0:00
You're going to kill the old man
Bill. Adam curry, John C.
0:03
Devora.
0:04
Thursday, September 29 2022.
This is your award winning keep
0:07
our nation media assassination
episode 1490.
0:10
This is no agenda
0:13
tracking pipe globally and
broadcasting live from the heart
0:17
of the Texas hill country here
in FEMA Region number six.
0:19
Morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry,
0:21
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where it's beautiful. I'm John
0:25
C. Dvorak. Buzzkill. How
beautiful. Is this used to be
0:34
raining in Florida?
0:35
Oh, goodness. It was did they
write that for you use did you
0:39
pay $10 for that one. What for
that joke seems to be raining in
0:44
Florida was a joke. Oh, come on.
0:46
It's a fact.
0:49
Alrighty, then. Yeah. How
convenient is this thing. I
0:55
mean, it's very inconvenient for
people. Uh, Tina knows a lot of
0:58
people they in Fort Myers once
have a very difficult time
1:04
of Fort Myers got swept.
1:06
hammered. Absolutely. I'm
hammer. Hammer hammered. No,
1:11
really? No, I
1:12
did. He got hammered.
1:14
So and you know, this, this is?
So you know, I talk to Tina,
1:19
whenever this happens, and she's
lived through cat two, I think
1:22
or maybe a cat three but never a
cat five. And she said besides
1:26
the terrifying howling like,
like you're in a freight train
1:29
in your house. Yeah, the noise
is really bad is really, really
1:33
bad. The aftermath is the
problem. She says, you know,
1:36
guaranteed there's a week the
first of all, there are people
1:39
dead, you know, this, this is
okay, massive day wrecker. Then
1:44
there's a week of no
electricity. Everyone's got
1:46
generators running. And so just
just constant generator noise.
1:51
Your house starts to get all
moldy and smell like it's
1:54
rotting away from the
1:56
bad bad stinks.
1:59
And of course, this was a once
in a 500 year event. Uh huh.
2:03
Sure. How convenient. First, we
can we can knock off the news of
2:11
the pipeline of the pipeline
sabotage.
2:15
So let's listen too much.
2:18
It's always good to
2:20
hear hear. Yeah, maybe? Yeah.
2:21
Well, it's about No, we don't
2:23
care. We just face it. What
difference does it make to us?
2:27
Do
2:27
you think that Florida will have
infrastructure back up and
2:30
running in time for the midterm
elections? With this
2:33
devastating? Okay. I thought it
was right. I didn't clip it. I
2:37
heard it. Tina was watching the
five on Fox, and I heard the
2:42
other words have a token
Democrat. Now sometimes it's
2:45
Geraldo sometimes it's a former
Senators figures. Yeah.
2:51
CNN token Republic has totally
2:54
well done. CNN doesn't even do
token Republicans they follow
2:56
they used to. So they have this
Jessica lady. And she and I
3:01
gotta hand it to her. She holds
herself up pretty well against
3:04
the obvious scorn and deserved.
But she said something you said
3:09
and she was they were
interviewing Marco Rubio. Rubio
3:13
is always in on games
everywhere. It's I don't trust
3:15
him and she asked What about the
nursing homes? How are the
3:20
nursing homes? And it just
struck me for that moment? Like,
3:24
are we going to try and draw a
comparison with Cuomo and with
3:28
DeSantis if people in the
nursing homes die? I mean, I
3:32
just felt like that was already
the spin that she was trying to
3:35
put on it.
3:39
TV sucks.
3:41
But we're supposed to
deconstruct it so I'm just
3:43
trying to figure out where are
we where are we going with this?
3:48
Well, I can't come up with
anything. I don't really know if
3:51
I have any clips I may have one
wrap up clip on the hurricane do
3:56
I
3:59
well, I have I have a couple
clips.
4:01
Let's play that out of the way.
4:04
Let's go to Bill we're at CNN
now. Usually when when there's
4:09
an event like this we'll we'll
do a mock report now and let
4:14
everyone know how phony This is.
But these guys were actually in
4:17
bad when there was no the wind
was not phony. But the fact that
4:21
they're doing it it's just it's
so stupid. Oh, it looked as
4:25
windy. It's windy. Oh, I'm
hungover onto a Piper to a to a
4:29
stop sign. Oh, it's windy. It's
windy. It's always windy. Well,
4:32
I put a condom on my microphone
because it's windy, windy,
4:35
windy. Oh, this is a viral
clips. You put a condom on the
4:38
microphone. That's the stupidity
that distracts from the pipeline
4:42
wars. Anyway, Bill Weir who I
think used to be a sports guy or
4:45
is a sports guy. He's out there
and he does the inevitable.
4:51
end is coming in here. John. We
just felt market increase in
4:56
wind speeds for the last 10
minutes or so. We were Ride
5:00
about 4050 miles an hour. It's
hard to fathom, that speed
5:03
tripling in the next few hours
by more now we're getting maybe
5:06
70 mile an hour gusts here.
We're right at the point where
5:10
US 43 heads across the Peace
River here, I'm just in front of
5:15
the memorial for sugarcane,
Charlie, which in 2004,
5:18
devastated and sent a wake up
call to this community about the
5:22
threats of living on the coast
in a rapidly warming planet. As
5:26
a result of that storm, they're
the first community in Florida
5:30
to put in a climate adaptation
plan, a level coastal resiliency
5:34
plan that they're you know, I've
been working on for years now.
5:37
And this will be the test is
hard to build power lines or
5:43
building codes for 17 foot storm
surge. So that's the crazy
5:49
variable here. Right now, no one
has ever seen that. So we don't
5:53
know what that looks like. This
is exactly what climate
5:57
scientists have been warning
about for a long time. And now
5:59
we get to see how close John,
6:01
oh, man,
6:02
when did climate become weather
all of a sudden, oh, when it's
6:06
convenient, oh, let's
6:07
ask the weatherman on CNN. And
let's just pretend we're Don
6:12
Lemon.
6:13
Can you tell us what this is and
what effect the climate change
6:17
has on this phenomenon.
6:20
We can come back and talk about
climate change at a later time,
6:23
I want to focus on the here. And
now we think the rapid
6:27
intensification is probably
almost done, there could be a
6:30
little bit more intensification
is still over the warm waters of
6:33
the eastern Gulf of Mexico, but
I don't think we're gonna get
6:36
any more rapid intensification.
If you look here, you can
6:39
actually see pretty interesting
for your viewers, you can
6:42
actually see a second eyewall
forming around the inner
6:46
eyewall. And that's basically
this, John. Rest development dry
6:54
now. Listen, I
6:55
just I'm just trying to get that
you said you want to talk about
6:57
climate change. But what what
effect does climate change have
6:59
on this phenomenon? That is
happening now? Because it seems
7:02
these storms are intensifying?
That's the question.
7:05
I don't think you can lead
climate change to any one event.
7:08
On the whole on the cumulus
climate change may be making
7:13
storms worse, but I would
caution against them.
7:19
Okay, well, listen, I grew up
there. And these storms are
7:22
intensifying Something is
causing them to intensify. Good
7:26
one time.
7:29
I grew up there intensifying,
something's causing it. It's got
7:32
to be climate change. By the
way,
7:33
there was actual audio from the
control room. Like it. This is
7:43
this odd clip, which is kind of
misplaced, but I'm not sure what
7:46
it is. I'd never heard of it.
The Waffle House index. Have you
7:49
ever heard of the Waffle House?
So I don't know if this is a
7:52
native ad. I can't I can't
imagine waffle houses jumping in
7:56
on it. Other than maybe they're
really trying to be a
7:58
communications mechanism.
8:00
Finally, the people who gauge
hurricanes threat in a very
8:03
unique way
8:04
they call it the Waffle House
index.
8:07
I brought the category three.
8:12
This morning some people in
Ian's path are using an unlikely
8:15
guide to decide whether they
should weather the storm but a
8:18
wipeout
8:20
air but let's get out of here.
But we all we all know but don't
8:23
close.
8:23
So called Waffle House index is
a tried and true test for how
8:27
serious a storm could be. And in
Florida at least 21 Waffle
8:31
houses have closed up shop as
cities across the state are
8:34
pummeled by en
8:35
they almost never closed. But
you can see they're closed. They
8:38
even shuttered up the windows, a
8:40
color coded system was created
by FEMA. And as a simple way to
8:44
visualize how hard the area will
get hit green means the
8:47
restaurant is fully operational.
Yellow means it's offering a
8:51
limited menu. And red means
closed. The government
8:55
looks to Waffle House as a role
model that explains what's going
8:59
on
8:59
and for a company that prides
itself on staying.
9:02
How about that for a little
insert that explains what's
9:05
going on government
9:07
looks to Waffle House as a role
model that explains what's going
9:11
on.
9:12
And for a company that prides
itself on staying open come rain
9:15
or shine or hurricane strength
winds. Closing is a big deal.
9:19
Waffle House has an emergency
protocol better than anyone
9:22
else.
9:23
Even though the index isn't
meant to be a serious tool for
9:25
deciding whether or not to
evacuate. The Waffle House CEO
9:28
says that it can be a way to see
how well an area is recovering
9:32
after the storm.
9:33
If we are on a limited menu,
then you know, there's some
9:36
limited resources if we are
closed, and you know, it's
9:38
pretty serious, but if we're
open, you know the community's
9:41
coming back. And that's the most
important thing after a storm is
9:43
to get that sense of normalcy.
We made it through the storm and
9:47
now we're getting back on our
feet. Now,
9:51
is this a native ad
9:52
native ad or is it ABC setting
up DeSantis everyone can say man
9:57
That's so stupid. They use the
Waffle House index. That's why
10:02
people are dead. I'm just
looking for the political angle.
10:06
It's there somewhere to
10:07
pre it's too premature for that.
And besides that there's money
10:10
to be made. There's a lot of
money to be made. So he's gonna
10:14
take precedent over the
political angle by these
10:17
networks. Yeah.
10:18
Now there's definitely money to
be made for sure.
10:21
That waffle house gets a nice
boost. Yeah. And everybody gets
10:26
free meals there for the next
few months. The I did the report
10:30
for sure. Yeah. Yeah. Do you
have anything this storm like
10:36
the rest of them will blow over
now? Yeah.
10:40
How come you're not on
mainstream with those jokes?
10:42
That's, you're really you're
you're fit for it. Right. Do you
10:48
have anything on the pipelines?
Because I would like to breeze
10:50
through that briefly.
10:53
In the middle, look,
10:54
this is after all my, my beat
10:57
this you are saying yes. Why
didn't get anything? Did I even
11:00
get it? No, I didn't get any
pipeline stuff.
11:04
Someone retweeted a tweet that I
tweeted to audit in 2013. I
11:11
forget exactly what the, with
the read. I was replying to
11:14
someone. I said, now you're
wrong. It's all about pipelines,
11:17
all about the pipelines. And
here we are. This is this is
11:20
very interesting. And I think I
certainly missed it.
11:23
Now. I understand. There's three
pipelines. Yes. Yeah. Well, and
11:27
then the last one is the one
that's kind of not paying as
11:30
much attention to which is the
moon this important, which is
11:33
the new Baltic one which comes
from Norway?
11:35
Yes. Let me take you through it.
First, CBS evening news.
11:40
Tonight, European leaders are
accusing Russia of sabotaging
11:43
two underwater gas pipelines in
the Baltic Sea. Ukraine is
11:47
calling it a terrorist attack.
Authorities are investigating
11:51
the leaks in the Nord Stream one
and two pipelines a vital source
11:54
of natural gas for Europe. There
was a sudden drop in pressure on
11:58
Monday video shows bubbles where
the leaks occurred after
12:01
underwater explosions were
detected.
12:05
I love it. Why are they not
using the words? Why aren't they
12:09
using the words false flag they
use that all throughout the
12:13
beginning of the Ukraine
conflict war. And now they have
12:17
the perfect opportunity to say
false flag and they're not doing
12:20
it. I mean, they're saying
they're saying the same thing.
12:24
Oh, yeah. Russia must have done
that, because that makes nothing
12:26
but sense. But I just makes no
sense. Of course, it doesn't
12:30
make any sense. But then I'm
missing the false flag Monica,
12:33
which is just not throwing in
there for some reason. So who's
12:36
wood? I don't know what you're
talking about. It's nothing like
12:39
a false No,
12:40
no, no, I understand that. But
if you recall, when this kicked
12:45
off in Ukraine, the main thing
was Putin is going to do a false
12:48
flag Putin is going to do if
it's a false he's going to do a
12:51
false flag, false flag false
flag. Don't you remember that?
12:54
No, actually, I don't. He was
over and over again. That's why.
12:58
Okay, let's see if I might even
have
13:00
a give us a clip. Remind me,
Newland,
13:04
it is Russia that has prepared
internal sabotage,
13:08
destabilization and false flag
options for you for Ukraine.
13:14
You remember now?
13:17
Newland, you want
13:19
a longer clip?
13:20
Let's talk about operations
within Ukraine. We've heard
13:24
today that this idea of a false
flag operation Russia looking
13:27
for a pretext to war they want
an excuse to invade. So you say
13:31
well, this is straight out of
the Russian playbook to try to
13:36
remember sabotage operations
through false flag operations.
13:40
Okay. All right. You got me I'm
not unconvinced that that this
13:43
was going on. But what is what
was this? Those are all spokes
13:48
holes for the for the
government. Yeah, you're playing
13:51
clips now they're from newsroom
news. got news people don't do
13:54
that. Ah,
13:59
okay, we may have clips of false
flag. Okay. Anyway, I've heard
14:03
no one used the term that's just
interesting because they That
14:06
was why don't they say this is
the playbook? How about that
14:09
forget false flag. This was the
playbook destroy don't
14:12
infrastructure, blame it on
Ukraine. Go
14:15
I have my thinking on this.
14:17
Well hold on. First we do the
the the cover story which is
14:21
beautiful is everything was
timed. This was meant to happen
14:25
with this. With this, this news
popping the next day or two.
14:28
In a move that Europe hopes will
ease its energy crisis. Leaders
14:31
have inaugurated a new pipeline
delivering gas from Norway to
14:34
Poland. The Polish Prime
Minister was joined by
14:37
counterparts from Denmark and
Norway, as well as EU
14:40
representatives. This comes at a
convenient time is trying
14:45
desperately to find new energy
sources. And after Denmark and
14:48
Sweden discovery of a massive
leak on the Nord Stream
14:51
pipeline,
14:51
do you show those portrait
Annamma not only in poker. Today
14:55
we're entering a new era of
energy sovereignty, energy food
15:00
and enhance the security of
energy security, and also
15:05
security in the broadest sense
of the word.
15:10
This completion comes at a time
of Russia's brutal war against
15:15
Ukraine, and Russia's
manipulation of gas supplies, to
15:18
destabilize our energy market
and our economies. So today, we
15:24
in Europe together are sending a
powerful message that Russia
15:28
will not succeed.
15:30
The project, which has been
completed ahead of time, is an
15:33
extension of an existing
pipeline that will benefit
15:35
mainly Poland, but also
neighboring states.
15:42
So I don't think this pipeline
is big enough to give Europe
15:46
what they need, it seems to be
okay. But I think this this is
15:49
cover and all these clips of
Nuland and Biden saying, Well,
15:54
you know, if they invade
Ukraine, there will be no Nord
15:57
Stream 2am I mistaken in the
memory that Nord Stream two
16:02
didn't actually get. I mean, it
got completed, but they never
16:06
put anything through it ever.
16:09
Well, I was just listening to a
clip on some while going through
16:13
clips about how they think it
was Newland, so they're never
16:17
going to finish this thing.
We're just never gonna get
16:19
approved just never going to get
turned on.
16:22
Right. But but but I mean, yeah,
the framing seems to her Okay,
16:28
let's perfect, it's too perfect
to
16:31
blame the crazy information
missing one. First of all these
16:38
they had to tax on the two
pipelines. One, which is not
16:41
neither one is really
operational is one of them.
16:44
But the other one had the
turbine problem, and Canada
16:47
won't fix it. So it wasn't doing
anything.
16:49
It was 30% 30%. So okay, so
they're running it low capacity.
16:53
So there's stuff running through
it. I don't know that Nord
16:56
Stream two ever had anything
running through it was it's
16:58
unclear. The other thing that's
unclear is that now this
17:02
morning's reports make it sound
as if they that all three of the
17:06
pipelines, the Baltic one coming
in from Norway, and the other
17:09
two, were all struck at the same
time. But, but the reports for
17:14
the two Nord Stream pipes came
in and then the other one came
17:19
in as an afterthought sometime
later. Like it was striking some
17:25
other incident, but they've now
put it together and make it
17:28
sound like it all happened at
once. This is very poor
17:31
reporting. If they don't have
the guys who can go in there and
17:34
dig around anymore, because
they're too busy sipping
17:37
cappuccino, or I don't know what
they're doing well, their time
17:40
in June, but they don't have the
money, the resources have been
17:44
pulled for, ever since these
large corporations. This is my
17:48
taking the side of the news
organizations, really, they took
17:51
them so much money away from
these guys that the Bureau's
17:55
don't have as much, you know,
they used to have just tons of
17:58
money to give these guys and
they could go out and do their
18:01
own thing for six months and not
report anything and they get get
18:04
a complete story. And they don't
have any of these dis going on
18:08
anymore. It's just like, sloppy
word of mouth. What did somebody
18:12
tweet? Let's report that maybe
that means not always, always
18:17
helps, is losses and they're all
politicals only ones this can
18:21
stick around for what kind of
and would
18:23
you consider at all that maybe
the news media is being directed
18:26
not to go in certain places?
Certainly you can. You can. You
18:30
can imagine that. So here's
another piece of the puzzle.
18:36
NATO, in when was this June 14,
held Balt ops, the Baltic Sea
18:44
operation with the US Navy Sixth
Fleet, and they were
18:48
experimenting with explosives
and ordinance the removal off
18:55
the coast of Bornholm, Denmark
at the exact same spot. It all
18:58
makes so much sense that I'm
thinking, well, who benefits it
19:02
can't be this. I mean, this
thing from Norway and we have,
19:06
you know, our intelligence
apparatus has very tight
19:13
relationship with Norway, they
got a big spy station up there
19:16
that I know if it's ours, or
they're running it for us. So
19:20
Norway will do anything and
okay, this is this was on its
19:24
way. They finished it a little
bit early. I don't know if it's
19:26
actually pumping or not. But
there's one thing we forgot
19:29
about. There's one pipeline that
we have looked at for well,
19:34
eight or nine years and and this
is not coming up in the
19:38
conversation. That's the East
med pipeline. And this East med
19:43
pipeline is the one that the the
natural gas is off the coast of
19:46
Israel and disputed area of
Palestine. They've done their
19:51
deal they figured it out. This
is Noble Energy. This is how it
19:56
was the other one
19:57
is the pipeline in place. A
parasite.
20:00
Yes, yes, it's in play? Of
course it is. And it's not just
20:05
through waxy they're throwing it
through through Greece. I don't
20:10
know if that part is completed.
But I think this is what has
20:13
this has to do with a lot of
Italy as well, because it's
20:15
supposed to go from Greece, to
Italy, which puts Queen Ursula
20:21
has comments about Georgia.
What's her name Moroni Maloney
20:27
in a little different context,
you know, so maybe Italy now has
20:30
power? Georgia, maybe maybe
Italy has some power? I mean,
20:34
and it would make sense. We
benefit but what do we really do
20:39
that with all this evidence? All
of all of these sound bites all
20:42
these clips? Or did we have
Mossad do it since they benefit?
20:47
Also, no one has mentioned
Mossad. Isn't that what these
20:50
guys do best? And most I'd never
gets mentioned? Well, I'm
20:54
thinking they did this.
20:57
Well, I don't know that massage.
Is that good. I mean, the people
21:00
that are the best, probably
underwater demolitions, I would
21:03
suspect is the US Navy SEALs,
21:05
you would think, but we have a
couple of them who are
21:08
producers, so they'll give us
their their thoughts on it. But
21:12
the the benefactor of This Is
Us. Well, we no matter what we
21:18
went
21:18
Yes. Over there. We went to
benefit. We're a benefactor no
21:21
matter what. Yeah, we I think a
benefactor anyway. So what's the
21:26
point of making these? You know,
that's why
21:28
we didn't do it. Don't think we
did it? I don't think I don't
21:33
think we have the finesse
anymore.
21:36
So there you go. Now there's
just a finesse. Oh, this I have
21:41
some clips. Let me kind of
indicate this. Let me do my
21:46
rants. But
21:48
last clip on this is from Darren
Beattie. He's, I think he's the
21:53
editor of revolver, which I
think is pretty good. And he has
21:57
some thoughts. Well, just he has
interesting thoughts. Soft
22:01
power is out. We're down to
kinetic here, kinetic economic
22:06
warfare. And both Nord Stream
pipelines have sustained severe
22:11
physical damage, which according
to reports will make them
22:15
inoperable for the foreseeable
future. All governments that
22:18
have commented on this have said
that this is an act of sabotage.
22:23
And so the question is Who
benefits from this? Now, of
22:27
course, US and NATO aligned
organs are saying that somehow
22:32
the Russians did this without
any explanation about why that
22:35
would be so but as you point
out, one political official from
22:40
Poland, who happens to be
married to an apple bomb, who is
22:43
a really a kind of royalty
belonging to this Atlanticist
22:48
establishment, incidentally, she
was part of the integrity
22:51
initiative, this secret
influence operation group
22:55
designed to condemn Russia and
sabotage the pipeline. He was
23:03
sort of mask or had a mask off
moment on Twitter when he
23:06
actually thanked the United
States, and showed a picture of
23:11
this big disturbance in the
water where the where the
23:16
pipeline was, and you know,
suggesting, okay, this is the
23:20
work of the United States.
23:22
Your girl and Appelbaum.
23:25
So this would be a distraction.
Yeah. false accusation. Yeah.
23:31
For a purpose. So that so you
don't do that unless there's,
23:35
unless the purpose you have to
kind of now deconstruct what the
23:38
purpose might be. Why would you
blame us? And I think I think
23:42
you're correct. I don't there's
no reason for us to do it. Even
23:44
though we had the skills to do
it. Because we already you know,
23:48
we're going to, we don't, it's
really not it's for one thing,
23:53
it's a crime against humanity.
And for sure, no, I think we do
23:56
a few of those. I don't think
this is one of them. So why
24:02
would you then and was in the
Polish? This gets so damn thick
24:08
with these books and phonies,
and double dealers and ever How
24:13
about
24:14
this? How about this? How about
this? We give the loop with no
24:18
one's ever going to address
this. We're never going to say
24:20
yeah, we did. We're not even
going to wink wink will kind of
24:22
be almost a wink wink, nudge
nudge all the evidence. Is there
24:26
an apple Obama's making sure
that we're all that you know,
24:30
and her husband that we're all
kind of assuming? Well, you
24:33
know, hey, Putin had come in,
you know, we kind of did that
24:36
and it'll just go away. But then
we can cyber hacking electric
24:42
grid, we can blow up a pipeline
here. This is the actual fault.
24:47
Maybe that's why they're not
saying false flag. Maybe this is
24:49
the setup is a false? Yes.
Here's Russia retaliating for
24:54
something that we didn't do, but
everyone thought we did. I mean,
24:56
it's elaborate, but it's only
two steps. I think they can
25:00
handle it
25:03
Laborat asking for trouble.
Well, the
25:06
Apple bomb thing is what got me?
Yeah, it's
25:09
an apple bomb that you had come
into the picture before I don't
25:13
remember you had clips from you
was your clips. The I had a
25:16
bunch of clips in here. What was
that? What was that? What was
25:18
the police?
25:19
Let me see what the point was
NPR propaganda and Apple bomb.
25:26
So we listened again since we're
here let's
25:27
play this and it turned
25:28
out an apple bomb the Pulitzer
Prize winning historian has
25:31
written about the current rise
of populist authoritarian
25:34
regimes around the world. She's
authored the introduction to the
25:38
new folio society edition of
hunter orange post world war two
25:41
classic, The Origins of
Totalitarianism that may seem
25:46
especially resonant during these
times of Russia's invasion of
25:49
Ukraine, Chinese mass detention
centers and the insurrection of
25:53
January 6 2021.
25:58
Proof it's your clip that's
about an apple bomb on social
26:04
media and was a ask Adam,
26:07
actually, there's a lot of
evidence that the kind of
26:11
connection that you get from
social media only makes you feel
26:14
more lonely and isolated. You
know, people talk about being on
26:16
social media, and feeling
afterwards worse about
26:20
themselves worse about their
relationships. And one of the
26:23
things she writes about in her
book is the way in which
26:25
autocrats use loneliness so they
separate people from one
26:29
another. And that then makes it
easier to dominate them. Because
26:33
when people aren't able to act
together, when they're not
26:36
active, when they're not
participants in society, then
26:38
they can't push back. They can't
even think about the nature of
26:41
the political reality that they
live in.
26:43
So what would the ask Adam have
been?
26:46
I have no idea. Well, here's the
26:48
answer. And does it make us
vulnerable to misinformation?
26:52
Okay, anyway, I don't know why I
played those.
26:55
Well, I'm glad you did. Yeah. I
mean, I liked some of these old
26:59
clips that remind us that the
disc craps been going on it's
27:02
under the surface and it's got
all kinds of bad actors every
27:06
which way everywhere.
27:08
Apple, Apple has removed
Russia's largest social network
27:12
from the App Store in order to
be compliant with Canada Navia
27:16
which sounds
27:17
sketchy had nothing to do with
our people tell him right it was
27:20
it was it was a Canada Navy. It
was an Australia let me see what
27:23
it was. No, UK I'm sorry. UK?
27:26
Oh, yeah, we always kowtow to
whatever they want, of course,
27:29
takes nothing but sit over
27:30
in Russia. I understand the
Russians call Ukraine Nuland
27:33
Dustan. Makes sense. But he was
he was the article that just I
27:41
mean, multiple articles. Nothing
big. But the reporting that the
27:46
Russian Central Bank and
Ministry of Finance, finance
27:50
agree on using Bitcoin, or other
crypto but they seem to be
27:56
pretty focused on Bitcoin for
settlements for payment
28:01
settlements. And this popped up
not just in Bitcoin news, but
28:05
now I haven't seen it The New
York Times. So I'm a little
28:08
sketchy on what exactly they
said. But it would fit with with
28:13
my theory, which is, hey, you
know, you either have to shut
28:16
down your plant or burn off the
gas unnecessarily, or you could
28:20
put it to use and start mining
Bitcoin. It's just, it's just
28:24
wishful thinking on my part, but
there's now news articles about
28:29
it.
28:32
Yeah, well, I don't know how
much of it they're gonna having
28:35
to burn off because it's just
no, it's just throwing money
28:37
down the drain.
28:39
Well, what if you shut it down?
Remember to start a bank, which
28:43
is
28:43
throwing money down the drain?
It's all throwing money down the
28:45
drain?
28:47
Well, that's why they could
convert it into money.
28:50
Well, I mean, they could it big
amount of time would take to set
28:54
up a set up shop to make it
work, especially which is
28:57
burning tons of gas, you can
drop, you can never be able to
29:01
harness all of it.
29:02
No, no. But you can drop
containers and they're good to
29:06
go. These things are good to go.
You can drop them in and they
29:09
know how to do it. The knowledge
is there.
29:11
Once you set that up, you know
holy Putin.
29:15
Hey, man, um, I'm just saying
that it's a possibility. You
29:19
don't have to get all you know,
like, what is that? Are you 12?
29:24
No.
29:25
Yeah, I'm 12. Okay,
29:27
well then play some of your
clips.
29:29
Well, I got bunches. I did that.
We're gonna drop off the topic.
29:33
We had said we're going into
direction pipelines here.
29:36
We just did. I did four clips on
pipelines. Yeah.
29:39
More and more pipeline clips.
Okay, I
29:42
have a okay. I have some stuff
here. I have a Germany boots on
29:47
the ground. About the pipelines.
This is Andre. And he's looked
29:53
through all the newspapers and
he says he's one of our guys is
29:57
one of our guys. Yeah, we got
one of our producers on all the
30:00
articles in the in the in the
big papers state 100% Certainty
30:03
it sabotages mostly using
flowery phrases like, our
30:07
fantasy cannot come up anymore
with a scenario where this is
30:10
not a targeted attack, blah
blah. Additionally, most
30:14
articles make sure to say there
was already no gas flowing
30:17
through and now these mysterious
leaks make it impossible to
30:20
impossible to reopen the flow in
the future. How convenient is
30:25
people in industry organizations
here are on the streets
30:27
protesting and demanding the
reopening of the gas faucets. As
30:31
for the identity of the
saboteurs themselves, the
30:33
article present multiple
multiple possibilities one a
30:37
Russian quote false flag
operation to further push the
30:40
gas prices up. That doesn't make
sense.
30:43
No, because the gas price now
Yeah. Putting anything through
30:47
now why would you do anything
like that? Okay, one
30:50
another is allies of Ukraine,
pointing out that with both Nord
30:53
Stream pipelines broken the gas
route would have to go through
30:56
Poland or Ukraine.
30:57
There's your Poland. I like that
one.
31:00
I liked that too. Finally, most
news articles come with a mini
31:04
map showing the leaks are
between the Polish coast and
31:06
Barnum Denmark I could not
verify the three supposedly
31:10
leaks are located in
international waters or not. Now
31:12
here's the bonus from the
Sueddeutsche Zeitung and some
31:15
freely translated pearls from
the article. The Deutsche own
31:19
Veldt Hilsa. Demands
renouncement of using Christmas
31:25
lights this winter. It should be
self evident. This is a direct
31:30
translation. It should be self
evident to renounce Christmas
31:33
lights in cities homes and
apartments. Considering the war
31:36
in Ukraine the energy scarcity
but also for Climate Protection
31:39
reasons we should for once pause
alone these private lighting
31:43
orgies cause a private lighting
orgies, causing it causes a
31:48
yearly energy consumption of
over 600 million kilowatt hours
31:52
an idea for an alternative, each
city, each city, each city
31:56
should only have one Christmas
tree decorated with fairy
31:59
lights, fairy lights, to
deliberately save energy and
32:03
show solidarity that could make
this Christmas a very special
32:07
one. Yeah, dark. So that's,
that's the
32:12
light like that. That was a good
report. He should give us more
32:14
information as he goes along
during that exact same kind of
32:17
analysis of the news.
32:19
He also put in links and
everything so it's in the show
32:21
notes. Very good job, Andre.
Good, good boots on the ground
32:24
report. For sure. Okay,
32:26
so now we can move on to some
other stuff camping.
32:29
I mean, I have Russia stuff if
you I mean, we knew I
32:32
was gonna I was gonna take a
break and do because I have a
32:34
bunch of these which kind of
coincides it gets into Russia.
32:38
But I did have a couple of
what's wrong with these podcast
32:42
segments.
32:43
It says that needs to be done
right now in our in our hot news
32:46
break is this. Do you think this
is an appropriate format change?
32:51
You could argue me out of it.
But then I can go I can switch
32:54
over to listening to bite into
it as rare as Jackie
32:58
this, I think is for once
something we need to discuss.
33:05
me for once we discussed Biden
constantly.
33:08
No, we don't. We didn't know we
really lay it Yeah, yeah. This
33:11
is bad. Especially. John?
33:19
Hi guys, John. Yeah, Abdul
Kareem Abdul Kareem Abdul
33:22
John Pierre VanDam. Yeah. So
here's the damning clip.
33:26
Bruce, Jackie. She was gonna be
here.
33:30
Wow. Why didn't you get the full
club a little longer? Well,
33:35
because it was in context. It's
funnier. No,
33:38
that is the sub clip. Oh, I'm
sorry. You gave that was the
33:43
punch line clip you played? Oh,
okay. I'm sorry. clip that you
33:47
want. Is Biden hunger meeting.
33:50
I screwed it up. Sorry.
33:52
I want to thank all of you here
for including bipartisan elected
33:55
officials like representative
Governor Senator Braun. Senator
33:58
Booker, Representative Jackie
here was Jackie think she she
34:03
was gonna be here to help make
this a reality. But thanks to
34:06
Senator Stabenow representative
Laurel for their leadership.
34:10
Okay, okay. The reason I have
the sub clip because I wanted to
34:13
play it after we played jump
even though notch I listened
34:17
that sub clip is he so as he is
dead it gave him no snowball.
34:22
No. They usually give him a
speed ball power
34:25
half power they gave him this
time. He didn't give me
34:28
anything. You think it was zero?
34:30
I think it was zero and no
coffee. No,
34:32
I think this was probably they
probably had already maxed him
34:36
out and they had to pull back.
34:39
You're gonna kill the old man
Bill. Okay, well, then we go on.
34:43
Exactly. So this is John
Pierre's excuse because somebody
34:49
asked her about what the hell's
he doing here? And let's play
34:53
this sub clip one more time,
because it's very clear that and
34:57
he's looking around he says
Where's Jackie? I thought she
35:00
was supposed to be here play
that one more time. This was
35:03
Jackie. She was gonna be here.
Yes. He says, Where's Jackie I
35:10
thought she was gonna be here.
And that's what he said, no,
35:13
stop right there. In the main
clip, let's just listen to it
35:19
again because this is not now
it's pissing me off in this main
35:22
clip listen to what he does. I
35:23
want to thank all of you here
for including bipartisan elected
35:26
officials like representative
governor, senator Braun, Senator
35:30
Booker, Representative Jackie
here was Jackie.
35:33
Now why does he do that? Why
does he Why does he? Why does he
35:38
say where's Cory Booker? Were so
and so. Is it because she has
35:42
her right in front of him? I
would like he's like he wasn't
35:45
looking at them. He's reading
the prompter. I felt that it was
35:50
weird though.
35:50
I you think as Okay, well, that
now you bring in some you bring
35:56
in a couple of interesting
points as you go on that maybe
35:59
he's being set up? Yes. Well,
whoever Yeah, grip. Yes. And but
36:04
I remember he was reading but I
personally, I saw him read. I
36:09
mean, he's reading away and then
he's also looking because that's
36:13
how I spotted that woman the
other day when he saw in the
36:15
audience, if you remember, he
was reading from the prompter
36:17
and saw this old 12 year old
girlfriend to his Yeah, but that
36:20
was okay. Okay. And he was
reading from a prompter and and
36:24
he saw her and he just glommed
onto her. And so I think he's
36:28
reading the prompter, but he
knows these guys, or they've
36:30
seen him. He wants to know where
Jackie is she's. And so Susie
36:34
said Jackie, because he does
this. He points and he.
36:39
Secretary tonight is explaining
that when we look at
36:42
the video, I want to thank all
of you here for including
36:45
bipartisan elected officials
like representative he's reading
36:48
he's reading Senator breeding
representative Jackie here.
36:53
Where's Jackie?
36:54
He'll the minute he says
representative, then he looks
36:57
away. Ask so he's reading
something that let me just see
37:02
if it's at the exact moment. It
may be on the problem is
37:06
Jackie here? Where's Jackie?
37:08
I don't know why he does that.
The prompter is at the back of
37:11
the room. He's staring at the
back of the room with that giant
37:13
prompter.
37:14
If he if it was on the prompter,
somebody would report it or
37:18
taking a picture of the prompt.
37:19
You would think I would hope who
the hell knows? Those guys, I
37:25
mean, they
37:26
you notice there may be well,
for all we know there's no
37:28
audience,
37:29
right? And notice that the guys
who always sabotage the sound
37:33
are gone to our heroes. Like
everyone Okay,
37:37
guys. So we let's just assume
that this was on the up and up
37:42
and up. And he was looking for
Jackie and couldn't see her in
37:46
the audience and went back to
his spiel. That's hardly the
37:50
same as this explanation from
John Pierre.
37:54
What happened in Hunter event
today, the President appeared to
37:56
look around the room for an
audience member, a member of
38:00
Congress who passed away last
month and seemed to indicate she
38:03
might be on the road. So the
President
38:05
was, as you all know, you guys
were watching today's event, a
38:08
very important event on food
insecurity. The President was
38:12
naming the congressional
champions on this issue and was
38:15
acknowledging her incredible
work he had. He had already
38:19
planned to welcome
congresswoman's family to the
38:23
White House on Friday, there
will be a bill signing in her
38:26
honor this coming Friday. So of
course, she was on his mind. She
38:30
was of top of mind for the
president. He looks very much
38:34
looks forward to discussing her
remarkable legacy of public
38:37
service with them when he sees
family this coming Friday.
38:41
Jackie, are you here? Where's
Jackie? She must not be here.
38:44
Okay, I totally understand. I
just I just explained she was on
38:47
top of mind. You know, this
wasn't what we were able to
38:52
witness today. And what the
President was able to lift up in
38:55
this at this conference at this
event was how her her focus on
39:01
wanting to deal with combat food
insecurity in America. And this
39:07
is something that he was lifting
up and honoring. And again, he
39:10
knows that she's going to see
her family this coming Friday,
39:13
there's a bill signing, that's
going to happen in renaming a VA
39:17
clinic in Indiana after the late
Congresswoman. He knows that he
39:22
is going to see her family and
she was a top of mind.
39:25
Yeah, what she's saying is he
was confused.
39:28
Top of Mind. Do you know us?
This is how bad this woman is,
39:33
is? She's not a good
representative. You could have
39:36
handled it the following way. So
what happened was biting when he
39:40
said look, where's Jackie? What
happened? He thought Jackie was
39:44
going to be there. He forgot
that she died. It's just it's
39:47
not uncommon. The guy's pretty
busy. He's like that's given
39:50
speech after speech after
speech. You could tell he was
39:52
kind of tired. What give the guy
a break. We'll Yeah.
39:55
So voila. Thank you for again,
putting my point up front.
40:00
They're using this numb nut.
Karina Abdul's John Pierre Van
40:04
Damme to bring down the
president because she you're
40:07
absolutely right. Anyone here,
you you would do better than she
40:12
does. Anybody would do better
than this woman, she's dumb. And
40:17
they know it and that's why she
worked perfectly at MSNBC. And
40:21
she's great at regurgitating
whatever she's told. And she's
40:24
reading everything and she has,
you know, and and then and then
40:27
and then it's same cadence she's
she's a robot. Her
40:30
cadence is terrible. By the way,
we're
40:32
one of those plops in your
clips. Did you make that or
40:35
someone else? No,
40:36
that's circadence
40:37
No, no that were plops in the
clip
40:39
there was. No I didn't nothing.
I just clipped it straight up.
40:42
Or there's something wrong with
your clipping machine.
40:45
No, I just took it right there
was what it sounded like when it
40:47
came across on seats. There's a
seat that's how it's a clip that
40:51
they posted. They may have added
40:53
Alright, no no I didn't say it's
edited just sound there was
40:56
popping in it. Weird That was
40:58
weird. I know. I wasn't gonna
take it out. But no, you might
41:02
be taking it to that level you
might be right she's just there
41:06
to SET set her mind her own stew
ya know
41:09
what I mean? You are so retired
You are so right. You're so
41:13
right. The truth the simple
answer? Hey, you know, yeah, he
41:18
was run ragged. It's a big day.
It's a big hunger conference.
41:23
You know? And and he just, he
just he just, you know, he got
41:28
confused slipped the United
States slipped his mind. Oh,
41:30
crap. You know, there was no
recovering from that for him. So
41:34
he just kept on going the guys
tired sorry, he'd been doing
41:37
exactly what you said. And and
of course he is you fit for the
41:40
job. But now Now everyone knows
he's not fit for the job because
41:44
they won't even admit that he
would the God confused it's
41:47
called a senior moment
41:51
well, it couldn't have been
worse handled worse. Yeah. So
41:56
what up with that mind genre
mind with a top a mind? Well,
42:00
he's he's he's honoring her top
of mind. Pull bold crap.
42:05
Top of Mind. We got a lot of
dumb people in this Biden White
42:10
House. Here's our vice president
Kamala Harris, standing in the
42:14
demilitarized zone between North
and South Korea.
42:17
The United States shares a very
important relationship which is
42:22
an alliance with the Republic of
North Korea.
42:25
Why stop? Why
42:27
didn't you should we need a
warning her droning voice you
42:33
know, it's it's amazing how bad
it is. The way she speaks with a
42:37
kind of tone. That's that kind
of weird. It's not monotone, but
42:42
it's not modulating and it's
slow. Like she's talking to a
42:45
three year old. It's terrible.
She's unbelievable.
42:51
Warning. Warning. Warning. Your
attention cleaning. Trigger
42:59
warning has been activated.
43:02
The United States shares a very
important relationship, which is
43:07
an alliance with the Republican
North Korea. And it is an
43:13
alliance that is strong and
enduring.
43:15
I had you seen this clip? Did
you hear her obvious gaffe?
43:19
strong and enduring? No,
43:21
you didn't hear it? No, no, I'm
43:22
just saying the way she said it.
I know I didn't, because I'm
43:26
still listening to their
hurricanes. And I realized what
43:28
it is. This is the cadence of a
stoner. Yes, I've said it
43:33
before. Yes. Yes, yes, you're
right. This is the first time
43:37
right there in the beginning,
you hear that she stoned. Now
43:41
listen to what she says John,
43:43
the United States shares a very
important relationship, which is
43:49
an alliance with the Republic of
North Korea. And it is an
43:54
alliance that is strong and
enduring.
43:58
Did you hear it now? Yeah, she
44:00
said we have an alliance with
North Korea that's strong and
44:04
enduring. She's stoned. Yes.
Yeah, at the beginning of it is
44:10
where she's, I mean, she is it?
No, no, no, she ever snaps out
44:13
of it. She's just starts stoned.
Yes.
44:17
I know how this goes. It's
called waking. It's called wake
44:20
and bake. It's a beautiful
lifestyle.
44:23
The United States
44:24
there it is. Right. United
States
44:27
shares a very important
relationship which is an
44:31
alliance with the Republic of
North Korea.
44:35
North Korea
44:37
that's not embarrassing. I can't
get over this.
44:44
Hey, man. I got a little
confused. You got anything left?
44:54
Hey, are you holding
44:55
she must be doing edibles on the
plane over hey man does
44:59
any make good sense to you
remember that one mill used to
45:04
do that when the sense Amelia
was in any does that make good
45:09
sense to you? Wink wink nudge
alright since we're on idiots
45:15
Did you see the the nerd orgasm
that NASA had when they crashed
45:20
that dart into the asteroid?
45:22
I will say this I don't have any
clips of it I watched the whole
45:25
thing. Oh, by the way the number
one thing they said what was the
45:30
number one phrase they used over
and over and over and over?
45:34
Oh wow.
45:36
Exactly.
45:38
This is listen we're headed
straight in wow oh my goodness
46:10
okay
46:13
this sounds like a sex tape.
46:15
Yes, that's what I
46:17
never thought of clipping it
because it was so dumb. But now
46:23
that you you played the clip it
sounds like a sex tape Yes.
46:28
Oh wow. Oh yes. 3210 Wow.
46:37
Well, I have to give a fair
warning. I have for all my ISOs
46:43
for the end to show mixes i Wow.
46:47
Okay. Oh my goodness. That was
so fun. Oh, wow. Oh, wow, man.
46:57
Let's, let's do a little
47:01
okay, I can need to do what's
wrong?
47:02
No, no. I want to do great,
great reset. I got a super cut.
47:07
Okay, play it.
47:09
This is the global media, the
Global Media. So this is all
47:13
around the world. Also us the
response to George Maloney being
47:22
elected and becoming the Prime
Minister, first female prime
47:25
minister, you may tell me to
stop at anytime,
47:29
is poised to welcome its best
far right leader since Benito
47:32
Mussolini, far right leaders
tend to take the lead in Italy
47:36
for the first time since Benito
Mussolini. The politics have
47:40
been compared to that as muscle
in a far right leader since
47:43
Mussolini, the first far right
leader since Benito Mussolini.
47:46
First far right leader since
Mussolini. First,
47:50
far right leader since Benito
Mussolini,
47:52
first far right leader since
Mussolini, first far right
47:56
leader since Benito Mussolini as
far as leader since Benito
48:01
Mussolini, first leader from the
far right, since Mussolini,
48:04
first foreign leader since
Mussolini first far right leader
48:08
since Benito Mussolini. First
far right leader since
48:11
Mussolini, first far right
leader since Mussolini. First
48:14
far right leader since
Mussolini, first far right
48:17
leader since Mussolini, first
far right leader since
48:20
Mussolini, first far right
leader since Mussolini,
48:23
first years since Mussolini,
first
48:27
leader since Benito Mussolini,
most
48:29
Conservative Prime Minister
since Mussolini most far rightly
48:33
so and mixed it up either since
the Benito Mussolini most far
48:36
right leaders, it's Benito
Mussolini. It's furthest right
48:39
since Benito Mussolini. It's
48:41
furthest right since Benito
Mussolini,
48:44
far right leader since Benito
Mussolini,
48:47
the most Far Right Prime
Ministers since Mussolini, the
48:51
most far
48:52
right Italian Prime Minister,
since Benito
48:55
Mussolini,
48:56
the most far right, Prime
Minister, since Mussolini. She
49:02
is also set to become the most
far right Italian head of
49:04
government since Benito
Mussolini and the most far right
49:08
Italian head of government.
49:10
Can we put the dots together
people?
49:13
So Berlusconi, by the way was a
far right leader. Yes. And he
49:18
supports her that he compared to
Brunico Mussolini,
49:23
because he's got the tapes from
the Boombah Boombah party.
49:26
So now, yeah, this is bullcrap.
So the point is, is that you can
49:33
here's a problem. The number of
people who watch this, listen to
49:37
the news that don't even know
where Ukraine is. Don't know who
49:42
Benito Mussolini is. It's not
like Hitler Hitler works. Benito
49:49
Mussolini does not work. I mean,
I used to always compare the way
49:53
that well.
49:55
Yeah, but hold on. That's I
think that's the reason is to do
49:59
they want us A the most far
right leaders since Trump. But
50:03
they have to say since Mussolini
and I think we had Mussolini and
50:06
Trump comparisons.
50:08
We did but nobody else did.
We're the only ones you and I, I
50:13
don't think it was generally
done by the media or anybody
50:16
else they just went on and on
about it's a Russian is a
50:18
Russian spy. They couldn't, they
couldn't keep mixing their
50:22
messages. In fact, I think on
the big list of all Trump flaws
50:25
that they put out there right,
you're right. I don't think
50:27
Mussolini was listed.
50:29
So what you're saying is this is
this is bad. Stupid I'd
50:32
messaging is what you're saying.
50:34
It's not a bad messaging, but
it's so obviously coming from a
50:37
central point. Do you think?
50:39
I can't imagine I can't imagine.
50:42
John, you're really bright.
50:45
Just all you're coughing each
other's homework or something? I
50:48
don't know. How can that be
centralized? That makes no
50:50
sense. Everybody watches BBC
reads New York Times and they're
50:56
done.
50:57
Yeah, that's it. You just do
whatever they say. They say
50:59
Benito Mussolini, you do say
Benny.
51:02
I look at the Dutch papers every
single morning and you can see a
51:06
copy paste straight straight up
copy paste little translate of
51:09
course. into Dutch. It must be
great to be a reporter in
51:14
Europe. Oh just got up let's
see. What's new? Oh, no, but
51:20
they get a lot they get. I'm
gonna go to bed darling. I just
51:24
have to copy the news for
51:26
him face and they get perks that
are unlike our perks over here
51:31
we have certain ethical things
you have to deal with.
51:35
Oh, yeah. In Europe now.
51:37
I always when I go I used to go
to see bit a lot in some of
51:40
these other European answers.
Germany meet up with my my
51:43
compatriots work the media over
there. And they just laugh at us
51:48
because we don't get all the
freebies they get.
51:52
Like, what what kind of
freebies?
51:54
Oh, they get it every weekend is
some trip that somebody's
51:58
putting on codecs when it used
to be one of the big junket
52:01
companies in Europe not here.
And he used to give these guys
52:05
is, you know, yeah, come on. No,
you're gonna get something to do
52:07
this weekend. Let's go do this.
And then they take everybody to
52:10
some big event and then they
give him a bunch of cameras and
52:13
it's just all kinds. It's just
it was a goldmine. Ah,
52:19
what are we doing wrong?
Clearly, all right, I'll just
52:23
I'll go through a few more.
Great first of all, may I say
52:29
just in general kind of looking
at what happened in the
52:31
financial markets? Can Can we
say that maybe the Queen's death
52:37
was indeed the kickoff of the
great reset. Because we get we
52:42
get bombing we get the kinetic
war with with pipe sabotage.
52:47
We've got the markets just going
crazy. And then not just the
52:51
markets but then the pound
52:53
elsewhere, the British pound
dropped to an all time low
52:55
against the dollar after the UK
is Finance Minister announced
52:57
plans for the largest tax cut in
50 years in an effort to boost
53:02
their economic growth.
53:03
I mean, you wouldn't need you
get the you get the new prime
53:07
minister. I think a new
Chancellor of the Exchequer
53:10
everybody's gonna be new. And
she's she doesn't she's seem to
53:13
be good.
53:14
No, but of course, this is
horrible. This dropped a
53:17
pound to a book, I guess I want
to take you to his backup, which
53:21
is like the time to go to
England is when the pound is
53:24
like this, because I remember
when I was until the software
53:26
was on the last show. When I was
a kid. I remember a moment when
53:30
the pound was $2. Yeah. Oh,
yeah. It was $2 after the war,
53:36
and I think it was his state $2
Lillington. And I kind of
53:39
gravitated and kind of stuck at
about between like 85 and a buck
53:43
60
53:44
Dutch guilder was $5.
53:47
What is it now?
53:49
Well, it's non existent because
it became the euro dollar.
53:51
That's why it became a year but
it was it was to guilders to the
53:55
euro. Hollens prices doubled
overnight. Basically, when they
54:01
implemented that.
54:03
It was the same thing happened
in Italy when they Yes, the
54:07
price in Italy was skyrocketed
because of the way they did the
54:11
conversion. And everybody
bitched and moaned about it, and
54:14
I don't know, because you know,
they did all
54:18
but let me tell you, I recall
working for me, VO was probably
54:22
still pod show. And I was
commuting back and forth. And so
54:26
my main domicile was in London,
but the pound was so strong and
54:32
kept getting stronger and
stronger and stronger. I
54:35
couldn't pay my rent at a
certain point. Check it out, but
54:38
check it out. So I went to Blum
and I said, Man, you got to pay
54:41
me in pounds. I mean, I can't do
it was really crazy. Go look at
54:44
it. It was there was some big
moves, like multiple dimes worth
54:48
of moves. And it was it was
making it I literally just
54:52
didn't have enough money to pay
for stuff as Okay, so you got to
54:57
change that we did and then if
Like the pound dropped like
55:01
crazy, and I was living on a
high horse I never told anybody
55:04
about that part was dynamite. So
you know, you got expats,
55:08
Americans
55:09
like you screw in your own
company.
55:12
Meanwhile, back at the ranch,
well on
55:14
Wall Street, the recent slide in
stock showed no signs of slowing
55:18
as the Dow dropped more than 300
points and entered into a bear
55:21
market down 20% from its high in
January.
55:25
Then we get went up today so
much. Oh, yeah, no, it's
55:29
slowing.
55:29
Well, it's the dollar is
weakening. The Euro was back up
55:33
to almost 98 the pound is I
think 110. Now they're back so
55:37
that they're recovering. What
are the odds Soros was in the
55:41
other side of this trade
somewhere?
55:42
Oh, did definitely you know, I
55:44
mean, what did it look like a
man that that's his job? Why
55:48
isn't he getting credit for this
one like he did for the last
55:50
time? I think he doesn't want
because he didn't break. He
55:54
didn't actually break the bank
this time. Anyways, things are
55:58
heating up in the central bank
digital currency talks in the
56:02
European Union. And I know that
our Fed Chairman Powell said,
56:07
Yeah, we're looking at it maybe
three years for the US, okay.
56:11
But in the in the EU, it looks
like they're moving a little
56:13
faster. And she was interviewed
for the Atlantic Council. And
56:18
she revealed really something
interesting about how the
56:24
Central Bank of Europe views the
use of what they're how they're
56:28
going to try and sell it to us.
Basically, she revealed that in
56:32
this interview,
56:33
I really want to talk about one
more last thing, the digital
56:35
era. We're here for the rest of
the day. Now.
56:42
What is up with this pashmina
that she has draped over one
56:45
shoulder. Like she's like she's
part of Starfleet Command that
56:49
has a sash.
56:51
I try just you just did it right
there. That's the That's it.
56:55
It's it's it's really annoying.
And she carries herself like
57:00
Madame Lagarde. The Honorable
Madame Lagarde, look at my
57:03
pashmina sash everybody.
57:06
For the benefit of our audience.
I am a bit puzzled. Why don't we
57:09
already have a digital Euro? I
only pay I never pay with cash
57:12
only based with digital money.
What is the central bank digital
57:15
cameras?
57:15
So do you think that was a setup
question? I already have digital
57:20
why do we why do we need one
Madame Lagarde.
57:25
Alright, right to keep it super
simple. But he would say that
57:28
it's it's a digital banknote
with a little less anonymity
57:35
than the paper banknote. Oh,
okay. Because it is issued
57:41
guaranteed by the central bank.
That bank notes will disappear.
57:50
No. Do you know what is that the
first thing that we found out
57:55
when we did the first survey and
sort of client testing. We found
58:01
that all those who are
interested in a digital Euro,
58:05
that would be a central bank
guaranteed payment system, peer
58:10
to peer and otherwise, they say
that one thing that we really
58:14
care about is privacy,
58:16
which apparently there's a
little less of
58:19
it. And privacy, I think has
been I mean, there are countries
58:24
in Europe, which have suffered
from lack of privacy. And these
58:29
countries are particularly
attached to their privacy. But
58:33
second, I think there have been
enough scandals in the last few
58:37
years of companies that have
collected data through payments,
58:45
notably, and otherwise. And that
have monetized those data by
58:53
selling databases by producing
artificial intelligence produced
58:59
in depth analysis of you, me and
others, and they don't want
59:03
that. So I think it's in
addition to being the sort of
59:08
central bank, guaranteed digital
bank note, it's also digital
59:14
payments. That should be
available if people want it, you
59:19
know, if if you're against
unwanted then we shouldn't go
59:22
there, but we should be ready if
they want it. Because we provide
59:25
the guarantee that those data
will never be exploited for
59:29
commercial purposes.
59:31
I'm going to stop right here. So
the pitch that she's making here
59:35
to the question, why do I need I
have credit cards? I Venmo. I've
59:40
got all the Why do I need the
digital Euro her pitches? Oh,
59:44
because they are spying on you.
They track everything you walk
59:48
through of course, you're gonna
have an entire profile of you as
59:52
a digital profile, all
completely true. And then she
59:56
goes and she says, Now you won't
have that With the central bank
1:00:01
digital currency, and then she
and maybe this is just her
1:00:05
misspeaking, but she says, Those
data will never be made
1:00:09
available. Well, those, I mean,
if she has those data, why is
1:00:13
she doing it? I mean, if you're
just so are they doing profiles
1:00:21
of people, and they won't share
that with company? What
1:00:23
you're saying? Like, I'm gonna
try to rephrase what you're
1:00:26
asking me
1:00:26
try? Yeah.
1:00:29
If the data won't be shared, why
are you collecting it in the
1:00:34
first place?
1:00:35
Or even turning it into a
profile? But yes, why are you
1:00:38
even collecting it in the first
Why are you collecting
1:00:40
it in the first place if you if
this is going to be so safe and
1:00:43
secure, and it's never going to
be shared? Now the way sure why
1:00:46
collected? What are you going
to? What's the point? What's the
1:00:49
point of collecting it?
1:00:50
Well, the way she finishes up
and this is almost done, it
1:00:53
almost sounds like she's willing
to sell it.
1:00:55
So I think it's in addition to
being the sort of Central Bank
1:00:59
Guaranteed digital banknote,
it's also digital payments, that
1:01:07
should be available if people
want it, you know, if if
1:01:11
Europeans don't want it, then we
shouldn't go there. But we
1:01:13
shouldn't be ready if they want
it. Because we provide the
1:01:16
guarantee that those data will
never be exploited for
1:01:19
commercial purposes. Whether
people pay to buy their bread,
1:01:24
or they pay to buy their cars,
or what kind of
1:01:28
work she gave it away.
1:01:31
Yes, yeah, I'll play that bit
here. Here we go.
1:01:35
It's all payments, that should
be available if people want it,
1:01:40
you know, if if Europeans don't
want it, then we shouldn't go
1:01:43
there. But we shouldn't be ready
if they want it.
1:01:45
You mean that part? No, no, they
will, the data will never be
1:01:50
available for commercial
purpose. Yes,
1:01:53
because we provide the guarantee
that those data will never be
1:01:57
exploited for commercial
purposes. Whether people pay to
1:02:01
buy their bread,
1:02:03
which so now she's telling us
what they're going to be
1:02:05
tracking. So this is the data
that will never be made up of a
1:02:09
made available for commercial
purposes. And here's some
1:02:11
examples of what we'll know
about. You
1:02:13
never be exploited for
commercial purposes. Whether
1:02:17
people pay to buy their bread,
or they pay to buy their cars,
1:02:21
or what kind of medicine they
purchase, what kind of frequency
1:02:26
they go to hospital is none of
our business, central banks. It
1:02:31
can be the business of private
sector, data collectors, who
1:02:36
happen to find out lots of
interesting things about us.
1:02:40
This is not the business of a
central bank, and it should
1:02:43
never be.
1:02:45
I think you're right, that she
just told us she knows very
1:02:47
well. What they're going to be
collecting.
1:02:51
I would have did a follow up
question would immediately be
1:02:55
okay, what's not the business
for the central bank? Is it the
1:02:58
business of the government? Is
it the business of the tax
1:03:00
collector, the revenue ORs? Is
it the business of the spooks of
1:03:05
the various intelligence
agencies at their business? I
1:03:08
think it's kind of their
business, isn't it as they're
1:03:10
not commercial? You're not
selling it to him. He's giving
1:03:13
it to him. Is that Is that what
school is going to end up? Yes,
1:03:18
Christine. By the way, I have
these two photos. I'm gonna try
1:03:22
to remember to put them in the
next newsletter
1:03:24
of Christine Lagarde.
1:03:27
Christine Lagarde pictures at
the American Sea and the ones
1:03:30
that they are T uses I'll bet
they're really mad. Woman have
1:03:38
wrinkles or what?
1:03:40
That's why you're supposed to
look at the pashmina. It's, it's
1:03:44
like a Deborah Birx thing. It's
really annoying. Because
1:03:48
you're probably right. It's to
distract you because she's if
1:03:51
you see some of these real
pictures she is she Yeah, yeah.
1:03:58
Yeah.
1:04:00
Oh, my goodness. Okay, let's see
what Oh. So amidst this since
1:04:04
we're talking about the sector,
stories now maybe a trial
1:04:08
balloon White House mulling
potential Janet Yellen departure
1:04:12
after midterms.
1:04:14
She was just interviewed on a
show. I didn't get any clips
1:04:17
from it. I didn't get like, I
get a lot of clips. But I didn't
1:04:19
get any of these that we're
talking about.
1:04:22
You were listening to a podcast
that irks you.
1:04:25
She was interviewed recently on
some screwball thing. And she
1:04:32
seems like she's got a foot out
the door seems to me.
1:04:35
Yeah, but why? I mean, wouldn't
they
1:04:39
want the job? Job? Nobody likes
the somebody's giving she
1:04:43
think she wants out or she being
kicked out. What do you think it
1:04:46
is?
1:04:46
I think she wants out.
1:04:48
Yeah. There are 1000s and 1000s
of Syrian refugees getting ready
1:04:54
to enter Greece through Turkey.
You see the videos of this? I
1:04:58
did not tell it and it has a
name has a codename Hold on a
1:05:01
second. It's called What's this
called? Oh, ISO
1:05:05
1000 I could have been the same
B roll this show for the 1000s
1:05:09
and 1000s of Russians.
1:05:10
Yeah, but there's Georgia now
there's there's like the
1:05:13
guardian. I mean, this is a real
reporting it's just not really
1:05:16
bubbling to the top because
ma'am, no Turkey. But this is
1:05:20
Erawan What did they call that
thing? It's like the it's like
1:05:24
the golden wind or something.
Something horrible that she
1:05:27
don't want. Some way I can't
find it has some weird name.
1:05:33
Yeah, so they're gonna trounce
through Turkey and then I guess
1:05:37
keep on you know, through Greece
and then keep going. I presume.
1:05:42
The Greece can't hit Oh caravan
of light. There it is. The
1:05:45
caravan of light.
1:05:47
caravan of light. Wow, that's a
good one. Yeah.
1:05:51
Yeah. It sounds like no one
would come up with that one.
1:05:55
Yeah, caravan of light. me a
break. And what else do we have
1:05:59
on the did the juice kind of
going back to a Georgia Did you
1:06:05
see her roast macaron? I mean,
like, really, really roast him?
1:06:11
No. Okay. I only I only have a
subtitled version.
1:06:15
Yeah, that's the problem. We
can't get some. But I'll read.
1:06:19
I'll read off his dynamite.
1:06:21
I'll read along. Okay, here we
go. Okay. I'll read long
1:06:24
Emmanuelle McCrone. She's like
her. Emmanuel Macron described
1:06:31
us as disgusting cynics and
irresponsible about her party.
1:06:35
Of course, once I believe. If we
have something here, the Italian
1:06:40
press began to ask. Did you hear
what McCrone said about us? He
1:06:44
said, We're irresponsible. What
a shame. irresponsible. Emmanuel
1:06:49
Macron are those who bombed
Libya because they were
1:06:52
concerned that Italy would
obtain important energy
1:06:54
concessions with Gaddafi and
left us facing the chaos of
1:06:59
illegal immigration we are
facing now. The cynics Emmanuel
1:07:06
Macron or the French who send
the gendarmerie to return any
1:07:09
immigrant trying to cross the
border in Ventimiglia. confini
1:07:13
of anti media mass and most of
all, and because things have to
1:07:17
be said, disgusting. Whom is he
David? She says something here
1:07:22
that's not translated. Oh wants
us to keep mono is not
1:07:28
translated. It's probably such
as a small penis. Next line, she
1:07:34
might look bad yeah, he's real
small. Discussing is France that
1:07:37
continues to exploit Africa by
printing money to 14 African
1:07:42
countries charging them mint
fees.
1:07:50
And by children labor in the
mines, and by extracting raw
1:07:54
materials as is happening in
Knight and asiair. Where France
1:07:59
extracts 30% of uranium it needs
to run its nuclear reactors
1:08:03
while 90% of new shares
population lives without
1:08:06
electricity. Do not come to
teach us lessons Macron the
1:08:11
Africans are abandoning their
continent because of you. The
1:08:15
solution is not to transfer
Africans to Europe but to
1:08:17
liberate Africa from Southern
Europeans. God we will not
1:08:23
accept lessons from you is that
clear? micron I thought that was
1:08:30
pretty good.
1:08:31
That she's just you know, it's
about time somebody spoke up.
1:08:35
Yeah. Sure. Yeah. She's gonna be
trouble. She's a troublemaker.
1:08:40
He just never likes the
adulation. She does love her
1:08:47
because she is she she likes to
shoot from the hip. He says his
1:08:50
shoulder as Biden would say
she's
1:08:53
on fire now. Yeah,
1:08:55
you know argue that that
1:08:56
okay, now right. Let's just
compare that 28 second clip to
1:09:01
one of our politicians back here
in America. You tell me which
1:09:05
one you'd prefer. You just heard
GEORGE Yeah Maloney. Here's New
1:09:10
York City Mayor Adams
1:09:13
We have a brand new york has a
brand and when people see it it
1:09:20
means something you know when we
go there it's not it's the
1:09:24
Kansas doesn't have a brand when
you go there you okay you from
1:09:31
Kansas but New York has a brand
that has a brand.
1:09:41
I mean, was sky
1:09:45
and now that there's that black
guy who can do his voice kind of
1:09:48
only makes it even worse is
whiny voice of the
1:09:52
mean. Aren't you mean our guy
Our producer is our guy who's
1:09:56
doing it. Our producer has done
end of show mixes with Eric
1:09:59
Adams
1:10:00
with that voice is dynamite
doesn't
1:10:03
want I mean it's
1:10:05
I wish I could get that cadence
he's got to Eric Adams is an
1:10:09
idiot. Who
1:10:11
think it's Sir Michael Anthony.
Let me say No Yeah.
1:10:15
Here you go so free court judge
who thinks he's the mayor told
1:10:19
me the best me on the globe. I
can't force a TV jab. That's our
1:10:25
guy.
1:10:27
Sir Michael Anthony. Yeah, he's
good. He's very good.
1:10:31
Take that on the road yet on
some shows.
1:10:34
Take that on the road.
1:10:36
Take it on the road. Michael.
1:10:37
Take it on the road. What was
that comedian LC what is their
1:10:40
name? Who does Kamala
1:10:43
da who Oh, that blonde girl who?
1:10:46
Yeah, they could do a show
together. Larry and they could
1:10:49
do a show together be great. She
listens to the show.
1:10:52
She does blonde girl who does
Kamli Listen. Yes, Lipson. St.
1:10:56
Campbell is saying she loves the
no agenda show and is stoned
1:10:59
voice. There
1:11:00
you go. All right. But it hasn't
been. Would you want to write a
1:11:03
script because it has to be when
I listen to podcasts, when it's
1:11:07
the best podcast of the
universe, the universe being
1:11:11
universal, where we all come
together to be universally
1:11:15
entertained by the podcast and
the podcast, which is something
1:11:19
like that. Can you write that?
1:11:21
You could write something?
Probably not that. Okay, we go
1:11:24
I'm gonna give you this as the
ask Adam. So what's wrong with
1:11:27
these podcasts? Segment? Okay,
ready?
1:11:30
I'm ready.
1:11:32
Now they got four of them listed
right? Now Yeah, be careful to
1:11:37
play the right one. This is the
one you're gonna play. I'm good.
1:11:39
Don't start playing it. No new
show. Guess who won
1:11:44
New Show? Guess who won?
1:11:46
I want you to listen to this
clip and tell me who this is.
1:11:51
Thank you to slack for
supporting the launch of my new
1:11:53
show. Sure, the name of the ads
but slack
1:11:56
do I get the buzzing now do I
have to listen to 30 seconds of
1:11:59
this? Do you want me to buzz in
or do I just let it play also
1:12:02
supports us by making our work
more efficient budget.
1:12:06
This is Adam curry Hill Country
Kara Swisher.
1:12:12
Okay. All right. So she's got
this new podcast. She's doing a
1:12:16
New York for New York magazine
because she got I guess booted
1:12:19
from the one from New York, New
York, New York Times.
1:12:22
I think she knows what she's
got. Listen, this is my hate
1:12:26
listen this woman so I know a
lot about it. She said it was
1:12:30
time to part ways.
1:12:32
Yes. Music right. So I
1:12:36
feel they don't like lesbians.
They don't like lesbian
1:12:38
recently.
1:12:39
This first one came out this
Monday and I caught it right
1:12:42
away knowing that this is so
important to you so you can keep
1:12:45
up
1:12:46
John I heard the podcast I
listened to the whole thing
1:12:50
I'm sorry play here's now I got
now I got some what's wrong with
1:12:53
this podcast? Everything.
1:12:56
Everything okay, before you get
into it, here's so I hate listen
1:13:02
to pivot. Man that was some
extraordinary hate to be had
1:13:06
there this week. But then of
course I caught the on it with
1:13:10
Kara Swisher and she starts off
her first news first episode of
1:13:13
the new show by saying hi
everybody it's Ben Shapiro with
1:13:17
my little dick and it got to
clip I don't have to do not
1:13:20
believe she
1:13:21
did that. Here it is.
1:13:23
Which one is it two? Yep. Okay,
number two.
1:13:27
Thank you to slack for
supporting the launch of my new
1:13:29
show. Sure the name of the ads
but slack also supports us by
1:13:33
making our work more efficient.
It's really where all Vox does
1:13:37
its work from launching iconic
isn't still
1:13:39
number one yet still number one
on there. Sorry, to
1:13:45
everyone from New York Magazine
and the Vox media podcast
1:13:48
network this is the Ben Shapiro
show with 100% Less LD II would
1:13:53
be little Duke Energy obviously
just kidding not about the
1:13:56
little Duke Energy I'm Kara
Swisher and this is the first
1:13:59
episode of On with Kara Swisher
1:14:01
and I'm name are aza. I've
1:14:02
been producing Kara for years
and now I'm getting a promotion
1:14:05
and bumped up to sidekick I am
the goose to your Maverick.
1:14:09
You know what happens to goose
1:14:11
dies? Yes.
1:14:12
But for now talk to me. Maverick
likes to say
1:14:17
thank you for my moment in the
sun like just a moment before
1:14:20
you asked me. Go ahead.
1:14:23
Yeah, so you know her promos
this was baffling to me. I'm
1:14:27
kind of happy you brought this
because you know I hated it so
1:14:29
much even I couldn't bring
myself the clip now you would
1:14:31
ever do this. Well, I know I'm
going to be clipping from her in
1:14:34
the future. Yeah, but you aren't
going to do no I was I was going
1:14:38
to maybe mentioned if it came up
and I'm glad you had the clip.
1:14:41
Some of her promos were like hi
this is Joe Rogan with a new
1:14:44
show. Oh Just kidding It's Kara
Swisher so she's she's
1:14:47
communicating to pointed that
she's communicating two things.
1:14:51
One, she is doing a show similar
where she has an interview with
1:14:57
a long interview with someone
although it's only an hour Our
1:15:00
big
1:15:00
golly I've never heard of such a
thing and it shocked depresses
1:15:03
she is so
1:15:05
irked. She's like an Air
America. disc jockey. She's so
1:15:10
irked that these two assholes
Joe Rogan and the little dick
1:15:15
energy of Ben Shapiro that they
have huge audiences police watch
1:15:20
me I'm Kara Swisher
1:15:24
now here's the other thing
besides that, by the way, some
1:15:27
poor form they're very clever.
1:15:30
We wouldn't say You know, we
would have said no, but that's a
1:15:33
burn we're burning back to tape.
Let's start over Kara. Just do a
1:15:37
normal. Hey, this is
1:15:41
what everybody else yes
1:15:43
you are and then she had Chris
Cuomo on who ran circles around
1:15:47
her.
1:15:48
Yeah, I did I believe me I
didn't cut I'll I got just a
1:15:52
What's wrong part which is the
quick Chris Cuomo who the hell
1:15:55
cares. But I want to play part
three. And then I want to I'm
1:16:02
gonna actually play this part
three and in advancing with it
1:16:04
tell you what I think is wrong.
You can't have two people
1:16:08
because he or she brought her
side kick. To be as though she
1:16:12
brought her producer to be a
psychic because everybody wants
1:16:14
to be in front of the camera.
Right? Yeah. So she brought this
1:16:17
one and this other woman, she at
some point on and off if you
1:16:21
listen to you watch the video.
No. So if you listen to it, I
1:16:25
said, if you listen to it, you
can't if you see the video, it'd
1:16:28
be better. If they have video. I
don't I don't know. But they
1:16:33
sound like the same person. You
have to if you're going to do a
1:16:37
dis a tip for podcasters out
there. If you're hanging out
1:16:41
with somebody all the time you
start sounding like them. You
1:16:44
can't do a podcast with them.
Just like Glenn Beck by the way.
1:16:48
He's got those three guy stole
sound like Glenn Beck, I'm
1:16:51
going to stop you there. This is
what you're saying you should
1:16:55
not do is something that radio
guys have done since the early
1:16:58
80s. I'm going to say Scott
Shannon was the first one who
1:17:01
did it. As you 100 In New York,
he hired Ross Britton, and every
1:17:06
other guy that he's hired as a
sidekick. Who sounds enough like
1:17:11
him, that if he's told me the
straight up, if Scott's not
1:17:16
there, either for one break or
something or whatever, or even
1:17:20
for a whole show, the audience
is not immediately tuned tuning
1:17:24
out because they hear a wildly
different voice. And that's why
1:17:27
Glenn Beck does it too. Now, why
Karen nating why Kara Swisher
1:17:32
does this I have no idea.
1:17:37
Well, I find it annoying. And
even when Beck was doing his
1:17:40
radio show and he had these he
had this one guy in particular,
1:17:43
that was always on the show with
him. Like a side kick still
1:17:46
doesn't say they did to have a
talk and I go I don't know who
1:17:49
the hell is talking here. This
woman because she's hanging out
1:17:52
there in the same milieu and
she's starting to sound like
1:17:55
her. She doesn't sound
completely like her, but she's
1:17:56
sounding too close. And when you
listen to this, she does
1:17:59
something else because she must
be aware of this. Because she
1:18:03
keeps saying like if I'm talking
to you, Adam curry, and blah
1:18:07
blah blah Adam curry. I don't
you don't do that. Unless you're
1:18:10
trying to make it clear that
you're identifying that you're
1:18:13
not Adam curry.
1:18:15
You don't even like me saying
John on the show. We
1:18:18
don't I find a poor form for
people to keep referring to.
1:18:23
Because you don't do that in
real life.
1:18:25
Oh, I do that all the time.
Tina, come on Tina.
1:18:29
You know you never I had never
heard you say to you always
1:18:32
don't pull.
1:18:33
Don't pull the trigger. You
always saying
1:18:36
yeah, Tina is when she's got the
gun. So let's listen to this.
1:18:42
They do say darling to her.
1:18:43
That is what you say darling
going part three, part three.
1:18:46
Trump has all been declared he's
running in 2024 and the Queen
1:18:49
has died which is unrelated to
the two items but in some way
1:18:52
who could blame her? Have you
enjoyed your time off or summer
1:18:55
vacations Kara Swisher
1:18:57
I don't vacation name I ran a
major tech conference code and
1:19:01
16 people invade your people in
two days and then I've been
1:19:03
traveling and I've done tons of
interviews. I don't I don't take
1:19:06
vacation. I
1:19:07
was there I was on stage with
you in my yellow suit. Yes, I
1:19:10
love it by the way Kara Swisher
you always need everyone to know
1:19:13
I'm Kara Swisher and I don't
take holidays.
1:19:15
Yeah, I did this. I cringed at
this as well. I'm like, Oh,
1:19:19
really? Oh, you don't take she's
a millionaire multimillionaire,
1:19:24
probably mainly by divorce. But
she's done quite well with her
1:19:27
conferences. And once she got
away from from the Wall Street
1:19:31
Journal and was able to set it
up herself. And you know, she's
1:19:34
she set for life. But she is she
really thinks she's all that in
1:19:38
the bag of chips. She she
tweeted. I tweet back at her all
1:19:42
the time. I hate her I might as
well try to reach her. And I do
1:19:46
and she's uh you know, coming up
the first episode of the pod so
1:19:51
I read and I reply yeah replies
it please don't call it pod and
1:19:55
her reply I will always
1:19:59
Oh, Please usually you know who
you can get under your skin. I
1:20:02
get on your break and
broadcasting.
1:20:05
Oh don't tell me it's Leo
Laporte me
1:20:11
silicon spin
1:20:12
Great show everybody. Nice
talking to you, John. John.
1:20:17
John. Really? You gave her you
gave
1:20:20
her the break and as far as I
know she's never been
1:20:23
to man you got Natalie del Conte
Morris and you got Kara Swisher
1:20:27
well done John. Coach to the
1:20:31
others believe me
1:20:33
coach to the women we hate what
is going on. Now that's not true
1:20:38
because Jen briny is a runaway
success that you knocked it out
1:20:41
of the park with her. Knocked it
out of the park.
1:20:44
So I know the park with all of
them in in essence. Part Two
1:20:51
part two of what's wrong with
these podcasts? I want you to
1:20:55
guess
1:20:56
you probably wait Part Two when
you mean we've
1:20:59
departure is a second second.
This is called www TP another
1:21:04
own no one not. Don't start it.
Okay. This is I want you to
1:21:08
guess who's doing this podcast?
1:21:12
Can I start it? Yep. Just seeing
if I can guess it from that
1:21:19
alone. No decades ago. A quote
was carved into a marble wall
1:21:26
at headquarters.
1:21:30
And you shall know the truth it
reads and the truth shall make
1:21:33
you free.
1:21:37
Ah, this is the CIA podcast now.
I just remembered what it was. I
1:21:41
wouldn't have known if I didn't
know they had a podcast at the
1:21:43
very end. It was the slogan of
the CIA. Is that the CIA
1:21:47
podcast?
1:21:48
Yes. This is episode one.
1:21:50
Yes. How bad does that suck?
1:21:54
More other? So they brought on
for their first interview. First
1:21:58
of all these these two? Nick's
1:22:01
Do you have more? Clips of this?
1:22:05
Yes. But I had to switch the
nomenclature.
1:22:08
Can I just say one thing about
this podcast in gross violation
1:22:12
of I think all standards and
practices. They are using
1:22:15
transistor as their hosting
company. You know, on the pod
1:22:18
father I know stuff. Yeah,
that's a French company. They
1:22:23
are host they are hosting this
at a French company.
1:22:26
Yep. Okay.
1:22:27
You knew that.
1:22:29
I knew this was it. I knew this
wasn't kosher.
1:22:32
Something's up here. Okay, what
are we doing? What do you got?
1:22:35
So we're gonna move to that what
that whole podcast was about
1:22:38
which was an interview with
William Burns. And so let's go
1:22:42
to the clips Bill Burns
interview.
1:22:44
Now who is Bill Burns?
1:22:46
He is the head honcho of the CIA
former. He's got a really spooky
1:22:52
background, even though he says
he never was in the CIA. But he
1:22:54
was an ambassador to Russia.
He's been all over the Middle
1:22:59
East. Yes,
1:22:59
he's one. Episode one guest one.
Yeah. You'd think that in
1:23:06
typical fashion, you'd have the
director of the CIA on or you
1:23:10
know, maybe roll out Brennan to
say you know, if you smell
1:23:13
guilty, you're guilty. Something
like that. No. Okay. Can I
1:23:18
start?
1:23:19
Well, I know Bill Burns is the
director of the CIA.
1:23:22
No, this was okay. I didn't
understand you said yeah, no, I
1:23:25
said Bill Burns is this guy's
he's been a spook all his life
1:23:29
yeah William Burroughs CIA
director but they brought him on
1:23:33
and they it turns out to guy is
not entertaining and and neither
1:23:41
are these two people that are
just doing the podcast are so
1:23:45
giddy
1:23:45
and or is the music
1:23:47
or the music and tonight that
but they had a trailer which
1:23:50
different music with the same
opening, which was worse. But
1:23:54
anyway, so here we go.
1:23:55
D and I couldn't be more excited
and honored.
1:24:00
All right, everybody, hold on a
second. That's a good start.
1:24:04
Let's try that again. Really
sounds like you're excited.
1:24:06
Okay, let's try that again. Can
be let's try it again.
1:24:10
D and I couldn't be more excited
and honored to sit down on this
1:24:14
debut episode with CIA director
Bill Burns. Hello, sir. Thank
1:24:17
you so much for joining us
today.
1:24:19
Well, it's great to be with you
guys. And
1:24:21
why do they identify themselves
by their like I'm Special Agent
1:24:25
burns I'm the I'm Special Agent
Pete or whatever it was it just
1:24:28
host Are you
1:24:29
playing clip? Two?
1:24:33
Are you want you didn't tell me
to play clip two.
1:24:36
Okay, no, I man play you
shouldn't be playing Bill Burns
1:24:38
interview with no number.
1:24:40
Yeah, that's what I was playing.
Okay. Yeah.
1:24:43
The time what's the length on
that one?
1:24:46
To 20 long to 20
1:24:47
to 20. Okay. Okay, play
1:24:49
D and I couldn't be more excited
and honored to sit down on this
1:24:53
debut episode with CIA director,
Bill Burns. Hello, sir. Thank
1:24:57
you so much for joining us
today.
1:24:58
Well, it's great to be with you
guys. And you're right,
1:25:01
intelligence agencies are
supposed to collect secrets and
1:25:04
keep them and not talk too much
about them. We do usually
1:25:08
operate in the shadows out of
sight, out of mind, our
1:25:11
successes are often obscured or
failures are often painfully
1:25:15
visible. And our sacrifices are
often unknown. At a certain
1:25:19
amount of discretion certainly
comes with the territory, we
1:25:22
have a profound obligation to
protect agents and officers who
1:25:27
risked their lives in support of
our mission, which is to help
1:25:29
protect Americans. But I'm
convinced, as I know you are
1:25:33
that in our democracy, where
trust in institutions is in such
1:25:37
short supply, that it's
important to try to explain
1:25:41
ourselves as best we can, and to
demystify a little bit of what
1:25:44
we do. So that's why I'm glad
you're launching this podcast
1:25:47
and glad to be with you. And
that's
1:25:49
a great word to use the
demystify word.
1:25:57
All of a sudden, it turned into
a great podcast.
1:26:00
And what we are trying to do is
just that is we think that by
1:26:03
engaging a little bit more with
the public, we can kind of help
1:26:06
to lessen some of those
misconceptions that many do have
1:26:09
of us. So thank you for that.
1:26:17
Agreed. And actually, so we want
to ask you, what do you think
1:26:21
are some of the biggest
misconceptions that people have
1:26:23
about the CIA?
1:26:24
Well, I should start by saying
that I love spy movies. But one
1:26:28
big misconception that a lot of
those really entertaining movies
1:26:31
feed is that intelligence in
real life. It's just a glamorous
1:26:35
world of solo operators, the
world of James Bond and Jason
1:26:39
Bourne and Jack Ryan, World of
heroic individuals who drive
1:26:43
fast cars and defuse bombs and
solve world crises all on their
1:26:47
own every day. That I have to
tell you is a constant source of
1:26:51
amusement for my wife and
daughters, and never cease to
1:26:55
remind me that they don't
exactly fit that image. Since
1:26:58
I'm most comfortable driving our
2013 Subaru Outback posted speed
1:27:03
limits, and that for me, at
least the height of
1:27:05
technological daring as when I
can finally get the Roku remote
1:27:09
to work at home.
1:27:10
Oh, brother.
1:27:15
So, first of all, the CIA
mission used to be informally
1:27:21
jump out of airplanes save the
world. Here on the cia.gov
1:27:26
website. He said their mission
is to protect Americans know, at
1:27:30
the CIA, our mission is to
preempt threats and further US
1:27:34
national security objectives by
collecting foreign intelligence
1:27:39
that matters, producing
objective all source analysis,
1:27:42
conducting effective covert
action as directed by the
1:27:45
President and safeguarding the
secrets that helped keep our
1:27:48
nation safe. So it's just not
true what he said. Surprise.
1:27:55
The there's I don't have all
this interview, obviously, even
1:27:59
though the podcast is fairly
short at 17 minutes. Oh,
1:28:02
really? That's their idea of a
podcast? Yeah. Yeah, she's
1:28:06
and but does I get one more clip
from him? And he gives away a
1:28:13
lot of the information that I
don't know if he what's the
1:28:16
point of telling everyone he
drives a Subaru? I don't know.
1:28:19
What's the point of saying he
uses
1:28:21
because I'm not sure because the
wife drives the Subaru and it
1:28:24
was a hit as he's not going to
get him
1:28:26
back cookie. And then he goes
on. He also talks about his 20
1:28:29
went overseas missions, which is
a detail I thought don't think
1:28:32
was important to anything and
maybe needless was
1:28:36
misinformation. But was he
telling us this stuff? Or let me
1:28:38
ask you something maybe
differently? Is this not just
1:28:42
another part of the unclogging?
You know, now they're
1:28:45
unclogging. Now we're going to
talk now CIA is coming to the
1:28:49
front, everybody's they're all
coming back. All the Obama
1:28:53
people are all showing up. And
now the CIA has been real quiet
1:28:56
for a long time. Now they're
doing a podcast. I mean, that
1:29:01
can't be overlooked.
1:29:04
Well, I think there's
1:29:06
Is this the recruiting tool? Or
is it just I think
1:29:09
it's, I think it's a couple of
things. I I'm not sure what it
1:29:12
is, and the idea that they're
doing their job, they I should
1:29:16
have no clue why they're doing
this. But, but they're doing it
1:29:21
I think it's just to assuage
personally, the woke element
1:29:25
that they brought into the
agency, as a as a front and this
1:29:31
is just their, okay, this is
their nod to these idiots. And
1:29:36
they're gonna Okay, well do me,
I gotta be the guy. You're
1:29:39
interviewing me and you're gonna
probably do five of these maybe
1:29:42
that and that'll be it, they'll
be done. And they say, well,
1:29:46
nobody listened to and by the
way, nobody is going to listen
1:29:49
because no matter where they put
it, it's posted only on the
1:29:52
cia.gov site that I can find. I
know this is it. This is so this
1:29:57
is pretty much to do. So he's
1:29:59
home. Our second bill is married
to Agnes brown mother of
1:30:06
Scotland's national poet Robert
Burns what now that can't be
1:30:09
that can't be right that's gotta
be different you get some
1:30:11
somebody that's connected to his
connected his wiki pedia All
1:30:15
right far to
1:30:17
the truth is that intelligence
is very much a team sport. It's
1:30:20
a profession of hard collective
work and shared risks, and
1:30:24
remarkable common dedication
every day. Our officers are
1:30:28
doing hard jobs and hard places
around the world. Every day,
1:30:32
we're recruiting agents and
collecting information on the
1:30:35
plans and the intentions and the
capabilities of our adversaries.
1:30:39
Every day are scientists and
technologists and digital
1:30:42
specialists are developing new
tools to help us compete to
1:30:46
those adversaries every day. Our
analysts are sifting through all
1:30:50
that information and studying
the global landscape that tried
1:30:53
to produce the best insights
that we can to help the
1:30:56
President make the best policy
choices that he can.
1:31:03
Basically, they do what we do.
Except they haven't figured out
1:31:07
how to do make a podcast out of
it yet. We do the same thing. We
1:31:11
look around we people give us
reports, we get reports. For the
1:31:16
people who put it together, we
use technology and then but now
1:31:20
instead now we turn it into a
podcast, you turn it in you
1:31:23
weaponize it for political
reasons.
1:31:26
We don't do that. That's for
sure. So that led me to this Oh.
1:31:32
Which is the grin grin green
roll gold?
1:31:35
Yes. I do have these clips. No,
no, I do not have these clips. I
1:31:40
saw it. And let me tell you what
happened. I had it ready to
1:31:43
clip. I saw your clips come and
I'm like, Oh, he has it. I do
1:31:47
have it. So you got it.
1:31:48
So Greenwald was on the rising
sun or whatever the hell the
1:31:52
name of this rising whatever it
is the
1:31:54
The hills are rising. The rising
No, no, but
1:31:57
the it's the spin off to what
the two guys know crystal ball
1:32:01
and rising. Yes. They are. Yes.
They went off to do their own
1:32:06
podcast and they're making money
and your heal people aren't
1:32:11
real people. Zero.
1:32:14
So they had Snowden on and
Snowden brought up some new
1:32:17
stuff. And New information has
come to light. And I thought it
1:32:21
was fascinating. His
interpretation may or may not be
1:32:25
on the money. But it's
definitely worth listening to
1:32:28
what he had to say about mostly
about Trump. And here we go.
1:32:33
I've got information, man, new
shit has come to light. And
1:32:37
the reason why media outlets
dislike Snowden and Assange, and
1:32:41
so many people like them, even
though those people are the ones
1:32:45
enabling journalists to do the
job they claim they're there to
1:32:48
do is because there's sources
inside the CIA and the FBI and
1:32:52
the Justice Department in the
White House hates Snowden and
1:32:55
Assange. And therefore they just
reflect reflexively, those same
1:32:59
biases. That is what these media
outlets are for.
1:33:02
Women that went too fast for me,
what did he exactly say? Their
1:33:08
discussion was about a
discussion ramble. They went
1:33:12
from here to there. Of course,
it's the rising This was because
1:33:16
we'll speak also because
anything with Greenwald is too
1:33:19
long.
1:33:20
It's too long.
1:33:21
He's long. He's long. He's long
winded. Yes. And but by the way,
1:33:24
I took this I just took this
clip off the end of his long
1:33:28
discussion of the of the what's
wrong with the media, which is
1:33:32
that they they're beholden to
CIA, FBI in the sources that
1:33:37
feed him stuff, and they just
regurgitate it for the public.
1:33:41
Now, what
1:33:41
does that have to do with
Snowden, though? I
1:33:43
don't understand. Well, it led
into into the Snowden discussion
1:33:48
about him not getting his
extradition. And that is
1:33:53
extradition, but his pardon from
from Trump. But I needed that at
1:33:56
the beginning, because that
tells you that the media is is
1:34:01
in the bag, and they're not
going to help the whole thing.
1:34:05
The whole thing is it was
rigged. It was fixed. And here's
1:34:09
he continues to kind of
1:34:11
play that first clip again, just
so I can hear it now. Okay,
1:34:14
context, and the reason
1:34:15
why media outlets dislike
Snowden and Assange, and so many
1:34:19
people like them, even though
those people are the ones
1:34:22
enabling journalists to do the
job they claim they're there to
1:34:26
do is because their sources
inside the CIA and the FBI and
1:34:30
the Justice Department in the
White House hates Snowden and
1:34:32
Assange and therefore, they just
reflect reflexively, those same
1:34:36
biases. That is what these media
outlets are for.
1:34:39
Okay. All right. I guess we'll
continue with clip two.
1:34:41
He had to transit through Moscow
on his way to Havana and the but
1:34:44
the the Obama administration led
by Joe Biden did everything
1:34:49
possible to block him from
leaving Moscow Ben Rhodes
1:34:52
boasted bragged in his own book
about he called the Cubans and
1:34:56
said if you want us to let this
embargo if you want to have
1:34:59
better relations, is with us.
You better not do anything to
1:35:02
help Edward Snowden get out of
Moscow? Because if you do,
1:35:04
there'll be no political space
to do it. The reason he's in
1:35:08
Russia isn't because he chose to
be it's because the Obama
1:35:11
administration forced him to be
precisely so that they could
1:35:14
turn around and get morons to
think, Oh, well, if he's in
1:35:18
Russia, he must be a Kremlin
spy.
1:35:20
And now he's a citizen.
1:35:23
Yeah, this brings up a lot of
possibilities, which I put down
1:35:28
as more background. I
1:35:29
agree. I agree.
1:35:31
Not a big deal. That's just more
background to the choice clip,
1:35:35
which is next. And
1:35:37
that is the problem is it was
the Trump administration
1:35:40
considering actively pardoning
Snowden. I think it was one of
1:35:44
Trump's more cowardly moves. Not
to have done that the reason he
1:35:48
didn't was because the second
impeachment trial was hanging
1:35:50
over his head in Marco Rubio and
Lindsey Graham made clear it and
1:35:53
Mitch McConnell if you pardon
Snowden, we're gonna vote for
1:35:57
your own impeachment. But he
didn't. And now the Biden
1:36:00
administration was a part of the
Obama administration is
1:36:03
continuing this repressive
attack on whistleblowers that
1:36:06
led to Snowden not being able to
come back to the United States
1:36:08
in the first place.
1:36:09
Yep. I had never heard that
before, Glenn, that there was a
1:36:12
threat from Rubio and Graham and
some of the more like hawkish
1:36:17
pro security state Republicans
to potentially vote to convict
1:36:22
Trump in that impeachment
hearing over Snowden. Is there.
1:36:27
Just explain that a little bit
more to me, because that's a new
1:36:29
piece of information for me. Oh,
this
1:36:31
is great. So it's the Chip and
Dale and the turtle.
1:36:35
So you have the turtle you have
the Chip and Dale, you have
1:36:38
Lindsey Graham, that lady G. And
you have to remember that
1:36:44
Rubio's on the Intelligence
Committee. Yeah, we have to, we
1:36:50
have to always remember we
always have to remember or
1:36:52
recall the fact that the FBI is
what was always primarily used
1:36:59
for does work. They do stuff
they got, I think, Bo
1:37:02
Rubio because he is on the Intel
Committee. I think Rubio is real
1:37:06
problem. He's a remedial
1:37:09
compromise. I think the FBI has
got pictures of both Graham and
1:37:13
Rubio with a dick in their
mouth. John, blunt about it.
1:37:16
Geez, that mean, and I would
never say something like that.
1:37:21
Hey, you would know.
1:37:24
But there's something wrong with
this picture that these two guys
1:37:28
especially I mean, Graham, we
know is just a phony lives at
1:37:31
home with his mom. Still as far
as I know. No, that's serious.
1:37:36
Yeah. And yeah, life did look
good. Last time we came the
1:37:43
conversation as it was during
the Trump administration came
1:37:45
out they lived at home with his
mom.
1:37:47
I mean, you could have said
tubes smoking. I mean, anything
1:37:50
would have been better than
that. Oh, you know, I'm done by
1:37:53
that. Smoking that's I don't
want to be vague. This is what
1:37:56
they get a photo of. And so they
these guys can't. They're there.
1:38:04
They're useless is
1:38:06
you're making a mistake as
represented Mark. Mark on
1:38:09
public. Marcos. Mom lives with
him. You say Don't you
1:38:11
understand? He lives with me.
Okay.
1:38:14
The Indus not Marcos that has
lived with the mamas, Lindsay
1:38:18
Oh, Lindsey. Oh, same lady G.
Lindy Hop, please.
1:38:23
No, no, Marcos Rubio i Who knows
where he lives with what? But
1:38:29
that's stupid. It's pathetic
because he was a runner for he
1:38:33
was gonna try to use going for
president and he was
1:38:35
compromised. He's obviously
compromised. If this story is
1:38:38
even remotely true. Lindsey we
know is totally compromised
1:38:42
because he sways with the wind
and sways other ways. Yeah,
1:38:45
there it is. And
1:38:48
the honor roll Jhansi keep it
going. I'm sorry. You shouldn't
1:38:52
say your name. Hey, you You're
on a roll you
1:38:54
so So this story is your and
Trump should have known better
1:39:00
he says we all because you still
need 75 yes votes to get the
1:39:04
impeachment. I think if it came
down to a lot of Democrats would
1:39:07
pull back on it because nobody
wants to impeach the president.
1:39:10
And it because the second
impeach was over the phone call
1:39:13
the perfect phone call. So I
mean, that was dumb. But if
1:39:17
those guys came over to Trump's
look really well, let's play.
1:39:21
There's a little more
information here coming up.
1:39:23
Let's go to part four.
1:39:24
Yeah, so you know, obviously I
was somebody who was working
1:39:27
very actively, both publicly
advocating but also in private,
1:39:31
doing everything I could to
secure a pardon for both Assange
1:39:34
and Snowden. Snowden being my
source. And Assange being
1:39:38
someone I regard as heroic. And
there was real movement inside
1:39:42
the Trump administration to give
particularly Snowden apart Nicky
1:39:46
much closer to Snowden, then
they get to Assange. And if you
1:39:50
think about it, why would they
have initiated an impeachment
1:39:53
proceeding against a president
who within a couple of weeks was
1:39:56
on his way out and the reason
Crystal was that they were very
1:40:00
Free that on his way out. But
Trump was going to do a bunch of
1:40:03
stuff, including not just giving
pardons to Snowden and or
1:40:07
Assange, but also declassify all
kinds of documents he had been
1:40:10
threatening to declassify about
the CIA about the Kennedy
1:40:14
assassination. Had against Trump
doing what they consider to
1:40:19
crack up on his way out was the
second impeachment trial. And
1:40:23
they explicitly communicated to
Trump, multiple Republican kind
1:40:27
of hawkish senators did that if
you do that, we know you're
1:40:30
thinking about doing what right
Rand Paul and Matt Gates and
1:40:33
others were encouraging him to
do, which was pardon Snowden,
1:40:36
that will severely jeopardize
your chances of getting out of
1:40:39
this impeachment trial with an
acquittal. And that was the kind
1:40:42
of Sword of Damocles hanging
over his head during that
1:40:45
transition.
1:40:46
Wow.
1:40:47
does that relate to the
documents that he then takes to
1:40:51
mar a Lago? Because there's some
reporting that the documents
1:40:54
that he took there were, you
know, related to Russia gate,
1:40:57
they were things that, you know,
he had flirted with
1:40:59
declassifying before, but didn't
for whatever reason, do you
1:41:02
know, if there's a connect
there?
1:41:03
What I know for sure, is that
Trump was threatening to
1:41:07
declassify all of those
documents relating to Russia
1:41:10
gate because Trump believes I
think, with a lot of validity,
1:41:13
that there were crimes committed
or at least ethical
1:41:16
transgressions committed during
the 2016 election to create and
1:41:21
manufacture russiagate. It came
out of the CIA. And I don't know
1:41:24
exactly which documents he took.
Nobody really knows exactly
1:41:27
which documents he took. But
sure, it certainly seems to
1:41:30
align with everything I knew at
the time, which was that Trump
1:41:33
wanted those documents public
had the power to declassify
1:41:38
them. And now his defense is
that he did.
1:41:42
Man, that's not bad for Crystal.
1:41:46
No, that at all, man, that's and
what's interesting is you listen
1:41:50
to this. And then if you go back
to the CIA, podcast, and listen
1:41:56
to Bill continue, he goes on
about how important it is to be
1:42:01
nonpartisan and blah, blah,
blah. That was just, I made sure
1:42:05
to clip that part too. Because
it's just like, What are you
1:42:07
kidding me? Especially after
that Russia gate in his more
1:42:11
recent stuff with the Hunter
Biden laptop and all the Intel
1:42:15
agency heads going on? It looks
like a Russian deal to me. I
1:42:18
mean, it says he's got all the
earmarks of a Russian hoax. You
1:42:22
know, these guys are into it up
to their neck. Hennessy,
1:42:25
actually kind of potater not
doing the public service
1:42:28
now and do you think that
they're going to fix this with a
1:42:30
podcast is that I know what will
1:42:33
kill the podcast, but I'm pretty
sure I said it was which is just
1:42:36
a just wage product. And I got
woke newbies
1:42:41
night. I'm down with that. Wow,
that's pretty explosive. So
1:42:45
Rubio, so the Chippendale and
the turtle, those guys, Lady and
1:42:51
the lady who's the Lady,
1:42:53
lady G.
1:42:54
And I'm sorry, I keep forgetting
the third wheel of the village
1:42:57
people unbelievable. Wow, good
on crystal ball. There is
1:43:03
nothing to deconstruct. I mean,
I can't even give Clip of the
1:43:06
Day because it was just they did
the work.
1:43:09
They did. And with that, I'd
like Lachey Greenwald did the
1:43:13
work.
1:43:15
I'd like to thank you for your
courage say in the morning to
1:43:17
you the man who put the sea in
the Chippendale and the turtle
1:43:20
ladies and gentlemen, please say
hello to my friend on the other
1:43:23
end, Mr. John C.
1:43:27
In the lady
1:43:33
Nolan games and all the Knights
out there.
1:43:36
And in the morning to the trolls
and the troll room who've been
1:43:38
diligently hanging out you've
handed me a couple of good ones
1:43:41
today trolls like that.
Appreciate that. The troll room
1:43:44
and troll room.io is where you
can log in. You can check it
1:43:48
out. You can talk troll, do
whatever. Listen, you'll be
1:43:50
listening live to the stream. So
you can hear the show on
1:43:53
Thursdays and Sundays. But it's
24/7 there's always a reason to
1:43:56
go in there. And I don't think
we can ever run out of space
1:44:00
there which is pretty good.
Let's give them a little more we
1:44:03
have 1971 1971 Same as last week
very stable, stable count. Now
1:44:14
did you tell me after last week
or the last show that you have
1:44:18
saw seven cars effer or so yeah.
Was it a seven or a six
1:44:23
you bring it up? The Zephyr as
of the for the last couple of
1:44:28
weeks has only been seven cars
as opposed to the normal eight
1:44:32
and the holiday nine which is
missed. But there's been seven
1:44:37
cars there was one eight cars
ever but it doesn't count as an
1:44:40
eight cars ever because the last
car was actually a private car.
1:44:44
It was one of the nice ones a
nice one. So it was still seven
1:44:47
cars ever with a private car on
the Amba destiny has been
1:44:50
running 7777 consistently. You
should have given us
1:44:53
a report because we could have
predicted the market collapse.
1:44:57
Maybe Maybe I'm sorry for the
trolls who I counted too
1:45:02
harshly. I guess they have
sensitive ears if you pat them
1:45:05
along, sorry about that. So if
you're not a troll you don't
1:45:09
want to be If not, that's not
your bag, go to no agenda
1:45:11
social.com If you don't have an
account, we have a limited time
1:45:15
offer you can sign up cost
nothing but you got to hurry
1:45:17
before stocks run out. Sign
up.no agenda social.com And
1:45:22
you'll immediately be subscribed
or following I think me and John
1:45:25
John C. Dvorak had no agenda
social.com Adam and no agenda
1:45:27
social calm or you can do that
from any Mastodon server. It is
1:45:31
the place where nobody in the
nation hangs out. Talks crap,
1:45:35
have some fun post some stuff,
you know, it's like it's like
1:45:38
Twitter without the annoying
algos and advertisements. So
1:45:42
looking forward to seeing you
there. Now let us thank the
1:45:46
artists for episode a second in
a second of a shown and we go in
1:45:59
a shownotes Episode What is hmm
1:46:02
well was high Is that a thing
popped up on my screen that I
1:46:05
thought was only on the other
computer, but yet here it is.
1:46:09
And that was well I just close
it so I can't tell you what it
1:46:13
was it's
1:46:14
okay. I'm glad we stopped for
that. But you're the one that
1:46:18
stopped 1989 was titled sophist
trees or sofas trees choice,
1:46:25
which was quite upon
1:46:27
upon. And the art was by the one
and only OG of the Art Generator
1:46:33
himself, Sir Paul couture. Yeah,
brought us a beauty. Now this
1:46:37
was a complex image, which
always gets I mean, if it's a
1:46:42
beautiful piece, and it's
complex that always gets our eye
1:46:45
but he had some good things in
there. He had, who he who he he
1:46:49
had, like a hui Hui cheesecake
girl,
1:46:54
you know what I'm gonna I'm
gonna I'm about to say something
1:46:56
about polar couture is art. And
it's not always this way. But he
1:47:01
does some of the best emblem art
he's the one who did the
1:47:04
original. That's why he's good
at it. And he's good at do and I
1:47:09
think he should be put aside as
a name to like if you need
1:47:13
something like even like a coin
a real coin design or, or a
1:47:17
symbol or something that's
round. A badge a button King
1:47:21
Charles should call him for the
for the coin.
1:47:26
Anything that is debt is got it
just like this is desert style
1:47:31
of art is good that he's really
nailed, he can do it. And so
1:47:35
every time he does one of these
things, even though in this
1:47:38
case, it's not a perfectly
symmetrical piece because he got
1:47:41
to cheesecake on there. But
generally speaking, it's steps
1:47:45
dynamite is dynamite. Logos. If
you're going to give you any
1:47:49
attorneys a
1:47:50
logo, get a hold of it. That's
it. It's the logo logos, you'll
1:47:53
do a lawyer he'll do a logo for
five grand, it'll knock your
1:47:56
socks off. All right,
1:47:57
there you go.
1:47:59
agenting form
1:48:00
and you know what I'm thinking
that's the kind of value we got
1:48:02
out of it. Just thinking about
the art generator itself, the
1:48:06
value that he's put into the
show by by setting this up and
1:48:10
maintaining it through several
horrible code changes from
1:48:13
headless Drupal, to whatever
we're running on now. PHP Thank
1:48:20
you very much, Sir Paul.
Fantastic work we appreciate you
1:48:24
so much. A couple other things
that were here on the no agenda
1:48:27
art generator.com which you can
always be refreshing during the
1:48:31
show. There's new art there for
this episode already. There
1:48:35
wasn't really that I kind of
like Dame Kenny Ben's who who we
1:48:38
could set it was nice but it was
small. Yeah, I couldn't read it.
1:48:43
It was small guns for granny
didn't quite work. There was an
1:48:49
interesting sir net Ned but it
was Humpty Dumpty economy and
1:48:54
definitely didn't really
anything that we talked about. I
1:48:56
don't think in that regard. We
had more you seem to who we who
1:49:00
is Was that was that? We already
had that dollar right. With your
1:49:07
head on it. You already had that
one. Was that was that for the
1:49:10
show? I can't remember him
correct to record I don't think
1:49:12
that was for this past show. Was
it?
1:49:16
Oh, no, that no, it was last
year. I made this show that I
1:49:21
wanted a copy of the art but it
never got heard from
1:49:24
we didn't get a big offering.
Mike Riley came in with I mean
1:49:29
it's it's beautifully drawn but
I just don't know if we should
1:49:32
put too big nipples on the
artwork is a great piece. But it
1:49:36
wasn't clear. It looks a lot
like he took the head from the
1:49:39
from what's the the boy's name
and family Family Guy?
1:49:44
Yeah, Chris.
1:49:45
Chris. Looks like Chris. It's
the same colors. Anyway, thank
1:49:52
you very much, Sir Paul couture.
We appreciate very much that you
1:49:55
do this. Before we move on. I
just wanted to say this is a
1:49:59
value for value. Are you podcast
we coined the phrase we have
1:50:02
kind of invented and refined the
the entire format over the past
1:50:07
15 years, big 15 Coming up 26th
of October. And the value for
1:50:13
value really is, in my opinion,
the only way to go with media,
1:50:22
just because of all the problems
that advertising brings along
1:50:25
with it. And you know, I've now
identified that there is an
1:50:29
actual podcast industrial
complex, which is quite small,
1:50:33
big in numbers. There's no
billion dollars in advertising
1:50:36
running through podcasting. I'm
sorry, I'm not seeing it as
1:50:39
people double counting with NPR
and other things or you know, I
1:50:43
Heart Radio. And, you know,
unbelievably, Bloomberg came out
1:50:49
with a story yesterday. Did you
see this about podcasters?
1:50:54
I probably did. No. So
1:50:56
the the, the headline is kind of
incorrect. But the headline
1:51:00
says, podcasters are buying
millions of listeners through
1:51:03
mobile game as
1:51:04
well. Yeah, I did read this
piece. You sent it to me.
1:51:06
Yes, that because I wanted to
discuss it briefly. But it's not
1:51:09
podcasters. It's I Heart Radio.
And so they've been buying 6
1:51:14
million downloads a month
through a mobile game. Where you
1:51:22
know, in order to get some
digital goodie, you have to
1:51:25
listen to at least 20 seconds of
a podcast, which and here comes
1:51:29
the unbelievable part is the
exact length that needs to be
1:51:32
played in order for the IAB, the
Interactive Advertising Bureau
1:51:38
to consider that a full download
listen to play by a human being.
1:51:44
Scam since 2018, they've been
doing this. They spent over $100
1:51:51
put
1:51:51
up with any of this.
1:51:52
It's It's such horse crap there
is none in the IAB
1:51:55
is falling right in line. I
mean, excuse me, I'm, I'm
1:52:03
thinking of the era in this 80s
When all these magazines had
1:52:10
their labs of computer magazines
all had these labs, and they're
1:52:13
doing testing of this and that.
And the first thing that people
1:52:16
started to do was game the
testing. So there was some,
1:52:23
there was also a thing called
the Chang modification where
1:52:26
somebody, some Chinese kid had
put a circuit on a Pentium. And
1:52:32
if you ran it through any of
these speed tests, how fast is
1:52:35
this computer? It would, it
would pin the needle. You're
1:52:39
like Holy mackerel, nothing's
this fast. How did this kid do
1:52:42
it? I think I remember this.
Yeah, it was though I kind of
1:52:45
publicize it a bit more than I
should have. Did you like see a
1:52:49
diode or something simple like
that? Oh, he did something. Now
1:52:52
it was an outside circuit
because you can't really snip a
1:52:54
diode on a Pentium No, but But
then we started running into a
1:52:59
PC mag is doing well is that we
started running into these
1:53:02
people. And I can name the name
of the company. I think you're
1:53:04
still in business. But there's
one company in particular, that
1:53:08
would sheet. This is, by the
way, this is all pre a prelude
1:53:12
to what happened with Volkswagen
diesels and all these diesels
1:53:16
were when the computer in the
car said, I think we're being
1:53:19
tested bill. Oh, okay, let's
turn down everything. So it
1:53:24
looks like we get good numbers.
And then when the test is over,
1:53:27
we'll go back to normal. There
was graphics cards that were
1:53:31
pulling the same stunt. So if it
suspected a test, or it saw a
1:53:36
test coming its way, it would
just jack up its own numbers.
1:53:40
And it was there get these huge
numbers. We had one guy in the
1:53:44
lab, unfortunately, and is a
pretty good friend of mine who
1:53:46
caught wind of this trick and
made I state's case out of it.
1:53:51
He was just on a rampage to get
these guys are not allowed to
1:53:55
advertise or anything in
between, which wasn't going to
1:53:58
happen. I can tell you right
now. But yeah, scams. And that's
1:54:03
what you're talking about. In
fact, I know a number of
1:54:06
podcasting companies that did
similar things
1:54:09
will also Yes, I do too. And I
just wanted to point out that
1:54:13
there's an industry in Silicon
Valley, not just for podcasts,
1:54:17
but for clicks for signups for
inquiries, whatever you need. If
1:54:25
the price that an advertiser
will pay is $27 CPM. So for
1:54:29
every 1000 impressions, clicks,
whatever it is $27 they will
1:54:35
come to CEOs and usually around
the end of the month, the end of
1:54:41
the quarter or before a funding
event or board meeting and
1:54:45
they'll say listen, we got we
got some here for a $25 CPM. So
1:54:49
you've got the arbitrage in the
middle there $2 You look like a
1:54:53
genius and they spin it up and
it's it's pretty much
1:54:56
undetectable for a long time.
They change continuously. They
1:55:00
names like Monopoly. They're
usually game companies, or
1:55:03
mobile games that people are
just making money off of.
1:55:07
They're part of the scam. This
is a giant, giant scam. This is
1:55:13
a
1:55:13
giant scam and advertisers that
play along or the I don't know
1:55:17
what they're thinking they're
fooling themselves.
1:55:20
But the IAB has responded to
this and said, Yeah, no, those
1:55:24
are valid plays. It's 20
seconds.
1:55:30
Well, they've been they sold out
then,
1:55:32
of course, they sold out. And
they charge every every hosting
1:55:36
company who wants to be
certified by them. $50,000 just
1:55:42
to get their phony baloney
numbers.
1:55:47
20 seconds does not a podcast,
make
1:55:49
it even 20 minutes barely, well,
CIA podcast. We've been doing
1:55:55
our own little analysis on some
numbers. And I do have I just
1:55:58
want to see what kind of apps
are reused. Somewhere out there.
1:56:02
John. There is one guy or gal
I'm not sure. Who I would like
1:56:09
to focus our spotlight on
because there's still one person
1:56:13
out there who listens to the no
agenda show on a Zune. You think
1:56:20
so? No, I know. So I saw I
believe we tracked it. There's a
1:56:24
there's about eight people who
use the Roku. But that one zoom.
1:56:28
The one lone zoom listener has
1:56:30
impressed how does he get it?
Yes, it what does he do record
1:56:33
it off to? I don't know I've
been putting it on the Zoom. Now
1:56:36
this and how would you know, the
1:56:37
Zooms go because the Zoom has,
you know, every podcast, every
1:56:42
player every every download
where it's coming from so this
1:56:47
is Zune user a great product one
way one user one, it had better
1:56:51
fidelity than the Apple, which
again, you know, Betamax versus
1:56:56
VHS thing. Doesn't matter. Who
cares? I mean, people would get
1:57:01
the two ear buds and two years
ago, the thing cranked up to max
1:57:04
and I listened to lousy music
that's poorly recorded. What do
1:57:07
they care about the quality of
the sound? But yeah, it's
1:57:10
interesting. I had I think I
still have a Zune in the
1:57:13
collection somewhere.
1:57:15
Let me see we have Pocket Cast
is real high for us podcast
1:57:19
addict. But then we get antenna
pod cast box all kinds of cool
1:57:24
ones fountain overcast, but the
Roku is in there people were on
1:57:32
Roku
1:57:33
Yeah, I we have to the guy
couldn't corresponds with us
1:57:36
once while he maintains that
Roku code that's dynamite
1:57:39
because I bitched about it once
on the show saying he fixed it
1:57:44
the next day
1:57:45
when they assume it's there you
got it and there you go. So
1:57:48
value for value seems to be a
much more honest way we love
1:57:53
being at the mercy was
1:57:55
definitely the most honest way
that's for sure. Yeah. Yeah, we
1:57:59
love being at your mercy it's
much better that way much much
1:58:02
better. Yeah, you just bail out
and we're done. Keeps me on my
1:58:05
toes tell you that. All right,
let's thank our executive and
1:58:09
Associate Executive producers
who have supported the show
1:58:13
kicking it off with Jean Harris
and I'm looking to see Did you
1:58:17
find anything from from Jean i
1:58:20
Yes, I did hold stuff. Oh, but
not this is so I have a number
1:58:26
of letters from Jean who sent in
things now and again and dislike
1:58:31
it but you have them here. I
have I got one from Iowa swine
1:58:35
day from August 16 contribution
is another one whose donations
1:58:40
July 9 I get that I get nothing
this recent.
1:58:43
I don't either. And so it's kind
of out of character for him. But
1:58:46
here we go. Jean Harris from
Winter Park Florida. Wait is
1:58:50
Winter Park in the in the path?
Could he be
1:58:55
a matter of fact it is up I hope
he's Winter Park. Oh wait Winter
1:59:00
Park. Oh, no winter parks. I
know. I'm trying to visualize
1:59:03
the map in my face. I think it's
south of Fort Lauderdale. That
1:59:08
would be on the other coast.
1:59:09
Oh, okay. That's closer to our
thing. Okay. All right. Well, I
1:59:13
think we don't have a note from
Eugene, but thank you for your
1:59:16
18081 donation. So one Oh, so
clearly, it's boobs. squeezed by
1:59:26
sticks.
1:59:29
Big giant, floppy one.
1:59:31
I don't know what it
1:59:32
is it aside,
1:59:33
but we we do appreciate you
ma'am. And
1:59:36
we'll we'll read your note when
we get it. So of
1:59:39
course let's give him a double
up for now. Well, we have him
1:59:42
here. You've got karma.
1:59:49
So we have Brent Young's up 666
from Los Angeles, California,
1:59:54
which obviously is the number
you would provide us if you're
1:59:59
from Los Angeles. Absolutely a
Hollywood producer. Brent young
2:00:03
he writes please accept this.
Check it this is he's writes he
2:00:09
brights with huge letters and a
lot of flourish very difficult
2:00:14
to read. Please accept this
check and that is woefully
2:00:22
inadequate. Or delinquent.
Delinquent please be nice at the
2:00:29
douching Oh we got
2:00:32
you've been de deuced
2:00:37
then he's had somewhere word I
can't read and he says my
2:00:39
favorite jingle is chemtrails I
soaked to play at the end my
2:00:45
sear my serious are biting up
acting up something up like
2:00:51
crazy my sick sciatic nerve
maybe my maybe sciatic or I
2:00:59
don't know which he heads which
heads me for defined there is
2:01:05
Schiff or shit cirrhosis
cirrhosis? Cirrhosis. Whoa,
2:01:12
yeah, I think Cirrhosis is
spelled with a C if I'm not
2:01:14
mistaken. He's got a spell with
an S there Szeged Ababa blah in
2:01:19
something thing air thin air
thing air the air. Viva la no
2:01:25
agenda. Brett the Hollywood
night so he is a Hollywood night
2:01:29
are Brett okay he has he
obviously. Yeah, because I got
2:01:32
asked him I'm looking
2:01:33
at his IMDb which is quite
extensive going back to 2006 He
2:01:39
has done a lot of shorts. He has
done some documentaries he's
2:01:44
done several Spongebob
Squarepants productions
2:01:50
I can see that from his writing
2:01:53
donkey live let me see was there
anything else this That's it.
2:01:57
That's director and let's just
check because soon we will have
2:02:01
a producer credited in here. The
last temple flight of the Dragon
2:02:05
documentary flying over a lot of
documentaries
2:02:08
well maybe it's a different guy
because there's about 40 Brent
2:02:12
Young's in the IMDB
2:02:18
Okay, fine, he's
2:02:20
gonna have to send us his.
2:02:21
I mean you can't just claim that
you need some proof bro.
2:02:24
I think whatever he wants for
666 bucks you can be the queen
2:02:28
of England.
2:02:29
All right. You wanted to
chemtrails
2:02:34
and a D Duchenne and we give him
the detail we gave him the
2:02:36
dilution. Okay, chemtrails. I
guess that's it.
2:02:42
HJ Smits in Utrecht, the
Netherlands 334. Adam, I sent
2:02:48
you an email with show note 1490
That's not how you're supposed
2:02:54
to do donations. John, would you
like to explain and
2:02:57
I will explain once again, for
everyone. The word donation has
2:03:02
to be in the subject line and
then we find them that way.
2:03:05
Otherwise, Adam gets to 300
pieces of email a day. I know I
2:03:09
get 400 Yeah, and we just if it
doesn't say donation, we can
2:03:15
just do a search sort and boom,
there's all the donations in one
2:03:18
spot. We can look at it but I
2:03:19
happen to have him here. i He
has been found in the morning,
2:03:22
Adam love the show since 2009.
Some suggestions and questions.
2:03:27
One, I donate $1 more so as not
to evoke Corizon, the Middle
2:03:34
East demon so instead of 333334
What is this Corazon? The
2:03:42
Mideast demon? Do we have any
idea what that is?
2:03:45
No, but I think he's negated by
the dot 33. Yeah, exactly.
2:03:53
He says believe me you don't
want him showing up. Well,
2:03:55
thanks for protecting us. To
Adam, please be kind to the
2:03:58
Germans. But they've been guilt
ridden by the war in Hollywood
2:04:03
hounds them till this day the
truth about the war is protected
2:04:06
by law in many countries that
that's injustice by itself. To
2:04:13
our we mean to Germans?
2:04:15
No, I don't think so. Well, I
just might be right there to
2:04:18
write them about they're
stealing the bikes from the
2:04:20
cars. Yeah.
2:04:21
That's about is as much about
the Dutch as it does about the
2:04:24
Germans. Now, man, I we we love
our German producers, all of
2:04:30
them of course, and that many
have been around for a long
2:04:32
time. Sorry,
2:04:33
perfect. We did we do a report
earlier.
2:04:35
I think it may be because of the
German accent. Maybe they don't
2:04:39
like that. Yeah, but
2:04:40
your main accent is the Dutch
accent which is the better one.
2:04:45
Adam, you return a polite
message. John ignores emails.
2:04:51
That's not true.
2:04:52
What emails do you want to
receive aside from shownotes?
2:04:57
John, I guess that's for you.
2:04:59
Well, I I'd say donation in the
subject line would be good if it
2:05:02
has to do with a donation. If
it's has to do with some boots
2:05:05
on the ground report that you
want us to look at, I recommend
2:05:09
and Adam agrees that we you send
them, you get one of us to start
2:05:14
taking them. Not both, because
then we will I think Adam will
2:05:18
get this one I think General
gets a never gets picked up. I
2:05:24
don't know, just bright more
interesting headlines over this
2:05:28
subject lines to get my
attention. I have no idea.
2:05:30
And I will say that a lot of
people have gotten into the
2:05:35
habit of just Capo just
forwarding Twitter to Adam. Oh,
2:05:38
it's a Twitter thing for that.
Oh, just from the forums. And
2:05:42
from some people, I get 10
emails on a show day morning,
2:05:46
one after another, you just
going through Twitter and
2:05:48
emailing me, please tag me on
Twitter. That's the appropriate
2:05:51
place. There's no reason to
email me a twitter link. There
2:05:58
really isn't. I look at Twitter
in my inbox specifically. And
2:06:02
but so when you email that, it's
too much. If you have emailed me
2:06:06
three times in a row, like just
boom, boom, boom, you're doing
2:06:10
too much. Think about the
hundreds of pieces that because
2:06:15
I read everything I have to
process it. So don't wear down
2:06:19
your podcaster. For what
happened to the PR associates, I
2:06:24
received that title, but others
did stellar work in promoting
2:06:26
the show. And they I guess they
have not. We have what happened
2:06:31
to PR associate is that a credit
that has since gone by the
2:06:34
wayside?
2:06:35
Well, now that you mentioned it,
2:06:37
I don't remember. Yeah. What was
the level for PR associate?
2:06:40
I don't think there was one.
Well, that probably
2:06:44
you've been around a long time
that probably morphed into him
2:06:46
in the mouth. I'm thinking
anyway, so as if you have plans
2:06:50
to come over let us know the
dollar is pricey in the no
2:06:53
agenda community is large and
friendly. We can we can we can
2:06:57
party with our dollar over
there, John. while stocks last.
2:07:01
Yeah, if you can get over and
back. That's the problem.
2:07:04
Actually, Horowitz and I
discussed the great
2:07:06
possibilities are going to the
UK at this rate of the pound
2:07:11
sterling. And it's like, yeah,
you get stuck over there or they
2:07:16
do a lockdown. And it's just go
you don't want that. It's
2:07:20
horrible to even contemplate so
even just
2:07:23
you haven't traveled in the
last, I don't know. Two years,
2:07:26
two years. It's been horrific. I
hate it. I took my first flying
2:07:31
lesson for the instrument rating
on Tuesday. I'm gonna fly myself
2:07:37
I'm sick of this shit.
2:07:40
Yeah, okay,
2:07:41
well, what can I
2:07:43
just say that expensive exercise
when it's not necessary or
2:07:47
shouldn't be necessary because
our civil aviation system should
2:07:52
be able to do take us to London,
you know, out of San Francisco
2:07:56
nonstop without a hitch with
good service on board and not a
2:08:00
bunch of maniacs running around
or anything in between. And we
2:08:04
shouldn't have to worry about
coming and going but now we
2:08:07
because of these because of the
companies themselves who fired
2:08:11
all their people because they
wouldn't get vaccinated and all
2:08:13
the rest of it. We end up with
this mess.
2:08:16
And it's not just the pilots.
You know, Heathrow has limited
2:08:20
flights he said 100,000
passengers a day that's it go
2:08:23
away. St Paul's doing the same
the aviation system is in
2:08:28
collapse it's can't
2:08:30
be a brought it on themselves
and then they moaning about
2:08:33
lying about it. They're not
they're not being truthful.
2:08:37
Yeah, that's true, too. Anyway,
2:08:39
Hendrick does end up by
suggesting two world war two
2:08:43
documentaries. One is Hitler the
greatest story never told. But
2:08:46
that's a doozy. And Europa the
last battle so you can look for
2:08:50
those on odyssey.com.
2:08:56
Daniel, Danielle, first in caca
now Wisconsin, ITM my sister
2:09:05
Nikki? Shrek hit me in the mouth
on Mother's Day of 2021 and I've
2:09:09
been an avid listener ever
since. I know my city is a doozy
2:09:14
in this shot to pronounce it.
You were so close last show. To
2:09:20
get Kakuna to it. I would look
at his Hawaii and if his wine I
2:09:24
think it'd be cow cow. Nah
because they pronounce pretty
2:09:28
much every he's loyally she
needs a dee dee doo
2:09:36
dee doo SBT
2:09:40
and that's it. Yeah. Okay. We
move on to Adam. Center ground
2:09:49
center ground. Think center
ground sounds about right,
2:09:51
Kensington, Kansas. Kansas don't
have a brand 333 dot 33 in the
2:09:58
morning. I did pretty good on
that. At my friend Jordan Detmer
2:10:01
hit me in the mouth around June
of 2020, as we were starting to
2:10:04
realize how big a sham the COVID
pandemic was, I recently turned
2:10:08
40 and thought I'd do some
numerology donation to celebrate
2:10:11
but life kept getting in the
way. Anyway, he rated right at
2:10:16
that way. Jordan along with nine
now there's a traveling from
2:10:19
Kansas to take an Oktoberfest
Fredericksburg Texas style. Well
2:10:25
that's great. That's this
weekend. Hopefully we'll run
2:10:27
into the pod father that is very
possible and we'll be driving on
2:10:31
Thursday so an ideal time to get
my first of many donations in
2:10:35
for jingles like he says planes
bad trains good it is in fact
2:10:39
trains good planes bad listen to
that horn he wants a little
2:10:42
foamer action and respects from
rev owl followed by whom and
2:10:48
we're doing going all the way
our way followed by a Manning
2:10:51
with some you're going to need a
Bitcoin okay we got all those
2:10:54
for you answer millennial air
horn karma goodness I didn't get
2:11:02
that one air air horn you asking
for a lot just a little bit was
2:11:10
it millennial millennial karma
we had one all right, Jim me
2:11:19
just gonna you just gonna get
some just gonna get some air
2:11:22
horn all the board trains planes
bad
2:11:28
oh my god DSP IICT all hell is
gonna break loose and you're
2:11:43
gonna need a Bitcoin
2:11:48
to so i want to put this one in
this is $356 from that two hot
2:11:54
Tusen meet up which came in
express mail.
2:11:58
Yeah, they have a meet up report
today.
2:12:01
Good with just a few people to
thank on here Brian for 100
2:12:04
bucks and Dame Beth for 100.
They all are other ones are
2:12:07
under. And they did not
designate a selected executive
2:12:16
producer, which they've been
doing recently pick one out of
2:12:20
your group and make him
executive producer. So I would
2:12:23
say go into full enough name is
Dame Beth. So I would put her on
2:12:29
the list at was go Dame Beth and
Brian as the top donors and we
2:12:35
just make them the executive
producers for this donation
2:12:38
named
2:12:38
Beth and Brian. That's it.
That's yeah, suffice. Oops, let
2:12:43
me spell it. Right. Okay. Good.
We got that. Well, thanks,
2:12:46
y'all. We love that when you do
that in a meet up, that's really
2:12:50
appreciated. And then we have
the indie meetup. Same thing.
2:12:53
This is the whole indie meetup
240 from Indianapolis, Indiana.
2:12:57
danio switcharoo donation of
$240 from the September indie na
2:13:02
tribal meetup raffle. Plus,
2:13:04
he escaped, Evan, of Greenie
Demma skini
2:13:10
Oh, I was doing Oh, I see. I'm
sorry. I thought that was the
2:13:15
switcheroo. Mistake. I didn't
know you were putting this one.
2:13:19
Okay,
2:13:20
this was 356 That's right. Okay,
so I don't have a note.
2:13:25
So but that was Brian and what
it was for Dane Beth.
2:13:29
And Beth and Brian Beth and this
and even Greenie as sociate
2:13:35
executive producer to 15 gets a
double karma
2:13:41
you've got karma. Now we got the
indie meetup from Indianapolis
2:13:47
240 Switcheroo donation from the
September indie and a tribal
2:13:50
meetup raffle plus another 9933
from surf FOD father to title
2:13:56
333 Dots 33 for an executive
producer ship for his wife,
2:13:59
Doreen Tattnall I don't
understand how this math works.
2:14:03
But I guess somewhere down below
he has the the 9933 which I
2:14:10
don't see. So what do we do
here?
2:14:14
Well, so this was designated as
Associate Executive Producer and
2:14:19
not
2:14:20
it's very confusing.
2:14:22
So this Yeah, it would be Doreen
Tattnall she just gets it.
2:14:26
Yeah, she says a Doreen ops for
no comments in favor of a double
2:14:30
up karma. Okay, well give her
that one then you've got
2:14:36
but then we do have then of
course, yeah. And of course the
2:14:38
rest of the group has a bunch of
2:14:41
bunch of jingles a bunch of
jingles now what you have done
2:14:44
6969 I think that sounds pretty
good.
2:14:51
Little story to tell.
2:14:53
We did it all for them. Yes.
2:14:55
Okay. Okay. Now we're onto
Joseph Finley in Louisville,
2:15:03
Ohio 23456 Please make it known
to join Dame tune says the data
2:15:11
queen and myself sir Walkman for
the hui Hui Hui hui in Traverse
2:15:17
City. So they have another meet
up in Michigan. They just
2:15:21
reminding us to go there if
you're Michigan Ian
2:15:26
James Carlson to 25 Associate
Executive producer from Denver.
2:15:30
I have nothing Do you have a
note from James Carlson see what
2:15:35
I got? Feels like we're missing
some notes.
2:15:40
Yeah, a lot of notes that came
in now I got nothing.
2:15:43
Okay, another double of karma
send us notice you got one James
2:15:46
you've got
2:15:49
karma to Jeremy chum fatti aka
Phillip Smith. in Oakville,
2:15:58
Ontario, Canada. tu tu tu tu as
a raw ducks. Yep. ITM John and
2:16:04
Amory believes My birthday is on
a show day. I must donate. Stay
2:16:07
safe. Sir Jeremy, chum fatty.
AKA Philip Smith. Oakville
2:16:12
Scandinavia now. Right? And
that's our last guy is another
2:16:16
short fairly short list of
executive and Associate
2:16:20
Executive producers for show
1490 Thank you
2:16:23
all for supporting us execs
associate execs alike. We love
2:16:28
to thank our producers, it's
part of the part of the loop
2:16:31
part of how it works. Part of
how we built this podcast
2:16:34
together and the value for value
universe. It is the new
2:16:37
international lifestyle. More
about it. here.org/and a thank
2:16:44
you again, to all our executive
associates for producing 1490
2:16:48
Our formula
2:16:49
is this. We go out we get people
in the mouth
2:17:07
is your kids making those
comments? I thought of a some
2:17:11
lyrics for one of our
songwriters. Producers. Yeah.
2:17:15
Using the tune of we built the
city rock and roll. We built
2:17:20
this podcast on V for V. We
built this podcast.
2:17:26
We build this podcast on how you
for value build this podcast.
2:17:31
Yeah, cuz I'm like Yeah, yeah,
maybe we could do something from
2:17:34
this millennium. Since that is
from 1985. No one knows that
2:17:43
song anymore.
2:17:44
It's got a good sound. No, it
Grayslake has barely. She still
2:17:49
lives.
2:17:51
I used to hang out. A woman.
2:17:53
She's always bitching about
stuff. You know.
2:17:55
She's very nice.
2:17:58
Now these kids, kids,
2:18:00
her daughter China was a VJ when
I was on MTV. She wouldn't know
2:18:04
kind of off on not always in
China was really sweet. But
2:18:09
Grace would come in all the
time. And she was funny. I liked
2:18:12
her a lot. She was no nonsense.
She would say exactly what she
2:18:15
thought she was cool. She was
cool.
2:18:19
She is cool. Yeah, so cashing
checks.
2:18:23
I wonder how big they are? I
don't know about that. Now.
2:18:28
Okay, this
2:18:29
was just as interesting aside,
not Roger McQuinn and I are
2:18:33
pretty good friends. Yes,
2:18:34
I correspond with Roger. And he.
2:18:40
I don't know how much money he
makes because he's a writer, so
2:18:43
he gets ASCAP royalties. But the
only thing he won't tell me. Why
2:18:48
would he? No, no, I think it'd
be kind of, you know, your
2:18:52
beeswax? Well, it is none of my
business. But it would be nice
2:18:56
to know. I can't imagine is it a
lot? Is it a ton? It seems like
2:19:00
a lot of my I think some of
these guys get a good check
2:19:02
every single day.
2:19:03
I mean, at this point, there's
not really sales. So it's going
2:19:06
to be your airplay, airplay and
streaming, I would think at this
2:19:12
point.
2:19:14
See, that's the problem. You're
just guessing I would like to
2:19:17
know, a gray slick would be the
one I'd love to know if she
2:19:22
still gets ASCAP check. We need
somebody that works in offices,
2:19:26
writing checks.
2:19:28
That's the problem is that the
money never really goes to the
2:19:32
artists that goes in this big
black hole called ASCAP or maybe
2:19:35
BMI. And then they don't even
know they always have to sue
2:19:39
everybody all the time. It's a
shizer business to bad business.
2:19:44
Alright, Primetime purge was
cancelled. That was supposed to
2:19:48
be last night I believe they're
going to yet another very
2:19:52
revealing fan tastic Prime Time
court drama where we would see
2:19:58
exactly how Trump should be
arrested and thrown in the brig,
2:20:01
I think they canceled because of
the hurricane, they want to,
2:20:05
like, we're not going to get
attention.
2:20:08
So that's probably why they,
you're probably right. But that
2:20:11
doesn't matter because the M
five and B below the fold, the,
2:20:16
the M, five M has already told
us where we're at. This is a
2:20:21
super cut. And it's, you would
listen to this. And luckily,
2:20:26
people just are kind of not
watching cable news anymore.
2:20:28
This is mainly cable news, but
not all of it. And this is just
2:20:32
irresponsible.
2:20:33
This means war. That is where we
are. We are at war with these
2:20:39
people. These folks are evil,
there is an ultra right Magga
2:20:45
contingent in this country that
wants to overthrow the US
2:20:48
government, it is
2:20:49
a danger to our democracy, it is
a danger to our way of life. The
2:20:54
Mega movement
2:20:55
is a threat extremists that
we're dealing with every single
2:20:58
day, we've got to kill in
2:20:59
front that movement.
2:21:01
This is a literally call to
arms.
2:21:06
Obviously Republicans I think
are the biggest threat to
2:21:08
democracy. We don't separate
right wing extremists and
2:21:11
Republican Party anymore.
2:21:12
I see this as a party, a mega
party that no longer is
2:21:16
confident that they can win
elections with votes. And so now
2:21:19
they're seeking to enact their
political will through violence.
2:21:23
This is literally what
conservative white folks do when
2:21:26
they don't get their way they
turned violent. Today's
2:21:28
GOP is no longer a political
movement is a fascist movement.
2:21:32
And
2:21:32
this is why it could be more
dangerous than 1860 or the
2:21:35
1930s.
2:21:37
This is a literally call to
arms.
2:21:42
Maybe now it is all about the
violence, it all is about an
2:21:46
insurrection at all is in his
mind about a civil war,
2:21:50
it feels like we are not just at
the brink of a civil war, but
2:21:53
that one has already begun.
2:21:55
The fact that the base is
getting smaller, it makes it
2:21:58
more dangerous and a lot of
ways. People are willing to do
2:22:02
things like take up arms and and
press the questions that lead to
2:22:04
press the questions and tactics
that lead to civil war.
2:22:06
This is someone who held that
office who is basically saying
2:22:10
to Americans, there should be
civil war, look
2:22:12
at what he's doing last night,
as you know that, you know, more
2:22:17
or less the loops that are
either Q anon or almost looked
2:22:21
like Nazi as
2:22:23
a rally in Ohio the other night.
Trump is there ranting and
2:22:27
raving for more than an hour.
And you have these rows of young
2:22:32
men with their arms raised
2:22:34
these crazed arranged folks who
want to employ evil in every
2:22:39
facet of our society.
2:22:41
I mean, what are they doing? Are
they just providing cover for
2:22:48
what's going to happen? Are they
trying to rile people up? Or
2:22:51
they're just talking crap?
Because really, this has gone a
2:22:54
bit far I think
2:22:56
I would say now what was it
Where did where the supercut
2:23:00
come from this from all over the
place? Yeah. Yeah.
2:23:06
That's a good one. Yeah. But
it's it has me a little worried.
2:23:10
I don't like this. Because you
know, they're just trying to
2:23:15
troublemakers. They are
2:23:16
big troublemakers. Now, this I
think was what was supposed to
2:23:19
have been revealed the big
surprising evidence and maybe
2:23:24
this fell through or maybe, you
know, I think everyone was ready
2:23:27
to pounce on it. And that's
probably why CBS brought it up.
2:23:31
Tonight. We're
2:23:31
learning new details about this
man. 26 year old Anton lunak of
2:23:35
Brooklyn seen here on January 6.
Turns out he was the man who
2:23:39
allegedly received your call via
the White House switchboard on
2:23:42
the day of the attack. The news
of such a call was revealed
2:23:45
Sunday night on 60 minutes by
former January 6 committee
2:23:48
investigator Denver wrinkle
happening. That's a big pretty
2:23:51
big
2:23:51
aha moment.
2:23:54
Someone in the White House was
calling one of the rioters while
2:23:57
the riot was going on on January
6. Absolutely. And you know who
2:24:01
both ends of that call. I
2:24:02
only know one into that call. I
don't know the White House said
2:24:05
which I believe is more
important.
2:24:07
CBS News has learned that lunak
traveled to DC tonight before
2:24:10
the Capitol attack with two
friends. The call allegedly
2:24:13
lasted just nine seconds and was
made to LUNEX phone at about
2:24:17
4:30pm but known whether there
was an exchange or if the call
2:24:20
was sent straight to voicemail.
A CBS News Review of LUNEX case
2:24:24
finds he left the Capitol more
than an hour earlier at 3:18pm.
2:24:29
After about 10 minutes inside
Illinois Democrat Raja
2:24:33
krishnamoorthi is one of
Reagan's former US House
2:24:35
colleagues.
2:24:36
I think that it's fair to say we
all knew that the White House
2:24:40
was somehow involved with
January 6 On the very day that
2:24:44
Dunn's direction was happening.
Any information about this
2:24:47
particular phone call would help
to develop that narrative
2:24:52
further.
2:24:54
Hey, did you hear what he said?
2:24:56
Yeah, but I want to. I want you
to play it again. But that guy
2:25:00
is in the same milieu with that
voice as to hills a guy with a
2:25:06
mustache who was Obama's
campaign manager for a while
2:25:10
he's got a podcast
2:25:12
yeah the fart sniffer Bolton
2:25:16
No Dad Bolton doesn't know that
this guy but believe me this
2:25:20
sounds exactly like a guy with a
mustache. Come on to chat room
2:25:25
who was Obama's campaign manager
which was in Bolton.
2:25:29
Oh Axelrod?
2:25:31
Axelrod he sounds exactly like
Axelrod with that scene. And the
2:25:35
reason I can spotted this screen
because I don't have these
2:25:38
clips. But I was I do have some
clips of coming up because
2:25:42
Axelrod also has a podcast.
Yeah. If you follow the news,
2:25:47
CNN is killing him almost all of
its podcasting division,
2:25:52
thinking that what's the point
of throwing money at this
2:25:54
because they're losing their ass
less than they want? So Ross got
2:25:57
one of them.
2:25:58
Last thing they want is for to
end up on what what? What the
2:26:01
hell are these podcasts? What
2:26:03
is wrong with these podcasts?
That's
2:26:05
it. Let's listen to Axl Rose and
he didn't they debated
2:26:08
certain words. That does matter.
And that because when the
2:26:11
President says terrorist attack,
that's a whole lot. Yes.
2:26:17
Absolutely.
2:26:19
And the word has taken on a
different meaning since 911,
2:26:22
Illinois Democrat Raja
krishnamoorthi is one of
2:26:25
Reagan's former US House
colleagues.
2:26:27
I think that it's fair to say we
all knew that the White House
2:26:31
was somehow involved with
January 6, on the very day that
2:26:35
the interaction was happening,
any information about this
2:26:39
particular phone call would help
to develop that narrative
2:26:43
further.
2:26:44
Any information on this phone
call would help develop that
2:26:47
narrative further the narrative
that the White House was in
2:26:52
control of the mob with a nine
second call these people are
2:26:55
crazy nine
2:26:56
second call they are raising is
they're insane. Here's a follow
2:27:01
up. We
2:27:01
reached out to Anton lunak
through his attorney to get more
2:27:04
details about that call, but
didn't get a response. A
2:27:07
spokesman for the January 6
Select Committee didn't directly
2:27:11
address Riggleman his claims
about the call, but said
2:27:13
Riggleman left the panel in
April and has limited knowledge
2:27:17
of the committee's work.
2:27:18
Yeah, okay. All right. They're
just in your buddy John
2:27:22
Heilemann. He's also he's all in
what happened to that guy. He
2:27:26
became he woke pig Shil. Back he
was in the Civil War. supercut
2:27:36
Yeah, yeah, I heard him that's
sad. Yeah, well, you get the
2:27:40
your your putting butter on the
bread thing? Oh, you mean that's
2:27:48
where his bread is
2:27:49
buttered feeding his family.
Well, speaking of such a couple
2:27:52
living in suburban Maryland has
entered a new guilty plea in
2:27:55
connection with a plot to sell
military nuclear secrets.
2:27:59
Jonathan Toby, a former nuclear
engineer could serve at least 27
2:28:03
years in prison. Diana Toby
could face more than a dozen
2:28:06
years. The couple allegedly
tried to sell information about
2:28:09
submarine technology to Brazil
hiding data in a peanut butter
2:28:13
sandwich.
2:28:16
All right, yeah, there you go.
2:28:22
What is up with that? What kind
of spycraft is that peanut
2:28:25
butter sandwich? Yeah, who knew?
Sometime
2:28:29
we selling Brazil? Secrets from
our Okay, whatever. work
2:28:38
I do have a clip here that I
pulled for you. This is what is
2:28:44
this person she is a she's
around the corner. She's a
2:28:48
sociology PhD from UC Berkeley.
Her name is Laurel Westbrook.
2:28:54
And she has a theory as to why
sis I think she might even say
2:28:59
white sis men but why
cisgendered men that's you and I
2:29:01
John but more you why you are so
afraid of trans women or trans
2:29:11
men. And I'm not saying you are
but she is saying that says
2:29:16
she's saying I am she's saying
you are and I'm calling you out
2:29:19
specifically because you are the
one that always comes with the
2:29:22
with the trans clips and the
queer. Mostly mostly
2:29:25
non non binary, non binary.
2:29:28
Okay, well, let's, let's listen
to what the problem is. Because
2:29:33
it's it's enlightening.
2:29:34
It's important to note that this
different perception of
2:29:36
transgender men is not a result
of greater cultural acceptance.
2:29:40
It's not just it's not like sis
opponents to trans rights love
2:29:44
trans men. Rather, it's this
assumed lack of a naturally
2:29:49
occurring penis. The hallmark of
biological maleness and it's
2:29:54
assumed superiority to
femaleness renders transgender
2:29:58
men non threatening and Under
segregated spaces, including
2:30:01
bathrooms and sports teams Oh,
it's also for women. This
2:30:05
believed in the innate
superiority and threat of male
2:30:07
bodies account for why cisgender
opposition to transgender
2:30:11
inclusion organizes
predominantly around the
2:30:14
presence of transgender women
and not transgender men. This
2:30:18
suggests that gender panics
around transgender people might
2:30:21
more accurately be termed penis
panics, as they are fueled by
2:30:26
the terror of penises.
Particularly penises where they
2:30:29
should not be because women's
restrooms or locker rooms or
2:30:36
sports teams isn't dangerous to
cisgender women and girls.
2:30:41
Yes, yes. It is odd to see a
penis where one does not expect
2:30:46
a penis. Thank you for pointing
that out. I don't know if we
2:30:50
have to call it penis panic.
2:30:55
Sheila likes saying the word a
lot to penis.
2:30:58
Yeah. Yeah, I think she might
have one. I just looking at her.
2:31:01
I don't know. I mean, I can't
2:31:02
tell I really take a look
myself.
2:31:05
You have you have right. Do you
have her? Do you have her? Oh,
2:31:09
you're gonna look at her name.
Of course. Yes. What is her name
2:31:12
again? LAUREL Westbrook, Laurel,
L A u r e l? Westbrook, w e
2:31:19
STBR. Okay. So while you're
looking that up, I'll play a
2:31:24
nonsensical clip next for
2:31:26
the 400 richest Americans for
2:31:28
the first time Elon Musk is
number one he made $60 billion
2:31:32
this year, but overall, the net
worth of the richest Americans
2:31:35
dropped this year by 11%. Number
two on the list is Amazon
2:31:39
founder Jeff Bezos, Bill Gates
is number three despite giving
2:31:42
billions to charity
2:31:43
Zuckerberg suffered the biggest
loss he has nearly $77 billion
2:31:48
poured this year. All right. Did
you take a look at it?
2:31:51
Yeah, now the problem is there's
a lot of Laurel Westbrook's,
2:31:54
including some blonde babe was
pretty attractive and then on
2:31:57
the far end PhD from
2:31:59
UC Berkeley. You couldn't add
that to the search? I
2:32:03
guess it could have but this one
has white sidewall marine hair
2:32:07
cut with the hair stack straight
up. Like Ken's right. It sounds
2:32:11
like it looks ugly. She looks
like a smuggling nonbinary Yes,
2:32:14
you
2:32:14
got a round face kind of oval.
2:32:18
Well, there's a round face one
here too. Let me put PhD.
2:32:22
jockeys.
2:32:24
Let's not obsess over it. Okay,
can we move on?
2:32:27
I got abscess. I'm gonna
2:32:30
show my school by donating to no
agenda. Imagine all the people
2:32:33
who could do that. Oh, yeah,
that'd be
2:32:43
a few people think but I
shouldn't mention she has the
2:32:47
picture with the white sidewalls
and then she's got an older
2:32:50
picture, which makes her face to
ground but when she has the
2:32:53
white sidewalls in this hair
stacked up in a kind of a
2:32:56
parallel line so this is big top
it doesn't make her faceless
2:33:00
she's done a good job of not
making her face look round. Good
2:33:05
work.
2:33:06
Yes. Fascinating.
2:33:08
Well, whatever happened to the
OH number Sorry, sorry. We do
2:33:15
have a few people to thank not
that many but a few. And I just
2:33:18
have to scroll back up to the
top one which is in Austin,
2:33:21
Texas, and it's Austin Jhansi.
Austin from Austin. An attorney
2:33:27
$133.31 Leola page. Holland in
San Antonio, Texas. We got
2:33:33
Texas, Texas in the house
1011 11. M MJ in Los Angeles,
2:33:39
California. 111 11. James Morgan
in Surprise Arizona. Surprise.
2:33:46
Hey MJ MJ also MJ needed a
2:33:50
de douchey na de douching MJ
2:33:55
you've been de deuced
2:33:59
MJ now we got JM a James Morgan
Surprise Arizona $100.33 David
2:34:05
Hutchinson $100 from Olympia
Washington. And yes, we've
2:34:09
got this donation puts my
beautiful and challenging wife
2:34:13
on the dame hood Ross are those
47 months of donating 1111 on
2:34:16
the 11th along with other
sporadic donations finally paid
2:34:20
off. Please pronounce the Kate
her Dame chaos pixie of the
2:34:24
South Puget Sound and put on the
birthday lists and she's
2:34:27
revisiting 39 on Saturday. She
requests margaritas and
2:34:31
mozzarella sticks at the round
table. Beautiful. You got it.
2:34:36
Lan hamburger What do you say
said LAN or Ilan in Bellingham,
2:34:43
Washington $90 No, Sir Kevin
McLaughlin, Duke of Luna lover
2:34:47
of American boobs locust North
Carolina 808, another 808 from
2:34:52
Benjamin Perry and Chimacum
Washington. Gary Blatt in
2:34:57
Chesterbrook, Pennsylvania 7777
Marjorie Langford in Negroponte
2:35:03
niccone. Michigan as a birthday
and donation switcheroo to Bill
2:35:09
74. Bill Langford gets to go out
there to a person with no name
2:35:14
in Portland, Oregon. $73 you
have a blank there too.
2:35:21
i Yes, I do.
2:35:23
Corey rule in Marion, Iowa 7183
And he has a douchebag call out
2:35:32
for a hatchet Frank douchebag
it's been far too long. He says,
2:35:38
QQ
2:35:40
I know QQ I met him kilkeel,
2:35:43
she was he she is in Key West
Florida 6666 from the last
2:35:48
episode donations are slowing so
kicking it out with 6666 this
2:35:53
what is my night title? I was
told I have to ask for the
2:35:56
official paper. I have to send
address to them to what is yak
2:36:01
company name site.
2:36:03
So he wants to know the Yak ball
company. I think he's from a
2:36:09
former Soviet state. I met him I
met he came from Florida to
2:36:14
Bluffton to South Georgia. I met
him he came just to say hi and
2:36:19
and hang out. I'm not quite sure
it's I think he is a night but
2:36:22
he has to I don't know. Do just
send me an email. We'll work it
2:36:25
out.
2:36:26
You send an email and we'll give
you 70 I don't have the I give
2:36:30
me the light yet guys phone
number but I moved off the
2:36:34
queue. Craig Kohler in
Evansville, Indiana. 6502 Taylor
2:36:40
Kramer mission Texas 6278. James
Buell in Vista, California 606
2:36:49
JD and Elkhorn Nebraska. 606. I
injured gelling in Paradise.
2:37:03
Paradise. Netherlands,
2:37:05
Hendrik to defy for Hendrick
Galligan Hendrick yelling in
2:37:09
here, here, here. Here. Here,
the
2:37:13
beard at 555 Stephen tropicals
and Sust soused. 50 by 33, and
2:37:20
he's in Estonia. Now we need
some reports. Yeah. Sir, by His
2:37:27
grace in Jacksonville, Florida.
5510 Anonymous Zookeeper. It's
2:37:32
got a note. Like a big note. It
says nothing. It says anonymous
2:37:38
Zookeeper. A big note. Thank
you. Does he put that on there?
2:37:42
Sir Luke, the URL of London and
south east in London UK chance
2:37:47
Barnett in San Angelo, Texas.
One penny for the jar. 501 So it
2:37:52
goes to the jar. Just got Nelson
another 501 from Council Bluffs,
2:37:57
Iowa the following people or $50
donors name and location.
2:38:01
Michael Elmore in Gastonia North
Carolina, Aaron wise Gerber in
2:38:06
Bend, Oregon, and Amy Zipkin in
Greensboro, Georgia, Jeremy
2:38:12
Hirshman in Sheboygan,
Wisconsin. Alec campus in
2:38:17
Fulshear, Texas is a de douching
2:38:22
you've been de deuced
2:38:26
Douglas angstrom and Sandy Lake
Pennsylvania got because of
2:38:31
something I put in a newsletter,
which is humorous. Robert
2:38:35
cardinal and Hinesville,
Georgia, Matthew Dixon in
2:38:40
Albuquerque, New Mexico. Greg
Hartlaub. In Cincinnati, Ohio,
2:38:44
Sonny paying in Lee, UK. Dale
Fitch in Hendersonville, North
2:38:51
Carolina. Josh Josh Springer.
You in Indianapolis, Indiana,
2:38:57
another blank in Yankee,
Florida. This
2:39:00
is you know, Eric, the back
office is now mobile. As they
2:39:05
moved out of their home and
they're on there, I think
2:39:07
they've chosen the Gypsy
lifestyle. And so he was doing
2:39:13
this from his mobile office, and
he Eddie did say could be wonky
2:39:17
for a show or two. I guess he
didn't clear that
2:39:20
was yankeetown, Florida. Thanks.
Shannon Norberg in Seattle,
2:39:26
Washington, Chris Goodman in
Leander, Texas. And then we have
2:39:32
a long note from Andrew garland.
2:39:35
I will I'll reply to you Arland
since she says brand new
2:39:39
listener here. Yeah, Garland
brand new listener here for
2:39:42
like, should have been here all
along. Wanted to announce my
2:39:44
presence briefly. So thank you.
He's a truck driver. He's got a
2:39:47
lot of fun things to say. Yeah,
a very funny note, but as long
2:39:51
as long and what he did say is
all of your listeners must be
2:39:55
rich. I'm not but I'm gonna kick
him because I truly am. Enjoy a
2:40:00
show that talks about all the
crap I've been read pilled to
2:40:02
that my Hillary Democrat Vax
loving nurse of a wife thinks
2:40:05
I'm crazy for believing. Okay,
welcome welcome
2:40:12
Mitch. Brett lemons and Mitchell
Indiana Scotch for Scott
2:40:18
Brinkley in Christiansburg.
Virginia. Douglas Ellis in New
2:40:24
York and Shane Morrison and
Clark, New Jersey low dies
2:40:28
represented with Scott McCarthy
Ray Howard and Kremling
2:40:34
Colorado. Richard Gardner, Sir
Richard Parts Unknown New York I
2:40:38
think. And last but not least
are Allenby now we didn't miss
2:40:41
somebody was on here, which may
be one of the blanks, which is
2:40:45
this call ran woman who wrote a
note in a very nice note. I
2:40:49
wanted to read it. And but I was
more interested in the way she
2:40:54
pronounced her last name because
it was I've never seen this. SEO
2:40:58
a h r a n. And I don't have it
here. I'll get to that next show
2:41:06
because I do have some, some
clips. In fact, I wanted to play
2:41:09
about her and her name.
2:41:12
Ray Howard. Ray Howard says he
came in with 50 He says could I
2:41:17
grab one of those American d do
things before they're gone? Oh,
2:41:23
you hear that?
2:41:26
Oh, you that was one has to be
thrown back to shake that's
2:41:29
typical of bad quality. bad
quality Chinese D douching.
2:41:34
Yeah,
2:41:35
let's get you the American
2:41:38
bad deed do it
2:41:39
better, better, better? Much
better. And those are our
2:41:44
producers 15 above Thank you
very much for supporting the
2:41:48
show value for value we talked
about extensively earlier. Of
2:41:51
course as people come in under
50 For reasons of anonymity, but
2:41:54
also for a lot of these
sustaining donations which you
2:41:57
can make up yourself. We have
some fun ones that are all laid
2:42:00
out. And again, thanks to our
executive and Associate
2:42:03
Executive producers for episode
1490 four.org/and. A two quick
2:42:10
make goods before we move on. We
have one from Nicholas Barris.
2:42:16
Now I remember him from the last
episode and he he supported us I
2:42:21
think it was an executive
producer ship. It was even an
2:42:25
instant knighthood. I couldn't
risk being destined to forever
2:42:29
douchebaggery. In case
dilutions, don't get restocked,
2:42:33
so please do you do? You've been
de deuced and Jack Wilson says
2:42:40
hey, I did not get called up to
the podium during the knighting
2:42:43
ceremony ceremony on 14th at you
called my requests of ribeye and
2:42:48
backwoods apple pie moonshine
but failed to give me a proper
2:42:51
knighting I sent John a couple
of emails asking me to get a
2:42:55
proper knighting but he's too
busy archiving to check his
2:42:59
messages us this qualify me for
a black knight title Why yes I
2:43:05
think it does. Yeah, I think it
does. And let me see if he is
2:43:09
and he is on the list. You're on
the list. We will make good and
2:43:12
let me put the ribeye and your
woods apple pie moonshine back
2:43:18
on the table the day it's a new
one by the way because of course
2:43:22
you know even though you weren't
or maybe especially you weren't
2:43:24
here people snarfed it right up
all right. Thank you all very
2:43:29
much. I mean give you all a go
Carmen just in case you need it.
2:43:32
Thank you for supporting us
2:43:43
and here's the list we've got
sir Jeremy chum potty aka Philip
2:43:47
Smith celebrates today. David
Hutchinson Hutchinson Happy
2:43:50
Birthday to his beautiful and
challenging wife, who turns the
2:43:54
risk of getting visits 39 On
October 1. Marjorie Langford
2:43:58
Happy Birthday to Bill Langford
turning 47 And Billy Bones
2:44:01
apparently celebrating his
birthday happy birthday from
2:44:04
everybody here at the best
podcast in the universe Oh no.
2:44:12
Take that back there's no title
change what am I talking about?
2:44:15
There's no title changes no
there's no title change. Well, I
2:44:18
put that one in which one well,
I don't it didn't show up but
2:44:22
it's one of our nice has become
a barren net. Well,
2:44:26
I don't have it on the list.
2:44:29
Get moved. Sunday. Okay. Sunday,
2:44:32
Sunday Sunday. How about this we
do have to actually have one
2:44:35
Daming one knighting. So if you
can blade
2:44:40
Oh, here it is. Sorry.
2:44:43
Mrs. Hutchinson and once you
step up here, and Jack Wilson
2:44:48
both of you have supported or
been supporting the best
2:44:51
podcasting universe with $1,000
or more that brings you up here
2:44:55
and pronounced vacation is
official for you. I hereby
2:44:58
pronounce the king you Daim
chaos pixie of the South Puget
2:45:02
Sound and Sir Jack Black night
of the industrial laundries for
2:45:06
you we've got hookers and blow
red boys and Chardonnay
2:45:09
margaritas and mozzarella
sticks, ribeye and backwoods
2:45:12
apple pie moonshine. Add to that
some cases and sad case of
2:45:15
ginger ale and gerbil sparkling
cider and escorts bong hits and
2:45:18
bourbon breast milk and pablum
cow girls and coffin varnish and
2:45:23
mutton and Mead. Head over to no
identity nation.com/rings Let us
2:45:27
know exactly where to send it
all you get the ring, which is a
2:45:29
signet ring. You can seal your
important correspondence with it
2:45:32
with the provided wax and of
course, a certificate of
2:45:35
authenticity. thanks again
everybody. Know what? Yo, yo,
2:45:45
they are cranking up for the
next month. We got lots of
2:45:49
meetups happening, including the
21st of October in Copenhagen. I
2:45:53
was asked to mention that early.
Because apparently in Copenhagen
2:45:57
they need a month to get
anything organized. I don't know
2:45:59
why that is. Exactly. And here's
the two hot Tucson meet up
2:46:03
report. This is certainly MoPhO
here at the two high Tucson meet
2:46:07
in the morning. Pile boys. This
is Baroness bath. It's six
2:46:12
o'clock. Do you know where your
rain sticks are? Hi,
2:46:15
this is Patty and we're in the
Sonoran Desert and it's about 30
2:46:20
degrees Celsius having a great
time. JCD you're my man.
2:46:25
Joe notum it's coyote from the
troll room crushing your Meetup.
2:46:30
Hey, this is Brian from Tempe
just saying college towns can be
2:46:33
friends.
2:46:34
Hey John and Adam This is Tim
down from the Oregon local 33 to
2:46:38
my first no agenda meetup the
two hot Tucson and having a
2:46:41
great time making new friends.
2:46:46
This is Vince the beat boxer
over here at the no agenda
2:46:48
meetup celebrating my 24th trip
around the sun
2:46:55
this has been says Mom I'm here
to
2:46:59
Alright, Vince's Mom Thank you.
Here's what's coming up. Today
2:47:03
the bourbon and refugees meet up
six o'clock Milwaukee time
2:47:06
Waterford Waterford stillhouse
and Waterford Wisconsin. Oh,
2:47:11
that was oh the September 30
Raleigh has been cancelled all
2:47:15
right. Then Friday we have this
is 30 is let them eat bugs meet
2:47:20
up six o'clock Central Presley's
in Houston, Texas. No agenda I
2:47:24
must be high number for the meet
up at seven o'clock on Friday
2:47:28
McSorley's wonderful saloon and
Grill in Toronto Ontario.
2:47:32
Central Balkan the traveling
slavers back against seven eight
2:47:36
o'clock Zagreb, Zagreb, time at
sushi bar aktuelle in Hrvatska,
2:47:42
Croatia. Go say hi to Alex. That
should be a fun one. I'm looking
2:47:45
forward to report we know you're
there in Croatia first of
2:47:49
October Saturday Red 33 Red 33
harvest season meet up to 30
2:47:53
Eastern Castle Island brewery,
North Norwood Massachusetts. Say
2:47:58
hi Mr. Nathan Lee Miller foster
for me chaotic GOOD NIGHT OF THE
2:48:02
WHITE Lodge. Saturday as well.
So flew soiree three o'clock
2:48:06
Eastern beefs. Oh Brady and
Punta Gorda, if it's being held,
2:48:09
we have not do not have
confirmation of everything's
2:48:12
okay. 333 spooks and slaves 333
Eastern Harpers Ferry brewery.
2:48:18
Purcellville, Virginia, spook
Central, join like minded folk
2:48:25
at 333 Central as well on
Saturday at the harvest Hall at
2:48:28
the hotel Vin in Grapevine
Texas. Dublin's no agenda
2:48:32
meetup, which will be at says
TPM, maybe it was meant to be
2:48:37
1pm It's Irish Standard Time.
Cube ons port Wetherspoons.
2:48:41
Dublin Ireland go take a look at
no agenda meetup.com for exact
2:48:44
starting time and finally the
Cancun dollar drinks heavy
2:48:47
party, party time six o'clock
Cancun guandolo Plaza Zona
2:48:51
Central Avenue in Cancun. Dude,
we are so international. We do a
2:48:56
lot of international meetups.
Got another one in Victoria BC
2:49:01
on the 30th. We have Byron
Boone, Bavaria, Deutschland on
2:49:06
the eighth you got Peterborough,
Canada on the 14th Ah, the Los
2:49:13
Angeles on the 15th. That's
really foreign. And then
2:49:16
Copenhagen. Nowadays first.
Yeah. And there you go. It's
2:49:21
quite a lot. No agenda
meetup.com is where you can find
2:49:24
out where all these meetups are
you get all the particulars all
2:49:28
the details. It's run by our
knights or Daniel with me me in
2:49:31
the back office. We really
appreciate all of these producer
2:49:35
organized meetups that you are
doing all over the world. It
2:49:38
makes a big difference to have
this community meet in person no
2:49:41
agenda meetups.com If you can't
find one, start one yourself.
2:49:48
Day de bom bom UniFi will be
triggered on you to be where
2:49:58
everybody feels the same. Hey
2:50:02
it's like a body backup hot air.
All right, let's check ISOs you
2:50:16
got your ISOs
2:50:19
I have four ISOs Okay,
2:50:21
which one let's go
2:50:22
let's just go in order to think
2:50:25
a little more in the mic device
is
2:50:26
always great
2:50:27
you really got to get on the mic
right very
2:50:29
cool. Now that is the ISO I'm
that should win
2:50:34
really great
2:50:35
very very cool. Okay that's a
podcast all right what else next
2:50:39
one is magical. Oh wow okay oh
sorry that was oh wow, this is
2:50:46
how you played oh wow instead of
magical moment. A magical
2:50:50
moment. Yeah, good moment.
2:50:52
I like to do I get to play Oh,
wow. Again, I like that one.
2:50:56
Yeah. Oh, wow. Yeah, I like that
one better than great.
2:51:00
Really? Okay, then I get on
Yeah.
2:51:02
Unbelievable. Yeah, no let me
see what I have. Where's Jackie?
2:51:13
Could couldn't resist
2:51:15
this is the beginning of a great
journey for you
2:51:18
too long. Maybe this one sounds
everybody. Oh, I gotta live I
2:51:26
gotta live.
2:51:28
Still long and it's clear.
That's not long sound so stoked.
2:51:36
Okay, let's compare I thought
your Oh, wow. was actually
2:51:40
better. See? Oh, wow. Can we do
Oh, wow, was a compromise. Okay,
2:51:48
we do. Oh, wow. Yeah, I think
that'd be good. It's a good
2:51:51
compromise.
2:51:52
It definitely said it a lot.
2:51:55
We haven't done any COVID. So I
do need to play one COVID clip
2:52:01
which is from our Director of
the CDC, Madame Wollensky, she
2:52:04
should have a pashmina, talk to
Fifi. And she has asked a
2:52:10
question about Paul Offit. One
of the doctors who was on the
2:52:16
FDA advisory board who voted
against the most recent Vax,
2:52:20
which is now being manned and
which is being offered, I should
2:52:23
say, and he and you know, the
clips we've played, it sounds
2:52:28
like he's like, I don't want
anything to do with this. I
2:52:30
said, I said no. I said
2:52:33
no, pretty much what he said.
2:52:34
So let's so how does the
director of CDC react to his
2:52:38
saying New
2:52:40
Dr. Paul Offit and infectious
disease and extra vaccine expert
2:52:44
at the Children's Hospital of
Philadelphia, he's also a member
2:52:46
of the FDA Advisory Committee
has been critical of this
2:52:50
updated booster, he says that a
healthy young person really is
2:52:53
unlikely to even benefit from a
booster dose, it should be
2:52:57
targeted more specifically to
those who really are most likely
2:53:00
to benefit. And I wonder if you
agree with that assessment, and
2:53:04
whether just even saying that
adds to what's been as you know,
2:53:08
an ongoing criticism of CDC
messaging that COVID vaccines
2:53:12
COVID itself, the messaging has
been confusing.
2:53:16
So first, deep respect to Dr.
offered, here's what I will say
2:53:19
about are updated.
2:53:21
What do you think she's gonna
say in answer to that?
2:53:24
Here's what I will say. We think
that the vaccines are safe and
2:53:28
effective, and he's just gonna
ignore it.
2:53:31
Even better.
2:53:33
So first, deep respect to Dr.
Often, here's what I will say
2:53:36
about our updated vaccine, we
are simplifying our message the
2:53:40
message is you need to get your
phone booster vaccine. So go
2:53:45
ahead and get it. If you're ill,
if you're over the age of 12. If
2:53:48
you've received your primary
series, if you're more than two
2:53:51
months out of your last shot,
you can get an updated vaccine.
2:53:54
And so we've intentionally
simplified the message. So it's
2:53:57
very, very clear.
2:53:58
We've simplified the message.
2:54:02
So she is answering a
nonexistent question as though
2:54:06
the whole problem was the
complexity of the message.
2:54:10
It was way too complex. But she
completely ignores the fact that
2:54:14
you know the guy said new
2:54:18
Yeah, it's crazy to wait to do
it she's pretty good by the way
2:54:20
that's good Deb bureaucrat
better
2:54:22
bet yeah, better than done
before for sure.
2:54:25
Do you have one one that's one
of the learning she's learning
2:54:27
you
2:54:27
want to leave us with or what
you got? Oh,
2:54:30
we got the have any one? I guess
some some. Oh, yeah. Let's this
2:54:38
this is educational. And it's
going to take us a couple of
2:54:40
minutes but let's do it so we
can catch up with Iran and
2:54:44
Starlink
2:54:46
Iran and Starling. The Internet
in a suitcase. Oh shoot fail.
2:54:54
Who suggested that his company
SpaceX could make its Starlink
2:54:58
satellite based internet
Available in Iran? How promising
2:55:02
is that? How would that work?
2:55:04
So I myself, I'm not a tech
expert by Louise, but when I
2:55:07
speak to my friends who, who are
they will argue that this is an
2:55:13
important development. Now,
what's challenging, I'll tell
2:55:17
you the challenges is that, for
example, in Ukraine, Starling
2:55:21
has played an important role in
providing Internet up for up to
2:55:26
a couple 100,000 people. The
challenge is that, whereas in
2:55:30
Ukraine, which is a country,
which is allied with the United
2:55:34
States, the US has a strong
presence there, and the
2:55:37
Ukrainian government eagerly
wanted this internet access.
2:55:41
None of those things are true in
the Iranian context. And so
2:55:44
logistically, it's much more
challenging, because you're
2:55:47
going to have to essentially
smuggle in these, these internet
2:55:51
kits to neighboring countries.
And then there's a financial
2:55:54
challenge here, because I can't
expect Iranians to be paying for
2:55:57
this internet service. But
neither of these are
2:56:00
insurmountable obstacles.
2:56:02
So just to make sure I
understand the comparison,
2:56:04
Sterling went into Ukraine, it
was seen as a big success after
2:56:09
Russia hit Ukraine's internet
access. But the key difference
2:56:14
was Ukraine wanted internet
access, they wanted people to be
2:56:17
able to communicate, Iran would
not want people to be able to
2:56:20
communicate over over Starlink
satellites.
2:56:22
Exactly. I think the Iranian
government wants to the police
2:56:26
did so it wants to control
communication, wants to control
2:56:30
information, and wants to be
able, if necessary, to
2:56:35
essentially throw it on the
internet. So it can repress
2:56:37
people in the dark. And so, you
know, outside Internet access
2:56:42
coming in, would be very much
viewed as a threat by the
2:56:44
Iranian government.
2:56:47
Yeah, this is the whole Arab
Spring internet, in a suitcase,
2:56:50
this
2:56:50
whole thing? This is really
good. Yeah. But it's amped up
2:56:54
Jesus Darling, did you know that
he lines Guinea gonna get some,
2:56:58
some good attention from our
government, because he's doing a
2:57:01
service to me, but when what
he's told to do, he's doing a
2:57:04
very good job.
2:57:05
He's doing a very good job. So
let, but part two is kind of
2:57:07
interesting. I just think just
from this, the kind of the
2:57:11
strategic aspect, part two,
pretty much makes it clear that
2:57:15
this won't be that hard to do,
if you don't mind, taxpayer
2:57:18
money going into it.
2:57:20
But the reality is that, you
know, Iran is a country, which
2:57:23
prohibits satellite dishes, and
it prohibits alcohol, and yet,
2:57:26
there's probably 30 million
satellite dishes in Iran. And
2:57:29
according to the regime itself,
there's a problem with
2:57:31
alcoholism. So smuggling small
devices into Iran, which are
2:57:37
probably about the size of a
pizza box, I would say
2:57:40
unbalanced is not an
overwhelming risk.
2:57:44
It's a little bit bigger than a
pizza box.
2:57:46
Yeah, you have one, I thought
that you could add a little
2:57:48
color to this report.
2:57:50
It is not a big box. But it's
definitely not a pizza box. I'll
2:57:54
just say again, this is some
amazing technology, I am blown
2:57:59
away that it even works at all,
you take this three pieces, no
2:58:04
two pieces, really, you know,
there's a stand for the for the
2:58:08
satellite, you stick the pole
from the satellite dish, which
2:58:12
is a rectangle into that you
connect that wire to the to the
2:58:17
hub, which is a Wi Fi thing. And
that Wi Fi thing, you plug into
2:58:22
the wall, then you got to do the
typical select your Wi Fi
2:58:26
network. To, you know, you have
to your phone has to select that
2:58:31
new Wi Fi network to set it up.
And that's it. And then the
2:58:35
satellite blue self adjust and
it just works. And now it's not
2:58:39
great for podcasts, because of
the physical distance there is
2:58:42
limitation. And you will have
some latency. But in a pinch,
2:58:48
if you're just surfing the web,
reading news feeds so no, you
2:58:52
can you can do Roku with this
thing. Um, it's great. I get I
2:58:55
get oh, yeah, no, I get high
speed a total what
2:58:58
is the bandwidth? You must have
checked it?
2:59:00
Um, well, it varies, of course.
But it's, it's between 100
2:59:04
megabits per second and 15. You
know, it can vary sometimes a
2:59:09
little bit. But in general, I've
never had a problem. If you
2:59:12
start to download a big file,
you can see it progressively.
2:59:15
It's toward the whole system is
assigning bandwidth. And gets
2:59:21
faster. I don't know seems like
a cool thing to hack or a cool
2:59:24
thing to blow some of those
satellites out of the sky. I
2:59:27
mean, we need some action on
this. Now Elon is just get
2:59:31
I'm sure that they don't like
the idea. The Iranians. This is
2:59:35
a second shot at this we had and
we can't keep doing this over
2:59:38
and over. We'll talk about that.
And next year. I do have some
2:59:42
clips that talk about how it may
be us behind all the action. No.
2:59:49
Again, I'm flabbergasted. It
stuns me every time it's crazy.
2:59:54
deconstruction complete for
today. Well, we're never
2:59:57
complete Of course. We got some
Hugh Allison coming up. In the
3:00:00
end of show mixes DS last
William New York and Tom
3:00:03
Starkweather Another one was
fantastic historical documents,
3:00:08
which is what all of his end of
show mixes turn out to be. Up
3:00:13
next I know agenda stream.com
You can find it in the troll
3:00:17
room troll room.io We've got
behind the schemes should be a
3:00:23
good one should give that a
listen. And we return on
3:00:30
Thursday coming to you from the
heart of the Texas Hill Country
3:00:33
in FEMA Region number six in the
morning everybody I'm Adam
3:00:35
curry.
3:00:36
And actually I'll be back on
Sunday I don't know what Adams
3:00:39
gonna do is John C. Dvorak
3:00:41
second Thursday. Enjoy John
3:00:46
I'll be here by myself. Remember
us
3:00:49
at the vortech.org/ma Until then
adios mofos and such you gotta
3:01:12
go now we have a brand
3:01:26
new york has a brand and when
people see it means something
3:01:33
you know when we go there it's
not it's the Kansas doesn't have
3:01:36
a brand when you go there you
okay you from Kansas? No. Well,
3:01:45
you know what? Brother but New
Yorker?
3:01:50
As the World Turns to curious
and you're gonna learn Bill
3:01:52
Gates try to block out the sun
my money burns. I want the
3:01:56
sovereignty of bodily autonomy
coerce you with his medical
3:01:59
experiments. seems odd to me.
Stick it in your arm. There's no
3:02:02
possible other on myocarditis
involved pausa you're looking
3:02:05
for a long long take it at your
own risk. What the hell is this
3:02:10
few doctors give you objective
advice much less follow up tips.
3:02:13
Advocating for free speech you
disagree only adds to your
3:02:17
integrity. If you ask me. Miss
me with a poisoned thought it
3:02:20
was me. BBB. Rickey Bell Miko
Behrens, Ronnie de veau Pusha T
3:02:25
says if you know that, you know,
come on to the show. October 6
3:02:30
APM. If you don't know now, you
know if you
3:02:33
see something, say something is
more than a slogan. It's how we
3:02:37
protect ourselves, our loved
ones and our communities used to
3:02:42
roll they recognize recognizing
and reporting suspicious
3:02:46
activity of Sunday's a big day.
It's about all of us. Say
3:02:52
All right, Secretary my orcas
and Department of Homeland
3:02:55
Security see
3:02:58
same day gets
3:03:01
weird his eyes
3:03:03
bugging out and bugging out.
3:03:06
Why do I see the same guy is my
wife and our daughters to make
3:03:12
my community safe. September 25
is CS stay day. Media using
3:03:20
hashtag why I see say
3:03:23
million out
3:03:24
authorities are investigating
whether sabotage is the cause of
3:03:27
leaks and the Nord Stream gas
pipelines and acting Russia to
3:03:31
your attack did
3:03:32
damage simultaneously at three
underwater pipes in the Baltic
3:03:35
Sea at
3:03:36
the very same time that leaks in
these pipelines were detected.
3:03:39
Swedish officials reported two
powerful undersea explosions,
3:03:43
each one of which was equivalent
to hundreds of pounds of TMT
3:03:46
these
3:03:46
explosions were at least
equivalent to 200 250 pounds of
3:03:50
TNT each so they're quite big.
Only a very professional
3:03:54
organization could do this. Only
a big country could do
3:03:57
the lease are under
investigation. Their initial
3:04:01
reports indicating that this may
be the result of an attack or
3:04:06
some kind of sabotage, but these
initial reports haven't
3:04:09
confirmed that yet. But if it is
confirmed, that's clearly in no
3:04:13
one's interest.
3:04:15
Denmark and the US all fear it
could be sabotage. The Kremlin
3:04:19
says it's extremely concerned
about the leaks,
3:04:21
but her Polish counterparts
alleged that the leaks are
3:04:24
sabotage. After the leaders
toured an energy facility in
3:04:28
Poland
3:04:29
in a move that Europe hopes will
ease its energy crisis. Leaders
3:04:33
have inaugurated a new pipeline
delivering gas from Norway to
3:04:36
Poland. This
3:04:36
is the red line is the line of
the Baltic pipe, which was
3:04:40
inaugurated yesterday. Just as
these explosions occurred on
3:04:44
you.
3:04:45
There will be there will be no
longer Nord Stream tonight.
3:04:49
We will bring it in, if at all
possible, prevent the Nord
3:04:52
Stream two from ever being
completed.
3:04:55
Is that something that is being
discussed with allies is that
3:04:58
something's being conflated.
3:05:00
Absolutely.
3:05:01
I'm not going to get into the
specifics here today, but we
3:05:04
will work with Germany to ensure
that the pipeline does not move
3:05:07
forward. If Russia invades
Ukraine, one way or another Nord
3:05:11
Stream two will not
3:05:13
move forward. But how we do? How
will
3:05:16
you do that? Exactly.
3:05:20
Since the project and control of
the project is within Germany's
3:05:23
control I promise you will be
able to do. boruch.org/in A Oh
3:05:43
wow.