Cover for No Agenda Show 1519: Freeze Peach
January 8th, 2023 • 3h 0m

1519: Freeze Peach

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0:00
Yeah, hall monitor.
0:01
Adam curry
0:02
Jhansi Dvorak, Sunday, January 8 2023. This is your award
0:06
winning keep our nation media assassination episode 1519
0:10
This is no agenda armed with
0:13
AI antidote and broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas
0:17
hill country here in the region number six in the morning,
0:19
everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:22
from Northern Silicon Valley where I have to report it's
0:24
sunny. I'm Jhansi Dvorak
0:28
buzzkill
0:30
I don't understand how that can be I'm literally reading the
0:34
right here bomb cyclone two inundate California again.
0:39
Again, has it happened is your bomb in a torrential rain? The
0:45
atmospheric rivers as yours is it happening?
0:50
Well it grains on and off right now it's sunny.
0:53
But no I mean atmospheric river bomb cyclone don't rains on and
0:57
off is not the same thing.
0:59
Well, what we're getting is it rains on and off. Now it may be
1:04
a bomb cyclone someplace maybe in northern, the northern Bay
1:08
Areas like Santa Rosa might be raining. But no, it's coming.
1:12
They come in these little waves wavelets and last night was a
1:16
good one. So I'm looking at my Microsoft's got this built in
1:20
weather thing is they pay for somebody to do it.
1:23
Yeah. So they can track you with your location and how you're
1:26
feeling about everything. Now you type
1:27
in a city you want to be anywhere. So I'm running a VPN
1:33
out of Argentina. No, yeah,
1:35
that's not suspicious. Okay, all right. All right. How's How's
1:43
Google looking? How does this How does Microsoft Bing look for
1:46
you? Is it in Spanish and Brazilian and Portuguese?
1:49
times it does. It figures it out. It says Oh, so you want
1:53
your prices in Argentinian pesos? And you're like, holy
1:57
moly. Like a $28 sweater is like 18,000 pesos. So I am I'm
2:08
looking last night because it's because I'm trying to finish
2:11
things up. So oh my god, I better get this done because
2:13
it's starting at 11 o'clock. There will be thunderstorms.
2:18
violent thunderstorms from 11 Wait a minute, and they're gonna
2:21
be at midnight 1234 until five in the morning. Okay, so it's
2:27
rain. It's windy. It is windy. It says as windy. very windy.
2:32
Blustery. Blustery. It was windy here. Okay, so not blustery. It
2:38
just windy. Yeah. So as windy and so it rains a little bit.
2:43
And then I have this contradictory information. I
2:45
look at just the maps of the clouds and cloud for me to go
2:49
by. It stops and it stops raining completely at about 11.
2:54
And then I figured well, I guess there's gonna be thunderstorms,
2:57
which I guess can happen without rain. Even though it's weird.
3:01
Nothing. It just was nothing. It was a big dud. And I woke up it
3:06
was sunny, I still kind of boots on the ground.
3:13
Right. So well done. I minus we'll get into my two killer
3:16
clips for today right off the bat. Because you know the guy
3:21
who told us this would all happen and was so correct. For
3:25
decades as Paul Ehrlich have had I've had a thing in my craw,
3:30
what kind of thing would it have in my craw he'd have sent me
3:33
across I mean, my craw about him. This is a Paul Ehrlich in
3:36
2020. This is mid to or right in the beginning of the pandemic.
3:42
And just listen to what he says because he brings it all
3:44
together you know population climate extinction, every
3:49
everything that you'd have you drowning right now, of course,
3:52
the situation of the human population and the populations,
3:57
our life support systems, the other organisms of the planet
4:01
are tied together very closely. And we're in the middle of a
4:07
pandemic, which is tied to both amazingly and not amazing. In
4:10
other words, the size of our population has made us extremely
4:15
vulnerable to epidemic disease, because the bigger the
4:19
population, the bigger the chance that a virus or a
4:22
bacterium can transfer into our population from other animals,
4:28
cold and remain the fact that we have because of our population
4:32
size, destroy the habitats of many other organisms,
4:37
particularly animals. of larger animals. We have made the
4:41
conditions much better for things like rodents, which are
4:45
wonderful carriers of the kinds of disease, the transfer to us.
4:51
And we have furthermore have a large population that tries to
4:57
extract animals from their natural Draw habitats and put
5:01
them into markets, classically in China and Southeast Asia,
5:05
where you have the so called wet markets, where you get
5:09
everything from civet cats to pangolins, to bats and so on,
5:13
which are carriers of viruses that love to transfer to human
5:18
beings. We're in the middle of the sixth mass extinction of the
5:23
biodiversity. Yeah, on the planet, the only one of the six
5:28
extinctions where we know exactly what the causes and the
5:33
causes the size and activities of the human population.
5:42
So that was Paul Ehrlich, just two and a half years ago, I was
5:47
lucky enough to come into possession of a video tape
5:52
recording of Mr. Paul Ehrlich in 1970. On the last show, we had a
5:56
lot of fun reading some of the articles but nothing really
5:59
matches the the splendor of his predictions in 1970. So that is,
6:08
what does that, Susan 5050 years prior to the clearly the three
6:14
to be exact the bull crap he was just spouting? Because it wasn't
6:17
a wet market, it wasn't a pangolin. We all know what went
6:21
down. Now, it's pretty much been admitted. But here's how
6:24
accurate he was 53 years ago,
6:27
what disasters do you see if we don't change our ways? Well,
6:31
we're losing 10 to 20 million people a year to data to
6:33
starvation right now, that's a big disaster already. And that
6:36
will inevitably increase worldwide worldwide. Oh, and in
6:39
the United States, too. We are very close to a famine disaster
6:42
in United States, because of the things that air pollution is
6:44
doing to change the weather, we have been trained to series of
6:47
weather changes, which now looks like we may have a very serious,
6:49
very large weather change United States which of course, will
6:51
hurt our agriculture tremendously. So we're close to
6:54
famine, the United States who were very close to a worldwide
6:57
plague that could kill virtually everybody we just met in 1967.
7:00
And this was something that concerns biologists a great deal
7:02
that if we got a plague, we're all gonna die, the denser, the
7:05
larger, the weaker the population gets, the more we are
7:07
set up for a virus, it'll just run through and it'll be so long
7:09
for three quarters of the people didn't happen. And of course,
7:12
every person you add to the planet increases and every bit
7:15
of pollution, you add, also increases the chances of a
7:17
thermonuclear war and makes its results worse, because the
7:20
thermonuclear war of course, we would wreck the ecology in a way
7:23
that we haven't managed with our, with our little efforts so
7:26
far, so that the disaster will take the form of famine, plague
7:29
or war there mankind's old companions. Fundamentally, you
7:32
just gotta remember this. There's no way out of the
7:34
arithmetic, there will never be 7 billion people in the year
7:37
2000.
7:41
Never, never, ever, will there be 7 billion people by the year
7:45
2003 will
7:46
take the form of famine, plague or war there mankind's old
7:49
companions. Fundamentally, you just gotta remember this.
7:51
There's no way out of the arithmetic, there will never be
7:54
7 billion people in the year 2000. Okay. The only question
7:56
is, why won't there be 7 billion people in the FBI? Because we
8:00
have so many people die off of those things? Or will it be
8:02
because we have managed to bring the birth rate down along with
8:04
ah, I believe somewhere you have given 1972 As a point of no
8:10
return no
8:10
return?
8:12
Yeah, it's a point of no return. Because if we don't have a
8:14
responsible government by then we gotta wait four more years.
8:17
Now listen
8:17
to this, this is this is the giveaway. He doesn't do it this
8:20
way anymore. He gives 1972 As the year that there's no return.
8:25
Because he's not a scientist. He's a political operative.
8:29
That's what that's his job is to get a the president he wants in
8:34
the office. Yeah, it's a point of no return. Because if we
8:37
don't have a responsible government by then we gotta wait
8:39
four more years before we can get one. And that's just too
8:42
long to wait. In other words, because of all the lag time and
8:44
so on, if we can't get moving in that direction in 1970, and get
8:48
a president by 1972, then it's just hopeless. My own feeling is
8:53
that that's that should be our watershed, if, in 1972, things
8:57
are still being run the same old way that at least as far as I'm
9:00
concerned, the bowl game will be over. I got to point out that
9:02
many of my colleagues think it's already over. I'm I'm considered
9:04
a pessimist by the public and an optimist by many of my
9:06
colleagues, and the future will tell if there is a future.
9:10
That's right.
9:12
From beginning to end, Ehrlich, you're full of crap. been wrong
9:18
for five decades. And the guy is still on all the science,
9:24
advisory panels and everything. It's unbelievable. It's
9:27
beyond me how this can happen.
9:29
Well, it's happening today. This is the latest video from the
9:33
World Health Organization. So there's music and it's edited,
9:37
but it is from their official Twitter account. Ladies and
9:40
gentlemen, meet the new Paul Ehrlich, your friend of mine,
9:45
Peter Hotep Hotez,
9:47
we have to recognize that anti vaccine activism, which actually
9:50
call anti science aggression, has now become a major killing
9:54
force globally, during the COVID pandemic in the United States.
9:58
200,000 Americans needlessly lost their lives because they
10:02
refuse the COVID vaccine, even after vaccines became widely
10:05
available. And now the anti vaccine activism is expanding
10:10
across the world, even in low and middle income countries.
10:13
It's a killing force. The anti science now kills more people
10:17
than things like gun violence, global terrorism, nuclear
10:21
proliferation, or cyber attacks. And now it's become a political
10:24
movement in the US, it's linked to far extremism on the far
10:27
right, same in Germany. So this is a new face of anti science
10:33
aggression. And so we need political solutions to address
10:36
this Gillam
10:38
political solutions to address this, there it is, it's the
10:41
same, the same MO two things I noticed in this little bit. One,
10:47
a very creepy laugh, tell in the beginning here, see if we can
10:51
find
10:51
the activism, which actually called anti science aggression,
10:55
has not become a major killing force globally, during the COVID
10:58
pandemic in the United States.
11:00
What is it during the COVID better than
11:04
killing force globally? During the COVID pandemic in the United
11:08
States?
11:09
pandemic? What Why did you hear it? You didn't hear? Oh, you
11:12
can't hear it.
11:13
No, I cannot hear I can hear it. I can hear the clip. But I
11:16
cannot hear this laughs You telling me about
11:19
killing force globally. During the COVID pandemic in the United
11:22
States.
11:23
You don't pandemic you don't hear him go, I
11:25
hear I hear a faltering but I don't hear it as a left tail.
11:29
And the other thing was extremists just like Germany.
11:33
I'm gonna say
11:34
terrorism, nuclear proliferation or cyber attacks. And now it's
11:38
become a political movement in the US. It's linked to far
11:41
extremism on the far right. Same in Germany. So this same
11:44
in Germany, what's he referring to the so called the prince who
11:49
was who? Who had hot people everywhere, which we never heard
11:53
anything about anymore? These people are
11:55
lawyers. Wow, did that thing disappear? Yeah. Anti science,
12:00
aggression. It's more, it's killing more people than ever
12:03
than war. It's killing more people than everything. And
12:08
that's us, you and me.
12:10
What cracked me up was killing more people to nuclear
12:14
proliferation. What does that mean? Hey, they built another 20
12:19
bombs that didn't kill anybody because they're not using these
12:21
bombs. So how's it so where more people are dying of old age that
12:26
the nuclear proliferation is incredible.
12:31
They just keep on going. They don't care. They just keep on
12:36
going. They get
12:37
credits, or creds while they're on TV. Why they're promoting the
12:42
Democratic Party. Let's face reality here. And how they get
12:46
away with getting on boards and showing up as experts. This is
12:51
the real promise the media not down because just blowhards are
12:54
all over the place. They just handpick these few and early so
12:58
worst example because, you know, as you can see, you know, that
13:01
page of bullcrap that early predicted, which was every
13:05
single thing was wrong, and it continues to this day. Why do
13:10
you keep bringing somebody on the media? Who is notoriously
13:14
inaccurate every single is that is always a little inaccurate?
13:19
No, like once in a while he makes a mistake. So why do you
13:23
bring him on? Because he being interviewed by Scott Pelley on
13:27
60 minutes? Because he's Why isn't he being ridiculed by
13:31
Scott Pelley What is it an immediate take him on and go
13:33
over all these things? He said one by one by one and say what
13:39
what about this? What about that? What about this? They
13:41
don't do that they just let them blather is really pathetic.
13:46
Did you did you see Fauci
13:49
fell I miss Fauci, Fauci was on that Fauci was retired. By the
13:53
way, why are we seeing him at all? Oh, he had to come back
13:55
because of Hamlin, because of, you know, the crazy conspiracy
14:00
theories about a vaccine related injury. So they bring him on and
14:05
he is led the witnesses led by CBS spook Major Garrett
14:11
aka fraction or if he saw it, but on Monday Night Football
14:13
this week tomorrow Hamelin player for the Buffalo Bills
14:17
collapsed on the field. I don't know
14:18
if you saw it. We just have you here by coincidence, I don't Did
14:20
you? You didn't expect me to ask about this that we brought you
14:23
out of retirement to talk about this, did you but I did you see
14:25
that?
14:27
You're not an NFL expert. And you're not an expert on any
14:30
cardiovascular issues the player might have had, but what I want
14:33
to ask you about anyway.
14:35
We're gonna lead you down the path but even better. Oops,
14:39
sorry,
14:39
expert, and you're not an expert on any cardiovascular issues the
14:43
player might have had but what I want to ask you about Dr. Fauci
14:46
is what to do in moments like that I kept an eye on Twitter
14:52
I'm a journalist you know I'll be kept an eye I paid to do I
14:57
kept an eye on Twitter. Cuz I'm high end journalists. So
15:01
whenever something happens like that might go to the source,
15:04
which is Twitter,
15:06
as I want to do in moments like that I
15:07
don't want what is this? As I'm wanting to do does it's gotten
15:12
what is this? What is this?
15:14
It's a kind of a British usage. That is. It's annoying. Sounds
15:19
like it's like somebody who keeps saying, Indeed,
15:22
or someone who says, what say you on the matter? Oh, what say
15:26
you? What's worse? What? Are you not an
15:32
NFL expert, and you're not an expert on any cardiovascular
15:35
issues? Why is he not an expert on this? He has some ideas I
15:38
might have had. But what I want to ask you about Dr. Fauci is,
15:41
as I'm wanting to do, as I want to do in moments like that I
15:44
kept an eye on Twitter. And I can't tell you exactly how many
15:48
minutes transpired. But it was less than 24 people on Twitter
15:53
began to say, Hold
15:54
on, does he he's been if he's on Twitter on him, doesn't he know
15:57
that's almost a lifetime on Twitter. But he's one years have
16:02
gone by in the real world and 20 minutes, 20 minutes for somebody
16:05
to put two and two together?
16:07
Well, clearly the vaccine cost his seizure. And that had a
16:13
multiplier effect on Twitter as these things tend to do.
16:17
I love the pregnant pauses. All right, here we go ask a
16:20
question.
16:20
What's your reaction to that? What's your what?
16:25
Was that? You didn't know? Right? No, this
16:28
is one for one. This is I'll go from his from this to the quest.
16:32
It's so dramatic. What's your reaction to that? Oh, my
16:39
God, what's
16:41
your reaction to that?
16:43
I can't even do it. I can do it. I think control. What's your
16:50
reaction? What's your reaction? to that?
16:57
What's your reaction to that? Well, my
16:59
reaction is one of concern.
17:03
borderlines more than concerned? Yeah. It's
17:06
harder than misinformation. There's information. When you
17:11
have a platform, like social media that exponentially spreads
17:17
in its best form. Hold
17:19
on, stop. I'm stopping when you have a platform like social
17:24
media. Where's this social media platform? I'd like to join?
17:28
Well, I think is there something I could do is there code that I
17:30
can insert into this platform?
17:33
But you know, social media, you know that he's talking about
17:36
Twitter as a platform?
17:38
Was he say Twitter?
17:41
Because they still have their their tentacles in there? They
17:44
didn't want to scare Twitter off the Twitter still does stuff for
17:48
more than concerned.
17:49
Yeah.
17:51
Misinformation nation. When you have a platform, like social
17:58
media, that exponentially spreads that in its best form,
18:04
proper and important, and value added information can spread
18:08
which is good. Yes. Public health
18:13
is like yes, you got that line right in the script,
18:16
proper and important, and value added information can spread
18:21
which is good yes. The thing
18:24
to note that wait start the beginning because you're gonna
18:27
get me started about the fact that he was leading the witness
18:30
and he didn't get the answer. He went because he says he was
18:32
concerned. I think the word he was supposed to say was alarmed.
18:36
Let's go back to the beginning then the left ask this question
18:38
your reaction to
18:39
that? Well, my reaction is one of concern about
18:43
horror. Isn't it horror script says horror Antony. Horror
18:49
horror for even a horror horror are well, I was supposed to say
18:56
horror,
18:56
he was supposed to say horror and he screwed it up. He botched
18:59
the launch
19:00
and is so Major Garrett actually drew the line that he was
19:04
supposed to say back at him to remind him to get back on the
19:08
script.
19:09
My reaction is one of concern about
19:12
horror. borderlines more than concern
19:14
Yeah, it's horrid.
19:18
Miss event and then Fauci did say
19:20
horror. Yeah, of course. He's like, No, he didn't say horror
19:23
you and
19:25
horror is one of concern. About
19:29
borderlines more than concerned. Yeah, it's
19:32
harder than
19:33
misinformation and disinformation. When you have a
19:37
platform, like social media, that exponentially spreads, that
19:43
in its best form, proper and important, and value added
19:49
information can spread which is good. Yes. The thing as a public
19:52
health person and as a physician and a scientist and my, my
19:57
identity as a physician is the thing that gets paid means the
20:01
most by that. Because what that means major is that yet again,
20:06
another conspiracy theory complete nonsense is gonna have
20:10
some people make a decision to die themselves in their family
20:14
not to get vaccinated, which may cost them their lives. That's
20:18
the thing that's so horrible about it. If you want to go out
20:21
spouting nonsense, conspiracy theories and spreading it all
20:25
around fine, except if it results in the person suffering
20:31
and perhaps dying. And that's what happens when disinformation
20:36
disincentivize disincentivizes people to get proper
20:40
interventions for a threat, like a pandemic.
20:45
He's not giving up he just not going to give up. They are not
20:48
giving up. Jimmy Fallon, Jimmy Fallon, did you see the opening
20:54
of a show?
20:57
There was Alpha Ben Delta Ben omachron. Next month, this
21:01
latest Berry is my feeds. SCP 1.5, another friend of COVID-19
21:10
has arrived. It's a new strain. But it isn't the same. Sounds
21:15
more like Elon Musk, his name is CZ on 1.5. Up 40 Who sees red
21:24
red wine. Put on your mask when you're inside a facility? It
21:29
could be a robot from a Star Wars trilogy is cc. Point 1.50
21:36
mg or NPD or TCP y or an eye chart made by a really high god
21:42
sounds like the password of your parents Wi Fi. D point 1.5.
21:50
So he just does a whole song about it. Perfect. Just
21:53
normalize it. normalize everything. Don't use the Kraken
21:58
name though I'm not seeing cracking show up anywhere here
22:01
in the United said it was gonna be a flop
22:03
it is a flat bow. They use it in Australia. I've heard it used to
22:07
think only Australia really. And and of course, we had a
22:10
Bloomberg article. But that's about it. It's floppy.
22:16
It's a reference to Trump and had to be rejected be rejected.
22:20
Yeah, this is anything Trump.
22:23
So I'll just grab a random clip here. This is just random,
22:28
random random Rando from Yahoo News.
22:31
The latest COVID variant called SPD dot 1.5 is spreading across
22:36
the country rapidly. And it appears to be five times more
22:39
contagious than ba dot five,
22:42
five to know what numbers that we heard this week, 10 times 100
22:46
times it's crazy five times just making it up.
22:50
It's the latest variant that that effect in the country. This
22:58
new variant is more contagious than previous ones. That's
23:01
always the case. Every new variant that spreads has to be
23:03
more contagious or one spread. And around the eye like
23:07
that logic. Every new variant has to be more contagious or it
23:11
wouldn't spread. Are you making these up in the lab? Lady? What
23:14
are you doing previous ones that always crowd I mean, she's
23:17
literally saying every variant has to be more.
23:22
This new variant is more contagious than previous ones.
23:25
That's always the case, every new variant that spreads has to
23:27
be more contagious or one spread.
23:31
That's bull crap, geez, adopted dammit.
23:33
And around the holidays, people have been traveling a lot, we're
23:36
interacting a lot more. So human behavior is playing a role as
23:39
well. They think that this variant may be better at
23:42
attaching to the receptors in our body that have been
23:45
vulnerable to COVID all along the ACE two receptor. So it's a
23:49
combination of factors that fits making this one particularly
23:52
infectious right now. So the vaccines again, worked very well
23:55
preventing severe disease and death, but you're gonna catch
23:58
COVID Even if you've been vaccinated, or you're likely to
24:00
catch COVID If you're exposed, so they will not prevent all
24:04
disease, just as the flu vaccine hopefully will save you from
24:08
severe disease, but it's not going to necessarily prevent you
24:10
from getting sick.
24:11
Wait a minute. Now the flu vaccine also doesn't stop you
24:15
from getting flu. It just stops you from dying from flu. Is that
24:18
what she's now?
24:19
Wow, that's a new trip that's turned around. That's a big
24:22
turning action idea. Let's take this idea and move it over to
24:26
year
24:26
anything that doesn't work. We just say you know it's normal.
24:31
It doesn't work. But it keeps you from dropping dead? No, it
24:34
does. Just as the flu vaccine hopefully will save you from
24:38
severe disease, but it's not going to necessarily prevent you
24:40
from getting sick. Every virus is different. We're learning as
24:44
we go here. And I think the fact that there's still so many
24:48
infections around the world is what's causing this continuation
24:52
of variants. It's especially believed to be at people who are
24:55
immune compromised, who can't fight off the virus, who it
24:59
percolate. That's within them for some period of time. And
25:02
that's how the variants seem to be developing. So the fewer
25:05
people infected, the fewer immune compromised people
25:08
infected, the better off we'll be over the long term. But that
25:11
hasn't happened yet. Unfortunately. posters, every
25:15
book lays like a, like some old fashioned coffeemaker
25:22
percolating just percolates as you're rolling around, you can't
25:26
fight it off. So it's percolating and creating new
25:29
variants. That's where you're the Typhoid Mary of variants.
25:32
Who
25:32
is who's ignoring science now. People they know we sound like a
25:39
bunch of anti vaxxers. Well, we are anti this Vax. I'll tell you
25:42
that.
25:43
Yeah, I get plenty of vaccines. I get not this
25:47
one and not anything that comes from mRNA.
25:51
backs. That's the point. So here's
25:55
Yvonne chin Schick. I think his name is he's a member of
25:59
parliament in the European Union. Thank you
26:02
very much. Mrs. Jones. Thank you very much, your colleagues. When
26:07
it comes to COVID crisis, we know now that we have been lied
26:10
to since the beginning. The Commission governments and
26:14
pharmaceutical companies like Pfizer presented and promoted
26:18
their products, their vaccines, mostly as something they're not
26:22
just last week. This was confirmed both by Pfizer and
26:28
then by the European Commission, in COVID, committee of the
26:32
European Parliament. They presented and promoted vaccines
26:36
as a product that reduces or even stops spreading of the
26:40
disease. And they knew that they have no evidence to support
26:45
that. Since the products were never tested for such a product
26:51
is not yet there as Commission's stated last week, it's not it's
26:57
not there. But they did pay 70 billion euros for that
27:01
nonetheless. And they did you use these lie to make and
27:08
introduce digital greens certificate to force their
27:13
product on as much people as possible right on they also use
27:16
this to take our rights away from our human rights to work to
27:22
move to patients rights
27:25
to democracy, dude, democracy is what democracy looks like. To us
27:29
to it. Sadly, three Massachusetts police officers
27:33
died suddenly this week. Sure. It's just a coincidence. quite
27:36
normal. Actually. Cops die. Three in a row happens all the
27:39
time. been seeing all my life. last clip and then we'll just
27:44
open it up a little bit. Neil Oliver. Have you ever seen him
27:47
on on GB news? Oh, no. He's kind of like the hippie looking guy
27:53
with long hair always has. It's like she looks more like a lefty
27:57
than anything. I'm sure you've seen him. He hasn't male might
28:01
probably have but yeah, let me see. Let me see what his what
28:04
his background is. He is a what's his
28:07
name again? Jeanne Oliver. Neil Oliver. Oh, not John Oliver. No,
28:12
he's was all these Oliver's
28:14
television presenter archaeologists historian and
28:17
author. He's presented several documentary series on
28:20
archaeology and history, including Oh, he's a Scottish
28:22
yet history of Scotland, Vikings and coast. So he's been around.
28:28
He's a president of the National Trust for Scotland. So the worry
28:31
was until 2020. And then, of course, he started talking
28:33
crazy. So we had to get rid of a ball. Yeah,
28:36
I know this guy. So he did a
28:38
10 minute video, which Tina cottoned and we watched it last
28:43
night and I was so depressed. Everything he says is happening
28:48
everywhere. And he's doing this in the context of the UK, which
28:52
has Anna What 60 million people on this little collection of
28:57
islands. And it's 45 but it could be I think you can put
29:01
everything together. As I as I've been saying for the past
29:04
couple of weeks. I've lived in the UK people are poor. They are
29:10
impoverished you get outside of the cities, people, they the
29:13
minute something goes wrong. I mean, they have no food, they
29:15
got no gas, they got no trains, they got nothing. They have no
29:19
money, they die in their homes, the children roam around many of
29:23
them just sleeping in other people's homes. It's a mess. I
29:26
saw this in
29:29
Enzian kind of
29:31
Dickensian. So I grabbed the last two minutes, as he just
29:37
kind of wraps this all up and it applies to everybody everywhere.
29:42
While
29:42
more and more of the population wakes up to the lies obfuscation
29:45
fear porn and propaganda around the so called vaccines around
29:49
the green agenda around gender, politics and race politics. The
29:52
majority of the news media obediently pumps out the same
29:55
old Tosh about safe and effective and climate crisis and
29:58
preferred pronouns and read spacing. But the fakery has been
30:02
swiftly and shoddily constructed without the foundation of truth.
30:06
For that reason, this Potemkin village thrown up around us is
30:09
flimsy and should be easily demolished if we wish it so,
30:13
underneath it all too quiet for too long. We know the truth of
30:16
Britain. More of us comprehend every day that beyond a shadow
30:20
of a doubt our leaders have tried to hoodwink us into
30:22
believing things that are simply not true. The ultimate Potemkin
30:26
village is all lies no truth. Now he's
30:28
he compares the UK to the Potemkin village which I don't
30:33
even know if that if it's true or if that was just a story of
30:36
the Tsar. When the Tsar of Russia when married to Catherine
30:42
the Great, he created these Potemkin villages, which were
30:46
just fake villages that made it look like everything was
30:49
prosperous, and things were going so well. But inside the
30:51
village, there was either no people, or they're basically
30:54
just acting so he's comparing us
30:55
like North Korea, supposedly fried chicken village, village
31:01
and I visited when two in which you can look up which is one of
31:07
the Hearst enclaves. And it's it's Potemkin village it's
31:11
there's nothing, it's just all facade. So that's what it might
31:15
look and that's what he's saying. The UK
31:17
is
31:18
the eye watering the expensive NHS costs rising year on year is
31:22
no longer a health service for all in any way that matters. I
31:25
see the green agenda is a fraud as as the climate crisis that
31:29
underpins it, the assertion that little boys can grow up to be
31:32
women, and that little girls can grow up to be men allies that
31:36
our government means to protect our borders is a fiction, a
31:39
parliament in which overmighty political indistinguishable
31:42
political parties dictate the law to the people, whether those
31:45
people like or not. It's a shameful setting aside of the
31:48
sovereignty of we the people of this country, Parliament is not
31:52
and was never meant to be sovereign. We the People are
31:55
sovereign. This is the foundation stone of Magna Carta,
31:58
sealed in 1215. And as unshakably solid knows that was
32:01
then any attempt to reduce the rights, freedoms and liberties
32:05
enshrined in that treaty are by definition beyond the power of
32:08
any parliament. Here's the thing. Our sovereignty as people
32:12
was sealed by that treaty of 1215 Parliament's have come and
32:16
tried to ride roughshod over the people again and again, and
32:19
those Parliament's have gone. One of many attempts to repeal
32:22
Magna Carta was even made in 1969. By the general public,
32:26
We're conveniently distracted by the moon landings. I've said it
32:30
before and I'll say it again. We see them we see the fakery that
32:33
they have raised around us, but our rights are real. I don't
32:37
believe in Britain is real. Isn't it time to see past the
32:40
shaky stage set thrown up around us as a distraction and to take
32:44
shelter instead in through Britain. Real Britain
32:47
dream on Oliver. Wow. Yeah. Dream. Ah, it's not gonna
32:51
happen. I think they're lost. I think they are lost for good.
32:55
And it's true people. I don't remember the NHS when when I
32:59
lived there. 22,006 2012 Let's say 2008 For sure. Christina. It
33:06
was great. And NHS you happy go to the general practitioner you
33:10
could still get in after COVID You couldn't even get in
33:12
anymore. And you know, no charge any medication. No matter what
33:16
it was five pounds, no matter what you are getting the most
33:19
expensive medication in the world. Five pounds. Now. When
33:22
Christina dislocated her knee and she had to have an MRI done.
33:26
Well, that'll be six to eight months waiting time. So what if
33:31
I pay for it private? I call them up. Oh, you can come
33:34
tomorrow? No problem. 5000 pounds. It's a facade. It's a
33:39
Potemkin village. It is it's always been since I've been
33:42
there is horse crap. Not that we're any better.
33:49
That's a nice depressing way to start things. But let's go back
33:52
to COVID. I do have one clip. Just to bring us back up to
33:55
speed boats on COVID and travel. Okay. I'm sorry. I'm sorry. And
34:01
this is about this is the update for China. Which if you listen
34:06
to this thing from beginning to end, it's kind of they still
34:08
have some restrictions. But the way they just pulled the rug out
34:11
from under their whole process is just beyond me.
34:14
A new protocol taking effect on Sunday we'll see China wind down
34:18
its zero COVID policy. The country is shifting its focus
34:21
from infection prevention to vaccination and treatment.
34:25
Chinese officials say they will no longer enforce lockdowns of
34:29
entire neighborhoods. Moreover, people who test positive for the
34:33
Coronavirus will not be forced to isolate and their close
34:36
contacts will not be identified. Quarantine requirements for
34:41
inbound travelers will be dropped and upon arrival, PCR
34:45
tests will be waived as well. But travelers will still need to
34:48
show Chinese authorities proof of a negative PCR test result
34:52
obtained within 48 hours before departure. Outbound travel by
34:57
Chinese nationals is expected to resume instead He says, For now,
35:01
domestic travel agents are not allowed to solicit overseas
35:04
group tours or sell travel packages. Government officials
35:08
have not specified when these bands will be lifted.
35:11
Have you stopped putting NTD on your clip titles?
35:15
That's from NHK. Japan. Oh, okay.
35:18
Well, I'd like to know the origin NHK. Japan Well,
35:21
I left it off just because I figured you'd accuse me of
35:25
overdoing my cache of valuable gold, which is called NTD news.
35:34
This is Di, D, D, D, valuable, it is valuable. I'll give you
35:41
that. They can't come into the United States. They do not have
35:45
one of the approved vaccine. So if you see Chinese walking
35:48
around, they're not allowed to take them out. Arrest them,
35:53
alert the authorities.
35:57
Alerted or it is
35:59
and then this is a short one, and we'll keep it at COVID Brett
36:02
Weinstein was on Joe Rogan Of course I'm catching up on my
36:06
Rogan episodes because I'm gonna
36:08
be on in a few weeks. He's got a lot of don't want to be flat.
36:11
No, no, no, he's got a lot of interesting people on very
36:15
interesting people. But Brett Weinstein
36:17
wishes Brett is Brett and Bart and he's the one
36:21
with a heather. Father.
36:25
Okay, this one is heavier than the other.
36:28
I don't know who's heavier. But his brother Eric, he's the one
36:31
with Peter teal. This is the guy Brett with Heather
36:34
Oh breast both get breast breast the one who got rousted from
36:38
Evergreen college because his students? Yeah, how academies?
36:41
Yes, he's the way he's actually kind of a wimp.
36:43
Yeah, but he is he he and his wife do fit in the realm of
36:47
scientists, a dev,
36:49
totally hotshot scientist, there's no, I don't say that's
36:53
not the case. So here's
36:55
what he brought to Joe, the mRNA vaccines. And this is not true
36:58
for the DNA version. But by the way, someone sent this to me,
37:01
and I noticed only when I was clipping it, because I had to
37:04
clip it down. That someone apparently thought it was fun to
37:08
put Brett Weinstein on 1.5 speed, which is actually good
37:12
for our show. But it annoyed me a bit that they had done that
37:15
without without asking the mRNA vaccine. And this is not true
37:19
for the DNA version. But for the mRNA vaccines like the Pfizer
37:21
and the Madonna, that after three doses, they saw a radical
37:26
elevation in the percentage of the antibodies that are part of
37:29
this class called IgG. For IGE is just it means immunoglobulin.
37:33
It's a synonym for antibody IgG G is a class of antibody and it
37:36
fights pathogens. But IgG for is a special subclass. And it has
37:42
all things in biology are complex. And so it has multiple
37:44
implications. But IgG for is actually part of a system in
37:48
which the body attenuates its own response to an antigen. So
37:53
the mind blowing and you know, it's an early result, and maybe
37:55
it doesn't get replicated, but it was published in Science,
37:57
immunology, topflight Journal, the implication is that the
38:01
evolutionary path we have traveled is causing the pathogen
38:05
now to be able to trigger a response that will cause the
38:08
immune system not to fight. Nobody knows what happens next.
38:11
It's a very dangerous discovery.
38:15
So three shots or more, you might be in some danger,
38:18
according to
38:19
this has been talked about quite a bit, actually. Yeah. Here and
38:22
there. We haven't had any clips about it. That's probably the
38:26
most concise clip you'll ever hear. I think it's sped up and
38:30
somewhat which, but it's still concise. And he I think it's the
38:34
best clip on the subject that I've heard so far, I've been
38:37
hearing nothing about a soil I've heard about and if you
38:41
start getting boosted and boosted and boosted, yeah,
38:43
you're just asking for this phenomena asking for
38:45
trouble
38:47
asking for trouble. But no, no, no.
38:51
Do you think your shots and you think Dr. Jill really took the
38:54
vaccine that maybe she was she was the dope that actually took
38:57
it up there?
39:00
I think that's possible. Dr. Joe Biden.
39:03
Yeah. Dr. Joe? Yes. The reason why is this clip
39:06
First Lady Joe Biden will undergo a medical procedure next
39:09
week after a small lesion was found during a routine skin
39:13
cancer screening. The First Lady now 71 years old will have the
39:16
lesion removed from over her right eye at Walter Reed
39:19
National Military Medical Center. doctors recommended the
39:22
procedure in an abundance of caution.
39:25
There have been these reports and there's a there's a website
39:29
that shows weird lesions on some people that including some that
39:35
are gruesome, and they're loaded with Spike protein according to
39:40
this website. I don't know if it has been discussed much
39:44
elsewhere but that's I don't know maybe could be lesion is
39:48
short discs. Normal skin cancer, which is not unusual. Yeah, but
39:53
what we see not over the eye usually skin cancers usually on
39:56
the side of that yeah,
39:59
no, but you know, But this is this is what we're hearing is
40:01
like we're seeing more and more cancers all kinds of stuff is
40:04
popping up.
40:05
Well, if what have you heard Weinstein's say about this
40:09
particular IG element of the of the immune system shutting down
40:15
in which is there as a regulator is going well, you know, don't
40:18
worry about it is what is scary are apparently saying about
40:22
everything. Let's this not don't worry about it. So that the
40:26
don't worry about it element seems to be concerning.
40:31
We were supposed to have our progressive dinner on Friday
40:34
night.
40:36
Ah, yes, yes. Yes. This is a fascinating idea, by the way.
40:41
And people moving aficionados will remember the discreet charm
40:46
of the bourgeoisie by Louis boonoo boonoo l. Which is what
40:51
the sounds like.
40:53
Well, we had to modify it because of the 12 people and
40:59
four were sick. And you know what that is? It's cracking
41:04
everyone's got cracking now. Tina has been sick for three
41:07
days coughing that she got cracking. Yeah, she's she no
41:11
one's testing any more people won't ask whatever.
41:14
I've got, you know, I have a closet full of tests. Yes,
41:17
stick those in your own nose from the government. Please
41:20
don't send them to us. We're not sticking that up our nose. So
41:23
instead of doing you know, salad at one home, and then having the
41:30
the main course it's next home and then moving on to our home
41:34
for dessert. We only did two homes. And I just I want I want
41:39
to I do want to mention some things I learned it was quite
41:41
interesting. So the first home was a beautiful house up on this
41:46
hill, you overlook all of the hill country. And this belongs
41:50
to a lawyer and his wife. And the lawyer is he's turns out
41:55
he's an aviation lawyer. Oh, who is now he spent many years in
42:01
Paris. And so he was serving Chateauneuf Du Pont, which was
42:05
nice. I was like, okay, that's nice wine. It's some other nice
42:09
things. But the kind of aviation law he does as well. I got a
42:12
couple of C 130s. We're gonna sell them to Uganda, sir. Huh?
42:18
Oh, yeah.
42:19
aviation law. Yeah, it contracts to buy see what are you okay,
42:25
great business, because they don't, they don't make these
42:28
planes anymore. So if you have one, you just keep it alive and
42:32
just sit on it until now, every single time one crashes, or
42:36
expires the price goes up. So he had some interesting tales.
42:40
They're also quite interesting that in his office, he had quite
42:46
a number of, of weapons, which I'll get to in a moment, you
42:50
know, AR fifteens, propped in the corner, etc. It is on a hill
42:54
Good move. Oh, yeah. And then we had a couple come in, and she
42:59
she was very cool. She, she looked like, in a way like Jane
43:03
Lynch, you know, very tall blonde. Now, most of these
43:08
people are older and we are probably about so in their mid
43:11
to late 60s. And she and and she are
43:15
the kids.
43:16
I'm the kid. I'm the youngest of the bunch. I'm a mom love loving
43:20
it. I'm the I'm the kid. And shorter
43:23
you kids talk about these days.
43:25
Well, so she's talking about I guess she was talking to Tino
43:29
and railing on whatever. And she said, Well, you know, do you
43:32
ever listen to no agenda? She has no agenda. I listen all the
43:34
time. And she hadn't connected it. Yes. And she connected it
43:40
right there. She was, oh my God. Oh, no. And she loves you.
43:46
And well, I'm likeable. And that's why and she was
43:49
she was strapped she was packing a 380 hammerless ballpark and a
43:53
gown and check it out with a Louis Vuitton design. Now, it
44:02
was a great time we we did do desserts at our place. But the
44:06
one of the main conversations, there's a lot of concern here in
44:11
Hill Country in Fredericksburg for what's coming from the
44:15
border going through our towns, and it's not being advertised,
44:20
it's not in the newspapers, but there's a lot of crime and
44:25
illegal immigrants coming right up 87 Going on to 90 It's it's
44:31
happening and people are very, very concerned about this and
44:35
they're you know, they're getting ready for something.
44:38
They don't think that the police or sheriff are taking it
44:42
seriously that that it's in order not to ruin the the
44:49
business of tourism. That it's not being reported but stuff is
44:54
happening as confirmed by my buddy Mike the former police.
44:59
Police Officer So were the anger management issues.
45:03
Like a cop with anger management issues key
45:07
key phrase former cop. Yeah, he and the Chiefs thought was best
45:13
he just left because it was not going to get any better. But it
45:18
Yeah. And that's
45:18
well, I have a bunch of clips about Mexico. We talked about we
45:22
mentioned Mexico on the last show. I just saw it, but the war
45:25
going on down there and nobody's covering it immediately. The
45:28
next day. No, Tucker covers it. Yeah. And, and the better
45:32
coverage, though, came from the Cuomo show.
45:36
Oh, do you still watch it? Do you still have that show? People
45:39
are watching the Cuomo show.
45:42
It's not.
45:44
It's as good as anything on Fox. Let's put it that way. In fact,
45:48
the guy they had on the Cuomo show to talk about Mexico is the
45:52
same guy that Tucker has on all the time. So there's becoming a
45:54
little now you're starting to see a click of us is
45:59
sensuousness. amongst people who are kind of on the on the on the
46:03
fringe of normal discussion.
46:07
I've kind of stopped watching Tucker, it's so it's such a
46:10
crapshoot. Most of us just like listening to Twitter, or a
46:13
podcast, I
46:14
got this one because it had McGregor and
46:17
oh, and so the Cuomo kid now also has McGregor on No dude
46:21
Cuomo kid had one of Tucker's normal guests cut this guy love
46:25
buff, who does Dobby US News. And he seems to be one that he
46:29
seems to be like, aren't ya? I've heard this podcast is like
46:33
a second rate Jimmy Dore was trying to do kind of trying to
46:39
be funny when he's really a journalist. But he's not. And
46:42
he's not a funny guy there. I'm sorry. But let's start with
46:46
let's go. And then we're going to talk about the situation in
46:48
Mexico. And I think the Cuomo clips are the best. And we got
46:51
two of them here. And let's go and he's got this guy love
46:54
Buffy. And we're going to talk about Mexico. And one will leads
46:57
it in by saying nobody cares about the story. And I agree
47:00
with that.
47:00
There that seems like nobody here really cares about what do
47:04
you make of what's going on here and what the implications are?
47:07
Well, it should show you, Chris, what really is going on?
47:11
You know how he sounds a lot like Fauci right there. You
47:15
notice that
47:16
he could do a Fauci that would be funnier than what he does?
47:19
Well, it should show you, Chris. Sounds really
47:23
good catch. Just like is
47:26
that millio? Or what is that?
47:30
That's a good question. Here and
47:32
what the implications are?
47:33
Well, it should show you, Chris, what really is going on? You
47:37
know, I mean, when you look at the Mexican military trying to
47:42
take out the head, a drug lord, and 10, Special Ops, military
47:49
personnel are dead, and 20 of the cartel. These are highly
47:53
trained, well armed militias, gangs, armies. And so when we're
48:00
talking about drug smuggling, or people smuggling or anything
48:04
else, there's a third entity, the United States government,
48:08
the Mexican federal government, and the cartels, and you are now
48:12
seeing the images of
48:13
that I would put the Mexican government third, I put the
48:16
cartels second. And I wouldn't call them cartels, political
48:20
motivation aside, they check every box of a terrorist
48:24
organization. Now former President Trump wanted to call
48:27
them that, to give more ability to use US military over the
48:30
border, and more laws and more punishment, but they were
48:35
worried about one you create a new avenue of asylum because
48:38
people running from a terror organization have a legit asylum
48:42
case to make and there were some other political considerations.
48:45
But you know, if we look at how big a player they are, Ben, my
48:50
producer just gave me this stat. They're the ones moving the
48:53
people 2018 $500 million. We estimated they made the drug
48:59
gangs from immigration profits 2022 So four years later, 13
49:05
billion.
49:08
Let me do a 22nd update from ABC on the story.
49:11
Authorities in Mexico have arrested the son of the drug
49:13
lord known as El Chapo. The arrest triggered a deadly wave
49:16
of violence in the Mexican state of Sinaloa law enforcement warn
49:20
people to stay indoors to planes at a local airport were even hit
49:23
by gunfire. Passengers were seen taking cover. Mexican officials
49:26
say the arrest was not related to President Biden's upcoming
49:29
visit to Mexico.
49:30
That's all we got. Thanks ABC. There were 10 special forces
49:35
killed I don't even hear about that.
49:37
Yeah, and so far and and there's more to is more than this, but
49:43
go to the second part of this and then we'll continue there's
49:46
some other action with another cartel which was reported on
49:50
anti D place some I never heard any of this. And yeah, no arm
49:55
news coverage is is is zip it's it's totally pathetic
50:00
considering that this thing is you we were dealing with just
50:03
south of the border here,
50:04
they could only think that they're in on it, you know, $13
50:08
billion. So this people on this side of the border who are in on
50:11
that money,
50:12
there has to be let's go
50:14
back to the political brother, because everything's politics as
50:17
well. Right? So Biden, Trudeau from Canada, they're going down
50:21
to Mexico City to see Obrador. All the sudden, now, we're gonna
50:26
get Ovidio Guzman, the rat, all of a sudden we're getting him.
50:31
Well, the Mexican government had him coordinated 2019 and let him
50:35
go to avoid those images that you saw. I don't
50:39
understand what what exactly did he just say there? We're getting
50:42
the rat. What
50:43
the rat is the guy over is Guzman's kid. He's got two sons.
50:48
Oh, he's
50:48
called The Rat.
50:49
And he's Yeah, he's called himself, I guess. But he's the
50:52
rat. And he is what that ABC report was about. That ABC
50:57
report you just played that's it just didn't mention his nickname
51:01
or anything else. It just says he was captured. And this guy
51:05
claims that and so does the guy on on on Tucker, show McGregor,
51:10
Colonel McGregor. They claim that the only reason he was
51:16
captured in the first place in which what this guy's gonna
51:19
continue to say is because of the visit the upcoming visit to
51:22
show that there's some action taking place. The Mexican
51:26
government
51:26
had him coordinated 2019 and let them go to avoid those images
51:31
that you saw. So suddenly, now we have him. Do you think it
51:35
stops his father went to prison three times. He's now in prison.
51:40
Next up, his brother Avon is next. If you really look at what
51:45
is going on with people the money, the drugs, the dope the
51:49
the smuggling. Mexico is a failed state. Can I give you a
51:54
little bit for the audience? Here we go. General Salvador
51:58
seemed for Vegas, Google it. He was the minister of defense,
52:03
right? Big deal. He was arrested by American ages at LAX for
52:08
being in in the employment of the cartels dope, smuggling all
52:12
of it. In exchange for their help with people smuggling.
52:17
Trump gave him back with the thought that the Mexicans were
52:20
actually going to put him on trial. They didn't put them on
52:24
trial. They let him go. That's the defense minister on Monday
52:28
in Brooklyn in federal court, the former head of what you
52:33
would say is the Mexican FBI. His name is Hannah Rowe Luna.
52:37
He's going on trial for being in the employ of the drug cartel.
52:42
The former president of Mexico Pena Nieto. In El Chapo is trial
52:47
in Brooklyn, a Colombian drug lord testified that Guzman gave
52:52
him $100 million bribe. Do you see the issue people It's way
52:58
bigger than just some scrubby hungry people coming over the
53:03
border?
53:04
Okay, couple things. First of all, you're right. The guy is
53:06
not funny. I don't know if he thinks he does. Second one is I
53:11
don't understand what the big deal is. We just heard that anti
53:14
science aggression kills more people than fentanyl. So I don't
53:18
know what he's all upset about. Hotez says it says the nuclear
53:22
proliferation doesn't even doesn't even come close to anti
53:25
science aggression.
53:27
Somebody says smuggle hotels across the board and
53:31
exchange students. Yeah.
53:34
Let's go over now to Tucker. Now, in the case of Tucker, I
53:38
have minimized Tucker's commentary you as opposed to
53:43
Cuomo, who is I think a little better at it. Tucker is always
53:47
you know, aghast about this.
53:48
You know, here's here's Tucker stock line. That's so smart.
53:52
That's so smart. I'm so happy someone finally said that such a
53:56
smart thing. Great, great.
53:58
You might as well but you could take over the show and take his
54:01
show. Hey, it's
54:01
our content might as well.
54:03
So here we go with that. Tucker with Doug McGregor, who's the
54:07
who's the editor in McGregor was on set, which I thought was
54:12
weird. Cuz McGregor's, always remote, but he was on set for
54:17
some reason talking to Tucker. And here we go. Doug McGregor on
54:20
Mexican War and TC,
54:22
it would seem if a war breaks out in a country with whom you
54:25
share this normalcy long border that there would be coverage of
54:28
it. There hasn't been why?
54:30
Well, we're lucky to get this glimpse. The media simply
54:33
doesn't bother to cover it. But we really need to understand
54:36
what this war is about. In 2020. We arrested the Mexican minister
54:41
of defense, a general name seen for egos in California, on
54:46
charges associated with drug trafficking, human trafficking,
54:50
and a whole list of crimes. Ultimately, we turned him over
54:54
to the President of Mexico President Obrador, who promptly
54:58
released him Yeah, and we draw Up to charges. Now one of the
55:01
reasons we dropped charges that we were promised war
55:04
cooperation, but it hasn't been forthcoming. And so what we're
55:08
really seeing here is not an effort to enforce the law. Not
55:12
an effort to do anything good. It's it's a fight between a
55:15
cartel, the Sinaloa Cartel, and the Mexican army. They're
55:19
fighting for turf. They're fighting for cash. They're
55:21
fighting for influence inside Mexico. They want the son of El
55:26
Chapo presumably, so they can give it to the President of
55:30
Mexico and he can create the illusion that by turning him
55:33
over to us that there is cooperation with Mexico. Tucker,
55:37
there's no cooperation with Mexico, and President Obrador is
55:41
irrelevant. He does not run the country. He's a mouthpiece for
55:46
the drug cartels. You know?
55:50
Do we remember Fast and Furious? Do we remember HSBC laundering
55:56
the drug money now? It happened still happening
56:02
here. It's just a good example Fast and Furious. And now we're
56:04
not talking about the movies. We're talking about the our
56:08
United States governments through holder, the Attorney
56:11
General, under a loving the Sinaloa Cartel, a bunch of guns
56:16
was under the impression that they would take over all the
56:20
cartels and run the cartels in Mexico.
56:23
Instead, they killed a bunch of our border agents, corps miners,
56:28
right off, he killed a lot of people.
56:30
And so So Holder was held to account on this and they held in
56:34
contempt to Congress for night, coming up with some documents he
56:37
was holding. And then no charges were ever brought against him by
56:40
the
56:41
local I'm sure that'll change with Kevin McCarthy at the helm.
56:44
I'm sure all these things will come to light, John, everything
56:47
well, the Republicans are going to do it now. They're going to
56:50
get everybody the Biden crime family, the FBI. Oh, yeah, can't
56:54
wait 1000s of
56:56
Mexican wars
56:57
to Mexico right now, in Central America, writ large, because of
57:01
the criminality is an existential threat to us. It's
57:05
the only truly existential threat to the country. And
57:08
remember, they reach into the United States, all of your major
57:11
cities, there are networks there that reach back into Mexico.
57:15
Thank you. That's why they're powerful. And that's a war that
57:18
will eventually have to be fought, because at some point,
57:21
we will shut down the border, because things will have gotten
57:25
that bad. When we do that we will immediately be at war with
57:29
the drug cartels, because we've cut off their income. And we're
57:33
gonna have to fight inside the United States as well as on our
57:36
border. And that's going to demand the United States Army,
57:39
because our border patrol is not nearly as well equipped.
57:43
They're, oh,
57:44
they're outgunned, outperformed in every sense, every category
57:48
of military power by the cartels. What you saw is a good
57:51
demonstration of just how powerful those cartels are.
57:55
Yeah, you know, Mexico, Texas has done it before. We got we
57:59
got house wise with 380s. We got lawyers with AR fifteens. We're
58:03
not going to wait for the army. It's only 175 miles from here.
58:08
This is serious. This is really
58:11
a Mexican American War took place before and there's been
58:14
other skirmishes and there's been buyouts we bought the
58:17
California was bought from the Spanish or the Mexican.
58:21
You guys are dead. You're not going to be able to defend
58:24
yourself against an invasion like that. In California,
58:28
it won't be against us.
58:30
No, it's gonna be against us to Texas. Hey, no, you know what,
58:34
you know what? liberal America will go
58:39
Dutch right for them. They'll be surprised. So here's the other
58:43
story. And this is an alternative gang, which is just
58:47
more there's more. One last one. This is from NTD. And this one
58:51
you didn't hear about. You did hear about the prison riots in
58:54
Mexico. But here's the details. This is Mexico and El Neto and
58:59
escaped
58:59
Mexican cartel kingpin known as El Neto died after a shootout
59:03
early on Thursday. This just four days after he fled prison
59:07
and a violent mass breakout. Ernesto de la Cruz was tracked
59:11
down by intelligence forces in the city of Juarez and the US
59:15
border and then shot after a pursuit. He reportedly crashed
59:18
into a gas station exited the vehicle and began shooting at
59:22
police before being injured. He died enroute to the State
59:25
Attorney General's Offices. Al Neto was a top gunman for the
59:29
Los Mexiko as cartel. He escaped with 29 other inmates after
59:34
raiders in armored vehicles attack the prison in Juarez.
59:37
Early a New Year's Day, a supermarket and a convenience
59:40
store were attacked as decoys to distract police from NATO's
59:44
escape. At least 19 people including guards and other
59:48
prisoners died in the assault, one of Mexico's bloodiest prison
59:52
raids in recent years.
59:53
I've never heard of El Neto. Well, you did now how do you
59:57
spell that l Neto e l n et eto l Neto.
1:00:01
Yeah I think so.
1:00:02
Let me ask the chat GP can IBO assist MC L and I'm doing it in
1:00:09
the chat did chat dot open ai.com Everybody. It's so
1:00:12
accurate. Let me see Neto. I'm sorry. But I don't have any
1:00:17
information about a person named El Neto. Could you provide more
1:00:19
context or clarify your question? Are you getting a
1:00:23
thumbs down for that answer? That's no good, huh? Well, if
1:00:32
people think it's just America and Texas and Mexico, you're
1:00:35
wrong. What is the crime capital of the European Union John
1:00:41
Holland, everyone knows that
1:00:43
everybody knows the Netherlands is the crime capital of Europe.
1:00:48
And I've been saying it and now all of a sudden Deutsche Avella
1:00:52
is picking up on it because we've had a few more people
1:00:55
murdered by the mafia now this piece which was a like a nine
1:01:00
minute piece, it just took one minute just in the beginning.
1:01:02
Because they immediately you take these horrible murders
1:01:08
which are done by the micro micro mafia, which is the
1:01:11
Moroccans I'm just gonna say it and they turn it into a bull
1:01:16
crap story.
1:01:17
Now string of mafia style murders and Netherlands has led
1:01:20
to questions about whether
1:01:22
I love mafia style. No, no, they're mafia murders lady. It's
1:01:25
not style at all. It's just mafia murder.
1:01:28
Now string of mafia style murders and Netherlands has led
1:01:32
to questions about whether drug gangs are threatening the rule
1:01:35
of law in the country. The high profile killings include that of
1:01:39
investigative journalist Peter to fleece, DW correspondent Jack
1:01:43
Parakh has been exploring how attempts to shed light on
1:01:47
criminal forces behind the country's liberal trade in drugs
1:01:51
are coming under pressure from mafia intimidation. Here's his
1:01:54
report from The Hague, a Dutch
1:01:56
coffee shop where it's permitted to buy small amounts of
1:01:59
marijuana. You can even pay with your bank card.
1:02:03
You see what they've done is they don't talk about the
1:02:07
cocaine. They don't talk about the MDMA manufactured in the
1:02:11
Netherlands they don't talk about the criminal network
1:02:13
networks that are trafficking through the ports of Rotterdam
1:02:17
No, instead, they're gonna say it's all because of marijuana.
1:02:22
That's the problem.
1:02:23
But businesses like this one could spend up to 3 million
1:02:27
euros buying stock without receipts. It's technically
1:02:31
illegal for them to purchase so much, but it's never prosecuted.
1:02:35
That legal gray area here is coming under increasing scrutiny
1:02:39
following the 2021 murder of Dutch investigative journalist
1:02:43
Peter our degrees he was part of a team supporting a witness in a
1:02:47
case against a drug kingpin. The Netherlands
1:02:49
is so corrupt look up the IRT affair. They the cops were
1:02:54
complicit in this the the whole country is riddled with
1:02:58
corruption. By the way, I got the name Ernesto Oberto, Pinyon,
1:03:02
Dela Cruz, alias El Neto with one T. Here's what chat GPT
1:03:08
says. It's not appropriate for me to provide information about
1:03:12
specific individuals who may be involved in criminal activities.
1:03:16
Well, I can ask about Biden, it is important to remember that
1:03:20
criminal organizations and illegal activities are harmful
1:03:23
and can have serious consequences. It is not safe or
1:03:26
appropriate to engage with these types of organizations or
1:03:29
activities. Is there something else I can help you with? That's
1:03:33
the future of your search. People just say no, there goes
1:03:36
your information. I
1:03:37
think you nailed it right there way ahead of the game again, you
1:03:41
nailed it right there is the future of search.
1:03:44
Yep. Sorry. We can't tell you. We
1:03:48
don't want to know nothing. Just as a quick aside,
1:03:51
let's just just briefly on this artificial intelligence, I need
1:03:55
to get a few things out. Now that this open AI with that
1:04:00
horrible vocal fry, Sam, what's his name? Altman is now in talks
1:04:08
for a tender offer, which means they're going to sell shares at
1:04:12
a $29 billion valuation. Funny, and what this will bring you is
1:04:18
pilotless planes to fight bushfires in New Zealand. We
1:04:22
have neuroscience news reporting, the deep learning
1:04:25
algorithm can hear alcohol in the voice. So instead of a
1:04:28
breathalyzer, which gives you a pretty accurate blood alcohol
1:04:32
level within a couple of minutes. No, no, it only takes
1:04:34
12 seconds and the AI can hear if you've been drinking, and
1:04:38
that's exactly why your car won't start in the future.
1:04:43
McDonald's is planning to cut jobs as it accelerates
1:04:47
restaurant openings, why AI robots? And then just have you
1:04:54
used a chat or GPS to the the chat thing.
1:04:57
I'll mention this as you brought up about chat. Ask. So I went to
1:05:01
get Okay, I'm gonna go to the site, I got it. You can use
1:05:05
this, you can use this. Give us your email address and instead
1:05:09
of just signing in with Google, I signed in normally with my
1:05:12
normal email address, which I'll give our wishes john@divorce.org
1:05:17
And then it created a password or somebody said we were going
1:05:20
to send you an email confirmation, so I waited no
1:05:22
nothing. So I went back and said resend email, nothing, resend
1:05:27
email, nothing. Now it wasn't in my spam box. It wasn't anywhere
1:05:30
else. It just It can't even do that.
1:05:35
No one can get through your service
1:05:37
user. It's either not doing that because my email guy is looks
1:05:41
for it does a call back it does all these things to make sure to
1:05:45
make sure there's a million things you can do to make sure
1:05:48
it's legit and it comes in is not legit. I guess it just gets
1:05:51
thrown out into the wind. So I can't even get the email
1:05:54
confirmation from these Boneheads. Well, I
1:05:57
just signed in under my my, my useless Google account.
1:06:00
I'm going to go out we're going to go resigning. And my trouble
1:06:03
is I went to do that it says it was already in the buffer or was
1:06:06
already in the on a cookie somewhere. I had to wait for the
1:06:09
cookies to be wiped out. Which I do nightly kept saying
1:06:13
log in with Google login with Google login with Google. Here's
1:06:17
the thing that I that I that I just wanted to point out to
1:06:20
everybody. So this thing creates a word salad which makes it feel
1:06:25
real, the biggest parlor trick of what they call AGI. So this
1:06:30
chat open,
1:06:31
you know what, there's probably one of those fortune teller
1:06:35
people involved with this thing.
1:06:38
The biggest parlor trick. So you know, when you type in a
1:06:41
question, it can just present you with the answer, but Oh, no,
1:06:45
it has to type it out. Like someone's actually typing you a
1:06:50
message. This is a trick. This is a this is a complete mind
1:06:55
fuck that you're in because it makes an even a code. It'll
1:06:59
output code, no type each line. It's a trick. It can give you
1:07:03
the answer. It makes it feel real when someone is typing it
1:07:07
in real time. That's what's happening. No one has mentioned
1:07:10
this. It's cheap, but a very effective method of humanizing
1:07:14
you get this on a lot of the robots that are on these
1:07:18
different websites. Can I help you? Yeah, you know they can
1:07:22
help you robot that's over in the corner. Yeah, you're gonna
1:07:24
help me find this. Well, then why don't you do that they get
1:07:27
does the same thing. it types it out. And it gives you bogus
1:07:31
answers. It doesn't help at all. This is the problem that this is
1:07:35
the same thing I bitch about this constantly is where are all
1:07:39
the receptionist in the world? Instead we get these voice
1:07:42
bullcrap. Where's the receptionist? Receptionist do
1:07:46
the job. They're cheap. They work cheap. There many times
1:07:50
they're pretty. And you have there in these off there in the
1:07:54
offices they bring. They bring joy to the world, generally
1:07:58
speaking the world and we can answer a question I got to find
1:08:03
so and so. And yeah, here you go to here. I'll plug you right in.
1:08:06
Well, I'm glad I'm glad you bring this up. Two things. One,
1:08:12
this is because of some great reset that happened to the
1:08:18
secretarial eligible generation. Ie hot Zoomers, I guess is what
1:08:25
you're looking for. Because they don't want to work they can't
1:08:30
they're afraid that are afraid to answer phones. This is from
1:08:33
PBS news hour
1:08:34
for years now from employers all over this land that young people
1:08:38
just aren't interested in so many of the jobs out there trade
1:08:41
jobs face to face the military. As Karen pay Lucci head of HR at
1:08:46
industrial robot maker Yushan in Rhode Island told me
1:08:50
you can schedule someone for an interview and they don't even
1:08:53
come for their interview.
1:08:57
My My stepdaughter? She interviews really well and she's
1:09:00
getting offers from Vogue from Kim Kardashian company out in
1:09:06
California. And she she I mean, she interviews Well, she has a
1:09:09
good resume. Of course a mom helped her with it. But but
1:09:12
she's she wants to work. I think it's easy. Now you just go out
1:09:17
and she'll show her face. She's not afraid to have a job to
1:09:21
interact with human beings. But that's not all. No, no, she
1:09:24
actually wants to work. Unlike
1:09:27
today's young Americans just don't have the work ethic of the
1:09:30
best the response we got.
1:09:32
I have work ethic for the things that I want to work on, that I
1:09:37
feel will better myself and be good for my health as well
1:09:42
with Jennifer Reardon and Lawrence, Kansas who calls
1:09:44
herself not a housewife but an apartment wife, take a frontline
1:09:48
job.
1:09:49
Do that. If I knew that my labor would be valued, that my
1:09:55
personhood would be valued, that I wouldn't just be another cog
1:09:59
in this mill. sheen that keeps endlessly grinding us downwards.
1:10:03
Breakout, the universal basic income, because these people
1:10:07
aren't going to function in a couple of years, there's not
1:10:09
there's going to be,
1:10:10
but the fact that she'd be, she would change your moniker from
1:10:14
housewife to a part Hart wife is a loser, that is the most loser
1:10:21
have an idea. That means you're you're just you're defining
1:10:24
yourself as an apartment dweller, which is something you
1:10:26
don't want to be if you have a choice, but you have a choice to
1:10:30
have. But you want to have aspiration, not D aspiration,
1:10:34
but yet my job doesn't define me but I'm an apartment wife
1:10:39
is
1:10:42
a very, very she's a loser. That's a desert bed, that person
1:10:45
is going nowhere. And and where are you how she got that you had
1:10:48
to blame the parents in the schools?
1:10:51
Well, I mean, this this is the thing. This is how they talk.
1:10:55
They don't want to have face to face jobs. And it turns out, let
1:11:00
me see if I can find this. The World World Economic Forum, let
1:11:07
me just see, where did I put this was hilarious story they.
1:11:13
Where is it? Ah, there's a huge of fractus because they are out
1:11:19
looking for people to assess assist in Davos. The next Oh,
1:11:24
here it is for the next World Economic Forum. And they put
1:11:29
ads. And here's what they're looking for. You have to be
1:11:32
blonde between 18 and 26 years old, taller than one meter. 70
1:11:37
centimeters and not shy. What is going on at these meetings?
1:11:44
says they give an ad for a hooker. Exactly. Yeah. But
1:11:50
that's probably what's going on. You should also have charisma.
1:11:56
Oh, in Davos, it's for a it should
1:11:59
they should have to one last thing and it should be adept at
1:12:01
the use of condoms. But that on their call Klaus. Tell him to
1:12:07
tell him to get your act together.
1:12:11
Yeah, it's pretty sad. It's pretty sad.
1:12:14
Now where where are we?
1:12:15
I don't know. For loss. We're completely lost in all this.
1:12:21
Well, I'll just we might as well just say that and there's also
1:12:25
no jobs for you. Anyway, Bethany
1:12:26
beyond warned today that the company has serious doubts about
1:12:29
its future and may have to file for bankruptcy. The Home Goods
1:12:33
chain founded more than 50 years ago announced plans last summer
1:12:36
to laugh about 20% of its corporate employees and close
1:12:39
around 150 stores. The company also owns children's retailer
1:12:44
bye bye baby.
1:12:45
Bye bye bye bye retail it's all melting down there's not going
1:12:49
to be any in person
1:12:51
Bath and Beyond was never a good store. I mean, they had a good
1:12:54
selection of stuff you could go there was always empty. It looks
1:12:57
like a money laundering operation. It was always empty
1:13:00
you always get these save $5 things in the mail constantly go
1:13:04
there. And they wouldn't even I was the nightmare. They was just
1:13:09
I mean I kind of enjoyed going to there. We used to have one
1:13:12
here just shuttered during COVID and you know but it was never
1:13:17
like I don't know how they made money to be honest about a huge
1:13:20
space that inventory way too much inventory of all sorts to
1:13:26
it was really compelling that you had to buy forget that.
1:13:29
Forget that. You know that this this college student killer.
1:13:34
Brian co burger, the guy who killed all these
1:13:37
cars a criminology student? Yes. Yeah.
1:13:40
So the Idaho jail, which is has him in prison right now says
1:13:46
that they will indeed attempt to accommodate his vegan diet. I
1:13:51
mean, come on accommodate his vegan diet. Ah, man.
1:14:03
That's pretty funny. That's sad is what it is really sad. All
1:14:08
right, let's look at this go worldwide here I got so let's,
1:14:11
let's go. Crazy story here. We're going to talk about China
1:14:15
a little bit. This is something that's another old brother.
1:14:19
Here's the Taiwan missile repair story. One
1:14:24
missile repair from Taiwan.
1:14:26
Tensions between Taipei and Beijing present a complicated
1:14:29
situation. Taiwan is closely tied to China in many ways, not
1:14:34
just economically, but also militarily. Concerns arose on
1:14:38
the island Wednesday after a key component of the islands most
1:14:42
advanced missiles turned up in China. The weapons are called
1:14:46
carrier killers. A key device used to calibrate them was
1:14:50
shipped to a manufacturer in Europe for repairs, but was then
1:14:54
returned to Taiwan from China.
1:14:58
The picture Oh, that's odd. You sent I got a missile I built I
1:15:03
meant make. And I sent it to a place who has some, I guess some
1:15:08
function to some function that was in the midst of that is
1:15:11
well, it's under warranty is handled. It's under warranty.
1:15:13
Yeah. And it has a Swiss component. So I sent it to go to
1:15:16
all the trouble of sending the damn thing to Switzerland. I'm
1:15:20
like a, you know, 40 miles away from the Chinese mainland
1:15:23
myself, but I sent it to Switzerland, in part to
1:15:27
the missile device was sent to China for repairs by a Swiss
1:15:30
company that operates a maintenance center there.
1:15:34
Taiwan's missile developers said no data had been leaked after
1:15:38
checking the return to device. But experts say Taiwan must be
1:15:42
careful. The island is discussing measures to avoid
1:15:45
similar equipment being maintained in China.
1:15:50
So I'm thinking what is what's the efficiency of sending
1:15:54
something to Switzerland, and then Switzerland, sending it to
1:15:57
China, and then China sending it to me? This is nuts. No, what
1:16:03
are the Swiss up to anyway?
1:16:05
No good. As usual. Oh, good. They're they're waiting for the
1:16:11
cbdc Bonanza to kick in. That's what they're doing. They're just
1:16:14
sitting there waiting. is going to be perfect. You bet.
1:16:21
Back on, to segue to hit more missiles. You got Australia,
1:16:26
Australians are now buying American missiles.
1:16:30
Okay, Australia, boosting its long range strike capability
1:16:35
with the purchase of a US missile system.
1:16:37
The effectiveness of the high Mars system in Ukrainian
1:16:41
conflict has certainly influenced the government's
1:16:44
decision. Here we go.
1:16:46
Hi, Mars is the same long range military technology Ukraine is
1:16:50
using in its war against Russia. But for Australia's defense
1:16:54
focus, China seems to be the target.
1:16:57
It's also something where we as a ally of the United States can
1:17:00
support their efforts and air force posture in the Pacific
1:17:04
region as well.
1:17:06
Last year, China signed a security pact with the Solomon
1:17:09
Islands in the Pacific. The move heightened Australian and US
1:17:13
concerns about China's assertiveness in the region.
1:17:17
According to the Australian Government behind our system
1:17:20
will include launchers, missiles, and training rockets,
1:17:24
and will be used by 2026.
1:17:26
The Australian Army will be going from having an ability to
1:17:29
strike targets 30 kilometers away to eventually being able to
1:17:33
strike targets at ranges greater than 499 kilometers.
1:17:37
The system is part of Australia's over $700 million
1:17:41
dollar budget for new missiles and rockets.
1:17:44
Well, that's clearly just meant to be a five eyes flank for
1:17:47
China, wouldn't it?
1:17:49
Yep, exactly. But they're going to be buying them. So that's
1:17:53
700 $800 million, even though it's a small pings good compared
1:17:58
to what we're giving to the Ukrainians. But here's the other
1:18:02
interesting part of this story is the new Solomon Island
1:18:05
embassy.
1:18:08
New where's the new words new Solomon?
1:18:11
Is that Solomon Islands, new embassy. Oh, okay.
1:18:15
The Biden administration is moving to reopen the US Embassy
1:18:19
in the Solomon Islands. That's to counter the growing threat of
1:18:22
China in the Pacific. The State Department says it will soon set
1:18:25
up a temporary embassy in the capital of the island nation.
1:18:29
Right on the site of the former US Consulate. The embassy will
1:18:32
initially staff two diplomats and five local employees. The
1:18:37
annual cost is expected at $1.8 million. But Washington's
1:18:41
ultimate plan is to build a permanent facility with larger
1:18:44
staffing. The US closed its embassy after the Cold War in
1:18:47
1993. But China's threat in the Indo Pacific region is sparking
1:18:52
concerns. Since the Solomon Islands struck a deal with China
1:18:56
last February, the US has sent several high level delegations
1:19:00
to the islands.
1:19:02
There's a lot going on right now. There's a lot that
1:19:05
crapload of stuff and he every once in a while not to to hog
1:19:10
the segment. But every once in a while there's a story that just
1:19:14
sings to me. It says if I was like the editor or the chief
1:19:17
editor in chief of one of these networks, or a big newspaper,
1:19:22
this story, the next story is so interesting. I don't know why
1:19:27
this isn't everywhere, because it's just the screwball story.
1:19:32
And this is this clip is the South Korea drone story,
1:19:36
South Korea will consider terminating a 2018 inter Korean
1:19:40
military agreement if North Korea's military makes further
1:19:43
incursions into its airspace. That's according to a South
1:19:46
Korean official following the North recent drone intrusion.
1:19:50
The agreement was signed by former South Korean president
1:19:53
Moon Jae In and North Korean leader Kim Jong Hoon in 2018 to
1:19:57
end military hostilities between them nation's termination of the
1:20:01
agreement could result in the resumption of live fire drills
1:20:05
along the demarcation lines separating the two Koreas. North
1:20:08
Korea sent five drones into South Korea on December 26. One
1:20:12
of them briefly entered a no fly zone surrounding South Korea's
1:20:16
presidential office. This prompted South Korea to deploy
1:20:19
fighter jets and fire about 100 rounds at the drones. But none
1:20:23
were shut down. And they flew over South Korean cities for
1:20:27
hours. In response, South Korea's president has demanded
1:20:30
the military develop a drone unit for surveillance
1:20:33
operations, develop stealth drones and mass produce small
1:20:37
drones by the end of the year.
1:20:40
I mean, come on. What a story.
1:20:44
Yeah, we don't need to report that here. It's
1:20:46
like it's so fascinating to see all these drift North Korean
1:20:50
drones flying around different cities in South Korea, and
1:20:54
nobody's covering it.
1:20:55
Only one one crashes, we'll just have a little blip somewhere.
1:20:59
We're under we're under complete psychological warfare, certainly
1:21:04
in the United States. And I'd from what I see in Europe as
1:21:06
well. In fact, there's a new guy on the scene that I want to warn
1:21:09
everybody about. And I heard about I saw him on Rogen, Peters
1:21:14
Zohan, have you heard of this guy?
1:21:16
The name rings a bell ZEIH
1:21:19
A n people have sent me a couple of clips. I'm like, Who is? So
1:21:23
this guy. He wears a suit. He's got a ponytail little knot on
1:21:28
the back. Like a little man bun and he's probably in the 40s.
1:21:33
In a man bun. That's the great combination
1:21:35
suit and a man bun is like she's like you should be beat up. And
1:21:40
Andy has a colorful tie. You know what I mean? Like,
1:21:45
yeah, in his ties. I collect in his Twitter profile.
1:21:49
He has a blue and yellow tie on. Get it Ukraine. And so this guy,
1:21:56
he he's a New York Times best seller, geopolitical strategist,
1:22:00
speaker and author. And his most recent book, the end of the
1:22:04
world. This guy was with Stratfor here in Austin for 11
1:22:08
years. The guy is a spoke. He's a spook and people like, oh,
1:22:13
yeah, yeah, he's the real deal. So he's giving lectures saying,
1:22:17
if you want to beamer buy it now because Germany's never going to
1:22:21
manufacture again.
1:22:24
So here is his wiki page.
1:22:27
Denver, he's in Denver, hello.
1:22:30
He's got to kindness. He's got to kind of spook wiki page
1:22:33
because there's nothing about him. We don't know if he has a
1:22:36
wife. We don't know anything. But he's got a couple
1:22:39
bestsellers that he should have a bigger page than this is
1:22:42
pictures not the one you see on TV. Born in 73, grew up adopted
1:22:47
a Jewish family in Iowa, obtained a BS in political
1:22:51
science from what was then northeast Missouri. I don't even
1:22:54
know what it is anymore. And then he went to University of
1:22:57
Otago, whatever that is a New Zealand, which is again another
1:23:02
five eyes operation. And then the Patterson School of
1:23:06
diplomacy and international commerce of the new University
1:23:09
of Kentucky, which is one of those little spin off things and
1:23:12
then there's really nothing he was an analyst and later vice
1:23:15
president Austin baseball geopolitical, he was an analyst
1:23:17
for Stratfor and a vice president and spent 12 years
1:23:22
according to this, and this is a very classic. What do we do you
1:23:27
know that because they we've heard them talk about it, we've
1:23:30
had clips of the agencies saying, we don't know how to
1:23:33
present ourselves in normal social media without looking
1:23:37
like we're giving it away. This is one of the best examples I've
1:23:41
seen because there's nothing here. Yeah, it's really vapid.
1:23:47
Let's, here's it once. What's this
1:23:48
paper buddy? Peters. I'm
1:23:50
coming to you from everybody worried?
1:23:53
That's January 6.
1:23:55
I don't know why.
1:23:56
I don't know where I am. It's January Sex and the news. I
1:23:59
don't know where I am. Now. He doesn't know where he is. It
1:24:02
doesn't worry you listening.
1:24:04
That's January 6, and the news is out of Mexico. A video
1:24:10
Guzman, who is the son of the former cartel ahead, El Chapo
1:24:15
Sinaloa cartel has been arrested and spirited off to Mexico City
1:24:19
in anticipation of the Biden administration's presidential
1:24:23
visit coming next week. Oh, that's
1:24:25
interesting. I thought that wasn't true.
1:24:27
Not saying specifically. That was the point that one guy made.
1:24:32
He says the idea was to catch this kid. They caught him the
1:24:34
rat and to have him in Mexico City captured before Biden
1:24:38
showed Biden and Trudeau show up. Good job we're doing
1:24:43
that's not what ABC reported. If you recall, they said exactly
1:24:47
the opposite.
1:24:48
Mexican officials say the arrest was not related to President
1:24:51
Biden's upcoming. Well, that's
1:24:53
not related. Not
1:24:57
but it is a little coincidental. A little bit of background of
1:25:02
the Sinaloa Cartel until recently was the most powerful
1:25:05
organ, okay? This guy is no good. And he's getting on
1:25:09
everywhere. He's, I've never heard of him before.
1:25:14
He's just one of those guys. he's on the list. Book him.
1:25:16
Have we ever had a clip of him? Let
1:25:18
me say, No, I've never I believe that we've never had a clip from
1:25:22
he's just an He's the new guy on the list. Oh, wait, no,
1:25:25
I have a clip here. From October 30. Hold on a second. What is
1:25:34
the what year this year? This year? October 30. Two recent?
1:25:38
Yeah. This is a recent clip on our show, which countries should
1:25:41
be very concerned about the ratio of young to old? The worst
1:25:45
in the world is China. They've been in the process of updating
1:25:48
their data over the past couple years.
1:25:51
Yeah. This the clip that claims China's dead
1:25:55
now starting to publicly admit that they over counted by 100
1:25:57
million people. All of those people would have been born
1:26:00
since one child so age 40. And under the young worker
1:26:03
demographic that the childbearing demographic, and
1:26:06
two thirds of them are probably women. So we best guess is that
1:26:10
China only has 1.3 billion.
1:26:12
So this guy is out there talking about COVID. He talks about
1:26:15
crypto and Bitcoin he talks about I mean, he's he is an
1:26:19
expert on everything. That's my job. So okay, we'll keep an eye
1:26:27
on keep an eye on that guy.
1:26:29
So he's he, this idea that the Chinese, the whole China, China
1:26:34
as a whole is dead, which is he introduced it. So this is an
1:26:38
eight. So this is some sort of agency meme. What? No, there you
1:26:43
go. Agency mean to get us in some sort of position to get
1:26:49
fooled. Yes.
1:26:53
So quick,
1:26:54
he could be worrying for the Chinese for all we know.
1:26:58
I don't know who he's working for him and do a quick little
1:27:00
thing on Russia since we're there. This happened. Of course,
1:27:05
we finally figured out when Christmas and New Year's was or
1:27:08
is according to the Orthodox calendar and he has a report
1:27:12
from CBS
1:27:13
while turning now overseas, Vladimir Putin called for a 36
1:27:16
hour ceasefire in his war against Ukraine. To mark
1:27:20
Orthodox Christmas, which is celebrated in both countries.
1:27:23
For Ukraine quickly rejected that is hypocrisy and said there
1:27:26
could be no truce until Russia withdraws its troops from
1:27:29
occupied land. The US tomorrow is expected to announce a new $3
1:27:32
billion weapons package for Ukraine that will include
1:27:35
armored fighting vehicles.
1:27:37
More, more more. Money. All right, here's Putin now breaking
1:27:43
his promise.
1:27:44
The sights and sounds of a shattered promise in Bach mood.
1:27:49
Moscow declared the guns would fall silent a unilateral
1:27:53
ceasefire, but as Ukraine celebrated Orthodox Christmas,
1:27:56
Russia's artillery ring in the holiday weakness. I think the
1:28:01
Russians are tricking us about the ceasefire. She says if
1:28:04
someone makes a promise they must fulfill it.
1:28:12
But trusting Russian President Vladimir Putin is a dangerous
1:28:16
gamble. The fighting continued like any other day, while
1:28:19
Ukraine's faithful tried to find some light in this dark time.
1:28:27
This sacred evening is very important for us. She says. As
1:28:31
for Putin, we cannot trust him at all. He's made us suffer so
1:28:34
much. Nobody is safe as long as he walks the earth. If the
1:28:39
season is a time to be surrounded by friends and
1:28:41
family, Putin attended Christmas service by himself at the
1:28:45
Kremlin's cathedral. But this holiday didn't pass without
1:28:49
bearing gifts. This week, the White House announced $3 billion
1:28:53
dollars in military aid including the Bradley infantry
1:28:56
fighting vehicle. US plans to send Ukraine about 50 of the
1:29:01
proven Russian tank killers.
1:29:03
It'll take a couple of months basically, to get this
1:29:07
capability fielded to get the Ukrainians trained
1:29:10
to some a dead Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky.
1:29:13
Thank the American people for the weapons saying this is
1:29:16
exactly what is needed new guns and rounds. High precision wants
1:29:20
new rockets, new drones. It's really lean and strong.
1:29:24
It's great. Nothing to worry about. Keep it going. The
1:29:28
Russians will never never escalated.
1:29:31
I have one clip on this new arming here. Or is it was COVID
1:29:39
Oh here is another 3 billion to Ukraine.
1:29:43
The US plans to send Ukraine nearly $3 billion in military
1:29:47
aid. The massive new package includes for the first time
1:29:51
several dozen Bradley Fighting Vehicles. The Bradley is an
1:29:54
armored carrier used to transport troops to combat it's
1:29:58
known as a tank killer. Big Isn't the anti tank missile that
1:30:01
can fire. The move is the Biden administration's latest step to
1:30:05
send increasingly lethal and powerful weapons to help Ukraine
1:30:09
beat back Russian forces. European allies also stepped up
1:30:13
their weapons commitments. Germany announced it will
1:30:15
provide armored personnel carriers and a Patriot missile
1:30:18
battery to Ukraine, while France says it will soon hold talks to
1:30:22
arrange for the delivery of armored combat vehicles.
1:30:26
It's interesting that you're on News says the US is sending
1:30:29
three and a half billion euros in military aid. So that would
1:30:33
be closer to $4 billion. Yeah, I don't know why I was reporting
1:30:37
different numbers. How hard is it to get the right numbers?
1:30:39
I know I think you see this all the time. It's and you know, the
1:30:42
fact that
1:30:43
we are reporting on this were years ago, you know, at this
1:30:48
time of year, where would you be you would be in Vegas at CES.
1:30:52
Reporting on the latest things happening in consumer
1:30:56
electronics
1:30:57
did latest junk that they're trying to foist on the American
1:31:00
public? When's
1:31:00
the last time you went there?
1:31:02
I haven't been there for five, six years. I stopped going years
1:31:05
ago, but I don't I mean, I think it's longer than five, six
1:31:07
years, maybe 10. I may not been there for 10 years. When I
1:31:11
during the Comdex era. After that fondly folded, I would go
1:31:16
all the time because I go every year and now you go to CES every
1:31:19
other year. And what I noticed at CES when I was going to it
1:31:24
besides the really packs to town, is that there's nothing
1:31:28
new that didn't amount of new stuff at CES, especially as
1:31:31
opposed to Comdex was around 10 20% of it was the same stuff.
1:31:36
Right? It was, you know, pretty much it wasn't that much new.
1:31:40
And then I also spent way too much time in the consumer
1:31:43
electronics and you know, looking at speakers and stereo
1:31:47
gear instead of looking at computer stuff did they have?
1:31:50
Did they have the adult video awards at the same time that CSA
1:31:53
does for a number
1:31:54
of members? That was a date that stopped about 15 years ago. That
1:31:59
was great. Was that because you go from one to the other and
1:32:02
just go are there they were like porn stars walking around. Porn
1:32:06
Stars in there were funny girls, and they were you'd have well I
1:32:09
did I had to hold when I was Emilio, which was the last time
1:32:12
I think that was going on that we had we designed a little bit
1:32:18
it's last somewhere where I get where I keep asking these is a
1:32:22
comedy act for the bvo people. It was filmed that was organized
1:32:27
structure with about three or four of these girls who love to
1:32:29
act. And so the idea was I was going to ask every one of them
1:32:33
out for a date. And they're all going to give me the brush off
1:32:38
in various ways. And it was getting pretty it was quite
1:32:41
humorous to do. And
1:32:47
yeah, HR had to get rid of it. Whatever. It was very funny.
1:32:51
Well, these days there is there are still stupid products. I
1:32:55
found a report an actual ces Consumer Electronics Show Report
1:32:59
from of all outfits France 24. It's a doozy. You could have
1:33:03
been reporting on this. Their nation
1:33:05
is at war, but the startups are proving Ukraine's texting is
1:33:09
still open for business. At this year's Consumer Electronics Show
1:33:13
about a dozen Ukrainian startups are unveiling gadgets and eco
1:33:17
friendly innovations, such as relief which produces paper
1:33:22
products from leaves that fall on city streets and in parks.
1:33:26
That some high tech
1:33:29
leaves were recycling leaves
1:33:32
when
1:33:32
the war started. Despite a lot of different negative factors,
1:33:37
there was also some positive ones. The nation became united
1:33:41
right. And I feel so proud to be a part of Ukrainian startup
1:33:45
ecosystem and to present Ukraine of the international markets.
1:33:48
Another Ukrainian ces exhibitor Rickover creates cups and
1:33:53
candleholders out of
1:33:54
coffee grounds. Wow, this is electronics like I've never seen
1:33:57
them before. Ukraine's economy
1:33:59
shrank by more than 30% last year due to Russia's brutal and
1:34:04
ongoing invasion. But the nation's tech scene has been
1:34:08
surprisingly resilient, according to the Ukrainian
1:34:11
startup fund,
1:34:12
out of it 160 startups that we've talked to no one has
1:34:16
closed and stopped their activity. Of course, a lot of
1:34:19
them have made a lot have changed their location to the
1:34:22
other city of Ukraine and cetera, et cetera. But all of
1:34:24
them want to keep working to developing
1:34:27
Russian exhibitors. We're not welcome at the 2023
1:34:31
International Trade Show. Ces organizers say they are happy to
1:34:35
feature Ukrainian startups this year, because the world wants to
1:34:39
support Ukraine during the conflict.
1:34:44
Something some sigh up or something going on here. The
1:34:47
Ukrainians are quite adept at high end coding, and, you know,
1:34:54
outstanding at creating viruses and, and also work as content
1:35:00
detractors and they make him sound like a bunch of buffoons,
1:35:03
Ukrainian startup fund and there were signs everywhere. Do you
1:35:06
know that who's financing Ukrainian startup fund?
1:35:11
I'm sure I won't be surprised us
1:35:13
AI D ah, they got signs all over the booth
1:35:19
it's us AI D so that's just a spook thing.
1:35:22
Yeah, well the My goodness, they're making paper from trees.
1:35:26
This is crazy. This is ces peak ces
1:35:31
making with coffee cups from coffee grounds. The hell's that
1:35:35
all about? Joke is a joke. It's a bunch of jokers. These guys
1:35:41
are just laughing up their sleeves. And meanwhile France 24
1:35:45
is all in like a bunch of dummies. And with
1:35:48
that I'd like to thank you for your currency in the morning to
1:35:50
you the man who used to report on the see in the CES ladies and
1:35:54
gentlemen say hello to my friend on the other end Mr. John's
1:36:01
Karina worship see was near social in the one of the days
1:36:04
and nights out there in
1:36:05
the morning to the trolls and the troll room who have been
1:36:07
trolling along nicely Good to have you all here. It's nice to
1:36:10
see you. If you want to know what it's like to be a troll, go
1:36:14
to troll room.io or grab a copy of the updated the updated a pod
1:36:20
verse app for Android and iOS. You would get will actually get
1:36:24
an alert when we go live in the troll room is right there for
1:36:27
you can listen to the live stream, which is 24/7. Yeah,
1:36:30
it's not like it goes away when we go away. This live shows all
1:36:33
the time. If it's not live, it's gonna sound live because it's
1:36:36
probably a podcast record. It is the best podcast network in the
1:36:40
universe truly. And you can listen to it in real time. Let's
1:36:47
see how we're doing on the count. Oh. 2321 What? Yes.
1:36:56
Okay, that tells us something's amiss.
1:36:59
I don't know why would it be amiss?
1:37:01
Because you don't the variations is statistically invalid what we
1:37:05
had last Sunday. It's going up and down. And we had the 1700s
1:37:08
stuff going on. It's freezing there. There's counting
1:37:12
mechanisms not I think that's an accurate I think that's the
1:37:15
number we should have been getting more normally.
1:37:17
That's what I think I think you're right there. I think
1:37:19
you're right on that some something was wrong. And now
1:37:21
it's back. It's definitely backward.
1:37:23
This number sounds the same to number. Yes, that's traditional
1:37:27
for Sunday's,
1:37:29
and we appreciate all the trolls stopping by here. Of course you
1:37:35
could be interacting with us at no agenda social.com We've had
1:37:40
our Mastodon server up for five years at least. Now, we still
1:37:47
have some spots available for you to sign up because it turns
1:37:50
out that we are on we have a rather long list of of Mastodon
1:37:55
servers that block us by Please tell me you saw the email I sent
1:38:00
to you. I probably didn't go oh my goodness, I thought I thought
1:38:04
you would be ready for this. I thought it would be ready to
1:38:07
laugh. Oh, okay. So
1:38:10
I'm always ready to laugh.
1:38:12
So, there is a server. Let me just see if I can bring this up
1:38:17
real quick. There's a server that you can query for any
1:38:23
Mastodon instance, and it will tell you here we go. Well, maybe
1:38:30
I thought I sent it to you. That's interesting, huh? Well,
1:38:36
it'll tell you which. Which Mastodon servers have blocked
1:38:42
you. Here. I'm going to bring it up now. And they have a reason
1:38:46
why now. We have let me see 464 that have blocked us.
1:38:53
Well, 64 Oh, yeah.
1:38:55
Let me give you some of the reasons how many are there there
1:38:57
must be millions. Well, we're blocked by a lot of them,
1:39:00
including twit dot social. But we are blindly twit
1:39:04
dot social blockers. Well,
1:39:06
let me see if they gave a reason you see twit Let me see. Twit
1:39:15
now didn't give a reason. But I'll just run through the list
1:39:18
and give you some reasons is pretty interesting. Pretty
1:39:20
interesting list. Hate speech, free speech
1:39:24
hate speech. What do we do hate speech? No. Free speech
1:39:28
which is the as a instead of saying free speech they do free
1:39:31
speech free speech moderators ignore anti semitism and our
1:39:36
slurs centered around a yikes podcast and hosts a few shitters
1:39:42
here's one transphobia here's another one instance is well
1:39:46
known for providing a platform for and turning a blind eye to
1:39:50
fascist and fascist adjacent ideology and the perpetuation of
1:39:55
such through harassment. Wow that That's
1:40:00
that's well I will say this turn a blind eye to everything but
1:40:06
not harassment we usually get we kick people off for that.
1:40:10
Here's another one freeze speech instance run by the no agenda
1:40:15
podcast hosted by John C Dvorak and Adam curry rather tolerant
1:40:19
of fascist and other scum Adam curry has proven uncooperative
1:40:23
in the past
1:40:25
and he corroborated for what
1:40:27
I guess blocking people and kicking them off here one no
1:40:31
agenda is Nazi agenda always good haha oh here's one oh no
1:40:36
moderation policy lots of free speech accounts. Also
1:40:41
misogynistic anti abortion conspiracy theory accounts. Oh
1:40:46
my god, I love this free speech. They just why why don't they
1:40:51
just say free speech? Why is it freeze speech? Free speech? What
1:40:56
is that? What is the brain freeze so free freeze as in
1:41:00
freezing peach as a freeze
1:41:01
with a Z it's got a Z right? Yes, free has actually has a Z
1:41:06
and it says freeze peach, peach. What is wrong with these kids in
1:41:12
12 years old.
1:41:14
Listen to this one. So this is social dot hex dot technology
1:41:18
you know the reason says I've looked at this domain four to
1:41:21
five times each time I didn't find anything specifically
1:41:24
warranting a suspension but the fact that it comes up so often
1:41:29
in itself warrants a suspension
1:41:32
I mean that's you oh you got to cut and paste that one
1:41:36
that's one of my favorite
1:41:38
ends and cut and paste and that's a poster it is
1:41:43
I'm so proud of that one anti bureaucracies Yeah, I sent you
1:41:48
the whole list okay you sent okay the gathering of all the
1:41:52
ideological garbage in one place Nazis fastest racist misogynist
1:41:57
homophobic Chernobyl is not so toxic as this instance
1:42:05
oh what was what was that domain?
1:42:08
That is bursal dot zone I have no idea what that is. Brother
1:42:14
yeah it's great. I love reading all this even podcasts index dot
1:42:19
social got guys blocked by quite a number of of I mean we talked
1:42:23
about there is podcasting 2.0 Seriously. So what are some of
1:42:29
the reasons that how many blocks do we get there? Let me see
1:42:34
podcast index dot social and watch this this is also funny 37
1:42:40
Let me see fashio adjacent now you go no agenda affiliated
1:42:49
there it is it's interesting though Mastodon dot social which
1:42:55
is the big one you know it's the big the big monster run by the
1:42:59
run by the by the fascist by the by the actual fascist. They have
1:43:05
a lot of blocks you know why they're blocked? It's too big.
1:43:09
There's large instance large instance excessive external Nov
1:43:14
traffic too large to be moderated. I mean, it's font.
1:43:20
It's fantastic. Now of course, this is perfect. Because it
1:43:22
shouldn't be that way. It's 464 servers that block us outright.
1:43:27
So find one that doesn't and join in the fun. We're fascia
1:43:31
adjacent everybody.
1:43:33
Yeah. That's pathetic.
1:43:37
Follow Adam and no agenda. social.com Jhansi DeVore I could
1:43:40
no agenda social.com You too can be fashion adjacent, and be on
1:43:44
the block list of 1000s. Now let's thank the artists for
1:43:49
episode 1518 which we tried to idle we titled cue yoga, to
1:43:57
yoga. And we love this art. This piece of work which was brought
1:44:01
to us by Nico Syme Nico has has had a couple of wins. It just I
1:44:06
mean, it's an old classic. We love a mac and cheese joke. But
1:44:10
when it came down to the crap half cooked macaroni and cheese
1:44:14
save the climate. Uh, he Nailed it. Nailed it. It was so good.
1:44:20
I will mention that this is repurposed from one of his
1:44:23
earlier failed pieces. I know a lot of artists do that and I
1:44:27
don't think it's a bad thing it's not you don't get any
1:44:30
points against you. But it should be noted
1:44:33
Well, what do you mean Did he already have
1:44:35
this action the whole like it was there was no agenda crap
1:44:39
you're not having a half Cook was no he had a different gag.
1:44:41
Different gag.
1:44:42
Okay, okay. It was a good gag though. I liked this girl was
1:44:47
outstanding.
1:44:48
This was a piece had everything that we wanted. It has something
1:44:51
to do with the show. It had put the little climate change thing
1:44:54
in there, which was President blocked for that regime by
1:44:57
climate change, right or Ehrlich They don't like Paul are like
1:45:02
we don't
1:45:05
the other pieces we ever just
1:45:08
Well, there was people trying to do climate like climate, The
1:45:12
Population Bomb, which Kenny Ben tried it and doesn't work
1:45:17
doesn't work. There was the unhappy Darren Darren O'Neill
1:45:22
the unhappy Amazon Alexa, that was actually not bad. Yeah, you
1:45:26
like that? And there was a lot of people trying to do the
1:45:28
speaker joke because of the Speaker of the House, which is
1:45:33
just No, no, could you show on speakers? Are you like the Yes,
1:45:38
I speak Dutch lady. Why was that? There was this there was
1:45:42
one little flag she's wearing the orange. Yes, I split up a
1:45:46
dash you liked it.
1:45:48
Stupid. That's why I just thought it was cute. Okay.
1:45:52
And I don't think there was much else that we thought was
1:45:57
appropriate for the show where you kind of liked the the fear
1:46:00
of the X BB dot 1.5 What that was it was kind of good with the
1:46:04
eyes. It wasn't too bad. It wasn't horrible peace. What else
1:46:10
did we have nothing. That was it. Oh, and Project BLUE steam,
1:46:14
which was done by mountain Jay. I appreciate it. Because it
1:46:19
would be Project Blue Blue street blue stream. So to say
1:46:25
blue steam, but it was such a stretch. I mean, I can't even
1:46:29
explain why it was kinda good. And then there was comics or
1:46:32
Blogger was some AI bullcrap was McCarthy as a clown. This is not
1:46:38
going to end well.
1:46:40
The thing about McCarthy as a con i didn't know as you
1:46:42
mentioned, I didn't look at the title before to me. I didn't
1:46:44
know what it was McCarthy. I just thought it was just some
1:46:47
clown
1:46:47
was Mike Elgin.
1:46:50
That's it. Maybe it was. I think I thought that too. Now I will
1:46:54
say I did use for the newsletter, which came in later,
1:46:57
which is the the first time ever submission at late submission of
1:47:03
Josh. On Hold on, I can keep talking on the mic. What? Icon
1:47:10
hold hold press mongering wheel, which is above there has got a
1:47:16
spinning wheel with crack and variant
1:47:19
that that wasn't up yet.
1:47:21
It came in late. Oh, okay. And I like saffron. I like it a lot.
1:47:26
And can I use it for the newsletter? It looks a little
1:47:29
bit like some lifted art from here or there. But I see the
1:47:33
newsletter. I use it
1:47:34
for the for the bad signal this morning going by it. Yeah, but
1:47:38
it's fuzzy. Did you notice it's fuzzy, it's not fuzzy on my
1:47:41
screen looks fuzzy on my screen will must be a kerning issue.
1:47:47
Whatever. Thank you very much.
1:47:51
You were to use the 5019 ones.
1:47:55
Yeah, but I just I just like this one better. Oh, it's my
1:48:00
choice dealer's choice, I get to do whatever I want. So thank you
1:48:05
again, Niko sign, we really appreciate that. It was very
1:48:07
funny. And we appreciate the work that all of the artists do.
1:48:10
And if you look in a one of those modern podcast apps, you
1:48:14
can go to podcast index.org/apps. There's another
1:48:17
way to get to it, you'll see that we have chapters and these
1:48:20
chapters work everywhere except on Apple, except on Spotify,
1:48:25
because those guys aren't real podcast apps. Take it from me
1:48:29
the futurist, and you can see lots of these images that are
1:48:32
that our artists have put together. So it's not just it's
1:48:35
only on nogen rt generator.com. And it's lost. Now it gets saved
1:48:39
for prosperity gets saved in the RSS feeds, it'll be around for a
1:48:42
long, long time. No agenda, RT generator.com is where you can
1:48:46
check them all out and you can contribute. It's all part of the
1:48:49
value for value message, the value for value model, something
1:48:53
that we have been building for moving on 15 years and pretty
1:48:57
much 15 years, I don't think we after we started, there was only
1:49:01
episode six or something we started doing value for value,
1:49:04
wasn't it very early on late later, I was later than that.
1:49:08
Still Still within our 15 years. And you can read about that add
1:49:13
value for value dot info if you're interested or just go to
1:49:17
our incredible donation page, which will be changing this q
1:49:20
dvorak.org. Finish and any minute now. And let's thank some
1:49:25
of our executive and Associate Executive producers. We'd like
1:49:27
to thank these people right up front when they when they come
1:49:30
in with these bigger numbers, which means they valued it in a
1:49:33
way that is mind boggling to us. We kick it off with Mike
1:49:36
Anastasio from Raritan, New Jersey who doesn't know record
1:49:40
and from douchebag to instant night how you say, Well, the
1:49:45
first meetup I attended that's how value for value works.
1:49:50
Meeting like minded folks that also enjoy the greatest podcast
1:49:54
in the world, or some would say best in the universe is worth
1:49:58
much more than my meager donation. Thanks to all that
1:50:01
attended Special thanks to certain nobody of the 3d printer
1:50:04
for setting up the event, sir our Daniels from for capturing
1:50:08
magical dance moves. And Carrie and Kelly my two dancing queens
1:50:12
from this point forward I wish to be known as Sir donec of the
1:50:15
Raritan Valley no special request for the roundtable as
1:50:18
I'm pleased by the standard fare. Stay safe stay lit. Stay
1:50:22
strong. Regards, Mike. Nice Mike now why is he not in blue today?
1:50:26
I presume that all as well with his accounting and
1:50:29
me checking on the list to be knighted just double checking.
1:50:33
Yes, he is. Okay, so it was just a small oversight. All right.
1:50:36
Cool. Cool. Thank you very much. So
1:50:38
the thing was it was lost in the shuffle the blue thing was lost
1:50:41
you know, I'm kind of you know for diversity, equity blah blah
1:50:48
blah blah blah. Why they want only want hostesses that are
1:50:54
blind. And 170 centimeters tall. Well, we all know why diversity
1:51:01
is this what is the World Economic Forum? Shouldn't they
1:51:04
be you know, eating their own dog food?
1:51:08
Yeah, no
1:51:13
no. really bugs me? Yeah. No, I
1:51:16
understand it bugs. I
1:51:17
hypocrisy bugs me.
1:51:19
Yeah. Well, don't worry. It won't be on CBS tonight. And
1:51:23
will not be
1:51:23
on word with Sir Danna mall in Nashville, Tennessee comes in
1:51:27
with the 500 bucks. Thank you, sir. Danna book and by the
1:51:30
way has a note here.
1:51:31
Did you have it? Oh, very surreal note Oh, and I know how
1:51:34
it's a real know how you can tell
1:51:35
because it's rustling in your hands.
1:51:39
It's like a rustle it encloses a very way past due value for
1:51:44
value. Oh way past due. After listening to well over 1000
1:51:48
episodes. I still eagerly await each one. John the newsletters
1:51:56
are consistently excellent excellent. Thank you. Do ah and
1:52:02
he's the hero Thank you let me do all the douchebags you will
1:52:05
feel better about yourselves. If you join the producer ranks and
1:52:10
donate. It's easy. So you have no excuse no jingles no Karmis
1:52:15
herd animal Baron have the Secret City
1:52:18
mount. Very nice. Thank you very much, sir. Then we have Sir
1:52:22
David Ross from Colorado Springs, Colorado. Interesting
1:52:25
number 412. I'm not sure why he put 412 in there. For 12 What's
1:52:31
up not for 20s Not for 12 was for 12 or 12? He says no jiggles
1:52:35
no Wiggles, love and lips are David of Ross. Bam. He's David
1:52:40
Paul Young. I know what's in the social.com Thanks, brother.
1:52:42
Nice, sweet, short to the point. Love it.
1:52:47
A Jennifer blazer in philos more Illinois 333 33 Just the classic
1:52:57
executive.
1:52:57
It is one of our favorites. Yes, yes it is.
1:53:00
Of all the podcasts I listened to. This is the one I look
1:53:03
forward to the most. I love your humor and all the true
1:53:07
partnership you both display what
1:53:12
we don't like we don't even like each other. What are you talking
1:53:15
about? Partnerships are
1:53:16
listening a couple of years ago after hearing Adam on the Rogen
1:53:19
show Okay, donation. Both best of both you both best to both
1:53:26
you have you in 2023 was the way she put it. Thank you Jennifer.
1:53:32
No Jennifer very nice and I'll be on the road again. This month
1:53:36
some time. Sir madness from wheelers Hill in Australia. Very
1:53:43
nice. 333 dot 33 That must be an Aussie. Yes it is. He says
1:53:48
greetings from vai count Matt in Melbourne get mowed down under
1:53:51
getting my sanity payment in in time for my 51st birthday on the
1:53:55
ninth no jingles no karma he doesn't have yellow here. II
1:53:59
this let me just I'm sure it's just an oversight today. I must
1:54:02
make sure that he's on the birthday. Oh, who is? I don't
1:54:08
think he's on the list. Oh, good. So let me put sir Matt fif
1:54:13
51 on the nights what is going on? It's fallen down on the job.
1:54:17
Okay. 51 Yeah, well, what can I say?
1:54:25
Yeah, I'm putting it in the book.
1:54:27
Yeah. big man on campus. Gonna gonna cause a ruckus ARIA hall
1:54:33
monitor
1:54:38
Jonathan young in Niles, Ohio. 333 33 And I'll go on because
1:54:43
he's got no note that I can find
1:54:44
with give him one. Double Up karma. That's what we give
1:54:48
people like that.
1:54:48
He's got karma.
1:54:54
So I'll continue with Dame salty. Manchester, New
1:54:58
Hampshire. Happy New Year and may go God bless you and all of
1:55:01
the no agenda nation. No, jingles is a great no jingle
1:55:04
day.
1:55:06
Richard Harlow is in Deutschland. Schliersee, 333 and
1:55:11
33. Hello, Richard. Dear gentlemen, John, thank you both
1:55:15
for the quite outstanding show. As a former headmaster of many
1:55:19
years, imagine a German headmaster Marsh now Camden. As
1:55:24
a former headmaster of many years, I would say, I'm good at
1:55:27
that, aren't I? Yeah,
1:55:29
I would get a natural jest that
1:55:32
it should be included in the school curriculum for 16 to 18
1:55:35
year olds, now you're talking it will certainly promote listening
1:55:38
skills. And I agree thinking I 100% agree. And that's why we
1:55:42
make it freely available to any any institution to use in your
1:55:47
class. My 333 dot 33 donation donation is for show 1518 So I
1:55:53
guess that came in late. I appreciate that it will have
1:55:55
reached you following the midnight deadline. However, the
1:55:58
time difference thwarted my efforts. Waking up to John's
1:56:01
email was the kick in the butt needed. Regarding donations. I
1:56:05
can report that my donation attempts were rejected until I
1:56:08
paused my VPN haha going through Argentina this may be an issue
1:56:13
for others or specific to my location. Please give a call out
1:56:17
to Nikki my smokin hot wife of 23 years we fight almost every
1:56:21
day and it appears to work for us in general she's an amazing
1:56:26
lady and love so much I would be extremely grateful if you could
1:56:29
provide some exams karma for our two boys as they may very well
1:56:34
needed some new job karma for any no agenda member who needs
1:56:38
it please thank you again for everything you do providing an
1:56:41
invaluable product found this regards from a recharge Hello.
1:56:45
Oh, that's so nice. Richard I'm gonna let me say I'll do a jobs
1:56:50
karma and some goat for the boys jobs,
1:56:52
jobs, jobs and jobs. Let's go for jobs
1:57:02
little extra there for you. Thank you and I will report No,
1:57:06
I will report that a train went by was one of the longest car
1:57:10
carrier batches I've seen for months but was it a Zephyr? No,
1:57:16
no, it's cars. It was cars from Japan. Usually Honda's and
1:57:20
Toyota's and they they're dropped off in Richmond and then
1:57:23
they go past when they're being shipped out to somehow go some
1:57:27
reason they go well,
1:57:28
they bring him to California or the bring from the port.
1:57:32
They're bringing him John Meriwether to America to America
1:57:36
bringing rice burners to America. South America is
1:57:39
America's port or car entry enrichment. Jacob logs on the
1:57:43
list meanwhile, inland in Burg Pennsylvania $245.13 will be a
1:57:47
first Associate Executive Producer he says Happy Birthday
1:57:50
to me you he's in the bear chicken. I'm I'm now a knight
1:57:55
today to please Knight me, sir. Pen 10 deline pan tan o pan 10
1:58:02
Jelenia and tenge pet Angelina
1:58:05
Angelina Angelina Pantin Chilean giulini. Hey, this
1:58:09
roundtable could use some game so I'd like to request stump and
1:58:14
monopoly deals.
1:58:16
What is stump? Never heard of Stump stump? So instead of food
1:58:22
he's asking for games board games, okay. Oh, that's fine.
1:58:25
Maybe he eats them literally. It's possible. He couldn't be a
1:58:29
paper terian loving Lin paper terian I like that paper terian
1:58:35
love is lit and all that s.it I don't know what that means. So
1:58:43
there you go.
1:58:44
And we have two more here. And Williams is in Sydney Australia.
1:58:49
I do not see a note but she did bring us $222.22 In Australian
1:58:54
didgeridoo. Reduce so we'll give you a double up.
1:58:57
You've got karma
1:59:04
now we have the issue of Central Jersey 732 In Parlin New Jersey
1:59:09
giving us $201 Which is actually a coaster donation with that
1:59:13
means I'm not sure I've no idea what that is Kosta from the
1:59:17
Central Jersey meeting we had a great meet up at three br Who
1:59:21
three whatever that was Dr. Toribio who opened up just for
1:59:25
us they were open just for them. Yeah, I think I'd like to credit
1:59:28
all the Central Jersey cemetery to it did and he's supposed to
1:59:31
give it to somebody who wins a lottery or something. For
1:59:34
jiggles fear is freedom. Oh for jiggles says but he meant
1:59:38
jingles. Fear is freedom and spot the spook and yet karma for
1:59:43
all.
1:59:44
What he's talking about is marching pigs.
1:59:49
Freedom, subjugation is liberation, contract, drift.
1:59:54
Those are the facts of this world and you will surrender to
1:59:59
them. You cuz
2:00:04
there was a 2000 Oops, oops oops oops How did that happen? What
2:00:08
spot the spook that it was a song I know but the jingle what
2:00:12
was that? replay it? Yeah well here it is here it is
2:00:16
a spot the spooky spot the spoon. Everybody wants to spot
2:00:22
spoon
2:00:25
you've got ah Harma so there was a guest spook at the Central
2:00:34
Jersey 730 to meet up we wouldn't have had his play that
2:00:36
little jingle oh there's
2:00:38
there's always someone there. This is the search strike I
2:00:43
think Stark struck Daniel. So Daniel, sir Daniels. Yeah, yes.
2:00:50
He's not the spook mind could be. But you never know limited
2:00:54
hangout spook. You know, you got to use you got to use the
2:00:56
language.
2:00:57
But they can't be used limited hangout spots, they can't be
2:01:00
used in the top men.
2:01:05
Thank you very much executive and Associate Executive
2:01:08
producers. For episode 1519 of the no agenda show. These are
2:01:13
forever credits. They never expire. They never go away. You
2:01:15
can use them and we will vouch for you for eight for all
2:01:18
eternity. Post them wherever you feel that they will be
2:01:22
appreciated and recognized and seen as something as important.
2:01:26
Like IMDB. Go ahead, just search for some no agenda. Executive
2:01:30
Associate Executive producers, you'll see there's many heavy
2:01:32
hitters to and Hollywood, put it in your LinkedIn anywhere you
2:01:36
think it'd be necessary. And of course, you can always flash
2:01:38
your business card at any no agenda meet up and say excuse me
2:01:41
stand back. I'm an executive producer. We will be thanking
2:01:44
more of our producers in our second segment. And, as always
2:01:47
catch that website, our donation website before it changes this
2:01:51
quarter. vora.org/and a thank you again for all your time,
2:01:56
talent and treasure for making the no agenda show possible. Our
2:02:00
formula is this. We go out. We get people in the mouth
2:02:22
all right. All right. All right. All right.
2:02:25
Little McCarthy. I can do a little McCarthy. I have a theory
2:02:28
around it. And yes,
2:02:29
I would like you just is it part of your Can you just roll that
2:02:33
bias again? Because I thought that was one of the you know,
2:02:36
you are so smart. It was one of the smartest things I've ever
2:02:39
comes my Oh, glad that someone finally just said it's so smart.
2:02:42
Just brilliant.
2:02:43
Thank you, Tucker. Apparently you couldn't come up with it.
2:02:46
No, I
2:02:46
didn't. When I saw it, I was going oh, man, actual content.
2:02:52
Look, I always be careful know,
2:02:55
what I determined is that the Democrats managed to screw
2:02:58
themselves over with this with this situation with McCarthy,
2:03:04
because they what happened was the Republicans wishes very rare
2:03:09
in a midterm, where you have such a small minority victory,
2:03:12
they only have three or four or five people that give them to
2:03:15
the majority. And so it doesn't take 20 people, if they if you
2:03:20
got 20 People that are kind of dissidents, and they just don't
2:03:23
want to Sky they can hold out for all kinds of things. And so
2:03:27
that's what they decided to do. They just said, No, we're not
2:03:30
going to vote for this guy unless and you can't make him
2:03:34
win, especially when the other side, which orchestrated to
2:03:38
small majority, meaning that they actually had to control
2:03:41
which is the Democrats, they were too, too arrogant to even
2:03:45
get through some votes his way. Which would have got him in and
2:03:50
instead they kept voting for this Hakeem Jeffries guy, and
2:03:54
you know, he's not gonna get in a Republican, no republicans
2:03:56
explain the importance of these negotiations. Because what what
2:04:01
we have come to learn is that the Speaker of the House sets
2:04:04
the rules. And one of the rules that the I guess the Maga
2:04:09
Republicans, the, you know, the fascist wanted was the ability
2:04:13
to kick the speaker out, but also they wanted the ability to
2:04:17
investigate Biden, investigate the FBI itself. Whatever,
2:04:24
whatever else, there are a lot of
2:04:27
Investigatory Powers, they can't be stopped by by the speaker,
2:04:31
they can kick the speaker out at the drop of a hat to he agreed
2:04:34
to all this. He kept agreeing and agreeing and agreeing to all
2:04:37
these terms and conditions, which weakened him technically,
2:04:42
all and every time that he agreed to something new than the
2:04:45
guy had gotten maybe another vote or two and they finally
2:04:47
agreed to just about all that. He pretty much gave his powers
2:04:53
to the Magga Republicans the most conservative the
2:04:56
Republicans are ultra mega ultra Magaz and so they got their they
2:05:00
got in. They got what they wanted. So they're going to have
2:05:03
a bunch of interesting, you know, probably still Toothless,
2:05:06
but be disposed to have some teeth into these investigations
2:05:10
Jim
2:05:11
Jordan got a church style investigation,
2:05:14
they want to do church style investigations. Okay, so they
2:05:17
got all that. Now the irony with the first irony is that this
2:05:21
only happened because the Democrats were so sharp at
2:05:24
keeping the Republicans from having a real red wave, they did
2:05:28
that. But instead of taking advantage of it, and by that, I
2:05:31
mean, taking advantage of it by giving McCarthy some votes
2:05:36
before he turned over all these powers. They had this huge
2:05:39
opportunity to the Democrats to give McCarthy the powers initial
2:05:45
which were going to be in their fair in the Democrats favor
2:05:48
because there's going to save all these investigations from
2:05:51
keep them from happening. But they were too arrogant or
2:05:54
stupid, which is my opinion. They didn't know what they had.
2:05:57
They could have pushed McCarthy over before he gave one
2:06:01
concession let alone dozens of concessions. They could have
2:06:07
pushed him over the top real easy, but now they want to show
2:06:09
they can unity, where unify we work like robots. We're all
2:06:13
gonna vote for Hakeem Jeffries with no exceptions, no
2:06:17
exceptions. So they all voted against McCarthy have a couple
2:06:21
of questions. It was dumb. It was
2:06:24
kind of a couple questions. So again, this was so smart. I'm
2:06:27
glad someone finally said just brilliant. You're a wonderful
2:06:30
press. Yes, you're so great. Thanks for coming on. So the
2:06:34
when you when I read this and can you always send me the draft
2:06:37
and this was a good to go newsletter? No changes. Good to
2:06:39
go. I was I was thinking now are we missing something because the
2:06:45
Democrats in Texas brilliantly brilliantly let the Republicans
2:06:51
go all the way with the with the Roe v. Wade overturned. So that
2:06:57
you know, you basically you can't you can't even have sex
2:07:00
and Texas anymore, let alone abort a fetus. And they let that
2:07:06
I think we agreed that the that was the Democrats in Texas did
2:07:11
that. So they could have this big wedge on election day. Which
2:07:16
for the midterm, which I think certainly helped them. So is
2:07:19
there nothing they've done here that you think it's truly the
2:07:22
arrogance, truly stupid, they're just stupid. And they really
2:07:26
didn't have any plan? Except let's all be unified. And we'll
2:07:29
show right.
2:07:30
Okay, a couple of things. I agree with that. And I was
2:07:33
thinking and thinking and thinking of like, maybe that's
2:07:36
what Pelosi wanted. She wanted the Democrats to stay away from
2:07:40
giving him any so that so so the may be as possible, because
2:07:44
Pelosi is out to the last she's not going to run again. Maybe it
2:07:48
was her goodbye gift to Biden as look, now they're going to
2:07:51
investigate you and they got free rein for you. It's
2:07:56
possible.
2:07:57
I have that thought as well. Let's go to some I've two
2:08:01
reports here. The first one is now this, of course, was the
2:08:05
only news that mattered. Don't worry about the border. Don't
2:08:08
worry about inflation. Don't worry about you know, potential
2:08:12
war with Russia. Don't worry about all that. It's all about
2:08:16
this. This is what matters. 15 vote. The Republicans are crazy.
2:08:20
Marjorie Taylor Greene has DT on the phone people.
2:08:25
Overnight, a dramatic finish to a historic battle for Speaker of
2:08:29
the House. Republican Leader Kevin McCarthy, finally elected
2:08:34
as the next Speaker of the House, taking the gavel from
2:08:37
Democrats. That was easy, huh? I never thought we'd get up here.
2:08:44
Hakeem,
2:08:45
I gotta warn you. Two years ago, I got 100% of the vote from my
2:08:51
conference. I didn't quite understand that. What kind of
2:08:56
this was a slam but I didn't understand it. He didn't get
2:08:58
100% of the vote this time. What was he trying to say here?
2:09:04
Whoa, what he's trying to say. Hakeem got 100% of the vote from
2:09:10
the Democrats. And he's just warning him that when he becomes
2:09:13
if the house flips back Democrat, oh, he may have some
2:09:17
more issues. Okay.
2:09:20
I got 100% of the vote from my conference. It was a fight that
2:09:26
was bitter until the very end. fingers pointed, heated words
2:09:30
exchanged after Kevin McCarthy failed for the 14th time blocked
2:09:35
by one member from his own party, Matt Gaetz. tense
2:09:38
negotiations played out on the House floor the cameras catching
2:09:42
it all after already making several key concessions.
2:09:45
McCarthy trying to convince Gates himself when that didn't
2:09:48
work, members grew frustrated. At one point Republican Mike
2:09:52
Rogers of Alabama had to be physically pulled back during a
2:09:56
heated confrontation with gate Democrat shouting to see see For
2:10:02
what purpose does the gentleman from Minnesota rise? Madam
2:10:05
Clerk, I rise to say, wow. Then a breakthrough deal reached the
2:10:19
15th round of voting stretching past midnight, ending in a
2:10:23
standing ovation for the new Speaker of the House.
2:10:26
My responsibility, our responsibility is to our
2:10:30
country,
2:10:31
McCarthy celebrating a new Republican majority calling for
2:10:35
a fresh direction.
2:10:36
Our system is built on checks and balances, it's time for us
2:10:40
to be a check and provide some balance the President's
2:10:44
policies.
2:10:47
What was rather interesting is the camera work from C span,
2:10:52
which provides all of the video for all of the public
2:10:56
broadcasters. And, you know, they were they were doing close
2:11:02
ups. And yeah, the reason why I found out is it typically when
2:11:08
they're in a session, so this is a joint session, and the rules
2:11:13
are off the table.
2:11:15
It's not it was not I haven't you mean by joint session?
2:11:19
Oh, hold on a second. I have it here. It's, there's a so there
2:11:24
are rules. So typically, the Congress determines or whoever's
2:11:29
in charge determines what can be shown and they actually I think
2:11:33
they control the cameras.
2:11:37
was a joint session means the sentence they're
2:11:41
looking for it. Now. There was a whole article on this. Um, so
2:11:44
I'm not saying it, right. What the IRS some put it this way,
2:11:52
there's a rule that didn't count in this case. And that's why
2:11:55
they were doing this type of coverage. But you know, the
2:11:59
funny thing is, it'll be over now.
2:12:01
C span is best ratings ever. Because I guess people were just
2:12:06
watching C span because this was so interesting. And so they were
2:12:10
hamming it up with direction. Get a close up with that guy.
2:12:14
You know, they go zooming in they had a they had a camera on
2:12:17
gates and waters. Yeah. Does she love Jackson or whatever? Namely
2:12:22
notching outwardly, yes, Sheila Jackson, whatever. And for a
2:12:27
long time, and she's yelling at him, she's going back and forth.
2:12:30
And he's laughing about something and they're having a
2:12:32
good day, and they're having a good time, which was not the way
2:12:35
it was expressed. I don't have a clip. Okay,
2:12:37
I listened. So I'm reading this now. It was because there's no
2:12:40
speaker of the house until the Speaker was elected, they could
2:12:44
do whatever they wanted. And they did.
2:12:47
How, wow, that's interesting. But then don't elect one anyway,
2:12:52
by the way, in 1836, that went for two and a half months like
2:12:55
this. So this was no big deal with a few days, whatever.
2:12:59
Now, what was so that was is Kevin McCarthy. He gave a little
2:13:04
bit of a butt slam to Jeffrey's Did you see Jeffrey's speech? Of
2:13:08
course he is the Minority Leader. Did you see what he
2:13:11
said? No. Oh, oh, here it is. He did the whole alphabet with
2:13:16
comparing Democrats to Republicans. Yeah, this is
2:13:20
written by the way I liked this. I like a divided house. I think
2:13:25
that's the way it should be. They should get nothing done.
2:13:27
That's basically my my my wish talking to the choir. Yeah.
2:13:31
Well, you and I both but here's here's the the unifying party
2:13:36
House Democrats
2:13:38
will always put American values over autocracy, benevolence over
2:13:44
bigotry. The Constitution over the coat democracy over
2:13:50
demagogues, Economic Opportunity over extremism, freedom over
2:13:56
fascism, governing over gaslighting hopefulness over
2:14:01
hatred, inclusion over isolation, Justice over judicial
2:14:07
overreach knowledge over kangaroo courts, Liberty over
2:14:12
limitation, maturity over Mar a Lago normal thing over
2:14:18
negativity, opportunity over obstruction, people over
2:14:23
politics, quality of life issues over chewing on reason over
2:14:28
racism, substance of a slander, triumph over tyranny
2:14:33
understanding over ugliness voting rights over voter
2:14:37
suppression, working families over the well connected Zinio
2:14:42
over xenophobia. Yes we can over you can do it and zealous
2:14:48
representation. Oh one zero.
2:14:54
So that's about as divisive as anything I've ever heard from
2:14:57
these assholes,
2:14:59
but use SP selfmade your cop daughter health is what I say.
2:15:02
And by the way, talking to my kangaroo courts as he turned
2:15:07
around and looked at his January 6 committee speaking of
2:15:10
such let's go to the videotape,
2:15:12
two years ago, on January the sixth our democracy was
2:15:16
attacked. The US Capitol was breached which had never
2:15:22
happened before in the history of the United States of America,
2:15:25
even during the Civil War. Oh, wait,
2:15:27
way, way, way way didn't they? Didn't bombs go off in Senate
2:15:32
multiple times? It wasn't on the ground. They blew it.
2:15:36
Weather Underground threw a bunch of bomb bombs, barrel
2:15:38
bombs in the capital
2:15:40
bombs but it wasn't breached, you see wasn't breached.
2:15:44
bombs in there somehow
2:15:45
mob of insurrection, so assaulted law enforcement,
2:15:48
vandalized sacred halls, hunted down elected officials did a
2:15:54
poor job, all for the purpose attempt to overthrow the will of
2:16:00
the people and you serve the peaceful transfer of power. All
2:16:05
of it. All of it was fueled by lies about the 2020 election,
2:16:12
five people.
2:16:13
One of them was US Capitol Police Officer Brian cippic,
2:16:17
whose parents accepted the Presidential Citizens Medal from
2:16:20
President Joe Biden on Friday.
2:16:28
On the steps of the Capitol bells told as the officers names
2:16:32
were read aloud officer Billy Evans gathered
2:16:38
hands onto their memory and notice what they were doing
2:16:41
here. So first of all, this is a lie. These officers did not did
2:16:45
that. Okay, just go go look at the actual facts is a total lie.
2:16:51
And what they're doing now is the doing the bell ringing with
2:16:53
the reading out of the names, just like 911 It's disgusting
2:16:57
what these people are doing evidence,
2:17:02
gathered hands on to their memory and acknowledged with
2:17:05
deep gratitude. The tremendous bravery of the hundreds of
2:17:09
officers who defended us at the Citadel of democracy that
2:17:15
fateful day.
2:17:16
Many of these lawmakers were here that day, crouched under
2:17:19
seats and wearing gas masks. Senior officials were whisked
2:17:23
away to bunkers. But while the focus was on the fallen
2:17:26
officers, Ashley Babbitt's mother marched outside holding a
2:17:30
picture of her daughter, Babbitt, who was among the
2:17:32
protesters was shot dead by Capitol Police inside the
2:17:36
building.
2:17:37
Here's, here's a question for Speaker of the House House,
2:17:41
Kevin McCarthy. Now that you're in charge of it, could you
2:17:44
please release all 14,000 hours of videotape of January 6, so we
2:17:49
can see that? Do you think he's going to do that? It's a unique
2:17:53
party pay people. These people don't don't care about you. They
2:17:59
don't. Couple other things we'd like to see.
2:18:06
And I notice Hakeem Jeffries voices a little bit like the
2:18:10
mayor of New York, and I think our guy can do it. Ooh, let me
2:18:13
hear that again. Very, it's a little less Gopi. But as much as
2:18:17
close actually Babbitt's
2:18:19
mother marched outside holding a picture by here. Many of these
2:18:23
lawmakers were here that day, crouch watch it here.
2:18:26
It's honor their memory and acknowledged with deep
2:18:28
gratitude. The tremendous bravery of the hundreds braver
2:18:32
officers who defended us at the Citadel of democracy, that
2:18:38
fateful day
2:18:39
that you write, and a here's our guy. It's exactly the same. Oh,
2:18:50
yeah, this it's going to be so disappointing. It's obvious.
2:18:53
It's obvious. It's just going to be disappointing. I don't see
2:18:57
how anybody can think anything different. Oh, there'll
2:18:59
be a lot of showboating. It'll be it'll be him humorous. We'll
2:19:02
get some good clips. Oh, maybe the mainstream won't pick any of
2:19:07
it up. So they're gonna go overboard, you can watch
2:19:09
especially Jim Jordan. Now Jim Jordan was wanting to be Speaker
2:19:13
of the House at one point. And but this time he he's got I
2:19:16
think he's got his eyes on the White House sometime in the
2:19:19
future because he decided against running for because he
2:19:22
could have stood up and run and probably beat beat McCarthy but
2:19:27
he won because he's the head of I think his ways and means the
2:19:30
House Judiciary, which is going to have most of the hearings.
2:19:35
And so he's going to be the big shot at that, you know, get
2:19:38
slamming the gavel and and shutting people up and then
2:19:41
making a fuss so he's going to be a showboat galore is gonna go
2:19:46
over the top. He's going to ruin his chances for presidency by
2:19:50
becoming a ham actor. And that's what we're gonna see in the next
2:19:53
two years.
2:19:54
Yeah, it's gonna be just as bad as January 6 as the January 6
2:19:58
Committee. It puts audible sham never, nothing ever comes out of
2:20:02
this. The fact that they're going to claim it to a church,
2:20:06
the clips, a clips come out of a church style Committee, which
2:20:10
has happened has nothing to do with church, but it was the was
2:20:15
it Senator church? Was it House Representative church? You know,
2:20:18
he was a senator, I think, wasn't he?
2:20:21
I think he was I think, Senator, the church was the senator, was
2:20:24
the Senate committee, not a House committee. Well, so
2:20:26
you're not gonna have one of those, that's for sure. And that
2:20:28
was when the CIA and intelligence services had to
2:20:32
admit they really didn't admit it until they were in private
2:20:35
session. That yes, we do put CIA people in as reporters. And if
2:20:39
they're not the reporters, then we the CIA, people write up the
2:20:41
story and give it to the reporters. And nothing changed,
2:20:45
nothing changed. Now we have the stooge in you know, in the
2:20:50
Ukraine times write it up, and then we can say it's true over
2:20:53
here in the New York Times, nothing's going to change. Now,
2:20:57
yeah, we've
2:20:58
already we've shown all the models have been Ohio's people
2:21:01
reveal the models on this show. We've had all the models,
2:21:04
different kinds of you know, you have the fake story in Africa,
2:21:08
and then you run it over here, or you just have a stooge
2:21:11
someplace in the middle of middleman stooge. Who's the
2:21:14
spook? And he approves it to go over here and over there. And
2:21:17
then we are we just write it up ourselves? Yeah, let's go send
2:21:21
it you know, they have a staff of who knows how many people
2:21:23
1000s I'm guessing of writers and in Langley that write this
2:21:28
stuff up there, right? They do books for people that, you know,
2:21:31
I know what it takes to write a book, and
2:21:34
do we ever. It takes forever to get a book done. It's horrible.
2:21:38
It's 10 years.
2:21:41
10 years for me to write a book, too many ace.com. And so the
2:21:47
point is, is that it's a system and it works. And they've done a
2:21:51
good job of buffering the public by making them think whatever
2:21:54
they want, which is what the idea is, because it keeps the it
2:21:58
keeps a stable, somewhat stable society. But it's bullcrap.
2:22:02
Yeah.
2:22:02
Here's, there's one other extra thing that has been shoved in
2:22:06
here, because mind you, all of what they're saying here about
2:22:09
January 6, is is not true. It's just not true. It's demonstrably
2:22:15
not true. And if we ever get to see the 14,000 hours of
2:22:19
videotape, it'll go right into the 1000s of sealed indictments,
2:22:23
you'll see that it just wasn't what they made out of it. And
2:22:26
there were a lot of actors, FBI actors who were a John
2:22:30
provocateurs. Just to top it off, though, let's bring in some
2:22:34
lawsuits.
2:22:35
This morning. The longtime partner of Capitol Police
2:22:37
Officer Brian sick Nick, who died from injuries suffered
2:22:39
during the January 6 attack has filed a wrongful death lawsuit
2:22:43
against former President Trump and two people in the crowd that
2:22:46
day. Sick Nick was hospitalized after being assaulted with bear
2:22:49
spray. He died January 7, the medical examiner saying the
2:22:53
cause was a stroke.
2:22:55
Now does bear spray cause strokes
2:23:00
I thought bearish spray was really not even like pepper
2:23:03
spray was designed. I think it's like a skunk based product that
2:23:09
no I'm gonna look it up the new lawsuit. Well, I doubt if it
2:23:13
causes strokes. But well
2:23:14
then what kind of what kind of lawsuit is this then by January
2:23:18
7. Ah,
2:23:20
a nuisance nuisance suit maybe Bill examiner saying
2:23:23
the cause was a stroke. The new lawsuit which claims a
2:23:26
conspiracy to violate civil rights and the aiding and
2:23:29
abetting of an assault seeks $10 million from each defendant. The
2:23:33
lawsuit saying the horrific events of January 6 2021,
2:23:36
including officers techniques tragic wrongful death were a
2:23:40
direct and foreseeable consequence of the defendants
2:23:42
unlawful actions as spokesperson for former President Trump
2:23:45
responding saying President Trump clearly and unequivocally
2:23:49
stated that Americans should peacefully and patriotically
2:23:51
make their voices heard
2:23:53
they should send this to the same court that convicted Alex
2:23:56
Jones.
2:23:57
This is this is the st. beb turns out to bear spray that's
2:24:01
commercially available, which is a lot different than what I was
2:24:04
would formulate. Is that is basically is just a form of
2:24:08
pepper spray. Right? Oh, so it's capsicum. It's hot chili peppers
2:24:14
in the face. It hurts. It's not fun. A lot more strokes out
2:24:19
there. But now it's one to 2% capsid capsaicin let's get that
2:24:25
straight out and get a bunch of notes. is Fe Ms. Avi Yeah, media
2:24:28
brands it capsaicin one to 2% capsaicin tended to turn
2:24:34
aggressive or charging bear I would rather access so i Okay,
2:24:39
well, I have my own theories of I keep Arizona the camp. Yeah.
2:24:43
What Well, hello, stop. If you have a keep the bears out of the
2:24:47
camp tip. I think we should hear it.
2:24:49
There was a product I was going to do with a guy another lab,
2:24:52
another lab rat at Union oil, and it was called bear scare.
2:24:57
And it was made with methyl mercaptan In what is one of the
2:25:04
elements that methyl mercaptan and dichro del Sol fight I think
2:25:07
the other two elements are the two main ingredients in skunk.
2:25:11
bears don't like skunks, they don't they avoid them like the
2:25:14
plague. And so you take this bear scare and you, you pet you
2:25:19
spray it on a perimeter of trees around your campsite. And then
2:25:24
the bears won't come into the camp. They just won't.
2:25:27
What happened to this? What happened to this product? That
2:25:29
should have been this is a shark tank product I've ever saw one.
2:25:32
Yeah,
2:25:33
I know. It's still a good idea. Well, the problem with it is
2:25:36
it's hard to sell. It's hard to ship it's hard to because this
2:25:39
damned the Mercat these Bearcat family of mercaptans were trees
2:25:43
to keep in the freezer at the lab. And I used to have some at
2:25:47
the house. Yeah, but it has to be kept frozen. And because it
2:25:52
it literally leeches through the glass and start stinking. It
2:25:57
stinks to high heaven is not a stench that you can adapt to
2:26:02
him. If you have it. Smell it, you smell it and you go home,
2:26:05
okay, you kind of adapt to it as you don't notice it after a
2:26:09
while, but it stinks. And I don't you can't put it in a you
2:26:12
can put it in a store to sell it. Because there's things you
2:26:16
can't put you can't ship because the post office won't take it
2:26:19
because it stinks it stinks. The
2:26:22
more you know, in the morning. Dynamite it it would work it
2:26:27
would work good info. Like that info is good. Yeah,
2:26:34
yeah. All right.
2:26:36
Let's see. What else do we have on the list? Well,
2:26:39
I got a couple.
2:26:40
How about Elon? I see you have Elon clips. I'm always
2:26:43
on Twitter. Yeah. This is updates on Twitter. Twitter
2:26:47
fires update one and two.
2:26:49
Okay. Oh, this is a new kind of update. Good is in D. D. I'm
2:26:55
excited.
2:26:56
Elon Musk has released more information about the extent of
2:26:59
alleged government influence on Twitter. He says the federal
2:27:03
government had asked Twitter to suspend a 250,000 accounts.
2:27:07
Here's the story. Elon
2:27:09
Musk on Tuesday replied to a Twitter thread, saying quote, US
2:27:13
government agency demanded suspension of 250,000 accounts,
2:27:17
including journalists and Canadian officials. Musk was
2:27:20
replying to a thread by journalist Matt Taibbi, who
2:27:23
posted the latest Twitter files. The thread showed redacted email
2:27:27
correspondence between Twitter executives and government
2:27:30
officials within various federal agencies in 2020. Ty EB wrote
2:27:34
that Twitter was taking orders from a range of government
2:27:37
agencies, including the Senate Intelligence Committee, the
2:27:40
Treasury, the NSA, the Department of Health and Human
2:27:43
Services, the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security.
2:27:50
Well, I read to a not that anyone cares?
2:27:53
Nobody cares, but teII me was on Tucker. Oh, TV is so
2:27:59
uncomfortable on Tatari This is amenable he smiles and he says
2:28:03
thanks for having me on and but but he's not like Greenwald who
2:28:08
appreciates going on Tucker because he's been blackballed
2:28:10
from everything. So let's tie EB but Ty EB just I think it makes
2:28:14
him itch to be on the Tucker Carlson as you just sense it.
2:28:19
That is like
2:28:19
he didn't have any problem going on the Bill Maher show where he
2:28:22
said nothing. He was very bad appearance as far as I'm
2:28:25
concerned. He's an occasional writer. He's wishy washy. He
2:28:29
shouldn't Why is he going on here? Right? He's a writer. Why
2:28:32
is he going on? Why that's not in his in his in his contract
2:28:36
with
2:28:36
everybody. You know, every writer wants to be a TV guy. So
2:28:40
you see the big bucks on TV. Oh, man, look at that guy. You know,
2:28:44
what, what? Buck Joe Buck makes $15 million a year on Monday
2:28:50
Night Football to Sunday Night Football, whatever it is what?
2:28:54
That's lots of money.
2:28:57
But also, I really the more I look at it, and I'm gonna bring
2:29:02
in Greenwald, because Greenwald is there all this is this is
2:29:07
just a myth because the term is being thrown around. It's a
2:29:13
limited hangout. This is purposeful stuff that is being
2:29:17
published by a willful le idiots and in this case, I'm sorry to
2:29:21
say that everything affiliated with Barry Weiss's substack and
2:29:24
all this substack. But the substack jockeys, they're being
2:29:28
given little bits of pieces, times or timelines are redacted
2:29:31
because oh, goodness, we don't want anyone to know that Obama
2:29:35
set all of this up. And he did, including the payments for
2:29:38
anything that the FBI wanted from any social media company.
2:29:42
And they're not I mean, they're giving us good stuff. We're
2:29:45
going oh, yeah, well, okay. We knew that but it's not good. We
2:29:49
did in the print industry last print with Snowden. At least
2:29:52
they got it into the New York Times and the Wall Street
2:29:54
Journal and The Washington Post and The Guardian with a little
2:29:59
now You got sub stack it and you can jump up and down all you
2:30:05
want as far as political America is concerned, as far as
2:30:10
mainstream media America is concerned, this isn't even
2:30:13
happening. This is there's not even files to look at. There's
2:30:15
no such thing. It's Q anon.
2:30:20
Part two of the clip.
2:30:21
One post also showed an email from the Office of Democratic
2:30:24
Congressman Adam Schiff, who was the chairman of the House
2:30:27
Intelligence Committee. His office asked Twitter to ban
2:30:31
journalist Paul Sperry Twitter's reply showed the social media
2:30:34
company declined to honor the Congressman's request, but
2:30:37
Sperry was still suspended from the platform. The latest Twitter
2:30:41
files release also showed that federal agencies flagged
2:30:45
accounts that questioned the origins of COVID-19 and tie the
2:30:48
accounts to Russian disinformation.
2:30:52
Don't worry, Kevin McCarthy is going to have that all
2:30:54
investigated.
2:30:56
By the way, the Sperry thing is kind of amusing because it went
2:30:59
like this Schiff Bryce's note, Hey, you gotta get rid of this
2:31:04
guy. And then they say, No, no, we can't do that. And it makes
2:31:10
sure it's on paper. And then they get rid of him. Yeah,
2:31:13
that's how you roll. That's how you do it, too. By the way, you
2:31:18
say one thing, if it's on paper, you had to put stuff on paper to
2:31:22
cover your ass. Yeah. So now they said, Well, you got rid of
2:31:26
this journalist, after this shift guy asked you to do it.
2:31:30
No. Well, we did. Well, no, look, here's my paperwork. No.
2:31:34
But then why did you get rid of them? Well, something else.
2:31:38
There's something brewing. And remember my my immediate
2:31:42
prediction of Elon Musk purchasing Twitter was he will
2:31:45
destroy Twitter one way or the other is going to destroy
2:31:47
Twitter, either destroy because we all have to register with
2:31:51
payment authentication, which is desperately trying to become the
2:31:55
digital ID and cbdc payment app just like WeChat it's not a
2:32:00
secret. He said it? Yeah, I think it's possible. Keep that
2:32:07
he may have been freewheeling more than I suspected. Because
2:32:11
one thing he acquired with the with the purchase of Twitter is
2:32:16
the consent decree. And the consent decree goes back to I
2:32:20
think 2012. And, you know, this is about misinformation,
2:32:26
disinformation, they have certain things they have to
2:32:29
adhere to, and why they picked up this clip. This is the FTC
2:32:35
chair. So the Federal Trade Commission, who I think are the
2:32:39
ones who have the consent decree with Twitter, and this was a
2:32:44
short little thing about how to combat there might have been
2:32:47
CNBC
2:32:48
when we've seen reports and employer employees of Twitter or
2:32:52
at least former employees of Twitter raise questions about
2:32:55
whether the company is following the consent decree, for example,
2:32:59
what goes on inside the FTC on those days?
2:33:01
Well, I'll just say we have a public page where anybody can
2:33:05
reach out to us and report to us any wrongdoing that they're
2:33:08
seeing within the company or from a company and so we monitor
2:33:12
that monitor that quite closely
2:33:13
do DM with Elon Musk
2:33:25
me see what this consent decree was?
2:33:31
Yeah, that was CNBC because that was Sorkin. Yeah.
2:33:34
Twitter agreed to pay $150 million and assess potential
2:33:37
features for data privacy and security issues also resolved
2:33:41
allegations that misuse private information such as phone
2:33:43
numbers for advertising after telling us that the information
2:33:46
will be used for security reasons the settlement was
2:33:50
prompted by assertions the company had violated the prior
2:33:53
consent decree There you go after to data breaches, so it's
2:33:56
about privacy. I don't know we'll have to see. I mean, they
2:34:01
have so many ways they can take this guy down I think they're
2:34:03
just waiting to see if they'll do anything useful for them.
2:34:06
I think he or she will
2:34:10
maybe I don't know I'm very I'm very skeptical I'm skeptical
2:34:14
that anything
2:34:15
like your position now hopefully one of this works out or doesn't
2:34:19
so I can spike the ball. So
2:34:23
much moved by donate agenda. Imagine all the people who could
2:34:26
do that. Oh yeah, that'd be fun
2:34:36
closer they came
2:34:37
courtesy of Captain trigger.
2:34:39
No, but you had the spike the ball boom that's when it's
2:34:42
supposed to go you even let you gave me an up tone.
2:34:46
Yeah, okay. I did. I didn't know that. It was we're that close. I
2:34:50
was certainly it's
2:34:51
two hours and 36 minutes it's time. I need to do I need to
2:34:55
have a but I need that. Like what
2:34:57
I have for fino what
2:34:58
you should know I got it at the E Yeah, the E collar I gotta get
2:35:01
you one of those so I know you have to
2:35:03
at some point, like right in the middle of something you should
2:35:06
just do. Oh yeah, okay so okay it means you got me a giant that
2:35:12
means you got five minutes to come up with a whopper
2:35:16
we used to have. We used to have that we used to have a warning
2:35:21
we used to have a five minute warning or something like that.
2:35:24
As you remember we did something I
2:35:26
mean Well, no warning is coming from Bruce Schwalm in
2:35:29
Harrisburg, Pennsylvania who came with a handsome $133.88 Bob
2:35:35
I Robert Toronto and San Francisco is $111.11 Carry do we
2:35:42
have this shortlist, by the way? Carry Jackson and Watertown,
2:35:45
Tennessee 100 David Asare in West Hollywood $100 Sure quirky
2:35:50
in, lieu, olu olu, Florida 808 I boob. Happy New Year, Sir Kevin
2:36:00
McLaughlin, of course and Lotus note locust, North Carolina.
2:36:03
Another boob donation of 808 is on a roll has been going on for
2:36:06
over a year. Larry Mason and Thompson stat. Thompson status
2:36:11
is something else Thompson's station probably makes sense. 65
2:36:17
Bobby brindle horse in Mount Laurel, New Jersey 5555 And as a
2:36:23
happy birthday to Mr. Martin McIntyre, who hit her in the
2:36:27
mouth. Kyle I ah AIGA
2:36:32
Hey, I think it's high.
2:36:37
Kaiser Oregon 5555 Rory Semel Roth and Manchester Tennessee
2:36:43
5510. Switcheroo for Matthew okay Matthew you get credit for
2:36:49
this. Just a D douching.
2:36:51
We got that hold on a second. Why is my D douche but you've
2:36:57
been d do to fix it right away. Sorry. Sorry.
2:37:01
Sure. Paul in Twickenham, UK. He says everyone's either on strike
2:37:06
here or on benefits. Yeah. Strikes me do continue. Thank
2:37:12
you. 321 from him on Neil Oliver's your guy you go Nicolau
2:37:18
and Lille ver neck enlighten 5163 and he needs a de douching
2:37:29
you've been de douche town has a douchebag call out for his
2:37:34
friend your room. You go you got that?
2:37:39
Jackson, Butler and level in Texas 5150 jobs cover for
2:37:43
everyone who give that at the end. And now we've already to
2:37:46
the $50 donors that start with Jonathan Farris and liberal
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Kansas. Patrick Eckstrom Eckstrom in Cranford, New
2:37:54
Jersey, Jonathan Meyer in Xenia, Ohio Edward Sir Edward Mazurek
2:37:59
and Memphis, Tennessee Justin Cruz into hatchapee California.
2:38:04
Capek, chiropractic. Ca PAC chiropractic you're in Capek,
2:38:09
Michigan, there's a place for you. Ryan Tiernan in North
2:38:13
Providence, Rhode Island, Matthew Smith in Colchester, UK,
2:38:17
Philip Kouzmanoff ski in Austin, Texas, right down the street
2:38:22
from where you used to live. Yeah, the tax squad in Columbus,
2:38:25
Georgia 50 And the last two as Jason sir Jason deluzy on Miami
2:38:31
Beach, Florida, and William dole gay in Bristol Ville, Ohio want
2:38:36
to thank everybody on this list and elsewhere further down for
2:38:41
helping us out on show 1519 1520 is coming up.
2:38:45
And thanks again to our executive and Associate
2:38:48
Executive producers that we thanked at the beginning and
2:38:50
thanks everyone who came in under $50. We do that for
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reasons of anonymity and some of you are subscribed to our
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recurring donations which is really sustaining donations.
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They can be small, they can be any size you want. But these are
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all under 50 Go to our website to find out more about that.
2:39:06
vote.org/in A jobs karma
2:39:10
jobs jobs, jobs,
2:39:12
jobs, jobs, jobs.
2:39:26
Everything is short these days? Not just the donation links but
2:39:30
a birthday list Jacob long celebrated just celebration.
2:39:34
Happy Birthday Jacob Bobby brindle horse happy birthday to
2:39:37
Mr. Marteen Martin McIntyre. And Sir Matt turns 51 Tomorrow happy
2:39:43
birthday from everybody here at the best podcast in the
2:39:45
universe. We have no title changes. We have two nights to
2:39:51
handle so give me a two night blade. Here you
2:39:53
go. Here's a two night blade
2:39:56
up on the podium. Jacob long Mike Anastasio gentleman both of
2:40:03
us for the no agenda show in the amount of $1,000 or more that
2:40:06
entitles you to the covenant title of Night of the no agenda
2:40:09
roundtable I'm therefore very proud to pronounce the Cade the
2:40:12
ads, sir pan 10 Jelenia and Sir Donek of the Raritan Valley
2:40:18
gentlemen, for you, we've got hookers and blow rent boys and
2:40:20
Chardonnay, we have a special request for stump and monopoly
2:40:24
deal Ium who hasn't tasted those? Also, if you want we got
2:40:27
some Ruben has limited Rosae, geishas and sock a buck and
2:40:30
vanilla bong hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escargot,
2:40:32
ginger ale and Jerboas breast milk and pablum beer and blunts
2:40:36
and of course, we got the mutton we got the meat, it's all here
2:40:40
at the round table while you are consuming that. Just hit your
2:40:44
head your phone there and go to no agenda nation.com/rings Give
2:40:47
us your ring size and an address to send them to these very
2:40:50
handsome no agenda night rings. They are rings that you can use
2:40:54
to seal your important correspondence with wax which
2:40:57
will also include and a certificate of authenticity.
2:41:00
Again, thank you all for supporting your best podcast and
2:41:11
going out a donation earlier from the 730 to meet up and we
2:41:15
have a report. All right, this
2:41:16
is James with the seven, three to meet up at the Gulag three
2:41:21
BRB distillery.
2:41:23
In the morning comrades former douchebag about to become a
2:41:26
knight.
2:41:27
And this is Kelly and chemtrails are real. This is karaoke and
2:41:32
I'm feeling a little punch drunk after 15 rounds of gates and bow
2:41:37
bar going against the car thing.
2:41:40
This is Rose and I'm really happy that I came and I enjoyed
2:41:44
all of your company. Thank you.
2:41:46
This is Lou in the Morning John Doe they go on a day when the
2:41:52
lakes
2:41:53
at a nice hotel. Stay balca thank you for your courage in
2:41:57
the mind. This is Jill from Ocean Grove and we're assisting
2:42:00
NASA three br in the morning. This is mappi Shout out to my
2:42:03
son Nick, who's propagating the formula at Rutgers. This is Dave
2:42:07
and I am looking to monetize the network. This is Greg and I'm
2:42:10
looking forward to coming back for more. This is Rob and I do
2:42:13
believe every year nothing interesting to say so our
2:42:16
Daniels here at closing it out be brave.
2:42:20
Thank you jersey. Thank you very much three br Thank you for
2:42:23
opening up especially for them. You hear that your rose right
2:42:26
sounds like a typical first timer. It was not quite sure if
2:42:29
she wanted to go. No, you might be a little bit introverted. You
2:42:32
might feel like you're on the spectrum who isn't go to these
2:42:34
meetups you can hear I'm really happy I came you will meet
2:42:38
wonderful people doesn't matter who you are where you came from.
2:42:41
You've got one thing in common you're no agenda community and
2:42:44
if you're a Milwaukee here's a tease for a meet up that's
2:42:47
coming up.
2:42:49
Are you a spook left out in the cold by your three letter
2:42:51
unnamed agency? Are you looking for a safe house where you can
2:42:55
grab a drink with comrades? Then join your fellow no agenda
2:42:57
producer Saturday January 14th at 2pm in Milwaukee we'll be
2:43:01
fine cover for burn spooks at the safe house after some mutton
2:43:04
in me join us at the historic Pabst Theater to rock out with
2:43:07
Chris, Vox and hairball. Yes, John that taps and don't forget
2:43:12
the password or who knows what mission you'll get sent out.
2:43:16
I should also mention that spooks are always welcome to no
2:43:19
agenda meetups where you might be spotted more than welcome. We
2:43:22
love having the spooks there so
2:43:23
if you're new we could try to spot them and we don't take into
2:43:26
people than they can
2:43:27
get go and go back to the agents. Yeah, that didn't catch
2:43:30
up.
2:43:30
Hey, good spot me
2:43:31
in a million years. dumb shits. Yeah,
2:43:36
here's what's coming up. Wednesday, nothing today, huh?
2:43:40
Interesting. Wednesday, downtown Knoxville five o'clock and
2:43:43
barleys. The meet up Billy Bones organizing that one. On
2:43:47
Thursday, our next show de Shuang Ridge meet up at 630 at
2:43:54
the Bacchus restaurant brewery and billiards in New Paltz, New
2:43:57
York. Then we have January 14. I just wanted to mention
2:44:01
specifically because you're Baron of the Armony is armory is
2:44:04
finally done filling the freezers and freeze dryer with
2:44:07
his GMO free protein for 2023. The very long overdue no agenda
2:44:12
local 512 meetup is set his keeper Christine and he will be
2:44:16
welcoming local 512 and all other Texas producers to
2:44:20
celebrate the new year January 14 at Doc's backyard in South
2:44:25
Austin from one to 5pm. I will make a concerted effort. I'm not
2:44:29
sure if there's a lot going on for us in January. But it's a
2:44:34
great meet up and Baron Scott and his wife are really
2:44:37
fantastic hosts and Scott the ducks backyard is great too.
2:44:40
Also, we have a couple more in January Central Ohio we've got
2:44:44
Milwaukee we've got Portland, Oregon, Snohomish, Washington,
2:44:48
Indianapolis, Indiana, Camp hills, Pennsylvania, we've got
2:44:52
Gladewater, Texas we got Peterborough, Ontario, Canada,
2:44:56
Charlotte, North Carolina, Las Vegas, Nevada, Wyoming. oming
2:45:00
Los Banos, California Cincinnati, Ohio Durango Iowa.
2:45:04
It doesn't stop these are the no agenda meetups. Everyone's
2:45:07
welcome even new spokes go find out if there's one near you no
2:45:11
agenda meetups.com If you can't find one start one yourself. Yes
2:45:15
spokes
2:45:22
bom bom bom Unity
2:45:24
will be triggered. You want to be with everybody meals
2:45:36
like a party like a party like a party. Ah, yes. Like a party
2:45:41
like a party. Like a party. Okay. Yes,
2:45:45
I suppose. Do you have I
2:45:46
have a two? I have a two. I will play them first. Because when
2:45:50
you say it like that, that means you got something dynamite.
2:45:52
You're gonna blow my socks away. And maybe you had a great ice on
2:45:55
the last show, too. Here's one. stop the madness. That's one of
2:46:00
my two. I like it. It's not bad. It has a nice little echo to it.
2:46:04
Here's the other one. I do believe. Well, please. Come on
2:46:10
man. wasn't all that bad, man.
2:46:15
Okay, let's start with this one. Scary.
2:46:18
Okay, scary. Here we go. It felt scary. Okay.
2:46:24
Okay, let's go with this was simple. Thanks.
2:46:27
Thank you so much.
2:46:29
Thank you so much. No. All right. Let's try this one. Wow.
2:46:33
Wow.
2:46:33
Wow. Whoo. I think that's that's a pretty good contender. Let me
2:46:38
just play that lump. So I used to back to back. So we've got
2:46:41
your
2:46:41
Wow, wow. And then stop the madness.
2:46:45
I like wow. Well, better.
2:46:47
Is this clear? It's concise. It's clear. And the two wows
2:46:51
aren't the same. Wow.
2:46:56
Wow, really? Wow. I mean, like, wow, it's Wow. And wow, it's
2:47:01
dynamite. Who would have expected?
2:47:03
Okay, I've got a couple of clips.
2:47:05
I have to leave with one clip. I have one clip. It's very
2:47:09
important. We play this clip, and then you can play whatever
2:47:11
clip you want. This is about the new consensus data in England
2:47:17
and Wales. Now consensus data is very important. Because
2:47:22
depending on what your population is made up of, you're
2:47:25
going to do political things and make sure it's different than
2:47:29
census data. No, it's It's census data didn't What did I
2:47:32
say? You said
2:47:34
consensus I meant census.
2:47:38
We have consensus on the Census I kind of gave away what's going
2:47:41
on Sky News,
2:47:43
the flags may be visible but the community had not always felt
2:47:46
so. But for the first time to questions about sexual
2:47:49
orientation and gender identity were included in last year
2:47:53
census. With results in today giving a snapshot of LGBT plus
2:47:57
and trans people across the country, a milestone moment for
2:48:01
those who spend decades campaigning for it.
2:48:04
If you aren't counted, then you don't count simply when it comes
2:48:07
to making policy decisions and designing services. So for LGBT
2:48:11
plus people to be included in the census is a truly historic
2:48:15
moment. Now, LGBT plus people are finally part of that
2:48:18
national story. And service providers and politicians have
2:48:22
got no excuse not to listen and to address our needs. Now,
2:48:26
before we finish this clip out, what do you think the
2:48:29
percentages of LGBT they've they've actually divided into
2:48:33
LGB? Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Q and T, queer and trans? What
2:48:41
do you think the percentages are?
2:48:44
Well, what they should be is about 3% of the whole group
2:48:49
should be about three to 5% total total
2:48:54
needs like housing, health care, mental health support, all in
2:48:58
part decided by Census results. And those results show that
2:49:02
across the country, Brighton and Hove, London and Cardiff have
2:49:06
the most people identifying as LGBT plus, overall 89.4% of
2:49:11
people aged 16 and over identified as straight or
2:49:15
heterosexual, with 1.5%, describing themselves as gay or
2:49:19
lesbian. And when it comes to gender identity is 0.5%
2:49:23
identified as a gender difference to the sex registered
2:49:26
birth.
2:49:27
So 2% total was zero 0.5% is Q and t.
2:49:32
So we're falling out over their selves because of this, and
2:49:35
well, they want mental health help. So
2:49:38
the new questions were voluntary, but they were
2:49:40
answered by more than 90% of people. And the hope now is that
2:49:44
policymakers have the tools to better target services across
2:49:47
the country.
2:49:49
This increase incredible.
2:49:51
Well, for this group, we've also gotten this far now as you'd
2:49:54
made me change my clip. Tsa, tsa new The transgender rules,
2:50:02
the TSA is ushering in a new policy that makes us airport
2:50:05
security checks transgender friendly. It has dubbed the new
2:50:09
screening system advanced imaging technology. And today's
2:50:12
Daniel Monahan has the details.
2:50:15
TSA will not provide any details about what's behind the
2:50:18
technology, however it statements suggested is designed
2:50:21
mostly to prevent transgender females who are biological men
2:50:25
from being flagged for a strip search. A group of Republican
2:50:28
lawmakers call the new policy insanity and introduced a bill
2:50:32
in that namesake called the securing America's from
2:50:35
transportation and sanity Act. The measure seeks to block the
2:50:38
removal of gender based airport security screening
2:50:41
Representative Bob good says quote, the new so called gender
2:50:45
neutral TSA screening policies are yet another example of the
2:50:49
radical gender ideology being pushed by the Biden
2:50:52
administration. Good is one of the co sponsors of the proposal.
2:50:56
Its prime sponsor is representative Lauren Bobert.
2:50:59
She described the new trans friendly airport security as
2:51:02
quote practically inviting terrorists to take advantage of
2:51:05
a weak and woke security system. responses to the new policy have
2:51:09
been mixed. Many transgender airline passengers have
2:51:12
complained on social media about the humiliating experience of
2:51:15
having to expose themselves to TSA security officers. They have
2:51:20
also expressed frustration about being patted down for wearing
2:51:23
transgender related devices as well as being patted down by TSA
2:51:27
officers of the wrong gender. Meanwhile, Republicans against
2:51:31
the new policy express concern that it will be used as a cover
2:51:34
in an attempt to smuggle weapons in those sensitive areas.
2:51:39
Well, it doesn't happen very often. But right at the very end
2:51:42
of the show, I'm just going to have to give it to the
2:51:48
end Can I follow up with a kind of a cherry on top here
2:51:51
it's really a cherry if you're gonna I mean, you're onto you
2:51:54
can go out on a high
2:51:56
I been on a high All right, I hi man, I'ma so here we go. This is
2:52:03
a clip from Tik Tok. It's a gender of the kicker is not the
2:52:09
clip, gender affirming care promotion.
2:52:14
So health professionals have a critical role to play. We must
2:52:18
continue and to expand their work to address health
2:52:22
misinformation directly with your patients. Now this includes
2:52:26
but it goes beyond COVID-19. So I'd like to talk briefly about
2:52:31
another area of substantial misinformation that is directly
2:52:35
impacting health equity in our nation and as the health equity
2:52:39
of sexual and gender minorities. There is substantial
2:52:42
misinformation about gender affirming care for transgender
2:52:46
and gender diverse individuals. We are in this nation facing an
2:52:49
onslaught of anti LGBTQ ai plus actions at the state levels
2:52:53
across the United States. And they are dangerous to the public
2:52:57
health. The positive value of gender affirming care for youth
2:53:01
and adults is not in scientific or medical dispute. So we all
2:53:06
need to work together to get our voices out in the front line, we
2:53:11
need to get our voices in the public eye. And we can we know
2:53:15
how effective our medical community can be talking to
2:53:19
communities, whether it's at town halls, schools,
2:53:22
conversations with others, and we need to use our clinicians
2:53:25
voice to collectively advocate for tech companies to create a
2:53:29
healthier, cleaner information environment during a moment when
2:53:33
public trust in our leaders in our information is very
2:53:37
challenged. The healthcare worker community the medical
2:53:40
community does, I believe, maintain a high degree of trust
2:53:43
and we have to utilize that and we have to utilize it
2:53:46
effectively.
2:53:47
Wow, I am really high. That ladies and gentlemen was Rachel
2:53:53
Levine Biden's head of the US Department of Public Health on
2:53:57
tick tock, oh man, activist and activist,
2:54:04
brother. Well, there you go. I'm thoroughly ready for the loony
2:54:09
bin. And they call us transphobic. Which we're not
2:54:19
all I did was play the clip.
2:54:21
We got lots of trans trans people on no agenda social.com
2:54:27
real ones? Just saying. All right, let me see what's next
2:54:32
on. Troll room.io. We have that Larry show. All right, that'll
2:54:38
be episode 395. Of course, we look forward to the next time we
2:54:42
can deconstruct the media with you. That'll be on Thursday
2:54:45
until then, coming to you from the heart of the Texas hill
2:54:48
country here in FEMA Region number six in the morning,
2:54:50
everybody. I'm Adam curry
2:54:52
and from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's supposed to
2:54:55
be raining right now. But it's not. I'm John Sitamarhi act
2:55:00
remember us
2:55:00
at divorce iq.org/na We'll talk to you on Thursday. End of show
2:55:05
mixes Sir Michael Anthony Rolando Gonzalez and chase Z
2:55:09
with a great Biden till Thursday adios mo poza holy city is
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watching you bet against you we go Brandon what is police bones
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facial recognition Fourth Industrial Revolution welcome
2:56:33
doesn't surprise me that's for sure cool guy sounds like this
2:56:46
is part of a bunch of Chinese nationals growing pie in my mind
2:57:00
astonishing not a new idea by
2:57:06
liberal intellectual elite
2:57:12
it's off the charts literally off the charts literally off the
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charts to the astonishing
2:57:21
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know, around me. Hi, I'm President Joe Biden. And now you
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Okay, back then. We didn't have these laws. statutory rape was
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when me and Mitch got drunk and fooled around with the Lincoln
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