Cover for No Agenda Show 1596: Flagger
October 5th, 2023 • 3h 7m

1596: Flagger

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0:00
Adam Curry: Boom, you're a dude.
0:01
Unknown: Adam curry,
0:02
Adam Curry: John C. Dvorak. October 5 2023 This is your ward
0:06
winning nation media assassination episode 1596. This
0:10
is no agenda. We are dodging the FEMA alert systems broadcasting
0:18
from the heart of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region
0:20
number six. Morning everybody. I'm Adam curry
0:23
John C Dvorak: and from Northern Silicon Valley where Taylor
0:26
Swift is added again. I'm John Cena, Mr. X
0:32
Adam Curry: we really can't talk about Taylor Swift. That really
0:35
pisses people off.
0:38
John C Dvorak: Oh, no, no, I picked it out that one guy who
0:41
has a crush on or is in the chat room to troll room.
0:44
Adam Curry: It's like the biggest distraction of the week.
0:47
It's so annoying.
0:48
John C Dvorak: I don't think it's gonna you know this is a
0:50
kind of I believe it's here we
0:51
Adam Curry: can try it here we go. We're talking about our
0:54
John C Dvorak: AI because of marketing. I think this is a
0:56
contract between her and the NFL.
0:59
Adam Curry: Yeah, there's there's two movies coming out
1:01
her movie and then and then her boy so called boyfriends
1:04
documentary boyfriend as bullcrap.
1:07
John C Dvorak: It's well, and there's also I think there's
1:09
some some other issues. I'm thinking they paid her to do to
1:13
come to these games
1:14
Adam Curry: for ratings and climate change. Trust me she's
1:16
going to do climate change is coming.
1:20
John C Dvorak: For the money, she'll do anything.
1:23
Adam Curry: But that's okay. Because that is not the biggest
1:25
news. The biggest news right at the top of the agenda show
1:28
everybody coming up.
1:29
Unknown: It's a feeding frenzy on the move. bedbugs are giving
1:32
people nightmares
1:34
over the last 10 years their population has been exploding.
1:38
Adam Curry: Tonight we look why the insects are crawling whole
1:41
movie theaters and classrooms and more. It's from 2020. But
1:48
it's movie theaters. It was movie theaters in 2020. Here in
1:51
the US and now it's movie theaters in 2023. In in France.
1:56
John C Dvorak: Yeah, there's another scam. Well listen,
1:59
Adam Curry: because they've got the they've got the World Health
2:01
Organization bringing they're bringing them in now. There's a
2:04
John C Dvorak: show they should move to take to catch all the
2:06
bed bugs you can bring him to the UN building.
2:09
Adam Curry: Here's here's France 24. For more let's cross to the
2:13
VISTAs now this is not 2020.
2:14
Unknown: For more, let's cross to the French city of wall Yan.
2:17
Cedric Hansen is his vice president of the of globosa and
2:26
has worked with the World Health Organization in the past. Thank
2:30
you for speaking with us here on France. 24.
2:33
Hi, I'm happy to talk to you.
2:35
So first off, is this a bland out of proportion with social
2:43
media or is there a real problem with bedbugs?
2:49
There is a common real problem with bedbugs because these are
2:54
two parasites that means a parasite that lives around the
2:58
human beings animals. Feeds she's on blood. And therefore
3:04
he's not the only one but he's becoming quite an important
3:08
issue because it is spreading not only in some specific areas,
3:14
but now it is becoming like a pandemic we could say because in
3:25
any social economic area of industry as countries
3:31
Adam Curry: pandemic there's there's some speculation that
3:37
part of I mean, this is being used for everything now is being
3:39
used by people who hate Macron for being a douche, having
3:44
nuclear energy not closing all of his new plants. So it's being
3:47
used against him. Some believe it's the hotel industry is
3:51
hyping it up to go against Airbnb for the for the coming
3:54
Olympics,
3:55
John C Dvorak: who I liked. I like it. I like that a lot.
3:57
That's the one I like.
3:59
Adam Curry: And of course, you know, it's again, movie
4:01
theaters. That's where movie theater, movie theater, you
4:04
John C Dvorak: know, and people go into movies and you got the
4:06
Olympics.
4:08
Adam Curry: Yeah, so well.
4:13
John C Dvorak: The Bed bugs are in a minute movie theaters are
4:15
not at the Olympic Stadium. They're not in your home where
4:19
necessarily where they should be in your home actually, if
4:21
they're going to bed bugs.
4:22
Adam Curry: One out of every eight French Homes has bedbugs.
4:26
Yeah, live bed.
4:27
John C Dvorak: Loop One out of every eight that's I think
4:29
that's brings in the Airbnb thing.
4:31
Adam Curry: Yeah. Yeah. Live bedbugs. So I think that's
4:36
possible. But everybody loves jumping. I mean, in America we
4:39
do everything just better. I'm sorry when it comes to crappy
4:42
news. Which of course you know, whenever. Whenever you look at
4:50
your screens, you know as every TV news bulletin is has a story
4:55
that affects you personally at that very moment. It's they're
4:57
very good at doing that. Have you ever noticed that that if if
5:01
Hollywood were true anybody could land a plane as long as
5:06
there's someone in the in the tower to talk you down. There's
5:10
also no no lights, no one uses lights in the kitchen, you only
5:13
have to open the refrigerator door and use that light. That's
5:17
the best. All detectives can only solve a case after
5:20
suspended from duty. This is fact we all know this. And
5:25
John C Dvorak: also my admin thing I brought this up years
5:28
ago on the show, which is that when the detectives go into a
5:31
room, they never turn on the lights. They use their
5:34
flashlight, which they hold in some peculiar fashion, like a
5:38
club like a flashlight backwards.
5:41
Adam Curry: It doesn't matter how many ninjas are attacking
5:44
you. They will all patiently wait one by one to get you.
5:47
You're only fighting one at a time. That's Hollywood. Pay
5:51
attention people. No, this is this is how we do things in
5:54
America. What a bedbug, babe we got it. We got bedbugs in the
5:57
story. What are we gonna do? We need a bedbug story people get
6:00
into bedbugs story.
6:03
Unknown: Tonight the family of a man who died at the Fulton
6:06
County Jail is now demanding action. They say he was
6:09
essentially eaten alive by insects and bedbugs while in
6:13
custody. Tracy Amy Pierce spoke with him just hours ago. She's
6:16
joining us now live from the Fulton County Courthouse Tracy
6:21
Wallace, Shawn Thompson had been held in the cycling of the jail
6:24
for three months when an officer found him unresponsive in his
6:28
cell. His family tells me by that point, they couldn't even
6:31
recognize him.
6:32
Yeah, he was definitely a heavyset guy. And from those
6:36
pitches, totally different. He's not the same person.
6:39
Right McCray says these pictures of his brother that he shared
6:42
with us 35 year old LaShawn Thompson are hard to look at his
6:46
cell at the Fulton County Jail covered in filth and his body
6:50
covered in sores and bites from bedbugs and lice,
6:53
like he wasn't even jailed or malnutrition. Or maybe the
6:57
bedbugs did the Fulton
6:58
County medical cause of death as undetermined, but noted a severe
7:03
bedbug infestation. The family says Thompson was brought to the
7:07
jail on a misdemeanor simple battery charge in June and was
7:11
put in the cycling because the jail was aware of his
7:13
schizophrenia. They are now demanding the jail be closed and
7:17
law enforcement open a criminal investigation.
7:21
Adam Curry: Man and they show pictures that did not look good.
7:25
That guy was eaten by bugs
7:27
John C Dvorak: eaten by bedbugs,
7:28
Adam Curry: which of course is you know is them that
7:30
John C Dvorak: man you have to remember that that's the same
7:32
jail that they dragged Trump into. We do here know the ones
7:39
that the same, exact same place how interesting so that makes
7:42
sense. So you put in your mind you put into mind the
7:44
possibility that Trump's dragging bedbugs to mar a Lago
7:49
and there will be an infestation or that he could bedbugs he
7:52
Adam Curry: could be eaten by bedbugs now Mar a Lago bedbugs,
7:58
everybody I didn't even pick up on that. That's good. That is
8:02
good. Well, you don't need bedbugs to eat you alive to lose
8:07
weight. We have the ozempic of course, a lot of stories about
8:11
ozempic. And and you know this now, this is a really, really
8:17
ozempic Novo Nordisk in the first seven months of 2023 spent
8:23
$500 million on advertising 500 million that's that's like
8:31
political presidential campaign level. Yeah. And of course, it's
8:36
not just on the cute commercials. It's on the It's On
8:42
placed advertising is, you know, native ads inside the morning
8:47
shows. They're now doing they are sponsoring a documentary
8:54
exploring obesity in America. And now they've managed in this
9:01
next report, which is NBC. They've managed to turn negative
9:05
reports there are two negative reports. Most people who pay
9:09
attention to m phi them that's you and I sometimes have seen
9:14
Sharon Osborne looking positively anorexic. I mean,
9:19
she's so anorexic she's doing you know, like eating disorder
9:22
tricks by wearing a very baggy sweater. Where you can just tell
9:26
this a skeleton the woman has a skeleton, and I know her is
9:30
Shara and Roly Poly Sharon from the Moscow music Peace Festival
9:35
before the stomach band surgery what does that call what is that
9:40
procedure called? forget what it's called.
9:43
John C Dvorak: Staples. Staples before the stomach stay before
9:48
the stomach staple.
9:50
Adam Curry: And and you know she I think on Piers Morgan City, I
9:55
went too far. I let it go too far. Oprah has come out and said
9:59
Now um you know, even though Weight Watchers of which he is
10:02
majority, a major shareholder now known as WW new branding,
10:08
they bought a telehealth company that prescribes stuff like
10:15
ozempic and we'll go V Even now she say a no no, no, no, I'm
10:20
gonna do it anymore. NBC somehow put together this package which
10:24
turned it all positive. I mean brilliant work for millions
10:27
Unknown: of Americans. The rise of weight loss and diabetes
10:30
drugs, including ozempic feels like something of a miracle. I
10:34
couldn't be happier over the past three years, their use has
10:36
gone up 300% According to a new report from analytics firm
10:40
Trillian health and with the blockbuster success of these
10:43
drugs comes new warnings they may not be suitable for
10:46
everyone. The Food and Drug Administration recently updating
10:49
its ozempic warning label to acknowledge reports of ileus or
10:53
failure of the intestines to move normally, drugmaker Novo
10:57
Nordisk, which manufactures ozempic And what Kobe said it
11:00
stands behind the safety and efficacy of ozempic. And a
11:03
statement to NBC is that
11:05
Adam Curry: safe and effective I think it is safety and efficacy
11:08
safe and effective.
11:09
Unknown: Adding the company is working closely with the FDA to
11:12
continuously monitor the safety profile monitoring medications.
11:16
More Common side effects include nausea and stomach issues, and
11:19
Sharon Osbourne recently,
11:21
Adam Curry: I love how to do that. So you know, some people
11:24
got really bad stuff going on. But more common issues is just a
11:27
little bit of you know, stomach pain and nausea. This is you
11:29
might expect not that other stuff you want to have.
11:32
Unknown: As Sharon Osbourne recently shared with Piers
11:34
Morgan on Morgan uncensored,
11:36
you feel nauseous, you don't throw up physically, but you got
11:40
that feeling. And it was about two, three weeks where I felt
11:44
nauseous the whole time. You get very thirsty, and you don't want
11:50
to eat. Osborn says she lost more weight than she expected.
11:54
I lost 42 pounds now and it's just enough overall Garmin,
11:59
Adam Curry: see how they do that. They took out all the I
12:03
went too far business. And they get this is an amazing amount of
12:06
weight loss. 42 pounds. And that's enough, I didn't really
12:09
throw up just felt a little nauseous, little thirsty. This
12:12
is This is phenomenal work NBC.
12:14
Unknown: And it's just enough to get paid the big bucks for this
12:17
year do
12:17
Winfrey also recently weighing in on the drugs. Winfrey, who is
12:20
an investor and board member in Weight Watchers says she doesn't
12:23
believe the medications are for her
12:25
Shouldn't we all just be more accepting of whatever body you
12:31
choose to be in. And when I first started hearing about the
12:34
weight loss drugs, and I felt, I've got to do this on my own.
12:38
I've got to do this on my own. Because if I take the drug,
12:42
that's the easy way out
12:43
inspired by dramatic before and after.
12:46
Adam Curry: That is so well done.
12:48
John C Dvorak: That's really well done. But I liked the idea
12:50
of the body you choose to view and you choose to be Hey, I know
12:57
that choosing to be in this bike rather being some, you know, a
13:01
different body. If I could be in one I choose to be in a
13:04
different body. Can I be in that that muscular one beat by the
13:08
ripped one. This is not used to be in that body.
13:12
Adam Curry: This is how fantastic this is. They take
13:15
Oprah because it's not working for her because she doesn't want
13:19
to die of any side effects that we're hearing about. doesn't
13:23
want to be puking doesn't want to be thirsty. He doesn't want
13:25
to be Sharon Osbourne. So but she's a shareholder. So what are
13:29
we going to do? Well, you know, I'm going to talk about you get
13:33
to choose the body you're in, I choose to be in this one. And I
13:37
I can do it myself. I'm not going to quote take the easy way
13:41
out. message being this is the easy way out people don't be
13:45
like Oprah don't be like me take the easy way out, take the drug
13:48
who
13:48
Unknown: choose to be in and when I first started hearing
13:51
about the weight loss drugs, I felt I've got to do this on my
13:55
own. I've got to do this on my own because if I take the drug,
13:59
that's the easy way out.
14:01
John C Dvorak: Inspired by dramatic debt that's worth a
14:04
million dollars right there.
14:05
Adam Curry: I'm sure she got paid for it.
14:07
John C Dvorak: I'm sure she got a million dollars. But the easy
14:10
way out is okay. Well most people would take the easy way
14:13
out to be on and what she just said okay, exactly. It's
14:16
beautiful, beautiful, beautiful
14:17
Unknown: place to be in. And when I first started hearing
14:19
about the weight loss drugs, I felt I've got to do this on my
14:23
own. I've got to do this on my own because if I take the drug,
14:27
that's the easy way out.
14:29
Inspired by dramatic before and after pics on social media.
14:32
Doctors say many people have unrealistic expectations of how
14:36
fast they should be losing weight, which can make
14:39
unpleasant side effects worse.
14:41
I see too many people who want to start at higher doses. It is
14:45
best to start slow and low.
14:48
Adam Curry: slow and low. Bring it down baby once you start slow
14:52
and low. Meanwhile, this horrible things happening to
14:55
people.
14:56
John C Dvorak: Some of this stuff is just just brightening
14:58
but they're monitoring this Make just decides to stop working.
15:02
Adam Curry: But don't worry people. They're monitoring for
15:04
your safety. Your safety. So yesterday the big FEMA test did
15:12
you die? Yeah.
15:13
John C Dvorak: Did you I didn't have a phone. Did you die this
15:15
day? I haven't used cell forces at December of last year. So you
15:19
Adam Curry: didn't die? And did anyone we know die? I mean, I
15:22
don't think so. I was monitoring you know, the the local text
15:27
groups and the and Instagram and a lot of it was, you know, just
15:32
in case, unplug your computer turn your phone off. Really?
15:37
Yes.
15:38
John C Dvorak: What is wrong with people?
15:40
Adam Curry: Well, after after we debunked the tone that wouldn't
15:43
would never work through the two
15:47
John C Dvorak: won't work at all. Well,
15:50
Adam Curry: I mean, there's
15:51
John C Dvorak: some people said they could hear it when you hit
15:53
like 8000 hertz, which nice.
15:57
Adam Curry: People were not happy with my test.
16:00
John C Dvorak: I guess it's set off a few dogs. Someone said
16:03
they got a headache. Oh, please. Nobody got a headache from that.
16:07
Now. One
16:07
Adam Curry: producer said he got a headache right in the middle
16:09
of his head. And on the fourth, you better unplug your phone.
16:14
You're gonna die. No, people like that was not cool, man.
16:19
It's not like I didn't say I'm going to do it. That was not
16:23
cool. Man. That coo coo coo said that several people thought that
16:27
was not cool. You heard my ears? Not coo bull bull. Yes, yes.
16:32
People thinking oh, triggered like this. Okay. At least I
16:36
didn't I didn't know they didn't die. So I spun them down in this
16:39
horrible situation. So once that was debunked, and even you know,
16:43
of course, there's a patent that you can blow apart cancer cells,
16:46
all kinds of stuff if you have a high enough frequency, but that
16:50
won't work through cell phones and your television and your
16:52
radio. No, no, there's no good. So then it was the five G the
16:58
activating the five G No. That's like 5g is on. It's not like
17:03
they're going to turn it on all of a sudden this on? They send
17:07
out this tone and then there's going to amp up amp up the
17:10
output. No, no people No. Is that gonna work? Now? Well, this
17:17
is all a throwback to the 5g in the backs the vaccination.
17:22
That's where this comes from it. You know, people are nuts.
17:25
People don't believe news. Surprise. So they'll they'll
17:29
believe anything. That's why people come to the no agenda
17:31
show. No. Now, I did like the idea that some people saying
17:39
hey, it's not about that. It's you know, it's about how many
17:42
phones respond. There may be some, you know, some mechanism
17:48
in some phones to find out if you turn it off immediately. And
17:52
there's a couple of things that may have been may or just in
17:55
general how people on social media are responding to the idea
18:00
John C Dvorak: that by it could be a test it could be a test,
18:03
that by itself
18:03
Adam Curry: is worthy of a test. I got mine in Spanish, which was
18:07
cool, because that's what I needed an emergency. I need my
18:11
emergency information
18:12
John C Dvorak: and emergency message in Spanish or did
18:15
Adam Curry: I got well you know, I'm running the no agenda phone
18:18
so who knows what they think that is? Hey, man is probably
18:22
the illegal migrant Oh, it's
18:24
John C Dvorak: gotta be well, this is some sort of cheap phone
18:27
so must be a Mexican. Given this given the Spanish in the Spanish
18:32
because they guys very you know, it's a little racist. Do you
18:37
think?
18:40
Adam Curry: So I did I got inspired. I got really inspired
18:44
by Nick the racks nick the rats album art for us. Which, which
18:50
we'll talk about later, but it was this. It turns out it was a
18:54
I surprise. We thought it wasn't up to nick the rats standard.
18:59
John C Dvorak: No, it will it was well chosen. I don't believe
19:04
they know agenda. The way it's presented on the side of the
19:07
ship. Could be can be done by AI.
19:11
Adam Curry: No, he you know, he said he did that himself. It was
19:15
John C Dvorak: a you have to do that yourself. And that's the
19:16
main part of the of the that was the character
19:19
Adam Curry: that was sketchy. Yeah, that was the gag. So it
19:21
was no agenda. But what what really caught me is you had this
19:24
little boat. And then you have this kind of ghostly, huge ocean
19:30
liner, which was, you know, just kind of looming out of out of
19:36
nothingness. And that's really the NGO, you know, that's really
19:40
the big, the big, the elephant in the room. And I was thinking
19:47
about this and I'm just mulling over what I'm seeing, you know,
19:51
going back to what you know, television, so on television and
19:55
on the news and on your screens. People who have traveled for
19:59
1000s of Miles, through harrowing circumstances, with
20:04
coyotes, human traffickers, rapists, these people show up at
20:10
our border with new shoes, clean shirts, the hair not dirty not
20:15
looking ragged. That last bit through the Rio Grande and the
20:20
barbed wire, that's just a little show to give us the
20:22
illusion that these people have made some harrowing journey.
20:27
Where are the arrest of these human trafficking rings? Where
20:30
are they? Where are they? Where are they? How can they you never
20:34
hear, Oh, we got one. They had all these be the coyotes. You
20:38
never hear about that. And it just dawned on me the true human
20:45
traffickers are the NGO. And so I so when when they say, oh,
20:52
it's human traffickers? Yes, that's correct. These are paid
20:55
for by the United Nations, the IOM, the international office of
21:01
migration, by our very own State Department, which I'm going to
21:07
lay out for you because I went down a rabbit hole, and I was
21:10
blown away with what what I came up with. So if this is almost
21:15
like pipeline stuff, if you view this migrant, this migration
21:20
replacement, and we had the document from I sound like Alex
21:22
Jones, we have the document from 2001. United Nations, we've, you
21:27
know, it's good. We've got to have all these, we got to have
21:30
all these Western countries, Western Europe, the United
21:33
States, the United Kingdom, even Russia, we have to have all
21:36
these migrants in their countries by 2030. Coincidence?
21:41
Because by 2050, you know, they'll need the new people.
21:44
It's good. We have to get this going. And I think certainly,
21:50
and I can prove this to a degree even in the United States,
21:53
especially in the United States, the the true elites who are who
21:56
are in on this game, which is not your this is not your your
22:00
border patrol. This is not my Yorkers this is this is not, not
22:05
FBI or any of these people. This is way above this is a globalist
22:09
level that is never discussed. These elites know that we're
22:13
raping these countries where these people live, you know, for
22:16
their iPhones, and there's an EVs and they feel guilty. So
22:21
they get in like USA ID and the National Endowment for Democracy
22:25
and the arts. And they go to all these galas, and they have their
22:29
fundraisers and their benefits and they get on boards, and
22:33
there's all this money flowing from from our tax dollars and
22:36
money that we've printed. And they and they roll it into the
22:40
we're helping the poor people. The but just don't put them in
22:44
my backyard. So this is a global problem the global West, I'll
22:48
say. And I have a couple of things that I discovered which
22:51
are quite eye opening. First, let's get an update from the EU
22:54
where we have a deal.
22:56
Unknown: The European Union's 27 member states have today reached
23:00
a deal on refugees and migrants, it concerns how to share caring
23:05
for people during crisis situations and how to organize
23:09
financial aid.
23:11
Adam Curry: Note they're not talking about solving anything.
23:14
No, no, instead of hey, we got too many migrants coming into
23:17
our country. Look at Lampedusa, look at Germany. Look at Sweden.
23:20
There's no one there's no deal that says, Hey, we got to fix
23:24
we're gonna build a wall or anything like would build a wall
23:27
is also a huge farce. There's nothing like that. No, no, we
23:30
have solutions
23:31
Unknown: and how to organize financial aid as well. As what's
23:35
been agreed and GA in our Europe editor is with us. And Armand
23:38
just remind us then what the proposed migration and asylum
23:42
pact actually does.
23:43
I think we have to go back in a way to the big migrant crisis of
23:47
2015 to 16, which was a big trauma for European political
23:52
elites. And that's really informed all of these
23:55
discussions for for the last seven or eight years. Back then,
24:01
you might remember Angular Merkel, the German leaders, her
24:04
famous phrase, we can do it via schaffen das we can take in a
24:07
large influx of migrants
24:10
Adam Curry: remember this John, remember this? Angular Merkel,
24:14
of course, she won the color Governor
24:16
John C Dvorak: very extensively on this show.
24:20
Adam Curry: She won the color go look at ColorGATE the color Gaya
24:22
award for my correction and a million over a million migrants
24:27
came in be shuffled us come on Krauts. We can do it. Germans
24:31
come on, Jerry, we can make this work. That has been a big shift.
24:34
Yes, we can. You know, the basically the German Obama Yes,
24:38
we can. We are these people,
24:41
Unknown: influx of migrants we can make this work. There's been
24:45
a big shift since those times no European leader talks about this
24:48
issue the way Angular Merkel did back then. And certainly the
24:52
German leadership doesn't take that kind of approach. Nowadays,
24:55
we have very much a focus on other things like security. So
24:58
for example, you How to simplify and speed up asylum related
25:03
procedures how to hold migrants at the EU's external borders for
25:08
up to 40 weeks in certain circumstances. To be fair,
25:13
there's also been talk under this proposed asylum migration
25:16
pack has been talking to solidarity helping frontline
25:19
states like Italy and Greece, that there's been talk of, you
25:23
know, making sure there are legal routes for migrants into
25:26
the EU. So their legal routes.
25:28
Adam Curry: This is not stopping migration. This is just changing
25:31
legislation to make it coming by a rubber boat legal, this legal
25:35
now not changing anything.
25:38
Unknown: There's been talk of, you know, making sure there are
25:41
legal routes for migrants into the EU so they don't attempt
25:44
dangerous crossings. But ultimately, we're in a European
25:47
election year a campaign year where security is a very, very
25:54
center stage and now now
25:55
Adam Curry: you understand why they have to do something about
25:57
it because all these the the minions in the European Union,
26:01
they're up for a vote not that they can do anything when they
26:04
get into European Parliament. But they could do a yellow card,
26:08
but they're up for vote and they don't want to stop it love
26:10
Brussels they love they love the parties that love by all the
26:14
stuff that's going on in Brussels. They'd love to not
26:16
really having to do anything. Even you can just show up in the
26:19
morning, get your get your per diem and go home, you get an
26:22
apartment you get. You get an apartment, in limo, you go. You
26:27
get an Audi, Audi, you get your hair done by Pierre. Oh, man, we
26:32
got to look like we're doing something here. And just in
26:34
case, you know, we get thrown out we got to do we got to get
26:38
as many people in as we can. And
26:39
Unknown: European elites know that migration issue is fuel for
26:44
the various populist parties across the EU that are running
26:48
in those EU elections next June.
26:50
Adam Curry: So I started looking around and you really everything
26:54
comes from one place. It's the IOM, International Organization
26:58
for Migration, IOM dot IMT, they get an international domain
27:04
name. Nice. And the first thing I see, did you know that
27:10
immigration is actually part of the Sustainable Development
27:16
Goals? You know, this is this agenda 2030 that they set up a
27:21
long time ago. And it has to do with climate change and climate
27:26
change and climate change and World Health and, and migration.
27:31
And the theme of this this past United Nations General Assembly
27:38
was all we're not doing very well with are not doing very
27:42
well with our sustainable development goals. We're behind.
27:44
We're not even at 20% We don't have that, what do we have, we
27:47
have seven, less than seven years left, we gotta hurry up.
27:51
And right there on the IOM website is a video human
27:57
mobility is an essential part of the Sustainable Development Goal
28:02
rescue plan. So they need to rescue these sustainable
28:07
development goals with you know, this is the whole climate
28:09
change, don't eat me eat bugs. And to help save it, we've got
28:15
to have more migration. So this also kind of explains why we
28:19
need why we're seeing more migrants across the western
28:23
world. I'm going to play this video. It's interesting,
28:25
Unknown: only 12% of the 149 targets are on track and nearly
28:29
one in three have shown no progress since 2015. The SDG
28:34
summit in New York marks the halfway point to the deadline
28:38
set to achieve the 2030 agenda. It is imperative that human
28:43
mobility is incorporated into the rescue plan, the UN
28:46
Secretary General is urging world leaders to deliver at the
28:50
summit. Migrants and displaced persons account for one in eight
28:54
people in the world managed well. Human mobility can be a
28:58
cornerstone of development, prosperity, and progress. The
29:03
Global Compact for safe, orderly and regular migration and the
29:07
Secretary General's action agenda on internal displacement
29:11
provide the roadmaps to maximize the positive impacts of human
29:14
mobility on development.
29:17
Adam Curry: What they're saying here is, it's good. We've got to
29:20
do it, we've got to do more of it. And it's not stopping it.
29:24
No, it's encouraging it. It's more
29:26
John C Dvorak: the key word there was internal disk displace
29:29
or replacement or displaced, displaced or non displaced. Yes,
29:33
internally displaced means that you're an American. You're out
29:38
you're displaced. What are your displaced for somebody that came
29:42
in from the I don't know Venezuela just to thaw anywhere
29:46
but you anywhere anyone anywhere but you you're done the world
29:51
because why? Why are you done? That's the key. What's wrong
29:55
with the American dads here? It did they want too much money. Me
30:01
too much do they refuse to believe the crap that's thrown?
30:05
Are they stupid? What what's what is the reason? We're
30:08
Adam Curry: not obedient? Yes, absolutely. We'll get there.
30:12
Unknown: The world is growing less equal, less
30:15
Adam Curry: equal. The world is growing last week. Well, this is
30:18
the globalist like, it's not fair we're rate we've been
30:21
raping those countries for centuries. It's not fair. It's
30:24
less equal. Let's do something. Let's equalize it by displacing
30:27
our own citizens for these poor people over there that we've
30:30
been raping
30:31
Unknown: more than half of the 71 million IDPs live in Least
30:36
Developed
30:36
Adam Curry: IDPs that they let's write that down. What are you an
30:41
IDP? Sir? Checks are got it. Let's say an EP internally
30:46
displaced person.
30:48
John C Dvorak: internally displaced person. Are you an
30:50
American?
30:52
Adam Curry: Well, they're talking about people from
30:54
Venezuela and other countries here. But yeah, you can be in
30:57
and of course, of course in internally displaced person,
31:00
we're going to be internally displaced in our own countries.
31:03
Yes, migration replacement that says it on the tin
31:07
Unknown: is developed countries. remittances and migrant savings
31:11
exceed 1 trillion US dollars per year, more than foreign direct
31:15
investment and official development assistance.
31:18
Adam Curry: I love this part. So when you let migrants into your
31:22
country, they send over a trillion dollars per year back
31:28
to their own countries, which is more than all investment made by
31:33
these globalist elites. So they come into our economy work here
31:41
legally or not, or or just get money, you know, gifts in New
31:46
York, Chicago, you just get money. And they send that back
31:49
home. And they're in the United Nations. Yes, that's a good
31:53
thing. That's theft. Am I miss reading this? No, not yet.
32:02
Unknown: Some governments are responding to the rising anti
32:05
migrant xenophobia by closing the door Keven as they struggled
32:09
to fill jobs.
32:12
Adam Curry: Anti migrant scene of xenophobia. It's not you
32:15
know, Hey, what is happening here? No, it's not questioning
32:17
what's going on. You're xenophobic. I love xenophobia.
32:21
Now you understand why they call Trump xenophobic? This is all
32:24
this was the real problem with Trump this really,
32:27
John C Dvorak: if you think about it, let's go back to 2016.
32:29
With Hillary, who is supposed to get the thing, and a tour and a
32:33
silver platter. Oh, we're
32:34
Adam Curry: coming? Yes. Go. He's the one right. Go ahead.
32:38
Because Hillary is a part of this for sure.
32:40
John C Dvorak: Yeah, she's the one who said that she imagines a
32:43
day where there's no, nothing. There's no borders, from the
32:47
symbol of South America. All the way up to Canada. Do we think Do
32:53
we have a clip of that? I don't know if we have a clip of that.
32:56
That would be a hard one to find. Because it's hard to
32:58
categorize. But she did. Everyone knows that that was her
33:02
policy was there was be no borders, nothing to stop anyone
33:05
from who is as if they're going to walk. Going from this tip of
33:10
South America all the way up to Canada have just
33:13
Adam Curry: finished this for six
33:15
Unknown: people on the move have less access to the internet and
33:19
new technologies.
33:20
Adam Curry: That's why you get a free cell phone. You have less
33:23
access on people on the move, have less access to the internet
33:27
and technologies. That's why at our border, you got a cell phone
33:30
Unknown: 260 million people could move within their
33:34
countries due to climate change.
33:37
Adam Curry: Ah, yeah, climate change. Of course, this is the
33:39
big one. This is the easy one. People have to move because of
33:42
climate change. It's too dangerous live in their
33:44
countries.
33:45
Unknown: 20.
33:46
John C Dvorak: Well, hold on. This reminds me of the softening
33:51
up we got probably five years ago and people kept talking
33:56
about climate change migration. Yep. And so they kept pounding
34:02
us with Oh, yes, sure. And now they can use that as an excuse,
34:06
because we've already been softened up with body blows.
34:08
Adam Curry: Yeah. Oh, the lexicon is already there. Oh,
34:11
these poor people. Yes. They're in South America. They have to
34:14
leave there because of climate change is extreme weather events
34:18
have have made you know, have you seen the flooding? Did you
34:21
see what happened in Libya,
34:22
John C Dvorak: all places that nothing happened? South America
34:25
is one of them.
34:27
Unknown: The clock is ticking. But it is not too late.
34:33
Adam Curry: It's not too late to act, everybody. Okay? Because
34:36
this will save their own Sustainable Development Goals,
34:39
their own self imposed rules. So let's just talk briefly about
34:43
the Mediterranean. There are 15 ships in the Mediterranean,
34:48
operated by NGOs. That's non governmental organizations. And
34:54
I think we need to explain a non governmental organization and
34:59
I'll Give it a shot. You stopped me what you think I'm wrong. A
35:02
non governmental organization is an organization that is actually
35:06
funded by government, a government or more sometimes
35:09
multiple governments. And they are doing the work that the
35:12
government's want them to do. They are off the I think they're
35:18
usually nonprofit, that may be a requirement. I think they're not
35:21
all nonprofit. This is also a huge slush fund. And I'll just,
35:26
I'll just give you a little a little, little example. Jumping
35:28
ahead a bit big story in the Dutch press about this Dutch
35:32
family called funder folic and they have owned hotels in the
35:36
Netherlands for as long as I can remember, I know a couple of
35:39
them. I know like some of the some of the cousins, not the one
35:43
that's in the news. I know, one of the big guys. He is very
35:46
famous. He was he is an international arms dealer. Of
35:51
course, I would know him. He was in the aviation business. And he
35:55
helped me sell a helicopter one time nice guy you up from the
35:58
funder up. And so these hotels, this hotel chain, they're now
36:04
suing a member of their own family. Because they were
36:08
getting all these contracts for asylum seekers, as they're known
36:13
in the Netherlands or irregular migrants. That's the new term.
36:16
Yeah, 900 hotel rooms, big deal. So one of their cousins was, was
36:22
arranging the rooms, and he was in between the government
36:26
saying, hey, we need hotel rooms and his own family. Then in the
36:29
past five years, he made 119 million euros for just sitting
36:35
in between the government and the family were their hotel
36:38
rooms. This is the kind of slush that runs through these NGOs.
36:43
And he was he was, of course an NGO. And the funny thing is, the
36:46
family is suing the cousin like hey, you ripped us off. We want
36:49
20 million of that. 190. And that's the funny part. Yeah,
36:53
it's funny. So you've got these w two EU dot info you've got,
36:59
you've got websites, these NGOs, they're helping people. They're
37:04
literally helping people in multiple languages, what to do,
37:08
where to go, what country is appropriate for you best way to
37:11
get there, what shipped to us? And then from time to time, you
37:17
see, oh, well, sorry, that one didn't work. You know, a couple
37:19
people drowned whatever. The minute, one of those ships, one
37:24
of those little rubber boats is sent out incomes, the big, the
37:26
big NGO and all will pick them up. Don't worry about it. So I
37:30
look at well, yes,
37:32
John C Dvorak: yes. Good. I was gonna interrupt you here. Yeah,
37:34
go for it. So we can get a sense because you're attacking NGOs in
37:40
general. And they probably shouldn't be attacked in
37:42
general, we don't even know who they are. But if you go to human
37:45
rights to careers, they have the 15 biggest in the world. And
37:49
it's interesting to note, these play these things are they're
37:54
there. They're huge. And I'm going to name them because his
37:59
names are very familiar to everybody number one number one
38:02
establish a 9019 Save the Children to Oxfam International.
38:12
Three Doctors Without Borders. Rack number four br AC this is a
38:22
this is monstrous This is a based in Bangladesh and it has
38:25
it takes care of most of the South Asia area. Yeah, it's you
38:29
don't never heard of it in the United States. But you have
38:32
heard a number five World Vision do they do Christian operation
38:38
of
38:38
Adam Curry: the song the song contest? The World Vision Song
38:40
Contest? Or is that something else?
38:42
John C Dvorak: No, no, not the Song Contest. That's funny. I he
38:49
has a billion dollars in operating revenue revenue. Not.
38:55
Adam Curry: So I
38:58
John C Dvorak: we need to know these International Rescue
39:00
Committee. This is one of the big one of the guys moving
39:03
moving people. Yep. Let's go to number seven Catholic Relief
39:08
Services. They're big,
39:09
Adam Curry: they are big. They're in the Office of Refugee
39:12
Resettlement. That's a billion dollar operation.
39:14
John C Dvorak: That one is yeah, here's another like I just said
39:16
date cuz you say there's a lot of religious organizations.
39:19
Yeah, sure. That's where you can get money that way. Well, this
39:22
Danish Refugee Council is number eight. And the
39:26
Adam Curry: problem with the with the, with the churches and
39:29
religious organizations, is you know, it's it's almost in their
39:33
charter and the charter of God you've got to help people. And
39:36
so everyone wants to help people. And then the government
39:40
says, well, you're you be an NGO, we're gonna give you $7,000
39:43
per migrant, and it becomes a business and then you can't stop
39:47
because you grow. You keep growing and then you see these
39:50
people as clients and you know, they're not even brothers and
39:52
sisters anymore. They just become things to move because
39:55
your your, your your, your faith based organization grows and
40:00
grows and grows and grows because the money grows. And
40:02
it's a trap. You can't get out of it. You can start serving
40:06
money as the Master.
40:08
John C Dvorak: Yeah. Nice to read a few more of these because
40:10
these are interesting care internationals number nine.
40:16
That's a big one. Yeah, Carol heard of internationals number
40:20
10. They're the ones that we deal with a lot. Here's one
40:24
Action Aid International, which you probably haven't heard about
40:27
the Red Cross, they've got to be on this list. I don't think they
40:30
are actually said too small. I have direct really I just read
40:34
the last three Direct Relief Action Against Hunger and the
40:38
anti slavery International and last on the 15th. And that is
40:42
the 15th. This Plan International was another one I
40:45
haven't heard of, but it's big. It's established in 1937.
40:49
Adam Curry: So what I what I have in the show notes is how
40:53
many pages as this six pages must be a couple 100 The IOM the
41:03
international office of migration, approved list of NGOs
41:08
and these are the guys who are in the five to $100 million
41:13
range. So these are the small ones. One Love movement, Action
41:17
Aid adesso African I'm do it's alphabetical African, disabled
41:22
refugee, a Lef alternative espouses if I can read that one.
41:27
But so what do we have Asian human rights and culture
41:30
development forum? Let's see. Center for development support
41:36
initiatives. I'm just jumping around center for refugee
41:39
studies. Deutsche Veblen hailed for Danish Refugee Council,
41:45
Harvard University, hello, Harvard University, human
41:50
appeal. Kids In Need of defense, also known as kind, John Hopkins
41:57
University Department of Political Science NGO, it's an
42:00
NGO migrants organize. I mean, I could just go on and on and on
42:06
and on. So this, this is huge. And of course, you'll see a lot
42:12
of nepotism in these outfits. A lot of lot of nepotism carries
42:18
kids as an example. My favorite it which I'm surprised it didn't
42:25
show up on your list is welcome dot U S. Have you heard of this?
42:32
You should have actually I have, because welcome.us originally
42:35
created in partnership with American Express global business
42:38
travel. The NGO helped relocate Afghans to the US during the
42:43
2021 during 2021 2022. Now working in tandem with miles for
42:47
migrants while retaining its association with AEG BTW the NGO
42:54
is committed to funding flights into the US interior for
42:57
migrants from Cuba, Haiti, Venezuela, Ukraine and
43:02
Nicaragua. This is an interesting outfit because the
43:04
leadership and just so you know, let's look at the leadership
43:08
here. welcome.us Oh, wouldn't you know here are the honorary
43:13
co chairs Barack Obama, Michelle Obama, George W. Bush, Laura
43:16
Bush, Bill Clinton, Hillary Clinton, Jimmy Carter, Rosalyn
43:20
Carter, and then you look at this huge list of 100 people
43:25
this is their Airbnb are in on it. Of course, the CEO and this
43:30
and the ce o y Airbnb gets paid to house migrants you gotta have
43:35
yo yo mine there. Yep, yo yo mas on that because you know you get
43:39
oh, we had a great gala Yo Yo Ma played. Yeah. And then look at
43:45
the CEO forum, Julie sweet Accenture, Sundar Pichai Google,
43:50
the Adobe dude Nara yen, but see CEO from Advent AIG Airbnb,
43:58
Airbnb marketing, Amazon American Express Tim Cook Hello
44:02
Tim. Bank of America Blackstone Business Roundtable Chubb
44:07
Comcast Delta gap, no closed them. And Amazon is interesting.
44:12
Amazon provided for free delivery of essential goods and
44:16
services, not the goods and services. Not the goods didn't
44:20
give anything free to these people. No, we just give you
44:23
free delivery.
44:25
John C Dvorak: Like you're a prime member.
44:28
Adam Curry: His right migrants become Prime members in America,
44:31
John C Dvorak: automatic Prime members.
44:34
Adam Curry: So So now we get to something very interesting. As
44:39
of October 1, there is a new director general of the I O M.
44:44
Oh wouldn't you know it's an American lady. Her name is Amy
44:48
Pope. And so this is active as of October 1 Before joining IOM
44:54
Director General. What is it? What is this? Why did they get
44:57
to use these titles? I think we should be doing Actor generals
45:00
of the no agenda show. In fact, that should be a level you can
45:03
donate for. was the director general business
45:07
John C Dvorak: doesn't correct or generic Director General in
45:10
your case doesn't sound douchey Oh, it was totally douchey what
45:14
is the point of these phony baloney military military type
45:19
and they're not even real military? So I mean, they sound
45:21
like some. It's like get His Excellency the UN. Oh, here's
45:26
his excellency.
45:27
Adam Curry: Oh, I bet you they get announced like that Her
45:29
Excellency, Director General Amy Pope. No doubt about it. She
45:35
served before joining joining Oh IOM Pope served as the senior
45:39
adviser on migration to US President Biden and served as
45:43
the Deputy Homeland security adviser to President Obama.
45:46
While working at the White House, Director General Pope
45:48
developed and implemented comprehensive strategies to
45:51
address migration in areas such as countering trafficking in
45:54
persons resettling refugees and vulnerable people and preparing
45:59
communities to respond and adapt to climate related crises. She
46:05
worked for
46:06
John C Dvorak: where they slipped at in,
46:07
Adam Curry: she worked for Clinton in the State Department.
46:11
This this State Department is the largest funder of the
46:15
international office of migration. It's our agenda. It's
46:19
our money. We're the ones funding, we're
46:22
John C Dvorak: financing the disaster, they're bitching and
46:25
moaning about in New York, Chicago and elsewhere, not to
46:28
mention Texas because who the hell cares what they think, is
46:32
all because of us are people in the state department of our
46:36
country.
46:37
Adam Curry: Let me play some clips here. This is from Africa.
46:40
Today, I had to go far to get a little information about our new
46:43
UN migration chief and what she's up to
46:46
Unknown: the new head of the International Organization for
46:48
Migration laid out her vision for tackling irregular migration
46:52
on Monday, the regulatory economic benefits migration can
46:55
have on the country's receiving migrants speaking from Geneva,
46:59
Amy pop focused on the evidence that migration can boost
47:02
economies providing well needed workers or new innovation, the
47:06
evidence is fairly overwhelming that migration actually benefits
47:10
economies. And when you look at economies that have had a
47:14
significant influx of migrants over the years, if you look at
47:17
how they're performing in the future, we see overwhelmingly
47:22
that people tend to be better off as a result of migration,
47:26
this data.
47:29
Adam Curry: Data the word Chicago, it's gonna be great.
47:33
This is the this is the whole thing.
47:36
John C Dvorak: You just make it up. Yes.
47:38
Unknown: Whether it's because it's fueling innovation. It's
47:40
fueling they fuel innovation,
47:43
John C Dvorak: somehow they fuel innovation. Yeah, it's
47:47
phenomenal. So to the homeless for that off as
47:49
Unknown: a result of migration, whether it's because it's
47:52
fueling innovation, it's fueling, labor supply, whether
47:57
it's fueling the renovation or revitalization of aging
48:01
communities. Migration, on the whole is a benefit for
48:05
gardeners.
48:06
Adam Curry: Let's just go back to the former New York banker,
48:09
we win because we've got new people coming in, our population
48:13
grows, they're fueling the economy, they're fueling it.
48:17
Unknown: Migration on the whole is a benefit
48:19
of also decried what you called the normalization of death in
48:23
the Mediterranean Sea, the people are
48:25
coming because they're getting jobs. And if there wasn't an
48:30
economic opportunity for them to take advantage of on the other
48:33
side, they wouldn't come. So our goal should be increasingly to
48:38
build out regular, realistic pathways for people recognizing
48:42
that there are job opportunities, whether it's high
48:45
skill or low skill, and that are our best opportunity. And this
48:49
is where the EU leadership is, is is especially needed, and
48:55
where we've seen very important developments in this space. But
48:58
recognizing the
48:59
Adam Curry: space has our actual country that she's talking
49:02
about. We see great developments in the space. Because these
49:06
people the great workers, doesn't matter if they're low
49:08
level, high level. They're fabulous. They're obedient,
49:11
they'll do what they tell them to lead if
49:13
Unknown: we're really going to stop people crossing the
49:15
Mediterranean on rickety boats and and dying as they do so we
49:20
need to approach the situation far more comprehensively.
49:24
Trump recently won her bid to become the first woman to lead
49:27
the UN Migration Agency defeating the current IOM
49:31
Director General Antonio vitorino in a vote for the
49:34
position
49:35
Adam Curry: so they had a vote. We had a vote that we fund that
49:39
thing we should have our our our person our person should be
49:43
running it we are the we need the Director General ship
49:45
because it's coming down to the wire here. People we need to
49:48
replace these lazy Americans. They're no good. They can't get
49:53
by, you know. They're basically saying you can get people from
49:58
other countries to live On the slave wages that Americans live
50:02
on, which is this is why we have strikes, you know, inflation has
50:06
is making it hard for auto workers, hospital workers, you
50:11
know, Kaiser Permanente on strike now, because they're just
50:14
not getting paid enough. So how do you solve that bringing
50:17
people who will be happy to live in a tent? Problem solved?
50:21
John C Dvorak: Yeah. Now let's grow you strikers.
50:24
Adam Curry: Let's listen to Amy Pope four years ago when she was
50:28
in the State Department. And this is very unfortunate people
50:32
shouldn't do these things. She did a speech at the Oxford
50:35
Union. Now, this is where people go and make a case. It's kind of
50:39
a fun thing to watch. Lots of debate, to debate thing. And she
50:44
is a Trump hater. She's a super Trump hater. And all she talked
50:49
about was Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump's no
50:53
good. Trump is dangerous. And in this, she and remember, she's in
50:57
the State Department, which we'll talk about in a minute.
51:00
She gives away why there was such a hate of Trump because
51:05
Trump really was a threat to their global migration
51:12
operation. Remember, people are showing up they're not dirty
51:16
clothes torn rip. They've been on the beast train? No, no,
51:20
they're little wet from walking through the Rio Grande. And they
51:22
might have gotten a scratch from the razor wire. But otherwise,
51:25
the shoes are new. There's no luggage they're dragging around.
51:28
This is this is this is a farce. So she's going to tell us how
51:34
stupid Trump was beat with his border walls. It's it's futile.
51:41
I posit
51:42
Unknown: that he has no foreign policy, that what we're seeing
51:45
is domestic policy. Dressed up as foreign policy. Whether it's
51:52
climate change, whether it's migration. Iran, North Korea,
52:01
the President does not have his eye on the long term strategic
52:06
interests of the United States.
52:08
Adam Curry: That's the stuff that we run the elites, the
52:10
globalist we know what's good for the world map this this yo
52:14
goal? There was
52:15
Unknown: a spectacular debacle when the President tried to meet
52:20
with the North Koreans. And where was the President when
52:22
North Korea was testing their missiles? The President was
52:26
talking about the southwest border wall.
52:28
Adam Curry: Now listen carefully, because she's going
52:30
to tell us exactly how sophisticated the globalist
52:34
human trafficking operation really is.
52:39
Unknown: Now, is that American foreign policy, I asked you that
52:43
was the national security issue, that if you turned on any news
52:46
station in the United States, he would be speaking about the
52:50
southwest border wall. Now, I spent many, many years working
52:55
on issues involving Mexico and Central America. And I can tell
52:59
you, and I'm sure you all know this, that their border border
53:03
wall is not actually a very effective deterrent. In the 21st
53:07
century. There are bad actors coming out of Central America
53:12
and Mexico. But these are sophisticated, multi national,
53:18
very well finance organizations, that traffic and drugs, the
53:23
traffic and people and the traffic in arms. And they have
53:27
submarines. And they have vast, sophisticated tunnels under our
53:33
border. And they have air technology. They have a million
53:38
different ways to get around a border wall.
53:41
Adam Curry: That's right, the NGOs are multinationals, well
53:46
funded, they got the tunnels, they have submarines, they have
53:50
air technology, who do you think you are with your stupid wall?
53:55
We can get we have a million ways to bring our irregular
53:58
migrants in around that. Because we run the world
54:03
Unknown: freely. And this one, I think doesn't get enough
54:07
attention. But I think it's critically important. President
54:11
Trump is eroding the institutional norms and
54:16
relationships. That's
54:17
Adam Curry: us these eroding our gig. But this is this everything
54:21
was fine. We've got all these multibillion dollar NGOs. We've
54:26
got our kids and our grandkids working at the little NGOs.
54:30
Everything was fine. Why are you doing this Trump
54:33
Unknown: in a way that is much more insidious than bureaucratic
54:37
disruption? And this is happening in two ways. First,
54:40
it's the relationships with our partners with NATO, with United
54:44
Kingdom, NATO Europe by devaluing these relationships.
54:50
He devalues American power around the world
54:54
Adam Curry: because we are foam finger number one what what we
54:57
do people have to do as well.
55:00
Unknown: America's power is not just because we have a strong
55:03
economy and a strong military, it's because we can lead and
55:08
others will follow. When we dealt with Ebola, it wasn't just
55:12
the United States going into West Africa, it was the UK. It
55:15
was France. It was partners around the globe, we lead, they
55:20
follow it,
55:21
Adam Curry: we lead a Middle World, it doesn't matter if it's
55:24
Ebola, or Zika, or COVID. We lead where the best we know what
55:29
we're doing, where the elites we are, in fact, the swamp. Here
55:33
she is she saying,
55:34
Unknown: second, the President's public humiliation and
55:39
disparagement of his advisors is deeply dangerous to America's
55:45
positioning around the world. And I know this just seems like
55:48
bureaucracy, you're draining the swamp. But it takes real work to
55:53
come to an agreement with another nation.
55:55
Adam Curry: Yeah, we have to go to Brussels, we have to have
55:58
dinners as parties. I mean, we have to dress up all the time.
56:02
It takes real work to organize, you know, all the money we take
56:07
from our American citizens, and give it to ourselves and to our
56:11
organizations, our air technology and our submarine.
56:14
There is
56:15
Unknown: a building of relationships and negotiating of
56:18
agreements. That happens time and again before sits down at a
56:22
table with another world leader.
56:24
Adam Curry: I mean, you can't just sit down and have a chat.
56:27
We have to have all kinds of meetings.
56:30
Unknown: And that's not happening here. And every time
56:34
the President disparages his Secretary of State, the
56:37
Secretary of Defense is National Security Adviser, his defense
56:42
specialists, advisors especially, he is saying to the
56:46
world, you can't trust these guys undress them wash new
56:49
tricks. That is incredibly dangerous for what the United
56:53
States needs to accomplish around the world.
56:57
Adam Curry: Okay, so it's very clear, they were all mad and
57:01
angry, he's deceased, upsetting the applecart. This is how we've
57:06
been skimming money off for years. This is how our how we're
57:10
going to get our friends with business, cheap labor, they do
57:13
not care about anybody but themselves. Quick clip here. She
57:19
just was voted as the Director General of the IOM, here she is
57:26
she's in front of the United Nations building and listen to
57:28
the arrogance,
57:30
Unknown: bottom line line is that humans are going to move
57:33
right that is, that is part of I'm
57:35
Adam Curry: sorry, this is a zoom call. And it's still
57:36
different human
57:37
Unknown: nature. And it is the most basic fundamental human
57:40
adaptation strategy. So for me, it's not a question of whether
57:45
people move, it's a question of how they move and whether we as
57:49
international actors can build out ways for them to
57:54
Adam Curry: do you hear what she's saying? It's a question
57:56
whether we as international actors on the global stage with
58:02
a we can move people around like chess pieces to make the world
58:06
more equitable. That's what they're saying here are they
58:11
move
58:11
Unknown: and whether we as international actors can build
58:15
out ways for them to move so that they are not exploited, so
58:19
that they have the
58:21
Adam Curry: so that, you know, we don't want an actual coyote
58:23
moving around, we want them to arrive clean, clean with clean
58:26
shoes, we want them welcome. So we'll do we'll take care of you.
58:29
We need ways we're going to make migration paths
58:31
Unknown: potential to reach their own human development, but
58:36
also so they can contribute most effectively to the communities
58:41
where they ultimately end up. The other thing is, as I said
58:44
that the demographics are really going to push, I think all
58:50
governments to start to explore migration as a way to respond to
58:55
their own individual challenges. So whether you're a country who
58:59
has a boom and young people, but not enough opportunities at
59:03
home, or you're a country with an aging population, who can no
59:07
longer sustain its economy, there are going to be interests
59:14
that begin to align and I think our job is to help make sure
59:17
they do so. Well.
59:20
Adam Curry: Okay, let's take this to a local level. We now
59:22
have Venezuelans we have a lot more but we have Venezuelans in
59:27
in New York City. And it's a problem. Oh, first we get them
59:30
into the Roosevelt Hotel. All right, that's good. A lot of
59:33
money being made there by the Roosevelt Hotel, probably some
59:36
cousins in the middle of that when organizing it all. And then
59:40
we have suddenly Temporary Protected Status for
59:45
Venezuelans. And it's like, okay, well, I mean, I have a
59:49
stepdaughter in New York it hasn't been super easy for her
59:52
to keep to keep jobs. You know, the cool jobs have been shut
59:56
down because there's no more money she's now in the service
59:59
in industry, literally in a service industry wasn't easy for
1:00:05
her to for her to get that job. There's a lot of people lining
1:00:07
up to get it but somehow, somehow this is all working
1:00:11
perfectly well. And then we bring in the governor of the
1:00:14
state Hogle Ah, she's got who's a part of the system. You can
1:00:18
just look at her hair do Pierre did it. And what is she arranged
1:00:21
here? This is phenomenal. It's working.
1:00:23
Unknown: Turning now to the migrant crisis. Gov HK will
1:00:25
announcing more than 18,000 job openings with nearly 400
1:00:29
employers were open to hiring migrants
1:00:31
ifox size Chris Wallace joins us now in studio. Chris, how does
1:00:34
the state plan to connect migrants to these companies?
1:00:36
Stephen Teresa, they're actually going to open up a web based
1:00:39
portal starting on the state's Department of Labor website. Now
1:00:42
the governor says this means that more than 40,000 Venezuelan
1:00:46
migrants who have come to New York will soon be able to hold
1:00:49
the job. And she says companies are lining up to hire them. In
1:00:53
the words of Governor Kathy Hall goal.
1:00:56
This is a big deal. This is a big deal. This
1:00:59
being the fact that on Tuesday, migrants from Venezuela who
1:01:02
arrived prior to July 31, will be able to apply for Temporary
1:01:06
Protected Status. Local estimates that 40% Of the nearly
1:01:10
120,000 migrants who have come to New York are from Venezuela.
1:01:15
She says they'll now be able to apply for work through a portal
1:01:19
on an app.
1:01:20
And luckily for me, because I tested it out the app is simple.
1:01:24
It's not cumbersome.
1:01:25
Nearly 400 companies across the state have already stepped up
1:01:29
offering 18,000 jobs, nearly a quarter of them in the
1:01:33
restaurant industry. Hot Bread Kitchen is one such company.
1:01:38
They provide culinary training and help place individuals in
1:01:41
the food service industry
1:01:43
in New York City Food Industry needs the talent, grit and
1:01:47
creativity of the migrants coming to New York.
1:01:51
Adam Curry: Okay, so this sounded like there were a bunch
1:01:53
of companies in New York that are desperate to have people
1:01:56
fill these jobs which my stepdaughter can got with no
1:02:00
luck and perseverance. So I look at this and I see the CEO of Hot
1:02:05
Bread Kitchen. She's the ones that had this is great. Leslie
1:02:09
Abbey, Esquire. Oh, go look at her LinkedIn. She's the Chief
1:02:14
Executive Officers Officer of Hot Bread Kitchen that she
1:02:17
doesn't look like a food person. I looked down the list depth.
1:02:21
Her previous experience Deputy Executive Director, Chief
1:02:23
Operating Officer of Covenant House New York. Uh huh. City of
1:02:29
New York Administration for Children's Services. Hmm. Let me
1:02:34
take a look at this Hot Bread Kitchen. It's a nonprofit. It's
1:02:39
funded with $5 million probably New Yorkers money $5 million.
1:02:46
This is not a job. This is a nonprofit. And then you start to
1:02:52
look at what this thing is this Hot Bread Kitchen. Oh, it's a
1:02:58
write off about they got parties. They got pictures of Oh
1:03:02
boy. Boy. We've had all these fantastic we've raised so much
1:03:05
money. Oh it our featured partners Bloomberg
1:03:08
Philanthropies Google Citibank, Denise and Michael Cohen
1:03:12
foundation. Chanel Goldman Sachs Haagen Doss. This is this is
1:03:17
party time. Write it off. Oh, we're doing so well for these
1:03:22
for these immigrants is we're doing such a good job Kathy.
1:03:26
Good job, Abby. No, no, you're giving them our money. Again,
1:03:31
this is not an actual job. And then the mayor of New York Shut
1:03:35
up. The he had one of his one of his his assistants who showed up
1:03:40
on television with Chanel jewelry, which I thought was a
1:03:43
somewhat inappropriate. She gave the wrong message and they they
1:03:48
end they all know that. This mayor is a problem. We got a
1:03:52
sideline of The move comes
1:03:54
Unknown: a day after vocal on Face The Nation called for a
1:03:57
limit on who can come across the Mexican border which is just
1:04:00
theater it is to open right now. And a day after Mayor Eric Adams
1:04:05
chief adviser went even further close the bullet is the mayor
1:04:09
likely would have been asked about migrants on Monday, but
1:04:13
his staff has instituted a new policy. He will only take off
1:04:18
topic questions one day a week. We're going to have one day a
1:04:23
week so I can do the business of running this very complicated
1:04:26
city. So I reached out to the mayor's office regarding that
1:04:29
advisors comments that the federal government should close
1:04:32
the border. A spokesperson says that is quote not the position
1:04:37
of the administration. Now speaking of the mayor Adams on
1:04:40
Wednesday will depart on a trip with stops in Mexico, Ecuador
1:04:43
and Colombia in an effort to learn about the issues at the
1:04:46
border and better understand conditions along on migrants
1:04:49
journey. He will return to the city next Sunday.
1:04:52
Adam Curry: The mayor has to be re educated that's what's
1:04:55
happening there. You're not a you're not taking any questions
1:04:58
anymore. No answering Have questions, and we're taking it
1:05:01
out of the city. You got to go down. We're gonna re educate
1:05:04
you. They're gonna wine and dine him. Of course that's
1:05:06
reeducation. Yeah. Come on into the party brother. You don't
1:05:10
really want to save New York at all. So this is mainly coming
1:05:18
from the United States state, but the State Department which
1:05:21
makes total sense, just look at who's who's running it in the
1:05:24
past, especially during Obama, Hillary Clinton.
1:05:28
John C Dvorak: Well, the woman is part of that clique of
1:05:31
females. That still there, they're in the the Biden
1:05:36
administration. Oh, yeah. The same ones, Lisa Manik go to
1:05:41
work. Lisa Monaco is also with Torp. There are all kinds of
1:05:46
Torp ish. And a lot of lesbians to a lot of lesbians. Valerie
1:05:53
Jarrett, yeah, Susan Rice, the whole group.
1:05:57
Adam Curry: So winding this up. But it's actually very
1:06:01
interesting guy on the Tim Poole show, which someone sent me a
1:06:04
clip, Mike Ben's now he's he worked in the State Department.
1:06:08
He's now like an internet freedom guy. And he was like,
1:06:12
well, he's a cyber guy. If you looked at his job, it was
1:06:15
basically a marketing communications at the State
1:06:17
Department. But he spells out what he witnessed and what it
1:06:21
was like there, and what the states. Now we know from the
1:06:25
economic hitman book, we know what's going on. But it's good
1:06:29
to get a little reminder,
1:06:30
John C Dvorak: my colleagues at the State Department were
1:06:32
actually the smartest some of the smartest people I met in
1:06:35
government and outside of government, there is an
1:06:37
animating spirit of Machiavellian world conquest,
1:06:42
that permeates that institution in a way that it doesn't at HUD
1:06:46
or even at the White House, there is a sense of the bigness
1:06:49
of the world and the interconnectedness of the world
1:06:51
and the opportunities in the world to go region by region and
1:06:55
stack the deck in ways that are advantageous to State Department
1:06:59
stakeholders. This is one of these things where until the
1:07:02
2016 election happened, and the national security state, which
1:07:07
has always, you know, come home in so many ways, you know, I
1:07:10
mean, you can make an argument that even the Martin Luther King
1:07:12
stuff and a lot of the COINTELPRO stuff was a proxy
1:07:15
attack on the Vietnam War, the FBI only got the
1:07:17
counterintelligence predicate on him because of him being backed
1:07:20
by Stanley Leveson, the who was said to be a sort of communist
1:07:23
Soviet and you had DOD and CIA involvement in that FBI activity
1:07:28
as well. There was always sort of a crackdown on this, but the
1:07:31
what they've done in the modern era has actually shook my I used
1:07:37
to think that we've got this department of dirty tricks, you
1:07:39
know, that we started to set up after World War Two, when 94
1:07:42
Seven act, we create the CIA, we changed the name of the War
1:07:45
Department to the Defense Department to make it sound like
1:07:47
we're not doing war, we create this entire NGO swarm army, we
1:07:52
create these incredible embeddings between the national
1:07:54
security state and the media, a soft power projection apparatus
1:07:57
that could effectively control the political economies of any
1:08:00
country we capacity build, but there was always sort of a
1:08:03
sense, well, it's this, it's for the benefit of the people who
1:08:06
live here, the bigger the American empire gets, the better
1:08:08
off Americans are more jobs are, you know, if Chevron does well,
1:08:12
well, that's more people who's got jobs in Texas. And in
1:08:15
Oklahoma, you know, if Pepsi Cola does well, you know, that's
1:08:18
more for chipping other men if there was this, at one point,
1:08:22
there was a connective tissue between the people who live here
1:08:25
and the Empire abroad and at some point, you know, pick your
1:08:28
your evolution point in globalization, you know, whether
1:08:31
that was, you know, in the, in the in the 70s, whether that was
1:08:34
in the 90s, when the when the offshoring really hit the hay
1:08:37
and when, you know, China joined the WTO and cheap labor there
1:08:40
were so many different points of departure from that.
1:08:43
Adam Curry: And no surprise Ukraine is no different no
1:08:46
better example
1:08:47
John C Dvorak: of that than what's happening with the Biden
1:08:49
family in Ukraine. I mean, it is like a State Department
1:08:52
operation to help a very small number of economic stakeholders
1:08:56
I'm I'm ready to make an a formal opinion on this I
1:08:58
understand both sides of the Ukraine Russia thing that's not
1:09:01
my my bag, so to speak. I just care about freedom on the
1:09:04
internet. But but in order to understand why it is that you
1:09:07
get censored for talking about Ukraine stuff or political
1:09:10
movements who are proxies for that gets censored is because
1:09:12
you now have a State Department vested interest in censoring US
1:09:16
American voices. Because if they, if they get a Matt Gaetz
1:09:20
in a speaker or if they get if they get a sufficient enough
1:09:22
Caucus in the House Appropriations Committee to be
1:09:24
able to kill funding, then there goes the war effort when then
1:09:26
there goes the ability for Burisma to monetize the shale in
1:09:31
the eastern region, where for Chevron, Halliburton, shell, and
1:09:35
Exxon which all have billion dollar gas contracts with the
1:09:38
Ukrainian government, all of that goes away if American
1:09:41
people have sovereign capacities to think for themselves and
1:09:44
decide with those free thoughts to enact to have political
1:09:48
representation that votes that so there's this is there's no
1:09:51
after Smith Mont was modernized and after there's been no
1:09:54
oversight. There's no justice department push back. We are now
1:09:58
in a in a brave new world where You know, it's the State
1:10:00
Department's World and we're living in it.
1:10:03
Adam Curry: Totally.
1:10:04
John C Dvorak: I like his line early on in that little
1:10:07
soliloquy, where he said they want to make everything
1:10:11
advantageous to the State Department stakeholders not to
1:10:16
the American public. No, of course not to the stakeholders,
1:10:20
which means the people that are corrupt. Yeah. In a nutshell,
1:10:24
Adam Curry: and there's a man this is a great video went
1:10:28
viral, unfortunately, on Instagram, so I'm sure it's
1:10:32
gone. As this was this woman, a young woman who was working at
1:10:36
cardi a in New York during the UN General Assembly. And the
1:10:41
story she gives us, she was, in essence, an intern for a couple
1:10:46
of weeks. He's at cardi a all our lens because the lens ska
1:10:51
Zelinsky comes by that's Zelinsky his wife. And, and this
1:10:57
she's trying to be really helpful. Like, would you like to
1:10:59
see our selection? And the way she says it is? I don't think
1:11:03
you need your opinion. And she got this girl fired, but was the
1:11:08
girl was leaving. She took the in a copy of the invoice of what
1:11:13
Zelinsky purchased that day. $1.1 million worth of jewelry at
1:11:18
cardi a and she shows that she's she shows she shows a copy of
1:11:21
the invoice whether it's true or not. I think the level that's
1:11:25
the level we're talking about here. That's the
1:11:28
John C Dvorak: lily if anyone was to go look at the Scott
1:11:31
Ritter documentary, yeah. On Zelinsky. Volume One. The amount
1:11:39
of property that guy Oh, yeah. All around the
1:11:42
Adam Curry: houses everything. Yeah. Yeah, it's ridiculous. So
1:11:46
while that's taking place in New York with these poor people,
1:11:50
here's the Chicago residents.
1:11:52
Unknown: We were going to have a shelter at this particular
1:11:55
location.
1:12:08
Adam Curry: This is your work for us. This is a local
1:12:13
alderman, who two days ago said Yeah, on Saturday, we're gonna
1:12:19
turn the it's the Edmondson Park, which is not a poor
1:12:25
neighborhood, but it's a thriving Park. But they don't
1:12:29
they got old guys playing checkers, they got kids playing
1:12:32
basketball. They're going to turn it into a migrant camp. And
1:12:35
they just shoved it down. Everybody's everybody's throat.
1:12:39
And the residents are like no, no, you work for us. It's not a
1:12:44
poor black neighborhood, but it's predominantly black
1:12:46
neighborhood. And the citizens just took over. Mr. Glover, you
1:12:52
get an opportunity to speak
1:12:54
Unknown: Coronavirus. Politician. Turn to Michael.
1:12:59
Turn the mic on. Good evening, everyone. I'm showing how
1:13:02
disrespectful This is on the five o'clock news. They
1:13:05
projected that the migrants would be here by Saturday. Look
1:13:09
at look, welcome to the Welcoming City. Well, I gotta
1:13:12
tell you, only certain areas are welcoming. That's us there were
1:13:16
us. They say they want to use this product. Well, let me tell
1:13:19
you, the sales Street, Clark Street, all the office
1:13:24
buildings, nobody wants to be in the loop anymore. They will all
1:13:27
want to move west because of new buildings with better amenities.
1:13:31
Those buildings are empty right now with water he and
1:13:35
everything. But they don't want the migrants out there. We're
1:13:38
not anti migrants. But this is so disrespectful for them to
1:13:42
just sit up here with this crap. And we both listen to it.
1:13:48
Adam Curry: There you go. That's that's what's really happening.
1:13:52
And there's now 500 people sleeping at O'Hare Airport. It's
1:13:58
everywhere. So when we look at this, we have to take our mind
1:14:02
out of the stories. Well, there's the rape tree admits the
1:14:07
human traffickers. The human traffickers are these people.
1:14:11
It's the NGOs and whoever State
1:14:14
John C Dvorak: Department let's just boil it. Whoever our own
1:14:18
state's doing this
1:14:19
Adam Curry: US AI D is a part of the State Department controls
1:14:22
the US AI D budget. Whoever becomes president. That's the
1:14:27
main thing. Stop the money flow withdraw from the United
1:14:31
Nations. Certainly the IOM that that's where it has that's the
1:14:37
old that's the only thing and it's and it's it's doing damage
1:14:40
in Europe, our State Department because oh when we lead
1:14:43
everybody else follows. That's your problem right there. Look
1:14:46
at who's coming in into Western Europe. Are these families? No,
1:14:50
these are healthy young men. And I love the it's a military that
1:14:55
bringing young men of military age in does not they're not
1:14:58
going to take over the middle The tarried who know they're
1:15:02
coming in to take your job, cheap job, cheap jobs, good
1:15:06
paying jobs,
1:15:07
John C Dvorak: because you're paying non union job because
1:15:10
you're
1:15:10
Adam Curry: being a problem. You're striking. This has no
1:15:15
beauty. Why don't you take your slave wage? These people will
1:15:20
look, they'll live in a tent. They're in Chicago. They're
1:15:24
Chicagoans. So that's what's going on. It's the State
1:15:29
Department of the United States. That's what's doing it. And it's
1:15:33
been a plan for a long time. Angle and Merkel color AG. So
1:15:40
and you know, and so that's why oh, you called the great
1:15:43
replacement theory Euro xenophobic, racist conspiracy
1:15:48
theorists. Now, it's because we saw your document and it
1:15:50
literally said migration replacement. And we kind of
1:15:53
thought that was a bad thing. And we called you out on it. And
1:15:56
then oh, I'm sorry. And that's why now in Europe, opposing mass
1:16:02
migration is about to be a crime. So if you post against
1:16:09
mass migration, the there's a very very well known documentary
1:16:18
program in Holland called zimbler. And they've been really
1:16:24
good for a long time. And they did a hit piece. They went to
1:16:29
these people who had posted anti migration tweets. And they went
1:16:35
undercover and and in essence, expose them as being horrible
1:16:41
xenophobic racist a holes by showing their tweets but they
1:16:46
edited the tweets were so good would would be saying, hey, you
1:16:51
know, these guys, these guys are gonna get either beat out of
1:16:55
here thrown out of the country, they kind of edited that to
1:16:57
saying these people should be beaten or thrown out. But they
1:17:00
just edited the edited the tweets, and the FAQ. It's
1:17:05
Ancilla, the black box organization, they have the
1:17:09
online stuff. They they expose this and now this this Assembla
1:17:15
episode has been removed from the internet after that people
1:17:18
were fired from their jobs for being xenophobic, eight holes
1:17:22
against the migration. This this is what's happening. Oh, don't
1:17:26
talk against it. Don't say anything.
1:17:28
John C Dvorak: We Oh, this sort of thing brings me to some clips
1:17:30
into may may be a segue if you want to Yeah, I do. I'm waiting
1:17:34
for this idea of of censoring at that level. Is was It's recently
1:17:42
been tested in California. And I have some clips on this cool.
1:17:47
Because if you listen to these clips, it's actually hair
1:17:50
raising when you see what they were up to and what they're
1:17:53
trying to do. And there was a law passed in California, which
1:17:56
was then unpassed, which required doctors to abide by
1:18:01
government guidelines and so forth recommendation vac
1:18:04
recommendation station of vaccines, the therapies
1:18:08
whatever, no, ivermectin obviously, you take a shot. And
1:18:12
this law was passed and signed by Newsom. They were sued over
1:18:17
this and let's play clip one. A statewide
1:18:19
Unknown: reversal of a law in California Governor Gavin Newsom
1:18:23
has now done away with portions of a so called Miss Information
1:18:26
Law targeting doctors signed into law by his own hand last
1:18:31
October. Under that law, doctors would have been forced to follow
1:18:35
government there it is on things like masks and vaccines, or risk
1:18:40
losing their medical licenses. Moments ago, we spoke with Laura
1:18:43
Powell and attorney with Californians for good
1:18:46
governance. Laura Powell, thank you so much for joining us.
1:18:49
Great to have you on the show now that portions of
1:18:51
California's COVID misinformation law have been
1:18:54
done away with what's next for you and your clients who are
1:18:57
actually suing the state over this very law.
1:19:00
Yes, I'm co counsel with the new civil liberties Alliance on a
1:19:03
case with five plaintiffs who are all doctors who challenged
1:19:07
this California censorship law. We got an A preliminary
1:19:10
injunction in January. So the law has not been enforced, since
1:19:15
it passed last year came into force January 1, and just a few
1:19:18
weeks later, we had a preliminary injunction. So now
1:19:21
we're anticipating Newsom has now signed the law, repealing HB
1:19:27
2098. It will take effect on January 1, I imagine the state
1:19:31
will now move to have our case dismissed as it's moot. And I
1:19:36
assume that our lawsuit was part of the motivation for them
1:19:40
repealing AB 2098 Because they saw the writing on the wall and
1:19:44
saw they weren't likely to win that this law was going to be
1:19:47
declared unconstitutional and they're hoping to avoid a legal
1:19:51
precedent that would bind in the future to make a definitive
1:19:54
statement about how this law violated the constitutional
1:19:59
rights of Da Doctors,
1:20:01
Adam Curry: not to mention the Hippocratic Oath.
1:20:05
John C Dvorak: This is kind of sinister. When you listen to the
1:20:07
these, these clips and I'll give it nobody gets it out there.
1:20:11
I'll explain afterwards this played, go to two.
1:20:13
Unknown: And on that note, how would this law have impacted the
1:20:17
doctor patient relationship if it had stayed in law?
1:20:21
Well, I always thought that a large part of this law was sort
1:20:23
of the statement it made to tell doctors that they should be
1:20:27
afraid of speaking their mind, and telling patients what they
1:20:32
truly think that they needed to stick to the government
1:20:35
narrative. So that chilling effect on their speech would
1:20:38
happen regardless of whether or not they the medical board
1:20:42
actually use the law to go after doctors. But what happens there
1:20:46
is that the doctor patient relationship gets damaged
1:20:49
because patients can't trust their doctors. And if they if
1:20:53
they believe that the doctors aren't telling them their honest
1:20:56
opinion, but are telling them what they think they need to
1:20:58
say, to protect their medical licenses. So that erosion of the
1:21:03
doctor patient relationship was one of the many reasons why this
1:21:07
was a bad policy.
1:21:09
Adam Curry: This was exactly what happened in COVID. I guess
1:21:12
people even in California, notice that that was not a good
1:21:14
idea.
1:21:16
John C Dvorak: So it gets more interesting. And this is the
1:21:18
lightning for the last of the clips, you got two more. Okay,
1:21:22
then it gets just what's happened here is that the
1:21:25
government are Newsom and his lefty buddies, they saw what was
1:21:31
going to happen, they're going to lose this case, it was
1:21:35
writing on the wall. And what this looked like, was a trial
1:21:38
balloon for how they can rewrite the law and re redo it and put
1:21:43
another law in place that might pass muster. And so they pulled
1:21:47
the plug on this thing before anything could happen. And so
1:21:50
far is precedents concerned, which I think is just the
1:21:54
sickest thing I've ever heard, play this third part 33.
1:21:58
Unknown: And in your view, given this was enacted into law in the
1:22:01
first place, could this happen again, down the road? Well,
1:22:05
without
1:22:05
a definitive statement from the courts, that it's
1:22:08
unconstitutional. We have the preliminary injunction, but that
1:22:11
wasn't a complete opinion from the courts. It could happen
1:22:15
again, although I think what is happening now is we're going to
1:22:18
see a change of tactics. I think repealing this law was a victory
1:22:22
for us, we won the battle, but there's still the ward when and
1:22:26
I think the state is changing its tactics. We saw the bills
1:22:29
author stating that they could still go after misinformation
1:22:34
from doctors based on pre existing law. And I know of one
1:22:38
case where this is happening that a doctor who said things
1:22:41
like mass don't prevent the spread of viruses, oh, is having
1:22:44
their license threatened not under av 2098. But under the
1:22:48
preexisting general law that says that a doctor who's
1:22:52
negligent, lose their license. So I think we're this is a
1:22:55
recognition from the state that this tactic was a failure. But I
1:22:59
think they are still going to look for ways to try to control
1:23:03
what people say on the topic of COVID.
1:23:05
Adam Curry: Wow. Wow. So not this time.
1:23:13
John C Dvorak: They're these. It was six when they repealed the
1:23:17
law, because they only repealed so that case wouldn't finish. So
1:23:23
Adam Curry: it wouldn't be precedents in
1:23:25
John C Dvorak: no precedent, there's a fourth clip you said,
1:23:27
Yeah, this fourth one was like as a kicker in here, I guess.
1:23:30
Unknown: And Laurie, you actually touched on this a
1:23:31
little bit. But given that medical treatment has for ages
1:23:34
been tailored for the individual, do you see Miss
1:23:37
Information laws like this one disrupting that patient doctor
1:23:41
relationship in the future?
1:23:44
Yeah, well, that's an interesting question is that the
1:23:46
ethical obligations of a doctor go to their patient. And what
1:23:51
one thing I've noticed, you can see, sometimes there's a switch
1:23:53
of language where they say that the doctors have an obligation
1:23:56
to public health, and that their obligation isn't so much to the
1:24:00
patient, but what they believe is best for everyone. And this
1:24:04
isn't how medical ethics has worked in the past, and that
1:24:07
seriously causes if you're a patient, and you believe that
1:24:10
your doctor is not telling you to get vaccinated, for example,
1:24:14
because they think it's best for you, but because they think it's
1:24:17
best for others, that is really going to undermine your trust in
1:24:22
your doctor.
1:24:23
Adam Curry: Oh, wow. misinformation.
1:24:28
John C Dvorak: Now that the interesting thing here is this
1:24:30
has been somatic. This is you want to wear a mask because you
1:24:34
don't want to get other sick. Yep. They've either they've
1:24:38
managed to switch the narrative. So it's nobody's it's to
1:24:42
eliminate the idea of individualism. We have to stop
1:24:46
thinking in terms of individuals, we have to start
1:24:48
thinking in terms of the collective this is all Marxist
1:24:52
stuff transmitted. So obviously Marxist stuff.
1:24:56
Adam Curry: Well, this kind of brings me into a couple of short
1:24:58
clips I have here which has been brewing. We don't I mean, this
1:25:03
is there's two laws in Western Europe, the digital services act
1:25:09
from the European Union, which I'll talk about in a moment. But
1:25:12
the one we've been looking at, especially in relation to the D
1:25:16
platforming of Russell Brand, or de monetizing of Russell Brand,
1:25:20
and probably removal of rumble, or whatever it was the online
1:25:25
safety bill. And this is the big UK Ministry of truthiness bill,
1:25:32
about what you can and cannot do on the internet. And I have, I
1:25:38
think, a UK law professor, it's, it's on a zoom, it's like 20
1:25:42
minutes, you should watch the whole thing. I just pulled out a
1:25:46
couple of clips where he's literally talking about some of
1:25:49
the some of the sections of this online safety bill and what it
1:25:55
really means. And the first one kind of sets the tone these are
1:25:59
these are pretty short, Paul
1:26:00
Unknown: 10 communications offenses. A person commits an
1:26:06
offense This is a criminal offense. If a person sins,
1:26:11
another person, a message. And that message conveys information
1:26:18
that the person knows to be false. And the person has no
1:26:23
reasonable excuse for sending the message. Now, it's important
1:26:27
to understand it's not just, you know, someone sending a text to
1:26:34
someone else. When they define message. This means anything,
1:26:38
any type of communication that's online. So this would affect
1:26:44
search engines. They're sending messages. And it's not just
1:26:48
individuals and of course, online providers, whether it's x
1:26:52
or Facebook, or rumble, or YouTube or anyone anyone sending
1:26:56
a message is committing an offense. If there's information
1:27:01
that's false in it.
1:27:03
Adam Curry: This is really good, because messages is as you said,
1:27:07
it was not just an email or a DM could be a podcast, could be a
1:27:10
blog post could be a tweet could be anything. And of course,
1:27:15
you've effectively outlawed lying which you should you
1:27:17
should be able to lie. I mean, you send a dick pic and say hey,
1:27:19
it's it's 20 inches baby, you know, that would be a criminal
1:27:23
criminal offense. Law ly and of course, there are exemptions.
1:27:28
Unknown: The very next section, this is section 181 which
1:27:32
follows section 180. This lists exit exemptions from offenses.
1:27:37
Okay, so these people are going to be exempt from that law or
1:27:42
recognized news publisher cannot cannot commit an offence under
1:27:48
Section One at the BBC and they're specifically
1:27:52
specifically exempt in Section 56 recognized news publisher it
1:27:57
says the BBC and it has a whole list a whole list of definitely
1:28:02
Adam Curry: so they're going to approve which organizations are
1:28:05
exempt from spreading misinformation this is and this
1:28:10
is
1:28:10
John C Dvorak: basically the guy basically said the BBC can lie
1:28:13
but you can't
1:28:14
Adam Curry: correct and this is law it just has to get now the
1:28:17
king has to sign it I've tried the way you bridge you should be
1:28:21
me you should look at this like the president you know if the
1:28:24
President's gonna sign something or veto something you know
1:28:27
people put pressure on the president I'm not going to be
1:28:30
elected you know it's not the same thing with a king but you
1:28:33
should be outside Buckingham Palace like where the guillotine
1:28:37
This is not okay. So there will be approved news organizations
1:28:42
and you have to have a code special code of conduct of
1:28:45
standards that you adhere to and and how are they going to
1:28:51
enforce this? Well of course they're gonna have the this is
1:28:57
off calm is the British I'd say it's the FCC but a little bigger
1:29:03
than that off calm is huge. They they really determined a lot
1:29:06
they determined what can and cannot be done on the airwaves.
1:29:09
So off calm, apparently.
1:29:11
Unknown: But there's one other thing you know, which I think is
1:29:13
really important. I've not seen this publicized anywhere but
1:29:16
section seven of the bill sets up it gives huge powers to
1:29:23
Ofcom, which is the regulator in the UK. And it tells off comm
1:29:27
they've got to set up immediately a new Advisory
1:29:30
Committee on disinformation and misinformation. Now, that's,
1:29:37
that's fascinating. And it's something also that the EU
1:29:39
Digital Services Act does, because that is all wells
1:29:44
Ministry of Truth of karma can be told to set up a new
1:29:48
committee to basically advise and rule on what is true and
1:29:54
what is false. And what is what is legal and what is illegal.
1:30:00
Adam Curry: In the EU digital services act similar idea.
1:30:04
They'll have flaggers who will be approved? So you can be an
1:30:08
approved flagger I want to be a flagger Yeah, now that's where
1:30:12
that's where this is going. So then this this doctor,
1:30:16
professor, my right, they're bigger than this. He does a
1:30:20
little quiz, little quiz time everybody you can play along at
1:30:23
home and YouTube trolls.
1:30:25
Unknown: I'm gonna read you a very short couple of sentences.
1:30:27
This is from a piece of legislation, which was
1:30:31
introduced to protect people from hate speech. And it was to
1:30:36
regulate journalism I want you to do to tell me, tell me where
1:30:40
this was from, quote, editors must treat their subjects
1:30:44
truthfully. Editors must keep out of the newspapers, anything
1:30:50
which is misleading, offends the religious sentiments of others,
1:30:56
or offends a person's welfare harms their reputation, or makes
1:31:01
them appear ridiculous or contemptible. Unquote. Where's
1:31:06
that from?
1:31:08
Adam Curry: Now? All right, do you want to take a guess before
1:31:09
we do the big reveal?
1:31:13
John C Dvorak: Is from the United Nations? I have no idea.
1:31:17
Adam Curry: I actually thought it was a brave new world. The
1:31:20
normal Orwell's 1984 Like that's that's gotta be a gag. That's
1:31:24
gotta be Orwell's 1984. Let me see what the what the troll say
1:31:28
AP Stylebook?
1:31:31
John C Dvorak: Prompt. It sounds like yeah, pride. There. That's
1:31:35
close.
1:31:38
Adam Curry: See, no one people are close. But now here we go.
1:31:41
Unknown: This section 13 The editorial law introduced by
1:31:45
Adolf Hitler's Nazi Germany on the fourth of October 1933.
1:31:51
John C Dvorak: I was close. I said United Nations. Yeah,
1:31:53
Adam Curry: exactly. Someone had Germany was close, or close. And
1:32:00
so now you understand why we have that Department of
1:32:03
disinformation with with the opera The was that crazy lady?
1:32:10
The one
1:32:11
John C Dvorak: that was singing and dance dancing? Yeah.
1:32:13
Wouldn't it be on Broadway?
1:32:14
Adam Curry: Yeah, that one. So the digital services agency, a
1:32:18
Digital Services Act is already up and running. In the in
1:32:22
Europe, and they have. I'm looking at it right now live in
1:32:25
the European Commission, the DSA transparency database. So this
1:32:31
Oh, it's changed since yesterday. So this is Digital
1:32:33
Services Act, transparency database. On this page, you find
1:32:37
some summary statistics of the statements of reason submitted
1:32:40
by providers of online platforms to the commission. This page is
1:32:44
a beta version of an Analytics interface that will be revised
1:32:48
blah, blah, blah. So what this shows is you can see which
1:32:51
platforms are removing content? And for what reason? So if I hit
1:32:59
the Tick Tock here they have it's it's kind of interesting,
1:33:06
because the top most active platforms in removing stuff
1:33:11
removing not saying that, you know that this is where the most
1:33:14
bad spad stuff is. Tick tock number one, Pinterest is number
1:33:19
two, Amazon three Facebook for low eight.
1:33:24
John C Dvorak: What is Amazon got to do with the price of
1:33:26
bread?
1:33:27
Adam Curry: Well, do you be surprised?
1:33:32
John C Dvorak: Here? Are they talking about AWS?
1:33:34
Adam Curry: Nope. And Google Maps, I'll tell you what that
1:33:36
most use. So they Google
1:33:37
John C Dvorak: Maps or Google Maps always blurring stuff
1:33:40
because somebody got upset
1:33:42
Adam Curry: to the most used categories. Scope of platform
1:33:47
service. So you're doing something that's against our
1:33:50
terms of service. Number two, illegal or harmful speech?
1:33:57
pornography or sexualized content? That's Pinterest.
1:34:01
Pinterest is number one in porn removal. violence, violence,
1:34:06
violence. And I think this is your Amazon intellectual
1:34:10
property infringement. So this is where Amazon shines. They
1:34:13
have to remove you know, the fake Dr stuff and all that. So
1:34:18
Oh, and and I would say if I'm looking at the list is can you
1:34:22
look by keyword. Illegal or harmful speech is is really the
1:34:29
top one. And it's all stuff like hate speech, hate speech, hate
1:34:33
speech, anti LGBT, you know, not inclusive. But here's the here's
1:34:38
the thing. Of all these platforms in the EU. How many
1:34:44
removals per hour Do you think we're seeing? So, these these
1:34:50
are top platforms, others but the Tick Tock Pinterest, Amazon,
1:34:54
Facebook, Google Maps, how many pieces of content are they
1:34:58
removing per hour? For the EU market
1:35:03
John C Dvorak: 1000 70,564
1:35:08
per people they have to do this
1:35:12
Adam Curry: apparently that's their entire payroll I mean is
1:35:16
that crazy? Yeah, here the keywords
1:35:21
John C Dvorak: Animal Crossing 2.0
1:35:24
Adam Curry: Yes The only way to go here here the here the key
1:35:27
here the categories animal harm adults so it's not like they're
1:35:31
killing animals online but I guess they're showing it adult
1:35:35
sexual material by far the number one age specific
1:35:40
restrictions biometric data breach hate speech is number two
1:35:47
after other you have to kind of go into other this interesting
1:35:51
little database
1:35:54
John C Dvorak: risks linked in the show notes yes
1:35:56
Adam Curry: risk for public health is also quite big.
1:35:59
John C Dvorak: But hey, like COVID Don't take the VAX Yeah,
1:36:02
Adam Curry: exactly. Let me see if I can find what is the hate
1:36:07
speech let me see give you some examples here hates paid speech.
1:36:11
I do not like a hate speech. Not show me that anyway. It's go
1:36:17
take a look. Grounds Marius, the grounds number one content
1:36:23
incompatible with terms and conditions. So you know, you're
1:36:28
just not allowed to say anything anymore. So yeah, podcasting 2.0
1:36:31
RSS blogs. This is the only way out people bring back the
1:36:36
readers. We can do it. We can do it. And this is what they want
1:36:43
here. It's the same words the same terms. That's why Elon is
1:36:49
gonna you know, close registration and you gotta pay
1:36:52
you're gonna know who you are. gonna know who you are. Gotta
1:36:55
have your credit card on file got to know gotta know what
1:36:57
you're doing.
1:37:00
John C Dvorak: It's a foregone conclusion what
1:37:02
Adam Curry: you're up to, but on what you're up to. It. Yeah, it
1:37:05
is. It is a foregone conclusion. I guess we should just do it
1:37:12
briefly since kind of came up in your clips
1:37:26
Unknown: get a shot.
1:37:30
Adam Curry: We see. So the COVID booster is off. People are not.
1:37:37
They're not able to get it. They're out there. The insurance
1:37:39
companies aren't paying for it. I think that this writing was on
1:37:43
the wall. And that's why they just didn't ship him. Like we're
1:37:46
not going to manufacture this stuff. I don't know if how that
1:37:49
works in in the medical field, but is it like the record
1:37:52
business or the book business? Do you get returned as
1:37:55
John C Dvorak: a flop? Forget it turned off the machines as
1:37:58
prints aren't Mel's.
1:37:59
Adam Curry: Seriously. It must be something like that. That
1:38:01
night they didn't want to send it because people are not
1:38:04
there's no uptake. I've actually seen them start to do HPV
1:38:07
commercials again. Hey kids, you're gonna die of cervical
1:38:12
cancer. Cancer of the throat boys you don't want that look at
1:38:16
Michael Douglas is a ramping that up again. They're doing
1:38:19
anything to keep the quotas going. So instead, we need to
1:38:24
placate people because we know that this was too early we know
1:38:28
that the whatever the deal was whatever member with the they're
1:38:33
saying was a glitch. Oh, it's it's a glitch with it with our
1:38:36
insurance companies. Now there's no glitch. They said it would be
1:38:39
here around Halloween. And somehow the I think the
1:38:43
marketing was out of step with with production. And so the
1:38:47
marketing wasn't ramped up enough. There's no demand. They
1:38:49
haven't scared people. There's not enough news reports where
1:38:52
you know, there's too much Trump in the news. So we're not really
1:38:56
getting these COVID. So let's let's let's get hold them over.
1:38:59
Let's go back to the testing with
1:39:01
Unknown: Dr. Darian. Sunday was in for Dr. Ashton all week. It's
1:39:03
good to have you as always great to be here. And we are talking
1:39:06
about a study that shows that at home COVID tests are actually
1:39:08
most effective on the fourth day of symptoms. That's a little bit
1:39:11
of a change in the past practice.
1:39:13
Right. It's the change an important question as we step
1:39:16
into this virus. So
1:39:17
Adam Curry: when When did this happen? The best time to test as
1:39:21
on the fourth day.
1:39:22
John C Dvorak: I liked the way she says it as though everyone
1:39:24
knows it. Of course we know this. Why would that and why?
1:39:29
Obviously people are going to use the thing when they get
1:39:31
symptoms is not going to JayBo know when you get to use another
1:39:34
pack. They want to get rid of these tests are all expired. Oh
1:39:38
yeah.
1:39:38
Adam Curry: Well, that's new too. But the thing is fourth
1:39:41
day, wait until the fourth day with Dr.
1:39:44
Unknown: Darian. Sunday was in for Dr. Ashton all week. It's
1:39:46
good to have you as always great to be here. And we're talking
1:39:48
about a study that shows that at home COVID tests are actually
1:39:51
most effective on the fourth day of symptoms. That's a little bit
1:39:54
of a change from the past practice. It's the change
1:39:57
Adam Curry: in what is what does that guy go move What does he do
1:40:00
in that? Four? Why is the co host going? Like a cow
1:40:04
Unknown: say most effective on the fourth day of symptoms?
1:40:07
That's a little bit of a change for the past bring
1:40:11
that about?
1:40:14
Adam Curry: Because they know it's, it's both? Yeah, exactly.
1:40:18
Unknown: That's a little bit of a change for the past practice.
1:40:20
It's the change an important question as we step into this
1:40:23
viral season. So in this study, they thought with viral
1:40:26
season horror, write that down. That's a good one.
1:40:30
Adam Curry: It used to be flu season, now. It's the viral
1:40:34
season, you just get viral stuff. And
1:40:36
Unknown: as we step into this viral season, so in this study,
1:40:39
they followed over 300 people, and they followed those who are
1:40:42
newly diagnosed with COVID 19. And they track their viral
1:40:45
loads. And they found that the viral load of these patients was
1:40:48
highest on the fourth day of their sickness, and also that
1:40:51
corresponded with the most or the highest accuracy of those at
1:40:54
home rapid antigen tests, they found that they were most
1:40:57
accurate on the fourth day. Now, why does this happen? And why is
1:41:00
this different from before? Why many believe and it's likely
1:41:02
true that the population that we're looking at right now is
1:41:05
very different from when we first started this pandemic, we
1:41:08
have a majority of them who have been vaccinated, or have had a
1:41:11
recent prior to the break up.
1:41:15
John C Dvorak: What does he mean when he says this pandemic as if
1:41:20
it's in play? Oh, it's not a pandemic anymore. But good
1:41:25
catch, good
1:41:26
Adam Curry: catch. It's also different people have had it. So
1:41:29
they have this thing called antibodies, which is now just
1:41:31
accepted. Remember, when that you have no protection? Take a
1:41:36
shot, take a shot without the shot, you have new protection.
1:41:39
But no, there's people who had it. So they know that a little
1:41:41
less susceptible you have kind of the way your immune system is
1:41:44
supposed to work a
1:41:45
Unknown: Now why does this happen? And why is this
1:41:47
different from before? Many, many belief and it's likely true
1:41:50
that many belief
1:41:51
Adam Curry: and it's likely true, this is a great?
1:41:55
John C Dvorak: Many believing is likely true? That's much better
1:41:59
than there's no evidence.
1:42:02
Adam Curry: I think we need to we need to you
1:42:04
John C Dvorak: any believe and it's likely true is fabulous.
1:42:08
Adam Curry: That's a great one. And this is from a doctor, this
1:42:11
is Dr. Sutton, many believe and it's likely true, you're gonna
1:42:14
die. Yes,
1:42:15
Unknown: they found that they were most accurate on the fourth
1:42:17
day. Now, why does this happen? And why is this different from
1:42:19
before? Many, many believe, and it's likely true that the
1:42:22
population that we're looking at right now is very different from
1:42:25
when we first started this pandemic, we have a majority of
1:42:28
women who have been vaccinated, or have had a recent prior
1:42:31
infection of COVID-19. And therefore, that takes time to
1:42:35
build up your viral load because your body is already
1:42:37
understanding, like and fighting it. And so that is one of the
1:42:41
reasons why it probably takes a little bit longer to get that
1:42:43
rapid test accurate.
1:42:45
Adam Curry: Okay, so the test, the test is crap. It's the test
1:42:49
is complete mu crap. That's why I was gonna
1:42:54
John C Dvorak: be arrested in the great in the Great Britain,
1:42:56
if you keep saying stuff like that.
1:42:59
Adam Curry: Well, and now Now, this next bit, comes back to
1:43:03
what you were talking about in California. So
1:43:04
Unknown: what should you do in between that? And if it's not,
1:43:07
you know, accurate into the fourth day? You know, my
1:43:09
recommendation is that if you have symptoms, regardless of
1:43:11
whether it's COVID, the common cold or
1:43:13
Adam Curry: all you want you want to get and want to take a
1:43:15
guess here.
1:43:18
John C Dvorak: Well, you should get a shot. You should probably
1:43:21
Test test test and it doesn't hurt to No, no,
1:43:24
Adam Curry: no, no, no, no, no, this your Hello, the propaganda
1:43:28
is not working on you. Do not take your test until the fourth
1:43:32
day, because it won't show you as positive with these expired
1:43:36
tests. Because the tests now don't work as well, because your
1:43:40
body's fighting it, you see. So even though you feel like crap,
1:43:45
don't test until the fourth day because the test can't determine
1:43:49
if you have COVID until the fourth day when your body's just
1:43:52
given up on you. So what should you do? Come on, you know the
1:43:57
answer.
1:43:59
John C Dvorak: Wash your hands mask up.
1:44:01
Unknown: So what should you do in between that if it's not, you
1:44:03
know, accurate into the fourth day, you know, my recommendation
1:44:06
is that if you have symptoms, regardless of whether it's
1:44:08
COVID, the common cold or the flu, I think you should mask up
1:44:11
and take you decrease the risk of transmitting it to others.
1:44:15
And then if you test initially and it's negative and you're
1:44:17
still symptomatic repeat that test about 48 hours or two days
1:44:20
is that the same if you don't have symptoms, if you come in
1:44:22
contact with someone, I believe that if you come into contact
1:44:25
with someone and you believe that it was a high risk
1:44:27
interaction, you were very close to someone for a long period of
1:44:29
time, then you shouldn't mind your level of risk when you're
1:44:33
transmit or walking around with other people. I wear a mask for
1:44:36
example, if I wasn't sure and then get
1:44:38
Adam Curry: interesting flub when you're trans he was gonna
1:44:40
say you when you're transmitting,
1:44:42
Unknown: basically mind your level of risk when you're
1:44:45
transmit or walking around with other people I've
1:44:47
Adam Curry: already said just gonna say trans Are you
1:44:48
transmitting? I'm transmitting right now, man. You're
1:44:52
transmitting
1:44:53
Unknown: mind your level of risk when you're transmit or walking
1:44:55
around with other people. I wear a mask for example, if I wasn't
1:44:58
sure and then get tested get about three or five days after
1:45:01
that interaction just to make sure you're not gotten to five
1:45:03
days still work they still work and the expiration dates are
1:45:07
changing and so curious before we throw it out check online to
1:45:10
make sure it's not expired
1:45:13
Adam Curry: expiration dates again oh and peep and they're
1:45:19
still people who believe this people messed up everywhere are
1:45:23
messed up I don't because you see
1:45:24
John C Dvorak: mashed up in Frederick's Burg Texas I
1:45:27
Adam Curry: have this Yes, I have seen some people messed up
1:45:30
in the either old people. To a large degree, a lot of old
1:45:35
people
1:45:36
John C Dvorak: breathing their own their own effluent to bring
1:45:39
around their own demise quite rapidly. I'd say that, okay. I
1:45:44
see a lot of old people too, that are wearing masks and
1:45:48
staggering around.
1:45:50
Adam Curry: I did a speech at the Rotary Club. No one was
1:45:52
masked up there. Those old people are are badass. Okay,
1:45:57
we'll
1:45:57
John C Dvorak: say hi to you.
1:45:59
Adam Curry: So, I was this is something that been asked months
1:46:03
and months ago. And I said yeah, sure. You know, I'm looking at
1:46:07
running for mayor I was like, Yeah, Michael get the Rotel
1:46:09
John C Dvorak: Yeah, you definitely have to get the
1:46:11
Rotary Club often
1:46:13
Adam Curry: got to get the Rotarians on my side which was
1:46:17
in the
1:46:17
John C Dvorak: court did have koalas and lions there.
1:46:20
Adam Curry: I I'm going to find out I think I need the Kiwanis
1:46:23
and the lions on my side. Yeah, definitely. So surprisingly, not
1:46:28
everybody was old and decrepid was was one lady. She had a
1:46:33
dynamite face facelift. She looked 50 Each I was I was like
1:46:39
Wow, I almost wanted to say who did that work? Wow. Wasn't that
1:46:45
rude? There were some young people there there were some
1:46:47
young Rotarians good for them. I'd say you know, late 20s,
1:46:51
early 30s and so on and Rotary Club
1:46:55
John C Dvorak: is huge in France. You go to a frat, your
1:46:58
Rotarian you go to France and you meet up with those guys that
1:47:01
put you up?
1:47:02
Adam Curry: My My grandfather was a lifelong Rotarian in an
1:47:06
Armani er right must have been MRI Westchester,
1:47:09
John C Dvorak: that's where all the spokes are Rotarians,
1:47:11
Adam Curry: of course, is a great group to be a part of.
1:47:14
Yeah, you'd want to be one there. And, and it was
1:47:17
interesting, because twice I when I spoke with the city
1:47:20
council meeting, and at the road at the rotary meeting, it was
1:47:25
the second time in less than a month that I was part of a
1:47:31
prayer and the pledge of allegiance. I don't think I've
1:47:34
been a part of that with the Pledge of Allegiance for 50
1:47:37
years. Wow, people don't do that anymore. Well, they do there.
1:47:41
Yeah. And then they had their rotary thing. They also have
1:47:45
like, a pleasure. The rotary Yeah, they have for four things,
1:47:49
you know, but it is it good for humanity. And I forget what it
1:47:52
was, but they had little like a boy scout chant. Anyway, my
1:47:55
point was that I was trying to kind of connect with these
1:47:58
people. They want me to talk about podcasting. Imagine this
1:48:00
assignment, talk to talk to the Rotary Club about podcasting.
1:48:06
John C Dvorak: So I was, would be it. That's it sounds like a
1:48:09
challenge. Yes. Well,
1:48:11
Adam Curry: here's how I did it. I talked about a B as a boy
1:48:15
transistor radio, my love for radio. And then I said, Well,
1:48:17
you're stalling. No, no, I was leading into anybody. Anybody
1:48:22
remember CB radios? All hands went up? Because that 70s Yeah.
1:48:28
Oh, everybody had a CB radio and then you wait for it. But I
1:48:31
said, you know, that reach wasn't so far. And it was good,
1:48:35
though. Because you could talk to citizens nearby but really
1:48:37
was for traffic information and just yapping about upsetting.
1:48:43
But then I became a ham radio operator. Anybody a ham? Well,
1:48:48
five hands.
1:48:51
John C Dvorak: They all have more than none good. No, but
1:48:53
Adam Curry: that's more than I've seen in a long time. And
1:48:55
then after the after my speech like hey, you you should come to
1:48:58
the to our
1:48:59
John C Dvorak: Amido Yeah, that was a mistake.
1:49:01
Adam Curry: Thursday morning. 730 at the diner
1:49:05
John C Dvorak: 730.
1:49:07
Adam Curry: I'm gonna go like we'll help you get your antenna.
1:49:10
We'll get your gear going. I love these guys. Anyway, so yes.
1:49:17
I'm still working on my B so lions and what was the other one
1:49:20
I need to hit?
1:49:21
John C Dvorak: coladas coladas. Kiwanis one 1x one is what do
1:49:26
they want to colonic Juana?
1:49:27
Adam Curry: What do they do?
1:49:28
John C Dvorak: There's also the optimists.
1:49:31
Adam Curry: I do we do have a Masonic lodge here.
1:49:35
John C Dvorak: Oh yeah, well, you definitely want to talk to
1:49:36
them.
1:49:38
Adam Curry: And with that, I'd like to thank you for your
1:49:40
currency in the morning to you the man who put the sea in the
1:49:42
cow crap ladies gentlemen say hello to my friend on the other
1:49:44
end one and only Mr. John C.
1:49:49
John C Dvorak: Nail in the morning you have a shadow
1:49:51
cranium warship ski but you're granted CSS what seems nice out
1:49:54
there
1:49:54
Adam Curry: and in the morning to the trolls on the troll room,
1:49:56
hands 1977 Is that good?
1:50:05
John C Dvorak: Yeah, it's up 100
1:50:07
Adam Curry: There you go. Then they hung with us. We're like a
1:50:10
buck 50 into this good work trolls. Good to have you here.
1:50:13
You can join them at troll room.io yesterday. What hour and
1:50:17
50 minutes what the but I'm doing like broadcast talk.
1:50:22
John C Dvorak: Is it just like sports? Guys sports ball sports
1:50:25
talk radio?
1:50:27
Adam Curry: What? Give me an example of sports talk radio.
1:50:30
John C Dvorak: Yeah, the guy came in at a buck 50. So light
1:50:34
is light is a buck 50 Is life
1:50:36
Adam Curry: isn't Buck 50? Well, we're heavy. We're late. It's a
1:50:39
buck 50. But, yes, troll room.io is where you can hang out with
1:50:44
all the trolls. You could also use a modern podcast app at
1:50:47
podcast apps.com The one that will alert you now actually
1:50:51
podcast guru, people are loving podcast guru now. And then you
1:50:54
can use this. Because it alerts you can very quickly like third
1:50:59
within 30 seconds of the bat signal going out. And it's just
1:51:03
the way it functions. You know, people pop around all these apps
1:51:06
are compatible. So I use several different ones for different
1:51:09
reasons. But yeah, people like the podcast grew. I like pod
1:51:14
verse. But a lot of people then because
1:51:16
John C Dvorak: gears favorite is pod verse you've been plugging
1:51:18
it?
1:51:18
Adam Curry: Yeah, because it has great notifications. And it's,
1:51:21
it's not overly complicated. I like it. I like it, why not all
1:51:24
your old podcast work in it. And as a part of podcasting 2.0. So
1:51:28
in the UK, Europe, EU, you better get on board with that.
1:51:33
Because everything else is going to be shut down. Apple's not
1:51:35
going to be able to do it, they're going to block they will
1:51:37
block probably our, our, our networks, our URLs, whatever,
1:51:44
we're gonna have to go to Tor and IPFS they'll never be able
1:51:49
to stop us. But man, it's getting bad. And hoping to hope
1:51:52
they'll end to Canada, Canada. They're gonna be on board with
1:51:56
this
1:51:56
John C Dvorak: stuff, Canada's out of control.
1:52:00
Adam Curry: You can also follow us at no agenda social.com or
1:52:03
Mastodon, our little spot on the fediverse, which is just a small
1:52:07
little outpost, we have 10,000 users from time to time we heard
1:52:11
about game host a very bad outpost, you can follow Jhansi
1:52:15
Dvorak at no agenda social.com Adam and Noah and the social.com
1:52:19
and probably best to just get your own little little Mastodon
1:52:22
and follow us so no one else can stop you. It's pretty easy to
1:52:25
set those up yourself now five bucks a month. And just don't
1:52:29
name it anything like, Hey, this is Joe's no agenda instance
1:52:33
because you'll get blocked immediately blocked you don't
1:52:37
want that at all. To value for value is the way that we have
1:52:43
survived and it'll be 1600 shows 16 years this month, which is
1:52:49
quite amazing. And we have never taken corporate money. We have
1:52:54
never run as we've noted a native ads or any kind of
1:52:57
endorsements except for stuff we really believe in. But it's
1:52:59
never been paid for. But happy to do that. And we asked you to
1:53:03
contribute this bout the value that you receive. When you get
1:53:06
that like you'd listen to the show. You learn about what's
1:53:09
going on with California law and doctors. You learn about the
1:53:13
migration replacement, you are much smarter for it you can be
1:53:16
at the watercooler saying oh yeah. Oh yeah. Have you heard
1:53:19
this Pope woman who's spending your money on these people now
1:53:23
sleeping in your parks? State Department. You can look smart.
1:53:27
You probably get dates. I think it's a good way to get dates in
1:53:32
the office.
1:53:34
John C Dvorak: I questioned that. But as you maybe
1:53:38
Adam Curry: well if you got a date it'll be it'll be the right
1:53:42
person.
1:53:43
John C Dvorak: Well, that's true. That's probably the way to
1:53:45
look at what could be some girl that's off the deep end.
1:53:48
Adam Curry: Well could be a guy I mean, we have women listening
1:53:51
to now we only
1:53:52
John C Dvorak: talk about guys no girls talk about guy stuff.
1:53:56
Screw guises to the office.
1:53:58
Adam Curry: So all we ask for in return is time talent or
1:54:01
treasure. Now when we say this I want to make it very clear the
1:54:06
time and talent that you're sending back and the treasure is
1:54:09
not for it's not for us. It's for your no agenda brothers and
1:54:12
sisters. It keeps this thing running. Yeah, it keeps
1:54:16
everything in operation. It keeps the I mean the time and
1:54:20
talent that we have from people and keeping servers running
1:54:23
Hello void zero Hello, sir. bemrose the time and Tally
1:54:27
Darren O'Neill you know getting warmed up. Imagine which I
1:54:32
can't. do you afford a warm up guy? We can't afford a warm up
1:54:35
guy at all. Not a good one who does it for two hours. This is
1:54:40
great.
1:54:41
John C Dvorak: He's a good warm up guy.
1:54:43
Adam Curry: He's a great warm up guy. He's
1:54:44
John C Dvorak: got the energy level the whole thing? Yeah, the
1:54:46
only we're missing is his arms being thrown up in the air
1:54:49
constantly.
1:54:52
Adam Curry: We have no agenda stream 24 hours a day. The troll
1:54:57
room. All of these things are time and talent done by people
1:55:01
who we don't have to employ or look after or police or do it or
1:55:05
have meetings with this is dynamite. But it's really for
1:55:09
your no agenda brothers and sisters who keep this all
1:55:12
running. Just want to make that very, very clear. Let's do so
1:55:16
appreciate. So appreciate what what everybody does. Now another
1:55:22
way is we have our artists this is interesting I have somehow
1:55:28
not update the didn't update the show numbers on no agenda notes.
1:55:38
Column is interesting. Why did that not work? Here we go. What?
1:55:45
Well, I'm trying to I'm trying to get to our show notes from
1:55:48
the previous show. And for some reason it didn't update Okay,
1:55:56
let me go to no agenda. No agenda notes stuck calm. Because
1:56:01
otherwise I don't even know who actually won the artwork.
1:56:05
John C Dvorak: He knew he talked about him already in the show.
1:56:07
Nick Darat.
1:56:08
Adam Curry: Oh, that's right. Well, I'm a busy guy. Okay, hold
1:56:12
on. Just I just need to get the show up all the show notes up
1:56:16
Okay, here we go. It was titled been police 19 Plus, right 1995
1:56:21
I got it. 1995 title of it was Ben police which was okay,
1:56:26
wasn't it? I don't think I think we both agreed it was kind of
1:56:28
like it wasn't okay title. We had we didn't really have
1:56:32
anything else that worked for us, per se. But the artwork was
1:56:36
indeed done by Nick the rat. And right away I had no agenda
1:56:40
social that's our little outpost. Comic Strip blogger was
1:56:44
gleefully posting. It is a Nick, Nick admitted is AI this AI
1:56:53
Well, you know what, Nick is better at AI than you are then
1:56:55
Mr. Ai. Because it works. Although we both thought the
1:57:02
composition was off, wouldn't you say that? That was our we
1:57:05
did have that complaint.
1:57:07
John C Dvorak: But it didn't have that complaint?
1:57:09
Adam Curry: We said something that we didn't there was
1:57:11
something not right about it. It was It wasn't up to Nick
1:57:14
standard or
1:57:15
John C Dvorak: no, you might come it was at you. I'm
1:57:18
surprised you haven't said it was Tuesday. Oh,
1:57:21
Adam Curry: well the no agenda NGO was not too small. No, but
1:57:24
John C Dvorak: the quarry divert Dvorak blur but the bottom was
1:57:29
too small.
1:57:30
Adam Curry: Anyway, we'd love having nick the rat back and he
1:57:33
hasn't submitted art for how long? Eight years? How long has
1:57:36
it been since he submitted all he at
1:57:37
John C Dvorak: one point? If you look at the ratings, he's
1:57:40
deleting guide for a couple of years. Yeah. And then he gave up
1:57:43
he was on a roll. He was he was like, Martin JJ, all of a sudden
1:57:47
they just kicked ass and they quit.
1:57:49
Adam Curry: There's another guy I'd like to see. Come back on
1:57:51
JJ. Anyway, we had other submissions. Let's see you
1:57:58
actually like to podcast Killed the Radio Star. I think if I
1:58:01
recall properly, no, no, you said the guy with the radio on
1:58:04
his head. You liked that one. You didn't say?
1:58:06
John C Dvorak: I said I just noticed it. I didn't think it
1:58:08
was good. I thought that the thing we had to talk about was
1:58:11
below the NIC the red piece, which was haha, whoa, whoa,
1:58:15
NGOs. Got to go.
1:58:16
Adam Curry: Yeah. Little little, little notes of a programming
1:58:19
note about these types of slogans people go, John.
1:58:23
John C Dvorak: It's Hey, hey, oh, whoa, not Hi. Hi. Hey, hey,
1:58:29
ho ho. NGOs have got to go. It's always Hey, hey, ho ho never ha
1:58:35
ha Whoa, who did that? That was like a fail? Who did this? And
1:58:39
then the other one was a bunch of people anticipated our
1:58:42
discussion of Bowman's pooling the big mistake. Yeah, you
1:58:47
anticipated a story that is was lame. I mean, it wasn't
1:58:50
something we wanted to talk about. I mean, yeah, he's the
1:58:53
same guy who says that no one's above the law. And then he broke
1:58:56
the law by pulling the fire alarm in Congress to slow down
1:59:00
the process and got caught on camera because he's an idiot.
1:59:05
And he's a former school principals. So he knows what a
1:59:08
fire alarm is. He thought it was Oh, I thought it would open the
1:59:10
door. Why it guys lying creep. There's a lot and no, we but we
1:59:17
never discussed it because it wasn't what I just said is the
1:59:20
whole story.
1:59:21
Adam Curry: Well, here's here's here's what concerns me. Is this
1:59:27
what people want us to talk about?
1:59:29
John C Dvorak: was? Well, I would suspect that both let's
1:59:33
see correct. The record. And Parker Paulie wanted us to talk
1:59:38
about it, or those are the two who did that?
1:59:42
Adam Curry: Or is this more reflective of the drivel that
1:59:44
people are subjected to in between our shows?
1:59:47
John C Dvorak: I think it's the drivel it's like oh, all you
1:59:51
hear about oh,
1:59:52
Adam Curry: everywhere. I mean, you should know something this
1:59:54
unimportant. That means like, it's almost borderline Taylor
1:59:59
Swift level. This is swift. And this is this is him and all it
2:00:04
did is just stopped the play. It just stopped the performance.
2:00:08
You all know that by now you know what's going on. It's just
2:00:11
here. We're we're $2 into the show, but two bucks in we
2:00:16
haven't talked about Kevin McCarthy or haven't used the
2:00:19
word speaker outside of the FEMA test once.
2:00:25
John C Dvorak: Yeah. Cheesy speakers people have
2:00:30
Adam Curry: because it's all a little show for your enjoyment
2:00:33
to spin your wheels. This is why you're here. This is why you
2:00:37
come to the no agenda show. This is the beauty of it.
2:00:40
John C Dvorak: But do we even have any clips on the McCarthy?
2:00:43
I have some thoughts on it, but I don't have any.
2:00:45
Adam Curry: If you want to do a donation donation segment clip I
2:00:48
have one clip on their speaker. Yeah, I do. I have one clip.
2:00:52
Let's see if I have one. It's a Yeah, one clip. Do you want this
2:00:59
clear at play? Oh, here we go. The yeas are 216. The gays are
2:01:04
two six. Did he just say that the gays sounded like it the
2:01:07
yeas
2:01:08
Unknown: are 216. Yeah, you said Please, are 210
2:01:13
This morning, the capital and chaos after that historic about
2:01:15
Adam Curry: this chaos. This is where like It's historic. This
2:01:18
has never happened before in our lifetime. Think about that.
2:01:22
Think about that soak in it for a moment. This is historic.
2:01:26
Never before in America. These are crazy times. So
2:01:29
Unknown: in the house, the Office of Speaker of the House
2:01:33
of the United States House of Representatives is hereby
2:01:37
declared vacant. So this
2:01:38
Adam Curry: is ABC. Where do you think they're going to take this
2:01:40
at the end of this report?
2:01:43
John C Dvorak: Climate change
2:01:45
Adam Curry: close enough.
2:01:46
Unknown: Eight Republicans led by far right Florida Congressman
2:01:49
Matt Gaetz and joined by all Democrats voted to remove Kevin
2:01:53
McCarthy is speaker a humiliating defeat. McCarthy
2:01:56
served only nine months the second shortest tenure of any
2:01:59
speaker in US history. His term bookended by Republican
2:02:03
infighting, it took 15 vote for him to become speaker back in
2:02:06
January, forcing him to make concessions to far right
2:02:09
members, including a rule change that would allow a single
2:02:13
lawmaker to call for a vote to remove him. That concession
2:02:16
proved to be McCarthy's downfall.
2:02:18
He has failed to take a stand where it matters. So if he
2:02:22
won't, I will
2:02:24
Congressman Matt Gaetz targeted McCarthy for working with
2:02:27
Democrats last weekend to pass a bill to keep the government
2:02:30
funded until November. You can say
2:02:32
the seeds of this were planted by all of the deals he cut back
2:02:35
in January. You could also say the seeds of this were planted
2:02:37
by the rise of the Maga movement inside the Republican Party over
2:02:40
the years. Even though Donald Trump was on the outside of this
2:02:44
this deal. His fingerprints are all over it. In a
2:02:47
news conference last night McCarthy said he has no regrets
2:02:50
but said he won't run for speaker again
2:02:52
for government is designed to find compromise. I don't regret
2:02:57
my efforts to build coalitions and find solutions. I was raised
2:03:02
to solve problems, not create them. But
2:03:04
of course, he seemed to move to outstream was about more than
2:03:06
politics.
2:03:08
You all know Matt gates, you know, it was personal. It had
2:03:12
nothing to do about spending. It all was about getting attention
2:03:16
from you. I mean, we're getting email fundraisers from him as
2:03:21
he's doing it. Join in quickly. That's not governing.
2:03:26
pointed the finger at Democrats claiming former Speaker Nancy
2:03:29
Pelosi assured him that Democrats would have his back if
2:03:33
Republicans tried to oust him. In the end, Democrats grew
2:03:36
furious with McCarthy, citing what they describe as broken
2:03:39
promises, along with his TV appearance this past Sunday,
2:03:43
where he appeared to blame Democrats for wanting a
2:03:45
government shutdown.
2:03:47
Adam Curry: It's all about Trump, Trump. Talk about Trump.
2:03:52
Oh, for Trump, everything's about Trump. Just Trump, Trump,
2:03:55
Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump. That's all
2:03:58
that it's about.
2:04:00
John C Dvorak: Well, I have a clip but
2:04:04
Adam Curry: let's thank our
2:04:06
John C Dvorak: the whole thing, by the way was was staged, of
2:04:09
course
2:04:10
Adam Curry: brought really what they're ambling there's acting
2:04:14
going on here, please, we kick it off. Our executive and
2:04:19
Associate Executive Producers these are people just like
2:04:21
Hollywood receive credits for supporting the best podcast in
2:04:25
the universe. Number One On The List with 2209 He does it every
2:04:30
single month within a number that is code. We don't
2:04:34
understand it. It's someone does somewhere no doubt synonymous of
2:04:38
Dogpatch and Lois LeBeau via always helping us a bridge
2:04:41
John C Dvorak: just got blowed up.
2:04:43
Adam Curry: He says thank you. All producers that continue to
2:04:48
make this a useful source of information. Lately, my boots on
2:04:53
the ground experience has resulted in very muddy boots,
2:04:58
and not from climate. issues. Now, if that's a code,
2:05:04
John C Dvorak: that's code for something, you know what I think
2:05:05
it is? He was at Burning Man
2:05:16
Adam Curry: but that was claimed to be climate change. So I know
2:05:20
he doesn't believe in it, but my boots on the ground experience
2:05:26
has resulted in very muddy boots. I mean, that's clearly
2:05:29
code for someone
2:05:31
John C Dvorak: who's somewhere and I think they get the playa.
2:05:36
Adam Curry: I love it. It's as good as anything else. I'll take
2:05:39
number two while we're out at Walker Phillips is in San
2:05:41
Rafael, California $1,000 And this is a switcheroo donation to
2:05:46
ensure that my smokin hot wife Kara Caravelle Cara Caravelle
2:05:54
celebrates her birthday this Friday, October 6 as a day of
2:05:58
the no agenda roundtable I would like to humbly request that you
2:06:02
reserve her Daming ceremony for a future show, as this is a
2:06:07
surprise birthday gift. And I would like her. This is nice.
2:06:10
What a sweet husband. I would like her to choose her own food
2:06:15
and drink for the ceremony. Smart man. I'll have her send a
2:06:18
note with her request. Please give her was that.
2:06:22
John C Dvorak: But we didn't get anything.
2:06:23
Adam Curry: No. That's why she's not being named. Until she's
2:06:27
ready. It's Happy birthday. Happy birthday, Cara. Please
2:06:31
give her a biscuit on her birthday and add it to the
2:06:33
birthday list. Thanks for everything. We love listening to
2:06:35
the show together every week. Cheers, Walker and Carol.
2:06:39
Unknown: They always give me a biscuit on my birthday.
2:06:41
Adam Curry: What a beautiful,
2:06:42
John C Dvorak: contradictory note. He said specifically, he
2:06:48
wanted her to celebrate her birthday on Friday which is
2:06:51
tomorrow as the dame of the no agenda roundtable. But yet she's
2:06:55
not on the list because she didn't send in her requests. I
2:07:00
find this to be distressing.
2:07:03
Adam Curry: It's like giving her the picture of the earrings
2:07:05
before you before she gets some. A lot of people do that. Well,
2:07:08
this is the same thing. Congratulations not
2:07:10
John C Dvorak: not even close because she will be given a
2:07:13
birthday shout out. Why are you ruining her birthday? I'm not
2:07:16
ruining it. I'm just saying she maybe should be named? No.
2:07:21
Adam Curry: He specifically says no. I'm not gonna I'm not taking
2:07:26
that risk
2:07:27
John C Dvorak: as why you read it. Okay, then you it's your
2:07:29
responsibility now. Okay, I'll go on was anonymous in
2:07:33
Cambridge, Massachusetts. Actually, I should mention
2:07:37
another donation that came in which I guess will be credited
2:07:40
on the next show, which she sent a note in. I just want to
2:07:46
mention this because it turns out that she did a Fibonacci
2:07:52
Adam Curry: now that's for next show. We got specific
2:07:54
instructional but I got it. No, no, ignore that.
2:07:57
John C Dvorak: No, no. Because people need to know in advance.
2:08:03
Adam Curry: Oh, okay. It's a beautiful it's, it was mind
2:08:07
blowing. I saw it. I have it here. It's mind blowing. We
2:08:10
should almost put it in the show notes. It's so mind blowing.
2:08:13
John C Dvorak: I'm gonna put it in the next newsletter. Okay. It
2:08:16
shows that the February 5 sibor favorite the Fibonacci sequence
2:08:21
has created the golden whatever it's called. It's just
2:08:25
unbelievable what's happening and show 1597 In terms of
2:08:29
Fibonacci numbers.
2:08:33
Adam Curry: 5097 is the top of the Fibonacci curve.
2:08:37
John C Dvorak: Yeah, it is. It creates the that crazy looking
2:08:41
circle and the golden whatever it's called ratio.
2:08:46
Adam Curry: Yes. The Golden Golden Ratio. It's
2:08:47
John C Dvorak: all there. Yeah. Next show on Sunday. 1597. It's
2:08:53
mind boggling when you see it. So you have to donate for 5097
2:08:57
because it'll be the luckiest show ever. It'll be in the
2:08:59
newsletter, the picture that she drew of the of the sequence, the
2:09:04
Fibonacci sequence 1597. So yes, it has to be discussed. It would
2:09:11
we'll put her her she'll be listed in next show as the
2:09:13
secretary producer. Meanwhile, we got anonymous in Cambridge,
2:09:16
Massachusetts. 334 He wants Space Force and some baby making
2:09:22
F 35 guys scream karma. Dear John and Adam I wife couldn't
2:09:26
stand being married to a peasant. So I'm finishing out my
2:09:29
knighthood with this donation. Isn't I like to be known as Sir
2:09:34
Leo the low Earth orbit. And can I get a Dookie Dookie duck
2:09:39
Cookie? Cookie Dough cookie dough and grape soda at the
2:09:43
round table? That's That's disgusting. Cookie dough and
2:09:47
grapes. Yes, it is disgusting. Can I also get a birthday shout
2:09:50
out for the seventh. I don't know if he's on the birthday was
2:09:54
Adam Curry: anonymous is on the birthday list. Absolutely. Keep
2:09:56
doing what you're doing.
2:09:58
John C Dvorak: SpaceForce
2:10:01
Adam Curry: You've got karma us we got Jonathan young State
2:10:10
College Pennsylvania 333 dot 33. I have no note from Jonathan, do
2:10:14
you have a note from Jonathan?
2:10:15
John C Dvorak: No I guys,
2:10:16
Adam Curry: double up karma for Jonathan Scott. Karma
2:10:23
John C Dvorak: Zachary Nelson and Sneads Ferry Sneads Ferry
2:10:28
California. Assuming you stub a ferry in the morning fellas, I
2:10:32
found the best podcast in the universe at peak COVID SIOP and
2:10:35
told myself if we're all still around when I turned 33 ld
2:10:38
douche myself. Then it thinks he wants to de douching that we
2:10:44
got. You've been de deuced and here we are. My birthday was
2:10:49
yesterday. 10 four good buddy. So I thought it appropriate to
2:10:53
donate 33333 I survived the mean the Marine Corps COVID Shot
2:10:57
critical thinker witch hunt, but it's still ultimately can my
2:11:02
career. So naturally I'm excited executing phase one of my exit
2:11:07
strategy as we speak part of Phase one is starting an Etsy
2:11:10
shop is phase one always in SC shop with my wife making
2:11:15
educational and seasonal crafts for children, reinforcing
2:11:19
project based learning as a homeschooling mother of two of
2:11:23
mother to human resources with a master's of education and
2:11:26
literacy. My wife assures me this will make sense to other
2:11:30
homeschooling mothers. The October projects were just
2:11:34
listed so if you have little ones at home please check the
2:11:37
snowy owl snowy owl creative creative out at HP you know WWE
2:11:45
snowy owl creative.etsy.com Snowy Owl all the creative use
2:11:50
code ITM 10 for 10% off jingles can I get please get the f 35
2:11:56
guys scream goat scream? one two punch. I can't think thank you
2:12:02
enough for what you guys do. Please have a lovely day signs
2:12:05
Zack.
2:12:06
Adam Curry: Okay, yeah, we can just show you once the F 35 I
2:12:09
think the goat scream should be first
2:12:17
this makes me laugh every time. So 1% is in Dixie Washington
2:12:23
333 33 And he wants Oh, he wants I love bugs and another F 35
2:12:28
Screaming This is very popular. And it goats scream karma. Okay,
2:12:32
as you're reading this note, I'll be flying to the US guys.
2:12:34
I'm away to a friend's wedding in Nags Head North Carolina on
2:12:37
Saturday. Coincidentally, the wedding is on my birthday. So
2:12:39
please put me on the birthday list for this 48 Spin around the
2:12:41
sun. I'm embarking on did you write this with chat GBT? From
2:12:45
my seat in the first class cabin. I plan to keep an eye out
2:12:50
for French bedbugs and any unattended F 35 speeding past
2:12:54
I'll post pictures and no agenda social. If I spot any. I
2:12:57
promised that I would get back to you with more details on
2:13:00
Liberland is the topic of my previous executive producer.
2:13:02
Nope. I will be doing so soon. But at present most of my energy
2:13:05
is going into my pest control business. It's a very busy time
2:13:10
of year for xe pest control LLC. So if you're listening from the
2:13:14
Walla Walla Valley, please do not call me for pest control
2:13:17
help. It's an anti spot I love it. I may be forced to write off
2:13:24
this donation on my taxes and advertising expense if anyone
2:13:27
does and says something like ITM where will the federal grant
2:13:32
money come from the study for the study of the
2:13:34
intersectionality of transgendered amoebas in
2:13:37
intermittent puddles in Africa Think of the children faithfully
2:13:40
suppressing your exit strategy 1% at a time, so 1% barren of
2:13:45
Liberland
2:14:00
John C Dvorak: you've got karma scomi. He's up. He's in
2:14:06
Charlotte, North Carolina. Thank you both for the value
2:14:10
especially the insight on Russia slash Ukraine trans Maoism.
2:14:14
COVID in Africa. This donation brings me to Duke he's the guy
2:14:18
he's the on ramp dude.
2:14:20
Adam Curry: He's the only guy that cares about these topics.
2:14:23
Africa you're
2:14:23
John C Dvorak: number you're the guy. You're the guy. Whether you
2:14:28
especially Africa, the round table please order up to drink
2:14:32
of choice for every troll and the troll room. That would be
2:14:35
Pabst Blue Ribbon. There
2:14:37
Unknown: you go.
2:14:37
John C Dvorak: Bottom up trolls love his lead sir schoo via this
2:14:41
Piedmont
2:14:44
Adam Curry: sir Maga, Odessa, Florida 333 Sir Maga here I saw
2:14:47
10 three dot 33 gallon, gallons dollars a gallon signs in
2:14:52
Florida this weekend. He knew it was time to donate. That's
2:14:54
right. You see that number? I was hitting them out by Julian
2:14:58
of Boston two years ago have not missed To show sense, please
2:15:01
give me a little rev owl. I'm gonna give you a little Rev.
2:15:05
I'll give you a little respect brother
2:15:11
Unknown: ESP ICT
2:15:15
John C Dvorak: so we got a note from the anonymous lesbian. Yes.
2:15:21
She says she's not overboard. He was she wasn't with me for that
2:15:24
she might bury
2:15:25
Adam Curry: mad. She copied me on it to make sure I knew
2:15:29
John C Dvorak: she was irked. And she says she's broke because
2:15:32
you know, she's a classical musician. And I'm guessing
2:15:35
you're bringing Venezuelan classical musicians up so they
2:15:39
can even lower the salaries even more. She's got an IV what's
2:15:43
going on? Let's
2:15:43
Adam Curry: have a new album dropping and I said send him. I
2:15:46
want to I told her to pick it up. Guy. I'm excited. I told her
2:15:50
Hey, I can get you value for value. We can we can make some
2:15:54
real money with that thing.
2:15:56
John C Dvorak: Kevin McLaughlin is up next of course. He is the
2:16:00
Duke of Luna I Archduke Alou and a lover of American homes in
2:16:04
North Carolina 333 Not his regular spot. I so he's up there
2:16:08
to get some other he says please squeeze in the knee the melon
2:16:13
mix to the end of the show mix on I think there's a million mix
2:16:15
coming up at the show.
2:16:17
Adam Curry: Got it in there brother of course. Sir Don
2:16:19
Francis, Chandler, Arizona row ducks to 2222 our first
2:16:24
Associate Executive Producer for episode 1596 In the morning
2:16:28
gents, no jingles but health karma please for my smokin hot
2:16:31
wife Dame Stephanie. My dad George and my best friend Bobby
2:16:34
The C love is lit Sir Don Francis of Chandler you got it
2:16:38
Sir Don you've got karma.
2:16:43
John C Dvorak: Nicholas crea Hill in Stanhope New Jersey to
2:16:49
to to ITM no agenda nation switcheroo this donation a tu tu
2:16:53
tu is to be credited did toward Bork the dogs knighthood. That's
2:16:59
more the dog sure to be the first ever fleece and for a
2:17:03
puppet to be served at the round table. Bork is the co star of
2:17:07
the arbor buddies YouTube channel and live performance
2:17:10
show contact Arbor buddies live at Gmail for booking information
2:17:15
on the in NJ area we're
2:17:17
Adam Curry: doing bought dog bookings now,
2:17:20
John C Dvorak: I guess. Can we please have an F cancer karma
2:17:22
for Adam crooning juror of the puppet nerd podcast Adam is a
2:17:28
pillar in the puppet making community and is currently
2:17:31
undergoing yet another round of chemo for brain cancer. We'll do
2:17:34
that. Thank you for everything you guys do for our amygdala cuz
2:17:38
you got
2:17:38
Adam Curry: it and here comes you've got karma I'm gonna do
2:17:49
the Connecticut meetup. So you can do it you
2:17:51
John C Dvorak: Linda LAPACK and Linda Lupe she's in you know
2:17:54
where she is. She's in Lakewood, Colorado. I've heard Yeah. And
2:17:58
she wants some jobs Carmen for a resume that gets results. She
2:18:01
says Go to Image makers inc.com For all your executive resume
2:18:05
and job search needs. I like to think that she's got a promotion
2:18:08
here but it's short. That's image makers Inc with a k.com
2:18:13
which is finally Linda LAPACK and under the show's producers,
2:18:16
lists jobs,
2:18:17
Unknown: jobs, jobs and jobs Let's vote for jobs.
2:18:25
Adam Curry: And then we have a wonderful photo that were sent
2:18:27
to us from the Connecticut meet up in hygge hygge Hagen them the
2:18:34
to the town, Adam, whose name you can't pronounce we forgive
2:18:37
you. It's not Hagar Hagar hidden. And so there's a
2:18:40
picture. Did you see this picture?
2:18:43
John C Dvorak: This is I did
2:18:45
Adam Curry: this is this is I wish that would put this should
2:18:47
put this online. Because this is a picture of an origin. I mean,
2:18:51
I'm gonna count 1-234-567-8910 like 15 people. We've got a
2:18:56
black guy, we got a cowboy. We got a nerd. We got an old guy.
2:19:01
We got a smokin hot blonde we got we got to, like spook in the
2:19:05
background with a hat and the Boosie, you spoke. I mean, this
2:19:09
is the perfect no agenda meet up crowd. I love it. Great meet up
2:19:15
at the truck bar. That could not have been a better way to spend
2:19:18
a rainy Saturday afternoon than hanging out with no agenda fans
2:19:20
it's $200 By the way, the drinks food and conversation were all
2:19:24
great what a what a bunch of cool and down to earth people
2:19:27
attach the picture most of us who came to the meetups, please
2:19:29
accept the enclosed check with a donation amount of $200. The
2:19:32
money's from all those who attended the Connecticut meetup.
2:19:34
Also shout out to Tito till for hitting me in the mouth several
2:19:37
months ago. That's beach girl and says Have a great day Adam
2:19:40
and John, thank you for all that you do. Thank you. Thank you
2:19:42
very much. We love these meetups, not just when you when
2:19:46
you send value to the show, but we know that you have connection
2:19:49
amongst each other and that always brings you special
2:19:51
protection. We'll be doing more of our meetups in a moment. As
2:19:54
we do have a couple of couple of items on the on the list
2:19:58
including a night Getting our two. We also have some birthdays
2:20:03
and until then John's gonna take us. I think there's a make good
2:20:06
on there and in there. That's a let me see. Yeah, there is I
2:20:09
believe it's a night note, actually, but I'll read it right
2:20:11
now. Oh no, this is a miss birthday donation. Thank you for
2:20:14
reminding me. This is from Daniel Magee in Mount Juliet,
2:20:19
Tennessee. I'm writing to you because I don't recall getting
2:20:22
credit for $59 donation rate method right after Adam's 59th
2:20:27
birthday. I believe this may have been because I didn't
2:20:30
include my info on the note or there were some issues that
2:20:32
donations for that show. I'd like a make right. We call to
2:20:36
make do if you'd be so kind and a deducing thank you from Daniel
2:20:39
Daniel McGee in Mount Juliet, Tennessee. Thank you very much,
2:20:42
Daniel. I appreciate
2:20:45
John C Dvorak: dee doo. Let's look at the rest of our people
2:20:50
here and starting with Sir Knight of the East Side, and
2:20:52
Maplewood, Minnesota came in with 198 90. And I want to
2:20:57
mention this because I'm going to put this out there because of
2:21:00
the Taylor Swift I mentioned earlier. He says this is a
2:21:04
Taylor Swift donation because 1989 was the year she was born.
2:21:10
Wow, thanks for that info. So now anyone who wants to get you
2:21:15
know do that I want to see if there's anyone besides sir
2:21:18
night, sir. hugger have kittens and Zan Damn 12345 F cancer
2:21:26
cancer Neil friend
2:21:27
Adam Curry: we break for F cancer you've got karma is Vika
2:21:36
John C Dvorak: Baron lattic. In Houston, Texas honored always
2:21:38
John Robin $800 Kristen Wiggins in Dover, Florida. $100. Kevin
2:21:42
McLaughlin is back with 808. The boobs is the Archduke of loon.
2:21:48
He's going to be at Duke pretty soon the way he's going with
2:21:50
these donations. Not missing a show. Eric Adler and Punta
2:21:55
Gorda, Florida 808 Pete chanson Oviedo, there's a way I
2:22:02
pronounced that I'm not sure why I know. The Florida 808 y n
2:22:10
Kartini in Torrington, Connecticut 7421 Melissa Reeve
2:22:15
in Winchester, Virginia. 70 Kenny Hall stead in Elizabeth
2:22:19
City, North Carolina 6951 break I
2:22:22
Adam Curry: think people are Sean's had a weird way of saying
2:22:24
it but I think he wanted a D douching. So I'm gonna give it
2:22:27
to you Ben de deuced.
2:22:31
John C Dvorak: That was a weird way of saying it. David German
2:22:34
in North Tora Bora New South Wales, Australia. 63. Kevin
2:22:43
McLaughlin is back from Concord North Carolina with 606 to small
2:22:47
boobs donation of his keeping me up a double pace here. He's
2:22:50
running like a madman Pay Pal. I don't know 5789. Maybe it's a
2:22:55
refund. Pete better Ichi in Bothell, Washington. 5555 will
2:23:02
give you some jobs in the Oasis jobs and interview karma work oh
2:23:06
yeah, baby. Scott Mingo in Exton, Pennsylvania. 5555 Brian
2:23:11
Furley 5510 Sir g k 5510 Sir Tom Dari and DeForest, Wisconsin
2:23:19
5510 Troy funderburk 55 Michael gates 52 at Eric poco our buddy
2:23:27
in Melrose Deutschland 52 For what for was l do brother okay
2:23:36
for was l do I age IG IG IG I like to not as pronounced Diwan.
2:23:43
Adam Curry: I think it's wise owl Diaz and he's in Kuwait.
2:23:46
John C Dvorak: He's in Kuwait.
2:23:48
Adam Curry: I've been in Kuwait, Kuwait, Kuwait City, Kuwait. So
2:23:52
yeah, that's a party town.
2:23:57
John C Dvorak: Douglas Moog in cochranton, Pennsylvania 50. And
2:24:01
this starts off our 50s disobeys just names and locations marker
2:24:05
rund. In Arizona, Kirkpatrick and nine amo BC, Jacob Martinez
2:24:13
in El Monte California, James sheremeta in Napa NOC New York
2:24:18
and Ray and Ray and Ray Shane in Evanston, Illinois. He needs to
2:24:24
be deduced.
2:24:27
Unknown: You've been de deuced
2:24:29
John C Dvorak: Lynn malinovski in Stafford, Virginia coal Lake
2:24:32
Colleen Garrett in Cary, North Carolina, Julie Williams in
2:24:35
Huntington Beach, California, Michael Lebar. In Williamston,
2:24:39
Michigan. Alex is avala in Kyle, Texas, David forrest and Elvin,
2:24:44
Texas. Alvin, servant servant in Arlington, Washington,
2:24:52
Adam Curry: he liked your your blow dried cows I thought I have
2:24:55
to say that was it got a chuckle out of me too.
2:25:00
John C Dvorak: Yeah, he says, John, thanks for the informative
2:25:02
laugh of blown dry cow is I've washed and groomed our horses
2:25:07
but never thought to do it to one of our cows. Hilarious. They
2:25:11
look. They bled, they looked like a big giant poodles. They
2:25:17
did. And then last is Sir Brett Farrell, who is I don't know
2:25:22
where he's from now. He's moved, I guess I don't know. But he's
2:25:25
last on our list. And that is our group of people who have
2:25:29
helped to chauffeurs number 1596 with the Fibonacci super number
2:25:35
coming up next show supercells so the Golden Triangle and
2:25:39
everything else in between. And thanks
2:25:41
Adam Curry: everyone under $50 Usually for reasons of
2:25:44
anonymity, but we have a lot of people on those special
2:25:47
sustaining donations, they help a lot. They're typically
2:25:49
recurring. We appreciate that so much. Remember, this is value
2:25:53
for value doing it for all of Gitmo nation to keep the show
2:25:56
going 16 years 1600 episodes we're on our way here's the
2:26:00
karma for anyone who requested it and needed it. You've got
2:26:03
karma and if you'd like to become a producer of the no
2:26:05
agenda show go here.
2:26:07
Unknown: alright.org/and a thank you again to our Executive
2:26:11
Associate
2:26:12
Adam Curry: Executive producers for episode 1596. Our formula
2:26:15
Unknown: is this we go out we get people in the mouth
2:26:39
Adam Curry: we do indeed have a list we've got Zachary Nelson
2:26:41
celebrating today. Hello, Zachary. Congratulations. There
2:26:46
it turns 59 Tomorrow, Walker Phillips wishes his smokin hot
2:26:49
wife. Chiara. Arabella happy birthday for the six that'll be
2:26:54
tomorrow. Sir Leo of low Earth orbits on the seventh as is Sir
2:27:00
Baron sir 1% There'll be turning 48 On the seventh happy birthday
2:27:04
from everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Change
2:27:11
I
2:27:16
don't want to be induced absolutely no douchebags allowed
2:27:20
here no because we have a title change test and that is SCOBY of
2:27:25
the Piedmont he becomes a Duke this is good news man.
2:27:28
Congratulations that's an additional $1,000 You support
2:27:31
the no agenda best podcast in the universe with and we
2:27:34
appreciate that we have one night we're also celebrating his
2:27:38
birthday soon so get out our special low Earth orbit
2:27:41
satellites award Here you go Oh that one looks a bit like a star
2:27:45
link sword it's not like that it's kind of cool glows in the
2:27:48
dark anonymous have been up on the podium here you sir about to
2:27:54
become a knight of the no agenda roundtable because of your
2:27:56
support. Instantaneous $1,000 We call that an instant a we really
2:28:01
appreciate I'm very proud to pronounce the k d as Sir Leo of
2:28:05
low Earth orbit. Get it? I certainly do for you. We have
2:28:09
hookers and blow rent boys and Chardonnay but as requested
2:28:12
cookie dough and grape soda. Also Pabst Blue Ribbon on the
2:28:15
table for the trolls enjoy that trolls. Along with that we've
2:28:18
got our redheads and our rise our beers and our Blanca
2:28:21
Rubenesque Rosie encases sakeI Buckham and Ella bong hits and
2:28:25
bourbon we got sparkling score ginger ale and Jerboas breast
2:28:28
milk and Padlet of course the always effervescent mutton and
2:28:33
Mead. Head on over to no agenda rings.com Our new night Go ahead
2:28:39
sir Leo. Then take a look. Everyone can take a look at him
2:28:42
night and damn rings are beautiful the signet ring so you
2:28:44
can press it in some wax to seal your important correspondence
2:28:48
with wax is included. It's all in the box along with your
2:28:51
certificate of authenticity to send off your Yeah, what are you
2:28:53
drinking?
2:28:55
John C Dvorak: My last bottle of Topo G Joe
2:28:59
Adam Curry: Topo teak Topo Chico not GG Oh
2:29:02
John C Dvorak: Topo Chico,
2:29:03
Adam Curry: chico. Get root on us. It's a it's our it's our
2:29:06
drink here man. So what we drink here Topo Chico in Texas. send
2:29:12
that off to us as this handy ring sizer in there. Thank you
2:29:15
very much for supporting the no agenda show. We really
2:29:17
appreciate it now. We have our meetups I told you earlier about
2:29:20
that wonderful group. All of these groups are beautiful they
2:29:24
all hang out together you can find a place for a meet up and
2:29:27
no agenda meetup.com People love going to them love attending
2:29:31
them they love hate they make friendships. Have we had a
2:29:33
marriage happen through a no agenda Muna feeling we have I
2:29:37
believe so. Yes, yeah, probably don't have enough of them. We
2:29:40
need more of those. Let's find out what's going on. People love
2:29:43
to tell us about their meetups. Here's a couple of meetup
2:29:45
reports no one
2:29:53
and we kick it off with the bring in the fall meet up. We're
2:29:57
gonna sit here and practice 15 minutes today. Very good. Warren
2:30:00
Unknown: Walton here in the morning, Brad from Fort Worth,
2:30:03
officially no longer a douche bag in the morning. In the
2:30:07
morning. This is seratonin from Fort Worth. And Adam of course
2:30:11
Americans have a daddy problem. We were founded by a whole bunch
2:30:14
of them
2:30:15
in the morning. This is Sir Matt wells night at the Austin petty
2:30:17
cabbies out here with Austin local 512 Resist we much and
2:30:22
make sure to paint your roof blue.
2:30:23
Adam Curry: I might have mentioned this is the Austin
2:30:25
meetup of course or Baron, barons or Scott of The armory
2:30:29
organize this one. Hey, this is Kristen and lots of love to Adam
2:30:33
and John. Thank you so
2:30:34
Unknown: much. Chris Baker from the fountainhead forum is here
2:30:37
I've got 110 shows now life is good.
2:30:39
Adam Curry: Farmer Chris here ITM in the
2:30:42
Unknown: morning is Brendan foster from Austin local 512.
2:30:45
This is Baron Scott on the new agenda armory
2:30:47
and keeper Christine. We're hanging out here at Knox with
2:30:50
local fire one two in the morning.
2:30:53
Adam Curry: We were in Houston every single time Scott
2:30:56
organizes a meet up we're gone. So the next time Scott we're
2:30:59
looking forward to it because those are bigs lots of people
2:31:02
show up. Here's a report from the whet your whistle meetup. I
2:31:05
think that was the first one Hello this
2:31:07
Unknown: is Charles Shelton, that though at the Webster
2:31:08
County Wednesday, whet your whistle Mito, thank you very
2:31:11
much for tuning in. This is you know that guy Charles Sheldon,
2:31:15
I'm gonna pass the phone around and we're gonna see all who's
2:31:17
here.
2:31:17
Dangerous Dan here. I'm not a douche. But I'm wearing my life
2:31:22
jacket. Sir Matt Decker here
2:31:24
in the morning, Mrs. Decker here in the morning. So this is the
2:31:27
crazy person that is organizing the event. Charles Shelton, and
2:31:31
we are here First Wednesday next month, you can come check us out
2:31:35
community tapping pizza Fort Dodge, Iowa. And we had a great
2:31:39
time. Four of us here, please. Connection is protection. Thank
2:31:42
you for your courage in the morning in the morning
2:31:44
Adam Curry: to you the barcade Philly meet up. How'd that go?
2:31:47
This is Sean from Philadelphia. You're running the meet up at
2:31:51
barcade in Fishtown. I saved hella kids in Michael Jackson's
2:31:55
Moonwalker today.
2:31:57
Unknown: We're here at parkade and this is Edie and Nathan and
2:31:59
we're not going to eat the bugs. Unless you make them tasty. Then
2:32:03
we'll think about bugs. I love bugs.
2:32:06
Black Knights are easy we go out with people in the mouth. Linda
2:32:10
from Philly 33 is the magic number. No, it's rob from
2:32:13
Philadelphia in the morning slaves.
2:32:15
Hi, this is Jason you will obey
2:32:19
Georgia Philly first meet up pretty cool Eagles for four No,
2:32:23
in the morning John anatomists cake from Philadelphia and smoke
2:32:30
Adam Curry: All right, thanks for the reports everybody.
2:32:32
Here's what's coming up. Today we have a meet up at the
2:32:34
northern wake rock rock rock rock Tober that'll be at the
2:32:39
compass rose brewery, Raleigh, North Carolina at six o'clock
2:32:43
today. The Central Jersey 730 to meet up we drink and we know
2:32:46
things that's underway at the Garden State distillery. That's
2:32:49
Toms River. My that's sir Archer Daniels Daniels. I think after
2:32:55
he left that whole project bear toss collapsed upon itself. Let
2:32:59
us know how you're doing brothers send us a meet up
2:33:01
report. On Saturday, the Stoney Acre Farms get your goat meet up
2:33:05
that'll be at three o'clock at Stoney Acre Farms Cary, North
2:33:09
Carolina. The tapping the admiral in the afternoon meet up
2:33:13
Rotolo is pizzeria Longview, Texas 430. On Saturday,
2:33:17
Fletcher's organizing Now that should be a good one. Central
2:33:20
Arkansas, amygdala check and backyard bonfire. Six o'clock
2:33:23
don't miss the bonfire. That'll be at Hot Springs village ish.
2:33:28
In Arkansas. I guess it's a dude named Jared now in Arkansas, so
2:33:32
he's doing that he's going to light a fire in his backyard.
2:33:35
Seems like a cool meeting to go to love those guys. On the list
2:33:41
for the month of October. We've got Hala centro, Jalisco Mexico.
2:33:49
I know I didn't pronounce that. Right. What else do we have
2:33:51
here? We've got Alpharetta, Georgia. We've got Camp Hill,
2:33:56
Pennsylvania, British Columbia,
2:33:58
John C Dvorak: Albany, California still on there. Yeah,
2:34:00
it should go to
2:34:01
Adam Curry: October 21, Albany, California, and they would like
2:34:05
to make a special announcement. They see on the list. Someone
2:34:10
scheduled a meet up for April 8 April 8. in Fredericksburg,
2:34:16
Texas for the solar eclipse meet up. Do not do this. Stay away
2:34:24
from Fredericksburg for the Eclipse view will not be this is
2:34:29
not a good idea. They expect 100,000 people to come here. We
2:34:34
have to get roadblocks security guards. We have to oil up our
2:34:39
guns. This is going to be we cannot have 100,000 people
2:34:43
everybody thinks it's going to be so cute to hang out in
2:34:46
Fredericksburg. You're going to be camping out it'll be worse
2:34:50
than the playa at Burning Man. I will not wet and your population
2:34:55
of Fredericksburg 15,000
2:34:58
John C Dvorak: You can't handle 100,000 and
2:35:00
Adam Curry: on the weekend we grow to about 50,000 Because we
2:35:04
have a few motels we have a mainly Bed and Breakfast that's
2:35:10
full that's it you know people think that they're going to camp
2:35:17
with their campers everywhere. It mean we've got tasks for we
2:35:21
got military we got we got all kinds do not come. I love you to
2:35:27
not come. I am going to have Joe Rogan over probably. Hey, man, I
2:35:33
hear your first truck I want to see the Eclipse. Okay, that's
2:35:37
cool. But no do not come at please attend all the other no
2:35:41
agenda meet up. These are great products. Every single one of
2:35:44
them is fantastic. They're put together with love. It's all
2:35:47
meant to get together with people so you have you already
2:35:49
have a connection with the show. Now you can have connection with
2:35:52
your brothers and sisters who are right nearby you it's
2:35:55
important we saw what Baron Scott did during the
2:35:57
snowpocalypse we were really we were better than the ham radio
2:36:01
networks which in fact sucks. We were we were we were a true
2:36:04
survival network all kinds of things could happen you want
2:36:07
your connection and brings you protection no agenda meetups.com
2:36:10
You can't find one near you start one yourself. Sometimes
2:36:14
Unknown: you want to go hang out with Dyson days. You'd be
2:36:22
triggered. You want to be where everybody feels the same.
2:36:31
It's like a
2:36:36
Adam Curry: only have two ISOs. What how many do you have?
2:36:39
John C Dvorak: Got three play your two?
2:36:40
Adam Curry: You always make me go first. I want you to go
2:36:42
first. Always. Always. I have to beg No, no,
2:36:46
Unknown: no me go first.
2:36:47
Adam Curry: No. Okay, here we go. Here's my first. Here's my
2:36:50
Unknown: Yes. 100%.
2:36:52
Adam Curry: Now that's no good. But you keep bringing that one
2:36:55
in. No, it's a new one. That's a new one. This is the one this is
2:36:58
the only one I have that is worthwhile. This is
2:37:00
Unknown: why you have a wondrous show.
2:37:04
Adam Curry: So what did she say? No, I know that people don't
2:37:06
understand that you can't hear when you can't hear it. It's no
2:37:10
good. This is why you have a wonderous show.
2:37:12
Unknown: This is why you have a wondrous show. Ah
2:37:16
Adam Curry: I like the word wondrous. I thought that was
2:37:18
kind of cool.
2:37:19
John C Dvorak: That's a cute word. All right, I got three.
2:37:22
Let's see what we got here. I think all three of mine are
2:37:24
better. Nothing. Let's start with unprecedented
2:37:28
Adam Curry: unprecedented. Yeah, that's better than mine. Right
2:37:31
there. Yeah.
2:37:33
John C Dvorak: Go to too late. It's too late.
2:37:38
Adam Curry: It's kind of ominous. This must be your
2:37:40
kicker.
2:37:42
Unknown: Hot. I just felt something hot on my legs
2:37:51
Adam Curry: where's that from?
2:37:53
John C Dvorak: Don't remember. I
2:37:54
Adam Curry: don't care. I don't care what videos you were
2:37:57
watching. I like it. That's a good light. That
2:38:02
John C Dvorak: kind of thing for videos. I got one here. It's a
2:38:04
little offbeat. This is from the Family Guy. Okay, now, you know
2:38:10
he do like to insult the Republicans and me. It's just
2:38:14
kind of a left leaning show. But I think this would might have
2:38:17
been going too far.
2:38:18
Unknown: I don't know how you handle all these kids every
2:38:21
week. How I don't mind I like children always wanted one of my
2:38:24
own. Someone that could raise a little bit better than my
2:38:27
parents did. May. You'd be a great dad. Bruce. You should
2:38:30
totally have a kid. I don't know if you knew this. But it's
2:38:34
anatomically impossible for a man to get pregnant. Even
2:38:37
Lindsey Graham. Well, he'd
2:38:38
certainly given it the old college try.
2:38:42
Adam Curry: Wow. That's great. Lindy Hop, Lady G Yeah, that's
2:38:50
good. That is good.
2:38:53
John C Dvorak: He's giving it the old college try.
2:38:57
Adam Curry: I have this is one report that I feel is important.
2:39:01
Because it kind of it kind of blows the whole the whole idea
2:39:05
of Ukraine. If as if the old Lenski lady buying $1.1 million
2:39:11
worth of jewelry at cardio was at cardio Tiffany and I was
2:39:17
cardio a as if that wasn't enough. I totally believe that.
2:39:23
I've actually have a boots on the ground report. But first I
2:39:26
want to so because of our meal continuing resolution be oh no
2:39:33
deal. No money for Ukraine. Oh, oh, they're running out of
2:39:36
bullets. They're running out of bullets. If I think that we're
2:39:40
now sending Ukrainian bullets to them. I Iranian I'm sorry. I
2:39:45
guess we intercepted a million Iranian bullets. Apparently they
2:39:48
just fit into our guns that we've given the I don't know.
2:39:51
Unbelievable. It's crazy. But this happened.
2:39:54
Unknown: They normally meet in Brussels or Luxembourg. All 27
2:39:58
Traveling to keep quiet A lot of planning and security
2:40:02
Adam Curry: roadtrip. Come on everybody roadtrip, no we're not
2:40:05
getting I've got a surprise. We're not having dinner at Chez
2:40:09
Lapeer tonight. No, we're going on a road trip blindfolds,
2:40:12
everybody. Y'all love that.
2:40:14
Unknown: As Ukraine faces its second winter at war. This was
2:40:18
about sending a powerful message of solidarity. Apart from the
2:40:22
symbolism, that was the promise of more military funding,
2:40:25
discussions about Ukraine's longed for EU membership. Our
2:40:31
victory depends directly on our cooperation with you, the more
2:40:35
they will be strong and solid steps to foster this war will be
2:40:39
over. We'll be over on just terms with the restoration of
2:40:44
our territorial integrity, and reliable guarantees for peace in
2:40:48
all of Europe. Eu ministers promised another $500 million
2:40:52
dollars worth of military with another 5 billion to follow in
2:40:56
the next year. There will be continued military training,
2:40:59
which will include F 16 pilots. There is concern that some of
2:41:04
Ukraine's allies are suffering war fatigue now for the
2:41:07
continued support for Kyiv. Now an election issue in some EU
2:41:11
states and the US. Eu ministers insisted this support remain
2:41:17
steadfast with them,
2:41:18
not intimidated by your drone. So besides, our resolve to
2:41:23
support the fight of freedom and independence shows Ukraine is
2:41:27
firmed. Fabian continues. Yes, we will continue standing.
2:41:35
There was also a strong support for President Solinsky His peace
2:41:38
plan. It demands the full restoration of Ukrainian
2:41:41
territory and a complete Russian withdrawal, which was at Burrell
2:41:45
said it was the only game in town. Monday's discussions also
2:41:49
included Ukraine's ambition to join the EU. Brussels has said
2:41:54
yes, in principle, there are hopes that formal accession
2:41:57
talks could begin early next year with a two year deadline.
2:42:01
The EU's as membership will be one of the best ways to
2:42:05
guarantee Ukraine's long term security.
2:42:08
Adam Curry: So I'm just hoping understands when they say
2:42:10
foreign ministers that State Department that's all state
2:42:13
departments of other countries haven't boy they went to that
2:42:16
dangerous Ukraine. They all went together. They didn't. I guess
2:42:21
those douchebags didn't take a plane. I mean, a train you know,
2:42:24
they flew in? Sure. Of course they did. Because it's so
2:42:27
dangerous. Oh, yes. Ha, that a big banquet and everything
2:42:31
totally sitting down. They lived
2:42:33
John C Dvorak: it up on our money. Exactly. Our money.
2:42:37
Adam Curry: Speaking of our money, we have two boots on the
2:42:39
ground that I'd like to share. The first one is from a we have
2:42:45
we have such great producers. The boots on the ground reports
2:42:48
are really something that no other show has. Adam and John
2:42:53
first I was in a congressional office two weeks ago. Yes, I am
2:42:56
a lobbyist representing an extremely important industry for
2:43:00
rebuilding Ukraine after his regularization. So not only do
2:43:04
we have lobbyists, they speak our language, and they agree
2:43:07
with it. I met with a high ranking member of a
2:43:10
congressional office who worked for a congressman who sits on
2:43:13
the House Armed Services Committee. Cool this this. The
2:43:17
staff member told us that the Ukrainians will win this war. He
2:43:21
was unmovable on that point and even mentioned his recent trip
2:43:24
to Ukraine to tour the country. But the real interesting point
2:43:29
was that this high ranking staff member pitched us to get
2:43:33
involved in the rebuild. He said $400 billion of worldwide
2:43:37
investment will be going into Ukraine after Ukraine wins, with
2:43:41
100 billion backed by the US taxpayer. This new 100 billion
2:43:47
is an addition to the billions of US taxpayer dollars of
2:43:49
support that we have already been spent or laundered in
2:43:53
Ukraine. This support will not be low interest loans or
2:43:57
supplemented loans meant to be paid back by Ukrainian entities.
2:44:00
This will be a direct equity investment into Ukrainian
2:44:03
businesses so they can rebuild. I wonder if that foreign
2:44:08
investment in Ukraine will have any influence so 100 million on
2:44:14
deck for that's probably 100 million from us and then 300
2:44:17
million from Russia that they that they stole the second boots
2:44:20
on the ground? Sorry.
2:44:22
John C Dvorak: No, I was gonna say is an inner special here I
2:44:25
want to says it's about investing in Ukraine. I have a
2:44:29
clip. And I want you to explain to me what the hell's going on
2:44:32
here. This is Ukraine in the its arms industry.
2:44:35
Unknown: Congress appears likely to let a Sunday deadline pass
2:44:39
for reauthorizing America's multibillion dollar global
2:44:42
effort to fight AIDS. As NPR is Gabrielle Spitzer reports. That
2:44:47
program will still continue but it will have less certainty
2:44:50
about its future.
2:44:51
The PEPFAR program got its start under President George W. Bush
2:44:55
and has been reauthorized three times with wide bipartisan
2:44:58
support. But this Time around PEPFAR has gotten entangled in
2:45:02
abortion politics. Some Republicans are you playing
2:45:05
Biden in
2:45:06
Adam Curry: this Ukraine arms industry? Weird NPR. This is
2:45:10
literally what Ukraine AMS it says in blue cable
2:45:13
John C Dvorak: keep playing it. I bet you I don't remember
2:45:15
anything about the AIDS crisis. But okay. I flipped.
2:45:20
Adam Curry: I was interested at this. I thought it was really
2:45:22
interesting. So do you want me to stop this since it's about oh
2:45:26
no,
2:45:27
Unknown: PEPFAR has gotten entangled in abortion politics.
2:45:30
Some Republican lawmakers accused the Biden administration
2:45:33
of using PEPFAR as a vehicle to promote abortion access. On
2:45:37
Thursday, the House voted to reimpose a ban on funding
2:45:41
organizations that support abortion services, even if they
2:45:44
do so with other money. The Senate is expected to reject
2:45:47
that bill. If Congress does not pass a five year authorization
2:45:51
by October 1, PEPFAR would still operate under annual
2:45:54
appropriations and
2:45:55
Adam Curry: this is just another minute of this. Well, the other
2:45:59
well, I
2:46:00
John C Dvorak: have it down here as a as a one minute 52nd clip.
2:46:05
Adam Curry: Yeah, we just played a minute of it. Okay, well
2:46:08
John C Dvorak: keep playing there's probably gets to the
2:46:09
point.
2:46:10
Unknown: Ukraine has hosted more than 200 weapons manufacturers
2:46:13
and defense ministers from several countries to help ramp
2:46:16
up arms production inside the country and peers. Joanna kisses
2:46:19
reports from Kyiv that Ukraine wants to reduce its dependence
2:46:22
on foreign military aid.
2:46:23
The government kept details of the International defense forum
2:46:26
which was held on Friday, a secret until today Saturday.
2:46:30
Speaking at the forum President Volodymyr Zelensky likened
2:46:34
Russia's war on Ukraine to a defense marathon and he said
2:46:38
Ukraine must keep recapturing occupied land
2:46:41
those of us live at Sacred teach now,
2:46:45
it's very important that Ukraine not retreat he said we need to
2:46:49
resolve every day and it's obvious we cannot do that
2:46:52
without producing our own weapons and our own defense
2:46:55
technologies. Speaking by video link to the forum NATO Secretary
2:47:00
General Jens Stoltenberg added that Ukraine needs to quickly
2:47:03
produce high quality weapons to keep protecting itself from
2:47:07
Russian attacks.
2:47:09
John C Dvorak: They're starting up a weapons industry in Ukraine
2:47:13
with our money.
2:47:14
Adam Curry: Yeah, you know, it's mainly drones. I boots on the
2:47:17
ground. Good. It's mainly drones. This is what everyone
2:47:22
believes that was that was the line again. Many believing
2:47:27
there's some evidence
2:47:30
John C Dvorak: No, I gotta write here. Yeah, many believe and it
2:47:34
is likely true.
2:47:36
Adam Curry: Many believe in it is likely true. That Ukraine is
2:47:40
has a a budding drone warfare, warfare drone industry. They're
2:47:46
small drones. Some of them are coming from Australia, Australia
2:47:50
has the flat pack drones. You've seen these?
2:47:53
John C Dvorak: Those are the balsa wood ones.
2:47:55
Adam Curry: Yeah, well, they're made of cardboard actually. And
2:47:58
so it's a flat pack, like an Ikea flat pack. And you you fold
2:48:02
it out, and then boom, your drone is good to go. You can put
2:48:04
a couple of keys of explosives in there and you know, there,
2:48:07
which I'm sure these will show up everywhere. There's gonna be
2:48:10
a lot of fun these cardboard drones, boots on the ground. If
2:48:16
we have someone on the ground in Ukraine, I received a boots on
2:48:20
the ground I have here about 10,000 small drones a month are
2:48:24
lost. This is in Ukraine, increasingly. So these are seen
2:48:30
as very successful. In fact, they're talking about deploying,
2:48:33
deploying drones when we go to war with China, because they
2:48:37
work so well, because the drones, you can't knock them out
2:48:40
with the you know, with anti aircraft missiles, the
2:48:45
complicated that's what you'd think but our boots on the
2:48:49
ground says something else, about 10,000 small drones a
2:48:52
month or last year and increasingly from electronic
2:48:55
defenses then why the theater attack was made. But that's the
2:48:59
theater where all the drone guys were. Russians have learned to
2:49:04
target drone pilot locations as more effective than trying to
2:49:08
knock down small drones. So they get these guys I am flying my
2:49:14
drone Oh crap. They just shot me. Oops. Small drones are
2:49:18
predominantly a daylight anti personnel weapon and important
2:49:21
to identify supply lines or other targets for artillery.
2:49:25
Payload does kill individuals and can damage some small
2:49:28
armored vehicles, but most can be repaired quickly. We only see
2:49:32
videos of the successes of the 10,000 launched each month. The
2:49:36
newly trained Ukrainian forces entering the offensive were
2:49:39
trained in 90 days. Much like Vietnam draftees this is not
2:49:45
going to end well. For Ukraine. People a lot of lot of people
2:49:52
are gonna die.
2:49:54
John C Dvorak: Still, that's a lot of people have died already
2:49:56
four or
2:49:57
Adam Curry: 500,000 They say
2:49:59
John C Dvorak: really? Yeah. have one that's a high estimate.
2:50:04
Adam Curry: Just one other thing. I don't have a clip. But
2:50:07
you've probably seen stories that vaccinated and people and
2:50:13
women around vaccinated people are indeed still suffering from
2:50:18
unexpected menstruation. postmenopausal menstruation we
2:50:25
discussed this during the COVID. Plan demic when the vaccines
2:50:31
came out and if that got a lot of pushback, because we had a
2:50:34
study and people said that's not true, you can't read the study.
2:50:37
Yomi Jr. Oh, I'm sorry. He's right. That we had boots on the
2:50:43
ground from everywhere at one guy and always a lot of guys. We
2:50:47
had we had incredible amounts of boots on the ground. Just people
2:50:54
you know, having irregular menstruation. And and now this
2:51:00
is Daily Mail, but okay. COVID vaccines do cause unexpected
2:51:04
vaginal bleeding and women even if they haven't had their period
2:51:07
in years study finds. So Dame Jamie sends me a note. She says
2:51:16
I saw an article that admits No, that's too strong shows a
2:51:20
correlation of COVID vaccinations causing
2:51:23
inflammation and changes in hormone levels. She said that
2:51:28
specifically hormone levels because that when you start to
2:51:32
menstruate, it's a hormonal process. And if you're doing
2:51:38
this when you are actually postmenopausal, that's it's your
2:51:41
hormones. And she says, what how interesting that we saw such a
2:51:48
surge in teen girls 13 to 15 years old during this
2:51:55
vaccination phase, who all want to become boys. And she's saying
2:52:02
is it possible that their hormones were not out of whack?
2:52:06
One suggestion, boom, you're a dude. I thought
2:52:12
John C Dvorak: was funny. I
2:52:13
Adam Curry: thought it was an interesting an interesting
2:52:15
theory. Because it did surge.
2:52:20
John C Dvorak: And it's Yeah, it did. And I have a clip that
2:52:23
discusses one aspect of all this not related to the vaccine, but
2:52:28
related to the puberty blockers. Okay, hold on. This is kind of
2:52:32
an interesting clip.
2:52:34
Unknown: Children who take puberty blockers risk poor
2:52:37
mental health according to a UK study, out of the 44 children
2:52:41
studied from ages 12 to 15 34% of those who took puberty
2:52:46
blockers self reported declining mental health. The puberty
2:52:49
blocker examined in the study is called triptorelin. It's used to
2:52:53
control the hormones in people's bodies, and some common side
2:52:57
effects include depression, nausea and hot flashes. The
2:53:01
result of the study may add to the epidemic of deteriorating
2:53:04
mental health globally, nearly 15% of young people have a
2:53:08
mental health disorder. According to a survey last year.
2:53:12
Another study last year found that in the US almost 22% of
2:53:17
children have at least one mental health condition.
2:53:21
Adam Curry: Wow. For Kids, not for kids. Now that I didn't
2:53:31
bring any of these clips, but people are being switched to
2:53:34
different SSRIs and they're getting what they call brain
2:53:36
zaps.
2:53:38
Unknown: Yeah,
2:53:38
Adam Curry: have you heard this brain zap thing?
2:53:40
John C Dvorak: Yeah, heard about it. What did you hear about it?
2:53:44
I heard people are switching from different SSRIs and getting
2:53:47
all kinds of issues.
2:53:49
Adam Curry: Why are they switching you know they have to
2:53:50
switch probably because the SSRIs are not working
2:53:53
John C Dvorak: and not as affected they all function
2:53:55
slightly different. So I suppose you just go from one to another.
2:53:58
Adam Curry: Yeah, the only problem is no one knows exactly
2:54:00
how they function.
2:54:01
John C Dvorak: Dad Yeah. what's believed to always say it's
2:54:05
believed to do this. It's believed you see it on the TV
2:54:08
ads they say it is believed to stop believed.
2:54:14
Adam Curry: Stories being spiked to impress us about AI and make
2:54:18
us scared and want our our leaders to create legislation so
2:54:24
that only the smartest people in the world from Silicon Valley
2:54:27
will control it so that you know, this kind of thing doesn't
2:54:30
happen this morning.
2:54:31
Unknown: a wake up call for parents as more teens begin to
2:54:34
explore artificial intelligence experts say what happened to a
2:54:38
group of girls in Spain recently could happen anywhere. Spanish
2:54:42
authorities say more than 30 girls ages 12 to 14 started
2:54:45
receiving fake nude images of themselves. The images were
2:54:48
created using an app powered by artificial intelligence that
2:54:52
undresses people. Police, a group of teen boys had used
2:54:55
photos from the girl's social media profiles, uploaded them to
2:54:59
the app and she Hear them on social media.
2:55:01
So essentially, these apps virtually strip individuals, and
2:55:05
that enables folks to distribute images of them in attempts maybe
2:55:10
to sexually shame them to humiliate them or just because
2:55:12
they think it's funny.
2:55:13
Sophie Maddox, an expert on cyber sexual violence says these
2:55:17
apps are becoming more access violence
2:55:19
issue is happening for everyday people, not just celebrities and
2:55:23
folks in the public eye. And while
2:55:24
these nude images are fabricated experts like Carrie Goldberg,
2:55:28
who's not involved in the spin case, but it was represented
2:55:31
victims of digital sexual abuse says the impact on victims is
2:55:34
long lasting,
2:55:36
they're very compelling and convincing photos so that it
2:55:39
really does look like it's a picture of the victim node. It
2:55:43
really has the same devastating consequences as if it was an
2:55:47
actual photograph that that depicted you that the harm isn't
2:55:51
any different children in particular, don't have the
2:55:54
coping mechanism to realize that that this could be a solvable
2:55:57
problem.
2:55:58
Experts say it's important to create a safe space for your
2:56:01
child to conform.
2:56:02
It's really important to seek the support of a trusted adult
2:56:05
whenever you see or experience something online that makes you
2:56:07
feel uncomfortable.
2:56:09
And as far as whether or not these deep fake nude apps should
2:56:11
even exist. Experts agree they're creating much more harm
2:56:15
than good fueling more calls for government regulation of this
2:56:19
expanding technology.
2:56:21
John C Dvorak: There you go a couple of things. First of all,
2:56:24
it's illegal. I think it's a felony to pose nude pictures of
2:56:27
somebody else. Those laws were passed some time ago. TV these
2:56:32
pictures are equivalent. Even if they are equivalent pictures
2:56:35
they're nude pictures of somebody else in debt wasn't
2:56:38
brought up in their report what at all. And in fact, it was even
2:56:42
discussed when it comes to child porn. If you post a picture some
2:56:47
of that looks like they're underage. That's a that's a
2:56:49
felony, child porn felony. If you draw I've talked to lawyers
2:56:53
about this not because I want to post pictures because I want to
2:56:57
know
2:56:59
Adam Curry: based on I want to know my rights.
2:57:01
John C Dvorak: No, I'll tell you why. It's because some years
2:57:03
ago, there was a chateau Mouton Rothschild put out a wine with a
2:57:10
line drawing of some kid who was naked, it was like some art shot
2:57:15
by Chagall or some artists it was famous. And and the wine
2:57:20
label was banned from the United States for being child porn, and
2:57:26
it became somewhat collectible if you get a ball of Mouton with
2:57:29
that label on it, but so I asked around and found out that if you
2:57:34
draw a stick figure according to the lawyer, if you draw a stick
2:57:38
figure stick figure and put it to have an arrow pointing to it
2:57:43
and saying nine year old girl that's actually a violation of
2:57:48
the child pornography laws
2:57:50
Adam Curry: not if you're not if you put it in a school library.
2:57:55
It's good they're good to go.
2:57:58
John C Dvorak: Be that as it may, the there's laws to cover
2:58:02
this i This story is a phony story.
2:58:04
Adam Curry: But of course, it's a phony story to hype AI. Keep
2:58:07
the phony story a phony story. I have just one last thing because
2:58:13
I got a lot of emails about it. A lot of pushback from Massa,
2:58:17
same guy. No master electricians. People who No,
2:58:22
that's a phony story. Your source is questionable. And it
2:58:27
was about this
2:58:28
Unknown: on that day of fire at 6:30am. What I will refer to as
2:58:33
the morning fire appears to have been caused by Hawaiian Electric
2:58:36
power lines that fell in high winds. The Maui County Fire
2:58:41
Department promptly responded to this fire. They reported that by
2:58:46
9am it was contained. After monitoring it for several hours,
2:58:51
the fire department determined the fire had been extinguished.
2:58:56
They left the scene in the early afternoon. At about 3pm A time
2:59:01
when all of Hawaii electrics power lines in West Maui had
2:59:06
been de energized for more than six hours a second fire, the
2:59:11
afternoon fire began in the same area. The cause of that
2:59:17
afternoon fire that spread to Lahaina has not been determined.
2:59:23
We are working tirelessly to figure out what happened and we
2:59:26
are cooperating fully with federal and state investigators
2:59:30
who have indicated it may take 12 to 18 months to conclude.
2:59:34
Adam Curry: Now according to our producer, who was in the grid
2:59:39
security business, I know him personally he's helped us learn
2:59:44
about ERCOT here in Texas, how everything works, you know that
2:59:48
it's all one big stock market basically we know all about
2:59:51
this. He has seen the logs because it's an insurance issue
2:59:55
at this point. The he said that what had happened is the law
3:00:00
names that were down had been re energized and they were from
3:00:03
generators that were on on the grid. And they were cranking up.
3:00:08
And of course, a lot of people who are thinking, oh, like, you
3:00:12
know, my Generac here at home, yes, there's something called an
3:00:15
ATS. It's a switch that ensures that you don't throw your your
3:00:21
your generator power not just to your building, but to the entire
3:00:24
grid. So people were pushing back. So I said, hey, hey, boots
3:00:28
on the ground, I needed a response. And he says, Yes, I
3:00:31
tend to agree it's somewhat hard to believe the fact is, the
3:00:34
transmission lines were disconnected. There were no
3:00:37
generators other than standby generators capable of energizing
3:00:41
the lines to the point that they were talking about multiple
3:00:45
megawatts of generation online. Household handyman generators do
3:00:50
not account for this. These were these huge mobile diesel
3:00:54
generators that you see and they brought them in likely for
3:00:57
hotels. But that of course, is why they have to look around for
3:01:01
12 to 18 months. They put those onto the grid without switches.
3:01:05
And that is what literally caused those fires to reignite
3:01:09
because the lines were down they got energized megawatts worth
3:01:14
and that's what caused this fire. I like directed energy
3:01:18
weapons better myself. But it's better to know the truth.
3:01:23
John C Dvorak: Know what you're you're getting pushback from
3:01:25
some of the producers out there because they still are
3:01:28
subscribing to the directed energy weapon bullcrap.
3:01:31
Adam Curry: I didn't say that specifically, but they were
3:01:33
Unknown: electric blue and red roofs
3:01:37
Adam Curry: it's the blue roofs man what you're saying can't be
3:01:40
true. Now they were not saying that but they were saying hey
3:01:44
you know that's not how they work. They anyone who installs a
3:01:47
generator has got an ATS. I know that. This is a very
3:01:51
John C Dvorak: the update is good. Good information.
3:01:54
Adam Curry: Do you want to call it
3:01:57
John C Dvorak: I can call it Are we done? Like I've everything
3:02:01
I've got can be moved to Sunday quite nicely.
3:02:03
Adam Curry: Good. Then I will let everybody know that we have
3:02:07
some end of show mixes we got DS laughs with Matty j we got
3:02:11
bought by a request the sound guy Steve melons mix for our
3:02:17
Archduke of Luna and we have a dynamite bedbugs and of show mix
3:02:22
from Jesse Coyne Nelson who never disappoints. Coming up
3:02:26
next on the no agenda stream 24 hours a day troll room.io no
3:02:30
agenda stream.com and on all the modern podcast apps random
3:02:34
thoughts. And that'll be episode 247 titled Russell Brand of
3:02:39
justice or that sounds exciting. And coming to you from the heart
3:02:46
of the Texas hill country here in FEMA Region number six, where
3:02:50
I did not get killed by the nanoparticles activated by the
3:02:53
5g and high tones in the morning everybody. I'm Adam curry
3:02:57
John C Dvorak: and I'm from Northern Silicon Valley, where
3:02:59
he is widely believed and it's likely true that I'm John C.
3:03:03
Dvorak.
3:03:05
Adam Curry: Please remember us to send your value for value
3:03:09
support at divorce act.org/na Have a great one everybody we'll
3:03:16
be back on Sunday until then. Adios such
3:03:36
Unknown: Yeah, I said Hello, Mark Twain said goodbye to my
3:03:39
guy why diversity in Canadian libraries is gonna die. People
3:03:43
are fungible, not just NF T's unable to one plug ourselves
3:03:47
from these online feeds Hanselman met books before 2008
3:03:51
Trudeau proves that we're living in a dictatorial state. Demon
3:03:55
are manic Elon Musk is mentally unwell that's burgers at neuro
3:03:58
link only time will tell not diagnosed but he's on the
3:04:02
scripts more powerful than the US government X formally known
3:04:07
as Twitter digital later freedom of speech versus reach that uses
3:04:11
our better a government shell pretending to be the people to
3:04:16
their own devices. I mean, still technocratic tool. Alex Jones a
3:04:20
bridge too far to bring back on the platform he was a fool.
3:04:24
How'd you learn the shadow banya man spam? This and
3:04:27
misinformation determine from one man damn Starlink you're
3:04:30
rolling his influence allowed by the state? I'm pointing at you
3:04:33
Uncle Sam, I think
3:04:39
Did you know there are over 40 different types of melons out
3:04:42
there.
3:04:42
John C Dvorak: Kevin McLaughlin in Concord North Carolina says
3:04:45
honeydew melons he just wrote that in there for some reason.
3:04:48
He likes melons stolen delicious melons that Gallia melon, corn,
3:04:54
melons melons that are there in the world
3:04:57
Unknown: over the different types of melon
3:05:00
John C Dvorak: Summertime is the perfect time to show off your
3:05:02
melons lady honey globe, melons, honey globe and melons tasty
3:05:09
camouflage melons, peppers and aisle three camouflage melons
3:05:14
Jade. Melon donation J do is another literal melon and I've
3:05:19
had those are pretty good I think the Chester mountains my
3:05:22
favorite. You just love melons Diptyque Castle melon Calabash
3:05:27
melons, that's Calabash melons, the kiss melon has got a big
3:05:32
tongue that comes out of it the papaya melon, the bailin melon
3:05:36
that you Bari King melon autumn suites, Autumn suites the melon
3:05:41
of choice for kind of sewers. Gonna run out of melons by the
3:05:45
melon varieties. I think this watermelon yet exactly. can pull
3:05:53
a melon to another one I've never heard of,
3:05:56
Adam Curry: but how long will he be able to come up with melon
3:05:58
names?
3:06:00
John C Dvorak: Korean melons
3:06:02
Adam Curry: I love his melon assortment.
3:06:04
Unknown: melons,
3:06:05
Adam Curry: the ananassa melon
3:06:07
John C Dvorak: has ever had one the sprite melon and Charentais
3:06:10
melons which is literally a melon. Kevin McLaughlin is back
3:06:14
this time promoting this melon for you keeping score.
3:06:19
Unknown: As you can see here what looks to be a bedbug
3:06:21
crawling along the armrest and one of the high speed trains in
3:06:24
France.
3:06:26
People are just thrilled to see
3:06:27
it they love it.
3:06:29
Adam Curry: Bedbugs they could turn them into a snack.
3:06:34
John C Dvorak: Kind of maybe like a popsicle sticks coated in
3:06:38
honey and then you roll them
3:06:49
on bentonite in the malleus sigh on a number of times delicious
3:06:55
Unknown: delicious.
3:06:56
John C Dvorak: Dip it in chocolate. Tonight
3:07:02
Unknown: the family of a man who died at the Fulton County Jail
3:07:05
is now demanding action. They say he was essentially eaten
3:07:08
alive by insects and bedbugs while in custody.
3:07:21
mopho.org/and I just felt something hot on my legs.
0:00 0:00