated. Can you tell us
1:09:06
why does this matter?
1:09:08
Well, it's a very significant issue because all of these
1:09:12
migrants, these families, children, parents, who are
1:09:15
seeking protection in the United States, have already been
1:09:18
processed by immigration authorities at the border or
1:09:21
most of them are asylum seeking that protection under the law.
1:09:24
So they have ongoing immigration proceedings in their cases, but
1:09:28
all of them
1:09:28
Okay, we just need to reiterate that the way and the place where
1:09:32
these people are entering is not the asylum process. And she's
1:09:37
making it sound like well, they got the good procedures is
1:09:39
processed. They're just here, your huddled your poor, your
1:09:43
meek, don't turn them back like the Jews
1:09:45
under the law. So they have ongoing immigration proceedings
1:09:49
in their cases. But all of the paperwork that would have been
1:09:51
filled out by the immigration authorities would have an
1:09:54
address that is nothing like the one that they now have now that
1:09:58
they've been transported to India. area that is not at all
1:10:01
where they intended to go. And unfortunately, it's not so easy
1:10:05
to make an address change either. And why
1:10:09
the life? Why the left is so easy to make an address change?
1:10:14
Why? What does this tell, we will rewind and review the one
1:10:18
that they now have now that they've been transported to an
1:10:21
area that is not at all where they intended to go. And
1:10:24
unfortunately, it's not so easy to make an address change
1:10:28
either.
1:10:29
I don't understand why
1:10:30
she laughing. It's so easy to make an address change
1:10:34
either.
1:10:35
Okay, and so he knows
1:10:37
something about the system being screwed up. Yeah,
1:10:41
yeah, easy to make an address change either. And so it is
1:10:45
quite likely that they will not receive notice of their hearings
1:10:48
or any updates in relation to their immigration cases. And if
1:10:52
they do want to pursue their immigration cases in a new
1:10:55
location, very different from where they intended to go,
1:10:58
they'll have to file motions with the immigration court. This
1:11:01
is not something that is automatic, or that is easy to
1:11:04
do, especially without a lawyer. And so we fear that there will
1:11:07
be very significant due process violations for many of these
1:11:11
asylum seekers.
1:11:13
So I'm convinced these people believe that the system is
1:11:16
actually working people show up, they come in, they go to their
1:11:19
hearings, they become upstanding residents, they have a path, you
1:11:23
know, they're helping the country we are we are the world
1:11:26
we are the children. That's how she's talking and that this is
1:11:30
such a diversion from their, their critical path towards
1:11:33
citizenship and success in America.
1:11:39
As I can't, it's kind of crazy. It's nuts, the whole thing and
1:11:44
it's just with this antithesis done is proven that the system
1:11:48
besides being broken anyway, because of the numbers that are
1:11:51
coming in, even though they're my favorite thing was John Paul,
1:11:55
Kareem Abdul Jabbar is talking about how we've, we've deported
1:12:00
more than any could ever. Oh, yeah, of course. And you got
1:12:04
into a big debate with this with the reporters saying, Yeah, but
1:12:07
you good. There's been millions and millions coming in more than
1:12:10
we've sent more out of the country than Trump did. Yeah.
1:12:14
But there's 20 times more coming in and she wouldn't buy it now.
1:12:18
No, it doesn't be besides that point.
1:12:21
Here's ABC, here's ABC with some numbers for
1:12:23
us is now on track to surpass 2 million crossings at the Mexico
1:12:28
border this year. That's up from last year's near record 1.6
1:12:32
million, the White House saying it's working to fix a broken
1:12:35
system, and the legal process will take time
1:12:39
to fix a broken system. Kind of analysis is this ABC. It's just
1:12:46
choices. It's not a broken system. It's choices made. Yes.
1:12:50
Okay.
1:12:51
So it's a good point with all you
1:12:53
have to keep well, I have one clip and then I have another
1:12:55
one, which is kind of a counter clip. I think this has something
1:12:58
interesting that hasn't been covered yet.
1:13:01
Less than two days after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis, flew them
1:13:04
to Martha's Vineyard to make a political point. 50 migrants
1:13:08
from Venezuela put on buses
1:13:10
here. Okay, here's the tell. She clearly is a biased reporter
1:13:14
when she says 50 migrants in Venezuela.
1:13:18
So she she has bias. I don't know where she's good point. But
1:13:22
she's
1:13:24
less than two days after Florida Governor Ron DeSantis flew them
1:13:28
to Martha's Vineyard to make a political point. 50 migrants
1:13:32
from Venezuela put on buses and transferred to a military base
1:13:36
on Cape Cod immigration attorneys telling reporters the
1:13:40
migrants were lied to.
1:13:42
There was a surprise present for them.
1:13:46
The Obama said that
1:13:47
there would be jobs and housing waiting for them
1:13:50
when they arrived. This was obviously a statistic lie.
1:13:54
ABC News confirming the DeSantis administration chartered the
1:13:57
planes and the migrants didn't even born in Florida. They came
1:14:02
from Texas today. DeSantis defending his move and promising
1:14:06
it's just the beginning.
1:14:08
I mean, these are voluntary transportation that they're
1:14:11
signing up for. But they're given a good ride. They're given
1:14:15
everything and that's just you know, it's a humane thing to do.
1:14:18
The President calling out to Santos for using human beings as
1:14:21
political props
1:14:23
on America is reckless. And we have a process in place to
1:14:26
manage migrants at the border. Republican officials should not
1:14:29
interfere with that process by waging a political these
1:14:33
political stunts.
1:14:34
But in El Paso, Texas, it's clear that process isn't
1:14:38
working. Border Patrol agents apprehended nearly 1300 people a
1:14:42
day in this area. Paso is now chartering their own buses to
1:14:48
help migrants head north. New York City 30 volunteers make
1:14:58
sure these families know where they're going. The act of
1:15:02
bussing is a necessity for you guys.
1:15:05
That's exactly it. We do not have the shelter capacity as
1:15:07
you've seen, you know, on top of the people we're bringing in,
1:15:11
you know, there's over 1000 releases to our community a day.
1:15:14
And when the shelter 1000 Fill up, some families have no other
1:15:17
choice but to sleep on a city sidewalk near the bus station.
1:15:21
So of course, that doesn't make anybody think about 1000 in this
1:15:25
small town. And there is a I feel kind of bad because I knew
1:15:29
a girl who grew up in Martha's Vineyard and has family there.
1:15:35
Sorry, just to back up to what you just said. How many people
1:15:40
were did they ship to Martha's Vineyard does this and this five
1:15:44
zero 50 There's 1000s piling up in El Paso daily? Yeah, and they
1:15:51
ship a mere 50 Now this is the thing that doorway these
1:15:55
reporters to cover this a mere 5050 They reported it this
1:16:00
making big the oh, what are we gonna do?
1:16:03
They reported it. This is ABC reporting it but it's at the end
1:16:06
of the report? Oh yes. 1000 bucks 1000 a day. They have
1:16:12
plausible deniability with that. I was gonna say that there is a
1:16:17
real outside of the elites who like to vacation there. Martha's
1:16:20
Vineyard is a real community. And it's a very odd one. And you
1:16:26
my alma mater, when I went to college for all about three
1:16:28
months. There was actually it was the only girl I've ever
1:16:32
slept with in college, and she became a lesbian the next day,
1:16:35
which was also kind of fun, was great for my ego. My daughter
1:16:40
loves that story, telling me to wonder about when she became a
1:16:43
lesbian dad. And it's, you know, you can only imagine how and
1:16:49
there's a lot of drugs going on there. People just hammered the
1:16:53
townies that people who live there and work there. I bet it's
1:16:56
gotten so bad since the 80s. When I was in college, it must
1:16:59
be nuts with all those idiots running around. something's
1:17:03
gonna happen out there. How about this, I predict someone
1:17:04
someone's going to pop off and go nuts on Martha's Vineyard.
1:17:09
It'll be DeSantis his fault. Boy, no, Trump,
1:17:13
Trump, I'm sorry, what am I thinking? So my neighbor, Laura
1:17:17
Logan is out on the warpath. As she has some information, new
1:17:23
stuff has come to light, I'm sorry, my quota is already full.
1:17:27
And she's she has the same basic story. She's going around making
1:17:33
the rounds, I should say, talking to people, I first saw
1:17:36
her do this wrap on war room. But this is a different
1:17:39
interview, a little less HYPEE. And she does have a clue about
1:17:44
some of the stuff that she's doing. Well, we'll get to it,
1:17:47
but just listen to what she has from insider information we
1:17:51
have in place and administration filled with open border
1:17:54
ideologues who are implementing a globalist policy that no one
1:17:59
was given the option in this country to vote on that bypasses
1:18:03
the legislature, and is completely in violation of the
1:18:06
Constitution and what they're edging towards. And I know this
1:18:10
from a source who was in meetings at the UN. And behind
1:18:14
closed doors, these are classified meetings, and the end
1:18:17
listen to these discussions of infiltrating 100 million people
1:18:21
into the United States as the basis for forming a regional
1:18:25
government instead of a national government. So a government of
1:18:29
Canada, Mexico, and the US, this is the strategy that's in place.
1:18:33
And so things like the cartels were created as part of a push
1:18:38
pull strategy where they would push people out of those
1:18:41
countries because life would become unbearable, and pull them
1:18:44
into the United States. It's about the destruction of this
1:18:47
country. And and it is it's put in place step by step so that
1:18:51
you don't really know what's happening. And so what has
1:18:54
happened, what what some people have done now a group of private
1:18:58
citizens has funded a threat assessment of the national
1:19:02
security threat on the southern border, because the government
1:19:05
is failing to do its job. And the the, the basic premise is
1:19:10
that you can't begin to solve a problem that hasn't even been
1:19:13
defined.
1:19:15
So I'm not a big fan of the my source in un behind closed
1:19:19
doors, classified meetings characterization, but she is a
1:19:23
real journalist. You can't deny that she is a great
1:19:26
investigative journalist. And so she says that that's the plan.
1:19:29
I'm thinking bring on the amaro time was
1:19:33
back to the marrow. You know, the funny thing is, if you're
1:19:36
any, we don't have a clip of it, I don't think but it's well
1:19:41
known that Hillary used to always run on the idea and she
1:19:45
would say cuz she was a globalist. She would say I
1:19:50
imagined that some day in the future, where there'd be no
1:19:53
borders. From the tip of South America to the to the tip to top
1:19:59
of Canada. be no borders anywhere the borders would be
1:20:03
done then wouldn't be.
1:20:05
We have from Episode 872 Kuma Aberdeen on hidden camera. Let's
1:20:13
see what this isn't welcome Dallas yesterday, I met this
1:20:19
young man, and it's gonna be stuck. admits Hillary Clinton
1:20:24
will open US borders. Now I don't have the clip you're
1:20:28
talking about. But yes, what she dreamt of the day when there's
1:20:30
no borders. No borders anywhere.
1:20:34
No borders between Argentina and Brazil. That's a good one.
1:20:39
And if I may remind you of the Antifa chant.
1:20:54
No borders, no walls.
1:20:56
Right. We can't forget the Antifa. No borders, no walls, no
1:21:00
USA at all. Your planet? This is not, you know, this is the enemy
1:21:06
from within. Not, you know, a bunch of people that were
1:21:11
protesting January 6.
1:21:13
And here's what I found kind of interesting. At the end there.
1:21:17
She says there's a group of private citizens who are who
1:21:21
have gotten together to what she says create a threat assessment.
1:21:27
So if you want to know why Mike Lyndale the pillow my pillow guy
1:21:30
is being harassed is because he's financing that he's
1:21:34
financing a documentary that she's producing, which isn't
1:21:37
it's not I don't think it's a huge secret. And I think it's
1:21:40
it's kind of a cool idea that people put their money where
1:21:43
their mouth is on this. And so it could be very true. The 100
1:21:48
million. It's still number of years at this pace, but crap.
1:21:54
That's pretty sick. Well,
1:21:56
they're doing what was it? 2 million last month? Was it last
1:22:03
year? A million this year debt 1.6. Last year. So it's 2
1:22:07
million a year it take 10 to take
1:22:10
Weilong? Little we won't be around? I want to see the final
1:22:15
destruction. Want to be around for that? Yeah,
1:22:21
that's a that's a pretty ambitious stunt.
1:22:25
Well, it would be total and there's already I'm sure 20
1:22:28
million.
1:22:30
I'm sure there's a lot of POB all for it, you know, as
1:22:32
Canadians would probably be glad to get rid of Trudeau and be
1:22:35
part of a bigger system. Sure. Mexicans would benefit from it.
1:22:40
But don't we I mean, we would have no more board. We'd have to
1:22:43
assume that somehow we do run it but with it being mostly Latins.
1:22:47
I don't think so.
1:22:49
lettings.
1:22:52
There's also a lot of presumption that the lot tanks
1:22:55
come in here and that they're all of a sudden they're all on
1:22:57
Democrat values.
1:22:59
Most of them Latina Tinks tend to go Republican or republican
1:23:05
over time. Yeah. Well, at least at least a third of them do but
1:23:10
they can easily go all in who they are all religious. A lot of
1:23:14
them. They're Catholics.
1:23:16
Don't you think that Trudeau might actually be vying for the
1:23:18
President of the what was it what were they going to call it
1:23:23
back? And we've heard this story before the North American Union
1:23:27
what was it was something No, the American Union I don't
1:23:31
remember the name of it. But I remember the marrow
1:23:35
Yes, the mirror dish where's that thing? Well,
1:23:38
if you can just wait for it you know, it's going to come back to
1:23:42
talk if if they're talking about doing this the North American
1:23:46
monetary union and au that's what it was. It has a wiki page
1:23:52
entry. North North American monetary union is a theoretical
1:23:57
economic and monetary union of three North American countries
1:24:00
Canada United States of America and Mexico. Implementation also
1:24:05
that's giving up their currency units and then all going to one
1:24:08
which in Wikipedia says Amuro when I'm making this up I wonder
1:24:15
what they
1:24:15
did they had they had some art artist renderings of the thing
1:24:20
Yes. Yes. Many cute looking thing.
1:24:24
Now it'll just be a central bank digital coin. Perfect What a way
1:24:27
to do it not a joke man.
1:24:30
And with that,
1:24:32
I'd like to thank you for your courage in the morning to you
1:24:35
the man who puts on your ladies and gentlemen, please say hello
1:24:39
my friend on the other end Mr. John C DeVore.
1:24:47
Also in the morning all ships to see boots on the ground feed
1:24:49
into your subs in the water and all
1:24:55
nighter there. I had several people come up To me here during
1:25:00
the conference and asked if, if I could describe how you make
1:25:05
that sound is the question is, is it a box full of aluminum and
1:25:11
tin cans? Is it a wastepaper basket? Is it just a pile on the
1:25:14
floor? Could you give us a little bit of a?
1:25:17
Yeah. Okay, well, first of all, I have a two I have two of these
1:25:21
devices. Once thinner than the other but this they're lightning
1:25:24
devices, they're a big, it's like a bucket with a handle on
1:25:27
it that you hold. And when you hook into it into the back of
1:25:31
it, it's meant for this sounds just like lightning. It's the
1:25:39
sound effect as well as the sound effects device. Thunder
1:25:44
sounds like thunder. And I decided that if you look into
1:25:49
it, you get this kind of echoey sound and then I do have a pile
1:25:52
literally a pile of cans, which can which I usually have one of
1:25:59
them in it here's it here's just a little more inside baseball by
1:26:03
take one of the cans and put it inside the inside the
1:26:08
bonus effect by calm combining the two
1:26:11
so it's inside the the under device. So if I shake it around,
1:26:18
makes an extra noise and if I talk into it with the piano and
1:26:23
then the can comes out and makes the sound and in and there's a
1:26:26
pile of cans and I throw the device into the pile.
1:26:30
That's that's the beautiful I'd say thunder device is a bit of a
1:26:34
stretch but the thank you now in the morning to the trolls who
1:26:39
are there in the troll room laughing their asses off over
1:26:42
this. They choose? They tune in every Thursday and Sunday to
1:26:46
Listen Live and elaborate Literie to troll troll me troll
1:26:52
us troll each other and lots of times they got good stuff of
1:26:55
course and they are our real time fact checkers not the best
1:26:58
but they are there and we do love them. And we played it
1:27:01
there's a we have a troll room song which will play end of show
1:27:04
played out this morning. Everyone liked it. Let's see how
1:27:06
many there are. Out there trolls. Let me see what do you
1:27:11
have? 2191? That's kind of on par? Isn't it for some
1:27:17
down? Well, 100 is down at least
1:27:22
100 All right. Well, it's okay. We're happy to have everybody
1:27:25
here. Thank you. Of course these people can also many of them can
1:27:30
be found on no agenda. social.com you can get a
1:27:33
membership. It's open sign up.no agenda social.com You have to
1:27:38
answer three questions. They're getting hard. People keep asking
1:27:42
me what is the answer this man? I can't believe that they're
1:27:45
asking me for cheats. Shouldn't that just be not dignified if
1:27:51
you if you want to join?
1:27:53
What's the latest hard question? Is there one?
1:27:57
I think it was the one
1:28:01
well, there was two there was one we go out we hit them in the
1:28:05
and a lot of that was and the other ones you broadcast from
1:28:10
Northern. Yeah, didn't know that was silly
1:28:14
is blank Silicon Valley.
1:28:17
Thank you. You just gave it away, man. All right, go sign up
1:28:20
for that. And you will be automatically I think
1:28:22
automatically subscribed. To follow John C. Dvorak had no
1:28:26
agenda social icon for Adam and no agenda social. And you'll
1:28:30
find all the artists there you'll find all the whole cast
1:28:33
of characters everybody's hanging out. You don't need to
1:28:35
do that through no agenda social. It's a mastodon so you
1:28:39
can you can also follow us from any other Mastodon account you
1:28:43
might have. And in our value for value model, we love the time
1:28:48
talent and treasure that people bring to the party. We had a
1:28:51
piece of art from Nico, would you say sign me sy me signed?
1:28:56
signed me. I'm not sure how to pronounce it.
1:29:02
Look at it again.
1:29:03
Yeah. I'll tell you what it was. This was the Kamala tour the bus
1:29:07
with a very happy bus driver driving away from the wall. And
1:29:11
it was without a doubt the the winner the best one. Let me see.
1:29:17
What else is he done? Oh, he's done more today. Okay.
1:29:22
He has done I didn't
1:29:23
Nico, same
1:29:25
same Easter No, Amy's actually done quite a bit as you ever
1:29:29
received a nomination before. Well, he
1:29:34
did a couple of AI thing Yeah, no, that's not going to work
1:29:38
again. She is he truly can't close on a number of pieces he's
1:29:41
got
1:29:42
would you say is because of lack of competition. I mean, I hate
1:29:45
to know
1:29:46
they there was no competition. There was nothing It was not
1:29:48
even close above everybody.
1:29:53
See, there really wasn't that I mean, it's like people have
1:29:56
given up
1:29:57
Yeah, it was it was one of those shows. You know, it's funny
1:29:59
because one is Sometimes you finish the show and we look at
1:30:02
the arc. It's over a page full which is a lot a page full of
1:30:07
art, you know 2030 pieces come in and then sometimes 1415 come
1:30:13
in maybe this this time it was like 12 or very few pieces we
1:30:18
didn't get I didn't have anything to grab on to his to
1:30:22
theme. There were only one I liked also, besides this one was
1:30:26
is the real thing. COVID Classic with a coke can here we did
1:30:30
this. Yeah. And that was done by Mark dand. And that was a nice
1:30:39
piece. I liked that he did the the the queen on the on the
1:30:45
toilet. We didn't feel that was very appropriate. No, that
1:30:49
wasn't gonna happen. And he's done a lot of this is actually
1:30:56
one of his slicker pieces. Although I did do like some of
1:31:00
his Biden's stuff. Now he's done a lot of pieces of that three
1:31:05
pages full. So he's been working for a while.
1:31:08
Well, we appreciate the work that that he did, and all the
1:31:11
Agnico and all and all the artists of course, we love the
1:31:14
competition, you can always follow along if you're listening
1:31:16
live or going to no agenda, art generator.com. And there is
1:31:20
always a spot for you to do sign up and submit your own. There's,
1:31:24
there's nothing there's nothing ever wrong, really. It's just
1:31:27
whatever mood we're in. And our rules sometimes go out the
1:31:31
window but having new artwork on for album art for the show is
1:31:37
unique. Very few podcasts do this. I don't think anyone has
1:31:41
done it to this to this length of time. And the diversity and
1:31:45
the talent that we have. It would be unaffordable, not
1:31:48
possible in any other model, but value for value. So we'd really
1:31:51
appreciate appreciate it Nico and of course you can also see
1:31:54
these if you get a if you get off of that legacy podcast app
1:31:57
you're using go to new podcast apps.com We have chapters with
1:32:01
images. There's a ton of extra features. You can also get a
1:32:07
notification when the show goes live pop into the chat room.
1:32:11
It's the future and this show won't go away from your app. If
1:32:15
it gets deep platformed any show won't go away if if you use one
1:32:19
of those. For the treasure parts, we have a couple of
1:32:23
executive and Associate Executive producers to thank for
1:32:26
today. When we start off with Radu and this is a fun one. Does
1:32:32
he give me a pronunciation guide here No. Tight at your ruler.
1:32:43
What do you think?
1:32:44
Ach added sure Ill at your LOA. LOA
1:32:50
well he's when he's in Garland Texas. comes in with a cool
1:32:54
918 89 Now I would say that's probably birthday related. Let's
1:32:59
see. A show 1487 There we go falls on the 33rd anniversary of
1:33:05
my arrival on the shores. Oh, okay. The amount is self
1:33:08
explanatory so 33 on the head. That's nice. Yeah, growing up
1:33:14
behind the Iron Curtain we knew that all we were force fed was
1:33:18
propaganda so he listened to Radio Free Europe Voice of
1:33:21
America and the like on shortwave radio to get a
1:33:24
different perspective on the news. Not that that was
1:33:27
propaganda at all. Holy crap.
1:33:31
Well, you know you get one kind of propaganda. It balances
1:33:35
it was bad it was fair and balanced. These days in the
1:33:38
formerly free West we're lucky to have the no agenda show the
1:33:40
sound quality does not compare and the deconstruction is very
1:33:43
informative and entertaining. Keep up the good work thank you
1:33:46
for your courage no jingles no camera, but you may upgrade me
1:33:49
if you wish. Accounting below. Do we upgrade? Reduce and just
1:33:54
Sir George of the Southern Carpathians? I don't know if he
1:33:59
if he didn't ask for it and see if we have any changes in blue,
1:34:03
isn't he? Oh, yeah. So he becomes a knight then. Alright.
1:34:06
He says you may upgrade. I thought it was already a night
1:34:08
but no, now he's a knight. I have it under the night and day.
1:34:11
So he's good to go. For a knighting
1:34:15
all right. No jiggles no car no jingles no karma. Gotta love it.
1:34:19
Okay, we get up next is sir 1% of the GTFO. And he's in Dixie
1:34:28
Dixie, Dixie Washington for $8.08. It's been four months
1:34:32
since my last donation please do do Shmi Oh, I'm sorry. Hold on.
1:34:36
I'm On Location always takes a second to get set up. You've
1:34:41
been de douche. We're running out. You know, it's like I took
1:34:44
a very small supply with me.
1:34:46
Only you can only bring so many, but I'll tell you.
1:34:49
They need to understand that. The supplies are running low.
1:34:52
We're running out of dilutions.
1:34:54
So check out his jingle requests as I continue to read. Inspired
1:34:59
by Lawrence neighbor of Peter, the main character the film
1:35:03
office space, I'm donating for $80.08 to chicks from the same
1:35:09
time donation. Oh two chicks at the same time donation
1:35:14
for 808. I got you.
1:35:18
And oh okay,
1:35:19
where is this week I'm off to Mexico City to attend Nomad,
1:35:27
capitalist live 2022 And be amongst my people. NCL is
1:35:34
essentially an International Living and investment conference
1:35:37
they have a simple but profound motto. Go where you're treated
1:35:41
best. It is their answer to cultural strife. There's no need
1:35:46
for violence. Relocate to where your time talent and treasure
1:35:51
are respected and appreciated. Instead, it's the reason je TFO
1:35:58
is part of my night name. One day I will get the eff out and
1:36:02
go where I am treated best NCL is like no agenda to me and that
1:36:07
is incredibly energizing and amygdala shrinking as an
1:36:11
experience like no agenda and no agenda meetups, the information
1:36:16
they pass on at these events is great. And being among the like
1:36:20
minded. Being amongst like minded people is invaluable to
1:36:24
all listening who have not heard of the Nomad capitalist, I
1:36:29
highly recommend checking them out. And if it turns out to be
1:36:32
your kind of thing if you attend a future NCL event I'll likely
1:36:36
be there to Django request Biden whispering get vaccinated. abama
1:36:41
No, no, no goat karma because goat is the goat but also
1:36:46
because it's the second we make making. It's the sound I'll be
1:36:51
making from my seat in first class. If the jab takes out the
1:36:55
pilots and my plane goes down. Oh, what a bummer note man a
1:37:00
fully rigged suppressing your exit strategy 1% at a time,
1:37:05
sir 1% of the GTFO lesson Oh no, no, no, no no no no, no no no no
1:37:21
no, no No, no, no, no no I'm up
1:37:34
nice to hear that one again. Greg Carwood San Diego
1:37:37
California for 20 Dots 33. I wonder what that message is
1:37:42
sending in the morning fellas. First off, I have to thank Adam
1:37:45
for mentioning Texas slim so often on the show. He was a
1:37:48
recent guest of mine on the higher side chats along with a
1:37:51
string of other recent guests focused on the Franken food
1:37:54
tech, the anti meat elite and the importance of a
1:37:56
decentralized sustainable ag grass fed and organic food
1:38:00
supply. One of the great issues of our times along with the
1:38:03
Saturn moon mind along with the Saturn moon mind control matrix
1:38:08
of course. Let it be known that my knighthood achievement is
1:38:12
unlocked with this one life's greatest honor. I think and most
1:38:15
appropriate that I go by Sir Carl would have the higher side
1:38:18
I'd like to request grass fed beef and Grassfield blunts at
1:38:22
the roundtable a random deep cut jingo from the archives is
1:38:25
always appreciated. Keep killing it. Okay random
1:38:46
OTG deep cut oldie.
1:38:51
So here we have Nancy Murphy in San Bruno. de San Bruno 350.
1:38:57
Send an email with note I didn't get it. I don't know if you sent
1:39:01
it to me. But I have some Murphy's in my pile. It just
1:39:04
looked. But no, Nancy banks named Nancy of the confused aka
1:39:09
Nancy Murphy. Why don't you give her a double karma for that?
1:39:12
Yeah. Okay. Hold on a second. Double karma.
1:39:19
You've got karma?
1:39:25
Yes, this is Ken Chapman from New Berlin, Wisconsin. And 333
1:39:32
dot 33. One of our favorite amounts. Let me see he is his
1:39:35
he's either one that was the escapee from Canada. Navia. Yes,
1:39:38
it is. Yeah. The big long note. Yeah. And I'll just pick a few
1:39:42
things out of it. We kind of talked about it earlier, but I
1:39:45
TM fellows, I understand. Excuse me, I understand this note isn't
1:39:49
read on air due to its length. Well, if we read it, it would be
1:39:51
the show. To be honest. It would be it would take forever to get
1:39:54
through great note though. It's a very good note, and I wouldn't
1:39:58
you know, it would be cool to publish this and so people could
1:40:01
read what you went through. So anyway, they escaped from
1:40:06
Scandinavia, they're now traveling around the country in
1:40:08
a an RV, which is a 40 foot school bus converted. cost them
1:40:14
a lot to get the COVID tests and the legal stuff and to bring all
1:40:18
the kids over. It's like nuts. He does have a website,
1:40:23
Vanguard. Vanguard adj.com Am I seeing that right? Weird URL
1:40:34
Vanguard, adj Vanguard, sounds like Vanguard, Jad J, something
1:40:39
like that. Oh, he's an insurance guy. That's right. He's looking
1:40:42
for gigs. That's that's, that's what he wants. He can do all
1:40:46
kinds of insurance stuff for you. So go to that website and
1:40:50
and it'll help you out when we see his Anything else we need to
1:40:53
shoot. I'm sorry, I just closed this. stupidly. Okay, is there
1:40:58
anything else he's got pictures of the, of the Cessnas they flew
1:41:03
out on. It's been 10 months of incredible growth, growth
1:41:06
opportunities. We still live in the boss so 10 months since they
1:41:09
escaped Scandinavia, thanks to zero American credit, of course
1:41:13
they can't get credit. They've had bus breakdowns, emotional
1:41:17
breakdowns, Visa, trouble work, regulatory trouble, adoption
1:41:20
trouble, but also with amazing experiences meeting freedom
1:41:23
loving Americans who welcomed us so warmly, he says, I do
1:41:27
emphasized firmly believe that without the generosity of all
1:41:31
our new friends across the nation, we wouldn't have made it
1:41:34
that and the support of my smokin hot wife of 17 years
1:41:37
anniversary last week never had a fight. She has been battling
1:41:41
horrible, debilitating health conditions the whole trip, which
1:41:44
had been dramatically improving thanks to going strict
1:41:47
carnivore. Oops. Sorry about that is that I don't know
1:41:52
misfire through the whole trip. I had curry DeVore I keep my ear
1:41:56
keeping me grounded in reality and laughing hysterically at the
1:41:59
absurdity of the times we live in. You have our heartfelt
1:42:02
thanks, he says. And he doesn't ask for anything but I guess
1:42:06
we'll just roll out of karma for travel. Oh, he does karma you
1:42:11
just say no jingles no karma, but we won't let you get away
1:42:14
with that.
1:42:15
Don it idlers up from Washington DC 33333. And she says this is a
1:42:22
switcheroo for executive producer for her father John.
1:42:27
Okay. So we'll we'll take care of that. And then she says
1:42:31
please say no to Adam. I promise it's short. Don Bigler,
1:42:36
Associate Executive Producer she's axes decades. Maybe she's
1:42:39
been an associate in the past. Well, I don't have that note. If
1:42:42
you have it.
1:42:43
I do. Here's the note. It is interesting. She says this is a
1:42:47
switcheroo for an executive producer credit for my father
1:42:50
John Aguilar. He's on his 85th trip around the sun and loves
1:42:53
the show especially enjoys listening while sitting by his
1:42:56
pool and eating his crew to teh I promised to keep it short so
1:43:05
thank you guys, and he would love some good yet karma and of
1:43:08
course our family favorite. He wants to noodle gun Okay, we
1:43:13
will do noodle guns well if you don't mind I'll switch around
1:43:16
noodle gun first. And all the best says Don yes switcheroo
1:43:21
achieved
1:43:23
with the Maduro gun I got to my pasta glad ah
1:43:40
you know I realize that when you go to occur I realize it because
1:43:43
I cook dinner this last Friday and and had crew to Kay and
1:43:52
I learned something just going on crudity. So what you had a
1:43:57
great line on the last show and I said you know we couldn't get
1:44:00
a Topo Chico and use new assets. That was some of crudity. Turns
1:44:04
out, the reason why carbonated drinks are a problem, at least
1:44:09
it's happening in Germany, and I'm pretty sure that could be
1:44:12
possible Mexico, there's a co2 shortage. It's an actual
1:44:16
shortage of stuff to pump into bottles.
1:44:20
I'm not sure how that works.
1:44:23
I don't either, but okay. We have enough. So anyway, they I
1:44:28
realized that, that when you go to a Korean restaurant and they
1:44:31
bring out all those pickles, they'll bring out maybe
1:44:36
depending on on the feast, if it's a real good Korean
1:44:39
restaurant, they'll bring out your main dish, whatever it is
1:44:42
bulgogi let's say something you might want to get. And then they
1:44:45
have all these little, little things of pickles, like usually
1:44:50
369 Sometimes 12 Little servings of different things. That's crew
1:44:57
to tase.
1:44:59
You It's Korean crudity
1:45:03
is Korean crude it is even though they're pickles cake okay
1:45:06
crew we just call it what it is k crew K crew man we could we
1:45:10
could remarket this K crew what is it? Let's Korean crude it's a
1:45:15
swanky Richard you're up next you have this one.
1:45:21
No I did Don Agler you're up next.
1:45:24
I don't have anything for Richard Bamas burger.
1:45:27
Oh well give him a double comment and read the next one
1:45:30
Did
1:45:30
you get any no note from him there's nothing now again.
1:45:35
You've got
1:45:38
karma. Actually on my list I have an insert from K Q for b i
1:45:44
b kilo Quebec. For Bravo India Bravo Sandra, who gave an in
1:45:51
person donation of 333 Dots 33 and says I had a blast this
1:45:55
weekend with Adam at the beef initiative conference at White
1:45:57
Oak pastures in South Georgia shout out to the producer who
1:46:00
created the ham Trainer App. She's a ham. His app helped me
1:46:04
pass the amateur radio Technician exam. No health, no
1:46:07
jingles and health karma for everybody. You go.
1:46:13
You've got karma. Very nice.
1:46:16
Congratulations to her. Yeah. Jace, Jason. Jason Jason.
1:46:22
Schmidle. in Morgantown, West Virginia. Is your old stomping
1:46:26
ground?
1:46:27
Yeah, of course. Who What was it? Was the top 40 station there
1:46:33
am yeah, Morgantown, Motown. Yeah, big time.
1:46:37
Please de douche me.
1:46:40
Ben de deuced.
1:46:43
I was hitting the mouth in my early 20 in early 2020 by my
1:46:47
friend and former co worker, Tyler Reiss, who I'd like to
1:46:51
call out as a douchebag. And I donated today in a late response
1:46:57
to my own douchebaggery, which was proclaimed on this show in
1:47:00
the early summer. Thanks for the donation of another friend and
1:47:03
colleague Chris Brown. Like Chris, I'm a West Virginia
1:47:08
native. So to keep from to keep form with the precedent that he
1:47:13
said, I shall make my donation in the amount of 304, which as a
1:47:17
reminder is West Virginia's original area code, I remember
1:47:21
it. I'd like to thank you, gentlemen, for your courage and
1:47:24
everything that you do to for your show and his listeners,
1:47:27
your COVID coverage in particular has played an
1:47:30
important role in my life and career. In the spring of last
1:47:33
year, my employer announced that all its employees, barring a
1:47:36
handful of exceptions, must be vaccinated for COVID or face
1:47:41
termination. I was working for a good company and a good paying
1:47:44
job particularly for the area. So I hear that I would be fired
1:47:48
if I didn't get the jab. It was devastating. However, I in many
1:47:53
of my colleagues, co workers decided we would resist the
1:47:56
forthcoming mandate. And armed with the knowledge provided on
1:47:59
this show, we would express her objections to the company's
1:48:03
upper management, to our surprise and great relief to
1:48:05
company management. Not only listen to our feedback would go
1:48:09
on to eliminate the vaccine mandate altogether. I don't know
1:48:15
how much of a part I played in the company changing their minds
1:48:18
probably very little if I'm being honest, but I am certain
1:48:21
that without no agenda, I would have been prepared to respond to
1:48:25
the situation the way I did. I wouldn't have been otherwise I
1:48:28
mean thank you for being thank you again gentleman. And my
1:48:34
apologies for not donating sooner. And then he's got a
1:48:37
couple of Jingle requests here which I had to open up which got
1:48:40
him Yeah, karma noodle gun Biden whole load I do want
1:48:45
to point out that your notes are getting a little long people I
1:48:49
know you're excited I know you have a lot to say. I really
1:48:52
appreciate the support but you know as you say late response to
1:48:57
my own douchebaggery which was proclaimed on the show and early
1:49:02
yes, you're gonna worry Could you could you could tighten it
1:49:05
up you could leave
1:49:05
that out
1:49:07
I'm gonna give you the whole load did
1:49:13
you I got the my pasta
1:49:26
that actually kind of works.
1:49:28
kind of work did work. I've never heard that come well
1:49:30
before. I will say this. That's compared to our last donor Scott
1:49:34
Farley knows how to do it. Right.
1:49:37
Yes. And because he did it right. I'll do Travis after
1:49:40
that. Scott Farley. 300, North Tonawanda, New York where they
1:49:43
have meetups from time to time. No jingles no karma go bills,
1:49:47
who the bills play.
1:49:49
The Buffalo Bills are the probably the favorite team to
1:49:53
win the Super Bowl this year. They're terrific.
1:49:56
Who are the who do that first
1:49:57
game of the season. They kicked the crap out Have the Los
1:50:01
Angeles Rams last year Super Bowl winner. Ha.
1:50:05
All right, well, I'm super excited. Travis Phelps, our
1:50:10
first Associate Executive Producer to 33 dot 33. In the
1:50:15
morning, please accept my birthday donation of 233 33 When
1:50:18
COVID broke up my wife tried to get me to wash the groceries
1:50:21
before I even brought them inside. I looked at her and said
1:50:25
you're insane I'm not participating in this or this so
1:50:30
Mary Let's see we get to the end of the note. I quickly began
1:50:33
teaching my two year old the evils of COVID and we began to
1:50:36
chant no COVID no vaccine
1:50:41
Oh She attached it
1:50:43
Yeah, hold I have it I have a habit a habit even sent me a
1:50:46
loop of it. Attaches audio of this chant from her It'd be an
1:50:53
honor to have it as a jingle forever to honor my late father
1:50:57
who once looked at my babbling daughter and said shut up slave.
1:51:02
Nice. Nice. Where does the wife fit into all this as she backed
1:51:07
out I'm very concerned. please add us both to the birthday list
1:51:10
Travis for 914 Steve for 917 jingles mac and cheese life
1:51:16
shapeshifting Jews and fluoride in your cup and first we have
1:51:21
the here's a little Gabby NO
1:51:25
NO NO Khalil
1:51:31
Mack cheese mac and cheese
1:51:36
is fluoride in you've got karma
1:51:58
All right. Now we have another blank entry.
1:52:01
Actually, we should have done a double up karma for No, no, I
1:52:07
guess not yet for Mark Jin Jinty Ginty McGinty, whereas he has
1:52:12
always been a scanty row a duck's but no, no, no
1:52:15
documentation.
1:52:18
You've got
1:52:20
an Ginty is from karma. Naugatuck Connecticut. I'll read
1:52:24
the next one, which is the second to the last. Anonymous
1:52:28
another long note from fuq wave arena, and I'm pronouncing that
1:52:32
wrong.
1:52:33
Okay. Fouquet Fouquet. Okay. Hey, Google. Hey, man.
1:52:39
$200. Following up on a donation a few months ago, I asked no
1:52:43
agenda nation to contact me if they knew of an OB Gen OBGYN in
1:52:48
the Raleigh North Carolina area who could face it to help a
1:52:51
fellow listener who is pregnant and coerced into a booster jab
1:52:56
by an employer. No one contacted us I don't believe that is a
1:53:01
failing of no agenda nation. I believe it's a failing of our
1:53:05
gutless medical professionals in the area. My wife is in the
1:53:10
medical profession and we couldn't think of any OG byo NS
1:53:14
OBGYN who would write an exemption. Hence the plea. We
1:53:20
did get our pregnant no agenda acquaintance in touch with
1:53:23
someone who had helped us with religious exemptions last year.
1:53:26
I don't know how much help we I've lost the accent. I purpose.
1:53:31
I don't know how much help because it doesn't seem right.
1:53:34
Because North Carolina No. I don't know how much help we
1:53:37
actually rendered but we received a great text from her
1:53:40
recently and her exemption was accepted. I think that is more I
1:53:46
think it was more her resilience and dogged efforts to protect
1:53:51
her unborn child that persevered in the end. Well, good. I feel a
1:53:56
hits keep coming from the multiple fronts but to finally
1:53:59
get a small victory by the way North Carolina shouldn't be so
1:54:02
bought in right? From someone we know is uplifting. It's
1:54:05
pathetic. Is the relentless pursuit of truth and liberty
1:54:10
that will win these fights MP and T. We're praying for you and
1:54:14
your unborn child. jangles. Get vaccinated. JCD that's bold. I'm
1:54:20
not going to say it because I only have two left. Obama you
1:54:23
might die in fact check true.
1:54:27
I don't have I don't have a jingle of you saying that. So
1:54:30
what are we going to do? You're not going to honor this request,
1:54:32
even though you do have to more or less
1:54:36
read but then I'm down. I went down to my last one. I have the
1:54:39
ability in this case to switch to bull crap.
1:54:42
He asked for and even put it in quotes. No, I'm
1:54:45
gonna say I'm gonna say it. I'm gonna say it. I would say that I
1:54:47
was gonna say it and say it but I'm not gonna say until I have
1:54:49
to say it. Here we go get vaccinated. That's bullshit. You
1:54:54
might die fatter.
1:54:58
Wow, I'm glad we did all that Thank you very much anonymous
1:55:02
Tony helst is in Fort Worth, Texas 200 Associate Executive
1:55:07
Producer ship and as Adam. Tony says, Adam and John have made my
1:55:11
donation this week after hearing Adam on Thursday show he was
1:55:14
talking about local businesses and how if you don't support
1:55:18
them, they will be forced to go away. I don't want that to
1:55:21
happen to you guys. So my donation was an order thanks for
1:55:24
all you do by the way I donated for my son Brian's birthday
1:55:27
earlier this month and didn't deep douchey him so before you
1:55:30
run out could you do that now? Yeah, we have a couple of
1:55:33
dilutions left
1:55:35
you've been deed deuced
1:55:39
and says can I get a travel karma for my hubby as he drives
1:55:41
to see his family across country? No jingles otherwise
1:55:44
Tony house Fort Worth Texas? Of course. No problem. Tony.
1:55:47
You've got karma.
1:55:52
Sweaty sweaty with a D in Plano, Texas. $200. We got the Texas
1:55:57
North Texas. That's right. coming in. Gents, longtime
1:56:02
listener first time caller going through 24.5 years of going
1:56:07
through 24.5 year divorce. To 24. Five year okay, I guess
1:56:14
going through 24 Five year divorce and it's no fun. De
1:56:18
douche.
1:56:20
You've been de deuced
1:56:24
jingle requests consult the book of knowledge Theramin. And I've
1:56:28
got info man karma.
1:56:42
Got information, man. New shooters come through.
1:56:47
You've got karma.
1:56:53
And that is concludes our group of executive and Associate
1:56:57
Executive producers for show 14 At what seven I believe 13. Left
1:57:05
15 to go. And we're going to be at 1500. Which is unbelievable.
1:57:09
And want to thank these people for helping to keep this going.
1:57:12
Why is it so unbelievable? John, you didn't think we would we
1:57:15
would last? No, it's not.
1:57:16
It's unbelievable that we can't do it. You are gonna quit it
1:57:20
show 100 I
1:57:20
will always bring this up. Man. You're always trying to shame me
1:57:24
about that just because it was having an emotional breakdown.
1:57:29
But it's because nobody does this. They very few people get
1:57:33
these kinds of numbers.
1:57:36
Yeah, well, it's because no one tried is about a handful
1:57:39
is about 10 podcasters, who have done this many shows maybe 10
1:57:44
have
1:57:45
actually started writing, rewriting the concept of value
1:57:48
for value is not the book or anything but value for for value
1:57:51
dot info. Doing that was the GG, buddy of mine. And so we're
1:57:57
trying to kind of explain more about what it is. So other
1:57:59
podcasters can take note with a guide and examples. But besides
1:58:05
that, we want to thank these executive and Associate
1:58:07
Executive Producers very much for helping us with this
1:58:09
episode. And of course you get the what did you call them the
1:58:12
Forever credit I saw on the newsletter, which I thought was
1:58:15
a good good way of describing it. It's a forever credit in
1:58:18
perpetuity. It never goes away. You will always be an executive
1:58:21
or Associate Executive Producer of episode 1487 of the no agenda
1:58:25
show the best podcast in the universe.
1:58:29
Yes, yes, it's a forever credit, forever credit.
1:58:32
If you'd like to learn how to get this go here.org/and A once
1:58:38
again, thank you all for providing your time, talent and
1:58:40
treasure for the no agenda show.
1:58:43
Our formula is this. We go out. We get people in the mouth
1:59:06
little bit, it's getting hard to hide the dead bodies. It's
1:59:12
getting a little difficult to do that. So they're coming up with
1:59:16
all kinds of ideas. This is an advertisement from the New York
1:59:19
Presbyterian Hospital.
1:59:20
I've been into fashion since I can remember. But one day I just
1:59:25
stomachache so bad. I didn't want to do anything. And she met
1:59:29
New York Presbyterian so it was actually my heart. It was
1:59:32
severely swollen. Something called myocarditis, but doctors
1:59:36
gave me medicines and use machines to control the
1:59:39
heartbeat. They saved me. So now I can become the next great
1:59:44
session signer.
1:59:47
Knowing 58 years 15 of them doing the show. I had never
1:59:52
really heard of myocarditis until until now. And now it
1:59:56
seems like it's very normal for children to get myocarditis.
1:59:58
Everybody's got it you So basically this is a new thing.
2:00:02
Now this and this is from a local news report. I think it
2:00:05
may be from what's wi o do wish to wonder if that's Florida.
2:00:12
This is a very weird side effect of the COVID vaccine called
2:00:16
tonight's
2:00:16
health spotlight emerging new research shows a growing number
2:00:19
of transplant recipients are suddenly rejecting their new
2:00:22
organ.
2:00:23
Scientists say the COVID vaccine could be to blame. Joining us
2:00:26
now to explain this, which TVs medical reporter Dr. Mary
2:00:29
Gillis,
2:00:30
Alexis Phil, according to a new study published in the Journal
2:00:33
of Clinical Medicine, acute corneal Aloe graphs are being
2:00:36
rejected by immunized patients who've undergone the procedure.
2:00:39
These are just that when you have plus, by the way,
2:00:43
Indianapolis that will you had Did you have a corneal corneal
2:00:49
transplant when you had your eye done for you, oh, God,
2:00:51
no, that that's a dead thing. That's where you go. That's it.
2:00:54
Nobody wants
2:00:55
that. Okay, well, apparently they're being rejected and
2:00:57
rejected
2:00:58
by immunize patients who've undergone the procedure.
2:01:01
Researchers say the underlying cause could be tied to a
2:01:04
systematic inflammatory response elicited by the shot. The cornea
2:01:08
is the outermost layer of your eye. Corneal grafts are used to
2:01:12
restore vision, reduce eye pain and improve the appearance of a
2:01:15
damaged cornea. The surgery is known to be one of the most
2:01:18
successful transplant procedures with low rejection rates.
2:01:21
Japanese researchers compiled data from 23 studies a total of
2:01:24
23 eyes from 21 patients who have undergone corneal graft
2:01:28
procedures were assessed. Graft rejection occurred anywhere from
2:01:31
one day to six weeks after vaccination in all patients,
2:01:35
some who underwent the procedure as far back as 20 years ago, in
2:01:38
the paper said the author's right as the virus spread
2:01:41
additional booster COVID-19 vaccines are expected, therefore
2:01:45
proper follow up of corneal allografts recipients and
2:01:48
interventions to prevent coronary allograft rejection
2:01:50
after they received the COVID-19 vaccine may be crucial among the
2:01:55
list of emerging complications linked to the vaccine, our blood
2:01:57
clots heart inflammation and Youngberry syndrome.
2:02:01
And now your your cornea pops off. After 20 That's your
2:02:06
eyeball is pretty much your eyeball after 20 years. Oops,
2:02:10
but your whole eyeball that your eyeball.
2:02:13
your cornea is the outside layer of the eyeball itself.
2:02:17
So the whole thing.
2:02:20
Wow. So the Yeah, you're gonna go blind?
2:02:23
Oh, yeah. Then you just got robbed ball
2:02:28
is the GABA fluid.
2:02:30
guy that's so nasty. Bill Gates. You know, he has his notes from
2:02:35
Bill Gates, Bill Gates
2:02:36
notes. Yeah, that I still wonder who the hell writes those things
2:02:40
because Bill can't write
2:02:42
well as the same people who wrote this script for this video
2:02:45
for him, which was released, I believe, four or five days ago,
2:02:48
the death of the child is a tragedy for the family. That's
2:02:52
all
2:02:52
you need to know. The death of a child is a family. Bill Gates is
2:02:56
now going to explain to you
2:02:58
the death of the child is a tragedy for the family and for
2:03:01
the world. And I was in my 40s. Before I understood about
2:03:06
childhood death, I was stunned to learn that back in 1950, over
2:03:11
20 million children under the age of five would die by the
2:03:15
year 2000 had been cut in half. So
2:03:17
this by the way, is edited this way with this music that's
2:03:21
coming directly from gates Central. And I find this way
2:03:25
very creepy.
2:03:27
Now, okay, well, I'll show you I'll let you know what I think
2:03:31
it's about 9.7 million, about 10% of the children who were
2:03:36
born since the year 2000. There's been unbelievable
2:03:40
progress. We're now downtown there 5 million, of course, we'd
2:03:43
like to get that down to be even lower. So what are those deaths?
2:03:47
What's going on there? Overwhelmingly, it's infectious
2:03:52
diseases, diarrhea, pneumonia, malaria. We can see here that
2:03:56
non communicable that'd be things like cancer 14% injuries,
2:04:01
like a car crash 4%, but infectious disease 82%. And of
2:04:06
course, almost all of this is preventable disease. It's
2:04:09
important countries where you simply don't have the same
2:04:13
health nutrition that the rich world takes for granted. Yeah, I
2:04:17
might ask how we brought child to death down and how can we
2:04:21
bring it down in the future, creating new vaccines and making
2:04:25
sure that vaccines get out to all the children in the world,
2:04:29
we can make sure that you actually have a good sanitation,
2:04:32
toilets ability to wash your hands. We need much better
2:04:37
tools, much better systems to help kids and that very first
2:04:40
week, a birth attendant, even monitoring the baby's
2:04:44
temperature, having the mother hold the baby to make sure it
2:04:47
stays warm. That kind of training and early diagnosis is
2:04:52
very important. So the world has made incredible progress in
2:04:56
saving children's lives. And I'm confident that will see far more
2:05:00
children celebrate their fifth birthday in the years ahead.
2:05:06
I mean, it's not an inconsistent message for him, but this guy's
2:05:10
just got to stop. Vaccines the only way to do it meanwhile,
2:05:17
that's that's the public side of Bill Gates, Robert Kennedy Jr,
2:05:22
who I think that I mean, is he completely de platformed of
2:05:25
alpha of everything now? Is he gone? Just think he's I know,
2:05:30
they were their main.
2:05:31
Yeah. Well, ever since Fauci book came out, that was the end
2:05:35
of him.
2:05:35
Listen to what he says about gates, I think
2:05:37
this is historical jeopardy to humanity that we've never seen
2:05:45
before, you know, the Black Plague and World War Two,
2:05:49
he's talking about how horrible this this COVID vaccine is,
2:05:53
that's, that's the lead up to Bill Gates,
2:05:56
are, you know, are are arguably rivals for it. But I would argue
2:06:01
this is the worst thing that's ever happened to humanity,
2:06:04
because the essential ambition of the totalitarian state is to
2:06:10
control not just conduct, self expression, and, and thought,
2:06:18
and for the first time in history, because of the
2:06:21
technological revolution, the capacity for totalitarian
2:06:25
forces, to literally control every aspect of human
2:06:31
expression, and even human thought is now unprecedented,
2:06:36
uh, you know, they, you know, Bill Gates brags that he's going
2:06:39
to be able to watch with his 60,000 satellites, every square
2:06:44
inch of the earth 24 hours a day, you know, at least in other
2:06:48
parts of the industry, you could run and you could hide, and you
2:06:51
could, you know, collect forces and begin opposition, and we
2:06:57
can't do that anymore.
2:06:59
Do you think that he is he confused with Elon maybe that he
2:07:03
says Bill Gates will have 60,000 satellites?
2:07:09
Well, I don't know that Bill Gates has got 60,000 satellites.
2:07:13
Maybe he is confused, I'm not sure. Or maybe they've confused
2:07:17
him on purpose. So he sounds like a maniac. 30 seconds
2:07:20
left. And the Chinese already deployed this vast array of
2:07:24
facial recognition that is an app that claims to be capable of
2:07:30
reading guilt on people looking at facial expressions from a
2:07:35
distance and deciding whether somebody is guilty. I love this
2:07:40
more. Oh, you know, I would say this is Armageddon is the
2:07:47
apocalyptical fortresses of ignorance and greed and
2:07:51
totalitarianism. And this is the final battle. We need to win
2:07:57
this kind of a
2:08:01
Well, I haven't heard of this technology.
2:08:04
And he's he did say there's claims he didn't say it's a fact
2:08:08
but I like it. I like the whole idea. Just like you have
2:08:11
a technology report that would kind of I record this
2:08:15
specifically for this sort of discussion. Okay. But it's not
2:08:20
about people. But why isn't it about people read it play the
2:08:23
future of tech fences. Some ranchers
2:08:26
say a new tool called virtual fencing is revolutionizing the
2:08:30
way they manage their livestock. It gives them new control over
2:08:33
how to graze on grassland SPVs Joshua hire reports.
2:08:38
The virtual fencing runs off of GPS towers that can be hauled
2:08:42
around on a trailer computer software draws boundaries and
2:08:46
moves the GPS collared livestock around to graze. Nick Jorgensen
2:08:51
uses the technology on his team's 10,000 acre ranch near
2:08:54
ideal, explained the system during a panel discussion at
2:08:58
this year's Dakota Fest in Mitchell.
2:09:00
It talks to a radio base station up on a hill and it sends signal
2:09:05
back and forth and it gives the caller its direction says hey,
2:09:09
this is as far as you can go. As they get closer, it beeps at
2:09:12
them. And then when they step into the fences on they just
2:09:14
they get a light electrical pulse that encourages them to
2:09:18
turn back around.
2:09:19
Oh man, if I wish I'd had this clip. I could have asked some
2:09:23
people about this here. Sure, the treat the crowd people like
2:09:27
the cattle why not?
2:09:29
Yeah, I like to say light electrical impulse. It gives him
2:09:33
a shock. Yeah, well,
2:09:35
that's what electric fence does. So it's the same idea. But it's
2:09:41
I think cars will respond. I don't know enough about cars,
2:09:43
but it just seems wrong. Here's what they're doing to humanoid
2:09:49
cows.
2:09:49
Nearly every baby born in the US gets a heel
2:09:52
prick shortly after birth. Their newborn blood fills six spots on
2:09:56
a special car used to test the baby for dozens of genetic
2:09:59
disorders that If treated early enough, could prevent severe
2:10:02
disabilities even death. The test itself is crucial and
2:10:06
potentially life saving, but it's what happens after that has
2:10:09
some concerned the leftover blood spots become property of
2:10:13
the state and maybe purchase for approved outside research
2:10:16
without your knowledge or consent. Now the state stresses
2:10:19
that research could lead to future life saving tests and
2:10:22
treatment, and they insist the bloods bonds are de identified
2:10:26
before they're given to researchers.
2:10:28
Bullcrap
2:10:28
I have heard this so this was a conspiracy theory back in the
2:10:33
day, I mean, you know, they do the heel prick that says they
2:10:36
got your DNA and they got to track you and I'm like, Man,
2:10:39
that doesn't sound right. But here it is. Sounds kind of spot
2:10:42
on the money.
2:10:42
A public records lawsuit alleges New Jersey police recently
2:10:45
subpoenaed a nine year old blood spot to link his father to a
2:10:49
cold case rape and an increasing number of lawsuits are
2:10:52
threatening state stockpiles. Both Texas and Minnesota had to
2:10:56
destroy millions of blood spots following past privacy related
2:10:59
lawsuits there. And Michigan Health officials reportedly
2:11:03
recently agreed to destroy more than 3 million blood spots,
2:11:06
following lawsuits by parents there. And while parents here
2:11:09
can request the state destroyed blood spots after they've been
2:11:12
stored, the state says it may not be able to comply. Why not?
2:11:21
tell you why not. Okay.
2:11:24
Because they don't want to
2:11:27
work. What do we get to do? Oh, forget it. Yeah, yeah. Okay.
2:11:32
We'll do it. And then go back to reading the newspaper at the
2:11:36
desk.
2:11:39
Well, doctors job is not reading the newspaper at his desk. He's
2:11:42
out there promoting the new ill advised by valen booster
2:11:47
today he was on the new COVID boosters which are now available
2:11:50
WhiteHouse COVID coordinator Dr. Ashish Jha telling ABC News to
2:11:53
get maximum protection. Americans 12 and older should
2:11:56
get these boosters before Halloween. The sooner the
2:11:58
better. He said they're designed to fight against Omicron and its
2:12:01
variants Dr. Shah receiving his booster today with second
2:12:04
gentleman,
2:12:05
Doug emhoff. Be five
2:12:07
is super contagious. It's out there getting a vaccine that
2:12:10
specifically targets that it's going to make a big difference.
2:12:13
Makes me feel better about protecting myself protecting my
2:12:15
family
2:12:17
officials warning there's always a chance of a possible COVID
2:12:19
surge this fall or winter with Americans coming back indoors.
2:12:23
Meanwhile, Sweden reporting they have the lowest excess mortality
2:12:26
rate in Europe. Of course the Sweden didn't do lock downs.
2:12:34
According to a properly peer reviewed study, I think most New
2:12:40
York COVID patients on ventilators died 90% Surprise,
2:12:44
surprise. One day that'll come out man, that protocol.
2:12:48
Remember, I was in Vegas, and we had the people who teach
2:12:52
operators how to operate the ventilator. And they're saying
2:12:55
this is the wrong protocol. We're killing people. And it's
2:12:57
and they're telling us to do it.
2:12:59
And you weren't the only one that was noticing a door that
2:13:02
found this out. This was reported here and there too.
2:13:05
Yeah.
2:13:07
Now I have that we've played Supercuts like this before, but
2:13:11
this is the most lengthy and detail that has all the players
2:13:14
in it. This is the all Democrat players before the election, who
2:13:20
were saying they would not take this vaccine because of Trump.
2:13:25
Yeah, I think we should play this because it's a, we have to
2:13:29
remind ourselves of a lot of things so much has happened.
2:13:33
And this is one of the things this show does best,
2:13:36
I think it's going to be a very skeptical American public about
2:13:39
taking the vaccine and they should be
2:13:41
we can't trust the president and take his word and take a vaccine
2:13:47
that might cause harm to us.
2:13:49
If and when the vaccine comes in, it's not likely to go
2:13:52
through all the tests that needs to be ended trials that are
2:13:54
needed to be done. Let's just
2:13:55
say there's a vaccine that is approved and even distributed
2:13:59
before the election, would you get
2:14:01
it? Well, I think that's going to be an issue for all of us,
2:14:05
when we
2:14:05
finally do God willing, get a vaccine, who's going to take the
2:14:09
shot, who's going to take the shot,
2:14:12
we will need to have access to the vaccine results so we can
2:14:16
make our independent assessment to make sure that Donald Trump's
2:14:19
fingerprints are not on it.
2:14:21
You'll be the first one to say put me sign me up. They now say
2:14:25
it's okay. Is the
2:14:26
vaccine safe? Frankly, I'm not going to trust the federal
2:14:30
government's opinion. And I wouldn't recommend to New
2:14:34
Yorkers based on the federal government's opinion
2:14:37
and the question of whether it's real when it's there that
2:14:40
requires enormous transparency. Would you
2:14:43
trust that vaccines there's very little that we can trust that
2:14:45
comes out of Donald Trump as well. We cannot take for granted
2:14:48
this process will be free of political influence. I don't
2:14:52
trust the president. And I don't trust the FDA.
2:14:56
To give answers and administration can't give
2:14:58
answers to these questions. The American people should not have
2:15:02
confidence.
2:15:02
You're understanding the American people. Now, here's a
2:15:05
vaccine. It was no, it was done quickly. But trust this federal
2:15:10
administration and their health administration that it how
2:15:14
confident am I? I'm not that competent.
2:15:16
Yes, I would be hesitant. But I'm gonna ask
2:15:19
a lot of questions. You're going to need someone other than this
2:15:24
FDA, and this CDC saying it's safe,
2:15:28
you got to make all of it available to other experts
2:15:30
across the nation. So they can look and see, there was
2:15:34
consensus, this is a safe vaccine. What I'm worried
2:15:37
about is that there's some sort of October surprise and that
2:15:40
there's a pressure put on the decision makers here to announce
2:15:43
a vaccine in October of 2020.
2:15:45
We're gonna put together our own group of doctors and medical
2:15:49
experts to review the vaccine and the efficacy and the
2:15:52
protocol.
2:15:54
Quite a contrast with what's happening now. Yeah.
2:15:59
Yep, all Majid loudmouth, Democrats.
2:16:02
Do you have any tick tock clips?
2:16:06
For sure.
2:16:07
The only one I have is why have one from last show, but it's I
2:16:11
don't think it's gonna fit into anything we're doing. I have one
2:16:14
dough that's today. And it's about some guy who claims that
2:16:18
this is organization that's been buying up? Well, we know for a
2:16:22
fact that tick tock and Instagram and other people that
2:16:26
get a lot of fall, we had
2:16:28
that we had the halo group who the United Nations prompted and
2:16:31
paid to promote the COVID vaccine.
2:16:35
Yeah, I got one here where a guy's being paid or told to do
2:16:38
something anti Trump specifically. And he's gonna get
2:16:43
paid to do it. And that's my tick tock for today,
2:16:47
versus offered $400 To make an anti Donald Trump propaganda
2:16:51
post related to the January 6 investigation that is completely
2:16:55
not true. I should start out this video by saying I'm not a
2:16:58
Donald Trump supporter. So that should give a little bit of
2:17:00
context to where I'm coming from. I'm an attorney, I post
2:17:03
legal news and analysis on related topics. Okay, here we go
2:17:06
with the story. So first thing first, I get an email from
2:17:08
somebody but the good info Foundation, we'll talk about
2:17:11
them a little more in a minute I'm going to refer to this
2:17:13
person is Jane Jane sent me a message letting me know she
2:17:15
represented the good info Foundation, and that she was
2:17:18
willing to offer a paid collaboration to discuss some
2:17:20
topics related to January 6, I said sure, why not? I'll learn
2:17:23
some more Jane says the good info foundation will give me
2:17:25
$400 To make a post on my page, and then share it Instagram. So
2:17:29
you see that blue link? Alright, we're gonna follow these.
2:17:31
I would just like to say, I find it very interesting how media
2:17:35
production has gone from the jump cut to a fucking machete.
2:17:40
What is this? They just they can these people not get a full
2:17:45
paragraph out in one go? They have to chop it up and all these
2:17:49
bits.
2:17:51
Everybody's doing this. And I don't know. Why be a mean, it
2:17:55
would work if there was a sense of rhythm.
2:18:01
Yes, thank you. Yeah, sense of rhythm and not the I mean, it's
2:18:04
horrible. It's really bad. And this, and I agree with you this
2:18:08
is it's become a format, but it's bad. And no one seems to no
2:18:12
one seems to monitor. I think
2:18:13
people that do it right with a sense of rhythm and beats. You
2:18:19
don't you wouldn't complain. But nobody does. Because they're not
2:18:22
professionals. And so you know, you're bitching about amateurs,
2:18:25
I'm
2:18:25
sorry. I'm just specific requirements in order to obtain
2:18:27
that $400 of how I should refer to the January 6, capital raid
2:18:32
number one, I must call this a criminal conspiracy. Number two,
2:18:35
I must say Trump, Republicans were responsible. Number three,
2:18:39
I must frame it as an attack on my country that attack on
2:18:43
America or Americans, a criminal conspiracy and a committed
2:18:48
crime, I must attribute the matter to Magga. Republicans, I
2:18:52
must make clear that this was ongoing and unresolved. And most
2:18:56
importantly, that I must channel all of this onto the
2:18:59
manipulation of voter agency so that I could turn their anger
2:19:04
around this event into defiance that would make people more
2:19:07
likely to vote in midterms. And the thing that struck me the
2:19:09
most was this part where I was told to talk about the aspects
2:19:12
of the Trump campaigns plan. And I was supposed to say that the
2:19:16
Trump campaign paid literally millions of dollars to make
2:19:21
January 6 happen. I figured maybe I missed something. So I
2:19:25
said, Hey, Jane, what is the basis for the claim that the
2:19:28
Trump campaign itself paid millions of dollars to make the
2:19:31
January 6 Seed of the Capitol happen? Jane doesn't answer the
2:19:34
question. Hi, Preston. If you don't want to state that in the
2:19:36
video, it's fine. You don't have to use all the bullet points
2:19:39
provided. So I kept going. Sure. I'm just wondering if there's
2:19:43
support for that client. Jane doesn't answer again. Let me
2:19:46
know if you are interested and the rate works for you. Thanks
2:19:49
so much. I'm not interested and the rate doesn't work. For me.
2:19:52
This is the good info Foundation. They boast on their
2:19:55
homepage that good information is the lifeblood of a democracy.
2:20:00
Did you look at the good info Foundation? And who there?
2:20:03
Perhaps the
2:20:05
guy in London by looked at the page I didn't look into who's
2:20:08
the about I didn't look at the about page. I just, they just
2:20:12
passed it off. I didn't care. What was interesting, though, is
2:20:16
the talking point they had where you wanted to blame it on Trump
2:20:19
that he had to sink Trump and Trump supporters. And it
2:20:24
specifically said on that line, he didn't read it, but it said I
2:20:28
you can see on the screen, it said Do not say Trump and Trump
2:20:32
allies.
2:20:35
Yeah, right. Yeah, exactly that he did say that.
2:20:38
There's something important about not saying allies, but
2:20:43
using supporters as some I don't know what psychological aspect
2:20:47
that is.
2:20:50
Wondering? Like, there they are a 5013. See, as I say that,
2:20:55
right? 501 c three? Yes. Founded in 2021, so they haven't even
2:21:02
filed yet. I don't have to look. They're brand new, front. Yes.
2:21:07
With some money regarding those
2:21:10
regarding the social networks and how they are used, I came
2:21:14
across. Interestingly, a talk Tiktok video of a college
2:21:19
professor, who asked his students what social networks
2:21:23
they use, and why they use them, what they use them for, what
2:21:25
their preferences are. And the results are not completely
2:21:29
surprising. But there are some gotchas in there.
2:21:31
I asked my first year college students how they feel about
2:21:34
five different social networks. Here's what they had to say.
2:21:39
Snapchat is mostly for private communication. Private stories
2:21:42
are popular still, streaks, which were a big deal for a long
2:21:46
time are really no longer a thing. And when a student meets
2:21:49
someone new, their Snapchat username is still the first
2:21:53
thing that they will give to that person before they give a
2:21:56
phone number. Instagram, they feel as getting too busy with
2:22:00
too many features. And that's frustrating them. They don't
2:22:03
like the changes in the algorithm. They don't like
2:22:06
seeing content from accounts they don't follow. They don't
2:22:08
like reels and they don't like to focus on shopping. They do
2:22:12
like that Instagram is a great way to learn about a person that
2:22:16
they meet by going through their Instagram profile when other
2:22:18
networks are, you know, letting content disappear after 24
2:22:21
hours. Tik Tok is where they go for entertainment. Few of them
2:22:26
are creating any sort of content. They're mainly a source
2:22:29
of entertainment. Twitter is good for news, but not widely
2:22:33
used. Actually, speaking of Tik Tok and Twitter, we had class
2:22:36
the day after Queen Elizabeth died and I expected that a lot
2:22:39
of them got news on Twitter about it, but I was surprised to
2:22:42
hear they got news on Tik Tok about Queen Elizabeth dine. And
2:22:45
Facebook is a big known as one student put it, people who are
2:22:49
on Facebook are not happy.
2:22:52
So we can see the problems here. Snapchat is still popular for
2:22:57
very different reasons. Tik Tok is purely entertainment. And so
2:23:03
I don't when I go on tick tock, I don't have an account. But I
2:23:08
only see entertainment stuff. But all the videos you bring,
2:23:12
which of course is from the lives of the lives of tick tock
2:23:16
account. It's all these these teachers and and it's because
2:23:22
something completely different. So there's multiple tic TOCs,
2:23:25
obviously.
2:23:26
Yeah, tic tock is dimensional. And
2:23:29
and of course Facebook is a no go. So we have a couple of
2:23:33
strikes against Instagram, except it's cool to stalk
2:23:35
somebody to see what they're really all about. And Facebook
2:23:39
is no no, I
2:23:39
don't think it's that effective. But okay,
2:23:42
what do you mean? Well,
2:23:43
I mean, I've tried to stalk people on Instagram, and I got
2:23:46
nowhere. No is the best place to stalk people. LinkedIn used to
2:23:52
be a Flickr.
2:23:53
Oh, Flickr yet is still around, isn't it? I still have a Flickr
2:23:57
account.
2:23:57
Nobody uses these things anymore. Do you want to? I think
2:24:01
probably Facebook's the best way. But if he you know kind of
2:24:04
stuck everybody well, I don't even have an account. You can
2:24:07
stalk me there. Well, clearly we don't have an Instagram account
2:24:10
either. Septim phony one.
2:24:13
So Snapchat is in the category by its own which is used for
2:24:16
introductions. They like the disappearing messages. I can
2:24:20
understand things younger kids particularly but I guess the
2:24:22
college kids as well. So we have a problem with tick tock on
2:24:26
Facebook, Instagram, all part of meta, enter their heat seeking
2:24:31
missile, who was out to get Tiktok to bring him down.
2:24:35
Senator Hawley here's his intro to a nice house and oh, yeah,
2:24:40
it's purpose. Let me start with you. I just say it's great to
2:24:42
see you here today. I have repeatedly invited your company
2:24:46
to testify before Congress. I invited them to testify to the
2:24:50
Judiciary Subcommittee on crime and terrorism in November 2019.
2:24:54
I invited them to testify again in September of the following
2:24:58
year, both times We were stiffed tick tock told me that they
2:25:03
would set up a meeting with the CEO. They didn't want to testify
2:25:05
in public, but they set up a meeting with the CEO after
2:25:08
November 2019. They then cancel that meeting. So it's nice to
2:25:13
see tick tock being willing to answer questions in public. It's
2:25:16
it's a pleasant change
2:25:17
from this. From this introduction, I can only
2:25:21
conclude that tick tock is a little worried now.
2:25:24
No, I think tick tock should be I think they should be praised
2:25:27
because there's no reason to go for Congress just to be
2:25:29
ridiculed.
2:25:30
Correct. And that's exactly what happened. And it does not look
2:25:34
good for the tick talkers.
2:25:36
Let's, let's dig into a few things. If we could,
2:25:38
specifically about tic TOCs, and links to the Chinese Communist
2:25:41
Party.
2:25:41
There we go. Okay. Are you ready?
2:25:45
In response to a letter from some of my colleagues, tic tock
2:25:47
claimed earlier this year that the company has never shared
2:25:50
data, never with the Chinese government, is that correct?
2:25:54
That is correct. Yes. And has never shared data with the
2:25:56
Chinese Communist Party. Is that correct?
2:25:58
We will never share data period.
2:26:01
My question was, in the past decades have has Tiktok ever
2:26:04
shared data with the Chinese Communist Party?
2:26:06
We have never shared data with the Chinese government. Correct.
2:26:10
With the Chinese Communist
2:26:11
Party, they did not send the right person for this. Holly.
2:26:14
He's good at this. He's a lawyer, I'm sure. Right.
2:26:18
I don't know what Hartley's background is. I'll look into
2:26:20
it. But right now, but yeah, he is good at this. He because
2:26:23
there's a bunch of these Republicans are competing for
2:26:27
who's the best at doing this sort of thing. And he's up. He's
2:26:30
up there with the big three
2:26:31
or four? He's, yeah, he's in the top five? For sure.
2:26:34
Yes, correct.
2:26:36
Do you have any? Have you ever shared it with members to
2:26:39
members of the Chinese Communist Party?
2:26:42
We've said many times, Senator, that we do have Chinese in
2:26:47
engineers based in China. I don't think there's any platform
2:26:51
up here that would be able to speak to what you're talking
2:26:54
about in as it relates to the political affiliation of an
2:26:57
individual. But I'm happy to assure you that we are ensuring
2:27:01
the access controls around our data, as well as hear a crack
2:27:06
weakness, this storage of that data in the United States.
2:27:09
So I think you're telling me that there are Tiktok employees
2:27:12
or bytedance employers who are members of the Chinese Communist
2:27:14
Party? Is that true or no?
2:27:16
I'm saying I wouldn't be able to verify that. Well, let
2:27:18
me just ask you that affirmatively. Are there members
2:27:20
of are there Tiktok employees or bytedance employees who are
2:27:23
members of the Chinese Communist Party?
2:27:25
Senator, I'm saying nobody that sitting on this panel could tell
2:27:28
you a political I'm not
2:27:29
interested about anybody's opinion. I'm asking you a
2:27:31
factual question. Are there members of the Chinese Communist
2:27:35
Party employed by tick tock and bite dance? Yes
2:27:38
or no? Now listen to her make a critical mistake.
2:27:42
I wouldn't be able to tell you the political affiliation of any
2:27:45
individual. What I can tell you is how much we
2:27:48
owe a membership in the Communist Chinese party is not
2:27:50
exactly like membership in the Democrat party. So I'm looking
2:27:53
for an answer. You tell me you don't know. Tik Tok doesn't know
2:27:56
I'm I, here's what I can tell you here. We can tell you that
2:27:59
our US and Singapore leadership, there are no CCP members. I can
2:28:04
tell you. So
2:28:04
you do know that. But you're telling me that you don't know
2:28:07
if there are any members who are employed by tick tock or
2:28:10
bytedance members, the Chinese Communist Party.
2:28:13
Senator, I am happy to share that we are putting access not
2:28:17
so my question. My question is that's not my question. My
2:28:20
question is, are there any Tiktok employees or bytedance?
2:28:23
Members, employees members of the Chinese Communist Party? Yes
2:28:27
or no?
2:28:28
Senator, I'm saying nobody could sit up here and give you so you
2:28:31
don't know. You're saying you don't know. You do know your
2:28:33
leadership isn't but you don't know about your employees? Is
2:28:35
that your testimony? I know that everyone who makes a strategic
2:28:38
decision at this platform is not a member of the CC
2:28:42
Dziedzic. Okay. It's interesting. It's interesting to
2:28:45
me that you're quite confident that anyone who can make a
2:28:48
strategic decision how many people's
2:28:51
it's our leadership team. So number and again, the leadership
2:28:54
team, is it based in the US and Singapore? CEO is based in
2:28:59
Singapore? He's not Chinese.
2:29:01
Whoa, you got
2:29:03
pot slam. It just went
2:29:08
to Yale. He graduated. Stanford got us this year, he went to
2:29:12
Yale because he's a Yalie law school guy, and he was the head
2:29:16
of the, again, you follows the same pattern, the same playbook
2:29:19
where he's runs the Law Journal, there are classic, classic guy.
2:29:26
Yeah. And I'm sorry to say it I mean, I want to like the guy but
2:29:30
this is he's clearly operating for someone who wants tick tock
2:29:34
gone. He doesn't. This is not because he really, if you really
2:29:39
cared about the American people's data, you'd shut down
2:29:41
Facebook, and Twitter and Instagram. They're the egregious
2:29:46
ones. They're handing over data to the FBI, willy nilly, and
2:29:50
saying, Oh, something might be going on over here. And the FBI
2:29:53
is using that to go on little fishing expeditions. So this
2:29:56
cannot be taken seriously as someone who cares about the
2:29:59
American public I agree. Yeah. Meanwhile over in the House of
2:30:05
Representatives is a good showboater there was a
2:30:08
showboater just so is this Higgins cat? Representative
2:30:12
Higgins, I forget where he's from. And as a climate change
2:30:16
lady, I only have this short clip, but you may have seen it a
2:30:21
lot of people have been posting this. And she goes off the rails
2:30:24
against him when he asked a very simple question, although he's
2:30:27
asked it, of course, an aggravated manner meant to set
2:30:30
her up and meant to trigger her is like, well, if we do away
2:30:34
with all petroleum products, how are we going to live? You know,
2:30:37
we've pointed out on this show as well, everything petroleum
2:30:40
products, oil is an oil Yeah.
2:30:43
Everyone's seen this as good. Everything you have your
2:30:47
clothes, your glasses, the car, you got her on your phone, the
2:30:50
table, you're sitting at the chair, the carpet under your
2:30:53
feet, everything you've got as petrochemical products. What
2:30:57
would you do with that? Tell the world
2:31:00
if I had that power in the world, what actually don't need
2:31:05
that power? Because what I would do is ask you sir, from
2:31:08
Louisiana, given your your present, use or Louisiana or
2:31:14
heart when and understand why the EPA knows that toxic
2:31:19
petrochemical facilities, toxic polluting the world and are
2:31:24
killing black people throughout Louisiana. With your heart and
2:31:31
ask your god what you are doing.
2:31:35
Crazy. That was? I mean, there must have been a lot of Lido
2:31:40
could I mean it she was given a kind of a blank check to say
2:31:45
whatever she wanted to about what you could do. And she could
2:31:48
you could have a lot of fun with that question if you had
2:31:51
anything on your mind at all, but she obviously didn't
2:31:55
know she started and then she switched right away as if I had
2:31:57
the power. No, I'd asked you Senator, she's like the training
2:32:01
kicked in. But there was Did you hear what he said to her unless
2:32:04
I misunderstood it. Listen to this
2:32:06
good lady tossing polluting the world and our killer?
2:32:11
She said, I'm trying to give you the word boo. Did he say boo to
2:32:15
her black lady? Did he say
2:32:19
what he said,
2:32:22
polluting the world and are killing black people?
2:32:27
Boo. I don't know. Well, whatever. He said, maybe AOC
2:32:32
went off the rails on this.
2:32:34
Oh, yes, she went nuts.
2:32:35
I wanted to address mistletoe directly. I just want you to
2:32:39
know that. In the four years that I've sat on this committee,
2:32:44
I have never seen members of Congress, Republican or
2:32:48
Democrat, disrespect.
2:32:51
She's basically violating the rules of the house when she does
2:32:54
this. You're not supposed to go after one of the other people
2:32:57
the way she's doing it. You can continue to say something about
2:33:01
you know, you can apologize to the person that was being
2:33:03
grilled. But you can't do what she's doing. The house rules
2:33:07
forbid it. I didn't realize know why she wasn't called out.
2:33:10
Oh, come on, boo. You know why, hello, expect
2:33:15
a witness in the way that I have seen them disrespect you today.
2:33:21
I do not care what party they are in. I've never seen anything
2:33:27
like that. And for the gentleman of Louisiana. And the comfort
2:33:35
that he felt in yelling at you like that. There's more than one
2:33:42
way to get a point across. And, frankly, men can treat women
2:33:49
like that in public. I fear how they treat them in private.
2:33:58
She is so good man.
2:34:00
She should be reprimanded. Now she wants to be reprimanded by
2:34:04
the left if the debt if the Republicans take over the House.
2:34:07
Nothing like that's gonna happen again. I can assure you.
2:34:12
Like she had her little
2:34:13
know what he's thinking. I didn't hear me yelling at her.
2:34:16
She was yelling is kind of mocking her I would say
2:34:19
But literally, the lady was yelling at him. Yes,
2:34:23
yes. So
2:34:27
I guess I should watch the whole climate change calm and it's all
2:34:31
performative. It's all about what we can get a clip on. And
2:34:34
there he is. We were part of the dumb system. We help that guy
2:34:36
out. But I know I know. But I wanted to get to AOC. That was
2:34:41
really why I wanted to play the setup. And you think that people
2:34:45
would learn about climate change? And if they hadn't
2:34:47
figured it out yet? Maybe they don't watch news, but Oh, well.
2:34:50
It's just the Appalachians
2:34:51
on the consumer watch tonight Appalachian Power so there's
2:34:54
still time to enroll in a program that promises a one time
2:34:57
$50 gift card the utility He calls it the Take Charge
2:35:01
program. It runs every year from the start of May to the end of
2:35:04
September. By enrolling you essentially are given control of
2:35:08
your thermostat to Appalachian Power, the company says it would
2:35:11
make small and brief adjustments, especially during
2:35:14
the peak electric demand zero. Once you enroll, you get a $50
2:35:18
gift card. Again, that's a one time deal and you can then get
2:35:21
an additional $25 gift card per central unit for every year
2:35:25
you're enrolled. That's $5 per month May through September. If
2:35:30
you're interested in this, we've got a link on whl.com where you
2:35:33
can enroll
2:35:34
now I'm sure a lot of people are doing it 50 bucks gift card not
2:35:37
not mistaken off the bill was a gift card is a lot of money now.
2:35:42
So sad.
2:35:46
So I got a clip, I want to ask you to maybe bring this up with
2:35:53
with Moe. Okay.
2:35:56
I think that the Little Mermaid, the new version with black woman
2:36:02
is an example. And one of the better ones and I say this based
2:36:07
on a couple of articles that are written about it, including how
2:36:10
cool it is that the new Little Mermaid just from a headline
2:36:15
won't be defined by needing a man or a man's love. bringing me
2:36:23
to the point of making it sound as though she is a would be a if
2:36:28
given the choice a single mom not interested in becoming
2:36:32
anything other than a mermaid actually, also, that this is a
2:36:36
classic example of systemic racism. by redefining the
2:36:44
character you make the character black, that's fine. I don't care
2:36:47
about that. But now you've redefined her in a black suit
2:36:51
agrees stereotypical mold. Sorry, a black stereotypical
2:36:56
mold from dentists is Disney by the way, the most woke of the
2:37:00
woke of the woke, which exemplifies to me. I could be
2:37:05
wrong. systemic racism. That's what's this word racism. Really,
2:37:10
when you talk about systemic racism, people, nobody can ever
2:37:13
define it. I think this is a good example of it, parent and
2:37:17
it would be a woke, woke woke that would do it because they're
2:37:20
stupid. They don't know that what systemic anything is and
2:37:23
they would just do it because they would go for the
2:37:25
stereotype.
2:37:26
Parents started sharing videos of their children reacting to
2:37:29
the trailer and seeing a princess that looked like them.
2:37:33
using hashtags like black girl magic and representation
2:37:36
matters. The trend has gone viral. Some of the videos even
2:37:40
reaching Bailey herself.
2:37:48
went for another black print. A few days ago, the White House
2:38:01
hosted what it called the United We Stand summit a gathering of
2:38:04
civic activists authorities in various fields and survivors of
2:38:08
violent hate crimes. Although the specific focus of that
2:38:10
gathering was to address hate motivated violence. The event
2:38:13
was part of the administration's broader argument that this
2:38:16
country's deep political polarization is a threat to the
2:38:19
nation's well being and that well meaning citizens have to
2:38:22
work together to address it. That's something Chris Starr
2:38:25
Walt has been thinking a lot about too. Even if you don't
2:38:27
know the name. If you follow politics, then you know his work
2:38:30
because as a political editor at the Fox News Channel, his team
2:38:34
was the first to call Arizona for Biden on election night.
2:38:37
2020 The first sign that the former President Trump would not
2:38:40
win reelection. The announcement infuriated the former president
2:38:44
and his allies who raged at Fox and Steigerwald when Senator
2:38:47
even said he should be fired. And a couple months later, he
2:38:50
was although fox call it a restructuring. Steigerwald later
2:38:54
testified before the January 6 committee about the attempt to
2:38:56
pressure his team to backtrack on its decision.
2:38:59
Something happened in the middle there and all of a sudden we
2:39:02
were at Trump. That was the weirdest thing.
2:39:05
Another one of these Switcheroos
2:39:08
wasn't just a switcheroo was like you got me on I
2:39:11
don't know what to call it. There's something else it's a
2:39:13
it's a it's changed the topic. They changed in midstream. It's
2:39:17
like,
2:39:18
doesn't know what to call it. It's just got to be some NLP
2:39:20
stuff.
2:39:21
I agree with you. I just don't know what. And that's
2:39:25
NPR again.
2:39:29
Yeah, more than anybody
2:39:31
that's very, very weird.
2:39:34
To catch more of these, but anyway, back to the Little
2:39:37
Mermaid, which was that when the report was supposedly about
2:39:39
didn't turn into a fox, anti Fox screed thing? Yes, Trump, and
2:39:46
but I just think it's systemic racism at its finest are
2:39:49
stereotypes
2:39:50
we don't they're stereotyping a black woman who would more than
2:39:55
likely not have a man about the house. By design, which He's
2:40:00
certainly systemic racism. But I'll ask Moe.
2:40:03
I speak with him on Wednesday. I shall ask him.
2:40:08
I'm sure we'll have some better clips as examples to show us
2:40:11
just how messed up it really is.
2:40:13
Well, maybe, maybe not. Maybe not. Okay, what else we got?
2:40:17
I do have a little bit of Russia.
2:40:21
Have or you do have I do
2:40:23
believe I do have a little bit of Russia. And in this case, it
2:40:27
is CNN. And we're laying it on thick. Actually, I should
2:40:31
mention, I saw this article. Okay, two articles first, USA
2:40:37
Today tries to bring out a fact check. Saying Ukraine's
2:40:43
President did not sell farmland to US companies. So we know that
2:40:48
30% wound up in in hands or maybe you say control of
2:40:52
Cargill, JBS Dupont, no, Cargill DuPont Monsanto. So they fact
2:41:00
check this. And then at the very end of the article based on our
2:41:03
research, we rate false the claim that Zelinsky sold 17
2:41:06
million hectares of farmland to US corporations. It is illegal
2:41:10
for foreign companies to own land in Ukraine, according to
2:41:13
experts. Although of course, the laws all changed. When Zelinsky
2:41:19
came into power. We don't talk about it. While Cargill Monsanto
2:41:23
and DuPont do have business interests in Ukraine and Cargill
2:41:26
has a 5% share in the land holding company, none own land
2:41:30
directly. So they say business interests. It's, it's I mean,
2:41:36
that's USA Today just lying.
2:41:38
Yet no law USA Today has turned into a liberal apologist and
2:41:46
they do this sort of thing. Their back checking sucks.
2:41:49
They've really gone off to off the rails. And then USA Today is
2:41:54
one of the worst news outlets now that you can can't count on.
2:41:59
Yeah, pretty much.
2:42:00
There was an opinion piece of Politico titled waging
2:42:04
psychological war against Russia. And it was written by
2:42:07
David shed, Former Acting Director of the Defense
2:42:10
Intelligence Agency, and Ivana stranor, who was an adviser to
2:42:16
the bearish Center for Media integrity at the foundation for
2:42:20
defense of democracies spoke. And just to start off totally,
2:42:27
the fight for Ukraine will not just be one on the battlefield.
2:42:30
For all the high tech weaponry The West has delivered
2:42:32
psychological war against Russia remains a key opportunity for
2:42:36
the United States as well we talked about as let's let's
2:42:40
shake it up there at home for him. Let's have some people fall
2:42:43
off a balcony and let's make it look like there's stuff going on
2:42:47
and people trying to unseat him. Historically, such an approach
2:42:51
focused on selling Russians the American dream, but this
2:42:55
strategy is a relic of the Cold War ill suited to present day
2:42:58
Russia. Uh huh. So that won't work by saying come to America,
2:43:02
instead of pitching the benefits of Levi's and Hollywood, really,
2:43:07
us information operations to use Russian nationalism to turn the
2:43:11
tables on the Kremlin highlighting the wars damage to
2:43:14
Russia exposing government corruption and inequities inside
2:43:18
Russia. And exploiting Brazil, there it is, and exploiting
2:43:24
resentment amongst Russia's ethnic minorities. Hey, we could
2:43:28
do that DLM thing in Moscow. These dare we say Russian style
2:43:33
tactics will bear more fruit than tales about the wonders of
2:43:36
American democracy to actually saying that, that we should use
2:43:40
Russian style tactics against them. Okay.
2:43:45
It's pretty hard to do it their their ethnic groups are spread
2:43:48
out few and far between. I mean, there's a this now this is
2:43:51
nonsense.
2:43:53
But I think they're sincere about it. I mean, I'm sure
2:43:56
this is syrup is not going to do any good. It was laughable. You
2:43:59
know, what else you Russians aren't idiots.
2:44:01
Well, here is David Petraeus wasn't the one point also CIA
2:44:07
director.
2:44:08
Yes, he was a CIA director until he gave state secrets to his
2:44:11
girlfriend for a blow job.
2:44:13
You know, I'm normally fairly guarded and cautious about this.
2:44:16
But the tide clearly has turned because the success of this
2:44:21
offensive as important as it is itself on the ground. What
2:44:25
really is important is that it reflects a hugely important
2:44:29
development a new reality that Ukraine has been incomparably
2:44:33
better than Russia in recruiting, training, equipping,
2:44:37
organizing and employing additional forces. While Russia
2:44:41
has been struggling to do just that literally running out of
2:44:44
soldiers, ammunition, tanks, fighting vehicles and so forth.
2:44:48
The Ukraine supported superbly by the US and NATO, whereas
2:44:53
Russia, even if it declared mobilization today could not
2:44:56
reverse this fundamental reality. So the implication
2:45:00
Since our start, they're very, very clear Ukraine will over
2:45:04
time and yes, tough fighting more casualties, more punishing
2:45:08
Russian strikes on civilian infrastructure. But Ukraine will
2:45:11
over time, I think, retake the territory that Russia has seized
2:45:15
since 24. February, and it's even conceivable now that they
2:45:19
could retake Crimea and the Donbass. And oh, by the way,
2:45:23
with what's going on in the front lines, there is insurgent
2:45:25
activity now, picking up in the Russian rear areas, carried out
2:45:29
by Ukrainians there as well. So again, this is going to take
2:45:33
time, there will be tough fighting all of that. But this
2:45:36
is a disastrous situation for Russia now. And I'm not sure
2:45:39
that everyone recognizes just how does it worse than
2:45:43
Afghanistan, remember, they left Afghanistan for the government,
2:45:47
they left behind state and power for two years, this is going to
2:45:50
be a terrible, painful retreat for them. And then again, the
2:45:56
outcome just is I don't think in doubt anymore, Ukraine will
2:46:00
prevail, unless there's some unforeseen development. And as
2:46:03
long as we continue to provide the weapons and of course, you
2:46:06
know, to the latest announcement about that, I'm confident we
2:46:09
will continue to do everything that they need to help them
2:46:13
build on the momentum that they have now achieved, and carried
2:46:16
all the way through to victory, frankly,
2:46:20
man, is that wishful thinking? Or is that real?
2:46:26
I don't know what it is. I don't think it's either one. I don't
2:46:29
know what I did. Given these talking points. He blows them
2:46:32
out there and I don't know. I don't know. Hey, can you get us
2:46:35
to give him more money more money?
2:46:38
I'm gonna show my mood by donating to no agenda.
2:46:41
Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah, that'd be
2:46:43
fun.
2:46:52
Then we could use a little more money. We do have a few people
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to thank for show 1487 Starting with and we start low here. We
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actually start with the 808 donation from Christopher Berg.
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And he's in Osceola. Wisconsin. He wants to and he's got a
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birthday coffers hot wife Meryl. Sir Kevin McLaughlin is up with
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Daisy Dukkha Luna lover American bougie always tell how well you
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did by how high on the list is Sir Kevin McLaughlin. He's right
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the top. Lucas, North Carolina 808. And our third boob donor is
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Brian Hendrickson, in Tulare, California. 808. I'm from
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California and I can pronounce to Larry. John fuller in
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No, he's happy belated to me. I turned 58 Are you all be AC
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Okay, is your partner 15 years no.
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AC AC I was alternating current until now. Dean Roker? No
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relation to 5510 Daniel Mariano and Pflugerville, Texas 5510
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in Imperial Missouri 5005 And then we have $50 donors right
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Nathan Cochran in Franklin, Tennessee Steven Chu MK in
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dog track is still there. Greg OLS camp in Thunder Bay,
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lavender in Montgomery, Texas. James Edmondson in South
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Adair. He's floating around in APO box $50 Alexander ver de HO
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in Gig Harbor, Washington, Lian Shipley in Covington,
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Washington. And last but not least, Sir Jerry wing and Roth
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in Saugus, California want to thank these folks are making
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voice.org/and a service called karma for those who are in need.
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You've got
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karma
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I wanted.
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And he does it again. Yeah, of course because I
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wanted to read and I wanted to read a note that from one of the
2:50:21
donors from the last week or the week before, who didn't have a
2:50:26
note that we wanted, and it was Paul Helmick and he wants to
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plug he says, I you know, I don't even know that much, even
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though I can't imagine how much mail I got from. He just wanted
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to plug the November 4 event of seeds of literacy.org seeds of
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literacy and he wants to
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promote
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he wants to honor Margo is friend and hero and she her full
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when anyway C's of literacy.org Get involved. Take a look at
2:51:13
that website. You'll get most of I think that's I think our
2:51:16
obligation is finished with a plug of Margo, okay.
2:51:28
Everything is short today shortlist for all we
2:51:31
congratulate Travis Phelps he celebrate on September 14, Jacob
2:51:34
Davis turned 39 on the 16th Travis Phelps says Happy
2:51:38
Birthday to Steve we celebrate on the 17 Jennifer strafing
2:51:42
Happy Birthday to her daughter Sonia turned 16 today and Joe he
2:51:46
will be celebrating on the 20th and Peggy our flight attendant
2:51:49
Peggy Lydon she is 57 Happy Birthday Peggy and Christopher
2:51:53
Berg's So happy birthday to was smokin hot wife Merrill. She'll
2:51:57
be 34 on the 20th Happy birthday from everybody here the best
2:52:00
podcast in the universe. No titles we do have two nights we
2:52:04
got that instant night and actually to two men here so we
2:52:07
got a manly manly blade blade. All right, Roger. Man, I'm glad
2:52:14
you becoming a knight. I don't have to remember that. I Cerullo
2:52:18
and I and Greg Karwa. Gentlemen, you both are about to become
2:52:21
knights of the no agenda roundtable. Thanks for your
2:52:23
contribution of $1,000 or more, and I'm very proud to pronounce
2:52:27
the case the as Sir George of the Southern Carpathians. And
2:52:31
Sir Greg Carwood. For you, gentlemen, we have hookers and
2:52:34
blow rent boys and Chardonnay grass fed beef and Grassfield
2:52:37
blunts, they get grass fed grass finished if you don't mind.
2:52:40
Also, we've got some Rubenesque women and Rosie Gates has in
2:52:43
stock a bucket vanilla bong hits and bourbon sparkling cider and
2:52:45
asked for its ginger ale intervals. We got breast milk or
2:52:48
pablum. But Donna you don't want that you want your mutton and
2:52:51
meat we got it right here. And while you're enjoying that,
2:52:55
please go to no agenda nation.com/rings Send us all
2:52:59
your info like you know size your finger. We have a way to do
2:53:01
that on that website. And the address we'll get your official
2:53:05
no agenda night ring out, which is a signet ring. So if you hit
2:53:08
someone in the mouth that will leave a mark or you can just use
2:53:10
the included wax to seal your important correspondence as well
2:53:15
as the certificate of authenticity. No one
2:53:26
do we have reports from to the DC meetup
2:53:30
Ferdous 33. Washington DC free show amygdala shrinking meetup.
2:53:36
Hey, it's Dave DC girl in the morning. Hey Jen and I'm in the
2:53:40
morning that Katie DC identify as a cat. ITM psoralea Crystal
2:53:45
policy and pizza preparing dossiers
2:53:48
Hey, this is rounding what a pleasure it is to participate in
2:53:52
bad kitty DCS very first meet up new listener new meetup Maven
2:53:57
What a pleasure to be here with everybody I knew I'd missed this
2:54:02
the fact that roundy is there makes me feel a little bit
2:54:05
better about the spooky quality of that meetup the CTC meetup we
2:54:10
got people who are cats we keep people who are doing pizza
2:54:14
parties While looking through intelligence.
2:54:17
I have no idea what's going on there
2:54:19
it's not exactly like the pig roast meet up.
2:54:21
What's shakin, get one nation we're here at the pig roast with
2:54:24
Dame Wen and friends and family and we're having a marvelous
2:54:28
time with this extremely fun group. This is Dane when up the
2:54:34
legs. I'm waiting for the fireworks. Fatima John it's
2:54:38
her stocks trade are having a great time at the third annual
2:54:40
pig roast. Trains good Blaine's bad
2:54:44
in the morning. This is Sarah Damon progress. Thank you for
2:54:47
your courage.
2:54:48
In the morning. He different from discussing bags and having
2:54:51
a good time and SIG Rose. Hi, it's clearly like say hello to
2:54:54
everybody. This is Richard in the morning. What would you like
2:54:57
to say sir about the end Can you whistle TV rather?
2:55:06
High in the morning this is Nate. First timer.
2:55:09
Thank you for your courage you douchebag Oh, definitely your
2:55:12
spec will change real soon.
2:55:15
Okay, tighten it up people. Thank you very much. Yeah, we do
2:55:18
have some meetups taking place today. They may even be close to
2:55:24
ending. Oh, I don't know. We've got the Crowne Plaza West
2:55:27
Minneapolis, in Minneapolis, Minnesota. That's the crypto
2:55:30
calm behind the scheme's meltdown that started at noon
2:55:33
central so they'd be winding down also the mighty Niagara
2:55:36
River meetup started at 130 Eastern and Ramin clinic
2:55:41
veterans park in North Tonawanda. New York on Wednesday
2:55:44
the 21st the Fort Wayne red pillars club 33 meet up at 633
2:55:48
Eastern at the What's up pub and grub Fort Wayne, Indiana. Look
2:55:52
for the tall guy in the red t shirt. We dive at dawn and the
2:55:57
22nd That'll be the next show day Thursday to hot Tucson meet
2:56:00
up four o'clock Tucson time. Canyon crown Tucson Arizona. We
2:56:05
go all the way through October with what I'm seeing here on the
2:56:08
on the meetup schedule let me see if we have anything from
2:56:11
outside the United States we got Toronto soon of course to be
2:56:15
part of the Americas zone. Northwood Dublin Ireland on the
2:56:19
first of October Cancun Mexico on the first of October Victoria
2:56:23
BC on the third Peters borough lots of Ontario on the fourteens
2:56:29
and then as I said meetups scheduled all the way through
2:56:33
the end of October but that means there's plenty more room
2:56:35
for you to add to it. If you don't find something on that
2:56:38
calendar no agenda meetups.com start one yourself there always
2:56:42
a party guaranteed no agenda meetups. You won't be triggered.
2:56:56
You want to be safe.
2:57:05
I have three ISOs. They've been collected by by producers. So I
2:57:09
don't even remember exactly what they are. So why don't I go
2:57:12
first? Yeah, because you know, people trying to help me out
2:57:15
while I'm doing extracurricular activity.
2:57:17
Let's see. It's not binary. Okay.
2:57:24
This one? God, punch them in the mouth. Okay, what's
2:57:31
this final one says people are evil bastards. Ooh,
2:57:36
I like that one.
2:57:37
Kind of okay. It's not horrible. What do you have?
2:57:42
I don't have much better. Oh, by the way, you're gonna get clips
2:57:45
for us. Just doing us. We talk on the show for three hours. We
2:57:48
don't need to be at the end either. At the end again. Let's
2:57:53
go with Whoa,
2:57:55
whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. Man, we have a Bernie doing Whoa.
2:58:00
That's by that's Biden. That's Biden. Yeah, hold on a second.
2:58:09
Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa.
2:58:12
That's Bernie. That's very old Bernie clip very similar. I kind
2:58:17
of kind of whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, I'm kind of liking that.
2:58:21
All right.
2:58:23
There we got overdue. As long overdue.
2:58:28
I'd say it's between Whoa, whoa, whoa. And which I think may be
2:58:32
better. You see, these people are evil bastards. Oh, oh, no, I
2:58:38
think it's Whoa, whoa, whoa.
2:58:40
Yeah, I think so too. Yeah,
2:58:42
I think that that's the way that the way to go.
2:58:46
So we have a big get a jolly get at the end. Here is what the
2:58:50
Japanese weather report as this is. I think I did get this clip
2:58:53
from NPR but nobody's covering what's going to happen which is
2:58:55
a nasty nasty turn. Not a cyclone of cyclones. A typhoon
2:59:03
typhoon. Authorities in
2:59:04
Japan are warning of a powerful typhoon that's approaching the
2:59:08
country's main islands. And piers Anthony Kuhn reports from
2:59:12
Seoul that heavy rains are expected through the weekend.
2:59:16
Japan's Meteorological Agency issued a level five emergency
2:59:20
warning Saturday evening local time. That's the highest level
2:59:24
of warning issued only in case of extremely dangerous weather.
2:59:28
The agency says typhoon Nan Madol is headed for a Southwest
2:59:31
Japan's Kyushu island and is expected to make landfall Sunday
2:59:34
morning local time. It's packing winds up to 120 miles per hour,
2:59:39
with gusts topping 170. Winds at those speeds can cause
2:59:43
catastrophic damage. Meteorologists are expecting
2:59:47
heavy rainfall of up to 20 inches and warn of high waves
2:59:51
flooding and landslides. Some trains and flights in Kyushu
2:59:54
have been canceled, and authorities have warned
2:59:56
residents to avoid unnecessary travel
3:00:00
Now those are good numbers and but they but since this is in
3:00:05
Japan who cares?
3:00:07
We care because we have de mastered and Sir Mark In Japan
3:00:10
we care horse we do we have guys no nobody
3:00:13
cares in the mainstream media is what I'm saying. And so we have
3:00:17
this this report Here's his report compare what you just
3:00:20
heard to the Puerto Rico hurricane Puerto Rico
3:00:24
is under a hurricane warning as Tropical Storm Fionna nears the
3:00:29
US territory threatening to dump up to 20 inches of rain. People
3:00:33
are bracing for mudslides, severe flooding and power
3:00:36
outages. Fionna is located some 90 miles south southeast of St.
3:00:40
Croix with maximum sustained winds of 60 miles an hour.
3:00:44
Puerto Rico's Governor Pedro Pierre loose Louisa says the
3:00:47
island is already feeling the effects of the storm and that
3:00:50
the soil is already saturated. Fiona is expected to swipe past
3:00:54
the Dominican Republic tomorrow as a potential hurricane
3:00:58
60 miles an hour compared to 120 and 170 miles an hour which
3:01:03
sounds like a tornado speed
3:01:05
yeah yeah.
3:01:08
So what are you saying there's gonna be so what you're saying
3:01:11
is gonna get slammed what you're saying is the mainstream media
3:01:16
media is racist they don't then like Japanese Yeah,
3:01:19
they're a bunch of that's exactly what I'm saying just
3:01:21
making sure we got a straight well for more outing of racists
3:01:28
will be back on
3:01:30
us. We I love we do we
3:01:32
out racists coming up next the no agenda stream.com Hug story
3:01:37
five minute limit. Oh, is this new variation on the hug story
3:01:42
format. Fletcher Blaney and special guests net Ned will be
3:01:45
doing it live so the switchover should be seamless and end of
3:01:50
show mixes from the one and only Rolando Gonzalez and also a
3:01:57
troll room an ode to the troll room and that is by Van jelly
3:02:02
and his daughter on the vocals coming to you from the deep
3:02:07
south in Georgia, Bluffton, Georgia in the morning,
3:02:10
everybody. I'm Adam curry
3:02:12
and from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain I'm John C
3:02:16
Devorah.
3:02:17
We will see you all again here on Thursday. No agenda time no
3:02:20
agenda station, please remember us at the vortech.org/na Until
3:02:26
then, adios mofos such boy boy boy oh boy,
3:03:10
caused by Sun circulation pattern
3:03:13
and Death Valley the mercury hit 127 degrees Fahrenheit or 53
3:03:18
Celsius
3:03:18
is the same disrespect to the natural world that has led to
3:03:23
this climate crisis is a drastic change in climate all with
3:03:27
our hopes and dreams drown in their empty words and promises.
3:03:32
We'd have to take combustion engine vehicles off the road as
3:03:36
rapidly as we can we will transition
3:03:38
off of fossil fuels natural gas, coal is caused by a
3:03:43
sudden circulation pattern. educating everyone on the need
3:03:47
to curb population growth seems a reasonable campaign to enact
3:03:51
so
3:03:51
how what, what are these ducks?
3:03:53
vegans eat Oreos. And they drink Coca Cola. I don't stop driving
3:03:58
around Moscow, it won't affect next one.
3:04:03
It's not tested. Hope is not blah, blah, blah. When people
3:04:07
aren't able to act together when they're not participants in
3:04:10
society, then they can't push back. They can't even think
3:04:13
about the nature of the political reality that they live
3:04:16
in.
3:04:16
Mr. Chair, can I can I respond to that, please?
3:04:20
We have opportunities now to transfer clean energy in a way
3:04:24
that goes 1000s of jobs.
3:04:25
There's no question I'm in favor of banning New data shows
3:04:28
President Biden's efforts to lower energy prices have reduced
3:04:31
the nation's emergency oil reserves there will
3:04:34
be a transition there will be a transition and there will be
3:04:37
some pain there. We we leave the True goods we have no agenda
3:05:26
fora.org/in A Whoa whoa whoa
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