0:00
hottest year on record.
0:02
Adam curry Jhansi Dvorak,
0:04
Sunday February 5 2023 This is
your award winning keep our
0:07
nation media assassination
episode 1527
0:10
This is no agenda
0:13
Up up and away and broadcasting
live from the heart of the Texas
0:17
Hill Country here and female
reason number six in the morning
0:20
everybody I'm Adam curry
0:22
and for Northern Silicon Valley
where we're all seeing the
0:24
balloon the balloon the balloon
and Jhansi Dvorak.
0:34
Here we go Everybody sing along
0:42
goodness the hoax SIOP of the
century I love this
0:51
story. It was the best
0:53
fair warning jump do during the
the fat lady a segment I have.
1:00
We did a little work on my on my
teeth on Friday, and my lower
1:07
bridge popped off. So I just
like jam that in with, you know,
1:10
I didn't even clean it properly
just jammed in with some
1:13
geriatric pay. So at any moment
that could fly off, but
1:15
hopefully it'll stick.
1:18
will hopefully it won't become a
continuing bit on the show.
1:22
It's not supposed to be a bit.
Thanks, though. You were aware?
1:28
That's it? It's not a bit. It's
okay. Okay. Okay. Sucks. I'm
1:33
telling you a better does that.
Let's
1:35
go with the balloon. Wait,
1:37
super cut time. What do you say?
1:39
Oh, hold on. Let me think I have
Okay, wait, let's hold off this
1:44
year because I have introductory
clips that really don't have any
1:48
serious meaning to him. That's
just from NHK and around the
1:51
world.
1:52
Well, that's what the supercut
is to.
1:55
Yeah, but it's super cut. I'll
point out to the stupidity of it
1:58
all and I get closer to the end.
Okay. Which do you
2:04
which one do you want to start
with? Well, when
2:06
you start with balloon NH is a
three party balloon NHK.
2:12
China and the United States have
been at odds for years now. A
2:16
trade war tensions on Taiwan,
the South China Sea and Russia's
2:20
invasion of Ukraine. The fault
lines have widened as Washington
2:23
scrambles to counter Beijing's
rising economic and strategic
2:27
influence. But this week's
appearance of a giant Chinese
2:31
balloon over the sky force
America is threatening to
2:34
further destabilize that Blue
Mountain says it's being used to
2:39
spy. In response it canceled a
planned visit by Beijing.
2:43
Beijing by Secretary of State
Antony Blinken China maintains
2:47
that it's a civilian weather
balloon that was blown off
2:50
course. The Pentagon says a
second balloon has now been
2:53
spotted over Latin America
2:56
all right. All right. Well,
we'll comment after everything
2:59
including the suit Yes Go
3:00
balloon to continue further
report from in HK
3:03
can't reward the CCP for this
kind of flagrant violation of
3:07
our sovereignty by
3:10
just putting up this is some
Republican congressman,
3:13
Republican specifically
showboating. You know, just
3:19
balloon is a big deal and he's
got to make his he gets his
3:22
finally gets his airtime on NHK
now, Gallagher, I can't remember
3:26
his name. He's so meaningless,
but going
3:29
to count reward the CCP for this
kind of flagrant violation of
3:32
our sovereignty. This is
normally not a grip and grin
3:36
session with Xi Jinping as it's
really happening would have been
3:39
a terrible look for us
diplomacy. The CCP will continue
3:42
to push the envelope until we
push back. This isn't
3:45
the first time that China has
launched a spy balloon over the
3:49
United States. The Pentagon says
that in recent years
3:53
surveillance balloons have been
spotted over Guam and Hawaii.
3:57
All right, new new term grip and
grin. This is what will be used
4:00
for meetups from now on. I like
to grip and grip like grip and
4:04
grin. Everybody time to grip and
grin.
4:07
And finally the last clip from
NHK balloon finale.
4:11
US Defense Secretary Lloyd
Austin says US military fighter
4:15
aircraft has shot down a Chinese
surveillance balloon over waters
4:19
of the South Carolina coast.
This footage shows a white
4:23
object believed to be the
balloon falling with a white
4:25
plume above it. In a statement
on Saturday, Austin said the
4:29
balloon was successfully brought
down at the direction of
4:32
President Joe Biden. Biden told
reporters that he had ordered
4:36
the Pentagon on Wednesday to
shut it down safely as soon as
4:39
possible
4:41
and successfully took it down.
And I want to compliment our
4:44
aviators who did it.
4:47
The defense secretary statements
said the balloon was being used
4:50
to surveil strategic sites on
the US mainland China had
4:54
described the balloon as a
civilian airship used mainly for
4:57
weather research.
4:59
All right Now let's get to the
fun stuff. Let's just blow that
5:02
was that was foreign media. Just
as stupid as our own media here
5:07
tonight breaking news as we come
on the air the Pentagon just
5:10
moments ago flying over the US
this suspected Chinese
5:14
surveillance balloon the size of
three buses
5:17
become on the air tonight with
some breaking news. We have just
5:19
learned that the Pentagon is
tracking a suspected Chinese spy
5:23
balloon we're gonna begin with
that massive spy build
5:26
begin with several developments
overnight as the Pentagon tracks
5:30
what's believed to be a Chinese
spy balloons.
5:32
The issue of the day is what the
Chinese spy believes. Oh, good
5:34
morning, George. national
security officials continue to
5:36
monitor this Chinese
surveillance balloons and
5:39
a senior defense official says
authorities are tracking a giant
5:43
Chinese spy balloon
5:44
The Pentagon says a second
Chinese spy balloon is currently
5:47
moving across Latin America.
5:49
It's also been reported that
these balloons have the ability
5:52
to stare themselves for on
Wednesday
5:54
the spy balloon was over Montana
5:57
Montana is home to several
nuclear weapons sites there
6:00
are intercontinental ballistic
missiles the Minuteman three
6:03
that have silos right here.
Everybody in their brother out
6:06
there wants the thing shot down
we look weak we look terrible.
6:08
Why don't we shooting down the
balloon? Why are we shooting
6:10
down the balloons.
6:11
Details about the dramatic us
shoot down of a Chinese spy
6:14
balloon over us airspace. vus is
working to recover the debris
6:18
from a Chinese spy balloon
6:19
that was shot down on Saturday,
the
6:21
Navy and the Coast Guard are
securing the perimeter to
6:23
collect that debris with
unmanned vehicles and divers.
6:27
What are officials going to be
looking for?
6:29
They're gonna be looking for the
sensor package that was
6:31
underneath that balloon.
Remember
6:32
that the administration said
that this was a spy balloon.
6:36
I got a sensor package for you
right here. Thank you clip
6:38
custodian. That's a no agenda
exclusive supercut not just
6:41
taken off the Oath of the
YouTube somewhere. I thought
6:45
this ABC lady she brought in
something really that I only
6:49
realize when I when I heard her
come to this breaking news that
6:54
there's something people said
something news models will say
6:59
when they really want it to be
incredibly important of dire
7:02
importance. Listen,
7:04
good afternoon. I'm Lindsey
Davis at ABC News headquarters
7:06
in New York. We're coming on the
air at this hour with breaking
7:09
news.
7:09
There it is. We're coming on the
air at this hour at this hour
7:13
mark down the hour at this hour.
Because you know at this hour
7:21
you know, I was listening to
some really old clips from years
7:24
ago. And breaking news is
relatively new that used to be
7:28
called news flash. Wow, that's
7:31
interesting.
7:32
We have a news flash.
7:34
Yeah, in fact, yeah, I don't
think we've even ever updated
7:39
our here. That's our news flash
sound. And it's even labeled
7:42
Newsflash, you, right? It's
never been. And then of course,
7:46
it went from breaking news to
breaking
7:48
to breaking right. Breaking,
7:50
breaking, breaking breaking.
7:51
You had to fill in the news part
yourself. I gotta get paid by
7:56
the word. I guess I got
7:57
a couple other clips here that I
think would make sense. Just in
8:02
case you didn't hear about this
happening. Here's our here's our
8:08
president
8:09
on Wednesday, when I was briefed
on the balloon, or the Pentagon
8:13
to shoot it down.
8:14
Like I was briefed on the
balloon. Do you hear yourself
8:19
on Wednesday when I was briefed
on the balloon or the Pentagon
8:23
to shoot it down on Wednesday as
soon as possible. They decided
8:27
without doing damage to anyone
on the ground and decided that
8:32
the best time to do that was the
god over water within our within
8:37
12 mile limit is successfully
took it down. And I want to
8:41
compliment our aviators who did
it and we'll have more to report
8:45
on this a little later.
8:47
Well done aviators you know,
just as an aside early on it was
8:53
pointed out if your aviators and
then he got on his philosophy
9:00
didn't left it was pointed out
that if someone had just put a
9:06
couple of holes in instead of
blowing it up,
9:09
oh no. dramatic enough.
9:12
It would have drifted down and
they could have just putting the
9:16
yes yeah, they could have just
picked the gear off perfectly in
9:19
good shape and said they dropped
dumping into water with a narrow
9:22
if they find is going to be
ruined. It turns out
9:25
it was 47 feet deep so they'll
be able to find it easily. That
9:28
is much shallower than they
expected which means they can
9:31
bring in whatever phony baloney
thing they have now just Oh
9:34
look. Boy, look. This is what
was on it. You wait, they're
9:37
gonna show this they're gonna
have pictures of it displayed
9:40
almost like a drug bust?
9:41
No, it'd be very similar to the
Roswell Yes, show pieces of the
9:47
balloon.
9:48
Yes, Roswell. You're right. This
is our Roswell of our age. Yes.
9:52
I have a few more short ones
here. There we go. This is This
9:58
is America, everybody. I just
want you to know, when we're
10:01
when we see a spy balloon and
we've got our aviators to go and
10:04
blow it up. This is how we react
on the ground. There we go.
10:12
Automatic moment caught on
camera off the coast of South
10:15
Carolina by 239 US fighter jets
took down a Chinese spy balloon
10:20
that had been making its way
across American airspace over
10:22
the past several days. A senior
US defense official says the
10:26
balloon was shot down by a
single F 22. With one Air to Air
10:30
Missile, the F 22 flying at
approximately 58,000 feet while
10:34
the balloon was at an altitude
between 60 and 65,000 feet poof
10:40
of smoke the balloon expected to
land in the Atlantic Ocean where
10:43
it can be collected for military
analysis.
10:46
There's a lot of bull crap going
on here. And you're right, let's
10:49
start with how high up it was
and how big this thing is. I'm
10:52
not quite
10:53
sure let's start with Well,
before we even do that. Let's
10:56
start with the expense of taking
an F 22 Our most expensive plane
11:04
and flying it up and then
shooting a rocket at this thing
11:07
instead of a couple of shots.
11:10
Okay, but that wouldn't be
dramatic, man. I mean, you could
11:15
shoot it with a BB gun.
11:16
It probably cost a million bucks
to bring this thing down
11:19
whatever we could it right you
could shoot it with a BB gun.
11:21
You could have shot it with a
biplane, but it was my
11:25
understanding
11:26
with the goggles. No, I think it
needs some oxygen, the biplane
11:31
would be a little it'd be very
11:32
minor Shelly was by the time
they shot it down. It was at
11:35
35,000 feet.
11:37
This thing was never at. I mean,
it was maybe at 47,000 feet at
11:42
one point. But hold on a second.
Let's just get something really
11:46
straight here. We have had spy
mechanisms. Keep in balloons
11:51
ever since Gorgon stare, if you
remember that we talked about
11:55
that a lot in 2013 2014 that we
can see down to a square foot
12:00
from these things. And we have
the balloons everywhere. We're
12:04
proud of it story after story
about our rapid expansion of
12:09
balloons as a as a spy system.
So these things typically are
12:14
120,000 feet. And the way I see
it is look up. That's a spy
12:20
balloon. Don't worry, we're not
spying on you, America, because
12:24
you'd be able to see it if we
were spying on you. That's
12:28
that's part of SIOP. Number one,
this thing was and then school
12:35
buses. I'm not quite sure what
the mind control is of that. Who
12:39
came and I don't even know who
broke this news breaking. First
12:44
breaking but it was very clear
that I was in the car. Yes, I'm
12:48
guessing probably. And I'm
switching it's Fox at CNN at
12:51
MSNBC. Everybody know they're
all in on it. Everybody's all in
12:55
on it and, and all of a sudden,
like national security. Oh, it's
13:00
China. So finally, the
Republicans have something to
13:03
bitch about. A Democrats in
America, Russia, Russia, Russia.
13:08
Now it's China, China's the
Republicans, they got to China.
13:12
And seemingly, most of America
just went went along with it.
13:18
And then to turn it into an
international incident by
13:22
blowing it out of the sky, even
though they've been tracking it
13:25
apparently for several days. And
then for Anthony Blinken, not to
13:29
go to China because Oh, no, I'm
just very curious. If you had
13:33
just balloon overhead.
13:35
China's decision to fly a
surveillance balloon over the
13:38
continental United States is
both unacceptable and
13:42
irresponsible.
13:43
Oh, irresponsible. I agree,
though. I hate balloons. I've
13:51
been in balloons. You don't land
a balloon. It's a controlled
13:54
crash. I'm sorry for balloon
pilots out there. But it sucks.
13:58
Okay,
13:58
you guys take exception. I'm
gonna take exception to
14:01
everything you said. Okay. I was
in a balloon. I've been in a
14:06
balloon a couple of times. And I
was in one once in Napa Valley
14:09
and it was exactly the way you
describe it. Then I was in
14:13
Switzerland. And I was being
shown around a bunch of tech
14:18
stuff. And I was taken up with a
couple other guys with the net
14:24
Swiss national ballooning
champion. Yeah, it's
14:29
unbelievable when you get a guy
like that he can drive the
14:33
balloon like it's up he can move
it from here to there he sees
14:35
the What does close piloting
it's called pilot a pilot a
14:39
pilot and then he it because he
just goes to different altitudes
14:43
and then it goes in a different
direction. It's astonishing. I
14:46
know. You got lucky you're gonna
love it you're not gonna believe
14:49
me.
14:49
I realized this. And then when
we landed it, it was like every
14:54
it was like it was a soft very
soft and as and it was like any
14:58
well I don't move And then he
would do something else and then
15:02
you step okay, okay, you can get
out and somebody got out into
15:05
the balloon would wiggle a
little bit. It was unbelievable.
15:08
Yeah. But then again, then I,
I'm never gonna get a balloon,
15:11
right again, I'm never gonna
take one. Plus I get this guy.
15:14
I'm putting it into our
agreement that you are not
15:16
allowed to go in any more
balloons. It's very by told my
15:20
daughter if some TV show says,
You got to go in a balloon you
15:25
refuse, which she did, they
actually asked her. So but and I
15:31
know the balloon in aviation
industry will be very mad. I
15:33
mean, I don't like it. I don't
like it. And so now they're
15:37
piloting this thing remotely.
No, they're not. It's the whole
15:40
thing. Bull crap. There's no way
Oh, all of this is bull crap.
15:44
Now. Is it a Chinese balloon?
Maybe? Was it a weather balloon?
15:47
Maybe it doesn't matter. Just
got satellites overhead watching
15:51
all the time. But now No, this
is being abused, to set up
15:55
bullshit with China, which we
needed, of course, because you
15:59
know, the whole Russia thing and
Ukraine that's going to start
16:02
coming to win. We'll talk about
that in a moment. So we need to
16:04
start up the next theater of
war. And Antony Blinken, of
16:08
course, completely complicit in
his
16:10
decision to fly a surveillance
balloon over the continental
16:13
United States is both
unacceptable and irresponsible.
16:18
That's what this is about. It's
a violation of our sovereignty.
16:22
So violation of international
law.
16:26
A violation of international
law. Okay. If indeed it is a spy
16:31
balloon, but don't worry, we'll
get the Roswell pictures. Now.
16:35
Why? It's so obvious why this is
being used because we even get
16:41
going back to NHK. I got a clip
from Japan. Bill Burns, the
16:47
director of CIA, listen to what
he has to say.
16:50
Countries are increasingly wary
of China, which is continuing
16:54
its military buildup. The head
of the US Central Intelligence
16:58
Agency is warning of China's
intentions in the Indo Pacific.
17:03
William Byrne says President
shootin ping appears to be ready
17:07
for an invasion of Taiwan by
2027.
17:11
We know as a matter of
intelligence that he's
17:14
instructed the People's
Liberation Army to be ready by
17:18
2027 to conduct a successful
invasion. Now, that does not
17:22
mean that he's decided to
conduct an invasion in 2027 or
17:27
any other year. But it's a
reminder of the seriousness of
17:31
his focus and his ambition.
17:33
Burns Ward should not be
underestimated. The Chinese
17:37
president is currently serving
his third term in office. It
17:41
expires in 2027. Burns said she
is closely watching Russia's
17:46
invasion of Ukraine, and is
likely unsettled in a little
17:50
sobered by the performance of
the Russian military.
17:54
So there's our favorite year
2027 on deck and in what
17:58
universe? Does the director of
CIA come out and said, Yeah,
18:01
China wants a war in 2027. In
what universe? Does this happen?
18:06
I'd like to know that's crazy.
And there's a Georgetown
18:08
University in Georgia. Yeah,
Georgia. It was George
18:13
Washington, something with the
GTE. But what what in what
18:16
universe? Does that happen? Oh,
maybe, maybe, maybe we're
18:20
antagonizing China a little bit.
That's why they
18:23
Well, that's what we did to rush
it again. Don't invade Ukraine.
18:27
Listen to this,
18:28
the United States in the
Philippines announced plans to
18:30
expand America's military
presence in that country. With
18:33
access to four additional
military sites. The move comes
18:36
as China has taken increasingly
aggressive actions toward
18:40
Taiwan, which it maintains as
part of its territory. The new
18:44
agreement would allow the United
States to put military equipment
18:47
and facilities in as many as
nine locations inside the
18:50
Philippines. That move would
create the largest US military
18:54
presence in the Philippines in
some 30 years.
18:57
Now in America, we're pretty
stupid. But if everyone goes to
19:00
Google Maps right now, take a
look at where the Philippines
19:03
is. Take a look at where those
bases are. Well, that that's
19:08
there. That's more egregious
than a balloon.
19:12
Well, I have four clips from
Voice of America that discussed
19:15
this exact topic. Let's
19:16
do it. Voice of America. Weight
of the propaganda station Voice
19:21
of America love it. Yeah,
19:23
this is good. Oh, yeah.
19:24
And by the way, they sound they
have a funny muffled sound that
19:27
is just there's nothing you can
do about but this is USA. Of
19:30
course. I did pull it off to
shortwave.
19:33
It's on the internet. Okay, good
one John.
19:38
The United States Embassy in the
Solomon Islands is now opened
19:41
Secretary of State Antony
Blinken said on Wednesday, as
19:44
Washington seeks to boost
diplomatic relations in the
19:47
Pacific as a counter to China.
Solomon Islands entered a
19:50
security pact with China last
year. US Secretary of Defense
19:53
Lloyd Austin says the United
States and South Korea will
19:57
increase the pace and scope of
joint military exercises As and
20:00
expand intelligence sharing in
response to repeated and more
20:04
frequent missile tests by North
Korea
20:06
did they have that music Andhra
to
20:08
yeah they play a music bed is
really disgusting This is doing
20:13
on all our reports it's very
very lame
20:15
and it's dumb if you're doing it
on shortwave it's only going to
20:18
mess up the audio.
20:20
I know it is. So that so this is
the reason blink it didn't want
20:25
to go because he's gonna have to
add account for all these this
20:28
stuff that's
20:29
over there. Thank you. Exactly.
20:31
So here we go. Part Two,
20:33
the US is set to gain access to
for more Philippine military
20:37
bases. US Secretary of Defense
Lloyd Austin and his Filipino
20:40
counterparts. Carlito Galvez
made the announcement Thursday
20:43
in Manila. They did not specify
the locations but in November,
20:47
the Philippines said the US had
sought access to military camps,
20:50
mostly located in the northern
Philippine region of Luzon. US
20:54
left its own bases in the
Philippines in 1992, after the
20:58
leases weren't renewed by the
Philippine Government, the
21:01
northernmost tip of Luzon sits
about 320 kilometers south of
21:04
Taiwan, putting it within range
of shore based missiles. US
21:09
presence on Luzon could deter
China from invading Taiwan.
21:12
So please pay no attention to
what dekes we are in the region.
21:16
No, no look at the balloon, the
balloon the balloon the balloon.
21:20
Before we play the first play
the third one that I have a
21:23
headline to read.
21:25
Third plate Philippines and
neighboring countries have also
21:28
been dealing with increasing
Chinese aggression in the South
21:31
China Sea. An expert in
Philippine National Security
21:35
explains why expanding the
current agreement with the US
21:37
makes sense for the Philippines,
21:39
the assymetry between the
Philippines and the other
21:42
Southeast Asian claimants visa
vie, China is very clear. So
21:47
without an external force to
balance, you know the disparity
21:52
would really make the
Philippines and other countries
21:56
in the region concerned and
suspicious about Chinese
22:00
activities in the South China
Sea and also in the Taiwan
22:03
Strait.
22:04
Very polling a Southeast Asia
expert at the Center for
22:07
Strategic and International
Studies, explains why this
22:10
latest move fits into
Washington's overall Indo
22:12
Pacific strategy.
22:13
The greatest benefit the US have
is a robust Alliance Network.
22:17
And the Philippines being the
oldest ally in the region is the
22:21
one that in a sense has been
left behind. So modernizing that
22:24
alliance, networking and more
with the Japanese in the
22:26
Australian alliances, fits
perfectly into this US overall
22:30
strategy of leaning more heavily
on its allies and making those
22:35
alliances more equal.
22:39
Okay, headline from Politico,
last July, July 5 2020. To us as
22:47
MIT US military's newest weapon
against China, hot air. The
22:54
Pentagon has quietly
transitioning high altitude
22:56
balloon projects to the military
services. The high altitude
23:01
inflatables, flying between 60
and 90,000 feet will be added to
23:05
the Pentagon's extensive
surveillance network and could
23:07
eventually be used to track
hypersonic weapons.
23:11
Yeah,
23:12
I mean, this, this is great.
high or very high altitude
23:16
platforms have a lot of benefit
for their endurance on station
23:18
maneuverability also flexibility
for multiple payloads. That's
23:22
the senior fellow for
International Security Program
23:25
and Missile Defense Project
Director for the Center for
23:27
Strategic and International
Studies. Over the past two
23:32
years, the Pentagon has spent
about 3.8 million on balloon
23:34
projects. That's nothing guys up
that put a B for that M. plans
23:38
to spend 27 point 1 million in
fiscal year 2023. Oh, that's
23:42
this year to continue work on
multiple efforts. So who's
23:47
floating over who this is, and
23:52
it gets worse. And another
reason that Blinken probably is
23:55
not showing up is because he's
the one starting to make, you
23:59
know, we say oh, you know,
there's Russians, they're
24:01
threatening nuclear war. And you
listen to them talk to you, and
24:05
they're not really doing that.
24:07
No, Lincoln is Lincoln.
24:10
Listen to these clips. This is
nukes who shot Korea, US and HK
24:17
Blinken sat down with PUC in
Washington on Friday the
24:21
diplomats later announced they
had agreed to strengthen the
24:23
country's defense capabilities
and maintain so called extended
24:28
deterrence. The term refers to
the USS commitment to use
24:31
nuclear weapons to protect its
allies. No.
24:35
Blinking blinking said that.
24:38
Yeah, do we have we have
24:40
audio? Yeah, well, you want to
hear him say it. Let's listen to
24:42
this clip. This will be nukes
blink and two. We reaffirmed
24:48
our commitment to improving our
allied defense against common
24:51
threats, as well as our
commitment to defending the
24:53
Republic of Korea using the full
range of us capabilities,
24:57
including nuclear conventional
24:59
man We are
25:00
committed to strengthening
extended deterrence while
25:04
maintaining a robust combined
defense posture. Any
25:09
provocations by North Korea will
be met with the firm and united
25:15
response.
25:17
Oh, man, you know what? This is
so useful something like this
25:22
because what do we no longer
hear? Hunter Biden's laptop?
25:25
Joe? Joe Biden's documents the
Memphis jump out team black on
25:30
black killing with a white guy
who was the ringleader. All of
25:33
that's off that's wiped off the
white, the white non binary, the
25:37
white non mom Barrett and non
binary ringleader of the whole
25:40
thing.
25:41
Stop him. I'm telling you, man
this just gets I have one last
25:45
clip in this series. Okay. And
this is from Stoltenberg Yeah,
25:49
and talking about promoting the
army and loading up the nuts
25:55
like rearming these old war
mongering mongering countries.
25:59
So he's all in on on loading up
Japan. NATO Secretary
26:03
General Jens Stoltenberg on
Wednesday, applauding Japan's
26:06
plan to double its defense
spending, saying it reflected
26:09
the country's resolve for
greater security involvement in
26:12
a changing world. Prime Minister
Fumiaki cheetahs government
26:15
approved the new security
strategy last year that includes
26:18
an increase in defense spending
to 2% of GDP, or 73 billion US
26:23
dollars by 2027.
26:24
Now isn't this exactly what
happens every
26:26
time it 2027
26:28
Of course 2027 That's when World
War Three is supposed to break
26:33
out. And isn't it always the
case that when there's financial
26:37
turmoil World War One World War
Two, the all the eight holes the
26:42
military industrial complex goes
out it goes to war. We of course
26:46
as Americans are easily riled up
with you know, Greg gonna pop
26:50
your balloon Mitch I mean,
that's literally what this is.
26:53
That's literally who we are with
the biggest eight holes on the
26:56
planet with this stuff. I
understand time
27:00
code for that when
27:05
we are Americans we like that
kind of thing. And it plays into
27:09
it so and the news just like,
like, oh, we can we know how to
27:12
do this one. This is easy. I
mean, I even for the for
27:16
starting the show, I even
tweeted out a balloon joke. I
27:19
mean, the memes are everywhere.
Because we feel superior as
27:23
Americans because we are good at
meaning we're good at making
27:26
jokes we're good at and scoffing
and laughing but in the men are
27:29
good at blowing stuff up. Very
good at that. That's why we
27:33
bring an F 22 to didn't pop your
balloon.
27:38
22 Think about it. I mean, it
27:41
would have been funnier if it
was a warthog, you know? That
27:44
would have been cool. Now, no,
can't do that. We can't blow it
27:47
up. Gosh, it's but the military
industrial complex has has us by
27:53
the balls by the balls, people
squeezing them. Just like oh,
28:00
no, no, we need more war stuff.
And I think and I can
28:04
demonstrate this with a few
clips. I think what's happening
28:07
is they're seeing that the
Ukraine thing is ending. This is
28:10
over. People are not digging it.
Especially in in Europe. Well,
28:17
first of all start with us. Of
course, what are we going to do
28:20
overseas
28:20
now to the war in Ukraine,
another massive US aid package
28:23
will soon be on its way $2.2
billion in assistance includes
28:27
long range missiles for the high
Mars launchers Ukrainians
28:30
already have. With fierce
battles raging in the east for
28:33
Ukraine, the aid simply cannot
28:35
arrive soon enough. All right.
Now let's let's listen up. This
28:41
actually plays into what Blinken
was saying
28:44
we turn tonight to the war in
Ukraine. Vladimir Putin with a
28:47
new veiled threat to us nuclear
weapons warning that war with
28:50
Russia won't be limited to
fighting with tanks.
28:53
Is that which means he'll start
nukes that? Yeah. How
28:57
does Yes. He never says the news
the way. Lincoln just did. You
29:02
heard it? No, no, no, we never
says he'll say something like
29:06
Well, we're going to do even
more or we're going to send more
29:08
troops. And then Nokes. Yeah,
that'd be the interpretation of
29:11
David Muir.
29:13
Good catches David Muir ABC
29:15
won't be limited to fighting
with tanks. And it's not like
29:18
David Muir wrote that line.
Russian missiles meanwhile,
29:21
targeting apartment buildings
overnight in the eastern city of
29:23
crematorium killing at least
three civilians wounding 20
29:27
others, President Solinsky said
he thinks Russia
29:29
that he's he's the editor in
chief of his own show. He's he
29:33
didn't write the line. Of course
not. But he's totally
29:36
responsible for that line. Yes.
His job. Okay, so
29:40
now so things are so bad. And I
have two clips to prove that
29:46
people really aren't all that
into it in in Europe. Here is
29:54
actually one. So here's the
former Defense Minister of the
29:58
UK sir Jared Old Horwath? And he
says, Yeah, we got to step it up
30:04
over there.
30:05
Just checking with you, though.
So Charles, are you suggesting
30:07
boots on the ground? I think
that
30:09
they said boots on the ground as
British that was not easy to
30:12
understand even for me,
30:13
just checking me there. So
Charles, are you suggesting
30:15
boots on ground on the ground?
30:19
Consider okay. Yes,
30:21
I do. We have to consider the us
something we have to consider.
30:25
Okay.
30:25
Okay. Yes, I do. I feel,
certainly if you would have put
30:29
a native things that will be
NATO versus Russia. But Russia
30:34
is the is the guilty party here.
Russia has invaded another
30:38
sovereign state. And we have
declared everybody on the West
30:43
has declared that Ukraine has
got to win. And we're doing a
30:46
tremendous amount. And Britain
led the way under Boris Johnson,
30:49
in leading the support for
Ukraine. But I do think we have
30:53
to think very hard, where this
is going. Because at the moment
30:57
what it's looking like, is a
stalemate
31:01
with a caller, could you turn on
your radio, please?
31:03
Russia, just flattening whole
parts of that sovereign country
31:08
like they did in Aleppo. They're
a brutal regime. They lie
31:11
through their teeth, and the
West is going to decide that it
31:16
is going to support Ukraine and
Ukraine does have to win because
31:18
if Ukraine does not win, where
will Putin go next? We have to
31:23
decide exactly how we're going
to do this. And I think just
31:25
edging slowly fit more here, but
no, that is not the answer.
31:30
Oh my god. That's the worst clip
ever. That guy had his radio
31:34
going. Why this is the BBC. Why
don't they send somebody over
31:38
there even when we do remote? We
have somebody that can go over
31:41
there and help. I know. So that
guy over there with a
31:43
microphone.
31:45
Well, this is a Hail Mary
because they can't get anyone to
31:48
really say anything nasty like
that. I'm just looking at some
31:50
of the headlines. Britain's ammo
would last a full day against
31:54
Russia, former general all their
ammo, all their ammo would be
31:59
one day of fighting. And
Germany. Well, Germany,
32:03
if you only took one shot when
you saw the whites of their
32:05
eyes.
32:07
German Germany is rebelling, the
Germans are not the Germans have
32:12
a history. The Germans have a
history with all kinds of
32:15
things. And they have agreements
like, like social contracts,
32:21
like you know, maybe we
shouldn't be dicks anymore. And
32:25
the people are coming out and
they're protesting AlJazeera
32:29
in Berlin, rallying against
sending battle tanks to Ukraine
32:32
visit of the evening, we were
the ones who fought two World
32:35
Wars, which we basically caused
and they want to drag us into
32:38
this wall. I totally do not
understand.
32:42
Of course, it is possible that
Russia will attack a NATO
32:45
country, and then there will be
a third world war. And I'm
32:48
really against all this because
we live in fear.
32:52
And Ipsos poll published this
week shows support for sending
32:55
heavy weapons like lappa to
tanks is down to 48% Compared to
33:00
55 a few months ago. Three
quarters of those polled say
33:05
they don't want Germany to be
militarily involved da fancy
33:10
face and became deeply rooted in
Germany after World War Two in
33:13
the mid 1940s. The generations
who grew up since then, are
33:17
familiar with the slogan no more
war. For them sending heavy
33:22
weapons to an active war zone is
seen as a huge break with the
33:25
past and the wrong strategy.
That is why the country's
33:29
foreign minister caused quite a
shock last week, we are fighting
33:33
a war against Russia and not
each
33:39
statement is fatal and it is
wrong. Because of our history. A
33:43
German foreign minister can
never say such a thing. Our
33:46
constitution says Germany can
never again go to war
33:49
god in the Constitution
33:50
that's France out wrote books
about peace with former Soviet
33:54
leader Mikhail Gorbachev and a
die Lama. He took part in large
33:59
peace rallies in the 1980s
against nuclear arms. And like
34:03
many Germans believed that his
country would never be involved
34:07
in a military conflict again,
but the war in Ukraine because a
34:11
large dilemma for the pacifist
immigrants are kind of awesome.
34:16
I have always said no weapons.
But if a neighbor like Ukraine
34:20
is so aggressively attacked,
like Putin has done and my
34:23
neighbor asks for help, even
with weapons, I can't close my
34:26
ears. But as a pacifist, I also
say stop this war. We need to
34:31
negotiate also with Putin
benefit I call it pacifism plus
34:35
or realistic pacifism. He's not
the only one conflicted. The war
34:40
has polarized opinion between
those calling for peace and
34:44
those who want more weapons for
Ukraine. It shows how Germany
34:48
struggles with both its darkness
and a dark reality at its
34:52
doorstep.
34:53
There is no motivation anymore
in Europe. The EU is done. The
34:59
people are done. They don't want
it. They don't like it. They're
35:02
also sick and tired of all of
the refugees. They're sick and
35:07
tired of it, you know, because
it's not just the Ukrainians. I
35:09
mean, it was. There's been going
on for the green one a year, the
35:14
fourth wave. Yeah, exactly. So
they're sick of it. And a
35:17
negotiation is coming. And it's
going to end and Queen Ursula
35:22
blew the lid off of it. As she
was onstage with Waldo
35:27
mineralogical onesky, the penis
piano playing actor. Sorry if
35:33
you're all in on it, and people
get so mad when we say this is
35:35
bullshit. can only get so mad?
35:39
We have a we've lost a lot of
our audience. A lot of people.
35:44
Yes. Because we're not
warmongers on the show.
35:47
And we're not sai opt into
believing that Russia
35:50
could be but it's not a quote
we've got yet. We don't know
35:54
whose tie off does but it's not
this aerosol being us. They're,
35:58
they're good. They're good.
We'll get you we'll get to it.
36:00
Don't worry.
36:01
So we can stop this as we go
along. Because a couple minutes,
36:04
but this is Ursula von der
Leyen, the President of the
36:07
European Union Commission
Starfleet Command with Volodymyr
36:11
next to her onstage just earlier
this week.
36:14
And indeed, reconstruction is
the big overarching topic
36:18
reconstruction we're already on
to reconstruction is the
36:22
overarching topic, the
overarching topic.
36:25
We are in this fight together.
And we will rebuild this
36:30
beautiful countries.
36:32
All right. Now remember,
Volodymyr was calling for
36:35
everyone to come and invest. You
know, Blackrock has already
36:38
investing he said it himself.
Goldman Sachs is already
36:40
investing, come over to Ukraine,
you gotta invest in Ukraine.
36:44
We're gonna pull it all
together, people. We've got a
36:47
grip, John, we could have come
up with a strategy. Listen to
36:50
this.
36:51
And hear let me briefly focus
reconstruction starts now. Now,
36:56
fast recovery
36:57
starts? No, not yesterday.
37:00
So we worked now together on
making it available and making
37:05
available 1 billion euros for
the start of the fast recovery,
37:09
fast recovery. Have you heard
anything about this fast
37:13
recovery business? I haven't
heard any of this.
37:16
We can start right away with
that fast recovery and with
37:20
these 1 billion, but of course
more is to be added to that.
37:24
Of course, of course people of
Europe Don't worry Moore's to be
37:27
added to that, more of your
money going for the
37:30
reconstruction, fast recovery
starting now.
37:33
The big topic as I said the
overarching topic is
37:36
reconstruction and here the
world is mobilizing. The g7
37:42
donors coordination platform is
now in place
37:44
the g7 What was the
coordination?
37:48
De g7? Donors coordination
something platform?
37:52
Topic? As I said, the
overarching topic is
37:55
reconstruction and here the
world is mobilizing the g7
38:00
donors coordination platform
38:02
issue seven donors coordination
platform, what is that? Wow,
38:07
sounds like theft
38:08
is no one place, this platform
will help coordinate the
38:12
international assistance and
will support your reform agenda.
38:18
Then there is an engine a motor
that is the secretariat
38:22
that an engine Oh, they've got
an engine of the engine, the
38:25
Secretary I think that's her
it's will
38:27
support your reform agenda. Then
there is an engine a moto that
38:33
is the secretariat that is led
by representatives of your
38:36
government and the Commission.
And that secretariat is present
38:40
here both in Kyiv and in
Brussels.
38:44
See they're gonna coordinate so
this is this is this is gonna
38:47
happen. This war is ending
38:51
g7 countries and beyond as well
as international financial
38:54
institutions,
38:55
Goldman Sachs, BlackRock, Amen.
38:58
Now preparing to send people to
second. It's a condiment by
39:04
experts to the secretariat. So
that we are now pooling the
39:09
efforts to make economic
recovery and reconstruction a
39:13
success. My second message today
is that we are making poutine
39:20
pay.
39:21
Ah, we're gonna make him pay.
Like I'm gonna pay you I guess
39:25
it's like Mexico's gonna pay for
our wall.
39:27
Now remember, when we turned off
swift for them, we have $600
39:32
billion. We're just gonna take
that guarantee you any money
39:37
that was
39:38
they're not gonna get away with
it. Okay, I get what you just
39:41
described I thought was 300 Now
it's I think it's 600. Okay,
39:45
well, whether it's three or six,
it doesn't matter. There's too
39:48
much money to steal.
39:49
You know what, don't worry about
it. The people of Europe will
39:52
pay Okay, let's just put it that
way. The people of Europe will
39:56
pay but it's a big investment
opportunity. This is no
39:58
different than the economic
HITMAN. We've had the jackals
40:02
not now. Now we got to send in
the KKR. And what's the other
40:06
one? With the Be? The big
reconstruction companies? I
40:14
don't know. But yeah, Bechtold.
Exactly,
40:17
atrocious world. Before Russia
started this world, we were very
40:24
vocal about the severe economic
costs we will impose on Russia
40:29
if it invades Ukraine. And Today
Russia is paying a heavy price,
40:36
as our sanctions are eroding its
economy, throwing it back by a
40:40
generation. The price cap on
crude oil already costs Russia
40:46
around 160 million euros
nowadays. And we will keep on
40:51
turning up the pressure further,
we will introduce with our g7
40:56
partners, an additional price
cap on Washington petroleum
41:00
products. And by the 24th of
February, exactly one year since
41:06
the invasion started, we aim to
have the tense package of
41:10
sanctions in place.
41:12
That's the last of the money
people.
41:15
Russia will also have to pay for
the destruction, it cost and
41:20
will have to contribute to the
reconstruction of Ukraine.
41:25
Therefore, we are exploring with
our partners how to use Russia's
41:28
public assets to the benefit of
Ukraine and
41:34
public assets to the benefit of
Ukraine. What could those public
41:37
assets be could only be the
money that they have that they
41:40
took that they froze,
41:41
but it's not a puppet that's not
a public asset?
41:47
Well, it is now
41:48
to contribute to the
reconstruction of Ukraine.
41:52
Therefore, we are exploring with
our partners how to use Russia's
41:56
public assets to the benefit of
Ukraine
41:59
who their partners are banks or
investment firms. So somehow
42:03
they've got money, they they've
got a lock on something, and
42:07
they're going to present it and
bring it to the to the table.
42:12
And Russia must be held
accountable in courts, for its
42:17
odious crimes in court.
42:19
Oh, yes. Can you feel the hate
coming? Can you feel Putin will
42:26
be late it will be indicted and
he will be convicted without him
42:31
being there. That's how that
workhorse
42:34
court works. Yes, prostitutes,
42:35
we went into the European Union
are already working together. We
42:40
are collecting evidence. And as
a first step, I'm pleased to
42:45
announce that an international
center for the prosecution of
42:49
the crime of aggression in
Ukraine will be set up in The
42:54
Hague
42:58
doesn't mean prosecution.
43:01
What is What does she say?
persecution? Oh, fantastic,
43:06
great catch. Oh, goodness,
43:08
to announce that an
international center for the
43:12
prosecution of the
43:13
prosecution is hard to hear
directly. Yeah, she may have
43:16
said provided it sounds like
persecution to me. I mean, if
43:19
you listen to this whole thing,
is persecution correct
43:22
that an international center for
the prosecution of the crime of
43:26
aggression in Ukraine will be
set up in The Hague. This center
43:32
will coordinate the collection
of evidence, evidence be
43:37
embedded in what's going to be
just like that Malaysian
43:40
airliner that Russia blew out of
the sky
43:42
joint investigation team, which
is supported by our agency,
43:47
even called the Center joint
investigation team. That's the
43:50
same team that they had, which
by the way is belling cat, if
43:53
you really want to know,
remember digit, the joint
43:56
investigation team, they're the
ones that convicted Russia, of
43:59
blowing them a Malaysian
airline, mainly Dutch who were
44:03
on it out of the sky, even
though there's sufficient
44:05
evidence that it was in fact,
Ukraine. It's all the same play,
44:09
to announce that internationally
run for the prosecution of every
44:16
tool needs to be creative.
Everyone's so creative in
44:19
Ukraine
44:20
will be set up in The Hague. The
center will coordinate the
44:26
collection of evidence. It will
be embedded in the joint
44:30
investigation team, which is
supported by our agency, Euro
44:35
just
44:36
Euro just watch that just Euro
just
44:41
so we will be ready to launch
work very rapidly with your just
44:45
with Ukraine, with the partners
of our joint investigation team,
44:49
as well as with the Netherlands.
The perpetrator must be held
44:55
accountable.
44:57
It's exactly the same team the
exact plan nobody's exactly the
45:00
same thing, Euro just European
Union agency for criminal
45:04
justice cooperation. Oh, they
got a very, very intricate
45:09
website. So you're this is
ending just as
45:14
it sounds like something from
1984.
45:18
Who we are, let's see, see Euro,
just Euro just the European
45:21
Union agency for criminal
justice cooperation is a unique
45:24
hub, based in The Hague, the
Netherlands where national
45:27
judicial authorities work
closely together to fight
45:30
Serious Organised cross border
crime, while only fitting that
45:34
it's in the crime capital of
Europe.
45:36
Yep. The role of Euro money.
It's ironic,
45:39
it's fair, that is the
definition of ironic. Let's see
45:44
what the Oh goodness, this is a
huge this is where this is where
45:47
all the lawyers who can't get a
regular job go. Just jits
45:51
funding. See, as part of its
efforts to facilitate the use of
45:55
joint investigation teams, they
provide financial support.
46:00
Several common areas of
expenditure travel and
46:02
accommodation. Oh, yeah, they're
living it up for interpretation
46:07
and translation, transportation
costs for transferring items,
46:12
like hookers, special specialist
expertise costs all there it is.
46:17
You can get paid for testifying.
These are these are the people
46:23
who who did that. It's just the
same people who did the
46:27
Malaysian Airline thing, which
was all Bellingcat, which was
46:30
all bull crap. And the Dutch are
still pissed about that, which
46:35
is never, they've never really
close the book on it. Now, which
46:40
is exactly what will happen with
this. They'll never close the
46:43
book on it. No, but it's Putin's
fault.
46:45
But it's ending and now this is
the transition. This is the
46:49
transition to China.
46:51
Yeah, you might be right. This
is she she's telegraphing her
46:54
blows.
46:56
Well, that's all she does.
47:00
But yeah, you could probably
bank on this. So But how's it
47:04
gonna end? I mean, maybe that's
another reason Blinken stayed
47:07
home. They're talking about how
to do this deal here.
47:10
They'll just stop they'll just
stop the reporting of Ukraine.
47:15
They'll just stop. Volodymyr
Zelensky is about to exit stage
47:20
left. Or he'll be there so
brazen. He'll just start
47:28
talking. The Greek construction
is underway. Victory. We got
47:35
them wrote rooskies.
47:36
Well, that's an interesting
situation that we're in right
47:38
now. Because how exactly is this
going to play out? Insofar as
47:43
the scripts concerned,
47:44
John, we are so we get jacked
over a frickin balloon. You can
47:48
convince the American public of
anything.
47:52
There's a balloon and the Europe
is spying on us.
47:57
And the Europeans have no voice
most of their media is
48:00
controlled by public
broadcasters who are all in on
48:03
everything will just repeat
whatever this is.
48:06
They're worse than our media
certainly.
48:07
Yes. Certainly in the
Netherlands. No, that's fine. So
48:12
meanwhile, we start encircling
China we start messing with them
48:16
and we start arming rearming
Japan with our Marines which is
48:22
insane we're gonna go stand at
300 miles off of off of Taiwan
48:28
Hey, hey, is using ping and
maybe you don't maybe everyone's
48:33
just off maybe it's all one big
joke maybe he's using ping as I
48:36
can't this it'd be fun All
right, let's do that boys. Let's
48:40
go shoot some billion dollar
stuff at each other meanwhile,
48:44
further enslave our people I
don't know man.
48:48
Well, here's the guy. I'm to
Ukraine clips. This is probably
48:51
the end of it at this, about
these. These are both NHK and
48:56
these are these these rockets
are sending over there. And by
48:59
the way, no play this Ukraine
bomb rockets
49:03
Ukrainian president Volodymyr
Zealand's he has welcomed the
49:06
Biden administration's decision
to send this country long range
49:10
rockets. But a high level
Russian official has responded
49:13
by suggesting that his country
could respond with nuclear
49:16
weapons. The rockets are known
as ground launched small
49:20
diameter bombs. They're part of
an aid package that the US
49:23
President Joe Biden's
administration announced on
49:26
Friday. The rockets have a range
of around 150 kilometers almost
49:30
doubled the range of the rockets
provided earlier. The weapons
49:33
are believed to be capable of
reaching the southern Ukrainian
49:36
region of Crimea, which Russia
unilaterally annexed in 2014
49:42
Solinsky wrote on social media
the more long range our weapons
49:46
are and the more mobile our
troops ah, the sooner Russia's
49:50
brutal aggression will end.
49:54
Oh, really? Oh, really? Oh, by
the way, that rocket that is a
49:59
rocket with a bomb I'm on it. I
mean, it's just a rocket. I
50:01
don't know why they have all
these different designators for
50:04
it, it comes in a rocket
launcher with a, I think six or
50:06
eight rockets and you know,
they're kind of lifts up. It's a
50:10
big square, saying it shoots the
rockets. 150 miles. That's like
50:15
shooting a rocket from San
Francisco and and hitting the
50:21
Capitol Building in Sacramento.
That's a long way. 150
50:26
kilometers. Yeah, that is not. I
don't know why you'd give
50:30
something like that to anybody.
But here's part two of this
50:33
clip.
50:33
Former Russian president and
current Deputy Chairman of
50:37
Russia's security council,
Dmitry Medvedev responded in a
50:40
written interview that VLF has
said that Russia could use all
50:44
kinds of weapons in accordance
with its doctrinal documents
50:48
under the basic principles of
nuclear deterrence.
50:56
The basic principles of nuclear
deterrence don't mean using a
51:00
nuke?
51:01
Well, no, of course not. Can you
turn on your speakers? Just a
51:03
hair? I'm having trouble with a
slap back yet. So just a little
51:07
bit. Producer John from
Amsterdam alerted me to alert us
51:12
really, to the fact that you
know, there's another little
51:16
point here as to why this is all
winding down. So we heard our
51:20
CIA chief talking about 2027 war
with China. Listen to me,
51:25
people. Where was our CIA chief
just two weeks ago? In Ukraine,
51:31
what was he doing?
51:32
Oh, that's right. Yeah.
51:33
What was he doing there? So
what? Yeah, and
51:36
what was he doing there? Our
producer, why would we be
51:39
informed that he was there?
51:41
Our producer John deconstructed?
I think he's, I think it's a
51:44
good one. That Zelinsky is not
behind the overhaul of the
51:50
corruption in the government.
No, no, no, it's us. We are
51:54
kicking out all the A holes,
everyone had a good ride,
51:57
everybody get the hell out. It's
coming to an end, the money
52:01
train is going to end. Now the
money train goes to our
52:05
companies, the reconstruction is
coming. And I think I think
52:09
that's the thing. That's genius.
The timing makes total sense.
52:13
No, I agree with that. But why
does it have to be the CIA
52:15
director?
52:16
Because Well, who else has who
else?
52:19
Who else has any power? Who
52:21
else has helicopters crash, you
know, with, with people, top top
52:26
government officials? And who
else does that we do that? The
52:28
CIA does that? Oh, I'm so
embarrassed by this. It's true.
52:34
It's embarrassing. And it's so
easy to see if once you set your
52:38
mind to it, like Oh, okay. But
yeah, it's eight we only do 800
52:43
billion a year in. In military
industrial complex, we need to
52:49
have a lot more than that. We
need to jack it up China,
52:53
Taiwan, Japan. The question is,
how are they going to keep it?
53:00
Top of Mind? You know, Ukraine
was? Well, you know, Ukraine. I
53:03
mean, the Beatles sang about
Ukraine. It's right next to
53:07
right to right next to
everybody's in Europe. We got
53:10
Queen Ursula telling us so. So
how do you engage the American
53:13
public in this scam, a balloon?
A lollipop and a balloon. That's
53:21
what's
53:21
going on was that thing shuts
down. You don't need the
53:24
American public involved at all.
And then we just start spending
53:26
money rebuilding and getting
paid for it. That money comes to
53:30
Christ.
53:31
I'm talking about China. No one
gives a crap about China's far
53:35
away. I don't understand China.
It's like whatever.
53:39
balloons that balloon is a
start. I think even the public
53:43
has got to be even though
they're jacked up about it
53:45
getting blown out of the sky by
an F 22. launching a rocket who
53:51
what what made red blooded
American male didn't like pop
53:56
your sister's balloon. That's
what that was what this was. Oh,
54:02
yeah, man, I popped the balloon.
It's a horrible thing to do. But
54:07
that's that's unfortunately
that's kind of our culture. Just
54:13
like that.
54:16
Well, we'll see how this how
they get distracted. I mean,
54:20
after the balloon what?
54:23
Well, we have to get rid of
Biden. Maybe Maybe we can get
54:27
rid of Joe. Maybe we can
distract with that a little bit.
54:32
We do have elections coming up.
You know. 2024 is when they'll
54:38
start. Start saber rattling
it'll be the election year. You
54:41
know, we got to have all that
going on. It's tiring. It's
54:48
tough to be a podcaster
54:50
it's not tiring either. I am so
pooped. You have no idea how how
55:00
much work it took me to find
that clip from Al Jazeera.
55:03
Meanwhile, I had to listen to a
news broadcast ah, meanwhile no
55:07
idea how miserable I am.
55:09
We apologize to Canada for
killing your favorite groundhog
55:12
and
55:12
finally an improvised groundhog
day
55:14
it was in Quebec the crowd was
getting ready for Fred the
55:17
groundhog and then they even had
a big mascot dancing on stage.
55:21
But then a problem
55:23
they were told that poor Fred
had just passed away so they
55:26
replaced red with a child of the
crowd holding a stuffed Fred
55:29
doll in the party. continued bad
news too is six more weeks of
55:34
winter. Yep,
55:37
well now let's get into mice
since you brought this in. I
55:40
wrote about this in the
newsletter and it turns out that
55:42
Canada's got a bunch of these
little animals all across the
55:45
country. Yes with multi
including a lobster. Lobster is
55:49
crazy who knew about the lobster
and it turns out that after the
55:54
all said and done half of the
groundhog said is going to be an
55:57
extended winner and half of them
didn't and that half of that
56:01
said no, included the worst of
all these groundhogs which is
56:06
okie from Okanagan up in
Vancouver, okie is actually a
56:11
hand puppet. Okay, he's a puppet
is a hand puppet and they say
56:16
that they have to have a hand
puppet and BC because this is a
56:19
really kind of Canadian logic.
Because on Groundhog Day,
56:24
February 2, which traces back to
England is a good article on cnn
56:29
about it. They have to have a
hammer because in BC, the
56:36
groundhogs actually don't come
out of hibernation nation until
56:39
March. Wow, my thinking is once
you turn that into the groundhog
56:45
day for BC, why do you have to
phony baloney it upwards
56:50
February 2 arbitrarily, which is
what we use the United States
56:53
and then have a hand puppet a
little bitty dorky looking thing
56:57
Hold
56:57
on a second. We are actually
discussing another SIOP the
57:02
whole idea of everyone looking
at a ground at a rodent. To
57:07
predict the weather is as silly
as climate change itself.
57:11
Well, I think it proves that
these climatologist are should
57:15
be thinking twice about the
business they're in anyway.
57:19
Yeah, it could be it could be an
up. But it's been optics been
57:23
going on forever. So well. Do
you want it? It's cute. It's
57:26
quaint. It's fun. And let's do
your Debbie Downer.
57:31
No, let's let's do a little bit
of climate change news. We have
57:37
a new term. Never heard of it
before. Have you ever heard of
57:40
frost quakes?
57:43
I knit you know I heard about it
over the news. This last news
57:46
cycle I did hear about AI but
before know
57:50
the extreme temperatures could
cause frost quakes harmless mini
57:54
earthquakes that can trigger
loud booms when underground ice
57:57
expands adding pressure to soil
and bedrock
58:02
so it's not what you say it's
harmless no
58:06
extreme temperatures. Frost
quakes harmless many Earth
58:10
harmless
58:11
lakes that harmless yet they
destroy things under the earth.
58:13
Okay, ABC, maybe
58:15
these frost quakes are more
common, the more cold the cold
58:18
front is. And this front is
going to be about a 50 degree
58:21
difference from behind it to
ahead of it. So you can see that
58:24
underground water freezing and
rapidly expanding resulting in
58:28
the cracking of the nearby
ground and rock. If the crack
58:31
reaches the surface. You hear
that loud boom. But notice this
58:35
if you have snow on the ground,
you probably won't hear any
58:37
frost quakes because the snow
acts as an insulating mechanism.
58:41
Now, is this the loud boom I
heard just before the previous
58:45
show.
58:46
I mean, or is this or are they
blowing up at frost quakes in
58:50
Texas?
58:51
Well, we had frost we had which
by the way, used to be called
58:56
global warming. And I'm sorry,
climate change ie global warming
59:03
caused this to happen
59:05
in New Hampshire Mount
Washington feeling wind chills
59:07
of 108 degrees below zero. The
coldest ever recorded in the US.
59:12
So really just that hold on. It
does cemeteries CrossFit was set
59:15
in less than one minute
Portland, Maine reaching a
59:18
windchill of minus 45 degrees
Friday night, shuttering its all
59:22
time record 108
59:25
below zero. Yeah, even
59:27
LG zero and I have a clip from
Al Jazeera cold weather, which
59:32
is not even even distributed in
United States is commenting on
59:36
this, again, kind of putting the
kibosh on global warming.
59:42
Scenes captured from a live
camera show the coldest
59:45
temperature ever recorded in the
continental United States.
59:50
It's at least it's refreshing
from hottest year on record
59:54
at the Mount Washington
observatory and research center
59:58
in the state of New Hampshire.
Where the windshield dragged the
1:00:01
mercury down to an incredible
minus 79 degrees Celsius on
1:00:06
Saturday. Classes property
called zero temperatures to
1:00:10
large parts of the northeastern
United States and Canada.
1:00:14
Temperatures across the region
plunging to dangerously low
1:00:18
levels in Boston, Massachusetts,
where it hit minus 33. with wind
1:00:23
chill, the biting wind made the
cold at times. Painful.
1:00:29
If you're really into masochism,
and whatever, yeah, it's
1:00:35
actually great. Otherwise,
people say, What the hell am I
1:00:38
doing here?
1:00:39
Well, who is this guy?
1:00:42
Man on the street in Boston,
just a
1:00:44
regular old dude. What am I
doing? He sounds like us
1:00:47
painful. If you're really into
masochism, and whatever. It's
1:00:55
actually great. Otherwise,
people say,
1:00:57
What the hell am I doing here?
People are used to cold weather
1:01:01
here in Boston this time of
year. But this is unusual. The
1:01:06
last time it got this cold in
Boston was 1957. In parts of
1:01:13
Maine, it was so cold there were
frost quakes, small earthquakes
1:01:18
caused by sudden cracks in
frozen soil. Elsewhere, the
1:01:23
brutal cold complicated the
emergency response to a massive
1:01:27
fire after train derailment
overnight in Ohio, freezing the
1:01:32
water being pumped to
firefighters. icy roads have
1:01:36
made for hazardous driving in
some states, like here in
1:01:39
Oklahoma. But back in Boston,
temperatures began to creep up
1:01:44
slightly in the afternoon.
Reaching negative 12.
1:01:48
I mean,
1:01:50
it 12 Celsius. Yeah, but by the
way, where are all the videos
1:01:55
you supposed to see on tik Kok
and Instagram and all the rest
1:02:00
of it where you take the cup of
hot water go outside in this
1:02:03
weather and yet throw it into
the air, and it freezes. And it
1:02:06
freezes on the spot and makes a
big kind of a cloud of ice
1:02:10
crystals where I haven't seen
any of those. But they're
1:02:13
showing all these videos of
this. Maybe it's too cold
1:02:16
outside. I don't know,
1:02:17
the thing is I have not even
seen well, of course we had
1:02:20
balloon. But no one even maybe
part of that is this. No one
1:02:24
even made an effort to say, Oh,
this is because of global
1:02:28
warming, because that's
typically what we hear well,
1:02:30
because of global warming. It's
extremely cold. I mean, haven't
1:02:32
we heard that for decades?
Exactly. But now we have new
1:02:36
records like this is getting a
little bit embarrassing. And of
1:02:39
course, we know from the 70s
from Leonard Nimoy Dr. Spock
1:02:42
that the Ice Age is coming.
1:02:45
Yeah. And this actually lines up
more with that. With that theory
1:02:51
than it does with global
warming, co2 theory.
1:02:55
Now there's a new campaign that
a couple of our producers have
1:02:59
flagged the science moms have
you heard of the science moms?
1:03:02
They're advertising science
moms? Science what size moms
1:03:06
MLMs moms the moms a mother's
Mom Yes science moms they are a
1:03:11
climate climate scientists who
are also moms. And this oh yeah,
1:03:17
this science moms go and you can
find that. I think it's science
1:03:20
moms. It's
1:03:23
a science dads some balance
here. Well, no, but the science
1:03:27
non binaries, science moms,
1:03:30
I want that science non
heteronormative which by the
1:03:33
way, their logo is S M, which is
just so wrong. s big or look at
1:03:39
science moms.com. So I'm going
to play their one of their
1:03:43
commercials in a moment. But if
you click on who we are, we are
1:03:50
a group of nonpartisan climate
scientists and mothers working
1:03:54
to give our children the planet
they deserve. Now, they have a
1:03:58
new statistic here which I which
I'm a little confused by what
1:04:01
percentage of scientists all
agree that global warming
1:04:06
climate change is happening and
that it's manmade, what
1:04:08
percentage?
1:04:10
Well, the percentage that they
keep throwing out is 97. When
1:04:13
it's not when we've debunked
that a million times so is
1:04:16
everyone else but it keeps
cropping up well the science
1:04:19
moms have a new number here and
this is an animated ad.
1:04:23
It's an entire neighborhoods
worth of doctors told you your
1:04:26
mole is cancerous would you keep
it? It's an entire towns worth
1:04:31
of mechanic said you need a new
brakes. Would you be like,
1:04:34
ma'am, if an entire planets
worth of scientists agreed that
1:04:40
climate change is real? What do
you ignore them? 99% of
1:04:45
scientists agree climate change
is here. It's manmade we're
1:04:48
running out of time to protect
your kids future and science
1:04:51
moms.com 99%
1:04:55
They've upped it to 99%
1:04:56
of all plant everyone in the
planet. All people
1:05:00
Everyone agrees. I mean, if
everyone said your brakes are no
1:05:03
good you would you just keep
driving without with your brake.
1:05:05
Yes, of course. This is an so I
looked at this was
1:05:10
so it's so that premises is a
blatant lie, it's worse, it is
1:05:15
worse. The premise of science
Mambas is a scientific lie.
1:05:22
Correct. And now you we begin
there and then we move on.
1:05:25
So science moms is a project
from the Potential Energy
1:05:29
Coalition, a 5013 c nonprofit,
which in 2021, somehow raised $8
1:05:36
million. They literally are on
Madison Avenue because this is
1:05:41
run by the Lippincott agency, a
huge marketing firm, who are
1:05:45
just taking money from clients
and churning out this crap.
1:05:52
As rents are high, they're in
Madison very
1:05:54
high, very high.
1:06:01
Now that I have,
1:06:03
there's no conclusion to be
drawn now. Now the
1:06:07
only thing I could do is just as
as The Wall Street Journal had a
1:06:10
little video, I have 35 seconds
of it. We need to save our
1:06:15
climate climate. And what is the
way to do it is of course not
1:06:21
buy fake meat. No, no, we've
moved past that lab grown meat
1:06:26
where you take the cell culture
and you grow the chicken meat in
1:06:31
a vat, which is of course going
to be even more nutritious, and
1:06:36
probably tastes better, and just
feel good on your tongue. So
1:06:40
Wall Street Journal took
whatever money they had to to
1:06:42
create this from their, their,
their tech team.
1:06:46
I'm Zoe Thomas for The Wall
Street Journal. This is a
1:06:49
special episode of tech news
briefing part of our four part
1:06:53
series on climate tech. It's no
secret the production of food,
1:06:57
especially meat releases a lot
of carbon into the atmosphere.
1:07:02
In fact, more than a third of
global greenhouse gas emissions
1:07:06
caused by human activity are
directly related to our food
1:07:10
supply chain according to the
United Nations. Lab grown meat
1:07:14
or cultivated meat could reduce
that by growing the animal cells
1:07:19
without growing the whole
animal.
1:07:21
Ah, grow the cells not the
animal that makes sense.
1:07:27
Totally. You view
1:07:29
each zip bomb
1:07:32
that's always the backup plan. I
like pizza box eats about maybe
1:07:40
we should talk about chicken now
for a second, you
1:07:41
know, at some point weighed in
some point. Don't you think that
1:07:44
the vegans that actually you
know who are against eating
1:07:49
roggin living things? Yeah. Is
it the even it's just the cells?
1:07:52
Isn't that a living thing?
1:07:54
I think you can call this vegan,
vegan chicken vegan vegan pork.
1:07:59
Because it's not the end, you
didn't actually kill the animal.
1:08:03
I think vegans will be all in on
this. We have to kill them
1:08:06
somehow. So, to me, that's
1:08:10
an ethical issue here. Amongst
the vegan really, I don't care
1:08:18
I'm not gonna eat that crap.
Really? Yeah. Killing a chicken
1:08:22
and then eating at the die
anyway. short lived animal or
1:08:27
eating a chicken egg, which
seems to be something that's
1:08:29
abhorrent to the vegans, which
just makes no sense to me. They,
1:08:33
you know, there's a good example
the egg is just an embryo, just
1:08:37
a one celled gobbly goo what is
roaches and they won't eat those
1:08:42
either. Now, they won't eat
those. Why would they eat a
1:08:45
grown chicken meat?
1:08:47
Well, I don't know. I just have
a feeling that they can they can
1:08:50
convince people. I mean, we can
convince people 99% of all
1:08:54
scientists, science moms a
percent are in on it. Let's talk
1:08:57
about this egg thing. I'm sure
I'm sure you've seen the stories
1:09:01
that they've done something to
the feed the chickens aren't
1:09:05
laying eggs. You tell me Yeah,
1:09:08
we saw that we talked about in
the last show. And it's now
1:09:11
we're getting some pushback on
that from people that have
1:09:13
chickens. They says bullcrap.
1:09:15
Well, yes and no. Some people
are saying, Okay, here's one of
1:09:20
your producer Jason. longtime
listener producer. At first I
1:09:23
thought the chicken feed with
thing was just another bullshit
1:09:25
conspiracy theory. But just for
kicks. I ditched the corporate
1:09:28
farm store feed picked up some
locally sourced organic small
1:09:31
batch artisanal feed. After six
months of no eggs. The chickens
1:09:35
started laying again the same
day. Not sure what's going on,
1:09:38
but there's something wrong with
the feed. Okay, I think taking
1:09:44
anything that is organic,
locally sourced small batch, and
1:09:47
artisanal will be better than
the store bought stuff. What am
1:09:52
I hearing? I hear something. Do
I hear something in the
1:09:56
background? No, what I thought I
heard something I thought I
1:10:00
heard something in the
background. Tell me I hear
1:10:04
something weird. Anyway, no one
else hears it. Then I got this
1:10:10
note from Bill. And Bill says
I've been homesteading for a
1:10:16
couple of years now I have a
little insight on the latest
1:10:19
conspiracy about the laying hens
one. egg production goes way
1:10:24
down in the winter months.
1:10:26
Yeah, does everyone knows that?
Well, no, not
1:10:28
everyone knows that. Of course
not. winter conditions are, are
1:10:32
exactly ideal for eggs or
hatching chicks aren't exactly
1:10:35
ideal for eggs are hatching
chicks. As you can imagine both
1:10:37
eggs and chicks need a near
constant 100 degrees to survive
1:10:40
from when the egg starts
developed. And this is all in
1:10:44
the show notes is very long.
There are a heck of a lot of
1:10:46
inexperienced chicken people new
to the game in the past couple
1:10:49
of years since the pandemic, the
amount of new people to the game
1:10:52
has skyrocketed.
1:10:53
Now this Okay, all right, right.
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
1:10:57
this this is this is why we are
the best podcast in the
1:11:00
universe.
1:11:01
This is well, but we should have
both identified this as a
1:11:04
problem immediately.
1:11:05
Also, remember, he says first
your hands produce more eggs
1:11:09
over winter isn't until the
second year that you really
1:11:12
notice it. People are starting
to see egg production go up
1:11:16
after they switch to the
chickens diet. There's a couple
1:11:18
of things going on here. I think
first, when you completely
1:11:20
switch up their diet, you're
shocking their system, this
1:11:23
could possibly be triggering
some egg production. More
1:11:26
importantly, what's really
happening. The daylight hours
1:11:29
are coming back daylight is key
factor. People switching diets
1:11:32
on their hands over the last
couple of weeks, are of course
1:11:35
going to see more egg production
because as the light comes, so
1:11:37
do eggs. Third, where are people
getting their chickens? Believe
1:11:44
it or not face back and
Craigslist? These are not the
1:11:46
best chicken people.
1:11:48
I believe that's true.
1:11:51
A lot of new chicken people
which is a category, I think
1:11:55
that's is that A is that a
sexual orientation? Is that a
1:12:01
judo people, chicken people new
chicken people as a gender only
1:12:05
have a few birds. So when we
have more chickens than I like,
1:12:10
we have about 30 laying hens at
the moment. We're getting maybe
1:12:13
two or three eggs a day over the
winter until my first year hens
1:12:15
hit egg laying age, then
production picks up. And now's
1:12:20
the daylights coming back. So
are the eggs eight to 10 Yeah,
1:12:23
and by spring 24 to 30 eggs a
day.
1:12:26
So it also makes a difference if
there's a rooster.
1:12:30
Oh, he didn't mention that. But
I would totally believe that.
1:12:33
Now Dame Jamie, who's an actual
lab scientist of animals, she
1:12:40
does identify that there is
something going on with animals
1:12:44
in general, not chickens.
Rabbits, he said my rabbits are
1:12:48
not reproducing my chickens are
not laying. She also points out
1:12:52
that human male sperm counts are
low. I mean, there could
1:12:55
definitely be something you
know, sprayed or I mean,
1:12:58
ultimately, it's all turning the
frogs gay. So there's there's
1:13:01
all kinds of stuff going on, you
know, the environment is not
1:13:04
healthy at all, at all. But
this, I think will lead to
1:13:10
something possibly that that I
think will happen and that is
1:13:17
mRNA for livestock. They're
going to come up with some bull
1:13:21
crap story about your chickens,
and that'll be the easiest one.
1:13:25
We have an mRNA vaccine for for
chickens. So if as long as you
1:13:31
vaccinate your chickens
everything will be fine. And of
1:13:35
course once you put mRNA into
the chickens is going to get
1:13:38
into the people that think
they're really they they are
1:13:43
really planning on doing this.
1:13:46
Well most home chicken people
don't inoculate their chickens
1:13:50
for anything and they don't even
let people know they have a big
1:13:52
flock because then they can get
cold and it's Corina Mimi, too
1:13:58
many A's dot com I might point
to a website out going to Mimi
1:14:02
the bird flu situation when it
comes to home flocks is minor
1:14:07
and so is the salmonella things
almost non existent with a home
1:14:11
flock. So you can eat your eggs
raw.
1:14:18
So of course I'm not talking
about the home chickens. I'm
1:14:20
talking about the big big egg.
The ovum industrial complex.
1:14:28
Yeah, let me write that one down
at the
1:14:32
industrial complex. So this
morning, I boiled I boiled three
1:14:37
eggs I had two eggs from heb and
one egg was from one of our
1:14:41
producers who dropped by town
when they were Fredericksburg
1:14:43
were their own homestead
chickens. And so I had three
1:14:47
boiled eggs at roughly the same
size. The H E B eggs totally
1:14:52
conform exactly what to expect.
Now the homestead egg the yolk
1:14:56
is on the side. So you boil it
the yoke. The yoke is It's not
1:15:00
even and you when you
experienced this, you know a
1:15:03
real chicken egg from an egg
that laid it in someone's you
1:15:06
know, loved and someone has kids
who get all the eggs, you know,
1:15:09
cuz you don't wanna do that
yourself versus the HEB
1:15:12
supermarket a, I just got
freaked out. I'm like, Oh my
1:15:15
God, this supermarket, how do
they make it every single yolk
1:15:18
is right in the middle is never
on the side or a SKU, or they're
1:15:22
all the same size. That just
makes you wonder.
1:15:29
I know how to get them all the
same size that are owed to a big
1:15:32
sorter, and they put the ones in
one thing they didn't they put
1:15:35
the extra large someplace else.
And if you're lucky, you can buy
1:15:39
a jumbo egg. Even though
according to Mimi, yeah, the
1:15:44
chickens that lay jumbo eggs are
exterminated after a couple of
1:15:48
rounds.
1:15:50
I guess they're sold on
Craigslist, of course. So now
1:15:55
I'd like to move from the opium
industrial complex with Big
1:15:58
Pharma as there's a lot going
on. Because as you know, as you
1:16:02
know, the COVID vaccinations
were so successful, so, so
1:16:07
successful, that we're going to
expand them into all kinds of
1:16:12
areas. Here's a report from
Germany from Deutsche Bella
1:16:15
international community is
marking World Cancer Day. Cancer
1:16:18
is among the leading causes of
death worldwide. But now thanks
1:16:22
to a cutting edge COVID vaccine
technology, we might just might
1:16:26
be closer to stopping cancer.
Germany's biontech is launching
1:16:30
a trial in the United Kingdom on
Personalized Cancer vaccines,
1:16:33
this
1:16:33
biotech just remind everybody,
they're the ones that that came
1:16:36
up with the whole shebang that
Maderna uses their technology
1:16:39
tech is launching a trial in the
United Kingdom on Personalized
1:16:43
Cancer vaccines this autumn.
More on the technology in this
1:16:47
upcoming report.
1:16:48
During the COVID 19 pandemic
vaccines were rolled out within
1:16:52
a year faster than most experts
believed possible. And messenger
1:16:56
RNA vaccines were among the
first to gain approvals. They
1:17:00
work by giving the body's immune
system a preview of potentially
1:17:04
dangerous invaders. A dose
contains many copies of a short
1:17:08
stretch of precise genetic
information, the messenger RNA,
1:17:13
it induces cells to start making
proteins that are otherwise only
1:17:17
found on a specific pathogen.
Like the proteins that's the
1:17:20
surface of SARS cov to the virus
that causes COVID 19. Then when
1:17:25
the immune system encounters the
virus, it quickly recognizes the
1:17:29
invader and wipes it out,
1:17:31
categorize the messenger RNA.
That's why
1:17:36
what do you get? Oh, we know it
doesn't do that.
1:17:38
No, no, excuse me, you're wrong.
Here's the expert
1:17:42
categorically. messenger RNA
vaccines have proven to be
1:17:46
exceptionally effective.
1:17:51
And safe, Here's your check.
1:17:52
They have proven to be able to
protect people against severe
1:17:59
and life threatening disease and
consequently saved millions of
1:18:03
lives.
1:18:04
I mean, it's just a fact. Just
don't even question it, you
1:18:07
shit.
1:18:08
There are different types of
RNA, but all of them are coding
1:18:11
molecules, and that code can be
rewritten. That's why many drug
1:18:16
developers describe RNA as
medicinal software.
1:18:19
Oh, there it is. Medicinal
software.
1:18:24
vaccines that use this software
have a major advantage over
1:18:28
other platforms, their codes can
be easily altered to also make
1:18:32
other proteins found on other
disease causing microbes,
1:18:36
teaching the immune system how
to fight them as well. And RNA
1:18:41
can encode for proteins found
not just in infectious diseases,
1:18:45
but also for instance, in
cancers, in addition to
1:18:48
messenger RNA, a range of other
RNAs play key roles in
1:18:53
metabolism and health.
1:18:55
Well, there's there's there's
admission, medicinal software,
1:19:00
you need an upgrade, it's a
platform, all the things we've
1:19:03
been saying. And it's safe and
effective.
1:19:07
Well, if it's the additional
isn't that then it isn't it a
1:19:12
treatment, not a vaccine is a
therapy, not a vaccine. It's a
1:19:19
Yeah, I think this clip may even
mentioned that this is
1:19:23
as you're gonna get so so you
get a shot. Okay, you're, you're
1:19:25
a guy. And so in other words, if
you're in UK, and you're on this
1:19:29
test, you have cancer, they're
giving you this Yes. Yeah. It's
1:19:33
a therapeutic den, correct?
1:19:35
Yes. So
1:19:35
that's not a vaccine.
1:19:37
Did you forget that they changed
the definition of vaccine.
1:19:41
I'm not forgetting anything I'm
saying. I know it you're. I know
1:19:47
what you're trying to where
you're trying to go but I'm not
1:19:49
buying it. And I said it. I'm
not buying it.
1:19:53
Now. It will give it'd be given
to you for free. You don't have
1:19:56
to buy anything. So I said free
free. If it's Free of course the
1:20:01
government will subsidize this.
And if it's not that medicinal
1:20:05
for 10
1:20:05
minutes now we're already
dropping the subsidy on the
1:20:09
COVID shots. Now they're gonna
cause hundreds of dollars.
1:20:13
Every single child in the world
will at birth, because that's
1:20:18
when that's when addiction
starts. We'll be vaccinated with
1:20:21
this following mRNA vaccine.
1:20:24
The fight against fentanyl could
be taking a turn thanks to a new
1:20:27
vaccine. A team at the
University of Houston has been
1:20:30
working on this solution to the
nation's Fentanyl crisis for
1:20:33
nearly six years. They say it is
similar to the hepatitis B
1:20:36
vaccine and stimulates the body
to make antibodies against
1:20:40
fencing. All scientists say
those antibodies can block the
1:20:43
euphoric high that a person
feels from taking that drug. The
1:20:47
antibodies
1:20:48
bind to sends it off, prevent it
from getting into the brain, and
1:20:50
then is excreted from the body,
the individuals and couldn't get
1:20:54
back on the wagon to sobriety
1:20:57
and we are told this treatment
is intended for drug addicts
1:20:59
looking to get clean testing was
first on on rodents, human
1:21:03
clinical trials are set to begin
soon.
1:21:06
Just like calling methadone, a
vaccine. Yeah, exactly. They've
1:21:12
gone out there out of control.
1:21:13
I think it will be it will be
administered preemptively.
1:21:18
Well, yeah, that would be an
idea. So but here's what's going
1:21:20
to happen, especially as some
fentanyl addict is going to take
1:21:24
the vaccine or record.
1:21:26
What did I just say? Except the
vaccine into their life? Yes,
1:21:30
he's going to take the shot. And
then he's going to take some
1:21:34
fentanyl he's gonna say, Oh,
this just fentanyl is no good.
1:21:37
Let me try some more. And he's
gonna kill himself.
1:21:40
No, I don't think you can kill
yourself with more fentanyl if
1:21:43
it's if it's if it's not
affecting the receptors and
1:21:46
stopping your heart and stopping
your breathing, then you'll
1:21:49
you'll just be like this bogus
1:21:51
isn't overwhelmed.
1:21:52
You switch to Coke, Coke. Don't
worry, there's a vaccine for
1:21:57
that common as well. It's
1:22:00
it now if you're not we have
clips at this go back at least a
1:22:04
decade. About You know, when you
were on the vaccine kicker we're
1:22:09
talking about adjuvants all the
time like maniacs even though
1:22:11
we've dropped that conversation.
And the clip goes about the
1:22:15
vaccine to stop you from
smoking. Remember that?
1:22:18
I will I don't have that one. I
do have this one. Dr. Crystal,
1:22:21
welcome to our program. Hello 28
Oh, 2018. What is the idea
1:22:26
behind the vaccine that you're
testing? Well, cocaine is a
1:22:30
small molecule and our immune
systems don't see it. So to be
1:22:34
able to develop a vaccine, we
have to trick the immune system.
1:22:38
And the way we did that was by
taking a cold virus called an
1:22:42
adenovirus, one of the causes of
the common cold. And we know
1:22:46
that that evokes a great deal of
immunity against the virus
1:22:50
itself. So we attach cocaine to
the cold virus, and we nipped it
1:22:56
apart. So that wouldn't cause
harm. And we're tricking the
1:23:00
immune system thinking that the
cocaine was part of the cold
1:23:03
virus, and so it would develop
immunity against it. So if
1:23:06
someone took cocaine, it would
not reach the brain and they
1:23:09
would not get a high
1:23:12
blame. What's the point of Gavin
cocaine around if you're gonna
1:23:16
do that? No, this is this, these
maniacs really need to be found
1:23:24
and locked up. These people are
good. They got something wrong
1:23:28
with them. Yeah, so you're gonna
screw around with your immune
1:23:33
system, which is a very
complicated system. We don't
1:23:36
even fully understand how it
works. You're going to fool
1:23:38
around with so it stops and
blocks cocaine molecules is
1:23:42
supposed to be going after
bacteria and viruses.
1:23:45
Which brings me to an email from
producer David, because you said
1:23:49
these people have something
wrong with them. Hey, Adam. I
1:23:54
have a little bit of expertise
to offer. The insight on the
1:23:58
medical school experience now
that I'm about halfway through
1:24:01
getting my medical degree.
Medical School is scary man. I
1:24:09
had an eight year career in
construction management before
1:24:12
deciding to transition into
medicine and I feel like a
1:24:15
boomer here. The even scarier
thing is that the mono think
1:24:19
really does extend to the
faculty about as much as it was
1:24:24
in the very liberal school I
attended for undergrad. I have
1:24:27
heard endocrinologist tell me
that they believe that people
1:24:30
can be healthy at any weight.
cardiologists nephrological,
1:24:35
nephrologists tried their
damnedest to explain why some
1:24:39
equations that incorporate race
or sex into the calculations are
1:24:43
bad and have had entire sessions
that can be boiled down to
1:24:47
Republicans bad Democrat good
look at which states didn't
1:24:51
expand Medicare. The student
body is about as whiny as you
1:24:55
would expect from early 20
somethings to be very woke very
1:25:00
disrespectful regarding any
alternative viewpoints very
1:25:03
ageist against older faculty.
The majority also really have
1:25:07
poor social skills, struggling
with a standardized patient
1:25:11
interviews that are supposed to
teach us how to talk to people.
1:25:15
I will be terrified to have most
of my classmates be my doctor in
1:25:18
the future. None of this is to
say that I'm a savant. But I do
1:25:22
pride myself on being able to
carry on a conversation and talk
1:25:26
to another person and I haven't
flunked out yet. I believe this,
1:25:31
I believe we have totally
believe it. And you know what,
1:25:34
and here's some proof. This is
this is what the big pharma and
1:25:37
big medicine is doing.
1:25:41
Michael Dieter has been awaiting
a lung transplant at the
1:25:44
University of Florida Health
Center since December, a
1:25:47
dedicated team of doctors and
nurses attend to him day and
1:25:51
night. But that's not all.
sensors and cameras track
1:25:56
details, every move in this
smart intensive care unit apart
1:26:00
from vital signs to facial
expressions, and everything in
1:26:03
between more than 350 gigabytes
of information per patient goes
1:26:08
into a central computer, where
artificial intelligence then
1:26:12
processes the data, we could
look at the patient and go,
1:26:15
they're moving along, there's
nothing going on there or their
1:26:17
face has a certain grimace
absolute that they'd normally is
1:26:20
it possible that it could tell
you before I even know that I'm
1:26:23
having problems?
1:26:24
Yes. 100% we will be able to
decipher complex features
1:26:29
complex emotions, like
agitation, or hunger.
1:26:33
People stopped saying 100% Wait,
wait,
1:26:35
wait. complex emotions like
education? Is that what she
1:26:39
said?
1:26:41
agitation. I think she said
agitation. Okay, let's follow
1:26:45
the follow up here
1:26:45
funded by the National
Institutes of Health. The high
1:26:48
tech experiment enters its third
year, researchers are still
1:26:52
teaching the technology what
certain actions like sitting and
1:26:55
standing might indicate the hope
that AI will soon be able to
1:26:59
provide real time health care
recommendations. Yeah. But will
1:27:03
this new technology replace the
need for humans in the hospital
1:27:06
all together?
1:27:08
very simplistic.
1:27:10
We don't even have humans in the
hospital who's gonna be sick
1:27:14
models compared to what our
brains
1:27:17
are doing. If something went
wrong, that
1:27:20
technology replaced the need for
humans in the hospital all
1:27:23
together nice,
1:27:24
very simplistic models compared
to what our brains are doing.
1:27:30
And I don't think that we should
be worried about humans being
1:27:33
replaced anytime soon,
1:27:35
though. Really?
1:27:36
Yeah. Yeah. Okay. said
1:27:38
that's what they said. Well,
we're being replaced.
1:27:42
I want to do this after the
break. Oh, really? Well, because
1:27:47
I have a lot of more stuff.
Dave. I have a bunch of clips
1:27:49
on. We're talking about AI. But
I just want to Okay, good. We're
1:27:53
teasing. I also have a which you
have to download, which he just
1:27:56
sent to you, which is an updated
Joe Biden poem, a poem,
1:28:03
poem. Okay, I got it. A couple
of things about Big Pharma.
1:28:10
There are moves being made. j&j
is undergoing a global overhaul.
1:28:17
They're firing people that are
restructuring something's up
1:28:20
with just because
1:28:21
they have a day have a distinct
possibility of going out of
1:28:24
business. Talk about it. How do
you know this? Well, they're
1:28:27
telling suits. This is on the
same level as the John man's
1:28:31
Vils asbestos suits.
1:28:34
Oh, they all come powder, you're
right.
1:28:37
And that they have been trying
to get out and push it over here
1:28:40
and push it over there and then
go bankrupt and come back into
1:28:42
business. I've been training all
these maneuvers because of the
1:28:45
suits. And they've been, they've
been unsuccessful at trying to
1:28:50
get out of it. That trying to
get trying to minimize it, at
1:28:54
least. And the numbers are just
outrageous. It's just it's just
1:28:58
like this bestest thing, which
did put John and people remember
1:29:02
this company, Johns Manville
huge construction operation,
1:29:06
they made different things, but
because they got ruined by
1:29:10
asbestos lawsuits, a Conk on ha
they may have restructured but
1:29:17
it's not that I That's
1:29:18
of course that makes a lot of
sense. Well, so that so there's
1:29:22
that Merck is in trouble.
Bloomberg reports that mercs
1:29:28
COVID drug. Do you even remember
mercs COVID drug?
1:29:32
It was the competitor with packs
lo COVID.
1:29:35
Oh, well guess what? It is
linked to spreading mutants and
1:29:41
vital mutations of the virus.
1:29:44
That's interesting. Well,
goodbye
1:29:46
Merck. just waved goodbye to
those guys.
1:29:49
Well, I don't know date I can't
put you out of business
1:29:53
is not great? No. And I'll see
what is Oh, who was that we
1:29:59
have? What is the latest on
reasons for strokes? Because you
1:30:05
know, it's everything except
Except peanut butter. Jeff is
1:30:09
really is. I'm waiting wouldn't
surprise me. No we have cracking
1:30:16
your neck, your chiropractor can
give you a stroke. pregnancy
1:30:21
complications can increase a
woman's stroke risk at young
1:30:25
age. According to the American
Heart issue,
1:30:27
a lot of women get what's called
mini strokes from having a baby.
1:30:31
And here's the latest from Dr.
Jen over there at ABC. Good
1:30:35
Morning, America.
1:30:36
Take a look at this big number.
More than 20 million Americans
1:30:39
aged 20 and older have coronary
artery disease the most common
1:30:44
form of heart disease. Dr. Jim
1:30:46
there's this misconception that
it affects men more than women.
1:30:49
I was growing up and I was
always taught that it was the
1:30:51
number one killer for women
heart disease.
1:30:53
That is true. But here's the
thing you guys, you know those
1:30:56
things that will stop
misgendering people Dr. Jen our
1:30:59
disease if that is true, but
here's the thing, you guys, no
1:31:02
one thinks it will happen to
them. So even if they are aware
1:31:05
that it is the number one killer
of men and women, people think
1:31:09
well, not me. But actually we
need to all realize that this is
1:31:12
potentially life threatening for
all of us. Take a look at the
1:31:16
stats for women, particularly in
heart disease. Over 44% of women
1:31:20
starting at age 20 years of age
and up have some form of heart
1:31:25
disease, whether it's coronary
artery disease, congenital heart
1:31:28
disease, valvular heart disease,
heart disease is the number one
1:31:31
killer of new moms in this
country. So we talk about the
1:31:34
maternal mortality epidemic,
heart disease tops, women are 6%
1:31:40
less likely to receive
bystanders minute
1:31:42
by minute women. They make a
good point. I mean, what she
1:31:45
says again,
1:31:45
heart disease valvular heart
disease, heart disease is the
1:31:48
number one killer of new moms in
this country. So we talk about
1:31:52
the maternal mortality epidemic,
1:31:54
maternal mortality
1:31:57
epidemic when it is done. I
never heard of this epidemic,
1:32:00
but
1:32:00
it's an epidemic. Is that
something that you know what to
1:32:04
control?
1:32:09
Epidemic cannot be anything,
just anything that's happening
1:32:13
over and over again, a
widespread occurrence of
1:32:15
infectious disease, infectious
disease.
1:32:21
I thought it does specifically
say that there must be a
1:32:23
secondary definition of loading
1:32:25
which let me go to Merriam
Webster, not what they got those
1:32:28
guys change everything. Yeah,
they change at the drop of a hat
1:32:31
affecting or tending to affect a
disproportionately large number
1:32:35
of individuals within a
population community or region
1:32:38
at the same time. That's the
number one definition so they
1:32:41
took out infectious they don't
even have infectious in here
1:32:44
anymore.
1:32:46
Those guys are real responsive
to the woke
1:32:49
here's here's our second
definition an outbreak of
1:32:52
disease that spreads quickly and
affects many individuals at the
1:32:56
same time. They don't even have
a virus in here they just took
1:33:01
that away epidemic laughter I
guess you could use it as as in
1:33:09
that way. Oh put an endemic how
is the one an epidemic is over
1:33:17
then you then that's endemic
Correct. Or am I completely Oh
1:33:22
look it up RIT epidemic
affecting or tending to know
1:33:26
that epidemic endemic and
epidemic see endemic same
1:33:30
dictionary belonging for native
to particular people or country
1:33:36
characteristic of or prevalent
in a particular field area or
1:33:39
environment restricted to
peculiar location or region? You
1:33:47
know, when they start, do you
know that the initial
1:33:49
pandemic to the Meza looked at
it?
1:33:52
Well, that that's a financial
definition. There's no I was
1:33:57
just gonna say something about
that there was oh, yes, violence
1:34:01
if you look at the term
violence, let me see if it's in
1:34:05
here. Violence and just
1:34:09
does it does Merriam Webster
who's the woke dictionary do
1:34:12
they? Do they have one of the
definitions 123 Maybe definition
1:34:16
for silence to say silent No,
1:34:19
but silence is violence outside
of the outside of the Merriam
1:34:24
Webster dictionary? A definition
of violence is changing words.
1:34:31
Changing changing words or
meaning of words falls under
1:34:35
violence not according to
Merriam Webster. I found this
1:34:40
out recently. Let me see if we
can do Do you trust another
1:34:44
dictionary? Funny question
Oxford
1:34:47
English I'll trust that okay.
1:34:53
Oxford of course that you know
that thing isn't isn't can't
1:34:56
even find Oxford English where
you Oxford English here we go.
1:34:59
Bye. Lunch?
1:35:01
Ah, you know, by the way, people
don't know this, but I almost
1:35:06
filled time with it, go for it.
A lot of people don't realize
1:35:09
that that definitions are all
1:35:12
copyrighted. Yes, we have
discussed this you have and then
1:35:16
when you when you write a
definition, you have to you
1:35:18
can't just copy from an
addiction or you have to come up
1:35:21
with your own, and you have to
document it. So they so these
1:35:24
dictionary companies have
documentation for its usage. You
1:35:29
just can't sit there and write
grind out to Adam curry
1:35:32
dictionary based on everybody
else's stuff.
1:35:35
It's copyrighted. So can you? I
mean, how close can you come?
1:35:41
Well, here we go.
1:35:43
I think if we did a dictionary
right now and put silence, here
1:35:46
we go based on silence is
violence, which based on a
1:35:50
bumper sticker and also maybe
somebody holding a sign up. I
1:35:53
think that'd be a copyrighted
definition. It's violent. It's
1:35:57
number six on the list. So we
have swift and intense force
1:36:01
refer injuries physical force,
action or treatment, unjust or
1:36:05
unwarranted exertion of force or
power against rights or laws, a
1:36:09
violent act or proceeding rough
or a moderate vehemence and
1:36:13
damage through distortion or
unwarranted alteration example
1:36:18
to do editorial violence to a
text I told you.
1:36:23
It's crazy talk.
1:36:26
There you go. Because that's me
1:36:28
heart disease tops that list.
Women are 6% less likely to
1:36:32
receive bystander CPR in an out
of hospital cardiac arrest,
1:36:37
because bystanders are
misogynist. How about that
1:36:41
likely
1:36:41
to receive bystander CPR in an
out of hospital cardiac arrest.
1:36:46
So again, in terms of
interventions, life saving
1:36:49
treatments, they're not doing as
well, they're 23% less likely to
1:36:53
survive if they suffer an out of
hospital cardiac arrest. And
1:36:56
then just in terms of research
in science, they are still
1:37:00
underrepresented in clinical
research when it comes to heart
1:37:03
disease. Now, you guys for the
last several years, I've been a
1:37:06
big push a big effort for OB GYN
as the primary care physicians
1:37:10
of women to really talk to the
cardiologist talk to their
1:37:15
patients about prevention, which
is so important because 80% of
1:37:19
heart disease is preventable.
1:37:22
Your OB GYN is going to talk to
you about your heart. We've gone
1:37:29
crazy,
1:37:30
it's out of control.
1:37:33
It is out of control. And with
that, I'd like to thank you for
1:37:35
your courage say in the morning
to you the man who puts the C in
1:37:38
the cocaine vaccine. Ladies and
gentlemen say hello to my friend
1:37:41
on the other end, Mr. John
1:37:46
in the morning to you Mr. Adam
curry also in the morning all
1:37:48
ships to see boots on the ground
feet in the air. saw this in the
1:37:52
water and all the names and
nights out there. And in
1:37:54
the morning to the trolls and
the troll room who let us down
1:37:57
severely on the last episode. I
mean, I shouldn't even be
1:38:01
talking be talking to the troll
room because not a single troll.
1:38:07
Then we have sometimes over
almost 2000 Trolls was able to
1:38:12
tell us that they're when it
comes to Timothy Tebow. That
1:38:16
there's two T Bo's one Tae Bo w
one TIBAUHLT. And no one. What
1:38:25
are you doing trolls? That's
what you were you were also
1:38:29
very dizzy. This was a
disgusting moment in the history
1:38:32
of the show.
1:38:33
Very disappointing children. I'm
very disappointed in you.
1:38:38
Like I say, don't go and you
came up with the white preyed on
1:38:41
the field. That's good enough.
And that's Shut up that shut the
1:38:44
trolls up instead of just
somebody actually coming in and
1:38:46
doing the work. Yeah.
1:38:47
And now they're just giving me
the finger. They're just sitting
1:38:50
in that troll and go and we
don't care about you. Let's
1:38:52
count down. Well, there's that
2337 of them today.
1:39:01
That's interesting. That's
1:39:02
pretty good. That's interesting.
Like, Hey, man, let's go hang
1:39:07
out and do nothing. Let's not
help those guys at all. There
1:39:12
you go. You can join the trolls
in the troll room at troll
1:39:16
room.io Or go to new podcast
app.com. There's a couple of
1:39:20
podcast apps, the new ones, the
modern ones that will alert you
1:39:24
when we go live with the BAP
signal, live on Thursdays. And
1:39:28
you know, it's really quite
exciting. I mean, we've had this
1:39:31
going on for 14 1314 years,
we've had the troll room. We've
1:39:35
had the bad signal. Now it's all
brought together into your
1:39:39
podcast app. So where you listen
to your podcast, you'll now get
1:39:42
an alert. It says no agenda has
gone live. You hit it. You
1:39:46
dropped right into the troll
room and you hear everything
1:39:48
going live podcast addict, a
very popular app. Pod verse also
1:39:54
does this and curio caster well
worth the price of admission
1:39:58
because I'm afraid you can
always support them though,
1:40:01
which I would suggest supporting
these apps or you can follow us
1:40:06
at no agenda social.com It is
Jhansi Dvorak at no agenda
1:40:10
social.com and Adam at no agenda
social.com You can follow us
1:40:14
from any Mastodon instance that
does not block us by default,
1:40:18
the which of which there are
many because you know, freeze
1:40:21
peach is very, very dangerous.
Be very careful you might get
1:40:25
covered in freeze peach juice if
you hang out with these guys too
1:40:29
long. And we want to thank our
artists for the art work on
1:40:35
episode 1526 titled Canuck Chuck
which of course was a very bad
1:40:40
omens how we kill these animals
when you're named on no agenda
1:40:44
show as a title you can get
killed this now first of all
1:40:48
correct the record for the hat
trick everybody three in a row
1:40:52
correct a record for the hat
trick was with the curry Devorah
1:41:00
duck eggs IT strategy a
beautiful it was just well done.
1:41:05
He had the egg carton, half a
dozen eggs right on the top
1:41:09
Corinne Dvorak eggs IT strategy
get it? And then also said in
1:41:14
the in the bottom corner perfect
for making Blue nachos. Which
1:41:16
you have to listen to the show
to understand why that
1:41:18
disgusting comment is on there.
But we did not we were looking
1:41:23
at a couple things. And
1:41:25
well you you actually I will say
you picked out one right off the
1:41:28
bat. I did like that piece.
1:41:30
I did like it. I did. Like I was
1:41:33
saying we should look at other
stuff because I didn't like to
1:41:35
contrast even though when it
shows up on other monitors, that
1:41:38
contrast is a little more
lively.
1:41:40
But for some reason I agree with
you the contrast does not look
1:41:44
that great maybe it's because
we're looking at a page with all
1:41:50
and by the way you can follow
this live no agenda art
1:41:53
generator.com or you can follow
it whenever you want. You can
1:41:57
see all the all the pieces
against
1:41:58
the blank against what is on the
black background of the no
1:42:01
agenda show.net It's lively. Oh,
it pops out pops. So we also had
1:42:06
to crack up by capitalist
agenda,
1:42:09
which you liked. Which one was
on again?
1:42:11
That's the egg saying breaking
break.
1:42:13
Oh, yeah. I liked it as as a
piece of funny art. What I
1:42:18
really wanted was, Brazil was
for liars. But we both kind of
1:42:22
thought that would be mean
towards Brazil.
1:42:25
Well, it's kind of Yeah, it's
kind of it was a broken heart.
1:42:29
Very good. I mean, this is a
classic piece of kind of graphic
1:42:33
art that you get out of New York
you got you got
1:42:35
some you got some pushback on
that from from Brazilians who
1:42:39
are like very sad that you call
them all liars. Well, they kind
1:42:43
of agreed with me though. I
didn't know anything. I didn't
1:42:45
know that when you were writing
for PC Magazine or whatever.
1:42:48
Yep, PC Magazine. But I was
writing
1:42:50
for I was writing for a magazine
in Brazil as a standalone. It
1:42:54
was not.
1:42:55
So they so they said that will
fly over business class. And
1:42:59
they flew over business class
and they kicked you into coach
1:43:01
to go back.
1:43:03
Yeah, it was funny.
1:43:05
I can just see you steaming in
the back. Well,
1:43:08
here's the problem with that
that particular anecdote which I
1:43:10
did we sent to this guy. The
Brazilians do this. It was like,
1:43:14
like I came over on seat to a
and it was business class seats
1:43:19
sexy. And I went back on seat to
1:43:21
a Yeah, but it was a regional
jet. It was a different
1:43:25
configuration. There was there
was very funny one row of
1:43:29
business class seats, and they
threw you right behind. Oh,
1:43:31
yeah. That's, that's Brazil for
you.
1:43:34
Now the other one I liked and
this artwork was the groundhog
1:43:37
said so by fluffed comment with
a little groundhog coming out of
1:43:41
the dirt. six more weeks of
propaganda. I used that on the
1:43:45
newsletter. We both kind of like
that. Yep. I used it on a
1:43:48
newsletter because I thought it
was cute. It was just cute. And
1:43:52
that was I think the main ones.
1:43:54
Well, and then I'll just say it.
I went, Hey, ma'am. If correct,
1:44:01
the record gets this one. He's
got the hat trick. Do we want to
1:44:07
hook a brother up?
1:44:09
Now? Now, I was wondering if
you're gonna mention that, but
1:44:13
you did. I
1:44:15
know I mentioned it. I'm honest.
Okay, I mentioned it.
1:44:18
And I said, Well, you know,
that's the way all these award
1:44:22
shows work. And all these lists
of the top 10 lists and the top
1:44:29
10 that we've done by editors of
magazines. They're all they all
1:44:34
work like that. So why don't we
also have this note of
1:44:38
corruption, which is what this
amounts to total corruption.
1:44:43
Give him the hat trick.
1:44:46
Note of corruption. That's
right. We are corrupt. The only
1:44:50
thing we didn't do is we didn't
take any money for it. That's
1:44:52
how stupid we are. Yeah,
1:44:53
well, we're corrupt without
without the brains.
1:44:58
The brains congratulate So as to
correct the record I think it
1:45:01
was well deserved it was a good
piece it was well, the the
1:45:05
contrast was the only thing that
really stayed I did like it
1:45:08
right away the kind of
surrounded by high contrast
1:45:12
pieces of art. Now there's some
other things like lots of egg
1:45:17
jokes, lots of lots of
hedgehogs, a groundhogs I'm
1:45:23
sorry, a hedgehog groundhog
which originally
1:45:25
badgers the original Groundhog
Day was a badger day
1:45:29
I liked the Marmont, myself,
1:45:30
I like Lamont live is it LA or
LA? That's LA? Really nice.
1:45:36
Look, I use lie think when I did
somebody sent me some Canadian,
1:45:42
French Canadians sent me a nasty
note. Yes,
1:45:45
it is not a very dear female,
there's a male groundhogs
1:45:51
Correct? Do you know that?
That's where you all comes from?
1:45:56
Canada? No, no, no comes from
Scotland, I think. Because
1:46:01
early, early, early on. Even in
America, we had some gender
1:46:08
language, I'm led to believe.
And it was you all was putting
1:46:14
out was nuts, not what it was.
It was plural or singular. I
1:46:17
don't know, I'm talking out of
my ass.
1:46:19
This is good guy, you just keep.
Yeah, I'm
1:46:21
not gonna I'm stopping myself
writing. I'm stopping right now.
1:46:24
I'm sorry, it was completely
stupid. Congratulations to
1:46:27
correct the record. And thank
you to all of the artists who
1:46:31
diligently participate and
really make this show better
1:46:36
with some huge amount of value.
We have scientific proof that
1:46:42
this really gets people to click
on our podcast in amongst a sea
1:46:47
of many, many icons, just to see
what that is. And before we know
1:46:50
what you're listening, and we
suck you right in the value for
1:46:55
value. If you want to learn
about the concept, go to value
1:46:57
for value dot info, it'll tell
you how this originated and, and
1:47:01
explain how it works. But
really, it's like, if you are
1:47:04
listening to this show, we've
done this for almost all the 15
1:47:07
years, and you get some kind of
value out of it, you laughed,
1:47:10
you cried, you got a stock tip,
you learn something, you got mad
1:47:14
and you liked it, whatever it
is, just just send us something,
1:47:18
send us some money and make the
number valuable to you make the
1:47:25
amount of valuable and $5 may be
very a lot of money for you then
1:47:29
send that that's all we asked
for whatever the value is, and
1:47:32
that fits within your value
system. Send that to us. And
1:47:36
then so far, so good. We're
still on the air. Of course, we
1:47:39
also need to actual treasure and
the time talent and treasure
1:47:43
categories. And this is where we
thank our producers, not
1:47:48
listeners. These are really
producers, especially executive
1:47:50
and Associate Executive
producers, who we like to
1:47:53
mention and give them the
official title and read their
1:47:57
notes. And this and we kick it
off now. I didn't even think
1:48:01
about it. But we missed your
animus of lower Soboba of
1:48:04
Dogpatch and Laura Slavia
usually comes in at the end of
1:48:08
the month, and he now comes in
at the beginning of the month.
1:48:12
And let me see what his note is
here. And he donated it's always
1:48:17
it's always a mystery. His
numbers, they vary, never the
1:48:22
same, never the same. Sometimes
a quarter of the amount,
1:48:26
sometimes four times four
January then $2,554. Which I
1:48:34
wonder whether it was 20 552
because the $2 has $2 Bill is
1:48:38
cash. Oh, we
1:48:40
put a $2 bill in there.
1:48:42
Yeah, but there were there were
two of them stuck together. And
1:48:44
I'm wondering
1:48:45
if it was mistake, so it might
have been 2552 a palindrome?
1:48:50
Yeah, but no, it was 2554
because there was two $2 bills,
1:48:55
one of artists that I know,
1:48:56
one of our biggest patrons, and
we appreciate it so much. And he
1:49:01
sent in a note and he's he's on
fire in his donation note for
1:49:06
this month. Yeah, thank you for
your outstanding News Analysis
1:49:10
and deconstruction of the
ongoing content provided by many
1:49:13
producers. Sadly, my travel
continues hence my late January
1:49:17
donation, and I find Western
media demonstrates their
1:49:20
disconnection from reality. They
failed to note the Davos
1:49:24
underrepresented the Davos
underrepresented the world
1:49:28
makeup of people most and he
travels all around the world. We
1:49:31
don't know exactly what he does.
Could be a hitman could be an
1:49:34
investor we don't know. I think
he's a salesman for Caterpillar.
1:49:37
Most places. Most places I
visited didn't know it was going
1:49:41
on except for the business press
highlighting corporate leader
1:49:44
interviews. While white
supremacy may be true in
1:49:48
predominantly Eurocentric
regions and some former
1:49:51
colonies. Elite supremacy is the
norm I encounter in my travels.
1:49:56
Leaders such as GE Modi because
she does even MBS Mohammed bin
1:50:02
Salman represents substantial
populations that no they are
1:50:07
superior to whites. Yes is a
leaf supremacy is a much better
1:50:12
term. I think I'm exhausted by
the but it does. But in America
1:50:16
we want to do some racial shit
so we throw that in it. I'm
1:50:18
exhausted by the increasing use
of the W s term by Western media
1:50:23
when I commonly encounter a
different physical paradigm, but
1:50:27
similar elitist attitudes. It's
right man to sign up. I have a
1:50:32
question to producers that
abandon this show because they
1:50:35
disagree with some views,
assuming they still listen
1:50:39
sometimes. Are you against free
speech and prefer to join the
1:50:43
mean field advertising based M
five M zombies? Does all of your
1:50:48
family and friends mimic your
beliefs or even support your
1:50:51
favorite sports team? Or do you
abandon them as well? This show
1:50:56
almost uniquely allows each of
us to question views and engage
1:51:00
as producers in dialogue with
John and Adam and each other.
1:51:03
Something increasingly rare in
our society and worthy of
1:51:06
support with your personal three
T's time talent treasure,
1:51:10
disagree with the view, donate
$200 and have your opinion read
1:51:14
to all the producers you might
open our minds. No jingles no
1:51:19
karma from sheer animus of
Dogpatch on lower Slobo via
1:51:23
yet some time on his hands this
he was around he was in the
1:51:27
airport and he's in a rush he
gives a short note. Yeah, he's
1:51:31
just really sick and tired of
something here. I don't know.
1:51:34
Thank you very much.
1:51:35
I'm sure he's sick and travel
title software. Thanks Michael
1:51:39
presutti is up next and he's in
Lewis Center Ohio and he comes
1:51:42
in with $1,000 Thank you John
Adam producers and assumed to be
1:51:46
fellow knights please add me to
the birthday list for 212 show
1:51:51
day and night me as sir Reverend
penguin pants of clown
1:51:56
universe.com first donation a
deed douching is appreciated.
1:52:04
You've been de deuced tonight
beautiful see at the podium
1:52:09
later mica in a little bit. In
fact, sir SCOBY is in Charlotte
1:52:12
North Carolina for 33 dot 33 He
clearly wanted to be of any of
1:52:16
the on top of the the executive
producers chips because
1:52:19
typically a 333 is the way to
go. Hello gents while listening
1:52:24
to show 1518 Wow, that's last
month. I was preparing eggs for
1:52:31
breakfast as I do each morning
John was talking about the too
1:52:33
many eggs cookbook too many
eggs.com and literally as I was
1:52:38
about to salt the beaten eggs
John quoting Mimi said, don't
1:52:42
solve eggs before they're
cooked. It makes them tough.
1:52:45
Holy yolk I thought oh my
goodness.
1:52:49
I am going to be a writer for
the Batman series on TV.
1:52:53
I have been salting eggs before
cooking them for years but new
1:52:56
information came to light I took
heat and now salt eggs only
1:53:00
after they are cooked the eggs
have never been better and the
1:53:03
too many eggs hardcopies I pre
ordered can't arrive soon enough
1:53:07
oh he went all in. Clearly the
value I received from no agenda
1:53:10
goes well beyond the excellent
media deconstruction and common
1:53:14
sense. One last note I'm now on
URL after my donation for show
1:53:18
1500 Thank goodness q1 is here.
Although in my opinion nothing
1:53:22
needs to change. YouTube do an
amazing job the back office does
1:53:25
an amazing job keep that shit
up. No jingles no karma Cisco
1:53:29
the URL of the Piedmont now man
thank you so much. That's nice.
1:53:34
That was nice. Crystal Guilarte
a in Napa, California and she
1:53:40
sent in a card. Now why
1:53:43
is she why so she has 333 Why
she above the 333 dot 30 threes?
1:53:48
Is that something that I'm
missing?
1:53:50
It's just the way the sword
works. I guess. I'll just
1:53:53
hit okay. Well remind me not to
use that sword
1:54:00
on here says 330 301 But I know
it's just the way thank you for
1:54:04
keeping my husband and I saying
we love the show. Here's my
1:54:08
first donation of 333 to become
an executive producer Keep up
1:54:12
the good work crystal Guilarte
Jae In Napa and she said psi
1:54:18
failed navigating your webpage.
Don't worry, it's all going to
1:54:22
improve q1 Oh she was she could
be talking about no agenda
1:54:26
show.net I think a nice car with
a picture of the of the
1:54:30
vineyards in them in the fall
very pretty. I think maybe she
1:54:35
just didn't know Goulart Goulart
or Goulart a depending on how
1:54:39
you want to pronounce it is if I
think it's a famous agricultural
1:54:43
name up there in the valley. Oh,
1:54:44
all right. rock crystal. Thank
you. Matt Dubois Draper, Utah
1:54:50
330 three.com. Sorry, Kevin s.
Santa Margarita, California 33
1:54:55
dot 33 333 dot 33. PAYGO Hello,
Jenson in the morning. Here's
1:54:59
some value from Are you karma
please love and light Kevin as
1:55:02
of California Central Coast.
You've got karma.
1:55:10
I'll take Matt Dubois, Matt
Dubois, capital D small you
1:55:15
Draper, Utah 333 33. John and
Adam for the first thank you for
1:55:20
the time and effort puts me at
two thirds, two thirds of the
1:55:23
way to knighthood. I'm
celebrating my 33rd birthday on
1:55:26
Tuesday, you're on the list. So
what better time now than then
1:55:29
now to be a producer? No,
jingles? No, Carmen. Good
1:55:33
jingles day today?
1:55:35
Well, that's the way it should
be. People are understanding how
1:55:37
it works. Eric Elaine in
Murfreesboro, Tennessee. Oh, it
1:55:42
looks like the keeper and I are
coming to fight you know, last
1:55:46
year was supposed to do the
indoor roller rink Valentine's
1:55:50
Day meet up in Tennessee. And I
got the COVID. So it looks like
1:55:55
we're going to reschedule that
for April 17 that keep an eye on
1:55:58
on that. So Murfreesboro,
Tennessee. Thank you, John Adam.
1:56:01
For all the years of no agenda.
I would like to claim my
1:56:04
knighthood with this donation
and take the name sir Eric
1:56:06
Knight of Sam Hain some Hain sa
M ha what is that Sam Hain on
1:56:12
it? That is karma for all
producers and douchebags. You
1:56:15
got it?
1:56:17
You've got karma. And it might
1:56:19
as well hit James Schneeberger
from Cary North Carolina. Not an
1:56:23
unfamiliar name but we did not
find a note for his 333 dot 33
1:56:27
executive producer donation so
he gets a double up karma.
1:56:31
You've got karma
1:56:35
No, I remember seeing a note
from him because he writes down
1:56:39
a lot. I know I know. But I
gotta do is here it is. Are you
1:56:43
dying to know, but was not
forwarded? Let me take a look at
1:56:50
administrator thank you both for
your efforts to keep us sane. A
1:56:54
JimBob way and Baroness Marianne
Schneeberger the girl with the
1:56:57
healing hands. No, that's all
there is. Interest so you're
1:57:03
welcome.
1:57:05
Surly furious This is our first
Associate Executive producer
1:57:10
from St. Petersburg Florida
surely
1:57:12
I get it.
1:57:13
Surly furious Yes. 205 dot 23 In
The Morning John and Adam I
1:57:19
believe tank talk on tick tock
will be your exit strategy.
1:57:24
Everybody welcome to tank talk
on tick tock, a gentleman John.
1:57:28
Kind of get an amen. Thank you
for your courage. Surly furious.
1:57:30
Thank you.
1:57:33
from William town, New Jersey
Williamstown, New Jersey Booper
1:57:38
of noses. You know that as you
move somebody's nose boop boop.
1:57:44
tuner bucks is our last
Associate Executive. We had to
1:57:48
get a D douching. And an RTD to
Carmen honor my beautiful
1:57:51
pageant wife,
1:57:52
pregnant wife. Oh, I'm sorry.
She may be a pageant wife.
1:57:57
He may be a pageant wife, who's
due any day now is our second
1:58:01
little boy for a safe delivery.
That de douching you've been de
1:58:08
deuced I started following you
guys. After watching Adam on
1:58:12
Rogen show. And I've been
hitting people in the mouth ever
1:58:16
since. Boop Rob knows
1:58:19
our to do too to karma. You've
got karma. And those are the
1:58:26
executive and Associate
Executive producers. For episode
1:58:29
1527. These are forever credits.
You can use them anywhere
1:58:34
credits are recognized. I would
suggest looking at LinkedIn and
1:58:37
doing a little search you'll see
what kind of big names are very
1:58:40
proud of these credits. You can
use them anywhere, your your
1:58:43
resume or LinkedIn. It will it
will get your attention and if
1:58:47
anyone questions, the validity
of this, you let us know we will
1:58:51
vouch for you. And John will
read the rest of our producers
1:58:55
through 50.
1:58:56
We're gonna start with a
donation for Rob for the new
1:59:01
South Jersey meetup to
switcheroo in Parlin. New Jersey
1:59:04
$150 that came from the meetup.
Lydia Terry in Rochester New
1:59:09
Mexico. 133 33 Deuce I don't
know. Do San Paulo moto in
1:59:17
Oviedo, Florida 101 Steven
colas. Cold, cold, cold glacier
1:59:25
cold lizard. Go Glazier.
1:59:28
How's it going today?
1:59:29
Oh glossy or glossy? Her Nan
Deena Beach, Florida. I give him
1:59:37
a DD wishes first. You've been
de deuced Steven Shevlin and
1:59:43
Holyoke Massachusetts. 100.
Steven crummy alcohol in
1:59:48
California 100. Brian to Leckie
and Lincoln Nebraska 100. And
1:59:53
Lynn John robe and a 100.
Followed by QQ in Key West
1:59:58
Florida. Oh Uh, got a little
story they're talking about how
2:00:03
to use the word cracking in
Turkey 100 Baron Kristoff in
2:00:07
munchin Deutschland 8888 which
is a lot different than nein
2:00:14
nein nein Nein. So onward to
this is how to stop the show
2:00:19
here. Find the correct email.
Here we go. This is Sir Kevin
2:00:28
McLaughlin locusts, North
Carolina 808 And I'm stopping
2:00:32
the show to read a note. This is
from my producer Bob and he says
2:00:37
I've had some free time at work
with nothing to do so I decided
2:00:41
I would indeed find the genesis
of curvature Kevin McLaughlin is
2:00:44
Duke of Luna lover of American
boobs 808 donation. The 1390s
2:00:51
are hit or miss between 606 and
808. My research concludes that
2:00:56
his first 808 donation was made
on episode 1393 However, I do
2:01:02
believe his 808 streak has not
been broken since episode 1397
2:01:09
Holy crap, which would make
yesterday's show and 129
2:01:14
consecutive donations this makes
it 130 consecutive donations of
2:01:21
808 Wow,
2:01:25
thank you, sir. Sir Kevin
McLaughlin. And he doesn't want
2:01:30
any any blog. Archduke? No, of
course. Yeah.
2:01:33
He's the Irish Duke Yeah. So 130
times in a row. Shade show not
2:01:39
like a month if not once a
month. John Bremen now I thought
2:01:43
it was worth stopping to show
for that. I agree. I agree. Sir.
2:01:46
Bremen our in Lemont, furnace
mud furnace Pennsylvania. It's
2:01:50
hot there sometimes 808 Sir
spooky. In Western Springs,
2:01:55
Illinois. At what why in Kartini
are way in Kartini in
2:02:01
Torrington, Connecticut 7421
James Green and F land. F land,
2:02:09
North Carolina 69 Russell roads
and Tallahassee Florida 6789 Sir
2:02:15
B boob in New Brighton Minnesota
5678 Brian Furley to D 510.
2:02:21
Edwin Visser and Holland 5430
twos
2:02:25
taste
2:02:27
college Michael gates 50 to 80
Matthew Janis zoo ski sir
2:02:32
Matthew in Chicago 50. In fact,
he starts off to the $50 donor
2:02:36
is going to do name of the
person and the location they're
2:02:39
all 50s Jeff Denham in Stuart,
Florida, Michael a bar or a bar
2:02:47
a the bar I think in
Williamston, Williamston,
2:02:51
Michigan. Villareal Villa rial
my believes in Texas I think so.
2:02:56
Alex Zavala in Kyle Texas, Aaron
Baker in El Reno, Oklahoma, and
2:03:03
Drake in Whitestone, Indiana
Kirkpatrick and nine Namo Nemo
2:03:08
Nemo sorry Nanaimo. Victoria
heiress of Victoria Island,
2:03:12
Canada, James sheremeta, in Napa
noc, New York, Jeff Denham in
2:03:17
Stuart, Florida, Brett Farrell
in Oklahoma City, and he
2:03:23
finishes off the front he got it
backwards. That finishes off the
2:03:29
list of donors. It's a very
short list. But I want to thank
2:03:34
each and every one of them
contributing to the show.
2:03:37
Were light on donors and heavy
on trolls. I don't know what's
2:03:40
going on the world troll world
has gone crazy donating Thank
2:03:44
you also to everyone who came in
and under $50 We do not read
2:03:47
those for reasons of anonymity
but also those are where you
2:03:49
find your subscriptions
sustaining donations they really
2:03:53
do help and we appreciate anyone
who's on those can get lower
2:03:56
amounts per month but I guess or
Kevin and you know if you want
2:03:59
to do 808 per show but I think
lots of people like $5.12 1211
2:04:04
lemons 3330 threes you can find
it all at our website which is
2:04:08
changing this quarter so look at
it quick before it goes
2:04:10
away.org/and A very much for
producing episode 1520 Best
2:04:17
podcast in the universe formula
2:04:19
is this we go out for yet people
in the mouth
2:04:35
go karma for anybody who still
needs it.
2:04:37
You've got karma
2:04:49
here here's our list for today.
Sir Matt philosopher night of
2:04:52
the wooden doors celebrates
tomorrow. Matt Dubois turns 33
2:04:57
The magic number on February 7,
Darius you ener D wishes his
2:05:00
younger brother by blood and
arms Sergeant Denzel Danny boy.
2:05:05
Happy Birthday turning 31 On the
seventh. Russel Rhodes wishes
2:05:09
his son Vikram a happy birthday
13 On the eighth and Michael
2:05:13
consew Teacher Reverend penguin
pants will be celebrating on
2:05:16
February 12 Happy birthday for
everybody here the best podcast
2:05:19
in the universe
2:05:30
don't want to be induced no
douchebags here we have sir
2:05:35
SCOBY who is a byte count now
becoming the URL of the Piedmont
2:05:41
thanks to another accumulated
$1,000 supporting your no agenda
2:05:45
show we really appreciate that.
Sir SCOBY URL of the Piedmont to
2:05:50
new entrance to our roundtable
of Knights and Dames today. So
2:05:55
at least we have to it's been
kind of up in meagre all over
2:05:58
the place I got got this blade
here. I just Oh, that's a pretty
2:06:05
Miko presutti Eric Elaine, step
up here both of you are now
2:06:12
night of the no agenda
roundtable I'm very proud to
2:06:14
pronounce the k d as Sir
Reverend penguin pants of clown
2:06:18
universe.com And Sam Eric Knight
of SA hain. For you, gentlemen,
2:06:23
we have of course hookers and
blow rent boys and Chardonnay.
2:06:27
Maybe some warm beer and cold
women would do well for your
2:06:30
harlots and how to sell beer and
blondes gazes and sakeI
2:06:33
Rubenesque woman and rose a bomb
hits and bourbon sparkling cider
2:06:37
and escorts ginger ale and
gerbils, maybe some breast milk
2:06:40
and pablum or a beer a bunch
now, we know what you want.
2:06:44
Everyone loves it. It's mutton
and meat is right here in front
2:06:48
of you go ahead and feast on
that. And if anyone wants to see
2:06:51
what we're talking about, go to
no agenda nation.com/rings You
2:06:53
can see these handsome rings
which are for days and nights
2:06:56
like their Signet rings. So you
get some wax to melt onto your
2:07:01
important correspondence and
push your night ring into it or
2:07:04
you can just hit someone in the
mouth and leave a nice mark. We
2:07:07
don't condone violence but just
saying and also a certificate of
2:07:11
authenticity. And thank you for
becoming knights of the no
2:07:15
agenda roundtable we really
appreciate it. No one
2:07:25
no agenda meetup.com It's all
producer run it's all producer
2:07:30
led to these meetups are
completely organized by the
2:07:32
producers no central authority
except for the one place you can
2:07:36
find it all no agenda
meetups.com Very important that
2:07:39
if there is one if you can get
to a meet up go because this is
2:07:43
where your community is. You may
feel like you're an introvert
2:07:47
like you're weird like you don't
belong you will belong to this
2:07:50
group. You will belong because
we have one thing in common. No
2:07:54
agenda nation. And remember,
connection is protection. Let's
2:07:58
go to Denver for a meet up
report filling
2:08:00
the meetup report gap. This is
your host in Denver John from
2:08:04
the millennial media offensive
gym sort of from Denver in the
2:08:07
mornings Colin I love you in the
morning. This is Taylor This is
2:08:13
Josh in the morning is that the
potty is Sir redacted and this
2:08:16
whole Meetup is now classified
top secret it's 933 here in
2:08:21
Denver and this has been an
excellent meet up they always
2:08:24
are if you haven't come out to
see us yet. Come see us now over
2:08:27
to the Aquarius 23rd Read 3333
no agenda meet up we just
2:08:32
stepped into the Twilight Zone
2:08:33
of conspiracies because their
hearts are on saying what's up
2:08:37
and this is COVID pie in the
morning.
2:08:39
This is the other deck in the
morning everybody
2:08:42
Nick didn't even introduce
himself in the morning and this
2:08:45
is certainly Miller foster in
front of a very embarrassed is
2:08:49
fight count Nick who is looking
tremendous today ladies ladies
2:08:53
ladies and thank you Adam and
John always
2:08:55
this is Sir Karis my account of
Greater Boston and he
2:08:59
seemed alright ladies go on to
new agenda social. What is it
2:09:06
Karis? Uh no agenda. That's key
A ry s because I'm trying to get
2:09:09
my man some happy Valentine's
and also a cold fan is single to
2:09:15
lay it is. Anyways we support
you and we always will and
2:09:19
everyone should donate right now
to no agenda. And thank you for
2:09:22
your courage. Dan,
2:09:23
thank you very much for your
report as convoluted as now if
2:09:28
we'd done the show yesterday, it
would make sense to talk about
2:09:30
the big Sydney emergency meet up
which is today but really for
2:09:35
them. It's yesterday. It was
scheduled for 3:33pm Luckily it
2:09:40
was of course unknown to the
meet ups.com special guest Brian
2:09:43
of London I hope had a good time
the gasoline pony is where it
2:09:47
was held and we'll see if we get
any any meet up report from
2:09:51
them. Also today the New
Hampshire meet up kicked off at
2:09:55
11 at the clipper tavern
Portsmouth, New Hampshire I felt
2:09:58
the feeling that may be over As
you know, I'm reading things
2:10:02
that are probably dumb. The Get
Down in the old town meet up at
2:10:06
chadwicks Old Town Alexandria,
Virginia. Ah the spook spook for
2:10:09
spectacular. Now here's what's
coming up the rest of February
2:10:13
Edmonton, Oklahoma, Austin, the
Sunset Valley, Texas, San Diego
2:10:18
star Idaho, San Antonio, Texas,
Portland, Oregon. We've got Guam
2:10:23
on the list. Spokane,
Washington, Fort Wayne, Indiana,
2:10:26
always on the 15th Denver,
Colorado, Charlotte, North
2:10:29
Carolina, Leiden, the
Netherlands where the university
2:10:32
is lot of smart people at that
meetup, Cincinnati, Ohio, DC,
2:10:35
Washington DC. I don't remember
how many Washington DC meetups
2:10:39
we've had. So that will be a
great opportunity to spot the
2:10:41
spook if you're there. Philly
Columbus, Raleigh, Ocala,
2:10:46
Florida Indy again on the 19
Gladewater Texas Toronto. In
2:10:50
Ontario Moore, Oklahoma. Warren,
Rhode Island Punta Gorda,
2:10:54
Florida. Derby, Connecticut and
that's just the month of
2:10:56
February they are going on
everywhere in the world
2:11:00
throughout all the months if you
want to find out where you can
2:11:03
find a meetup go to no agenda
meetups.com If you can't find
2:11:06
one near you start one yourself.
It's easy. You'll have a lot of
2:11:09
fun it's always a party Dyson de
bom bom UniFi will be triggered.
2:11:23
You will be buddy feels the
same. Is like how are you on
2:11:33
ISOs today? I have two okay,
let's do you. I've had five for
2:11:39
some reason. Oh, yeah. Let's see
what you get. Well, here's
2:11:42
my two. One is future. I'm
talking to you from the future.
2:11:47
Okay. And the other one is like
that. I like
2:11:53
did you edit those together?
Sounded like was cut like that.
2:11:58
I like that. Yeah, it was cut.
That's not original. I'm not oh,
2:12:01
gee, man. Yeah, it was. Okay.
Well, here's here's my ISOs
2:12:05
journalistic integrity just one
not wearing pants. Not so great.
2:12:14
Super interesting. Not bad.
2:12:17
Would that have been nice? It
was clear
2:12:19
Yeah. The rooms crowded with
elephants these days. But
2:12:23
nothing How about this stuff
totally blew me away. That one I
2:12:29
liked I thought that was pretty
decent.
2:12:33
Well, I liked like that but I
think I'm from the future is
2:12:36
kind of good. I like Mike my to
2:12:41
let me hear from the future. I'm
talking to you from the future.
2:12:45
And I like I liked I liked I
liked that. But it's it. It
2:12:51
sounds like it was cut together.
Doesn't sound natural. I
2:12:55
like sounds natural to me. As
the desk the troll room what
2:13:00
they think is done naturally
utero room or wood now
2:13:03
you now you rely on these
worthless trolls now? Oh, no,
2:13:08
no, no, no. You know what
they're all saying. I like that.
2:13:11
Okay. Yeah, sounds fine. They
don't care that they're doing
2:13:16
they're listening to other
shows. I don't know. I don't
2:13:21
even know what they're doing
over there. All right, we we
2:13:26
teased it before the break. I
very important with Jesus before
2:13:30
the break. We would be you'd be
doing a little expos a on
2:13:36
artificial intelligence
2:13:37
will not so much. The next was a
but I think everyone's kind of
2:13:40
missing the point in what we you
have the clip that was on no
2:13:44
agenda social, you might as well
play that for starters.
2:13:47
And I'd like to say something
about that. So there's a new AI,
2:13:52
which of course stands for atom
intelligence. But
2:13:55
it turns it turns out that
there's more than one of these
2:13:57
Yeah, but I saw
2:13:59
I think it came from the same
place because I got a link and
2:14:04
it said hey, you know, you can
sample sample yourself. See how
2:14:07
it works? Try the demo. And I
for a second I thought oh, no, I
2:14:11
thought I'm not gonna feed my
valuable voice into some AI
2:14:15
piece of crap. But don't worry.
Someone did it for us. And here
2:14:21
it is. Hi, this is not Adam
curry broadcasting to you live
2:14:24
from FEMA Region six.
2:14:25
And from the mudflats in San
Francisco. This is not John C.
2:14:29
Dvorak, where we are celebrating
National carrot cake day
2:14:32
Welcome to the all agenda show
where we reinforce the
2:14:35
propaganda messages from the M
five m in the morning everyone
2:14:38
special shout out to that dude
from the fort in Colorado for
2:14:41
giving me the idea to do this.
It is ridiculous how easy voices
2:14:44
can be faked. Remember, I am not
Adam and that was not John.
2:14:49
Alright, what what was your
impression of this?
2:14:52
I liked it. And and I played it
to me me and she said no, she
2:14:59
says Nana, she said does sound
like the one year? This it
2:15:03
sounds just like us and she says
no issue. The cadence is wrong
2:15:06
in the case she went she had
some complaints. Now I agree. I
2:15:09
agree. Okay, so I said, Well,
you know, I'll tell you this
2:15:12
that is fixable.
2:15:14
Yes, it's fixed. Can I say
something else? Not only is it
2:15:18
fixable, it's our it's our way
out of this thing, bro. Bro.
2:15:24
Well, we can just have a couple
of writers and we can just sit
2:15:28
back to the island PiFan II.
2:15:30
This is what I thought that
podcasting is like the last
2:15:33
vestige of of honesty because it
takes if you think of the put
2:15:38
this, take this show and write
it out to do the writing from
2:15:43
scratch instead of just ad
libbing like we do. Because we
2:15:45
do prefer this performance art
for us as we are. We are artists
2:15:48
it was just we are always faster
to do it this way.
2:15:54
It's a lot easier.
2:15:56
It's faster. So meanwhile, Marty
Higgins Of course, our official
2:16:00
no agenda, joke writer and
comedian. He got a hold of this
2:16:03
thing and did his himself and he
did a long spiel on no reading
2:16:09
the Declaration of Independence
in his own voice. And Mimi,
2:16:12
although it's his voice when he
was 25. Mimi says that it sounds
2:16:15
just like him. But I so I told
Marty I said Okay, for the show.
2:16:20
Let's start working on the Joe
Biden because I believe that the
2:16:23
Joe Biden that we've been
getting, is one of these one of
2:16:26
these systems.
2:16:27
So it's not the real Joe, this
is AI Joe. So I have an AI Joe,
2:16:31
did
2:16:31
you get the download? I do.
Okay, this is the second
2:16:34
iteration that we still have
some problems with the with the
2:16:37
pausing, because this is just a
straight script. I'm Martin did
2:16:41
you write the script or Marty
2:16:43
I wrote the script. Marty did
the sampling. Marty is also a
2:16:45
writer so he can do in the
future. This is something this
2:16:48
happened at 11 o'clock last
night. You guys were stoned. So
2:16:53
we're up. And so he just got it
in. This is the second
2:16:57
iteration. And it still has
issues. But it especially the
2:17:00
second part of it sounds a lot
like Joe, this can be done in a
2:17:03
way that could be useful.
2:17:05
All right. And this is Joe's
poem.
2:17:09
Joe's calm. When my dad used to
sit us down. He always read a
2:17:13
poem before dinner. Yeah, no
joke. It was always the same
2:17:16
poem. He said, Joey, these are
the words to live by. And I
2:17:21
don't want you to forget that it
went like this. Roses are red
2:17:25
and violets are blue. And the
world is an oyster for you to
2:17:28
chew. I swear to God, my hand on
the Bible. He said that poem
2:17:32
every day for 10 to 15 years. A
couple of years ago, when he was
2:17:37
on his deathbed at the White
House. He motioned me over and
2:17:40
whispered in my ear. Joey, do
you know that poem I used to say
2:17:43
at the dinner table before we
ate back in Scranton? Yeah,
2:17:46
Pops. I told him, Joey, tell me
the poem. He says, okay, Pops, I
2:17:51
said, and he smiled, and passed
away right then and there as I
2:17:55
held his hand, before I could
repeat the poem. Then the
2:17:59
damnedest thing happened. And
I'm not kidding. All the kids
2:18:03
gathered around. I swear to God,
without saying a word or
2:18:07
agreeing on anything. We
spontaneously said the poem
2:18:10
together, man. Oh, man, we all
had a good cry that night. I'm
2:18:15
not joking.
2:18:16
All right. Couple of things.
One, what the hell was that
2:18:19
rumbling? I don't know. Don't
even answer that. And no, I
2:18:23
think I think the cadence is
off. If anything, you need to
2:18:27
put some spaces in there. So we
can because
2:18:29
Yeah, well, that catalyst is
wrong. Probably sampled from a
2:18:32
younger Joe.
2:18:33
Yeah, that that doesn't count.
Oh, it's a younger Joe. Now.
2:18:37
It'll Yeah, it's a deep fake.
That has to be a deep fake
2:18:39
again, it's got to be
convincing. No,
2:18:41
I agree. I'm not saying this was
just done last night at the spur
2:18:44
of the moment.
2:18:45
Let's shows.
2:18:48
I am very impressed with this
stuff.
2:18:51
I think we the thing of us is
better than that. Honest,
2:18:57
I am very impressed with this
stuff.
2:19:00
Yeah, the problem is it just it
will never have and will almost
2:19:07
say never. I just don't see how
it can have the spontaneity and
2:19:12
you know, what is beautiful
about us? Is the stuff that is
2:19:16
wrong. You know, the mistakes. I
mean, it's hard to write
2:19:21
spontaneous mistakes and
recovery into a script. I just
2:19:24
don't see it happening. Now. For
other things. Like I wouldn't
2:19:28
mind having this, you know, for
doing station IDs. Hi,
2:19:32
everybody. It's Adam curry and W
htz. Listen to no agenda, you
2:19:36
know, back in the day, but I
just don't see it working. And
2:19:40
it sounds like us, but not
really. If if we don't if we
2:19:44
talk like this the whole time is
this is exactly how we talk
2:19:46
then. Yes, that will be pretty
much accurate, John, don't you
2:19:48
think so? John?
2:19:51
I'm telling you, I'm impressed
with this stuff. You're easily
2:19:55
impressed. I'm impressed with
and I know that's the joke of
2:19:58
it. I'm not easily impressed and
everybody out there who knows
2:20:01
any of anything about me knows
that I'm not easily impressed.
2:20:05
This is one inch away from being
almost perfect. I'm telling you,
2:20:10
this is a Dane, this is going to
take this is going to eliminate
2:20:13
voiceover jobs. This is going to
eliminate audible books, people
2:20:17
who do read those for a living,
while you do sample a guy's
2:20:20
voice from one of his own books.
And you can use his voice to
2:20:24
read a book. Yeah, it's also
good for writers like myself
2:20:27
that say, wrote a book that I
wanted to read, I can't read a
2:20:31
book I've tried, you try to read
a book out loud and try to go
2:20:35
through the whole thing without
flooding. It's not possible. If
2:20:38
you have your own voice sampled
2:20:40
here. Once you write your own
voice, you can write a book and
2:20:42
publish it.
2:20:45
Eventually, so you resample
yourself. And you read the whole
2:20:50
damn book. And yeah, you maybe
can beef it up here and there.
2:20:53
I'm telling you, this is a big
deal. Well, and But meanwhile,
2:20:57
of course, NPR is work is still
working on the AI on that NPR,
2:21:01
but PBS is still talking about
the AI that that's the writing
2:21:05
AI, the chat, the chat, GPT
chat, whatever it is. Yeah. That
2:21:11
which is why I've got some clips
of I think I can
2:21:14
I can just say something here.
Sure. I am in agreement that
2:21:19
there's going to be certain use
cases that first of all, it
2:21:22
would revolutionize NTDs
programming. It would
2:21:27
revolutionize what those guys
are doing. It would probably
2:21:29
also revolute loot revolutionize
NPR you know, just to have a you
2:21:33
could easily take those dead
voices and and redo that CNET is
2:21:39
already having stories written
by artificial intelligence,
2:21:44
quote unquote, yeah, advertisers
love it. So yeah, but but I
2:21:51
think we will always always
prevail, with the human voice,
2:21:56
the human connection. Now
granted, we'll be broke, but we
2:22:01
will prevail.
2:22:04
Let's go with AI teaser. This is
just a teaser for their little
2:22:08
segment,
2:22:09
artificial intelligence and the
popular new AI tool chat GPT has
2:22:15
the potential to influence our
lives dramatically changing how
2:22:18
we gather information, how we
communicate, even how we work.
2:22:22
There are also questions about
how it will affect governance
2:22:25
and what it means for the future
of our democracy. William
2:22:29
Brangham has that and it's part
of our periodic series, the AI
2:22:33
frontier. Oh, yeah.
2:22:34
For government and governance
gonna be great, more bullshit
2:22:37
more of the time.
2:22:39
So they, of course, take this
whole thing to democracy because
2:22:42
it's like some sort of
Democratic Party theme, threat
2:22:46
to democracy. I'm surprised he
has to call the whole program
2:22:49
threat to democracy and you
know, the point that Republicans
2:22:52
and say, there they are. But but
let's but they're not they're
2:22:55
going to talk about AI and how
it's a threat to democracy
2:22:58
because everything's a threat to
democracy. So let's go with AI.
2:23:01
And this is teaser to
2:23:03
could AI be used to distort
democracy, not through voting,
2:23:07
but using the technologies
ability to mimic human
2:23:10
communication and language
through lobbying.
2:23:13
Almost like a why is this guy on
the toilet? I mean, seriously,
2:23:18
sounds like it's on the toilet.
Yeah, now,
2:23:20
you're referring to the slight.
The room ambience, which is
2:23:24
echoey. Yeah, I have no idea. As
I saw myself, I said, why is
2:23:29
this guy? What is it? Where do
you think getting this echo
2:23:31
from? They have a lone mic
that's open nearby they which is
2:23:35
what usually causes that
2:23:36
there was this video was this
video and this is PBS
2:23:39
News Hour wrong.
2:23:41
That's a question raised in a
recent New York Times opinion
2:23:44
piece by security expert Bruce
Schneier. Oh, Schneier is a
2:23:47
fellow at Harvard University's
Berkman Center for Internet and
2:23:51
Society. And the Belfer Center
at the Kennedy School of
2:23:54
Government. He's the author of a
new book just out called a
2:23:58
hackers mind. Bruce Schneier,
great to have you on the
2:24:00
program. When you look at these
AI technologies, what is it that
2:24:05
most troubles you about this
potential threat to democracy,
2:24:08
really, where it mimics humans,
democracy is fundamentally a
2:24:12
human way of organizing
ourselves. And we're an AI
2:24:16
whether it's a chat GPT that is
writing human text, or another
2:24:21
AI that is figuring out humans
strategy, can do that at a speed
2:24:25
and scale that humans can't. It
could take over processes, and
2:24:32
really subvert the intent of
this very human system.
2:24:37
I will say this, about that
2:24:39
threat to democracy,
2:24:42
for sure. The human brain will
adapt to anything. See the
2:24:47
experiment where you wear
glasses that invert the image
2:24:51
that you see and the world is
upside down. I think it's within
2:24:55
12 or 24 hours, you'll be able
to function much faster than
2:24:59
faster. And that even Yeah, you
will be able to function just
2:25:03
perfectly your mind has no
problem inverting it flips it
2:25:06
over. So for people once they
get used to it, yeah, yeah, I
2:25:11
think I'm
2:25:13
not going to disagree with them.
2:25:14
I think once you get used to it,
your brain will just go, okay.
2:25:17
It might not even register
anymore as
2:25:20
might actually be better, it
might be good for us to be
2:25:23
confronted with this. So we can
look at it and say, like you did
2:25:26
with the Joe Biden thing, which
I thought was excellent that
2:25:29
Marty did within like an hour of
the show. You heard all the
2:25:35
flaws, because you're but you
have a trained ear for this sort
2:25:38
of thing. You hear flaws in your
own voice and things that nobody
2:25:41
else hears or cares about. I'm
critical, and so cares about
2:25:46
saying, but that might be
something that everyone
2:25:48
achieves. So when you hear a
deep fake, because I've got a
2:25:52
couple I'm working on based on
some ideas, that when you hear a
2:25:56
deep fake of, of just somebody
mimicking somebody else's voice,
2:26:00
once it's perfected, you'll be
able to pick it out, you build
2:26:03
up. No, no, that's not that's no
good. That's not the guy. At
2:26:08
least some people know this is
like, like people with the
2:26:12
personal computers, some of them
still in there can't figure out
2:26:14
how to use them. And there's a
bunch of those people in the
2:26:17
population that are dumb are the
people that bought into all
2:26:21
this. Russia, Russia gate stuff,
for example. And that includes
2:26:26
smart people out there are
journalists, they they're done
2:26:29
for if you can't make that
adaption that you can with those
2:26:33
glasses that flipped the world
over your your through. I think
2:26:37
this is going to be a big
separator here. Okay, but let's
2:26:42
go to clip three. This is very
short. Is that correct? Yeah,
2:26:46
cuz it's a commentary clip.
2:26:47
Okay. Can you give me some
examples? Like how would this be
2:26:50
used to corrupt the system as
you describe it?
2:26:54
Okay, okay.
2:26:55
He at no point in his interview
says it corrupts the system. I'm
2:26:59
just pointing that out. Just
throws it out there. Yeah. And
2:27:02
he just says that how would it
be done? In other words, this
2:27:04
was scripted. How would this be
used to corrupt a system as you
2:27:08
describe it? Obviously, he was
supposed to say that someplace
2:27:11
in the interview. Maybe that
corrupts
2:27:13
this? Isn't that guy just AI
voice himself with his toilet
2:27:17
sound? I'm telling you. I don't
trust AI
2:27:19
guy. Yeah, Guy toilet. Ai just
wanted to. I just thought that
2:27:23
was worth mentioning. last clip,
2:27:25
one of the things we have in our
system is an ability to submit
2:27:29
comments. When federal
rulemaking agencies make draft
2:27:33
rules, we are allowed to submit
comments back, and we humans
2:27:37
submit comments. If an AI can
submit 1000s Millions of
2:27:41
comments. It could overwhelm
human comments.
2:27:45
I mean, this is sort of the
ultimate fake astroturf
2:27:49
campaign. It's sort of what the
Department of Justice accused
2:27:51
the Russians of doing in the
2016 election.
2:27:54
And the Russians had hundreds of
people and a million dollar a
2:27:57
month budget to do it. I'll make
what this does is brings that
2:28:01
capabilities down to a lot of
other actors. But yes, it's
2:28:04
exactly that same thing. Your
assertion
2:28:07
is that if you could suddenly
flood the zone with all of these
2:28:11
quote unquote, fake comments or
opinions, then you could distort
2:28:16
what popular will really was
about any given topic.
2:28:19
That's right. That's how we
figure out what people want is
2:28:22
we asked them and they tell us
and we don't ask them in person
2:28:25
we asked them remotely and they
tell us remotely so having an
2:28:28
artificial agent, mimic people,
subvert that process, other AIS
2:28:34
doing other types of analysis
could figure out what
2:28:38
legislators are more susceptible
to having their minds change. I
2:28:42
mean, again, these are very
human actions lobbyists do this
2:28:46
but having an automated process
supplanting that just gives that
2:28:51
capability more
2:28:53
power yeah
2:28:58
I'm I'm skeptical this is going
to take off the way people
2:29:02
believe it will. Now this chat
LGBT you know that whole thing?
2:29:09
No.
2:29:11
Thank you. Thank you a line from
the troll room believe it or not
2:29:18
I mean, the thing with with the
chat GPT is is really just wiki
2:29:23
pedia information and stuff you
know, written out in real time,
2:29:28
which gives you this this parlor
trick idea of agar. This is a
2:29:32
human typing this. As the
answers are iffy at best, the
2:29:36
whole thing is obviously biased.
If you ask it to do a poem about
2:29:42
trumpet says I can't do that a
poem about Biden no problem. You
2:29:46
know, well, that
2:29:47
that Yes. I actually got into a
little argument with JC about
2:29:50
this because he's working with
this stuff too. Oh, okay. And he
2:29:55
says, I questioned that because
one of our Dame Jennifer or had
2:30:01
a clip from something showing on
the on the no agenda social dis
2:30:05
example of say something good
about Democrats and they say
2:30:08
something say something good
about Republicans and they
2:30:10
won't. Yeah. Because of the some
of the people behind chat GPT
2:30:14
are woke and according to and I
want to see some like real live
2:30:19
examples of this, but this is
all disappeared because I guess
2:30:22
it's been pointed out or
2:30:23
replicated. I replicated exactly
what was on Chad GPG. I don't
2:30:28
know. I would like to see clips
of that because I was gonna use
2:30:31
it in the newsletter, but I
couldn't replicate it. Well,
2:30:33
you didn't. You don't because
you do even have an I asked
2:30:36
a chat I asked the entire no
agenda social community for
2:30:39
this. They
2:30:40
don't care. They don't care
about you. While you're on it. I
2:30:45
was doing things.
2:30:47
Okay, well, I'm just I'm just
saying it's not like I was
2:30:50
remiss,
2:30:50
no, but I can do it live right
now. I'm going to have an
2:30:53
account you say?
2:30:54
Okay, well, let's do it live. Do
the vocal thing. Okay, what's
2:30:57
the voice thing?
2:30:58
What do we use the voice thing?
2:31:00
Can you think you're talking to
you? Is that a part of it? No,
2:31:03
no, no, no, not talking.
2:31:04
Okay. Let's do it live. Let's do
it live. All right. What
2:31:07
do you want me to what do you
want me to type in the got hairy
2:31:09
legs? What do you want me to
type in? Is I think it was make
2:31:14
a poem about Donald Trump. I
think it was something like
2:31:19
that. And it's thinking it's
thinking. Now now it's now it's
2:31:25
doing now it's doing a poem,
piece of shit. A man of wealth
2:31:31
and fame Donald Trump was his
name. A businessman, a TV star
2:31:34
with charisma he won by far. He
promised to make America great
2:31:38
with policies that would seal
the fate of a nation in need of
2:31:41
change and his supporters felt
very strange controversies
2:31:45
followed his trail, but he stood
firm, never pale, a divisive
2:31:48
figure Love him or hate his
legacy a matter of debate. He
2:31:52
ruled with Twitter as his tool
shaping a new era breaking the
2:31:55
rule, defying norms and stirring
the pot leaving his mark whether
2:31:59
it's hot or not. Now that his
presidency is done, his story is
2:32:03
far from over and begun as
history judges has ever move
2:32:06
remove Donald Trump a name to
prove. Now we do make a poem
2:32:17
about Joe Biden. So this is not
the example of course, which is
2:32:23
why Joe Biden a name so true, a
name with a man with empathy
2:32:27
seen by a few raised in Scranton
with humble roots, a leader who
2:32:31
values hard work and Toots
toots. He served in the Senate
2:32:35
for many years with wisdom he
calmed the nation's fears in the
2:32:39
White House as president as vice
president to a man of the people
2:32:43
with a heart that's blue. And
then he ran to lead the nation
2:32:46
with a message of hope and
liberation, a leader who's
2:32:49
fought through adversity, and
now he stands as the President
2:32:52
with diversity. With a steady
hand and a clear voice. Joe
2:32:56
Biden is making the nation
rejoice as he works to heal and
2:33:00
to unite a leader who shining a
brighter light. So let us
2:33:03
support our commander in chief
in his mission to bring relief
2:33:07
to a nation in need of hope and
love and eggs Joe Biden sent
2:33:11
from the heavens above us got
hairy legs. I made the last part
2:33:17
of
2:33:18
the that's just as good a poem
as the poet laureate at the
2:33:23
inauguration. You're right.
2:33:27
I don't know, man. So fine. I
mean, this is just go read.
2:33:32
industrial society and its
future. We're doomed.
2:33:36
Now you're back on track. Yeah,
2:33:37
we're doomed. We're totally
doomed with this crap.
2:33:40
Meanwhile, here's the real Joe
Biden.
2:33:45
Any blame for inflation,
2:33:46
the president are taking blame
for inflation. No. Why not?
2:33:51
Because it was already there.
When I got here, man. Remember
2:33:53
what the economy was like when I
got here? Jobs were
2:33:56
hemorrhaging. Inflation was
rising. And weren't
2:34:00
manufacturing the damn thing
here. We were in real economic
2:34:03
difficulty. That's why I don't
2:34:06
inflation was already here, man.
Look, look. Look at the history.
2:34:10
A lie, man. So here I have it.
Biden. clipless. Play this.
2:34:16
Oh, there's only one. Yes, this
is a good one.
2:34:18
More than half the women in my
cabinet more than more than half
2:34:21
the people my cat more than half
of the women in my
2:34:24
administration are women.
2:34:26
So this is what I'm talking
about. Where was our excellent
2:34:29
joke writer was something like
this.
2:34:31
The point is we'll give Marty a
bad time he's working for free.
2:34:34
I'm sorry, Marty. But you know,
the whole point is,
2:34:37
you don't get more of the
bumbling to make
2:34:41
jokes. The man is funny for when
he's trying to be serious. This
2:34:45
is the human condition. It
cannot be the women are women. I
2:34:48
know it cannot be replicated by
AI AI is too even AI is too
2:34:53
smart to be dumb enough to be
Joe. Let's just face it man. Man
2:35:00
No joke is no joke, man.
2:35:02
I'm gonna continue on this
quest. look at why this is your
2:35:05
beat. Congratulations with that
your beat. Okay. Oh, should we
2:35:16
just do something completely
just off the wall just to just
2:35:19
to change it up a little bit?
2:35:21
Well, all I got left is Haiti.
Now which by the way seems to be
2:35:25
out of control.
2:35:26
Let's do Haiti. I'm interested
in Haiti because you remember,
2:35:32
ah, I wonder if I have a clip of
that Hillary Clinton's brother
2:35:39
had gold rights remember that,
though? Vaguely. Yeah, yeah, he
2:35:44
had some gold rights or
something in Haiti. I can't find
2:35:49
I don't think we have a clip on
it. I'm sure it was some music
2:35:51
clips since I was somewhere.
Let's listen to it was his Haiti
2:35:54
match one? Yeah, Haiti match.
2:35:56
The island nation of Haiti is
moving closer to the brink of
2:35:59
collapse. Since early January,
the country was left without a
2:36:03
single elected official, leaving
heavily armed gangs to be in
2:36:07
control. Today, much of the
capital Port au Prince is under
2:36:10
the control of gangs that have
been targeting police and
2:36:13
Haitians are living in fear and
chaos. And a funeral and Porter
2:36:19
prints the families of three
fallen police officers grieved
2:36:24
as their colleagues solemnly
saluted their flag draped
2:36:27
coffins. In the last month gangs
have killed nearly 20 officers.
2:36:32
Mourners lamented the lives lost
and the turmoil that has
2:36:36
engulfed the country.
2:36:40
Our police officers are being
slain again, we will not accept
2:36:44
that bandits rule and that they
say that the government is
2:36:46
theirs.
2:36:47
Elsewhere in the capitol rage,
armed protesters, some dressed
2:36:51
in police gear, set fires in the
streets, broke through the gates
2:36:55
of the airport and lowered the
flags to half staff to mark the
2:36:59
deaths forever. There has to be
a revolution. There has to be a
2:37:04
bloodbath. All these policemen
have been killed, and the Prime
2:37:08
Minister has not reacted violent
protests have persisted for
2:37:12
months and many Haitians are
angry that the government can't
2:37:15
keep them safe. Who's been
suffering for a long time?
2:37:21
Now we probably should mention
because a lot of people didn't
2:37:25
know don't know this anymore.
But Haiti had a horrible
2:37:27
earthquake. And immediately the
global community sprung into
2:37:32
action we had the former
presidents this is where this
2:37:35
jingle comes from. I know a lot
of people want to send blankets
2:37:38
or water. Just send your cash.
Well, cash they did send and
2:37:42
cash went right into the Clinton
Foundation. And as far as we
2:37:46
know, they put some puppets in
there. They had a whitecliff
2:37:51
Shawn and his dad whole debacle
of bull crap, and the Haitians
2:37:56
hated them.
2:37:57
To this day mark six years since
the 7.0 magnitude earthquake
2:38:00
devastated. AMY GOODMAN flippin
bound. Tuesday marks six years
2:38:07
since the 7.0 magnitude
earthquake devastated Haiti
2:38:10
killing an estimated 300,000
People 10s of 1000s of patients
2:38:14
are still living in tents here
in New York City. A group of
2:38:17
Haitians gathered in front of
the Clinton Foundation to
2:38:19
protest former President Bill
Clinton's role as head of the
2:38:22
Interim Haiti Recovery
Commission activist a hoot Andre
2:38:25
was among them. You
2:38:26
remember, we had the blue
helmets the UN came in? And what
2:38:30
did they give them? Cholera.
2:38:32
Cholera came in with the United
Nations
2:38:35
12. So it's horrible 16, six
years after the earthquake. And
2:38:41
for us, it was important to be
in front of the Clinton
2:38:44
Foundation. Because Bill Clinton
as head of the i HRC, Interim
2:38:51
Haiti Recovery Commission was
responsible for the $6 billion
2:38:56
that came into his hands. He had
unlimited control of this money
2:39:01
six years after the earthquake,
not much has changed. And as a
2:39:05
matter of fact, Haiti is in
worse condition than it than it
2:39:09
was in 2010. Only Bill Clinton
can tell the world what happened
2:39:13
with this money. Yeah, well, we
know
2:39:15
what happened. He ate it on
Epstein's jet. Haiti mess to
2:39:22
current current situation we're
now six years after this
2:39:26
debacle, which was six years
after the earthquake, the term
2:39:29
of Prime Minister REO already
who was appointed to office it's
2:39:33
fired February 2022. But he has
yet to schedule new elections.
2:39:39
My dad,
2:39:41
no one voted for him. He was not
elected. He has no legitimacy.
2:39:45
He has no right or real Re is
not the president.
2:39:49
With no president no legislative
quorum and the high court
2:39:53
dysfunctional lawlessness
reigns. The UN estimates that
2:39:57
gangs control more than half of
board apprentice In late last
2:40:01
year, the UN imposed sanctions
on one of the most powerful gang
2:40:04
leaders Jimmy Sharif Za, a
former police officer known as
2:40:08
barbecue, shooting, massacres
and sexual violence. But Sheree
2:40:15
za considers himself the lesser
evil
2:40:18
to pursue you and your country.
If you were living in these
2:40:22
conditions, if you saw the
conditions in which our people
2:40:26
are living in
2:40:28
Haiti in the UN have called for
international peacekeepers to
2:40:31
bolster the country's belief.
2:40:35
As soon as you visit, it is our
obligation to act fast. If we
2:40:41
overcome the gangs, we will
restore order and peace.
2:40:45
But so far only Jamaica has
offered to help leaving Haiti to
2:40:50
fall deeper into chaos.
2:40:53
This is really such a scandal
that no one talks about anymore.
2:40:57
I mean, we have clip after clip
of what happened there. And now
2:41:00
they want to bring in the
international police force,
2:41:04
which is the UN Blue Helmets
again, here's a little review.
2:41:07
We're not being told exactly
what's going on here. But it's
2:41:10
certainly smells like sewage.
There are toilets right there.
2:41:13
The liquid seems to be draining
into this river just a few
2:41:16
meters away that flows into the
nearby town of nearby lay. Local
2:41:20
residents said they'd frequently
seen sewage from the base leak
2:41:23
into the river, and that
families in the area had
2:41:25
recently become ill.
2:41:27
Only people down river who have
been infected. The child's close
2:41:30
to here died and
2:41:31
then they remember the one of
Hillary's buddies and she
2:41:36
trafficked children out of
Haiti, and now she's in charge
2:41:39
of like code red for children
trafficking. It's a mess. These
2:41:43
people are evil, they're sick,
they're sick. And this fits
2:41:48
right into it. This is a new
story from today from the BBC.
2:41:52
Yeah, some breaking news. Coming
to you now are here at the BBC
2:41:57
and it is that the disgraced
Popstar Gary Glitter has been
2:42:02
freed from jail. According to
the PA news agency. He's been
2:42:07
freed from jail after surfing
half of his 16 year sentence for
2:42:13
sexually abusing three school
girls. So just to reiterate,
2:42:18
guariglia has been freed from
jail. The rock singer of course
2:42:22
enjoyed a string of chart hits
in the 1970s that was jailed in
2:42:26
2015. For sexually abusing three
school girls his real name is
2:42:32
Paul gad. And at the time he was
found guilty of one count of
2:42:37
attempted rape one count of
unlawful sexual intercourse with
2:42:40
a girl under the age of 13 and
four counts of indecent assault.
2:42:46
He was of course one of the
first people to be arrested. If
2:42:49
you remember under operation you
tree that was the investigation
2:42:53
launched by the Metropolitan
Police in London.
2:42:57
How does that work?
2:42:59
How does that get anything to do
with Haiti?
2:43:01
Because of the child
trafficking? Child abuse? And
2:43:06
what is this this guy went in?
When they were basically trying
2:43:10
to cover up? Jim will fix it.
What's his name? Seville Savile
2:43:16
saddle, and then they Cliff
Richards involved he never went
2:43:21
to jail. Or anything were
proven. And then through carry
2:43:26
glitter in jail. And now he's
out after eight months. Do you
2:43:30
think it gets Epstein to what's
going to happen here?
2:43:34
Well, if he's out he's not gonna
get Epstein not in jail.
2:43:39
He may have to commit suicide
breaking news breaking breaking
2:43:42
news, breaking news. That's the
last I have at stats thoroughly
2:43:47
depressed me if you have
anything else
2:43:48
to miss. It isn't the point it
isn't to miss. And this is what
2:43:52
this is anarchy. This is true
anarchy people always want to
2:43:55
all anarchy is good. No circle
with an A in it. Nope.
2:44:00
It's not gonna see it. No, it's
not good at all. But that's
2:44:03
okay. Because you're all saying
with us turn off your computer
2:44:06
after the show. Turn off your
phone. And don't turn it on
2:44:10
again until Thursday. Don't
watch television, go read a
2:44:14
book, play, do some hopscotch
with the kids. Whatever you do,
2:44:20
stay away from electronic
messaging. We will protect you.
2:44:25
And we'll do that again on
Thursday, with your no agenda
2:44:29
Show. Coming to you from the
heart of the Texas hill country
2:44:33
located here in FEMA Region
number six in the morning,
2:44:35
everybody. I'm Adam curry,
2:44:37
and I'm from Northern Silicon
Valley where I remain on John C.
2:44:40
Dvorak
2:44:41
coming up next on no agenda
stream if you're still in the
2:44:43
troll room troll room.io Hug
story episode. Not sure which
2:44:48
Oh, it's live. There you go.
Fletcher and Blaine these notes,
2:44:50
quotes and goats. All right,
wonderful. Remember us at
2:44:57
divorce act.org/na and of show
MC Since from Leola puke we've
2:45:01
got Sir Michael Anthony Rolando
Gonzalez and Mary J. until
2:45:07
Thursday members that have
worked on org slash and a until
2:45:09
then adios MoPhO and who we who
we have such
2:45:18
that's the moon. What the heck
is that? That's
2:45:25
a high altitude Chinese spy
balloon the size of three school
2:45:30
buses has penetrated us
airspace. Apparently the spy
2:45:35
balloon flew over Alaska and
then enter us airspace through
2:45:38
Canada. Some ally the Canadians
are didn't even give us a heads
2:45:43
up
2:45:43
there are 11 of these Chinese
spy balloons right over the Mall
2:45:46
in Washington DC they have giant
laser beams and they're blowing
2:45:55
up buildings on the malls
floating like meatballs and a
2:45:59
microwave oven and Democrats are
coming out to welcome them
2:46:02
they're on rooftops celebrating
the arrival of the Chinese
2:46:05
balloons the Capitol dome of the
humanity now that White House
2:46:13
Joe Biden
2:46:22
have a lot of money a lot of
money to come here
2:46:53
a saying about biotech.
2:47:42
There's so many different ways
that it can be smuggled in in
2:47:45
the United States, right?
2:47:46
It's coming into 18 wheelers,
it's feminine through passenger
2:47:48
vehicles. It's
2:47:49
coming in through people walking
across the border is being
2:47:52
backpacked into the country.
This violent act was not in
2:47:57
pursuit of public safety.
Attention to
2:48:00
flare for months. Immigration
and Customs Enforcement agents
2:48:03
today conducted multiple raids
2:48:05
onto 24 victims seven 254 kills
in the last 10 days of the last
2:48:10
year we're seeing
2:48:11
an evolution of what we're
calling superbugs. This violent
2:48:14
act was not in pursuit of public
safety
2:48:18
swarms this neighborhood oh my
god, more than 100 pounds of
2:48:23
precursor chemical and
2:48:24
we need to see why people also
get beaten before anybody will
2:48:27
do anything just what is driving
that violence. Let's look more
2:48:30
closely at that now without
terrorism expert this
2:48:33
violent act was not in pursuit
of public safety. So lack of
2:48:37
hope is a huge threat to global
health and
2:48:39
it's something that we need to
address.
2:48:41
I think it demands that we
2:48:42
speak truth. Last year the DEA
seized over 50 million specially
2:48:48
spills and over 10,000 pounds of
fentanyl powder. enough to kill
2:48:53
every American
2:48:55
drip drip drip drip drip, drip,
drip, drip, drip, drip,
2:49:04
rockin McLeod
2:49:06
drip, drip, drip, drip, drip,
drip, drip, drip, drip,
2:49:15
rocking the cloud rockin the
cloud drip drip, drip the cloud
2:49:32
rockin the cloud
2:49:34
drip drip drip drip, drip, drip,
drip, drip, drip, drip, drip,
2:49:47
drip rock in the clap
2:49:57
Mofo borak.org. slash and I like
that