0:00
We're doing a show.
0:01
Adam curry Jhansi Devora October
23 2022. This is your award
0:06
winning give our nation media
assassination episode 1497.
0:10
This is no agenda, welcoming the
0:13
Dr. Demmick broadcasting live
from the heart of the Texas Hill
0:17
Country here and FEMA Region
number six in the morning,
0:20
everybody. I'm Adam curry,
0:22
and from Northern Silicon Valley
where our guest host is Scott
0:25
Gottlieb. I'm John C. Dvorak.
0:34
Okay, I'm very curious. First of
all, if I can just say
0:36
something. You seem very chipper
up and on the ball today.
0:40
So I didn't do anything. No,
look, I've
0:43
known you for almost 15 years.
Nah, no, no, no, no, no. I love
0:48
I love it. When Mimi comes to
visit. You're sharper than ever.
0:54
Yeah, that's it. And you get
annoyed quicker,
0:55
which is always fun.
0:57
So Scott Gottlieb was on this
morning's face to nation. I
1:01
didn't get any clips because he
didn't have anything to say as
1:03
usual said everyone should get
the shot. Yeah, but they sent a
1:08
nasty tweet out.
1:09
You did you sent you wait, you?
Oh, no. You participated in
1:14
lace the nation to Face The
Nation and Margaret Brennan for
1:18
booking this guy. He's like he
works with the social media
1:22
companies to get people banned.
He's being sued. It turns out
1:25
Oh, by that New York Times
reporter Alex Berenson. Yeah.
1:29
Yeah. Berenson. And so he's and
somebody asked him about this.
1:35
He hasn't been sued by the way.
Baris is just threatening. And
1:40
so he's asked about this and
some other show. And his quote
1:43
was, oh, I can't talk about
pending litigation. It's not
1:47
pending. Nothing's happened. Pin
pen. Phony from the get go.
1:53
Wait, who's you mean, look,
Scott leap is a phony. Yeah,
1:57
I'm sorry. I just discovered
that now.
1:59
No, no, I thought for a second.
You meant maybe Alex Berenson? I
2:02
do know
2:03
is fine. Gottlieb is on the
show. And they I figured well,
2:08
I'm gonna see what he see what
because because Margaret surely
2:11
will ask him a question about
Berenson. This whole thing now
2:16
she has too afraid to do it the
whole show was and instead that
2:19
they bring out their next series
of guests which includes your
2:22
friend in mind. Oh, no, no, Kara
Swisher so cares. My goodness.
2:28
She's there to talk about ballot
tampering in Arizona. Wait,
2:33
that's not her beat. And she's
and she says that she says the
2:37
words that make clip this for
the next show. It's all part of
2:40
the Russian playbook.
2:43
That's a great i so we need that
end of show. So
2:46
she's so the phrase the Russian
playbook. By the way anyone
2:50
wouldn't do a best seller real
quick. Yeah, Russia still book
2:53
called The Russian playbook.
2:56
Well, what's wrong with us? Exit
Strategy? Hello. We could make
2:59
this so humorous.
3:03
It would be a funny book. You do
a funny book. Yeah. But they're
3:07
really freaked out every all
these new shows are totally
3:10
freaked out about Carrie Lake.
Oh, yeah.
3:13
She's She's a force to be
reckoned with. She's very
3:15
interesting. She is one of the
few women over she's over. 50.
3:20
Right.
3:21
I don't know how she can't tell
her age. She's between 35 and
3:24
60. I can't tell ya 30. She's
not she's writing her late 40s.
3:28
There
3:28
aren't many women who can rock
the short hit the pixie cut that
3:31
well,
3:32
but very, very few the personnel
have been working in the
3:35
business for 30 years. She's got
a beautiful smile. Yeah, yeah,
3:39
it's not it's not a Miss America
smile is a different smell. But
3:42
it's very attractive. And she is
sharp. And she also knows the
3:47
news business. And she knows the
news business. And she can she
3:50
kicks back on anyone who goes
after her from the news
3:53
industry. And she makes the
point. She's on all these all
3:57
the shows that she can get on.
And she makes the point that
4:00
they once loved her and now they
all hate her. Because she's the
4:03
Republican. It's unbelievable.
4:07
Man. Well, the still I think the
political news of the day has
4:12
got to be the United Kingdom. I
just love what's going on over
4:17
there. And if you have a chance
to read any of the newspapers in
4:21
the ANC, you can actually get a
picture of the headlines at the
4:23
newsstand is just fantastic.
They go nuts over there. And I
4:28
was listening to my favorite
news podcasts from the UK
4:31
actually the only news podcast
and listen to the news agents
4:36
and this so this is the the
three journalists respected
4:40
journalists they're They're well
known I guess. And they kind of
4:43
disgusting they deconstruct the
news while the reporting the
4:46
news kind of so this happens
when we go into a place of sheer
4:50
political science where the one
of the one of the female
4:52
reporters politics where
4:54
it looks too weird to try and
govern a party where there is so
4:59
much demand for a more
democratic process. I mean, I
5:03
don't know how
5:04
can I interrupt you? Steven
swynford is reporting the Boris
5:09
Johnson is standing
5:15
Okay, shit. not biased at all or
anything.
5:21
No, I'd love to believe that in
the media
5:24
they're no but I love that they
left that in I have
5:26
great respect for it's too much
work to take it out. It's good
5:30
radio.
5:30
Here's, here's a little update
on what's happening over there.
5:33
Today. Liz trust sealed her fate
as Britain's shortest serving
5:37
Prime Minister in history, just
44 days after the Queen
5:41
appointed her and two days
before the monarch died in
5:44
Parliament.
5:45
I love how they just snuck in
there how the Queen appointed
5:48
her which of course is
technically true. But isn't that
5:51
weird? Because he was the party
who chose her or some forces
5:56
that be but now the Queen
appointed her.
6:00
And in public the past month,
trust his political life
6:02
imploded. I will deliver a bold
plan. The biggest tax cut plan
6:07
in half a century would have
ballooned the deficit that
6:10
spooked the markets and sent the
pound plunging. She sacked her
6:13
finance minister then made a
massive U turn on campaign
6:16
promises
6:17
20 feet tax cut God two year
energy freeze gone. Tax free
6:22
shopping Dawn economic
credibility.
6:27
Just yesterday she vowed to
carry on
6:30
Mr. Speaker, I am a fighter.
6:35
But today she did just that step
down this head of lettuce
6:39
outlasting the premier in a
tabloid stunt streamed online.
6:43
President Biden thanks trust.
6:45
She was a good partner on
Russia. And the British are
6:49
going to solve the problem do
6:51
anything but no
6:52
problems, including inflation
over 10% and that a 40 year high
6:56
are not disappearing.
6:58
This was about people's
mortgages, how much it cost to
7:01
fill the grocery trolley and
that's why the British people
7:04
are pretty angry
7:05
and fed up with their political
leaders.
7:08
This is a cycle of rubbish,
rubbish and they will face
7:11
rubbish more rubbish. We're
basically the laughingstock of
7:13
the world as per usual.
7:17
I love this. I love that when
it's all blowing up. So here's
7:20
the quick follow up with a tune
on CBS Evening News note that
7:24
bow Joe is in the running and
now
7:26
the race to replace Liz trust is
on in the Conservative Party is
7:29
aiming to have a successor in
place as early as Monday. There
7:33
are even reports that Boris
Johnson may throw his hat back
7:37
into the ring. Meanwhile, as for
the opposition Labour Party,
7:40
they are just clamoring for a
general election polls show that
7:44
if that were to be held today,
they would win in a landslide
7:49
Yeah, I have a I have a clip
that discusses the various
7:54
candidates now. The dark horse
candidate that I like Sue neck
7:59
is this woman penny more don't
8:01
Oh, yeah, that's she's an
insider elite isn't she? Isn't
8:05
she like some superstars
everybody?
8:07
She's got this. She's a she's a
dark horse. She's got the sharp
8:13
tongue that you need. She
doesn't you know put up a guff
8:17
she has a woman she has a womb
that you need. She has a
8:20
she which is makes me think she
has a candidate she's a
8:23
possibility because they're not
going to push out a woman and
8:26
then bring in a man I don't
think because of the political
8:29
correct unless
8:30
it unless it's the sunic guy
that because he's Indian. I
8:33
didn't
8:33
like sunic He's too much while
he's tied into via Yeah, he's
8:38
the guy needs credit score
systems with his family and
8:41
stuff. very connected.
8:43
He's very connected. And he's
logically the choice because
8:46
he's the one who came in second
I think yeah. And more than was
8:49
kicked to the curb. But she's
still a dark horse. She would be
8:52
the best and there is this
situation with well, you took a
8:56
woman out to put in a guy I
don't think so. Yeah. Because
9:00
that that that's you know,
American in style, but it's
9:04
universal. It's an offense. So
let's go to main UK candidates
9:09
is a good net two minute clip of
every possible issue more than
9:14
mentioned in there
9:16
who will replace Liz truss as
Britain's Prime Minister trust
9:19
announced her resignation after
just 44 days in office, the
9:23
shortest term in British
history, leading to yet another
9:26
leadership race. Here's more.
9:29
Rishi Sunak, who was running up
against trusts over the summer
9:33
is a firm favorite. The former
finance minister sounded an
9:37
early warning about trust its
economic agenda. rising
9:40
inflation is the enemy that
makes everyone poorer and puts
9:45
at risk your homes and your
savings.
9:48
He first gained popularity
staying Britain through the
9:51
COVID pandemic Griffin
conservative instincts for a
9:54
small state and borrowing
massively to support workers and
9:58
businesses. He was The preferred
candidate amongst Conservative
10:02
MPs in the summer leadership
race, but lost out in the
10:05
membership vote. Many of them
saw him as responsible for Boris
10:09
Johnson's downfall. Which brings
us to the next potential
10:12
candidate.
10:13
And it's perfectly true. It's
perfectly true that I mean, not
10:16
at the time of my choosing,
10:18
Johnson was kicked out of office
in July. However, the face of
10:22
Brexit was once seen by many as
a vote winner. In the 2019
10:26
general election. He won votes
in parts of the country that had
10:29
never backed the Conservatives
before. Johnson was on holiday
10:34
in the Caribbean when Trump
announced she was quitting. The
10:37
British media reports on
Thursday and suggested he was
10:39
flying back seemingly loved and
loathed in equal measure. Some
10:43
Conservative MPs may quit if he
wins hasta Lavista baby the
10:50
third candidate likely to enter
the race is Penny mordant. A
10:53
former Defense Secretary just
missed reaching the final two in
10:57
the summer leadership race
mordant like Johnson and Sunak
11:00
was a passionate supporter of
leaving the European Union and
11:03
as seen by some as having broad
appeal in the parties the pianos
11:07
detained on urgent this she won
plaudits for her performance in
11:10
parliament on Monday, when she
defended the government even as
11:14
it reversed
11:15
most of its policies. The Prime
Minister is not under a desk is
11:22
that what she said there? That
was sabotage. No one said she's
11:27
hiding under a desk. She said
that. Yeah, she sabotaged trust,
11:32
man. Yeah, I didn't know that
was her. I'd heard that. I was
11:37
like, Holy crap, man. What a
what a what a dick. Move someone
11:40
from your own party. But that
that was a penny. Yeah. Ah,
11:45
yeah. Okay. Yeah, I'll put money
on Penny. She's better.
11:50
They She is a strong. She'd be a
strong Prime Minister. She's
11:56
young, luckily for good and bad.
And she looks young. And she's a
12:02
but she's got all the chops to
be like another Thatcher. Or a
12:09
or that woman net. In Australia,
who was just the nastiest of all
12:14
the Prime Ministers down there,
Redhead who would just take
12:18
anyone on
12:19
the let's face planter. She just
12:24
so I think more than it would be
great. Because she wouldn't put
12:27
up with anything. And we'll say
12:30
it was a long shot. She's a
military industrial complex, so
12:34
that she is
12:35
so that's that's an advantage.
Now. They do like her. They
12:38
would think she's She's funny.
12:41
Yeah. And she's ruthless. That
that says it to me right there.
12:46
She had the balls to do that she
knew trust was out. Interesting,
12:52
interesting. Interesting. Well,
we have our own crap going on
12:54
back here at home and this is
percolated up again, as we have
12:58
been following the story, I just
viewed
13:00
over sick time as derailed talks
between the nation's freight
13:02
railroads and their unions,
setting the stage for a possible
13:06
strike next month workers
rejected a tentative contract
13:09
deal, then they propose adding
up to seven sick days per year,
13:12
but management said no, a
walkout could trigger more
13:16
supply chain problems.
13:18
Now, I was thinking about this
because they won't have they
13:21
won't be able to strike. I guess
there's some time limit in the
13:25
negotiation process that legally
binds them to not strike before
13:29
November 23.
13:33
Which to me elections after,
13:35
but it's after the election. So
is this a time bomb that the
13:40
unions are going to hold on to
so that if the Republicans
13:45
dominate, then they blow up the
country?
13:51
I don't know. It's hard to say.
I have a one minute report from
13:55
New Tang Dynasty that adds a
little element to this report
13:59
left out and I find it kind of
interesting that that rewards
14:03
you get that report.
14:04
Oh, hold on a second. That was
ABC America this morning.
14:10
Yeah, well, they left out a
little factoid which will play
14:13
you'll hear it in this one.
14:15
US railroad companies rejected a
new sick leave proposal
14:18
yesterday from a union of track
maintenance workers that is
14:21
threatening to go on strike. The
Brotherhood of maintenance of
14:24
way employees says it will
strike as soon as November 19.
14:27
Without a new labor deal. The
Union proposed seven paid sick
14:31
days, up to 56 hours per year as
part of a new contract
14:34
agreement, which the railroads
rejected. The railroads said in
14:38
a statement quote rail unions
have agreed repeatedly in
14:41
previous contracts, that short
term absences would be unpaid in
14:45
favor of higher compensation for
day's work. Oh, generous
14:49
sickness benefits for longer
absences. If the Union were to
14:52
go on strike. It is expected
that other freight railroad
14:55
unions would honor their picket
lines causing the nation's major
14:58
freight railroads to grow grinds
to a halt, and stopping the
15:01
movement of an estimated 30% of
the nation's freight
15:05
negotiations are scheduled to
resume in the next two weeks.
15:08
Both sides are issuing warnings,
the brotherhood of maintenance
15:11
of way employees represents
23,000 rail workers. It is the
15:15
third largest rail workers
union. As a general, I'll
15:18
see that I just want to point
out to that little report from N
15:22
T. Superior was packed with it
was superior to ABC, you'd have
15:27
all the resources of ABC News
and they can't put together a
15:30
decent report. And they leave
out important facts,
15:33
which is the they chose more
money over the Sick Day pay or
15:37
the sick leave. And so some of
the so what I understand is they
15:41
said, Hey, we want to just more
more dough we won't get sick.
15:44
And if we do screw it, that's
our tough, and then a couple of
15:47
other unions when Hey, wait a
minute, we don't like that deal.
15:49
Is that what I'm hearing?
15:52
All the unions had the same
basic deal, but this one union
15:56
is steadfastly standing by with
the hey, we've changed our minds
16:01
about the nose paid sick leave.
So they said weird now, it just
16:07
depends on the union leadership.
I mean, you can change your
16:09
mind. But it's like, yeah, we
used to do it that way. But we
16:13
don't like that and so much
anymore, because it's getting
16:17
these unions tied closely to the
Democratic leadership's ie
16:21
Obama. Yeah, yeah. So. So this
could just be a trigger, they
16:26
can resolve it. Or they can let
it go and let it cripple the
16:29
country. I wouldn't put it past
these idiots.
16:33
Well, even if it cripples the
country, that will be a damaging
16:37
blow to the Democrats, because
it always reflects on the
16:40
president United States, not the
parties that went in, in the
16:43
midterms.
16:44
And there's reason number two,
now we really can get rid of
16:47
Joe. He's failing at everything.
25th amendment. Get rid of the
16:51
guy.
16:53
Yeah, no, it's possible. The
25th amendment looms
16:58
Sure does. A report leaked in
the Netherlands. There is a
17:04
secret scenario that is good to
go. In case the Euro collapses
17:10
and they will bring the Gilder
back. I love this. Do you
17:14
remember when they when they all
switched to the euro? That was
17:18
when was that? 2010 2012? Maybe?
It was way before that? No, that
17:23
no, no. They they did the switch
on paper. But it took several
17:26
years before they did the
switch. In like in everybody,
17:31
you know, you had a lot there
was years years before everyone
17:34
was on the Euro 100%. But I
remember that, you know, the
17:39
Deutsche Mark, they still you
know, like oh, we got a secret
17:42
plan in case it doesn't work
will continue to print Deutsche
17:45
Marks you remember that?
17:46
I vaguely remember the Euros
launched in January 1999. Oh,
17:50
yeah, I know. But for the first
three years was an invisible
17:54
currency only used for
accounting purposes. So 2006
17:57
Then coins and banknotes were
launched in 2002.
18:03
Well, the older I get old, the
worst the worst. My memory is.
18:07
Memories, just compressing
history.
18:11
Well, now is that a natural
thing that people?
18:16
Yeah, you know, when I was back
when I was in when I was in
18:19
Portugal last year, you weren't
in Portugal. Eight years ago. Oh
18:27
wow. Okay, well, that sucks
balls. I don't like that.
18:31
It was not gonna get any better.
18:32
This is This is no good.
18:36
Compression. It's not a big
deal. Goodness. Well,
18:38
since we're doing a little bit
of American politics, we just
18:41
give you some reports here on on
the Biden crime family,
18:45
the president on the stump and
on the hunt today for Democratic
18:48
votes in the key battleground
state of Pennsylvania lunching
18:51
with Democratic Senate candidate
John Fetterman, who's neck and
18:54
neck with Republican Mehmet Oz
Fetterman one of the contenders
18:58
to be seen with the President.
Given his sagging poll numbers.
19:01
I liked the neck and neck and
veterans case that's that's
19:04
humorous.
19:05
Yeah, they keep doing it as a
reference, of course to this big
19:08
giant lump on the back of his
neck. Fused like another head.
19:13
Whoever wrote this one kudos Can
you turn your speaker's down
19:16
just a tad John.
19:19
Because they turned him up
earlier. So whoever Yeah, the
19:23
wrote that at
19:23
CBS deserves a little little
attaboy for that one.
19:27
Well, this thing is still kids
still fascinates me this veteran
19:31
guy. This is the dumbest big
lunk I have ever seen in my
19:36
life. And Paul, he's never had a
job in his life. Wow, you're
19:39
such
19:40
you're such an ableist
19:43
he's got he's got his his brain
dead. About this guy is just a
19:49
disaster. But yeah, there he is.
And then the Democrats are. In
19:54
fact, I think Obama came out for
him. Oh, yeah, of
19:57
course. Yeah. No, he's he's he's
all on the Up and up. He's good
20:00
to go. Anything anything better
than AWS
20:03
Republican Mehmet Oz Fetterman,
one of the few contenders
20:07
willing to be seen with the
President, given his sagging
20:09
poll numbers, sagging
20:11
poll numbers. Good line. These
guys are ruthless I think so.
20:20
Tonight over to us over in the
six key Senate races across the
20:23
country. The chamber the economy
and inflation are among the top
20:27
concerns and nearly seven in 10.
Voters in a new CBS News poll
20:31
think the President isn't doing
enough.
20:34
Biden administration's failed
policies have created this
20:37
crisis. The orange
20:39
polls are beginning to break in
favor of Republicans. So the
20:41
President has weak pushing
issues that might resonate with
20:44
voters forgiving student loans,
protecting abortion rights and
20:48
lowering gas prices. But many
Democratic candidates and close
20:51
races don't want to be seen with
the President, including Senate
20:55
candidate Tim Ryan in Ohio,
who's trailing Republican JD
20:58
Vance.
20:58
I'm not relying on
21:00
Chuck Schumer or the President
or anybody to come in here, like
21:04
boost me or give me money. We're
doing it on our own like the
21:08
President
21:09
has done most of his campaigning
behind closed doors party
21:11
funding, as he will tonight with
Federal Democratic Congressman
21:15
Brendan Boyle said candidates
shouldn't be avoiding the
21:18
president, given that he's
accomplished officers.
21:21
We elected Democrats have a damn
good record to run on.
21:25
We shouldn't run away from it.
21:28
Man, guy can't catch a break.
21:31
So they lifted a lot of
reporting not to have names
21:35
stream but almost everybody
else, Randy, because they
21:38
mentioned that Tim right. They
mentioned Tim Ryan and that's
21:40
probably why they use use these
allusions to sagging and all the
21:44
rest. Yeah. Because here's the
clip of the reporter going up to
21:47
Biden specifically asking him
about why he's not going to or
21:51
why Tim Ryan doesn't want him to
show up. And this is the Biden
21:55
mumbling 1620 clip. Tim Ryan
21:58
in Ohio said he doesn't want you
there. Warnock said wouldn't
22:01
say. Do you think they're making
mistake?
22:04
A 16 year I've already done for
you and a lot more than another?
22:07
20
22:10
Yeah, you know what, my human
heart broke a little when I saw
22:13
this clip. Like, the dude is
toast. You know, I know what
22:19
he's trying to do. I know
there's 16 People that unwrap I
22:21
got a tree I'm gonna go and yum
there. Sad, said elder abuse,
22:29
elder abuse. But luckily we got
Jill out on the campaign trail.
22:33
And she is incredibly popular.
22:35
Now. While many Democrats may be
nervous about campaigning with
22:38
President Biden, they're quite
eager to be seen with the First
22:41
Lady Joe Biden, who has been out
on the trail and in the coming
22:43
weeks in four key battleground
states. It's the former
22:46
President Barack Obama will be
the top headliner for Democrats
22:51
pulling out the big guns. They
interesting the GIL is so
22:55
popular I wonder I'm sure it's
not true. But I wonder what the
22:58
what the is what their playbook
is the Russian playbook. It just
23:03
says have have geo run
interference. And then and then
23:08
you know, of course the stupid
dishes
23:10
presentable.
23:12
Dishes presentable but she
messes stuff up too. She does
23:16
like the calls people tacos
23:19
was a classic taco Gaff. She's a
little bit
23:22
of a risk. You know this Jesus,
she's a gas Meister too. And
23:27
then, and then you always have
to do all the hit. They got to
23:30
get all the constituents. Oh,
now, let's go get some trans
23:34
people. Are you familiar with
Devin Mulvaney? No, no. Devin
23:40
Mulvaney is what identifies as a
trans woman. And it's truly a
23:45
boy who is really dressing like
a girl. As far as I know,
23:50
there's no no surgery or
anything or no implants. And as
23:55
you know, ain't like an
influencer Instagrammer type
23:58
person. And so what what do we
what do we see now? Devin
24:04
Mulvaney is going to meet with
the President. i This makes a
24:08
lot of sense. We got to get the
constituency together. So this
24:11
is the entire report from Devin
Mulvaney.
24:14
It's Day 222. A bigger girl. I'm
in Washington, DC and I'm going
24:18
to the White House to speak to
the President of the United
24:21
States. Hello. You know that
phrase, I fear I may have
24:24
Girlboss too close to the sun.
Well, that's how I feel today
24:27
because I get to sit down with
Joe Biden. And now this news and
24:32
I get to ask him a few questions
surrounding trans issues in the
24:35
United States and talk to him
about my transness and I really,
24:40
I'm sorry, I liked that. You can
talk about your trans SNESs.
24:46
Right. I don't know about that.
24:49
Trans Ness.
24:53
transmis how's your transmis
this morning?
24:57
She's running behind time
24:59
mindset. Acting up in talking
about my transness and I really
25:03
just want to represent my
community the best that I can.
25:06
And you know what? As silly as I
am on I'm sorry.
25:09
And I do want our no agenda
trans we have several of them
25:13
maybe 1000s I don't know. I want
I want your response to this
25:17
this this is what's representing
you supposedly, President must
25:21
be there must be beside them
must be mad anyone is serious.
25:25
Yeah, as opposed to these
goofballs.
25:27
I mean that that must make you a
guy
25:29
that played the piano with his
with his pecker. This going
25:33
around that video. Some guy
dresses the girl who has fake
25:37
tits rips off his clothes and
his and he finishes up he's
25:41
playing the piano on stage and
some performance BBC pull
25:45
it No, it's It's a channel for
late night television
25:49
channel for UK. Yeah, UK. Yeah.
Yeah, late night tellers. He
25:53
tears off all his clothes and
then then finishes his piano
25:57
recital is it's actually at a
keyboard with his peccary powers
26:01
a keyboard with it. It's
hilarious, but come on. It's
26:09
just representative of anything
but insanity.
26:14
Can and you know what? As silly
as I am on here, I'm ready to
26:18
step up and show that trans
people we're not going anywhere.
26:22
And that trans kids?
26:23
Exactly. You're not going
anywhere with that EDC,
26:27
a fighting chance to be their
true selves. Okay, I'm running
26:31
late. Let's go. And y'all are
obviously wondering what I'm
26:34
gonna wear to meet the
president. Here you go. It's the
26:37
transplant colors. Cute, right?
So heels,
26:42
believe it wholly inappropriate
outfits, revealing lots of skin
26:47
and okay. You're gonna be great.
I love you. Let's go. Do you
26:55
think I just knock on the front
door? Walking to the White
26:58
House?
26:59
The President of the United
States gave me a cookie.
27:02
Bam. There you go, everybody.
That's your report. I went to
27:06
talk about my transness. And the
President of the United States
27:09
gave me a cookie.
27:10
He gave me a cookie in the Oval
Office. Now here's the question,
27:13
do I eat it? Or do I save it as
a seal? Please, honestly, tell
27:18
me everyone talk, I got a stone,
27:22
Oh, I got a cookie, and I got to
pet his dog. You know, I am so
27:25
proud of this trans community
representation. In America. It's
27:30
really this really is good. I
mean, this is this is exactly
27:32
what true trans people want is
this kind of representation.
27:36
I'm still in shock. And don't be
mad. But I don't get posted any
27:39
of the footage until after the
interview airs on Sunday night.
27:43
Okay, so this is going to be
something big and think it's
27:45
going to be 60 minutes isn't 60
minutes Sunday night. They're
27:48
going to do this on 60 minutes,
John, but we know they got a
27:52
cookie and got to pet the dog.
27:56
On 60 minutes, this would be
great.
28:00
And it needs a little more worth
it because I can't wait for you
28:02
to hear everything that we
talked about. I left with a lot
28:05
of hope and optimism not only
for just trans people that many
28:09
different topics and the fact
that our president has watched
28:13
days of girlhood. It's kind of
epic, and I'm not gonna lie I
28:16
have been. I've been having a
rough go of it lately. A lot of
28:20
darkness and, and today was what
I needed to keep going on. Also,
28:25
if you live in the US and can
legally vote, this is going to
28:28
be one of our lifetimes. So
please get out and vote
28:33
next month. Go ahead. Activation
activation complete varved.
28:43
Caught a weird Biden Biden
situation,
28:46
it's the end of times job. It's
the
28:50
kind of worry I got a couple of
clips here. All right. So Biden
28:54
get his long speech. It was one
of these kind of stump speech
28:58
and it went on and on I was
gonna clip it together and make
29:00
make make fun of it. But I just
decided to catch the end of it.
29:04
And at the end of it so the clip
is Biden sorry, at end of talk
29:10
is clip number one who's played
that in this list away finishes
29:14
his speech.
29:15
Vote vote. God bless you all.
May God protect our troops.
29:19
Thank you. I'm sorry.
29:23
I know God's looking down going
really Joe? I'm sorry.
29:28
So he says he's sorry. So they
start playing this tune. And
29:32
then they achieve they play hell
to the no they never play Halo
29:37
to achieve it's some some rock
song. You'll hear it in a
29:40
second. Oh, the stump speech of
course. And he stops the band
29:46
and or stops to notice no band,
but he stopped showing off the
29:49
tape realizes he screwed up. And
by saying I'm sorry that speech
29:55
is so Oh, I see. So then
everything comes to a halt. So
30:00
this is the this is the Biden
apology
30:04
apologizing for my back.
30:07
My mother be very angry. I was
talking with people my back to
30:10
them I apologize. So thank you
all so very very much
30:19
Ah. So when I don't know what
song it was pisses me off
30:24
higher and higher. Your love
keeps going Okay, gotcha. So he
30:33
know I've seen him give speeches
for a couple of days longer than
30:37
two years even before then. And
he always has people behind his
30:41
back. They all do. Trump does,
too. They have a bunch of
30:44
stooges behind your back and
then they smiling clapping
30:47
they're holding signs. So this
time he is apologizing. He's
30:51
never done this before. So
that's bold crap. Yes, stopping
30:56
this speech to apologize because
he's got people behind his back.
30:59
I think I don't know why he said
I'm sorry. I think he
31:02
forgot to thank somebody or make
a nod or to toss to the next
31:07
music video. I mean, he forgot
to do something in the script.
31:11
And someone was like, no, no,
no, no, and he couldn't figure
31:14
it out. And I don't know. You
know this, but it's it's
31:19
heartwarming to know that this
is how smooth it runs in the
31:21
White House.
31:23
smooth and silky,
31:24
smooth, baby smooth. To kind of
play this clip for a couple
31:30
reasons. One, it shows you the
anger of the Dutch which of
31:33
course, you know, having grown
up there. I have a lot of
31:36
connections, a lot of family, my
daughter particular. So this is
31:43
Dutch guy who did this minute
and a half rant. You know, just
31:47
on I don't know if it was on Tik
Tok or Instagram doesn't really
31:49
matter. But I'd like to play it
for two reasons. One, because he
31:52
does not have the accent of a I
usually do it. He's very refined
31:57
and great accent. But he's mad.
And this is this. Yeah. He's
32:05
really mad. The angry Dutchman.
It's
32:07
odd that you as a grown European
man, have to watch your words or
32:12
you might lose your bank
accounts. The social media
32:15
corporations might shut down
your your email or even your
32:18
phone numbers. And still I have
this desire to speak the truth.
32:24
You know, growing up in the
Netherlands, I witnessed
32:27
firsthand how our country began
pandering to the immigrants. And
32:32
then it got worse. Then in the
late 1990s, they started pushing
32:36
for the LGBT agenda. It started
with the gay marriage. And now
32:40
we have surgeons removing wombs
from 14 year old girls. And then
32:46
came the euthanasia movement.
First, they said it's just for
32:49
old people with terminal
illnesses. Now, if you're an 18
32:53
year old and you claim you are
depressed, you can't heal. Or
32:56
even if you are hearing a high
pitched sound in your ear that
33:01
you can't get rid of. Now, these
are accepted as excuses for you
33:05
to have euthanasia, which is
basically state sanctioned
33:08
murder. And all the while these
things are happening. They keep
33:12
calling it progress. But it's
not progress. It's decline,
33:18
morally, socially, and
especially psychologically. And
33:22
as the icing on the cake. Our
Western leadership now expect
33:27
men like me to enjoy being
drafted into the armies, because
33:32
we have to fight the Russia. I
have to lay my life down in the
33:36
mud to die for diversity and
LGBT and gay marriage. Things
33:40
that I don't give a shit about
and instill our leaders expect
33:44
that I will go along with it or
else they'll take away my evil
33:48
and my bank accounts. This is
just fucked up.
33:53
Come on, man. Wow, excellent use
of F F.
33:57
Very, very good. Yes. It was
good use of the F bomb.
34:01
Yeah. And does it sound
familiar? Immigration?
34:07
No. It's the same. Worldwide.
It's a worldwide phenomenon.
34:10
It's
34:10
the same playbook.
34:13
It's the same Russian playbook.
So Russian playbook playbook.
34:16
Now. So amidst all this, and
this is really been bugging me
34:21
this Adderall shortage that I've
been talking about for a week or
34:26
two. I see the stories pop up.
We got Adderall shortage. So I'm
34:30
like, Okay, I'm ready. You know,
Adderall is already widely
34:33
abused, prescribed. What exactly
is going on? I start to look
34:37
into it. Adderall, by the way.
The compound itself is you know,
34:42
Crystal was like salt.
Methamphetamine, basically. And
34:46
it's generic, but Adderall is
the brand and Adderall is the
34:50
most the most commonly
prescribed. Yeah, and illegally
34:55
used and so then there's this
report. It's on Good day,
34:57
Philadelphia. I think it's a low
Got a news report. And they
35:01
bring in their doctor, Dr. Z, I
think her name is. And as I'm
35:06
watching this, and as I watched
it again this morning, here's a
35:09
guy who's going to clip it. I
kind of figured out why my brain
35:12
was triggered from this. But
let's just talk about I will
35:16
I'll stop the clips through it
throughout a couple of times,
35:18
because it's really incredible
what I think might be going on
35:20
here,
35:21
VA declared a nationwide
shortage of Adderall because
35:24
there's so much demand and there
are supply issues, and this
35:27
could last into next year.
35:29
licensed clinical psychologist
and author Dr. Jamie sacrament
35:32
joins us now Doctor remind us
all what is Adderall.
35:35
Adderall is a medication
stimulant medication used for
35:38
ADHD to help people be able to
focus better concentrate better
35:42
and just kind of performed.
35:45
I liked this and just performed
better. What What kind of what
35:49
kind of medication just you
know, if you need to perform
35:51
like a drug, okay, speed lady,
that's done. That's exactly what
35:57
it is. But she's not gonna say
that, obviously, because we're
35:59
not quite sure exactly whose
payroll she's on yet, and just
36:03
kind
36:03
of performed. So there's a
couple reasons. One, there is a
36:08
increase in demands, which a lot
happened over the pandemic was a
36:12
lot more diagnosis, there was a
lot more, there's ease to get
36:15
the medication because of online
appointments that you could
36:19
have. So it just made things
easier. People were seeing
36:21
symptoms
36:21
that we've been tracking this
ease of getting the drugs,
36:26
mainly through these, these
therapy apps, we can talk to
36:31
somebody and then they but they
really are technically
36:34
providers. And so they can ask
you a few questions you answer a
36:38
few Yes, okay. You're good for
this antidepressants and
36:41
Adderall, etc. They're, they're
legal drug pushers, and this
36:44
really popped up during the
pandemic. This is very
36:47
disturbing
36:48
appointments that you could
have. So it just made things
36:50
easier. People were seeing
symptoms that maybe they hadn't
36:52
seen before in their workplace,
structures and routines went out
36:55
the window. So symptoms became a
lot more apparent.
36:58
What kind of symptoms do you
think ADHD is? Which is not
37:01
asked by the way? What does that
even mean symptom? What new
37:06
symptoms of what,
37:09
what such a problem for our
kids, I meet so many children,
37:11
it's really important for them
to be able to focus in school.
37:14
And you can't just be switching
things up willy nilly when
37:17
people have routine and
structure. So what do you do if
37:19
you have for example, elementary
school kids and oneness?
37:23
elementary school kids were
unmasked?
37:25
So there's a couple things
37:27
that you mentioned that Yeah.
School kids aren't? Well, let's
37:32
call it what it is, is really
not math is a combination of
37:35
ingredients, different
amphetamines mixed in a certain
37:37
way, to be honest, but a lot of
decks in there. Or as they used
37:41
to call it, Dex, Dex
amphetamine, Dextroamphetamine,
37:44
whatever it is, but they're
mixed up. But so I think the
37:48
generic term should be speed.
Speed.
37:50
Okay, there you go. Speed. Yeah,
that's a good one speed. So hey,
37:55
kids need to concentrate. That
doesn't mean a stable loving
38:00
household with, with good good
food and, and on some discipline
38:05
now speed
38:06
up routine and structure. So
what do you do if you have, for
38:09
example, elementary school kids
that don't want us?
38:11
So there's a couple of things.
One, there are other
38:14
medications, the FDA is listing
and different dosages. So that
38:18
is something that you can do you
38:19
can the pharmacists do that,
because I think that we're
38:21
having some problems getting
some of the ingredients, the
38:23
pharmacists are able to make
these different or compound
38:26
different things.
38:26
So there's other types of non
stimulant ADHD medications that
38:30
are available. So it's obvious
something want to talk to your
38:32
provider about to see if that is
something that could benefit
38:34
you.
38:35
Hey, stop, stop. I've been
meaning to bring this up,
38:39
because it's been going on for
months on end. You notice, and
38:44
they do this and all the
mainstream media, I just got to
38:46
be in the style, guys. There's
got to be like the NBC style
38:49
guy. It's got to be something
because they've all done it.
38:52
They've changed the word your
doctor to your provider.
38:55
That's exactly what I teased a
minute ago. That's why said your
38:58
provider.
38:59
Yeah. But I think needs to be
pointed out. Yes, that these
39:04
talking heads, keep saying
provider, somebody is telling
39:08
them to do that. Because I
remember and you can remember we
39:11
all remember, well, well, you
should ask your doctor. Yep.
39:15
They don't do that now. So you
should ask your provider for
39:18
your provider can be a drug
dealer. It could be a cannabis
39:22
shop,
39:23
your provider is a legal drug
dealer. This is the whole point
39:27
the people who answer the app
calls their providers, they're
39:31
not doctors. So they they don't
give you any advice other than
39:35
the script, the protocol. This
is a legal definition that
39:39
they're using here. This woman
this doctor is using this maybe
39:42
because she just brain
controlled mind controlled into
39:45
it. But I think it's clear that
she's on a mission here. She's
39:48
selling an alternative to the
generic Adderall. And although
39:56
it
39:56
sounds like it because she kept
talking about
39:58
well Oh, no, no. The television
people say. So are there
40:04
alternatives? That's the
scripts. See,
40:09
let me back it up a little
Russian playbook.
40:11
Mrs. Do you think that we're
having some problems getting
40:14
some of the ingredients, the
pharmacists are able to make
40:17
these different types of
compound different things? So
40:19
there's
40:20
a whole lot of second. I'm
sorry. You said we can
40:22
interrupt. I mean, yeah,
40:23
definitely.
40:25
I think they're having trouble
getting some ingredients. Kind
40:30
of a report is this. I think
they're, um, well, I think
40:34
they're, they're not getting
some ingredients. What do you
40:37
know, not what you think, you
know, they're not getting the
40:40
ingredients? Could this be just
a giant scam? What specific
40:44
ingredients? Are they not
getting? And why aren't they
40:48
getting them? Most of these
things are manufactured in India
40:51
nowadays, and some in Mexico.
There's no supply chain chain
40:55
issues here. I think this I
think that?
41:00
Well, it is in fact, Adderall is
marketed and manufactured by
41:05
Teva T V. A. And they are the
ones saying that because saying
41:11
that, because of supply chains
and high demand, and in addition
41:14
to that, they are regulated by
the FDA as to how much they can
41:19
produce. So they're also in a,
they're also saying, hey, we
41:23
need to be able to produce more.
So they're full of crap.
41:26
Basically, they just want to
make more of these drugs. But I
41:30
think there's, there's some,
there's multiple players going
41:33
on here. As we as we listened
to, again, the news lady kicking
41:37
off the script,
41:38
and just be switching things up
willy nilly. When people have
41:40
here, hold on seconds, go back a
little further.
41:44
went out the window. So symptoms
became a lot more apparent
41:47
was such a problem for your
kids. So many children, it's
41:50
really important for them to be
able to focus in school. And you
41:54
can't just be switching things
up willy nilly when people have
41:56
to just brings
41:57
these up out of the blue. Out of
the blue. You can't be switching
42:00
things up. willy nilly can can
you
42:03
routine and structure. So what
do you do if you have for
42:05
example, elementary school, kids
and us?
42:08
So there's a couple of things.
One, there are other
42:10
medications, the FDA is listing
and different dosages. So that
42:14
is something that you can do you
42:16
can the pharmacists do that. I
think that we're having some
42:18
problems getting some of the
ingredients, the pharmacists are
42:21
able to make these different
types of compound different
42:23
things.
42:23
So there's other types of non
stimulant ADHD medications that
42:27
are available. So it's obvious
something want to talk to your
42:29
provider about to see if that is
something that could benefit
42:31
you. Okay,
42:33
so other drugs that are same
thing, not a stimulant.
42:40
They work in a different way.
But again, it's something you've
42:44
been on vacation for a long
time, we really want to speak to
42:46
your provider before you just
switch, it's
42:50
gonna be a transition. It's such
a challenge. I just feel like
42:53
your kids
42:53
are like me, they're literally
prepping you to Okay, so just so
42:56
you know, you can't just stop,
you can't just switch your
42:59
route, like, like, you can do
that. You can just call up the
43:02
pharmacy, Hey, man, I'm
switching to product B. No, you
43:05
need a note from a provider,
make sure you talk to your
43:07
provider, talk to your provider,
make sure you talk to your
43:10
provider, our
43:13
same thing, not a stimulant.
43:16
They work in a different way.
But again, it's something if
43:19
you've been on a medication for
a long time, you really want to
43:21
speak to your provider before
you just switch.
43:25
Correct you got a transition.
It's such a challenge. I just
43:28
feel like your kids are like
they're running around doing all
43:30
these different things and
43:33
obviously worried sick that
she's gonna get a get her speed.
43:37
She's on the product. You
43:39
see, she's on the broad
43:41
picture provided for you just
switch.
43:45
Correct. You gotta be a
transition.
43:47
It's such a challenge. I just
feel like your kids are like
43:49
they're running around doing all
these different things. And it's
43:51
just a really frustrating
situation. I have some friends
43:53
that love this part. You know,
your kids are running around
43:56
doing all these different
things. Yeah, lady there on
43:58
speed. Take them off the junk,
man.
44:04
You gotta be a transition.
44:06
It's such a challenge. I feel
like your kids are like they're
44:08
doing all these different
things. And it's just a really
44:10
frustrating situation.
44:14
You're mad. This funny thing is
that woman that woman reported
44:20
the woman from the station.
She's on speed. The guy, the
44:23
deep throated guy. He's like,
he's like a dope smoker. Well,
44:34
you can see your head on a
swivel going back and forth. I
44:37
don't know what to do here.
44:39
Oh, man, that is so funny.
You're right about that guy.
44:43
Wow. I am really high. It's
44:45
gonna be a transition.
44:47
It's such a challenge. I just
feel like your kids are at like
44:48
they're running around doing all
these different things. And it's
44:51
just a really frustrating
situation. I had some friends
44:53
where they just had kids that
were just diagnosed already
44:55
trying to get them onto
something.
45:01
I've been waiting for weeks to
get my kids on something.
45:05
These kids need to be loaded on
something.
45:09
Please provider, please provider
I need um, so can I get my kid
45:13
on something,
45:14
there's gonna be a transition.
45:16
It's such a challenge. I just
feel like your kids are running
45:18
around doing all these different
things. And it's just a really
45:21
frustrating situation. I had
some friends where they just had
45:23
kids that were just diagnosed
already trying to get them onto
45:25
something. And sometimes it
could have, you know, different
45:28
for the new stuff have or the
different things?
45:33
Did you catch it? Did you try to
do stuff
45:37
that news will the new stuff and
she correct yourself? I mean,
45:40
the alternate. The new stuff
that
45:44
she was correcting herself is
just changing the subject and
45:47
midstream, like you would do if
you're jacked up.
45:50
They'll listen again. They're
running around doing all these
45:52
different things. And it's just
a really frustrating situation.
45:55
I have some friends where they
just had kids that were just
45:57
diagnosed already trying to get
them onto something. And
46:00
sometimes it could have, you
know, different for the new
46:02
stuff have or the different
things. Could they have side
46:04
effects that
46:05
well, the new stuff?
46:06
I mean, the different things I
had no, I think she was just
46:09
nuts yakking away without
correcting herself. I can assure
46:14
you without a doubt,
46:15
and sometimes you could have you
know, different for the new
46:17
stuff have or the different
things could they have side
46:20
effects that you should know
about that would be different
46:22
than what they were already on?
Adderall
46:26
provider about side effects
because all these kids and
46:30
adults can affect them
differently.
46:31
Is there a brand name of an ad
roll substitute,
46:35
so a nonce and you'll be
Strattera would be an example.
46:39
Hello, is there an example?
Could you give me a name? I
46:44
mean, just just off the cuff?
The guy's like, Oh, she's my
46:49
line. Could you give us a name?
Could you give us a name of a
46:55
brand that to do where you want
to get your kids on?
46:58
I always you always want to
check with the provider about
47:01
side effects because all these
medications are killing kids and
47:03
adults, you know can affect them
differently
47:05
because their brand name of an
Adderall substitute. So a non
47:09
stimulant be Strattera would be
an example. Well, good luck,
47:14
folks. therapy. Therapy is
always
47:19
well, sorry, speed freaks. Bad
day for you. Good luck, folks.
47:24
I'm just I'm over. Roll
substitute.
47:28
So nonstimulated be Strattera
would be an example.
47:32
Okay, well, good luck, folks.
47:34
Arabic behavior therapy is
always something that you'd want
47:37
to add
47:39
up and moving around
47:44
into such a frustrating
situation. Thank you. My
47:47
pleasure. Dr. Z.
47:49
Get him up and moving around. He
says hey, man, down, took him
47:55
speed. kick their ass. Get him
up moving around, man. So so
48:01
first of all, this Strattera is
made by Eli Lilly. And this is
48:08
not a generic I don't know what
Adam Moxa teen does. Have you
48:14
ever heard of atto Moxa? Teen
48:16
Not off the top of my head? I'd
have to read about it. Yeah.
48:20
Well, let's use it. Let me just
see here from WebMD, which of
48:23
course is always good
information. used to treat
48:26
attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder as part of a total
48:29
treatment plan, including
psychological social and other
48:31
treatments. It may help to
increase the ability to pay
48:35
attention, concentrate, stay
focused and Stop fidgeting. It
48:38
is thought to work it is thought
to work by restoring the balance
48:43
of certain natural substances.
Neuro trophic
48:47
type. Yeah, ne, ne, ne, nor nor
epinephrine reuptake inhibitors,
48:57
oh, it's an SSRI? Well, no, it's
a different kind. Well, it's not
49:02
an SSRI necessarily. It's like
it, but it works like one. But
49:07
it does that message with your,
with the way your your your
49:10
metabolism works, right.
49:15
Your metabolism so it has the
same effect.
49:18
Did Buress your whole system is
based on using reuptake is how
49:24
it is a metabolite metabolic
function where you have you
49:28
know, you get a jolt of it of
some let's say adrenaline, and
49:36
then the adrenaline phases out
naturally. And if you give
49:40
yourself a drug to prevent that
from happening, you've you've
49:43
messed with the metabolic
function, and that's what these
49:46
things do.
49:49
So as so here's Yes, so this may
be a very long commercial by Eli
49:54
Lilly to promote Strattera. I
think that there's definitely
49:58
got to be well, there's One
other thing, there's definitely
50:01
an element of coupling therapy
with this drug, as you just
50:08
heard in the description, she
even said that Oh, and therapy
50:11
and therapy. So I think that
this may be the drug of choice
50:15
for these therapy apps. So
you're getting quote unquote,
50:18
therapy from a provider. And,
and as we remember, we heard
50:22
that we had clips with the lady
like, you call the first time,
50:25
we'll give you two of these
pills. Second time, give you
50:28
three of those third time,
sorry, I've done everything I
50:30
can for you. I can't prescribe
anything but by so this is legal
50:34
drug dealing. Now, as I'm
watching this, and this is
50:37
clearly a package somehow some
sort with a local Dr. Z. They
50:41
have this footage, wrote B roll
going and it's pills. It's just
50:45
pills, it's pills in different
boxes, the different containers,
50:49
you know, with the with the like
that nice looking thing, they
50:51
put it into the into the bottle,
and it's just a whole B roll of
50:55
pills. And I remember thinking,
man, maybe they're trying to
51:00
move the kids from Adderall to
opioids, you know, maybe it's
51:03
like it's time to up our game on
this on this generic crap. And
51:08
so as I was watching it again
this morning to clip it, I kid
51:11
you not and people can watch it
in the in the show notes. One in
51:15
that B roll. There's one shot
that came back three times of
51:19
OxyContin and t really and yes
and Teva is not only a fentanyl
51:27
producer. They've also been
stonewalling the Senate opioid
51:32
probe. Yeah, which has got the
Sacklers and j&j. And so there's
51:38
something going on with Teva.
And I have a feeling Wasn't
51:44
there some, like some senatorial
candidate approval that had to
51:48
be some, some candidate for some
things, something important like
51:53
Homeland Security or a woman,
and she was a member of I
51:58
thought it was the Teva family.
I don't know it's just all of
52:04
that. But when I saw that, that
oxycontin come back three times.
52:09
I mean, it's it's very possible
to like, hey, you know what?
52:12
This this, we've saturated the
market with. With with speed, we
52:18
got to up our game a bit. Now,
hey, I got an idea. Let's make
52:23
them all colors of the rainbow.
Now, of course, that's just
52:29
conspiracy.
52:31
Yeah. Well, that's a total,
especially when you bring that
52:33
in.
52:34
But that's happening. I'm not
making it up.
52:39
No, but whether or not they want
to move kids from Adderall,
52:44
which is speed, maybe not to
opioids, which is good downer,
52:48
maybe not kids. I mean, you
know, they're they're using
52:52
fentanyl and all kinds of drugs
that look like what is it, you
52:57
know, a bar of what does that
shit called Xanax?
53:00
Well, this would be China's
revenge from for the opioid
53:03
war. Well, then let's just
ignore it.
53:06
Dave actually mentioned this. I
think it's well within the realm
53:11
of possibility that the Chinese
would love to see us all wasted
53:15
on opioids.
53:17
Yeah, we're dead. And of course,
we've had a change. Now with the
53:23
status of vaccines in the United
States with addition or
53:27
recommendation to be on the
children's schedule
53:30
this morning drugmaker Pfizer
says it will soon start charging
53:33
for its COVID vaccine. The cost
will be about $120 for the
53:37
vaccine, once the federal
government stops paying for
53:41
them. It's still not clear yet
if or when that could happen.
53:45
Pfizer says it expects people
with private or government
53:48
provided health insurance will
still pay nothing.
53:53
So the governor was paying $20 a
dose if my memory is correct,
53:57
because we had the numbers that
were there was
54:00
20 More than wasn't more than 50
For sure. No, no,
54:04
I wasn't even close to 50
Because I remember the numbers I
54:07
recall were 19 or $20 for Pfizer
$30 For Maderna and j&j was 10.
54:14
That was the what the government
was paying for these shots that
54:18
they bought by the billions
54:19
and was as the saying goes, you
get what you pay for. Everybody
54:23
took that j&j Way to go blood
clot land.
54:27
dusters and it could fall into
that category two, yeah. But the
54:36
sort of jacket up from 20 bucks
to 100 and what 20 is over this.
54:42
Yeah. 120 It's unbelievable. to
gouge
54:48
Yes, of course. And then we have
the try Demick coming up to try
54:56
Demmick and it is New York Times
wrote This morning. Try dem
55:02
point. Let me see. Well, let me
find the exact try Demick Yeah,
55:05
here it is the I'm sorry, not a
triple Demmick my mistake.
55:12
Oh, well they gotta try this
better.
55:15
Yes, stupid New York Times a
triple Demmick question mark,
55:19
flu and other infections return
as COVID cases rise
55:24
this morning the dramatic rise
in respiratory the US cases of
55:31
RSV spreading the CDC now
reporting the age group
55:34
currently most impacted by flu
like illness or children under
55:38
five hospitals in 43. States now
telling ABC News they are facing
55:43
a crush of the flu, RSV and
other common viruses. So in
55:50
Connecticut 10 month old Lila
got progressively sicker with
55:54
RSV over the last five days,
lining up in the ER overnight
55:58
where she was treated with a
nebulizer.
56:00
She'd been lethargic for more
than 24 hours and was showing
56:07
lots of signs of dehydration.
56:11
Give her some water and put her
to bed for God's sake. What are
56:14
you sending her to the hospital
for your dumb woman? Here I have
56:18
a less frenetic version of that
same clip but this is from NPR
56:22
where they talk with a little
more Sunder COVID new illnesses.
56:30
Scientists at the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention
56:33
say there has been a surge in
respiratory illnesses and oh
56:36
notice
56:37
the surge word is back in my
report and your reports
56:41
say there's been a surge in
respiratory illnesses in
56:45
children. Besides the corona
virus and the flu virus known as
56:49
our SV is spreading at unusually
high levels. Some pediatric
56:54
hospitals report they are
nearing capacity. No
56:57
professionals are concerned
since the nation has adjusted by
57:00
the way capacity is not just
number of beds, it is number of
57:04
personnel they have to service
the number of beds they have,
57:08
but that's never mentioned.
57:09
Right. And we should remind
remind everyone that these
57:12
hospitals are designed to run at
99% 99% full capacity because
57:18
that's how that's how you make
the money. You make them. This
57:21
is like it's no different than
the airlines is the guy at
57:26
Southwest one said the airline's
not making any money if it's not
57:31
in the air.
57:32
Some pediatric hospitals report
they are nearing capacity.
57:36
Health professionals are
concerned since the nation is
57:38
just heading into the flu
season. Meanwhile, the Director
57:41
of the CDC has tested positive
for COVID 19. statement said Dr.
57:49
Rochelle walensky is
experiencing mild symptoms.
57:56
Well, there ya have it. Well, by
the way that goes that follows
57:59
on nicely with Lenski getting
the the COVID right late in the
58:04
game with this. This very minor
mini cut of COVID. Well, here's
58:10
what I'm hearing. It says Well,
I wouldn't play the super cut
58:13
first. Oh, if I better be on
here,
58:17
right? I know. Oh, yeah. See
vaccine super cut.
58:20
Yeah, because this is we have
to, we always have to remember.
58:24
Yes, yeah, of course
58:25
stops with every vaccinated
person, unvaccinated person gets
58:29
exposed to the virus. The virus
does not infect them, the virus
58:33
cannot then use that person to
go anywhere else. It cannot use
58:36
a vaccinated person as a host to
get more people.
58:39
That means the vaccines will get
us to
58:43
the end of this. Essentially,
vaccines block you from getting
58:47
and giving the virus fully
58:50
vaccinated people are at a very,
very low risk of getting
58:56
COVID-19. Therefore, if you've
been fully vaccinated, you no
59:02
longer need to wear a mask.
59:04
When people are vaccinated, they
can feel safe that they are not
59:07
going to get infected, we have
all the vaccines we need. We
59:11
just need our people to take a
for their own protection for the
59:16
protection of their family. But
also to break the chain of
59:21
transmission, you want to be a
dead ends of the virus. So when
59:24
the virus gets to you, you stop
it. You don't allow it to use
59:29
you as the stepping stone to the
next person. I think given the
59:34
country as a whole, the fact
that we have now about 50% of
59:38
adults fully vaccinated, and
about 62% of adults having
59:42
received at least one dose as a
nation. I feel fairly certain
59:48
you're not going to see the kind
of searches we've seen in the
59:51
past.
59:52
If you're vaccinated, you're not
going to be hospitalized. You're
59:56
not going to be an ICU unit and
you're not going to die. You're
59:59
okay Hey, you're not going to
you're not going to get COVID If
1:00:02
you have these vaccinations.
Yeah,
1:00:05
I'm glad you, you clip that the
Supercup because we heard Dr.
1:00:10
Fauci in there. And now as they
are obviously the way I see it
1:00:15
ratcheting up the necessity for
vaccinations for children under
1:00:19
five, and that probably means
that commonality, you know,
1:00:24
Pfizer moderna, whatever COVID
shot, that's really what they're
1:00:27
angling at. And now of course,
they're, they're able to do that
1:00:31
it's the timing is no
coincidence. So Fauci is out
1:00:34
kind of promoting this because
you know, we have the triple
1:00:36
Demmick. But what the heck has
happened to Fauci? I didn't even
1:00:41
recognize him in these clips
from Good Morning America.
1:00:44
Well, let's start with just how
concerned parents should be
1:00:48
about these viruses. Well,
respiratory
1:00:51
syncytial virus traditionally,
is one of the most difficult
1:00:56
viruses in us this
1:00:57
even sound like Fauci.
1:00:59
No, it doesn't sound anything
like Fauci, it sounds like he
1:01:03
had a throat operation or
something. He has a certain
1:01:07
certain timbre to his gravelly
voice, and that doesn't sound
1:01:10
anything like him.
1:01:11
It's it. I mean, this is Fauci
from Good Morning America, but
1:01:16
maybe someone had the Fauci mask
on because this is not his
1:01:21
voice. It has a little bit
you'll hear it gets a little
1:01:23
different near the end, but sums
up
1:01:25
young children less than five
years old. We have about 58,000
1:01:29
hospitalizations a year with
respiratory syncytial virus
1:01:33
making it the leading cause of
infectious disease
1:01:36
hospitalizations, and children
have anywhere between 100 and a
1:01:40
few 100 deaths every year, we're
seeing a surge of it now, more
1:01:45
so than in previous years more
so you know, the the infectious
1:01:49
disease environment for children
has been really walked a bit by
1:01:55
COVID, where you have
dissociation from contact with
1:02:00
people wearing of masks being
withdrawn and protected. And
1:02:04
then as people pull back, no
longer were mass congregate
1:02:08
together, then you get a surge
of infections that might have
1:02:12
been spread out over a period of
time, we're seeing a
1:02:16
concentration of them. Now this
is particularly problematic,
1:02:20
because as we get into the flu
season, you might have a
1:02:23
convergence of three significant
respiratory illnesses at one
1:02:28
time, in children RSV, which you
just mentioned, influenza, and
1:02:33
of course, there's always the
concern as we get into the
1:02:36
winter about a surge of a new
variant COVID-19 So it's
1:02:41
particularly difficult at this
particular time as we enter into
1:02:44
the colder weather.
1:02:46
Fauci are foxy if a UX CI
1:02:50
Yeah, no, I got it. But you do
have to spell it out for the
1:02:54
for those that aren't as agile
as you
1:02:57
folks see. Full
1:03:00
folksy folks, folk folk folk
folk folk Josie folk folk Fauci,
1:03:05
Fauci, Fauci Farsi Farsi.
1:03:08
So he that sounds like, yeah, he
had some prosthetics on you
1:03:13
know, they do that. It's a fact
people joke about it, but not
1:03:17
now. There's really, people on
the we've listened to that woman
1:03:22
disguise artists person,
1:03:24
not. She runs the maths
department.
1:03:28
She's retired. He's retired now,
she doesn't work for the CIA
1:03:31
anymore. Hello. So she's
mentioned that they do exist,
1:03:37
this does exist is doable. And
so you can dress somebody up to
1:03:41
look like Fauci as long as he
got the kind of a New York
1:03:44
accent a little bit.
1:03:45
We'll have a second shorter
clip, it's possible that maybe
1:03:49
he had an another throat
procedure because he did have a
1:03:52
throat thing, if you recall. He
had to have a polyp removed or
1:03:56
something.
1:03:57
Yeah, he's definitely got
polyps. Yeah, let's check it
1:03:59
out.
1:03:59
And as you're talking about
those other illnesses with all
1:04:01
of these spreading at the same
time, it's a bit of a guessing
1:04:04
game for parents. What is making
their kids sick? The symptoms
1:04:08
are very similar. What advice do
you have for people?
1:04:12
Well, for parents who have
children and you and you had a
1:04:15
person there that you were
showing on the clip, who is
1:04:19
describing quite accurately what
happens with children, they tend
1:04:23
to get lethargic, they may get
difficulty breathing, because
1:04:27
children in that age group have
very small airways that can get
1:04:32
easily obstructed, making the
flow of air and oxygen difficult
1:04:35
for them. If you have a child,
who gets that way has difficulty
1:04:40
breathing, has little bit.
lethargy is a very important
1:04:44
symptomatology of this.
Obviously, call your physician
1:04:47
and get your provider care
because as you saw in the clip,
1:04:50
sometimes these children or
require intensive care including
1:04:54
supplementary oxygen,
1:04:56
to intubate them, jam a tube
down the throat That's our
1:05:00
protocol. sick, sick, sick,
sick, sick people sick.
1:05:06
Hopefully not real sick children
that would that would
1:05:09
be a kid who's a kid who's got a
cold, the flu, RSV, man, RSV,
1:05:16
whatever he's got and they're
lethargic. Oh, who knew?
1:05:22
And one of our friends is back
an old old friend of the show.
1:05:27
This friend of the show pops up.
I think probably every seven
1:05:31
years maybe no less than that
probably every three and a half,
1:05:35
four years. Our friend Vibrio
vulnificus Do you remember a
1:05:41
good friend Vibrio?
1:05:43
No, I do not more than three
weeks after Hurricane Ian
1:05:46
devastated parts of Southwest
Florida its dangers persist.
1:05:50
This time in the form of a
bacteria called Vibrio
1:05:53
vulnificus Rakesh brackish
waters and can enter the skin
1:05:57
through open wounds, causing the
skin to break down which is why
1:06:01
some call it a flesh eating
bacteria.
1:06:03
Yeah, maybe the flesh eating
amoeba is bag.
1:06:07
It can be treated with
antibiotics but spreads quickly
1:06:11
and causes death in one of every
five people infected. Bam Lea
1:06:15
Delaney. His fiancee, Jim Hewitt
traveled from Michigan to
1:06:18
Naples, Florida to help a friend
after the storm, but a wound to
1:06:22
his leg after falling into water
became infected. And within a
1:06:25
matter of days, he ways was gone
because it came down out of the
1:06:29
goodness of his heart to help
people and ended up losing his
1:06:34
life.
1:06:36
It's been very, very difficult.
He really wouldn't have
1:06:40
preferred to go any other way
though. He was always helping
1:06:44
people.
1:06:45
This year in Florida, there have
been 65 reported cases and 11
1:06:49
deaths from the infection.
Officials say overall 28 cases
1:06:53
and seven deaths are directly
connected to the hurricane.
1:06:57
There's debris scattered all
around us. Christine
1:06:59
Hollingsworth is with the
Florida Department of Health in
1:07:02
Collier County where Jim he
would contracted the bacteria.
1:07:06
What's your message to the
community about this bacteria?
1:07:10
community you have a open cut
sore or wound. First symptoms
1:07:15
would be pain, soreness and
redness around the area. Seek
1:07:19
medical attention immediately.
1:07:24
That would happen with almost
anything he has little redness,
1:07:28
seek medical attention
immediately call your provider.
1:07:32
Yeah, call your provider.
1:07:34
I think we I feel we need to
talk about Russia and Ukraine
1:07:37
before we take a break. It's
still kind of a couple
1:07:41
of clips. We're gonna
1:07:43
start it off with just a little
to set to set the stage. This
1:07:48
guy Mick Wallace, a member of
European Parliament from
1:07:51
Ireland. He's got the gray crazy
long hair. Kind of looks like he
1:07:58
should be wearing sandals with
with no wool socks.
1:08:03
It looks like an unreconstructed
hippie.
1:08:05
There you go. Here's his latest
rant just to get us into the
1:08:08
mood.
1:08:09
When Russia drops bombs on built
up areas in Ukraine. I have no
1:08:14
doubt that the people in Ukraine
underneath the bombs are
1:08:18
terrorized. It's a form of
terrorism. When the US NATO
1:08:26
bombed Afghanistan for 20 years.
I killed several 100 1000s and
1:08:34
displaced millions. They were
terrorizing the people. Un
1:08:41
surveys shows that US NATO
bombardments of civilians in
1:08:48
Afghanistan 45% of the people
killed were children. When the
1:08:54
US killed over a million
civilians in Iraq was that
1:08:59
terrorism when Israel terrorized
the Palestinian people every
1:09:04
day, is that terrorism? When
France and the UK and others I'm
1:09:09
the Saudi UAE to commit genocide
in Yemen, where the UN said that
1:09:14
over 400,000 are dead and 16
million are starving because of
1:09:19
a genocide being carried out
with the support of the US to UK
1:09:23
France and several European
European states. Is that
1:09:26
terrorism when he's going to
wake up and start living in the
1:09:30
real world,
1:09:32
guys a major downer man wow Damn
man you bumming me out brother.
1:09:46
All right, what you got?
1:09:48
I got some updates. Just some
casual clips. This one here is
1:09:53
start with this one. You got the
Oh yeah, the latest bombings had
1:09:56
Russians got very annoyed by
that by I mean, they're their
1:10:00
favorite bridge. Yeah. So
they're blowing out the
1:10:03
utilities companies left and
right. And by the way, I thought
1:10:06
we just send them a bunch of
anti aircraft and all these
1:10:09
crazy this gear with billions of
dollars worth of stuff. They've
1:10:13
done work. Meanwhile, it doesn't
work.
1:10:16
We call them. No, no, the
problem is these Iranian suicide
1:10:22
drones. They're made of like
wood and they don't have jet
1:10:26
engines. They have very small
combustion engines, but they
1:10:30
have that cool delta wing so
that they're not really the type
1:10:34
of object I guess that the anti
aircraft stuff we gave them that
1:10:38
I'm good at.
1:10:39
Oh, here we go. Ukraine utility
records is an NPR report.
1:10:44
Ukraine's energy utility says
damage from today's country wide
1:10:48
air raids has broken previous
records. from Kyiv NPRs. Elian
1:10:53
reports almost all of Ukraine
was
1:10:55
under orders to seek shelter
from Russian bombardment this
1:10:58
morning. Officials in southern
central and western Ukrainian
1:11:01
cities say the attacks seriously
damaged electrical
1:11:04
infrastructure there who could
and that her Ukraine's national
1:11:07
power company says that the
latest attacks have caused even
1:11:11
more damage than last week's
unprecedented nationwide
1:11:14
airstrikes. The company is
recommending Ukrainians ration
1:11:18
even more energy after rolling
blackouts have become regular in
1:11:22
the past two weeks here. And the
report from the Keefe School of
1:11:25
Economics found that even before
these latest escalations,
1:11:28
Ukraine had about $130 billion
worth of damage to rebuild.
1:11:34
Yeah, I like I like that they're
already they already know the
1:11:36
rebuilding, I guess. I think
they're planning rebuilding, it
1:11:40
feels like we're two to four
months out of resolution and
1:11:44
brechtl and KKR. And all those
guys getting their claws in a
1:11:48
lot of rebuilding talk.
1:11:50
Yeah, that's what's gonna take,
it's gonna it's gonna cost the
1:11:53
American taxpayers. But you
know, we will build them,
1:11:57
eventually they'll cost the
taxpayers to do it, and then
1:12:03
backfill will build the
Ukrainians and they'll get all
1:12:07
the money to go to them by the
way. Tobacco, yeah, tobacco and
1:12:12
the other guys. Okay. So let's,
here's a here's a little note is
1:12:16
called notes on the Iraq, Iran
drones around drones.
1:12:20
Iran is advising its citizens
not to go to Ukraine, and it's
1:12:24
urging ones already there to
leave the country. This comes
1:12:27
after the US accused Iran of
providing drone support to
1:12:30
Russia, we bring you some
analysis from a key player in
1:12:32
international diplomacy. Please
welcome RVA Lightstone, former
1:12:36
Special Envoy for the Abraham
accords and author of let my
1:12:39
people know, thank you for your
time.
1:12:41
Thank you for having me.
1:12:43
The White House says Iranian
troops are directly engaged on
1:12:46
the ground in Crimea, helping
Russia use Iranian main drones
1:12:49
to attack Ukraine's power
stations. What is the
1:12:51
significance of this?
1:12:53
We shouldn't be surprised by
this. If we can remember when
1:12:56
the Russia of invasion of
Ukraine happened. The only place
1:13:00
that Russia was invited in
polite company at that point in
1:13:03
time was when Russia was pushing
America to get back into the
1:13:06
Iran deal. At that point in time
I was on your station saying
1:13:09
that we shouldn't be calling
this the Iran deal. We should be
1:13:12
calling the Russia Iran deal.
Russia and Iran are linked in
1:13:15
meaningful ways. And therefore
it's not surprising that when
1:13:18
Russia needs reinforcements,
that not only are they using
1:13:22
Iranian technology, but they're
using Iranian troops in order to
1:13:26
perfect the use of that
technology.
1:13:29
There was this also NPR or
something else.
1:13:32
That was the Tang Dynasty.
1:13:34
My question is how is Iran's
supply of drones to Russia? That
1:13:41
much difference from our supply
of anti aircraft weapons, all
1:13:47
kinds of military stuff to
Ukraine? Is there a fundamental
1:13:50
difference I'm missing?
1:13:52
I'm carrying water for Putin.
1:13:56
Shit, man, I'm sorry.
1:13:59
This is what here's what let's
see what Mike Miley, the famous
1:14:03
head of the Joint Chiefs of
Staff has to say about the whole
1:14:06
thing. He's under Ukraine,
Miley,
1:14:09
this fight is not just in
Ukraine's interest. It is in the
1:14:13
global interest to protect, as
Secretary pointed out the rules
1:14:17
based international order. Oh,
and that is our purpose that has
1:14:21
been given to us, the uniform
military from our civilian
1:14:24
leadership, really, which is to
uphold the rules based
1:14:27
international order that was
established on 80 years ago, at
1:14:31
the conclusion of World War Two.
1:14:33
Whoa, what that is that is not
the the mission of the of the
1:14:40
Armed Forces of the United
States it is to defend and
1:14:44
uphold the Constitution. Or am I
missing out wrong? This is
1:14:50
wrong. Wow. Let me hear that
again.
1:14:51
And that is our purpose that has
been given to us, the uniformed
1:14:54
military from our civilian
leadership, which is to uphold
1:14:58
the rules based international
Whoa that was established some
1:15:01
80 years ago that's the
conclusion of World War Two
1:15:05
wow look up John look up look up
look up there it is it's coming
1:15:09
right out yeah I don't know if
you felt it was clip or the day
1:15:15
worthy but that's significant
what this guy is saying
1:15:20
yep but he said it before we if
you look in the in the clip bin
1:15:25
you will find a longer version
of that that he said I think it
1:15:29
was during the Obama
administration he gave a speech
1:15:32
where he pretty much said the
same thing in a less succinct
1:15:35
way
1:15:39
I wonder what there is quite
well there's you know, there's a
1:15:42
lot in here.
1:15:43
I have too much Miley stuff.
Yeah, it's
1:15:45
really your your Miley stuff is
out of control. Miley Miley.
1:15:49
Yeah, thanks for New Tang
Dynasty for giving us some facts
1:15:52
that we don't actually you want
to know. Let's go back to
1:15:56
American media. I want to feel
good. I want to feel good about
1:15:59
what we're doing. Man you're I'm
having a hard time getting the
1:16:03
noise gate right with you. And I
don't know why. Because if I
1:16:07
turn it up to stop the speaker
bleed back then. Then you are
1:16:11
clipping anyway.
1:16:14
Oh, yeah, maybe I get turned
down my thing a little bit that
1:16:16
we might help. Yeah, yeah, yes.
My volume.
1:16:19
Oh, that thing? Yeah. Can you
turn that down a bit.
1:16:21
There was a thing. Test as I
knocked it down.
1:16:26
A couple DBS alright. Okay, back
to feel good land. ABC America
1:16:31
this morning
1:16:31
Ukrainian company revealed its
new body armor for children
1:16:35
designed to wear but as they
evacuate the wars,
1:16:38
another guy's talks to us those
Oh,
1:16:40
yeah. Oh, no, no, I like this
guy a lot. He's got he's got
1:16:43
good stuff. So here's CBS
Evening News where they're quick
1:16:48
update on the Iranian
involvement. The US says
1:16:52
it has information that troops
from Iran are on the ground
1:16:56
supporting Russian drone attacks
here in Ukraine. As you know,
1:16:59
North Ukraine claims that Russia
has ordered nearly two and a
1:17:02
half 1000 so called Kamikaze
drones from Iran.
1:17:07
Hmm. Okay. So we sources say.
And then we have CBS with the
1:17:15
coup, which I which gives me
more reason to believe
1:17:19
resolution is coming in two to
four months. Finally, we have a
1:17:24
CBS News Crew embedded embedded
with a one oh first 100 and
1:17:29
first airborne,
1:17:30
air America's go to combat
troops. Go go go go the soldiers
1:17:35
of the 101st Airborne Division,
now the closest US forces to the
1:17:40
fight in Ukraine. We joined
Colonel Edwin Thetis, and
1:17:44
Brigadier General John Lewis, on
board a Blackhawk helicopter,
1:17:48
where we flew along the coast of
the Black Sea across those same
1:17:52
waters from Russian held
territory in Ukraine, including
1:17:56
Crimea. What is the what is
preparing for,
1:18:01
we had two major tasks, right,
to assure our allies and our
1:18:05
adversaries from doing anything.
1:18:07
Well, fully aware of those
adversaries have eyes on
1:18:10
everything this close.
1:18:13
I liked the poor Brigadier.
Well, we have two tasks, right?
1:18:17
To protect our allies and make
sure our adversaries don't do
1:18:21
anything.
1:18:25
The exact same thing just said
differently,
1:18:28
pretty much. But the one, the
one I want the 101st. You know,
1:18:32
those are the guys. So now we're
now we're close. Idiots. This is
1:18:36
so unnecessary. But here's where
I think the real deal is going
1:18:41
to come down to and well, we
know we know the Russian
1:18:45
playbook, don't we? We know what
the Russians do. This is this is
1:18:49
clearly the Russian playbook.
1:18:51
Ukrainian president Solinsky
delivered an ominous warning to
1:18:55
European leaders saying Russia
may be planning to blow up a
1:18:59
major dam and hydroelectric
plants and then blame the
1:19:03
Ukrainians for it. It's the
Lensky accused Russia of already
1:19:07
planting mines in the dam in
southern Ukraine, adding an
1:19:11
attack could flood any tells
indologist
1:19:16
did he say planting minds may
hear
1:19:20
this Alinsky accused Russia of
already planting minds in the
1:19:24
dam in southern Ukraine
1:19:25
I can't hear it he
1:19:26
says mindset planting my mind
he's got a bunch of French guys
1:19:31
with white faces
1:19:36
that again, adding an attack
could flood any town further in
1:19:42
the dam in southern up accused
Russia of already planting mines
1:19:45
in the damn
1:19:47
mountains. He says Muslims did
mind not really my mind
1:19:51
is the Lenski accused Russia of
already planting minds in the
1:19:55
planting moms. It's not mine.
He's not saying mind.
1:19:58
I know what he's saying. A mom's
1:20:01
Lenski accused Russia of already
planting mines in the damn
1:20:05
mines. I think he needs some
money. I think it's mine away.
1:20:08
He doesn't know what he's doing.
1:20:10
But anyway, let's finish. The
report is so short, Lenski
1:20:12
accused Russia of already
planting mines in the dam in
1:20:16
southern Ukraine wanting adding
an attack could flood at towns
1:20:19
and villages along with the city
of her son. And Solinsky says
1:20:24
destroying the dam could cause
cooling issues at the Zapper
1:20:27
visa power plant, Europe's
largest nuclear power plant more
1:20:31
than 100 miles up river.
1:20:34
So do you think this is a real
issue? Isn't this the dam that
1:20:36
they want gone? Because it's
starving Crimea of the water? Or
1:20:40
am I misunderstanding this?
1:20:44
I don't know what the deal is. I
don't know. You know, we'd have
1:20:47
to look at some maps to see
where this dam is. And if he
1:20:49
knows there's mines, or memes or
whatever planted their flag
1:20:54
should go take them out. Yeah,
1:20:55
what's up with that? Zelinsky
Vlad, I totally agree. But this
1:21:01
seems to be the seems to be the
big deal. This is is it going to
1:21:05
be a false flag? Is it going to
be will the Ukrainians do it?
1:21:09
Well, this
1:21:10
by the way, why do they need to
plant anything they get is that
1:21:12
thing with a couple of screws
which are easily hit it can't
1:21:17
miss that target. Isn't
1:21:18
that kind of the tell? That it
can be ducktail well the tail is
1:21:24
where they've planted mines
Okay, yeah, I mean we could just
1:21:27
target a missile as you say boom
done. No, no, no, we have to
1:21:31
plant minds what is this like
we're blowing up the railroad
1:21:34
bridge with
1:21:35
Jesse James like a world war two
scenario.
1:21:37
It does. Exactly that wooden
bridge with all the struts and
1:21:41
the train goes over it and just
before it's gonna blow up you
1:21:45
jump out of the train. Yeah, I
think you're I think that's it
1:21:48
makes total sense. With that,
I'd like to thank you for your
1:21:52
courage say in the morning to
you the man who put the seat in
1:21:54
Foulke see ladies and gentlemen,
please say hello to my friend on
1:21:58
the other hand, Mr. John cedar
1:22:02
well in the morning news for
your shift she was in Rafi new
1:22:08
subs in the water games nights
out there
1:22:11
and in the morning to the trolls
and the troll room who are all
1:22:14
always here to you know that
what happens is the Pied the
1:22:19
troll Pied Piper is Darren
O'Neill and Darren does the two
1:22:23
hour rock'n'roll pre show before
we get on the air Thursdays and
1:22:27
Sundays I really want to thank
him because he gets everyone all
1:22:29
jacked up and all excited so
let's go controls squaring away
1:22:35
I can count your spots. Okay, we
go 2136 For today's troll count
1:22:41
Oh, what are we drinking?
1:22:45
This time it is a meet my
glasses so I can read the label
1:22:49
you I'm glad because otherwise
you just drinking stuff. You
1:22:52
don't really know what it
1:22:53
is. It's a pair. It's a Perrier
Mystere potion. And I'm telling
1:23:01
you the truth is paradise got a
skull, like a Mexican day the
1:23:05
dead skull on the label Perry
and his hairy. Yeah, Perrier.
1:23:11
And it had like, you know, put a
picture up. Yeah, but it's
1:23:15
actually what it is. Is
BlackBerry flavored bubbly water
1:23:20
while you're drinking red dye
number three.
1:23:23
This is absolutely clear. It's
totally clear. There's not a
1:23:26
color that has no color.
1:23:29
How can it taste like raspberry
if it has no color? Blackberry,
1:23:32
Black Flag very nice. No one.
Yeah.
1:23:36
Well, it's it's obviously
flavored with blackberry and
1:23:40
just the extract I guess. I
don't know. It's not it doesn't
1:23:43
have any color. It's a mistake.
I think this is a failed
1:23:46
product. That if it was actually
purple. Yeah. Would make it
1:23:49
would do would do. Well,
1:23:50
yeah. And call it drink. Call it
Perry a purple drink. So are you
1:23:57
now purposely picking these up?
Or is this another gift at
1:24:01
checkout?
1:24:02
No, this is another a bargain.
1:24:07
The bargain from the bargain
bin? You're drinking from the
1:24:12
bargain bin. I just want to make
sure I understand
1:24:14
it. See what it sounds like when
it goes into the pile?
1:24:18
No, sounds very cheap. Alright,
so we have 2193 Trolls no agenda
1:24:24
stream.com. But if you want to
get the full experience, go to
1:24:27
troll room.io. That's where you
get this live stream 24/7. It's
1:24:32
always available for you. And
you can hop right into the chat,
1:24:37
start trolling along do whatever
you feel like you want to do.
1:24:39
And I'm going to keep promoting
the apps that to do this because
1:24:43
I really love how modern podcast
apps like pod verse and curio
1:24:48
caster. Now in the same Apple,
you get the podcast, boom. You
1:24:53
get a notification when we go
live. So if you're able to
1:24:56
listen to it, and then you can
enter the chat rooms right in
1:24:58
the app as well. So check those
and all of the new podcast apps
1:25:02
new podcast app.com. Of course,
we have our Mastodon social
1:25:09
network, which is it's becoming
really, I think it's so
1:25:13
important people are able to
communicate in that environment
1:25:16
even from other Mastodon servers
to kind of reach out to get mo
1:25:19
nation. And we're nearing the
end of the the 10,000 limit. So
1:25:23
if you still want to have a
swanky your name at no agenda
1:25:27
social.com for free, of course,
go to sign up.no agenda
1:25:31
social.com and follow Adam, Adam
at nogen social accom and Jhansi
1:25:34
Dvorak had no agenda social.com
And thank you very much at Aaron
1:25:40
are for for running the show.
Because man it's a lot of work
1:25:45
that he does. A lot of work
really appreciated. A whole lot
1:25:49
of his house with his neighbor
has backups or something. It's
1:25:52
crazy. Yeah, gaffer tapes. Good
stuff. Thank you very much sir
1:25:57
Polka tour, not just the artists
who brought us the artwork for
1:26:00
episode 1496 titled deport
Greta. But he also he also
1:26:07
envisioned and runs the current
no agenda Art Generator with
1:26:11
over 27,000 individual pieces of
art, all of which have been
1:26:17
considered for album art and for
all kinds of great, man. Have
1:26:22
you been to no agenda shop.com
Lately, they got a lot of new
1:26:25
products. They got bottle
openers and the cool stuff now.
1:26:29
Yeah, they
1:26:30
got the right idea how to do
that kind of work.
1:26:32
Yeah. So and the artists get
compensated and the shop donates
1:26:36
to us and there's no contracts,
no meetings, everybody's happy.
1:26:38
So Sir Paul couture made a kind
of an interesting piece with
1:26:43
something I initially wanted to
use as a title, which was
1:26:45
deprecated and decentralized,
which in hindsight was probably
1:26:49
a little too many
1:26:54
letters, letters, too much
letters. Or letters. Yeah, he's
1:27:02
obviously been watching Turner
Classic Movies recently. And I
1:27:06
think that's
1:27:08
what I liked in this image. Was
it was all old stuff, but highly
1:27:12
recognizable for me. Because
that gray telephone you see
1:27:16
there? That is the telephone I
grew up with in socialist
1:27:20
Netherlands. That is exactly and
later on where to go now. I'll
1:27:24
see it. Right submitted were
accepted should be here. Yeah,
1:27:29
there it is. So that gray
telephone with the with the with
1:27:33
the dial on the on the front. So
later, because you weren't
1:27:36
allowed to unplug it. You
weren't allowed to touch it. You
1:27:39
could only have that phone
1:27:40
at least it was never, never you
never owned it
1:27:43
correct. And later said, Well,
we're now going to introduce
1:27:47
colors are like oh, this is
cool. And the color you got was
1:27:51
that you didn't get a new phone.
No, they had snap ons. So you
1:27:55
could snap a new body onto the
phone and onto the receiver in a
1:28:00
different color. Like a plastic
snap on. Yeah. The Collins
1:28:06
microphone I recognize because I
have one of those. Then there's
1:28:09
a bush looks like what is it
Nikon? Maybe it says Kodak kits,
1:28:16
you know a traditional camera, a
television with a dial for VHF
1:28:20
UHF and a radio with a dial in a
traveling suitcase with a big
1:28:25
gramophone honker horn. I mean,
how can you go wrong for two old
1:28:29
dudes is this is right up our
alley. And the fact that nothing
1:28:32
else tickled us
1:28:34
well no, I liked a piece I use
it on the newsletter.
1:28:37
Which one is the climate change
diet? That's the one you wanted
1:28:40
to the most?
1:28:42
No, the one I wanted. The one I
want to wanted the most was the
1:28:47
burning Tesla logo on fire. Why
did we use that? Because it's
1:28:52
the Tesla of cars it's unfair.
It's It's It's mean. I liked oh
1:28:57
no agenda the one title ice
cream economy with with the girl
1:29:01
upside down ice cream cone.
Melting Yeah, that
1:29:05
was super super. What do we call
it cake cheesecake? Yeah,
1:29:11
it was cheese. cakey
1:29:12
it was very cheese cakey and
just
1:29:16
this Yeah, I know it offended
you. But it probably would
1:29:20
offend the lady folk. To you and
the women. It didn't
1:29:24
offend me. Yeah, so now you try
to do know what? And then you
1:29:29
then you call me Lady folk.
You're nice. You and the lady
1:29:33
folk. Yeah, I hear you. You're
mean bastard. I mean bastard.
1:29:39
Yeah, and a lot of people are
doing just kind of hodgepodge is
1:29:42
which
1:29:44
I don't know. I think we didn't
really give them a lot to go on.
1:29:47
So a separate car. Yeah, burning
car and we're not going to use
1:29:50
that. And in fact, even even the
one from Paul couture was kind
1:29:56
of total hodgepodge, but it
worked. I want to tell you most
1:30:01
artsy that a lot of it has to do
with the quality of the art.
1:30:04
That's why I like the ice cream
cone one because cows jam
1:30:08
together a piece of pretty art.
Yes, high
1:30:09
quality definitely high quality.
I'd like to Evie bomb. It was
1:30:13
simple from dirty Jersey horror,
but I think was too simple.
1:30:17
Maybe hadn't good elements. I
liked how the bomb the wick
1:30:21
worked and everything. But now
overruled because John could
1:30:25
stop looking at the upside down
melted ice cream cone with a
1:30:28
hottie straddling it. Do you
know how creepy that is?
1:30:31
The bomb? The bomb? One that you
said you like for a while? It
1:30:36
was it was beyond too simple.
1:30:41
Okay, well, you're the expert.
1:30:45
about simplicity. Yes, I'm a
minimalist.
1:30:50
Yeah, I know. So could you
please post a picture of your
1:30:53
office and so we can prove this
minimalism. Sir Paul couture,
1:30:58
thank you so much. We really
appreciate the art generator.
1:31:02
And of course, all of the
artists who participate
1:31:04
diligently doing this live at
home at work during school, who
1:31:09
knows what they're doing when
they're just coming up with
1:31:11
these crazy ideas. They're all
appreciated. They're all fun to
1:31:14
look at. And you can look at
them in real time by going to no
1:31:17
agenda art generator.com Whoa,
those newfangled podcast apps.
1:31:22
Now let us think some more value
for value that came in as all we
1:31:27
ever ask is, Hey, What value did
you get out of the program?
1:31:32
Maybe just keeping you company
on a trip maybe help you fall
1:31:35
asleep. A lot of people listen
to us to fall asleep. It doesn't
1:31:38
really make me feel good, but if
it helps you and so we asked you
1:31:43
to translate that into into a
number and send that off to us.
1:31:46
You can find more information at
divorce act.org/na. We kick it
1:31:50
off with our executive
producers. True Hollywood
1:31:53
Forever credits with Tammy
McLean, from Steele Ville,
1:31:57
Missouri. And she says in the
morning donation of 1497 dot 54.
1:32:06
And this has not happened in
maybe a year months and months
1:32:11
and months. I want to be a show
club member for my birthday. And
1:32:14
bonus I become a dame 54 trips
around the Sun yesterday.
1:32:18
Congratulations. I would like to
be known as Dame Tom Yos. You
1:32:23
think it's pronounced Tom iOS?
1:32:26
But it'd be Tam. Tam. Just tam
just 10 t am Hey, is it tam iOS
1:32:33
I would
1:32:33
think honey, Tammy Ricki Hill
Where's Brickey? Hill? Thomas.
1:32:37
She's in Missouri. So I don't
know Tam. Just
1:32:41
I hope I do it right. Anyway,
congratulations on keeping this
1:32:45
going for 15 years. Much
respect. That's right. Coming
1:32:48
up. Wednesday. Wednesday is our
birthday I believe.
1:32:52
Thursday or Friday? No.
1:32:54
Today's the 23rd and then date
what's our 20/26 of October?
1:33:01
Okay, so we celebrate on the
next show on Thursday.
1:33:05
Right Yeah, yeah, yes.
1:33:08
Much respect for the truth and
analysis enjoyed Adams
1:33:11
appearance on Infowars like most
producers I remain constantly
1:33:15
haunted by the 33 live love
laugh it off otherwise meet we
1:33:20
may cry karma for all because
what goes around comes around
1:33:23
from Tammy McLean Steele Ville
Missouri other info no requests
1:33:27
for the roundtable just sharpen
respect. Okay. And I look these
1:33:31
up for you earlier. She wants
some Sharpton respect and it's
1:33:39
true. And then some karma. And I
and she does say we don't need
1:33:44
to say it to reference it but I
think it's nice to know. Show
1:33:47
1330 She established a
knighthood in her dad's memory.
1:33:50
Sir Gerald barber and Farmer of
central Kansas.
1:33:59
Is getting lunch at Chipotle.
The tortilla is in the race. Kim
1:34:08
Kardashian we wash our ESP IICT
they are all Jide ESP ICT
1:34:17
there's no real conference this
much to resist. We must we must
1:34:29
and we will talk about that
1:34:39
you've got karma. And now we
have further proof of the random
1:34:46
number theory because after a
year of waiting for somebody to
1:34:53
come up with a donation for the
show club Yeah, we have a nother
1:34:59
donation for This show club it's
unbelievable. Sure dude named
1:35:04
Jeff from Westlake Ohio. So I
believe there's no connection
1:35:09
here. I don't think so. 1497 mom
considers 1497 to be our
1:35:16
family's LUCKY NUMBER Come up
Wow about
1:35:21
lucky number.
1:35:23
Usually it's five. I also wanted
to donate a to show number
1:35:29
amount to become a show. Club
member. I love the humor and
1:35:34
keep making fun of the
douchebags in the clips this
1:35:39
donation moves me up to Baron I
humbly request an upgrade to two
1:35:45
dude named Jeff protectorate of
the lands the local area
1:35:50
networks because he's not barren
dude named Jeff protected of the
1:35:56
lands Local Area Networks okay
1:35:58
yeah hold on because that is not
on the list today. So I need to
1:36:04
put just put them in manually
glad we caught that so dude
1:36:09
named Jeff comes sellers. Alert
colors you got no color to do if
1:36:16
Okay, protected. He's barren
barren. Okay. All right.
1:36:23
He wants some jingles he wants
AMI good Herman's clip in bound
1:36:28
air raid
1:36:30
yes
1:36:31
I don't know that one. Yeah, we
do.
1:36:33
It's a trigger warning.
1:36:34
Yeah. Rebel all the rebel lasers
number station and stay safe.
1:36:40
Okay, we got Dave warning. AMY
GOODMAN flippin bound hang out
1:36:49
standby
1:36:51
333 33 or otherwise are out all
right, you got it
1:37:01
you got it exactly what yes for
Thank you very much nice to see
1:37:04
to showing them with donations.
It's been a long time. Now to
1:37:09
our favorite number 333. Bristol
Tennessee lucid map. And lucid
1:37:15
map is very simple just says
climate gates chemtrails
1:37:21
to the gate to the gate to the
cloud buy and rent so now we
1:37:34
have Timothy more in Dallas
Texas at $333 and there's no
1:37:38
note for him so I'll continue
with Rita Harrington 222 dot 22
1:37:43
from sparks good oh sparks
Nevada near Reno. No note from
1:37:48
her
1:37:48
so I do a little double up for
both of them them
1:37:51
yes please you've got
1:37:55
karma All righty. Which brings
us to back Banshee from Denton
1:38:02
Texas. 200 dot 33 There's our
magic number. Back man she Oh
1:38:07
biscuit for my birthday. Sorry.
Did I bring the biscuits shoot
1:38:13
Yes, I have a biscuit for you
here they always give me a
1:38:15
biscuit on my birthday. Biscuit
on my birthday 1010 Please 1010
1:38:22
turned Oh 1010 Turn the big 33
This must be late I'm not sure
1:38:26
my smokin hot husband asked what
I wanted and I said to donate
1:38:34
and get the long version of the
Al Sharpton montage love you
1:38:40
love you guys when are we
meeting up in Bastrop again so
1:38:44
is this for hmm I'm not sure if
back Banshee of I don't know. I
1:38:49
don't I don't I'm not sure who
gets the birthday biscuit here.
1:38:55
Do you understand this one?
1:38:58
This guy Liberty Tintin. He I
think back does.
1:39:01
Okay. Good. Well, and we have Al
Sharpton by request the last
1:39:04
one.
1:39:05
Thanks. Good evening. Is this
Crown Hall day two. We are
1:39:11
watching. That was Attorney
General Eric Holder add about
1:39:17
some Republicans at home already
beating the drums of war today
1:39:23
the Pentagon refuted that claim.
And he said the American people
1:39:28
do not want him to quote
griddling either they do not
1:39:32
want him twiddling his thumbs
you can get a gig as a crock of
1:39:36
contortionist, intravenous
fluids and pills coated all with
1:39:41
galet genetic we don't leave our
women of women women or men in
1:39:47
uniform behind it's a monument
to the uterus of Dick Cheney,
1:39:52
Representative Raul our Labrador
years of a brute of abuse. I've
1:39:58
personally apologized To Mr.
PVS, just as soon to be former
1:40:04
Congress with Democrats or
outright Jide CIA's countering
1:40:09
counter tourism,
Counterterrorism Center Veteran
1:40:13
Affairs Secretary shins since
getting Why do I always mess up
1:40:19
the name Shinseki. I love my
critics have fun with that.
1:40:23
Now there you go. That's a
birthday present right there.
1:40:27
The long sharpen mess up.
1:40:31
Okay, now this is a Dutch name.
And I would guess it would be
1:40:37
pronounced anaemic. It's Anamika
and ICA does a cut at the end.
1:40:43
If you look at the notes, you'll
see that she spells it with an E
1:40:47
at the end and I see
1:40:48
y'all can look at the note and
make more sense. But she's not
1:40:53
in Holland. She's in Florida
Ponte Vedra Beach in Florida 200
1:40:58
bucks a nicer place to be by
Tam, John and Adam call to
1:41:01
action. I'd like my favorite
podcast to stay afloat. Keep up
1:41:05
the good work. Slowly making my
way to Dame hood love from
1:41:08
Florida. Met Ren Dyker grote
close. Yes. And then mica
1:41:17
holder. And then she asked what
does that all mean?
1:41:20
Well, just so we know Anamika
because we met her at the
1:41:24
Charleston meetup the South
Carolina Charleston, South
1:41:27
Carolina meetup was her husband
and and she is Dutch and she's
1:41:33
definitely comes from an elite
Dutch family. I'm just going to
1:41:35
put it out there and she escaped
which is good because she could
1:41:40
have easily been snapped up by
the king or by Prince and
1:41:43
probably married one of those
but now she got a cool dude in
1:41:45
Florida. So when she says my
friend look a flute that means
1:41:48
with with very friendly
greetings from anime colder and
1:41:52
she has hashtag 75 Hard hashtag
C C and T k means well she is in
1:42:00
my wife to keep her Tina's 75
Hard group which you called a
1:42:05
fad.
1:42:08
Don't remember calling it a fad.
It must have been a fad.
1:42:10
You call it a fad on? DHA
unplugged.
1:42:16
You will explain to me what I
did. You
1:42:19
well. Horowitz said Tina the
keeper she's doing 75 Hard which
1:42:24
is all this workout and no
alcohol for
1:42:27
final hard. faddish workout.
Yeah.
1:42:34
And you did say something
correct. Which is her not
1:42:36
drinking is ruining our show.
Not this one. But the show I do
1:42:39
with her did
1:42:40
the other show your Yeah, the
show that you love so much?
1:42:43
I do. I do love it so much.
Anamika thank you so much. And
1:42:48
they're on I think day 50. Now,
so the end is in sight of the
1:42:52
insanity of 75 hard, and she
didn't ask for any jingles. But
1:42:57
I'll give her some good karma.
Thank you very much.
1:43:00
You've got a
1:43:04
pretty short segment today. Once
again, very short. We do
1:43:09
appreciate very much these
Executive Associate Executive
1:43:12
producers who get their forever
credits. So you're an Associate
1:43:15
Executive Producer of episode
1497 of the no agenda show. You
1:43:19
can even say comma, the best
podcast in the universe. Put it
1:43:22
anywhere where credits are
recognized and appreciated. Even
1:43:25
Hollywood will appreciate and
recognize these just go look at
1:43:28
who has one of those in their
IMDb big names as well. If you'd
1:43:33
like to learn more, go to our
website. evora.org/in a nice guy
1:43:38
for bringing the time the
talents and the treasure to
1:43:40
Episode 1497
1:43:42
Our formula is this. We go out.
We had people in the mouth
1:44:02
now we are we planning anything
for the 15th on Thursday, we're
1:44:06
just doing a show, right?
1:44:08
Well, this is gonna be the week
the whole week. Now that was the
1:44:11
anniversary actually starts on
Sunday. And it goes through the
1:44:16
next Sunday and then it goes to
show 1500 So it's going to be a
1:44:20
big celebration.
1:44:21
I don't know I don't understand.
If the 26th is Wednesday isn't
1:44:26
our anniversary on Wednesday and
then when the week starts
1:44:30
Thursday you want to start it
because people are going to be
1:44:32
confused now.
1:44:34
Down to use any confusion. It's
a I'm confused. It's the 15th
1:44:38
anniversary week.
1:44:40
So we don't celebrate Thursday
we celebrate the week the
1:44:44
starting the week after that.
1:44:47
No Sunday is coming up. Today.
You saw no I'm sorry. Once
1:44:51
again, got the running.
1:44:52
Thank you Now Now give me that
same attitude as you apologize.
1:44:56
I'm sorry. Okay, good.
1:44:59
So Thursday
1:45:00
Sorry, Thursday will be the big
day. Yeah, I'm sorry, today's
1:45:03
23rd It actually starts today
then. And then a very lousy
1:45:08
turnout. Well, it officially
officially assesses right next
1:45:14
to it. It'll be Thursday so the
newsletter will come out on the
1:45:17
anniversary so the newsletter
will celebrate the we'll
1:45:21
celebrate the 50th anniversary
and then we move on to show 15.
1:45:26
So you you forgot to promote
birthday week because you
1:45:30
thought it was Sun Thursday?
1:45:35
I actually I you know, I guess
I'm the only one who forgot what
1:45:39
day it
1:45:39
is. No, I forget all the time.
what day it is.
1:45:45
But I don't big newsletter day.
26. Big week, big week, but this
1:45:49
will we'll consider this week.
That was
1:45:53
good. All right. So so yeah, so
we're gonna celebrate I guess
1:45:57
we'll just by doing a show. Now
we're gonna have a special
1:46:01
promotion. Okay, but we're still
doing a show with a special
1:46:04
promotion. We're doing a show.
Hold on. Thank you opening.
1:46:10
That's beautiful. We'll take
that one. We're doing a show.
1:46:15
Oh, goodness. Okay, and let's
see,
1:46:19
I got a note from Brunetti.
1:46:21
Oh, film producer to the stars.
1:46:25
You know, he's always he's like
you. Oh, you know, holiday was
1:46:29
dead Blab. Like, he's just one
of those guys. Yeah. And, of
1:46:33
course, then when you, you know,
he's still working. You know, I
1:46:36
thought he's all I've done
moving up to the middle of
1:46:38
nowhere. I'm gonna you know,
blah, blah, blah. He finally got
1:46:42
that work. And he's in meetings,
you get to meetings. So here's
1:46:46
an interesting little story so
they could read this.
1:46:48
Oh, okay. Well, let me ask a
question. Even though I'm kind
1:46:52
of the Hollywood guy of our
dynamic duo bonus. You're the
1:46:56
guy that's just hanging out and
chatting with Brunetti all the
1:46:59
time? Yeah, she's
1:47:02
because he doesn't want some guy
who's always hitting him up for
1:47:06
a party deal. Can I give you a
producer? That would be what
1:47:10
Hollywood guys exactly
1:47:11
know what he wants is the guy
that goes creamier well, how
1:47:14
come I can't get a bit part and
one of your movie?
1:47:17
That's you that he already told
me. He's already told me to bid
1:47:20
part ideas off for me as good of
as an actor that I obviously am
1:47:25
by listening to these. My
emoting on here.
1:47:29
He's off is never going to be a
chance. That's it. That's done.
1:47:32
He did that early in the game.
smart, smart, man. Okay, so
1:47:36
now you're just friends. Yeah.
Hey, not brown nosing. Okay. All
1:47:40
right. So
1:47:40
what did you make anyway? I can.
So he's taught, you know, we
1:47:44
talked about the guy, the
missing guy, the James Gordon
1:47:47
meet guy. Poof, disappeared.
Just the journalist at FBI
1:47:51
invaded his apartment. He's not
there always is empty. And he
1:47:57
was working for seat. He's
worked for all the big networks.
1:47:59
He just disappeared off the face
of the earth. Yeah, this is
1:48:02
quite interesting. It's still
going on. So he meant he says
1:48:07
this note. I was negotiating
with him. Oh, and Scott man ago
1:48:14
did Greenbrae I guess, on there,
or he has a Greenbrae. One of
1:48:19
the two on their upcoming
probably is Greenbrae on their
1:48:22
upcoming book. About the
Pineapple Express and the pull
1:48:29
out of Afghanistan. Right
disappeared.
1:48:32
Yeah. And yes, this is part of
the story because he did that
1:48:36
documentary about the about the
ambush where the 444 Americans
1:48:42
died in Somalia want to say
yeah, it was covered by the
1:48:46
army. It was it was ISIS stuff
in the African countries crazy.
1:48:51
I don't even know what it was.
We don't know anything. There's
1:48:54
no reporting. So and yes, it was
the Pineapple Express, which is
1:48:58
another story that the the
military industrial complex
1:49:02
doesn't want coming out to we
start warn, I mean, you might
1:49:05
want to talk to your Hollywood
friend, Dana, and say, How many
1:49:08
warnings does he need? Don't
know go Don't be a part of that
1:49:12
deal.
1:49:14
He went he disappeared. He and
his reps told me he was having
1:49:19
family problems as he went from
constant calls and texts to very
1:49:24
little and then nothing. I
thought it was negotiate. It was
1:49:28
a negotiating tactic and didn't
think much of it is still
1:49:31
clearly Hollywood could still
1:49:33
be I liked that. Yeah. God, I
know what Go ahead. You
1:49:37
finished. I'll tell you. I know
what's going on. Go ahead.
1:49:40
The book ultimately went with
another producer and thus I
1:49:44
stopped communicating with them
and didn't think much of that
1:49:47
either. But I just recently
found out about the FBI raid and
1:49:51
his disappearance, crazy stuff
and he did crazy stuff. And he
1:49:57
and Scott Scott man, were
definitely tied in with some
1:50:00
high level stuff and we're
pissing people off at the White
1:50:04
House. Scott was summoned to DC
during our negotiations though
1:50:08
he's still around as far as I
know, Scott, the other guy. So
1:50:12
then I asked him about this
book, he's in the books seems to
1:50:16
have disappeared too, which is,
I think, a function here. And
1:50:20
Danny, does he the second note,
I don't have it in front of me,
1:50:23
but I'll just tell you what he
said. He said that. Yeah, the
1:50:26
whole thing was peculiar looking
back on it, because it turns out
1:50:30
that he was going to sign with
another producer. But the
1:50:35
problem was, as far as Burnett
is concerned, is that the other
1:50:38
producer didn't have a studio.
Brunetti was the Goshi ating
1:50:43
with a studio. And that means if
he said it accepted their terms,
1:50:48
they would have been on their
way to making a movie, the other
1:50:51
producer still has to find a
studio. So that that was
1:50:54
peculiar. I'm thinking the other
producer was the spook or
1:50:58
something. And it was this one.
I'm thinking I mentioned this to
1:51:02
him, he said and maybe and so
this whole thing is get this is
1:51:05
getting pretty in the book. This
book is what we got to find.
1:51:09
So it sounds to me like this
Scott guy. Greenbrae. He said,
1:51:16
Dude, you're getting ripped off,
and we're getting ripped off
1:51:18
here. This Brunetti characters
like low balled Now listen to
1:51:21
me, low balling us. This other
douchebag doesn't even have a
1:51:25
studio. Let's ratchet this crack
up a little. Let's live ratchet
1:51:29
it up a little bit. All right,
you're going to disappear. And
1:51:32
it's going to be really
mysterious and peep and this is
1:51:35
going to build and build and
build. Then we're going to cut
1:51:37
the deal of a lifetime. Brunette
is being played.
1:51:43
You know what you just said is a
distinct possibility. But
1:51:48
burnetii was hit as a
negotiating tactic.
1:51:52
Versus whatever knee has Juice
Man Brunetti has juice in
1:51:56
Hollywood. Do you know how much
juice brunette he has? What is
1:52:00
he famous for?
1:52:02
He's famous for some hot movies.
Yeah. And what is social net?
1:52:05
Where?
1:52:07
How's the car cards? He Dana
Brunetti
1:52:10
degrade the gray zone movies?
House of gray what is it called?
1:52:15
Gray diaries. What are those
things called? What are those?
1:52:17
Those are three of them.
1:52:18
50 Gray diaries of houses and
gray diaries. No, this dude has
1:52:26
so much juice. He got Kevin
Spacey off
1:52:30
this morning actor Kevin Spacey
found not liable in a sexual
1:52:34
battery case dating back to the
1980s.
1:52:37
Mr. Spacey is deeply grateful
for the jury system and for this
1:52:41
jury in particular,
1:52:42
It took the jury less than 90
minutes to agree. laughter and
1:52:48
rap who was seeking $40 million
in damages. Rap accused spacey
1:52:52
of assaulting him when he was 14
years old and spacey was 26 and
1:52:57
Spacey. His New York apartment
wraps attorney claims spacey
1:53:00
story was inconsistent and not
worthy of your belief. Spacey
1:53:04
denied the accusations pointing
to the fact that he had a studio
1:53:07
apartment at the time not a one
bedroom as rap alleged.
1:53:11
This was a highly intelligent,
highly educated jury. They're
1:53:15
very very bright people and they
could see right through this
1:53:18
raps allegations were the first
among several against spacey at
1:53:21
the beginning of the me to era.
There's no better way to
1:53:24
overpower a trickle of doubt and
with a flood of naked species
1:53:28
career was soaring at the time.
With the hit Netflix show House
1:53:31
of Cards. The ban was dropped
from the series and his acting
1:53:34
career has stalled. Rap best
known for his role on TV Star
1:53:39
Trek Discovery did not speak
after the verdict, but tweeted
1:53:42
in part bringing this lawsuit
was always about shining a light
1:53:46
as part of the larger movement
to stand up against all forms of
1:53:49
sexual violence. This wasn't the
only sexual assault allegation
1:53:53
against spacey in 2019. He faced
charges of groping a man at a
1:53:57
Massachusetts bar. Prosecutors
later dropped the charges and
1:54:01
three months ago he pleaded not
guilty in London to charges he
1:54:05
sexually assaulted three men.
That criminal trial is due to
1:54:08
start next year. Spacey was also
ordered to pay nearly $31
1:54:13
million to the makers of House
of Cards for violating his
1:54:17
contract by allegedly sexually
harassing crew members.
1:54:22
There it is brunette he's
rolling in the dough he says
1:54:25
Listen man, you just pay the 31
mil I'll get all other charges
1:54:29
dropped by I'm telling you
brunette he's got the juice and
1:54:33
Holly he runs Hollywood Do you
remember that crazy video that
1:54:39
Kevin Spacey did as as his
character on house of cards when
1:54:43
all those what what's it this
was it this clip? You have a
1:54:48
clip I think I do. What was it
this one? Weird clip news this
1:54:52
one. She says spacey insisted
that her son go I don't
1:54:56
remember. I don't think we have
it for some reason this weird.
1:54:59
No I'm pretty sure we have it
somewhere but it's not. It's not
1:55:02
under spacey
1:55:04
it will never find it.
1:55:06
The probably not. I mean,
seriously, I'm just saying that
1:55:12
guy's got to do it.
1:55:14
I find it to be disappointing
for the public for spacey be
1:55:17
such a weirdo because he's such
a fun actor. I mean, I first saw
1:55:24
spacey in a in a TV series
called Wiseguy where he played I
1:55:32
think their last name was
proctor. And it was him and a
1:55:36
famous model who is very, very
attractive and the two of them
1:55:40
played brother and sister crook
criminals as part of a gang of
1:55:46
famous kind of an underground
criminal organization and they
1:55:50
were incestual which I thought
was pretty advanced movie at the
1:55:54
time. So they were two of them
were having sex more often than
1:56:00
not and so as those bases
introduction pretty much to the
1:56:04
public was stuff like kind of
off beats, you know,
1:56:07
you know what? I would right now
like to make an option offer to
1:56:11
option his life story. Bases no
Dana Brunetti. Dana Brunetti. I
1:56:18
was a Hollywood hitman. I want
his life story. I'd like to
1:56:22
option it
1:56:23
That's a good name for a guy who
does hits
1:56:26
this Right exactly. You see it's
double
1:56:29
Title I Oh, hello. Rare but
great title. But
1:56:34
it was such I come up with every
title of the show every single
1:56:38
episode. It's rare. He says.
Title, every single female out
1:56:44
here. Take that. Take that take
that. No, I'm telling you. I
1:56:48
want to option his life story.
And I'm gonna you know, we'll
1:56:51
figure it out. We'll do it.
We'll crowdfund it.
1:56:56
We can. This guy has stories. He
has stories. He's today's pretty
1:56:59
good storyteller.
1:57:00
He has the stories he has the
stories open invitation for me
1:57:04
to buy those rights from you buy
it you gotta buy he's got Okay,
1:57:08
I'm gonna crowdfunded I'm gonna
get we're gonna raise $100
1:57:11
million Crowd
1:57:12
funding is a good idea. You go
for that to spend his own money.
1:57:18
Meanwhile, another story that
one day will be fabulous to read
1:57:22
is the Laura Logan story. She is
my neighbor as many and just
1:57:26
down the road here up the road
in in Hill Country, Texas, and
1:57:30
she has not had a good go of her
mainstream experience
1:57:35
experience. And sadly, you know
what, when when we met which is
1:57:39
well over a CBS for a long time.
Yeah, she was on 60 minutes but
1:57:43
she messed up there. I can't
really remember what she messed
1:57:46
up with 60 minutes to
1:57:47
do it the crystal thing and her
doing she did a dry lab of some
1:57:51
something or other she
embarrassed McChrystal was that
1:57:54
it? No, no, that was part of it.
But it dude real reason was that
1:57:58
she had phony doubt by a report.
Really? Yeah. Something like
1:58:04
that. You can look it up on
Wikipedia. That's quite the
1:58:06
accusation. But okay. So an
accusation is kind of what
1:58:10
happened? I don't know. It's
harmless. It was harmless. Okay.
1:58:15
No, they were looking to get get
rid of her.
1:58:17
That's what I think. So then,
you know, when we met her and
1:58:21
her husband, you know, present
now a year ago. They're like,
1:58:24
No, no, you can't be doing
alternatives. We've got to keep
1:58:28
pounding at the mainstream. This
is they want people to walk
1:58:32
away. I'm like, Are you crazy? I
shouldn't have asked that.
1:58:36
Because, yes, man, she was
steadfast. I gotta stay on the
1:58:41
mainstream then. So then she,
she was the fox nation, and she
1:58:45
had all that going
1:58:46
for her wisdom. If anything's
not mainstream, that's it.
1:58:49
No, but she got the judge
Jeanine hit, you know, quick
1:58:54
news hits where she could then
promote what she was doing on
1:58:56
Fox nation. So she'd be on Judge
Jeanine before she moved to the
1:59:01
five and Hannity, and sometimes
she'd be on Tucker. And then she
1:59:05
had her series about the border,
which, of course, was a good
1:59:09
series, but obviously, long
tedious and no one saw it
1:59:13
because it's on Fox nation. And
then she got kicked off of all
1:59:18
of Fox properties, including Fox
nation because she compared
1:59:21
Fauci to Dr. Mengele. Okay, all
right. It's minor oversight, but
1:59:27
now she was still getting on
Newsmax Newsmax as you got
1:59:32
kicked off Newsmax what would
you
1:59:34
get your How can you wait, y'all
can you pause anyone get kicked
1:59:38
off Newsmax?
1:59:40
Well, I have the two clips that
did it. Let's start and she I
1:59:45
mean, she was already on on
rocky ground as she she started
1:59:49
off telling everybody what the
core problem in the world is.
1:59:52
It's
1:59:52
right out of it's right out of
the playbook. The right out of
1:59:56
the socialist playbook. Divide
and conquer. You don't tell them
1:59:58
your intent. You get people to
come in Got your useful idiots,
2:00:01
those of us who are paying by
these people, they have all
2:00:04
these luxuries, and they live,
how's it end?
2:00:09
Well, it ends badly for some.
Okay, so on a serious note, and,
2:00:17
you know, people of all faiths
have said to me that this is a
2:00:20
spiritual battle. I am a firm
and solid and immovable believer
2:00:26
in God. And I believe that God
wins. I believe that God is
2:00:29
greater than evil. And I believe
that the fallen angel, otherwise
2:00:33
known as Satan, doesn't get to
prevail in this world. So if you
2:00:38
follow the Bible, or if you
follow the Koran, or you follow
2:00:42
the Book of Mormon, you know,
people talk in various different
2:00:45
ways about the end times. And if
you fight for God, God will
2:00:49
fight for you.
2:00:51
This is a very big problem for
for news mainstream in America,
2:00:56
you can't be talking positive
about God. So I think she put
2:01:00
herself on notice with this. And
then to say, you know, Satan is
2:01:05
real. And if you fight for God,
God will fight for you. But that
2:01:11
still I think she could have
remained a fine commentator for
2:01:15
Newsmax. But this is where it
all went downhill.
2:01:18
Final thought though, I have to
I have to ask you this because
2:01:21
that my audience is very God
fearing God loving etc. Final
2:01:24
thought and only a couple of
seconds, please. Does is god
2:01:28
okay with a closed border?
2:01:32
What kind of question is that?
It's much
2:01:35
bigger than that. God believes
that in sovereignty and national
2:01:39
identity and the sanctity of
family, and all the things that
2:01:42
we've lived with from the
beginning of time. And he knows
2:01:44
that the open border is satan's
way of taking control of the
2:01:48
world, through all of these
people who are his students and
2:01:52
his and his servants. And they
may think that they're going to
2:01:55
become gods. That's what they
tell us. You've all know Harare,
2:01:58
and, and all the rest of them at
the World Economic Forum, you
2:02:01
know, the ones who want us
eating insects, cockroaches, and
2:02:04
that while they dine on the
dreaded children, those are the
2:02:07
people right, they're not going
to win.
2:02:11
I think it was saying that they
died on the blood of children
2:02:15
that might have pushed, Newsmax
moves max over the edge, which
2:02:19
by the way, I don't think is
canceled worthy at all.
2:02:23
Well done on Newsmax. But the
point is, well, a couple of
2:02:29
things. First of all, she do
think they you left out of your
2:02:33
clip edge. And I don't know if
it is clipped clippable because
2:02:36
I have never found it but I've
heard about it that she said
2:02:38
that she was at the UN and
someone was telling her that the
2:02:42
United Nations has a policy of
wanting open borders especially
2:02:45
we played that weeks ago. Well,
I
2:02:48
replayed again that
2:02:49
okay, hold on a second. Logan
2:02:54
is I think that's more likely to
get her expunged than just
2:02:59
Christian rant.
2:03:01
While I'm looking at up, listen
to her talking about don't walk
2:03:04
away from the M five M.
2:03:05
And you know, what's disturbing
about it, Greg, is they actually
2:03:08
want you not to believe what's
right in front of you. We can
2:03:11
all see it. But they're saying
no, don't believe reality,
2:03:15
right? We're going to create a
safe zone, where you can be one
2:03:18
of 230 Something pronouns, you
can change your agenda 32 times
2:03:22
in a day, because believe me,
there's even memes about that,
2:03:25
and the southern border can not
exist, it can be wide open,
2:03:28
you're gonna have over a million
illegal immigrants coming in.
2:03:32
And by the way, we're just going
to remove the word illegal, and
2:03:35
only talk about it as if it's
migrants. And it'll just, you
2:03:38
know, go away. Actually, if you
look at the political agenda,
2:03:41
they don't care about the chaos.
They don't care about the the
2:03:44
crime rate going up. They don't
care about the people in the
2:03:46
inner cities in Minneapolis,
whose life is that much harder.
2:03:49
They actually want that. Because
when you create that chaos, you
2:03:53
get to be the solution. And they
want us to give up on our media
2:03:56
and our institutions, our FBI
and DOJ, they want you to say
2:04:00
no, I'm giving up you know why?
Because they have such a tiny
2:04:03
bit of support. And if we'll
give up, it's the only form of
2:04:06
victory that has to be given.
You cannot win it. We they want
2:04:11
all of us to give them that
victory. And that's why it's so
2:04:14
important for Americans to not
accept that they're so divided
2:04:17
because it's not true. Yeah. And
for us not to surrender.
2:04:21
Yeah, so that was probably part
of the violation. Oh, really?
2:04:25
Yeah. No, no, you're gone.
Voting you off. I can't find it.
2:04:29
I remember distinctly that she
said this about the about the UN
2:04:34
that she had maybe it was a blog
post maybe it was written and it
2:04:38
wasn't a clip. Possibly. Well,
I've
2:04:41
never heard the clip so but
let's get back to this. I think
2:04:45
that Christian thing should be
for news what was news nation or
2:04:50
newsroom X,
2:04:50
Newsmax news Madea.
2:04:54
These guys you know are lucky to
have anybody of her caliber
2:04:57
whether she's a little loopy or
Not, it's unbelievable that they
2:05:02
should throw off for that. Yeah.
2:05:06
Yeah, because they're there.
They're not a I wouldn't even
2:05:11
put him into grade B or C or D,
maybe D quality product. They
2:05:19
have stuff once in a while. It's
interesting, but it's not. You
2:05:22
know, they don't put their day
energy is scattered is a weird,
2:05:25
weird place. Anyway, Yes, too
bad. Yeah,
2:05:31
I know, it feels like this.
There's got to be so much good
2:05:35
that that she can do, but she's
really got to get her own thing
2:05:39
together. You know, she's
relying on watches.
2:05:42
She is a talented journalist.
Yes. She can have her opinions
2:05:49
which she probably should keep
to herself.
2:05:52
Just as a tip from your no
agenda,
2:05:55
advice or John. Keep your
opinions to yourself. Or you can
2:06:01
go I mean, they'll let you go
megachurches or you can go to a
2:06:05
megachurch and say whatever you
want, you can say what you what
2:06:08
she said on there in those
clips. If she was at a
2:06:11
megachurch, and she said all
that stuff to the fawning
2:06:14
audience, you would do her a lot
of good because that did
2:06:17
audience into mega church. I'm
talking about church, she has at
2:06:20
least 10,000 people in the
audience. They are appreciative
2:06:26
and they would go they'd be
loyal to her. But to broadcasted
2:06:31
on this stations themselves,
there's too many outliers and,
2:06:36
and snipers and haters. Yeah,
that
2:06:40
well, they went after they went
after they they went after
2:06:43
advertisers. So one went after
advertisers of Newsmax or maybe,
2:06:49
God forbid, they might well they
might have gone after spectrum,
2:06:52
or Cablevision or whatever
Comcast and said hey, we're
2:06:57
going to call some crap here,
get her off or you're going to
2:06:59
lose your England really
2:07:00
they're dead threatened taking
Newsmax off because it's
2:07:03
probably well there it is.
They're solid, give you take
2:07:06
news, you know, I pay for the
cable and the cable. You know, I
2:07:10
expect to have good programming
on the cable and I'm turning
2:07:14
this around from channel to
channel I get this. I don't know
2:07:16
what this is Newsmax and there's
some woman ranting about Satan
2:07:20
you know it's just religious
programming. It seems to be says
2:07:24
news just sounds like a
religious program. I don't get
2:07:26
it.
2:07:28
That's right. Dan, I wonder what
Newsmax has audiences now that
2:07:33
entire Spiel seems right up
their alley with your typical
2:07:37
Christian conservative audience.
Yeah. And so they are they are
2:07:43
in fact, the, the Judas. Judas
is now looking at yay for a
2:07:50
second speaking of the Ministry
of truthiness if you have a copy
2:07:55
of the GA interview the
controversial interview on your
2:07:59
right got killed it gets removed
which Hello How about next cloud
2:08:04
everybody set up your own stuff
to come on. How dumb can you be
2:08:08
after all these years? And then
my favorite is after a yay calls
2:08:12
out the Jewish media and the
Jewish people for keeping the
2:08:16
black man down. Ari Emanuel said
hey stop doing business with the
2:08:25
agent the self fulfilling
prophecy
2:08:28
is he got to do it anything he's
Jewish Of course. So what So
2:08:32
it'd be nosing his business and
everyone else's affair
2:08:35
nothing funnier than you know
than him saying okay don't work
2:08:39
with Kanye West because
2:08:41
there's an irony to the Jewish
guy doing exactly what Kanye
2:08:45
accused him up
2:08:46
there thank you that is that is
indeed the irony hilarious
2:08:53
All right. Well clips
2:08:54
okay yes, I have some but I
think your it's your turn to
2:08:57
grab the wheel to
2:08:58
do some Chinese stuff.
2:09:00
Oh goody goody China stuff.
2:09:02
Let's go with the UK versus does
this stuff this Why listen to in
2:09:07
New Tang Dynasty because they
have stuff when it comes to
2:09:09
China. They have great material.
2:09:13
It's They're beautiful. Let's be
honest, China haven't heard
2:09:15
about
2:09:15
this. This is the UK versus
China in the in Manchester, UK.
2:09:21
Britain has warned that
diplomatic consequences will
2:09:24
follow if China does not waive
immunity for officials charged
2:09:28
with assaulting a protester at
the Chinese carpe Diems. Press
2:09:32
the government to go further and
take action before the police
2:09:36
investigation concludes. But the
consulate denies dragging the
2:09:39
protester in
2:09:41
Mr. Speaker Foreign Office
Minister Jesse Norman told MPs
2:09:45
that the Chinese ambassador has
been summoned over the incident
2:09:48
as a Hong Kong pro democracy
campaigner was dragged into the
2:09:52
grounds at the Chinese Consulate
in Manchester and beaten we have
2:09:55
made it absolutely clear to the
Chinese embassy that the
2:09:59
apparent behavior of constant
general officials during the
2:10:02
incident as it appears in the
footage, which even now more of
2:10:06
which is coming out. As we
discussed this is completely
2:10:10
unacceptable.
2:10:11
Greater Manchester Police have
started an investigation and
2:10:14
said it's a complex and
sensitive inquiry and may take
2:10:17
some time. Norman said the
foreign secretary will wait for
2:10:20
the result of the Independent
Police investigation.
2:10:23
And let me be clear that if the
police determined that there are
2:10:26
grounds to charge any officials,
we would expect the Chinese
2:10:29
Consulate to waive immunity for
those officials. If they do not.
2:10:33
Then diplomatic consequences
will follow.
2:10:37
This is odd duck because I did
see the story come I'm glad you
2:10:41
got the clips didn't this same.
So basically, you have Chinese
2:10:45
CCP party embassy workers,
people come up to demonstrate
2:10:49
they open the gates go out there
and rouse them beat their heads.
2:10:52
Yeah. Isn't this exactly what
happened in DC at the Chinese
2:10:55
Embassy? didn't this happen
before
2:10:59
it also happened to San
Francisco at the council it they
2:11:01
don't have an embassy here. I
just I see used to have the
2:11:05
Falun Gong used to be outside
this place over in San Francisco
2:11:08
all the time and I sat there
anyway let's go to part two,
2:11:14
conservative former leader so in
Duncan Smith used an urgent
2:11:18
question in the House of Commons
to ask about the role of the
2:11:22
Chinese Consul General Zhang Shi
Yuan. Zhang admitted to Sky News
2:11:27
that he had pulled the hair of
the protester and said it was
2:11:30
his duty because a protester had
insulted his country and his
2:11:34
leader
2:11:36
right now urged the government
to be much, much clearer than
2:11:39
just using diplomatic language.
I urge the government to make it
2:11:43
clear in the light of this new
evidence is not just
2:11:46
unacceptable, that any consulate
individual should have taken
2:11:50
part in anything like this. But
the any constant individual who
2:11:54
has proved to have been one of
the perpetrators of this
2:11:57
outrageous and violent attack on
Mr. Chen will be made persona
2:12:02
non grata immediately and sent
back to China.
2:12:08
The attacked Hong Kong
protesters spoke at a press
2:12:11
conference in central London on
Wednesday, Bob Chang said he and
2:12:15
others were holding a peaceful
anti government protest outside
2:12:19
the conference on Sunday, when
masked men came out, tore down
2:12:23
the protesters banners and
dragged him inside the buildings
2:12:26
Gates.
2:12:28
Gates, always because I was near
the gates. They pulled me
2:12:32
inside. Police tried to pull me
back out but didn't succeed. So
2:12:36
in the end, I was pulled inside
and it was beaten
2:12:39
up. Chang said continent staff
beat his eye in the corner of
2:12:44
his left eye was swollen. His
head and back still hurts. The
2:12:49
worst part is his spine. And
there was some internal
2:12:52
injuries. He had to be rescued
by a police officer who would
2:12:56
not normally be allowed and
conflict grounds without
2:12:58
permission due to fears for his
safety. Wow.
2:13:03
So the guy so there was a tug of
war with this character at the
2:13:09
gate and the police are trying
to keep him from getting pulled
2:13:12
into the council it where they
put the police guy last because
2:13:15
he couldn't go in there. And so
they chose they got him past the
2:13:18
gate and they beat the crap out
of him.
2:13:21
What would they what are they
protesting?
2:13:24
It was just a Hong Kong
protests. You know, these are
2:13:27
Hong Kongers and they were
protesting the crackdown of
2:13:30
freedom of speech and the rest
of it, you know, in and they
2:13:32
were right in front of the you
know, the Chinese Embassy which
2:13:35
is where you do that sort of
thing that happens all the time.
2:13:37
Yeah. But they were very the
Chinese weren't putting up with
2:13:40
it is clip three.
2:13:43
Launching in the fall. I believe
the UK is a very safe place with
2:13:49
freedom of speech. Cost of stuff
can so brazenly pull someone
2:13:53
inside and beat them up in broad
daylight is unimaginable. It's
2:13:58
shocking that this should
happen.
2:14:01
Chang said he fears for his
family safety and said he will
2:14:05
be silenced but he's committed
to helping with the
2:14:08
investigation. The Chinese
consulate in Manchester claimed
2:14:12
in the letter to police the
protesters has stormed the
2:14:14
compound and members of staff
had been injured Jong the Consul
2:14:19
General claiming Chang was
dragged into the ground because
2:14:23
he will not let go of a staff
members neck. Oh yeah, that's
2:14:26
it. Yeah.
2:14:28
Movies of All this they didn't
storm the place and they know
2:14:30
that that didn't happen. But the
Chinese are reporting that so
2:14:34
that is the same report that
will go back to China to make
2:14:38
them look okay well and then you
had your justified but it's not
2:14:41
going to work out for these
guys. And I think they're going
2:14:43
to kick the the ambassador out
of the country. And it's
2:14:48
interesting. Now I have one
other clips. One other clip but
2:14:52
China also on NTD. Again,
something that won't get
2:14:57
reported by the mainstream
because Heaven forbid we Get
2:15:00
some Chinese worked at us even
though they're already worked.
2:15:04
Chinese indicted in TD report,
2:15:07
seven people are indicted for an
alleged plot by the Chinese
2:15:10
regime to coerce a dissident in
the United States to return to
2:15:13
China to where New York
residents and were arrested
2:15:16
yesterday morning. The remaining
five defendants are at large in
2:15:20
China. When arrested suspect
allegedly acted under the direct
2:15:24
orders of various Chinese
Communist officials. It was to
2:15:27
conduct surveillance on the
Chinese national and to try to
2:15:30
coerce the individual back to
China. The FBI says the victim
2:15:33
had fled to the United States
due to persecution in China. The
2:15:37
indictment states that the
efforts went back to at least
2:15:39
2017. The indictment also
alleged defendants engaged in
2:15:44
money laundering to fund illegal
Chinese Communist Party
2:15:47
activities in the United States.
2:15:50
This is what Pompeo was
bitching. Yeah,
2:15:53
yes, the author the 1000
talents,
2:15:58
or something like that. And it's
just going on and it has to be
2:16:03
stopped. You can't have this
2:16:04
there's also all these reports
these weird reports of Chinese
2:16:07
police units being stationed I
think there's in Canada, there's
2:16:12
a couple I think in the UK,
there's one or two in New York
2:16:15
City and and it's like a police
unit and they're in in these
2:16:20
countries in the cities and it's
unclear what they're doing if
2:16:23
they're learning on loan, but I
don't know there's I've seen
2:16:28
reports about that, which is
kind of odd.
2:16:31
But you'll find very little in
the mainstream again, and this
2:16:34
particular last report I think
is mainstream worthy, but they
2:16:37
won't
2:16:38
Yeah, definitely. Well, you know
what got the mainstream from the
2:16:43
UK you know how they're they're,
they're sending illegal
2:16:48
immigrants off to Nigeria. Was
that Nigeria? No is Rwanda
2:16:54
Rwanda? Oh, weird. Oh, then then
the story doesn't make sense.
2:17:00
You talk about the UK Boris
Johnson No,
2:17:03
no, an unhinged British Airways.
A passenger in route from
2:17:07
London's Heathrow Airport to
Nigeria. Took travel chaos to
2:17:12
new heights when he pooped on
the floor of the plane and
2:17:14
smeared it into the seats.
Sickening travelers. Wow, here.
2:17:20
Yeah. I gotta read this to you.
I just want you to
2:17:23
get the vibe. This is one of the
shittiest stories
2:17:27
is Oops. Oops, stop, stop. There
we go. The unnamed passenger
2:17:33
inexplicably flipped out in
protest moments before flying
2:17:37
from London's Heathrow Airport
to Lagos, Nigeria on October 7,
2:17:41
he peeled off his pants and let
loose on the aircraft's main
2:17:44
floor before rubbing the feces
into the carpet curtain and
2:17:47
seats. He must have been first
class, prompting Emergency
2:17:51
Service officials to rush in
quote during boarding a
2:17:55
passenger stripped from the
waist down and defecate it on
2:17:58
the galley floor. He sat in it
rubbed it onto the galley floor
2:18:01
and aisle carpets. He walked in
it started running up the aisle
2:18:05
as far as door for He smeared
his arms to the elbow and fecal
2:18:09
matter and door seats as he
went. The officials considered
2:18:13
the incident hygenic biohazard
there's your show title. High
2:18:21
genic to a long bio is two
words.
2:18:27
What is British air you said
yes. That British Air
2:18:31
Yeah. Yes. My goodness. How
about that?
2:18:38
You get the tail number of that
particular plane is probably
2:18:40
contaminated.
2:18:41
Yeah, I wouldn't I wouldn't fly
in that one ever again. Hey, I
2:18:45
back to China for a second.
We're still going after him in
2:18:48
big tech land because you got to
get rid of these guys. This is a
2:18:51
real problem. This is a problem.
Tick tock has a problem that
2:18:55
eating our lunch face bag Mehta
can't make any more ad money
2:18:59
Google is sitting to see it's
slipping his hurtin Instagram,
2:19:02
it's problem problem.
2:19:03
A new report is raising more
national security concerns
2:19:06
around tick tock. According to
Forbes, that China based team
2:19:09
with the parent company was
planning to use tick tock to
2:19:12
monitor the location of some
Americans. A spokesperson tells
2:19:16
Forbes the app collects data for
ad targeting purposes, but
2:19:20
Forbes reports the information
was for surveillance.
2:19:26
Oh, please. Forbes
2:19:28
is owned by a Chinese company.
This doesn't smell right.
2:19:34
Yeah, I would say that's a good
analysis.
2:19:37
And then we still have an n. Now
we just got to talk about it for
2:19:41
a second Elon Musk with Twitter.
I mean, he's he's back. He's
2:19:44
like, it's as if it's as if he
was either delaying this
2:19:49
purchase purposely or perhaps
more likely. Someone pulled out
2:19:56
and then came back in. Okay,
we're gonna We're gonna we're
2:20:00
gonna pick up the extra 16 Bill
and in Slack that you got a hole
2:20:04
there. Don't worry about it.
We're good to go. Go tell
2:20:07
everybody it's overvalued.
2:20:09
Elon Musk is reportedly planning
major job cuts if his purchase
2:20:13
of Twitter is completed. The
Washington Post says Musk plans
2:20:16
to slashed Twitter's workforce
by 75% of former executive says
2:20:20
the cuts would jeopardize user
security
2:20:26
or security. Does that
2:20:28
work?
2:20:29
I don't know. But
2:20:30
well, I as you've noticed in the
newsletter, since you didn't
2:20:33
read it, I believe no,
2:20:34
I'm sorry. I didn't. We were
engaged in something completely
2:20:38
different this week.
2:20:40
Give me a tip to do something I
did how to fix.
2:20:46
Was that this newsletter? was
the one before what oh, is
2:20:49
this one?
2:20:50
Oh, what did you put it? I
2:20:51
changed it. I
2:20:52
change what you suggest. Oh,
okay. Oh, yes.
2:20:55
You did? Read the newsletter? I
did. Again, again, I don't know
2:20:59
maybe the beach? Well, if you're
not using a stop using the
2:21:02
toilets, compression, it's I'm
compressing the timelines
2:21:04
compressing timelines. Okay. So
here we go. It looks like musk
2:21:09
might have an out because the
National Security Agency or the
2:21:12
national security apparatus, I
was going to say, you know, we
2:21:16
don't want Elon owning. The
government may put a stop to it.
2:21:22
I'm thinking, why would this be?
It's an interesting story has
2:21:26
been floating around. But why
would the government care about
2:21:30
who own Twitter unless they had
some piece of the action?
2:21:33
Oh, yeah. Well, Oh, okay. So
this is interesting. So they
2:21:37
could find is this your clip?
You have a musk?
2:21:40
No, this is a follow up.
2:21:44
Before we go before we go to
Tesla. Now, explain this to me.
2:21:48
So what exactly is happening
with this national security
2:21:52
issue?
2:21:55
It seems as if there is some
national security concerns about
2:22:01
a guy like Elon Musk because
he's South Africa. And maybe
2:22:07
there's a million reasons. I
don't know. He's killing SpaceX.
2:22:11
I know book, that it might not
be a good thing for the security
2:22:16
apparat tie to have a Twitter
owned by this guy. And which
2:22:22
just says, you know, and I've
always believed this Twitter's
2:22:24
as your front for the number of
intelligence agencies. I think
2:22:28
they'd go there and say, yeah,
why do we need to push this and
2:22:30
that take this guy off of the
site, put push Rob Reiner
2:22:35
tweets,
2:22:36
which by the way is still
doesn't preclude Elon from being
2:22:39
in on it.
2:22:41
I suggested in the newsletter,
that Elon might have gotten wind
2:22:47
or develop the idea himself to
have this happen. So he could
2:22:53
say oh, yeah, now I'm gonna buy
I'm knowing full well that
2:22:57
they're gonna pull the plug on
the deal. So this whole thing is
2:22:59
a scam. Potential potentially.
Well, not gonna buy him he's not
2:23:04
gonna buy me He's like, he's
going to be prevented from
2:23:06
buying him. So now you can make
a big fuss about buying Oh,
2:23:08
yeah. No, I want to buy him
because there's no reason the
2:23:14
way I saw it. He could have
taken this thing to court and
2:23:17
done very well. You know,
probably even one that case. He
2:23:21
didn't have to jump back in like
he was very enthusiastic about I
2:23:24
try. I always wanted to buy him.
I don't know what they listen.
2:23:27
Okay.
2:23:27
So I like that. So the it could
be Now what if? What if it gets
2:23:33
resolved just in time for the
midterms? Boom, he puts Trump
2:23:37
back on for a week before
elections.
2:23:40
I don't think that's possible is
too close. Okay.
2:23:43
I really like this idea of guys.
You got to bail me out here.
2:23:48
Okay. National security concern.
But then they're going to screw
2:23:53
them all the way right.
2:23:54
Because they're already in bed
with them. He's got SpaceX I
2:23:57
know but can't be they're
telling me this
2:23:59
is my stick don't you can't be
telling me that he is a
2:24:03
government agent. This is my
stick. I'm just trying to
2:24:06
understand if he's in bed if he
has all of that going, why
2:24:10
wouldn't With their help, why
wouldn't he then get that? He
2:24:15
does? He does. It's what he
does. Okay, well he's gonna
2:24:21
Twitter's destroyed either way.
2:24:23
No, Twitter's never gonna be
destroyed if the premises that
2:24:26
is part of a government
operation in the State
2:24:28
Department really is the one
who's controlling Twitter. They
2:24:31
will let it go. It's like saying
Oracle is going to go out of
2:24:35
business. That'll be the day.
2:24:37
Hey, that's what they said about
MySpace.
2:24:41
Nobody said that about MySpace.
Once Fox but MySpace it was
2:24:45
over.
2:24:46
Now people said Facebook was
going to eat my spaces lunch and
2:24:50
they did. Yeah, so same thing.
2:24:55
What's the same thing who's
eating Twitter's lunch?
2:24:58
Now haha Mmm, is that Twitter
can
2:25:02
go, okay, you can say Twitter is
gonna get smashing and
2:25:05
disappear. But I don't see how
2:25:07
he how you're such and such now,
meaning people don't want to use
2:25:11
it anymore. They're not going to
be interested in it will exist.
2:25:14
It'll have it'll have somebody
have you fire 75% of the people
2:25:19
you can get on staff on the
2:25:21
big kind of condemnation all
about this. But I point the
2:25:25
finger at you. You tweet more
than you post on your own
2:25:30
Mastodon no agenda social. So
you tweet a lot.
2:25:35
No, I answer. I don't tweet a
lot. I answer people not. I'm
2:25:40
not tweeting. And if people
would put something interesting
2:25:43
on no agenda social for me that
I would that would warrant a
2:25:47
reply, I would reply because I
look at it just as often.
2:25:54
Okay. You can tell you can
maintain that position.
2:25:58
My position is Twitter is broken
and is not going to come back.
2:26:02
And I think there's more broken
and Facebook is also broken.
2:26:06
These things are broken.
2:26:07
So things that are broken. Let's
go to Google.
2:26:10
The Google is very broken. Okay,
2:26:13
I just have two interesting
little tidbits here. Here's I
2:26:16
got two of them. Here's Google
email shoot on NPR. The
2:26:20
Republican
2:26:21
National Committee has filed
suit against Google, alleging
2:26:25
that tech giant has been
suppressing its email
2:26:27
solicitations ahead of
November's midterm elections.
2:26:31
The lawsuit filed in California
last night, accuses Gmail of
2:26:35
discriminating against the RNC
by unfairly sending the group's
2:26:39
emails to users spam folders,
they complain it's impacting
2:26:43
both their fundraising and get
out the vote efforts and pivotal
2:26:46
swing states. Google denies the
allegation and says the company
2:26:49
doesn't filter emails based on
political affiliations. A
2:26:53
spokesperson says Gmail spam
filters reflect user's actions
2:26:58
know what's not true. Now this
whole story, based on my recent
2:27:04
episodes, with my newsletter,
yeah, I'm sorry, with my
2:27:09
newsletter tweaking has given me
new insights into this and a lot
2:27:14
of it is all programmatic is not
because of people want this and
2:27:17
they want to because I know
plenty of people that have
2:27:19
subscriptions to the newsletter,
they they've tried a whitelist
2:27:22
they do this they do that
doesn't work out. And it turns
2:27:25
out to be on my end. And I'm
convinced that the Republican
2:27:28
National Committee are
formatting their newsletter
2:27:31
doing a number of things wrong
themselves, and blaming Google
2:27:35
so so I would take Google sides
on this thing, but now there's a
2:27:38
different one. Here's the second
lawsuit or whatever it is
2:27:42
actually just a hell of that the
government's just gonna find
2:27:45
Google because their money, bag
of money.
2:27:48
Can I just say something? Under
no circumstance? Should an email
2:27:52
provider ever be making any
choice for you where your email
2:27:57
goes? That's not that's not an
email service. That's control.
2:28:01
It should never it should never
make Are
2:28:03
you that's okay. But let's go
with the Google find in India,
2:28:09
Google was hit with a $161
million fine from Indian
2:28:13
regulators over anti competitive
practices. The Competition
2:28:16
Commission of India imposed a
penalty of about 13 billion
2:28:20
rupees on Google that's for
abusing its, quote, dominant
2:28:23
position in multiple markets in
the Android mobile device
2:28:26
ecosystem. The commission has
also asked Google to modify its
2:28:30
conduct in relation to anti
competitive practices. And its
2:28:33
inquiry, the Commission
concluded since Google owns the
2:28:36
Android operating software and
allows some of its own products
2:28:40
to come pre installed. It has an
unfair edge in the market.
2:28:44
Google is yet to comment
publicly on the matter. India's
2:28:47
competition watchdog is also
separately investigating
2:28:50
Google's in app payment system,
and its business conduct in the
2:28:53
Smart TV market. Short Google
2:28:58
Yeah, now this is just gonna go
on for everything. It's so
2:29:02
Google, every channel is pay and
it's the cost of doing business.
2:29:05
And before I'm done with this
series, Eclipse, I do want to
2:29:08
play the Elon Musk Tesla story
for the software out there and
2:29:12
tell me if he has a couple of
things in here that might catch
2:29:15
your attention.
2:29:17
Elon Musk says Tesla cars will
not be approved as fully self
2:29:21
driving this year. This means
the company is not yet able to
2:29:24
satisfy authorities that its
cars can be driven without
2:29:27
someone behind the wheel. The
automaker sells a $15,000
2:29:31
software add on called full self
driving or SFD. It enables
2:29:36
vehicles to change lanes and
park autonomously. It's an
2:29:39
upgrade from Tesla's standard
autopilot feature that enables
2:29:43
cars to steer accelerate and
brake within their lanes without
2:29:47
driver intervention. However,
Tesla says the cars still need
2:29:50
to be driven with human
oversight autonomous vehicle
2:29:53
would require regulatory
approval in certain states like
2:29:56
California, Musk said he expects
to release an up graded FSD
2:30:00
software at the end of the year.
2:30:04
A lot of people already prepaid
for that.
2:30:06
$15,000 Are
2:30:08
you kidding me? Yeah, they
prepaid for that. And a people
2:30:13
are paying this. No, they
prepaid when they purchased a
2:30:16
recent Tesla for the full self
drive package. They prepaid.
2:30:21
Yeah, to get their money back.
And in fact, I think many of
2:30:25
them prepaid at 10 grand or some
lower amount and they increased
2:30:29
it and they didn't add some more
people, I think grandfathered
2:30:32
in, but I, this is never going
to fly. It's not gonna work.
2:30:37
They didn't they didn't get the
5g rollout the way they wanted
2:30:40
it with antennas every 1010 feet
all over the world. I mean, not
2:30:46
yet. Not yet. They'll get there,
they'll get there. Alright, I
2:30:49
have some other technology stuff
we need to talk about. And this
2:30:55
is the technology of food, which
as you know is it's very
2:30:59
exciting. That food processors,
the big ones, there's only only
2:31:03
about four big ones in the
United States and around the
2:31:05
world not that many more.
They're all really excited about
2:31:07
getting rid of animals and
printing your food and this one
2:31:12
this is clearly a fluff piece.
Israeli company who are now a
2:31:19
distributing in the Netherlands.
Let's listen
2:31:21
He will stake could soon be 3d
printed. That's if you live in
2:31:26
Europe. Israeli company redefine
meat has struck a partnership
2:31:30
with importer. Gerardi meets to
drive European distribution of
2:31:34
its new meat steak carts. The
startup is hoping to establish
2:31:39
his products as an alternative
to conventionally produced meat.
2:31:46
We define meat operates large
scale meat printers at its red
2:31:49
Harvard headquarters south of
Tel Aviv.
2:31:53
So first of all, for people who
make these promotional videos,
2:31:55
this steel drum popcorn
background crap is not cutting
2:31:59
it is very annoying, and you're
losing all of your message. Now
2:32:03
what you're seeing is, as you'll
hear this guy talk, he literally
2:32:06
John has a screen of cuts of
meat and he's praised. It's a
2:32:10
touchscreen. It's like boop,
boop boop boop, like a holodeck?
2:32:12
Like, oh, I want this steak.
2:32:14
Well as in a new factory in the
Netherlands, or manager of the
2:32:18
company's 3d printers project,
Juran itself explains how it
2:32:22
works.
2:32:24
When I want to make my
statement, I have a library of a
2:32:29
few different steps. I can
choose each one of them, and I
2:32:32
can adjust it accordingly. I can
define the amount of marbling
2:32:37
so you can hear it but he has
the sliders, and he can say more
2:32:41
fat less fat marbling thickness.
The whole thing is touchscreen,
2:32:46
but it may be total bull crap.
This may be like an Enron fake
2:32:49
trading room, but it
2:32:50
sounds like a fade rate.
2:32:56
And now I can start to reduce
it. So I wouldn't give this as
2:33:01
my cue. This is my timeline for
today. I know that in an hour or
2:33:04
something from now I will need
to refill the machine with new
2:33:08
new material. But now I can go
directly into the printing
2:33:11
process. And you can see how the
process start to build layer by
2:33:15
layer.
2:33:16
The company makes its products
from ingredients including soy
2:33:19
and pea proteins, chickpeas,
beetroot, nutritional yeast and
2:33:23
coconut fat. Co Founder and
Chief Executive as Tom said, we
2:33:29
define meat was launching
tenderloin and strip loin
2:33:32
steaks.
2:33:33
In the past two years, we have
been working deeply on
2:33:35
understanding meat and what
makes meat so exciting. And we
2:33:39
identified a few components that
we can recreate from plants and
2:33:44
have the same exact performance
as tissue of animal meat.
2:33:48
Leaving you with the combination
of additive manufacturing. The
2:33:52
exact feeling your experience, a
good steak, meat coming from an
2:33:56
animal without the use of the
animal
2:33:59
genius. What could possibly go
wrong?
2:34:03
You know I was thinking about
this and they're doing this
2:34:08
wrong you can't go from zero to
100 is what they're trying to do
2:34:12
ya if you started off for
example, with 3d printed candy
2:34:20
3d printed chocolates 3d printed
Mars bars
2:34:24
aren't they already 3d printed?
2:34:26
No, they're made or manufactured
in a giant factory. There's no
2:34:31
3d printers that you are you can
make you know make something on
2:34:35
a on a on a 3d printed. You can
just know 3d printer involved.
2:34:41
No but if you started making 3d
printed candy and 3d printed
2:34:45
simple things, and got people
used to eating 3d printed
2:34:51
whatever it was, you could Rach
it. You could ratchet it up to
2:34:54
protein products or meats or
Salamis or whoever no one knows
2:34:59
what you're going to want to Do
but you can't just go jump right
2:35:03
to meat. That's ridiculous.
2:35:06
Well, you know, obviously this
is a futuristic report, but they
2:35:09
are dead serious about it. It's
a little, you're correct when it
2:35:14
comes to changing our diet to
moving away from pure, beautiful
2:35:18
animal protein, and into these
3d additive printing scenarios
2:35:24
of fake meat, and soy, but also,
as we know, bug products, it's a
2:35:30
lot more subtle. The approach
the bug guys are taken, then the
2:35:35
3d printed meat guys.
2:35:37
And I agree, I think the bug
guys are doing a much better job
2:35:40
of marketing the bug peeps.
2:35:42
So the very, very big favorite
show of foodies around the world
2:35:51
is the great British baking
show. That airs in America as
2:35:55
well. And here's a snippet from
a recent episode the morning.
2:36:00
Tell us about your hanging land.
I have decided to celebrate
2:36:03
horror movies. So I'm making a
popcorn box with curry
2:36:07
decoration and I'm gonna hide
two different levels. Trick or
2:36:11
Treat truffles. You knew she's
truffles will be hidden within a
2:36:14
popcorn box London built from
Armand sadly biscuit and feech
2:36:18
Retreat flavored with spice
pumpkin and a trick containing
2:36:21
pistachio and Crickets.
Crickets. Yes, they're gonna be
2:36:24
made with cricket powder. And
then we've smoked whole crickets
2:36:27
inside to provide the cans for
GrandAm
2:36:30
really nice to actually be more
like Patreon.
2:36:32
They make quite good flour for
so what are we just talking
2:36:35
about insects? Here we are. And
you know what insects are going
2:36:39
to be the future because they're
easy to farm. Cheap, very
2:36:43
ecologically sound. And they
pretty nice as well. It tastes
2:36:46
like you're eating bacon. I
think that's very original. And
2:36:48
I'm looking forward to that.
Thank you. Thank you. Okay,
2:36:51
let's deal with that woman who
was on that show is pretty good
2:36:57
on the show as a judge. She,
they she's gotten ahead of
2:37:02
herself, because they've given
her given her her own show. Uh
2:37:05
huh. Where she cooks? No, she
stinks. And the end of analysis
2:37:14
I
2:37:14
liked I liked the one guy saying
they're really peppery. This is
2:37:18
one of your
2:37:18
descriptions and talking about
I've never heard crickets being
2:37:22
peppery.
2:37:24
Do you know
2:37:26
the kid ever wants to well JL E
to cricket or something? Because
2:37:30
there'll be some packaged goods
floating around and she loves to
2:37:34
do this. Anyway, this datamine
he
2:37:36
called she loves to gross you
out with that, like, I want to
2:37:38
eat a cricket?
2:37:40
Yeah, something like that, which
doesn't gross me out. It's just
2:37:42
you know, it's just Disney and I
roll I guess good exercise. So
2:37:49
I've never heard from anybody
that they're peppery. So anybody
2:37:53
out there eat crickets and tell
me they're peppery? I know ants
2:37:56
are for sure not all answer
peppery? Well, the ones around
2:37:59
here are Argentine Argentine.
And yeah,
2:38:03
there's their spicy. Spicy from
Iran, Tina. Hey, oh, it's so if
2:38:10
I just gotta just do a
completely different topic
2:38:12
because I'm surprised that we
have this clip left over. I
2:38:15
haven't even discussed it before
the first donation segment
2:38:18
overnight,
2:38:18
a federal appeals court granted
the request from attorneys
2:38:21
general of six Republican led
states to put a hold on the
2:38:25
Biden administration student
loan forgiveness plan. Now in
2:38:28
limbo, just days after people
began applying for loan
2:38:32
forgiveness ABCs Karen Travers
joins us now with the details.
2:38:35
Karen. Good morning.
2:38:37
Good morning. Well, this is a
major blow to a key policy that
2:38:40
President Biden campaigning on
ahead of the midterm elections,
2:38:43
about 22 million Americans have
already applied through this
2:38:46
relief program. And it's only
been open for a week. And now
2:38:50
it's not clear what this order
means for those borrowers. The
2:38:53
White House is still encouraging
people to apply under this
2:38:56
program. White House press
secretary Korean John Pierre
2:38:59
said in a statement last night
this order does not prevent the
2:39:02
education department from
reviewing applications. But also
2:39:06
unknown is whether the several
legal challenges right now
2:39:09
against the president's loan
forgiveness program will be
2:39:12
resolved by January 1. That's
when payments on all federal
2:39:16
student loans have to restart
after a nearly three year pause
2:39:20
due to the COVID pandemic.
2:39:25
So what's this all about? That's
a big promise that Joe has and
2:39:30
they're trying to thwart him.
Oh, poor
2:39:34
Joe.
2:39:36
Do you think it'll stick?
2:39:38
Yeah, I do. I think to Nancy
Pelosi, we still have the clip
2:39:42
of her saying that you can't do
that because it's illegal.
2:39:46
That's your right. Yeah. The
president can't do this.
2:39:52
Well, let's talk about some
other Biden stuff. Then I got to
2:39:55
get one of the clippers to Biden
oil and the oil reserves which
2:39:58
he's got the national Petroleum
Institute or the big boys, oil
2:40:02
industry guys all bent out of
shape
2:40:05
after President Biden Wednesday
said he's releasing 15 million
2:40:08
barrels from the Strategic
Petroleum Reserve in an effort
2:40:11
to lower gas prices. One
American oil industry leader
2:40:14
says the SPR has become the
strategic political reserve.
2:40:19
Here's what American Petroleum
Institute president and CEO Mike
2:40:23
summers told Fox Business
Thursday.
2:40:25
This is a very precarious
position we're in today, at a
2:40:29
time of dramatic geopolitical
upheaval. We need to have that
2:40:34
SPR in place and at the right
levels dealing with the current
2:40:38
geopolitical situation we're in
today. The SPR
2:40:41
is a stockpile of crude oil
owned by the US government. It's
2:40:45
a backup in case the commercial
oil supply is disrupted. Last
2:40:49
November, Biden first announced
he was releasing oil from the
2:40:52
SPR to lower gas prices. He
called it the largest release in
2:40:56
US history. Since then, he's
released a lot more. Right now.
2:41:01
The emergency reserve is at its
lowest level in nearly 40 years.
2:41:05
But the difference now according
to oil industry leader Mike
2:41:08
summers, is we use 27% more oil
than we did back then suggesting
2:41:14
we should have more oil in the
reserves. Some Republican
2:41:17
lawmakers and oil industry
officials have accused Biden of
2:41:21
misusing the SPR for political
reasons. They allege Biden is
2:41:25
releasing the oil now to try to
keep gas prices lower before the
2:41:29
midterms which could help
Democrat candidates. But Biden
2:41:33
when state denied those claims.
2:41:35
I've been doing this for how
long now?
2:41:38
It's not politically motivated
2:41:39
at all.
2:41:41
Blamed high fuel prices on
Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
2:41:44
But oil industry leader Mike
summers blames Biden's policies,
2:41:48
which he says have clamped down
on US oil production. Summers
2:41:53
told Fox under Biden federal oil
leases are at record low levels.
2:41:57
He said federal leases haven't
been this few since World War
2:42:01
Two. Bloody Putin
2:42:04
Putin Putin this fall this is a
gross misuse of course this is
2:42:10
meant for wartime so that we'll
have you know if we have to
2:42:13
crank some production up that we
have this stuff in and now it's
2:42:17
I don't know how much is left
but
2:42:22
ever. I'm sorry. But ya know,
this is a misuse of government
2:42:26
power. I have I just
2:42:30
feel like this. There's
something something's going to
2:42:32
pop in the next couple of weeks.
You know, we haven't really had
2:42:35
the right October surprise, no
one has really done anything of
2:42:38
note. I mean, there's they're
trying to get things go and is
2:42:43
there no one in American
politics anymore? Who has a good
2:42:46
old fashioned October surprise
that blows our socks off? Is
2:42:49
that no longer available?
2:42:51
This is last time we had a good
one. The last time was during
2:42:55
the I think the Jimmy Carter
administration when Reagan
2:42:58
somehow made the Iranians keep
the hostages.
2:43:06
Yeah, that's what I mean. Let's
do one of those. Yeah,
2:43:08
well, I think you know, better
men, Futterman, whatever his
2:43:11
name is, could probably shoot
five, shoot him right there and
2:43:15
then be get away with it because
he's got brain damage. Okay,
2:43:19
that would be something.
2:43:20
Yeah. Yay. Great.
2:43:23
So I've got two light clips.
belabor this both minute long.
2:43:28
But I just got a kick out of
these analysis is from one end
2:43:33
of the spectrum, New Tang
Dynasty. And then NPR. And it's
2:43:37
interesting to contrast these
two clips is Georgia Maloney.
2:43:43
Not quite friend of the show,
but she's in Italy and becoming
2:43:46
the the prime minister there
were the president the Prime
2:43:49
Minister.
2:43:49
Well, well, if she can form the
government. No, she did. She
2:43:52
did. Okay, with Bella. Dandy.
Okay, done.
2:43:56
So go to go to Georgia bologna
update
2:43:59
Italy's Georgia Maloney told the
President today that she's ready
2:44:02
to become prime minister. She
said she is able to form a new
2:44:05
government swiftly despite some
tension within her right wing
2:44:09
coalition. I think Yamo of your
2:44:11
man, obviously we now await the
decisions of the President of
2:44:14
the Republic, whom we thank for
his Magisterium at such a
2:44:18
particular moment in the
nation's history. And obviously,
2:44:22
we're already announcing that
we're ready, because we want to
2:44:25
proceed as quickly as possible.
Thank you all and have a good
2:44:28
day.
2:44:29
Bologna of the brothers of Italy
party met the president
2:44:32
alongside her main allies, those
of the leader of the
2:44:35
Conservative league party and
founder of the conservative
2:44:38
Forza Italia party. The
president is expected to call
2:44:41
her back to his office later in
the day to ask her formally to
2:44:44
become prime minister. The new
cabinet is likely to be sworn in
2:44:48
over the weekend. The
conservative bloc won a
2:44:50
commanding parliamentary
majority at a September 25
2:44:53
general election. It was
Maloney's party that took the
2:44:56
most votes. The victory put her
in position to become Italy. His
2:45:00
first female prime minister.
2:45:02
Okay, all right, well,
2:45:05
I got it. But but but, but, but
it was no good because there's
2:45:10
not a Neri Nari. I'll use that
word. nary a mention of her
2:45:14
being a fascist pig.
2:45:16
I was just gonna say where's the
far right well, let me try. So
2:45:20
this is NPR that we're going to
play. I've not listened to the
2:45:22
clip of course, I'm thinking
they say, Italy's soon to be far
2:45:26
right. Prime Minister with
fascist Neo fascist roots of the
2:45:34
party.
2:45:36
You've already listened to the
clip.
2:45:38
I did not I swear to you, I did
not I never do that ever.
2:45:43
But so we hear a normal report
and mentioned she's a woman and
2:45:47
all the rest is a very
straightforward newspaper, but
2:45:49
without the propaganda. So let's
listen to the NPR take on the
2:45:53
exact same story.
2:45:55
Italy's first female prime
minister took the oath of office
2:45:59
today in Rome, ushering in the
country's most right wing
2:46:02
governments since World War Two.
Giorgio Maloney's party brothers
2:46:06
of Italy has its roots in the
ashes of fascism. Never
2:46:11
repudiated the 20 year
dictatorship. And Dr. Sylvia
2:46:14
Poggioli reports
2:46:15
standing in the frescoed halls
of the presidential palace the
2:46:18
45 year old populist leader
clearly enunciated the words of
2:46:22
the oath of office by memory he
would have Yes Senator De La La
2:46:26
Repubblica, the cabinet is
formed by many Maloney loyalists
2:46:29
reflecting what commentators
call a nativist slant promoting
2:46:33
the interests of native born
inhabitants against those of
2:46:36
immigrants. Maloney will govern
with the hard right anti
2:46:40
immigrant league party and go
Italy the party of former Prime
2:46:43
Minister immediate tycoon Silvio
Berlusconi, the top issues
2:46:47
she'll face will be rising
inflation and trying to maintain
2:46:50
a united front and back in
Ukraine, despite bedless gurneys
2:46:54
close relations with Russian
President Vladimir Putin
2:47:00
we got Putin in there we got it.
I love ashes of fascism. Holy
2:47:06
moly. Someone worked on that
one.
2:47:08
Yeah, that actually has
objective NPR you know, telling
2:47:13
us they're giving us news
reports making sure there's a
2:47:16
huge slant it was I found it to
be the one of the most offensive
2:47:19
things they've done. They should
be you know, they did mention
2:47:22
she's a woman that's a guy guess
something. But yeah, I was
2:47:26
pretty pathetic. I'm gonna show
my school by donating to no
2:47:31
agenda. Imagine all the people
who could do that. Oh yeah,
2:47:34
that'd be fun we have a few
people with thanks for show 1497
2:47:46
We do this before our 50th
anniversary.
2:47:49
Anniversary week anniversary we
University week
2:47:51
on Wednesday. $161.80
2:47:57
Of all the things we mess up
preparing anything we ever
2:48:00
prepare is always messed up any
script any Gambit any joke No.
2:48:05
Yeah. And now even our birthday
we have messed up the week
2:48:13
I'll tell you what, I come up
with an idea that I'll make it
2:48:15
up okay. All right. I'm elected.
Yeah, I will. I know do see I
2:48:20
will talk about it do San
melodic melodic in Bartlett
2:48:27
Bartlett Texas. And he just sent
a note in complaining about
2:48:32
about my about Pay Pal.
2:48:36
No, is that what he said? I
have. Do you have the note? It's
2:48:38
kind of hard
2:48:39
to read this thing but
2:48:41
let me see if I can do that. I
2:48:43
glorified Pay Pal. That's what
he said. Yeah, I said we it's a
2:48:50
it's an we've never had any
trouble with them. I always like
2:48:52
PayPal.
2:48:54
Just okay. Glorifying them
wasn't
2:48:57
glorifying anybody telling you
what my policies are. All right,
2:49:02
gotcha. Anonymous, alias
Princess JJ Lu ITM as donated
2:49:08
$123.22 from Lakewood, Colorado.
And she says I'd like a treasure
2:49:14
karma for the best podcasts in
the universe and all of those
2:49:16
small businesses trying to stay
afloat. We will put a karma for
2:49:19
you at the end. Jason Bible.
This What do you think Bible
2:49:25
BYOB em? byobu and Austin,
Texas. He's in it for $120.12
2:49:31
Joe Dirks in Amsterdam, Holland.
103 28
2:49:36
Though he's promoting the
Halloween meet up environment on
2:49:39
the 29th this
2:49:40
month. The thing is on the
meetups. It is it is this but
2:49:44
he's promoting it extra
promotion Benson and Mel taze
2:49:47
and Victoria BC, II en field 100
l by their events was 100 Ian's
2:49:54
100 and Josh Buford Buford
Buford in Henrico, Virginia 808
2:50:00
followed by the ever never
ending Sir Kevin McLaughlin,
2:50:04
Archduke of Luna lover of
American boobs. Eight Oh, a
2:50:08
donation from locust North
Carolina. And he's in he's got
2:50:12
another urgent PSA. Oh dear
small save them all.
2:50:17
Breast Cancer Awareness cancer.
2:50:20
Okay. Dan Bailey $50 $31.50 in
Fremont, California. Forrest
2:50:26
Martin 505 Parts Unknown.
Tatiana prints in Hollywood,
2:50:31
Florida is a $50 donor and the
following people are all $50
2:50:34
donors name and location, if I
have it, Robert Hannah in Poway,
2:50:39
California. Patrick may come in
New York City, Sir Patrick, Bart
2:50:45
Baek Wilder, in Veghel, North
Brabant, the New York City of
2:50:52
the Low Countries in
Netherlands. Is that right? No.
2:50:58
But I like
2:50:59
I had a hunch it wasn't right.
Hey, town name Norte. Newer
2:51:04
double North Brabant.
2:51:06
Well, I think the town is
fettle.
2:51:09
speckle Lawrence
2:51:12
I allowed to wake up in a city
that's name federal.
2:51:18
No, John Lawrence helot. Texas,
or hell? Yes. Hell lots. Hello,
2:51:23
It's Kate Pascall in San Rafael.
Hey, California, Michael Romano
2:51:30
in Sebastopol. Same Jennifer
Ouida in Carrollton Georgia.
2:51:37
Alexa Delgado in Aptos.
California David Purdue and Snow
2:51:41
Hill, Snow Hill, North Carolina.
Daniel a boy in Bath Michigan.
2:51:48
Julianne Robins in Aptos
California and last but not
2:51:52
least a very short list that
only 31 donors will make it up
2:51:56
with a big next Thursday motion
2:51:58
massive special promotion to
make up for make up for screwing
2:52:02
up the start of our birthday
week. Your your piece of work as
2:52:06
Oh my Michael
2:52:07
stat Tama 50 bucks. He's on the
end and no relation to the
2:52:13
actor. So want to thank all
these folks are making a show
2:52:16
1497 We still good? You know, is
it a couple of big boys at the
2:52:20
top and helped a lot.
2:52:22
We're very we're very
appreciative. And thank you to
2:52:24
these producers, as you
mentioned, our executive and
2:52:27
Associate Executive producers
and everyone who still has a
2:52:30
subscription for our sustaining
donation under $50. Also, for
2:52:33
reasons of anonymity, all of it
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2:52:36
matter what the number is, we
don't care. If you're you can
2:52:40
listen to this for 100 years and
never send us anything. As long
2:52:43
as you're happy with that,
that's fine. Most people like to
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push some value back, which of
which $3 may be a lot, too
2:52:50
doesn't matter to us as long as
you're sending back the equal
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value that you feel you received
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learn more about that we have a
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bora.org/in A day
2:53:04
we have some karma here for
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got karma
2:53:17
and here's everything short
today back man she celebrated on
2:53:21
the 10th of october so it's a
little bit late Tammy Maclean 54
2:53:25
on the 21st and we really
appreciate her super donation
2:53:29
today. And Sir David Foley and
myself Adam curry uncle Adam
2:53:34
will say Happy Birthday district
David Foley son London 17 on the
2:53:38
25th and I'm very proud he is
embarking on helicopter lessons
2:53:42
good for you screw College.
Happy Birthday on behalf of
2:53:46
everybody here it's the best
podcast in the universe don't
2:53:58
want to be caught right the end
luckily, we have a title change
2:54:03
here for surf dude named Jeff
who today with additional
2:54:07
donation becomes a baron and he
will be the barren dude named
2:54:11
Jeff and he is chooses the
protector of the lands which we
2:54:16
think is just fine for him to
have Thank you very much sir
2:54:18
dude named Jeff now Baron. We
had to make good here which is
2:54:23
from Oh no, it's a note from
lower on the on the spreadsheet
2:54:28
because this is from Patrick
Leduc no Patrick in Leduc
2:54:33
Alberta, Canada Navia he is the
victor echo six uniform echo 70
2:54:38
threes nightmare he says after
many years of listening dotted
2:54:42
with donations, celebrity
birthdays, anniversaries and
2:54:45
important no agenda numerology.
My loving wife, Beth tells me
2:54:49
I've got to be teetering on the
edge of knighthood. I didn't
2:54:52
keep track of the donation
amounts or show numbers thinking
2:54:55
I'd never actually achieved
peerage, my smokin hot milk
2:54:58
painstakingly went through
emails in numerous show donation
2:55:01
segments to find what was lost
and furnish me with the
2:55:04
accounting below. And he says,
Thanks, babe. I'm an idiot. That
2:55:10
was right just like in the
commercial. Like, yeah, that's
2:55:13
what they want to
2:55:14
show honey.
2:55:15
I don't know how to operate the
washing machine. Oh, I got the
2:55:19
wrong Peter Jones altered know
how to count
2:55:22
anyway, he loves his wife. Thank
you. If the parents committee
2:55:26
accepts I'd like to be knighted
as Sir Patrick night of the 30
2:55:30
meter band. Well, of course.
Although that's so weird man. 30
2:55:35
meter band that's like what is
that? Is that the 20 to 2121
2:55:40
megahertz is weird. It's always
I can never get good connection.
2:55:46
30 meter band 20 works 40 works.
2:55:48
The guy talked to him. He didn't
tell me help me. I'd like to
2:55:51
know. Yeah, I've never really
had
2:55:52
good luck or antenna man. No.
Well, it's another one like 30
2:55:57
meter antenna. Just you never
have an antenna that's kind of
2:56:00
tuned for 2040 and 30. Anyway,
he will be bringing stroke
2:56:05
voxels and so slick Veracruz
schlocky to the I don't even
2:56:10
know what slick Veracruz
schlocky is but that's some kind
2:56:12
of sounds like a duck drink. I
gotta look that one up. So we
2:56:16
have him standing by and why
don't we get our swords out? And
2:56:20
since we're ready to do it, we
have got you right here. All
2:56:24
right. Actually, we have a knife
and a game. That's right. Tammy
2:56:32
McLean, step on up here and
Patrick Visser, both of you have
2:56:35
supported the no agenda show in
the amount of $1,000 or more no
2:56:38
matter how long it takes. I'm
very proud to pronounce the Kate
2:56:41
D as Dame Tommy office of bricky
Hill and Sir Patrick Blacknight
2:56:47
of the 30 meter band. I guess we
did screw it up. All right there
2:56:50
Sir Patrick, for both of you.
We've got hookers and blow rent
2:56:54
boys and Chardonnay. We've got
this throw baffles and slicked
2:56:56
back for smoking. We also have
geishas and sock a Reuben has
2:57:00
limited Rosae vodka and vanilla
bong hits and bourbon, sparkling
2:57:03
cider and escorts. We got mutton
and meat over there somewhere.
2:57:09
Go to no agenda nation.com/rings
Let us know where to send off
2:57:15
your very handsome ring and
actually produce a one's a night
2:57:19
ring. The other one's a dame
ring almost indistinguishable
2:57:21
from each other. So therefore,
we also need your, your ring
2:57:24
size. I think there's even a
handy guide there. And we'll
2:57:27
send it off with your wax which
you can use for sealing your
2:57:30
important correspondence which
you do with your knight or Dame
2:57:34
ring, which I
2:57:36
mentioned, you know people
should go to a jeweler to get
2:57:40
measurement. Pretend they want
to buy a ring there and get
2:57:43
measure so they know what their
ring size is. Absolutely. Yeah,
2:57:48
let's have a complaint before
you get to the next segment.
2:57:53
Notes at no agenda show.net is
where you send donation notes.
2:58:00
Not clips and news items.
Because they don't have access
2:58:07
to that account. Eric gets it
then he says do any does the
2:58:11
books it so I missed a good bit
that I would have put on this
2:58:15
show. What's the bad how Vander
Lyons a corrupt person that she
2:58:19
is going to be out?
2:58:21
What was the bid? How would you
have known? What was
2:58:25
what is it that some guy sent a
note to no agenda? nation or no
2:58:29
nation? No agenda show.net. And
I got it this morning. But it
2:58:33
was sent last Friday and I
should have had it I would have
2:58:36
been able to listen to the the
evidence was oh,
2:58:40
I don't know where this has one
other thank you for stopping the
2:58:44
show. Actually, there was one
other donation. Oh crap, man.
2:58:48
And who did this come from?
Somebody sent in a donation we
2:58:52
see if there was a note
associated associated with it.
2:58:55
But maybe they'll maybe didn't
donate but he sent in a backing
2:58:59
track for the Gitmo nation
national anthem and he says he
2:59:01
wants to get listen to this. He
wants to get people to audition
2:59:06
to sing or something but it's a
pretty written version listen to
2:59:10
this Yeah, that's
2:59:22
pretty good. You're gonna post
that so people can use it as a
2:59:25
track
2:59:25
Yes, I will post it and then
yeah, that's that's the only way
2:59:29
to do it. I guess
2:59:29
we have anybody that can
actually sing a complete song
2:59:33
without you know, holding
without going off
2:59:36
key. Millennial male for sure.
Oh, yeah. She
2:59:40
would be out. Yeah, millennial
male can do it.
2:59:42
I asked millennial male to do a
different version. She did a it
2:59:46
was interesting because she did
a whole beautiful classical
2:59:48
version of while we're at it.
Let me see. Mel, Mel. Yeah,
3:00:00
Here's Mel's piano anthem
3:00:07
also pretty alright, so I'm
gonna post both of these then
3:00:12
how about that? Yeah, good. We
need to cuz you know the the
3:00:16
originals getting pretty tired
people get on the stick Why did
3:00:22
i Why did the network get mo
national? Make sure
3:00:25
the Ford or die
3:00:28
innovate the show needs to
innovate. All right so that's
3:00:32
the business there. Time for the
meetups. There we go
3:00:43
we got a couple of reports that
came in. Here's the first one
3:00:47
the I must be Hi meetup reports.
My gossipy. Hi,
3:00:51
Nina, Toronto.
3:00:53
Good. We got it. Sir Sterling of
the Oxnard. Why do they want us
3:00:58
to eat bugs? Why don't they feed
the chicken bugs and then we'll
3:01:01
eat the chicken.
3:01:02
I'm 11 years old on the inside.
This is Victor living the mac
3:01:06
and cheese life in the morning.
Hey, John.
3:01:11
Probably a douche bag. In the
morning in the night, bro. But
3:01:15
up to all the other fellow
producers man.
3:01:19
But resist we much. We must. And
we will much about that.
3:01:26
Dude, these guys were baked at
this meeting. No kidding. Those
3:01:33
guys. Oh my, you know they
should try some of that. So what
3:01:39
are you gonna do? They should
try some of that. atomoxetine
3:01:43
teen now get get spruced up a
little bit. All right space
3:01:48
coast. Moonbase meet up report.
3:01:50
This is Mike Bravo from the
Cocoa Beach Space Coast room
3:01:53
bass roundtable. In the morning,
y'all.
3:01:56
This is Chad. We had a great
conversation talking about
3:01:59
tortilleria mud floods and
data's been great.
3:02:05
New Smyrna Beach Cirque shows
and thrilling seashores check in
3:02:08
and again, cup of coffee in the
big time boys. Thank you for
3:02:11
your courage in the morning.
3:02:15
Randy Savage macho man. So today
there's the North Texas autumn
3:02:20
meet, shoot, meet and shoot
which I expect a great report
3:02:24
from that started very early at
9am. At extreme tactics and
3:02:28
training solutions, my buddy Vic
actually and his wife Chris,
3:02:31
they were here for the weekend.
And they live up in Dallas like,
3:02:33
oh, man, I wouldn't have even
come to stay with you if I knew
3:02:36
that was happening. Waxahachie,
Texas. So hopefully Eric will
3:02:42
give us a report on that. The
Central Connecticut Meetup is
3:02:45
probably over by now but that
was in Connecticut Valley
3:02:48
Brewing Company South Windsor
Connecticut. Same goes for the
3:02:52
indie na tribal meetup but they
may still be hanging in they
3:02:54
only kicked off two hours ago
half liter BBQ in Indianapolis,
3:02:58
Indiana. The inaugural 12 mile
wedgie meetup took place is
3:03:03
underway at the bee here brewing
Avondale, Pennsylvania. On
3:03:08
Thursday, a part of the no
agenda birthday week I'm
3:03:11
reliably informed that'll be the
27th North Idaho Saturday
3:03:15
brigade meet at 330 Pacific at
Selkirk Abbey and Post Falls,
3:03:19
Idaho. And finally also on that
Thursday for our birthday week.
3:03:25
Summertime meet up six o'clock
Central burnt and barbecue
3:03:28
that'll be in Overland Park,
Texas. These are just a few of
3:03:32
the meetups that you can attend
you can find them all at no
3:03:35
agenda meetups.com It truly the
way to expand your no agenda
3:03:40
experience is to visit at least
one of these once in your life.
3:03:44
You will not be disappointed you
will have a good time we obey
3:03:48
you too. If you can't find one
near you start one yourself.
3:03:52
Sometimes you Tyson days you
won't be triggered. You will be
3:04:05
where everybody is like right
meetups man the meetups. The
3:04:16
meetups are great. And so proud
of our meetups.
3:04:19
Yeah, yeah, it's really high to
the book. attractive female that
3:04:24
called me what? In Toronto?
3:04:29
How do you how do you know she
was attracted
3:04:33
by her voice?
3:04:35
Oh, you're a connoisseur. Hmm
3:04:37
so here we go. I have one loan I
show
3:04:42
now is it the killer so I do
mine first. I got three
3:04:47
it's a good one but get to your
three first
3:04:51
we're going we're going for the
anticlimax everybody. Alright,
3:04:54
here we go. Hello. Nice gay
Hello at the end. No
3:05:00
My balls in a bag.
3:05:02
No, no. And the only one I have
is bloody bloody potent. That's
3:05:07
all I got.
3:05:09
Well, the Hello wins in that
group, I think okay, but it's
3:05:13
the end of the show she would do
and say hello. What you want to
3:05:15
say is my ISO
3:05:17
hasta LaVista. Baby. We will use
that. No, we
3:05:23
didn't it was just clipped. You
know, it was our today's show.
3:05:27
He Boris
3:05:27
said this a long time ago.
3:05:31
He said it was a clip from
today's show. It's when he flew
3:05:35
back. He said sigh No, hasta
LaVista. Baby, okay. And we ever
3:05:39
use it on the show.
3:05:40
We have used a clip of him
saying I still obese find it?
3:05:49
Okay. I'll find it for I'm not
going to do it now, obviously.
3:05:53
But believe me, I know these
things. I remember stuff.
3:05:58
Compression. It was just on
today's show. And
3:06:04
I know, this isn't. This is an
old thing he said. And in
3:06:08
hindsight, because I heard it in
your clip today. I know that he
3:06:12
said that hasta Lavista baby was
at the end of his speech in in
3:06:15
Parliament. In hindsight, he
should have said I'll be back.
3:06:18
See, that's what he should have
done.
3:06:21
That you grew up, you should
apply for a job as a consultant
3:06:27
with the Boris campaign who
3:06:29
says I'm not already won.
3:06:31
And I couldn't. Who would ever
tell me I know that. Alright, so
3:06:34
we're going to do your hostel a
visa, baby like it's all new and
3:06:38
stuff. Okay, well, that's really
fun. Wow, brand new clip.
3:06:42
Everybody has to love visa,
baby.
3:06:44
My entire show clip is Steve
Bannon was sentenced to four
3:06:48
months in jail. Yeah, little
speech on it. And he's got
3:06:52
nothing there but hecklers who
hate him.
3:06:55
Steve Bannon, the ex adviser to
former President Trump has been
3:06:58
sentenced to four months in
prison. Here's what he said just
3:07:02
before the sentencing. Remember,
3:07:04
this illegitimate regime? There
there judgment on
3:07:10
November when the administration
ends, I want to thank you all
3:07:14
for coming. Nice, by the way.
And remember, take down the CCP.
3:07:20
Thank you.
3:07:22
Bannon was also fined 260 $500.
But he doesn't have to pay or go
3:07:26
to prison just yet. Brandon's
attorney plans to appeal the
3:07:30
conviction, and the judge
allowed the sentence to be
3:07:32
delayed until after the appeal
in July bandhan was convicted of
3:07:36
two counts of contempt of
Congress for not appearing to
3:07:39
testify and for not handing over
documents related to a subpoena
3:07:43
from the January 6 House
committee is attorney says the
3:07:46
appeal of the conviction is
quote bulletproof. Because
3:07:49
Bannon was prohibited from
explaining why he didn't comply
3:07:52
with the subpoena.
3:07:53
Yeah, so there's gonna be an
appeal. And meanwhile, he just
3:07:56
sits on his show and just keeps
doing his stammering Yeah. So
3:08:01
it's a nothing burger.
3:08:02
It's a total joke.
3:08:05
All right. All right. I'm going
to top your end of show clip.
3:08:08
With this one.
3:08:09
An increase in legalized
marijuana is sending more pets
3:08:12
to the hospital. One poison
control center report 6200 cases
3:08:16
of apparent marijuana poisoning
of pets in the last year. Vets
3:08:20
advise people not to leave weed
laying around saying pets don't
3:08:23
ingest marijuana like people do.
3:08:26
I don't think weed is the
problem is probably edibles. But
3:08:30
okay yesterday, man mr. ABC had
3:08:33
died recently from chomping down
too many edibles his mom was
3:08:36
thrown in jail for murder.
3:08:37
Yeah, but it was the sugar in
the edibles that killed the kid
3:08:40
not the weed. Killer. Yeah, the
fentanyl because it was colored
3:08:48
pretty. Anyway, people do not
leave your weed right laying
3:08:54
around because the last thing
you want is your dog eating your
3:08:58
good weed to it's a waste of
weed. We have a big live show. I
3:09:06
think it's the Battle of the
douchebags coming up next on no
3:09:11
agenda stream if you're a troll
room died i Oh yes it is live
3:09:15
the Battle of the douchebags.
Part Eight with the SIR seat
3:09:20
sitter midnight, Mike, Tom
Starkweather, Guelph, and Adam
3:09:25
from G G RP. My goodness. I
coming to you from the heart of
3:09:29
the Texas Hill Country. That is
FEMA Region number six in the
3:09:32
morning, everybody. I'm Adam
curry,
3:09:34
and from Northern Silicon
Valley, where I remain I'm John
3:09:38
C Devorah. And
3:09:39
of show mixes coming to you from
Jesse Coyne Nelson DS laughs and
3:09:45
Rolando Gonzalez remember us at
the vortech.org/na until
3:09:50
Thursday, adios mofos and such
Hui Hui
3:10:00
And Jorge Ventura live at the
border. Thank you for your
3:10:04
courage El Salvador finest shout
out his order. Shout out to the
3:10:07
Neptunes and Phillies most on
the 2000 classic cross the
3:10:11
border, Rob from the citizens
never leaving as board he's
3:10:14
going to paint into the common
man Rob Ford. Yo my pops work
3:10:17
with him in the 90s at City
Hall, who looked more common
3:10:20
than that ran Rob Ford. He was
appalled whose Joy slick with
3:10:23
the talk the media couldn't Buck
because he had these custom
3:10:26
sound bites that made him
infamous and well known. Man
3:10:29
said that he had more than
enough to eat at home. CP 24
3:10:34
clips you're having a giant,
late night getting jerk chicken
3:10:37
at the jerks by smoking the
crack rock for somebody? Yes, it
3:10:40
was a lot. But when the salary
video leave my mail are pretty
3:10:44
weak. Your cattle was so funny
like he couldn't even speak.
3:10:47
We'll see you next week.
3:10:53
We cannot discuss pricing.
Pricing is confidential. And
3:10:57
from that point of view, I know
again, you're going to be very
3:11:00
frustrated. I can see it in your
faces. You're going to be very
3:11:04
frustrated with my answer, but
pricing is confidential. And
3:11:08
from that point of view, I am
not able to have a conversation
3:11:11
with you have a station but we
cannot discuss pricing. It is
3:11:16
confidential.
3:11:20
Please
3:11:24
tell us what we're doing here.
Profits and profits and profits.
3:11:29
I am proposing that this
committee declares itself
3:11:32
incompetent. Just committee
lacks the authority to get to
3:11:37
the bottom of crucial questions.
The fact that Mr. Borla CEO
3:11:42
Pfizer taciti to refuse to
appear in front of this
3:11:45
committee to answer your
question constitutes the gross
3:11:49
disregard for the people who is
tax money. We cannot compel a
3:11:55
crucial player to appear in
front of this committee and this
3:11:58
committee is useless. According
to the rules, you will have to
3:12:03
let me continue. i Furthermore
proposed that this committee
3:12:06
concludes to restore the peoples
of Europe. Go ahead to target to
3:12:12
me.
3:12:15
This morning parents speaking
out as school districts across
3:12:19
the country opt to cancel
Halloween celebrations.
3:12:22
Parents really need to hear this
morning powder and pills that
3:12:25
are brightly colored
3:12:26
school districts are saying no
saying no to rightly covered
3:12:30
that no pill candy that could be
deadly trick or treating is
3:12:34
extra concerning this year to
war on Halloween. Rainbow
3:12:39
fentanyl. I feel like it's just
crossing the line. It's just
3:12:42
where to send. The DEA first
issued a warning about it. Four
3:12:46
weeks ago many people are dying
from fentanyl poisoned
3:12:49
they say they found it in at
least 21 states that it's a
3:12:52
trick of the devil
3:12:53
many see Halloween as a fun
candy filled holiday. This is
3:12:57
not the case. First of all you
did this for the filwood Stupid
3:12:59
little holidays should not have
Halloween kids. No costumes, no
3:13:03
candy. Nope, they're all dressed
up. And hookers. There's danger
3:13:09
in every venue in every way.
3:13:11
Oh just which are these walls
Mercer's practicing this stuff
3:13:14
giving you this kind of candy.
And are you taking this stuff
3:13:16
home? You put that stuff into
your body?
3:13:19
What exactly are you talking
about when you say rainbow?
3:13:24
They're making rainbow colored
pills and it could be deadly. It
3:13:27
looks like candy. Sweet Tarts.
Skittles. Pink or blue, or
3:13:33
yellow. All the colors of the
rainbow. There is no more urgent
3:13:37
threat with our kids just talked
about the electorate as it
3:13:41
starts in schools.
3:13:42
So why would you why would you
bring that kind of curse into
3:13:45
your house and curse your family
from three to four generations.
3:13:49
So next people are going to be
affected by pumpkins. They're
3:13:51
going to take away pumpkins or
jack o lanterns or pumpkin
3:13:54
carving. boruch.org/in a
3:14:08
hustler the star