0:00
John C Dvorak: I'm gonna turn
into a TV network.
0:02
Unknown: Adam curry Jhansi
Devora January 14 2020
0:06
Adam Curry: for the seal board
when he came on he media
0:09
assassination episode 1645. This
0:12
Unknown: is no agenda, tracking
the Dream Team and
0:16
Adam Curry: broadcasting live
from the heart of Texas Hill
0:18
Country here. Reason number six
in the morning, everybody. I'm
0:21
Adam curry
0:22
John C Dvorak: from Northern
Silicon Valley where we're
0:24
wondering why anybody cares that
much about Iowa. I'm John C.
0:29
Dvorak.
0:31
Adam Curry: Buzzkill. Well, it's
record cold in Iowa. That's why
0:37
everyone cares. record cold
everywhere record cold in Texas.
0:42
It's 22 degrees in the hill
country.
0:46
John C Dvorak: Is it what it is
there right now? Yeah, and you
0:48
Adam Curry: know, such a scam.
So this cold front Yeah,
0:51
everyone knew the cold front was
coming. And immediately we get
0:55
this. This warning freezing rain
freezing rain Sunday, Sunday
1:00
night freezing rain, it's gonna
be horrible. Oh, everything's
1:04
gonna break you'll be without
power freezing rain. And I'm
1:09
looking at the Aviation Weather
which 24 hours ahead you can get
1:13
a pretty good idea but even now
I'm still checking the terminal
1:16
area forecast. The May two
arguments is what pilots you
1:20
know, their life depends on it.
And those are passengers and
1:25
there's just no rain no
precipitation predicted but
1:30
John C Dvorak: but well that's a
far cry from freezing rain well,
1:34
but
1:35
Adam Curry: in anticipation of
this ERCOT you know, we're all
1:38
the old Enron people went to go
scam everybody ERCOT immediately
1:43
jacked up the per megawatt price
our of gas turbines to 400
1:48
bucks. So it's a money making
scam. And then all people can do
1:55
is say, Oh, the Texas grids. No,
good. We have a great grid. It's
1:59
just they don't turn on any
other power systems. In fact,
2:04
last night, so we're
unincorporated. We're out here
2:08
we have we don't have any city
services. We're right on the
2:13
edge of the city. We have no
city services. So nothing else
2:15
is arranged. You know, we get
our we have our own propane. We
2:20
have electricity from from like
garbage pickup. No, no, we have
2:24
we have a private service that
picks it up. Gillespie Waste
2:28
Services. Yeah. Hey, let's be
literally these guys. You can
2:33
call me say hey, I got a really
heavy rolled up carpet and no
2:37
problem we can. These are great
guys. Or if I if I missed the
2:42
pickup, it's happened. You know?
Oh, crap. I forgot to put it out
2:44
Monday morning. I can text them
they'll come right back or at
2:47
the end of the day. Commercial
servers. You guys are great.
2:51
Anyway, turns out but here's
what happened last night, we get
2:56
a text was on the group text.
And Larry and Jeanne who live in
3:03
Fredericksburg. And they're a
little bit older. They're I
3:06
think, in their 60s, late 60s,
maybe 70. Still very active. Got
3:11
business, but she had a bad fall
a week ago. So she's kind of you
3:15
know, a little bit bedridden.
Larry gets the flu. And then
3:19
when it's going down to 19
degrees and the city, apparently
3:24
they have I think it's they have
a nest, the city limited their
3:28
heat to 70 degrees
automatically. So I'm running
3:33
over with space heaters for
them. But this is this is crazy.
3:38
You know that? Oh, we have to
conserve gas future. Sadly, it's
3:44
the future. Yeah, you're right.
3:46
John C Dvorak: Your temperature
is a little higher. We're going
3:47
to turn it down from here from
Central. We're also going to
3:50
take Central $100 out of your
bank account, if you don't mind.
3:53
That's right.
3:54
Adam Curry: For your carbon
credits. Your offset? I have
3:58
other friends. And they they
live in Wimberley and they have
4:03
city water Wimberly is small as
you know, it's maybe 3000 People
4:06
sounds small is very small. Yep.
Paul Simon lives there is small,
4:10
small,
4:11
John C Dvorak: he does say hi.
You
4:13
Adam Curry: know, he I don't
know if he's kind of in the
4:17
community. I think he and Edie
keeps themselves
4:21
John C Dvorak: go over there and
say hi. All right to be in the
4:24
biz. He hates me. Oh, well,
nevermind. And
4:28
Adam Curry: I know because of
the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame
4:30
dinners. I go Hey, say Hey,
Paul. And he say I hate you.
4:37
Because you know, he's 414 said
I hate you. Yeah, with a wink.
4:42
But he's four foot five. You
know, it's very awkward to me to
4:46
say. He's like, Yeah,
4:50
John C Dvorak: he has to yell at
you just
4:51
Adam Curry: Yeah, exactly. Hey,
I hate you. Get in line. Anyway,
5:01
so our friends there, they knew
they have her parents live there
5:06
and they have they have a
daughter and sometimes their
5:10
sisters were there and you know,
so they have more people in
5:13
their in the previous residence
when they bought the place. And
5:17
they've got the water company
calling saying you're using a
5:21
lot more water. Well, yeah,
there's more people living here.
5:24
We need you to we need you to
use less water. What the I mean,
5:27
don't I pay the bill? Yeah, but
we need you to use it and they
5:30
they're constantly calling and
harassing. That's the future.
5:34
You're right. Yeah. It's not
good.
5:39
John C Dvorak: No,
5:39
Adam Curry: you don't want it
not a good development. Well,
5:42
speaking of not good. A new fat
leonard. You thought fat landed
5:47
was bad. We've got an update. We
have something new.
5:50
Unknown: New at 10. A San
Antonio a woman is indicted
5:53
after she allegedly stole more
than $100 million in army funds
5:58
from Fort Sam Houston. A federal
grand jury returned the
6:01
indictment today. Janet Yamanaka
Melo reportedly stole the funds
6:06
while working as a civilian
financial program manager at the
6:10
post. The indictment says she
used the money to buy millions
6:14
of dollars worth of jewelry,
clothing, vehicles and real
6:18
estate. She's charged with 10
counts of fraud and faces up to
6:22
20 years for each charge.
6:25
Adam Curry: Audit the Pentagon
people this is ridiculous.
6:29
John C Dvorak: That is I didn't
know the story. That is
6:32
ludicrous. 100 million to
Christmas, somebody could steal
6:35
$100 million right from under
the Army's nose. It should have
6:40
been spotty when she was up to
10 million.
6:43
Adam Curry: Well, that's just
the tip of the iceberg. Okay, of
6:45
course, you
6:46
John C Dvorak: know, we're sure
it is I'm sure there's billions
6:49
being still well, there's this.
Tonight
6:51
Unknown: it's a critical moment
for us supporting the war, a new
6:54
report accusing us officials of
failing to account for more than
6:58
half of the sophisticated
weapons supply to Ukraine. In a
7:02
sample that was under review.
The Defense Department's
7:05
inspector general investigating
whether nearly 40,000 items such
7:11
as Stinger balls and nightvision
7:13
Adam Curry: Oh, nice NAT POP.
Did you hear that that was
7:16
great. The Defense
7:17
Unknown: Department's inspector
general investigating whether
7:19
nearly 40,000 items such as
Stinger missiles and night
7:24
vision sets were properly
tracked just before and in the
7:28
months after Russia invaded. The
report found that more than a
7:31
billion dollars worth of 1.7
billion in military items under
7:35
scrutiny were delinquent or not
properly accounted for. But the
7:39
reports finding no evidence that
any US military aid to Ukraine
7:43
has been misused or stolen. At
this
7:46
time, there remains no credible
evidence of illicit diversion of
7:49
us provided no evidence.
7:54
Adam Curry: At this time, no
evidence
7:55
Unknown: it comes with Congress
still not agreeing on continuing
7:59
to support Ukraine. Now these
frontline troops are running low
8:03
on ammunition. Well, you can
really feel the force of this
8:08
American gun. But these
Ukrainian artillery units are
8:11
now having to limit the amount
they fight because of the
8:15
scarcity of ammunition. The unit
showing us their stock of just
8:20
20 shells, they had around 200 a
day, just a few months ago. And
8:27
David a top US defense official
reacting to that report saying
8:30
the accounting procedures for
weaponry sent here are quote not
8:33
practical in a hostile dynamic,
wartime environment. Dude is not
8:38
practical.
8:39
Adam Curry: The accountants
don't like it. It's not
8:41
practical to count. And why why
is this ABC and why do we have a
8:46
Brit doing this? This is this is
always baffling to me. Was
8:51
button us so but there's not
always bothered you? Yeah,
8:54
little bit. So there's there's a
sales job underway for the
8:58
military industrial complex.
Pick this up from Deutsche Bella
9:02
and yes, in this case it is
Deutsche Bella I made a mistake
9:04
on the last show.
9:05
Unknown: Marina Meuron is a
defense analyst with King's
9:08
College London if you could just
help us understand what's
9:11
actually taking place in the
sky. Ukrainian officials said
9:15
just eight out of 40 missiles in
this latest barrage were
9:18
actually shot down. They see
others were disabled using
9:21
electronic warfare. What does
all that mean? Well,
9:24
first of all the missiles that
were shut down, they were shut
9:28
down by the air defenses but we
see that Ukraine is lacking air
9:32
defenses and as far as
electronic warfare is concerned,
9:35
it's a Russian speciality.
Actually, it is basically
9:39
operations in the
electromagnetic spectrum where a
9:43
system would send out a signal
in order to confuse missiles so
9:47
to prevent the missile from
detecting the target, sending
9:54
wrong measurements to it. It's
also used to suppress radars
9:59
too. jamb GPS signals. And this
goes also for drones for
10:04
instance, as well. So these are
these kinds of systems that the
10:07
Ukrainians have been asking for
in the United States, but this
10:12
is sensitive technology. So
Ukraine has to work with what it
10:15
has in order to try to jam
Russian missiles and to prevent
10:18
them from reaching as a target.
And
10:21
just briefly, this new
technology is Ukraine trying to
10:24
develop its own, while waste for
American and other supplies. The
10:29
Ukrainians
10:30
have captured some electronic
warfare systems from the
10:32
Russians and handing them to
NATO in order to study but I'm
10:37
sure that they kept some parts
open, which they can work
10:40
because Western allies cannot
export this technology to
10:45
Ukraine. So Ukraine is on its
own when it comes to the
10:47
development of electronic
warfare systems able to jam,
10:51
Russian radars and Russian
missiles.
10:54
Adam Curry: Yeah, all right.
Kings Cross college good sales
10:56
job, lady. We need to we need an
order of those missile confusing
11:01
things. Like giant magnet in the
sky or something.
11:08
John C Dvorak: Says bogus. Well,
11:10
Adam Curry: of course, they're
not getting any money from us
11:12
just yet. But the UK just
pledged 2.5 billion pounds. What
11:20
is that? almost $3 billion. I'm
just guessing a little less
11:24
around
11:24
John C Dvorak: there and bucks.
25 cents and 25% Higher. And
11:28
Adam Curry: then Rishi, Rishi
Sunak went over to Kyiv. And,
11:34
and announced the deal and I
have a little clip of him
11:37
standing there in Parliament.
And Volodymyr was there and
11:41
everybody's all jacked and all
happy presidents
11:43
Unknown: Lenski, you are an
inspiration. And a lot of it I'm
11:48
proud to call you a friend John
F. Kennedy once said of the
11:53
great Winston Churchill, he
mobilized the English language
11:58
and sent it into battle. Well,
Vladimir, you have done the
12:02
same. And English isn't even
your first language. No leader
12:07
this century has done more to
unite liberal democracies in the
12:12
defense of our values. So let me
say to you on behalf of
12:15
everyone, thank you. Thank
12:17
Adam Curry: you. Very good. How
about that? He's comparing him
12:25
to Winston Churchill and himself
to himself to JFK, which is even
12:31
even funnier, even weirder. So
he went on for the whole, you
12:34
know, like a whole session like
we're gonna win, you're gonna do
12:37
it for us go Volodymyr. And I
can already tell you who's gonna
12:41
gobble up that money. Because
there was a very interesting
12:44
move made by BlackRock. And
Blackrock bought gap, which I I
12:52
didn't know a gap was global
infrastructure partners. They
12:57
bought it and I didn't know that
Blackrock bought companies. I
13:01
thought they only took shares
and companies of every company.
13:05
So now they bought this company,
$12.5 billion. And I think that
13:11
they're just sitting there
waiting for this billion or
13:15
whatever billion the US Congress
will approve, to gobble it up.
13:19
Here's Larry Fink, the Finster,
the CEO,
13:22
Unknown: we believe
infrastructure is only at the
13:25
beginning of a real major asset
class. There are some structural
13:31
demands that are going to
increase the issuance of more
13:36
and more infrastructure. I've
said for all along and Bloomberg
13:39
has been talking about it for a
number of years, deficits
13:42
matter, it's gonna be a harder
and harder for countries to
13:46
continue to deficit finance. And
at the same time, there's a
13:51
giant need to rebuild and build
out infrastructure, whether it
13:58
is the digital infrastructure,
as we are all trying to become
14:02
more engaged with AI and other
forms of urbanization process,
14:08
more and more countries are more
interested than ever before and
14:11
energy independence. And one of
the ways in countries that do
14:15
not have available hydrocarbons,
they're going to be doing it
14:18
through through wind and solar,
maybe other forms of of
14:23
decarbonisation. And when you
think about BlackRock and the
14:26
roles, we play with many
governments, our continuous
14:30
ownership and stock and bonds of
every major corporation in the
14:34
world, more and more companies
are coming to us. And over the
14:37
last few years, we did build up
a very large and really
14:40
successful infrastructure teams.
He's not bashful.
14:46
Adam Curry: More infrastructure
is going to be needed the
14:49
infrastructure
14:49
John C Dvorak: asset class that
was interesting unifies
14:53
beautiful arrays. Yeah,
14:54
Adam Curry: well, that means
that you can, I guess you can
14:57
commodities and
14:58
John C Dvorak: gouge you can get
the infrastructure You'd get the
15:00
sewer system and then overcharge
everybody. Yeah, yeah. So it's
15:03
got to be about gouging. What
else would he do? That's what
15:06
his that's what they do.
15:07
Adam Curry: Yeah, season of
unveiling. There you go. There D
15:11
cloaking. Hey, we have we have
shares in every every big
15:15
company in the world or company,
we own your water company. Yeah,
15:18
we own that and what airports
because these guys build
15:21
airports, I think gap built
Gatwick and so they'll probably
15:26
build a nice new airport in
Ukraine.
15:30
John C Dvorak: And that's nice.
They are in Canada just
15:32
overcharged for the landing fees
15:34
Adam Curry: or so I mean, the
globalization is the Rafal
15:36
isation is almost complete. It's
no, it's not even the landing
15:39
fees. It's the retail retails
where you make the money, retail
15:45
parking. It's and they also do
fiber optics. So they'll be
15:52
wiring up, Ukraine and Ukraine
will be great for data centers.
15:56
You can see it coming. That 300
million from Russia is going to
16:01
be a joke compared to what these
guys are going to scoop up.
16:05
John C Dvorak: Keep it all. But
that's a good start.
16:12
Adam Curry: Have you seen any
more ces CES coverage?
16:15
John C Dvorak: No, I checked, I
ignored all the CES coverage as
16:18
your last show. Was the latest?
It just seemed pretty dialed in.
16:23
Adam Curry: It's so dull. And
people have they just have no
16:27
ideas, you know, outside of the
so who pointed that out that?
16:32
You know the fridge that detects
your tomato freshness? And gives
16:38
you recipes? I think and I
wanted to ask you about this.
16:42
Should you even have tomatoes in
your fridge? Yeah, you want to
16:46
put tomatoes? You want to put
them in the fridge? Yeah.
16:47
John C Dvorak: How about me? You
can leave them out if you want
16:49
them to ripen a little more.
Yeah, but don't they'll rot
16:53
pretty quickly. If you're if
they're left out.
16:55
Adam Curry: How are you with
eggs? Are you fridge eggs guy or
16:58
not in the fridge? Well,
16:59
John C Dvorak: the Mimi's the
expert on this. And I'll tell
17:02
you what she says because
17:03
Adam Curry: this comes from too
many eggs.
17:06
John C Dvorak: Too many eggs.com
is the book that in which you
17:09
get at least a free copy of
better hurry. Eggs when they're
17:15
laid, and they have a coating on
them. Pretty impervious to any
17:19
problems once they're in so you
can keep them on the
17:21
refrigerator. Just a pile until
you wash them. Right. Well
17:25
washing them as one but also
when you're refrigerate them the
17:29
first time they have to stay
refrigerated after that.
17:33
Adam Curry: Oh, once you once
you go you can't go back.
17:35
Unknown: Yeah, right. All right.
17:38
Adam Curry: And something I get
from the HEB. I should probably
17:41
just refrigerate that because
that's probably going to
17:43
John C Dvorak: be yes. been
refrigerated already. Yeah. All
17:45
right. Anyway, so that's why
most refrigerators have a little
17:50
egg area where you can put a yes
17:51
Adam Curry: egg thing. So
everyone's out of ideas.
17:56
Everything is AI has the Sony
guy had an Eevee drive out on
18:01
stage that he supposedly was
controlling with a with a
18:04
PlayStation handset. Okay. Okay.
I mean, and
18:11
John C Dvorak: yes, this is too
funny that these demos, because
18:15
most of them are fake, of
course.
18:17
Adam Curry: So the Siemens CEO,
this was interesting. For
18:20
Siemens, I learned it's ximines,
Siemens, Siemens from Deutsche
18:24
Avella. So the Zeeman CEO, had a
keynote coup, who would have
18:30
expected that, you know, as far
as I know, Siemens does. Well, I
18:35
thought maybe washing machines,
you know, wow, you'll have a
18:38
cool washing machine.
18:39
John C Dvorak: They do pretty
much everything electronics,
18:41
somebody
18:41
Adam Curry: sent me a graph they
have. It wasn't as Siemens it
18:46
was their washing machine and
it's connected. And it had
18:50
transferred 10 gigabytes of data
in one month. Is what is it
18:57
doing? Is it hosting movies?
19:01
John C Dvorak: Maybe it's doing
some processing and one of those
19:04
one of those mesh nets
19:06
Adam Curry: is mining Bitcoin.
19:09
John C Dvorak: There you go.
Mining Bitcoin or doing SETI,
19:12
Adam Curry: you don't need
bandwidth, really, for the
19:14
Bitcoins, is the punch line. But
what is the washing machine
19:18
doing? That it's transferring 10
gigabytes, I'd really like to
19:22
know
19:23
John C Dvorak: it's not stealing
movies from the internet is it's
19:26
got to be like a Tor server. So
would you like to see a movie
19:30
while you do your laundry?
19:32
Adam Curry: So the Siemens guy
comes on stage. Now he's
19:36
probably my age, but 60 bald,
balding, so not completely bald
19:40
because I do not like Bezos cool
ball but just bald, and he's
19:44
wearing blue jeans, white t
shirt black leather jacket. Well
19:49
brother like a Steve Jobs mode.
I'm like you're the Siemens guy.
19:55
And here's the big unveiling.
2024
19:58
Unknown: is a turning point.
Today, we can build and use
20:03
technology faster than ever.
Class, we can combine the real
20:10
and the digital goals. And
here's what I mean. You need
20:15
highly trained engineers to
build and run things in the real
20:18
world. Infrastructure,
manufacturing, transportation,
20:21
you name it. design cycles take
years. deploying your tech in
20:27
the real world is expensive. And
mistakes cost billions,
20:30
sometimes even lives. But this
is changing. The change has a
20:38
name. The industrial Metaverse
is generating AI, and industrial
20:46
Metaverse building and using
technology is becoming easier
20:50
and faster, a lot easier. And a
lot faster. Pass fast we will be
20:55
able to accelerate innovation,
accelerate sustainability, yes
21:00
and accelerate access to new
tech. Tonight, I will share my
21:06
vision for how AI and industrial
Metaverse will redefine reality
21:12
and transform the way we live
work move on make. So
21:17
Adam Curry: you're going to be
able to sit at home you won't
21:19
have to come to work. So
21:20
John C Dvorak: it's like I'm
listening to Hogan's Heroes by
21:22
the way.
21:24
Adam Curry: The industrial
Metaverse did he not get the
21:26
memo that the metaverse is is
out. They still he missed out
21:31
somehow and he throws in
generative AI. Okay, that's you
21:35
so you're gonna sit at home and
and you have your day that glove
21:39
on ha man, I still have my
Nintendo data glove. Maybe I can
21:43
be able to use that in the
future to get your data glove.
21:47
And you'll be putting together
parts on the assembly line. And
21:52
you'll and everyone will be able
to code. He saw it. He
21:55
John C Dvorak: said that later.
Sure. Oh, yeah. You just you're
21:57
just everybody wants to coach?
21:59
Adam Curry: Yeah, well, you
know, it'll be business
22:01
applications. Hey, I need to I
need to send them I need to send
22:07
something to a mailing list. And
you can code it up. And this is
22:12
the tech bubble is is expanding.
Except for maybe? Well,
22:18
actually, yes. X. Linda yakka.
Reno, who is Elon CEO, she, she
22:26
gave everybody an update, not an
audio or video. Unfortunately,
22:30
she gave everybody an update
about what she calls X the X
22:34
everything app. Here we go.
Whoa, there you go exactly as we
22:38
predicted. Let me read because
it gave us some interesting
22:42
insights. She says this week, we
made it clear the everything app
22:46
is closer than everyone thinks.
Nothing can slow us down. X is
22:51
part of a constellation of
companies working for the
22:54
betterment of humanity of
humanity. We're moving fast for
23:00
our community's creators and
businesses big themes for x this
23:03
year, freedom of speech, a new
video ecosystem, and the power
23:08
of AI. It's all coming to life
in plain sight. And in real
23:13
time. Here's what we discussed
this week. X is an app for
23:16
everyone. We're building an
information independence that's
23:19
essential for society. From my
live stream collaboration with
23:23
ces to new content partnerships
with Tulsi Gabbard, Don Lemon
23:28
and Jim Rome. Talk about that.
And and you were right. I was
23:33
wrong. They paid Don Lemon a lot
of money according to Kara
23:37
Swisher who hangs out with Don
Lemon apparently. So I guess Jim
23:43
Rome as well and Tulsi Gabbard
23:47
John C Dvorak: got plenty money
to spend. We're
23:49
Adam Curry: expanding
perspectives on x and unlocking
23:52
new commercial opportunities.
We're building a new ecosystem
23:55
video ecosystem with our
partners. There's never been
23:58
more economic opportunity on X,
new shopping experiences,
24:02
financial partnerships for
payments, AI collaborations and
24:05
your recruitment product. just
the beginning.
24:08
John C Dvorak: You know, they're
changing the name again. They
24:12
are going to change it to
America Online.
24:19
Adam Curry: Yeah, that's you
know, that's funny. You say
24:22
that. That's exactly what AOL
tried to be, isn't it? Yeah.
24:28
Except they ruined it by letting
everybody into the internet now
24:32
though. They're trying to this
is I guess, a reverse osmosis
24:34
version of it. But
24:36
John C Dvorak: it looks like it
looks like just the opposite
24:37
going in the other direction.
Well, let's see if we can wean
24:40
them from the internet. Yeah, I
put up and create a new AOL.
24:46
It's, you know, that's gonna
24:48
Adam Curry: go yeah, they're
gonna and they're gonna buy,
24:51
what can they buy? Can they then
reverse merger and buy discovery
24:55
and buy all of that good.
24:58
John C Dvorak: into trouble is
done. That devalue the book
25:01
value of the company keeps going
down. So it'd be tough. Yeah.
25:09
Well,
25:09
Adam Curry: I mean, when AOL
bought Time Warner, Time Warner
25:12
was much bigger than AOL. Yeah.
25:14
John C Dvorak: But AOL was the
net, the the book value was
25:19
going up, up up, it was going
through the moon, AOL. So it
25:23
looked like a good idea at the
time.
25:26
Adam Curry: whenever, whenever
an online thing, you know,
25:30
starts to get into show
business, like hiring Don Lemon.
25:34
And that's usually where things
go wrong. Good
25:37
John C Dvorak: point this would
have with the Yahoo. If you
25:39
remember when Terry Semel was
hilarious, I'm all right. I'm
25:42
going to turn into a TV network.
But wait a minute, there already
25:46
are TV networks, you got
something special, something
25:49
different. Why don't you like
maximize what it can do? No TV
25:54
network,
25:55
Adam Curry: very similar to
like, Spotify did the same
25:59
thing? Oh, we're going to be a
podcast. We're going to be the
26:01
biggest podcast network in the
world. No. Radio have
26:05
John C Dvorak: any experience
with podcasting or podcasters?
26:08
No, it doesn't matter.
26:10
Adam Curry: And they brought in
Hollywood people. I think that
26:14
Joe Rogan was probably a good
hire for them. I'm sure he
26:19
brought a lot of people over,
although I don't know if they
26:21
all signed up for the $5.
26:22
John C Dvorak: You know, I
wonder about that. I personally
26:27
doubt it. I think that Rogan was
the guy who made out on that.
26:31
Adam Curry: Oh, no doubt.
26:33
John C Dvorak: But and
supposedly is we're gonna see
26:37
that Don lemons gonna make out.
Yep. And we'll see somehow and
26:41
Jim Rome, and Jim Rome who
already got more properties than
26:47
he needs?
26:48
Adam Curry: Yeah, I would say
get your money up front, Don,
26:51
but it's gonna be great. I can't
wait for Don show. It's gonna be
26:55
no, it's gonna be a clip bonanza
26:58
John C Dvorak: of you're
probably right. Yeah,
27:00
Adam Curry: I'm excited. I'm
excited. I'm excited for him,
27:03
honestly. I mean, we, we all
know how we've just believed
27:07
excoriated him at every move he
made. But you know, so I think
27:12
it's pretty. It's either bold
and brazen, or completely
27:18
oblivious to? Well, his
position, Musk
27:21
John C Dvorak: did make the
comment that he likes it. He
27:24
thinks this is proving that he's
on both sides of these arguments
27:28
that he could put something like
that on. Yeah. And of course,
27:32
the guys who already quit
Twitter, all these journalists,
27:35
they've gone off to Mastodon
they and they call it the dead
27:40
bird. You know, they burned it.
It's unbelievable how they've is
27:46
there's various opinions on
Twitter. Now. They had to leave.
27:52
What
27:52
Adam Curry: since you bring that
up? I want to talk about
27:54
activity pub for a moment. I
don't know. I don't know if
27:58
anyone knows what activity Pub
is. I don't. Okay, activity. Pub
28:02
is probably, in my estimation,
one of the most important
28:05
technologies open source
technologies of the past 10
28:08
years. What activity pub does,
and I think was even developed,
28:13
it may might have been developed
15 years ago. It allows for
28:17
decentralized, interrupt between
applications. So you don't have
28:22
to have, you know, Google, in
between these disparate apps. In
28:26
fact, we're actually using we're
using activity pub to
28:30
decentralize the podcast index.
Because if there's one weakness
28:34
of what we set up with
podcasting, 2.0 is the actual
28:37
index if they didn't come after
that, or whatever. I mean,
28:40
there's lots of copies around
but we you want to decentralize
28:44
it so that, you know, no one,
there's no one way to ruin
28:47
podcasting. So what activity Pub
is, it allows messages to be
28:51
exchanged in what is commonly
known as the fediverse. So
28:55
servers federate with each
other. That's what Macedon runs
28:59
on. And this was known as glue
social before that. And of
29:04
course, six years ago, I set up
no agenda social was running it
29:09
from I think I had it on Amazon,
AWS. And it became a big project
29:15
technically, I couldn't handle
any more the updates, the the
29:19
infrastructure, it was becoming
very expensive. And I think
29:24
maybe did I run it for a year or
two? I'm thinking thinking
29:28
something like that. Matt
Hamilton, one of our producers
29:32
stepped in and took over no
agenda social.com in that in the
29:37
very beginning and I was very
excited about the technology
29:40
very excited about the federated
nature of it. So you can have an
29:44
account on one server and you
are jacked up I was I was very
29:48
jacked up on it. It was great
because you can you can connect
29:53
to someone else Epson, you know,
post messages, basically a
29:57
social network between it didn't
didn't You could have a little
30:01
server with just yourself and
your family, everybody could
30:03
communicate. The mistake I made,
which I didn't know, but I fully
30:08
own it is i is my choice of
domain name, no agenda
30:12
social.com, which of course
identifies with no agenda. So
30:17
any messages posted on no agenda
social could always and can
30:21
always be seen by this world of
federated servers. So even
30:26
though if you're on your own
account, say, I know agenda
30:30
social, and there's stuff you
don't want to see, you can block
30:32
it. Everything that's coming
from no agenda social from us,
30:37
is always visible outside of, of
our server, and of course,
30:42
associated to the outside world
with the show. So very quickly,
30:46
we became one of the most
blocked instances. We were
30:50
called Nazis que que que
Quadroon is free speech zone,
30:54
which I kind of I kind of liked
the free speech zone, because
30:57
there was no censoring, no one
got kicked off, except for
31:01
actual illegal stuff. And there
was some of that in the
31:03
beginning. And it was funny, but
the initial culture, it even the
31:08
fediverse itself is very, very
dimension B. So you can know why
31:14
you could understand why a lot
of people got very triggered
31:16
just by our general thinking. So
Matt, took it over, upheld the
31:22
same policy that I initiated no
censorship, free speech over
31:27
time, and this has been going on
for you know, this, I've been
31:30
having this conversation on no
agenda social for months, this
31:34
became a problem, I think,
likely because of the purges,
31:37
you know, we kept it at 10,000,
inactive accounts would get
31:41
purged, more people could come
in, I think partially because of
31:45
that, partially because of the
nature of social media, which
31:48
is, obviously a societal
failure, content was being
31:52
posted, that you could block
that you didn't have to see, but
31:55
to the outside world, it
certainly did not reflect the
31:59
nature of our show, or the
producers of this podcast, and I
32:03
was really getting fed up. I
didn't want to tolerate it
32:05
anymore. So I'd advocated many
times that people move to
32:09
smaller servers, you know, you
can, you can get, you can get
32:12
one out of the box, five bucks a
month, you could share that cost
32:16
with a couple of people. But it
was so bad that hosting
32:19
companies that host Mastodon
instances, wouldn't even let
32:22
people set them up with no
agenda in the name because of
32:25
our reputation. So it would be
easy if we could just change the
32:30
name and have everybody go on
their merry way. Because I just
32:35
I don't know about you. But I
didn't like the association that
32:38
we were having with a lot of the
there was a lot of garbage,
32:40
there's hundreds of accounts
just posting garbage, and that's
32:42
visible to the whole outside
world. So unfortunately, you
32:46
can't change and I own the
domain name, then, you know,
32:48
just always let that go. It's
fine. We'll just run it. But you
32:52
can't change the name the domain
name without breaking
32:55
Federation. And that's that's
the I didn't realize that early
32:59
on. Because
33:00
John C Dvorak: it Well, now, you
know, so I would suggest having
33:04
gotten into more than a few
beefs with some of the losers on
33:06
the on the no agenda social that
we kill the instance and start
33:14
afresh?
33:15
Adam Curry: Well, that is
exactly what Matt decided he
33:18
took, I think, a brave stand, he
made the decision. It's better
33:22
to start a new server and it's
at no authority dot social. And
33:26
you can migrate your account to
it. That way you can keep your
33:29
fediverse followers is going to
break stuff, no doubt about it.
33:32
And he's going to allow time for
people to migrate over. And I
33:35
just wanted I wanted to take
this moment to thank Matt
33:38
Hamilton for being such a great,
kind, generous and a good
33:42
steward of knowledge and the
social and for all the years of
33:45
his time, talent and treasure
that he put into maintaining it.
33:49
He's a real solid guy and
deserves a lot of praise and
33:51
gratitude. Where's Aaron nurse
fit into the next chats? Matt?
33:54
Erina Matt is Erina Okay, his
name is Matt Hamilton.
33:58
John C Dvorak: Aaron are so
exhausted him you you've doxxed
34:01
him no, he
34:02
Adam Curry: says it right on his
account Matt Hamilton at no
34:06
Daxing so now, so everyone can
move over there. And that'll
34:13
that'll be fine. It's it sucks
that we can't keep the name or
34:18
the we can't change the name and
keep the server intact. That's
34:21
really what bums me out. Because
it just breaks everything. That
34:24
part really sucks. But we'll
have a new house. Oh, so
34:27
John C Dvorak: no agenda social
will be no more at what dropped
34:30
dead date. I
34:31
Adam Curry: don't know Matt and
Matt will figure that out. But
34:35
people can already move over
today. So you can start
34:41
migrating your stuff over. And
we hope to see you there, John.
34:47
John C Dvorak: If I can't figure
it out, too hard for me.
34:51
Adam Curry: I'm sure you'll be
able to figure it out. All
34:55
right. Well, yes. Well,
34:57
John C Dvorak: we're talking
about it change major change.
35:00
Ain't yours I want to play a
series of clips that I thought
35:03
were fake to begin with. But it
was confirmed by the CEO of
35:09
Cloudflare. Oh, this
35:11
Adam Curry: video, I stopped
watching after about two minutes
35:15
because I
35:16
John C Dvorak: have the whole
thing because I think is I think
35:18
is valuable. But now I thought
it was I just thought it might
35:21
just
35:22
Adam Curry: say something. It
was uncomfortable for me.
35:24
Because I have I have fired
friends. In my companies. I've
35:31
fired you I think did my fire,
you
35:33
John C Dvorak: know, you never
fired or demoted you. I had to
35:36
have your salary. No, no, you
didn't demote me there I was. I
35:39
kept the job. But I got was a
cut MBA.
35:42
Adam Curry: And I had to say,
Dude, I'm sorry, I gotta cut
35:45
your I hate these calls. But But
I didn't at least I didn't
35:49
chicken chicken out and have HR
do it.
35:53
John C Dvorak: Or whoever what
this was this reason I was
35:55
attracted to this clip is
because it was a reenactment
35:59
almost, purge, almost word for
word of the script up in the air
36:05
with Clooney. Now, if anyone
hasn't seen that movie, I think
36:12
is one of the best movies done
by Clooney. It's just a
36:14
beautiful film. And it's about a
guy who is a professional at
36:19
firing people, right? And they
are going to hire this girl who
36:23
is going to be that she's the
new young kid that was going to
36:26
change it all. So nobody's going
to be fired in person anymore.
36:29
It's all going to be done over
the over the computer exactly
36:33
the way this was happening. So
this was right out of up in the
36:37
air. And I said, Well, there's
got to be a fake, because it was
36:40
well miked. You could hear her
Oh,
36:43
Adam Curry: you really? I mean,
it looks to me like she just had
36:46
her her phone set down.
36:48
John C Dvorak: It was very, I
thought it was too professional,
36:51
to be really honest. Yeah, I
was. I'm skeptical. I'm very
36:56
skeptical of everything. Yes. So
I'm just skeptical of this being
36:58
just a fake, but then they had
Cloudflare. And I had to
37:01
rationalize, well, were they
there? Was there any slander to
37:04
Cloudflare? No, not really. I
don't think they could be sued,
37:07
but they could be sued for
reputation. Or there could be
37:10
some SEC action. So but anyway,
we went once the guy from cloud
37:13
first flare came out and said,
Well, we're sorry this happened
37:16
to I did but we we fire we fired
40 people we fire 40 people
37:21
every quarter from the 1500
sales people that we have great
37:25
Adam Curry: company every
quarter 40 Go isn't that stack
37:29
ranking? Isn't that what that
is?
37:32
John C Dvorak: This is an
interesting point. Because stack
37:34
stack the ranking never came up
in the conversation. But stack
37:37
ranking does stuff like that.
Yeah. stack ranking is I believe
37:43
is going on at Boeing. And
that's why Boeing is having
37:45
these issues, because they
brought these GE guys into CEO
37:48
Boeing. Yeah. And they're all
staggered rank rankers
37:52
Adam Curry: yeah, there's that
and they then they fired 900
37:54
Quality Control guys.
37:57
John C Dvorak: Well, yeah, that
was during the code that was
37:59
just the VAX Yeah, we
38:00
Adam Curry: one of our producers
wrote a whole list and I put it
38:03
in the show notes. Yeah, under
trains, good plains bad a whole
38:06
list of all these things. And he
thinks it's definitely Boeing's
38:10
mistake. This what the Mac the
most recent Mac's kerfuffle.
38:15
Yeah,
38:16
John C Dvorak: he's got nothing
good. He basically takes Boeing
38:19
to task. But yeah, 900 Quality
Control guy, so which is the guy
38:23
that you guys, you don't want to
fire but okay. So we go to this.
38:27
So this woman found out in
advance that she's gonna get
38:30
fired from her friend who got
fired a few minutes early, or a
38:35
few hours earlier. And so she
got ready, got prepared and tape
38:39
the whole thing. And I want to
go over it with it in mind that
38:42
you and I both have enough
experience in the corporate
38:46
world, that we can take these
both sides to task and some of
38:50
the mistakes that were made
along the way, I just think it'd
38:53
be nice to deconstruct good,
38:54
Adam Curry: constructive or
deconstructive today.
38:59
John C Dvorak: Let's go with
clip one. Hey,
39:01
Unknown: Brittany. Hi. Yes, I'm
so sorry. My name is Rosie and
39:06
just joining the call. Nice to
meet you. Monday, HR team. Hi.
39:15
Thanks for meeting with me. And
Rosie. We have an important
39:19
meeting today. script with
FaceTime valuations of 23
39:24
performance. That's where you've
not met clap our expectations
39:28
for performance. We've decided
to part ways with you. Yeah,
39:32
I'm gonna stop right there. So I
started August 25. I've been on
39:38
a three month ramp. Okay,
39:41
Adam Curry: so first of all
script obvious, man and woman
39:44
this is and this isn't I'm gonna
bet it's an outside HR firm. I
39:50
don't even think it's in house.
39:53
John C Dvorak: I had the same
feeling. I think the mistake
39:56
immediately that these two
boneheads made were she's stop
40:00
them from reading the script.
Yeah, yep, I'm gonna stop you're
40:03
right now and took over the
place that
40:07
Adam Curry: is not in their
script. There's no, there's
40:09
probably in there if employee
starts crying and stuff like
40:14
that, but not, I'm going to stop
you and I'm gonna get in your
40:17
face with this now, probably
not.
40:19
John C Dvorak: So good. So
that's a screw up on their part.
40:23
I think the guy or the woman
when the two should have said,
40:26
well, we'll let let me finish
first. Yeah, and then finish up
40:29
the script. I agree. I agree.
But they didn't do that they
40:32
Okay, whatever. And so this girl
went off on him, which means to
40:36
me that she probably is a good
salesperson to be able to pull
40:40
this off. Oh, good. I looked at
her watch. And I worked with a
40:44
lot of different salespeople
mostly in publishing, but I've
40:46
worked with do they have to go
out there and sell stuff? And I
40:52
can recognize a reasonably good
salesperson kinda but she never
40:56
she says herself that she never
closed anything. Right? The
40:59
three she was only there for
three months. I don't know how
41:02
to close over the holiday. Yeah,
yes. Yeah, she
41:04
Adam Curry: made a big point
about that, that she called it a
41:07
ramp which I kind of like I'm on
my ramp on my sales. Guy
41:12
John C Dvorak: who sent us the
insight on this was said that,
41:15
because I asked him about what
some of these terms I didn't
41:18
hear a few these they ramp to
him meant onboarding, which is
41:22
probably what was going on. So
she was only really working
41:25
there for a month or two. And
the CEO later says, Well, when
41:30
we fired the 40 PA, we can tell
right away if somebody is no
41:33
good. And I found that convinced
to that, bro. Okay, let's go on.
41:38
Unknown: And then it was three
weeks of December, and then a
41:43
week of Christmas. And then here
we are. I have had the highest
41:49
activity amongst my team. Since
I've started, I have had three
41:55
contracts out, done a really
great job managing my deals up
41:59
until the very end that decided
not to close last minute. So I
42:03
don't think that that makes a
lot of sense. And when she
42:07
Adam Curry: says decided not to
close last minute to me, that
42:10
means these are dead deals. That
it's I mean, they won't matter
42:16
to these HR people. But it
sounds like she did she did just
42:21
didn't close. It's not like
they're gonna close and
42:23
John C Dvorak: she had three I
think three deals she couldn't
42:25
close them couldn't which is a
problem. Yeah. But at the same
42:28
time, we're dealing with
Thanksgiving, Christmas and New
42:31
Years. That whole that whole
period is impossible. Any work
42:35
that even nobody's around
42:37
Adam Curry: even from November.
You're right. Okay. That
42:40
Unknown: makes a lot of sense
for me and my Cloudflare journey
42:43
here so far.
42:44
Adam Curry: I love the
Cloudflare journey.
42:47
John C Dvorak: I love the
journey, this Zoomers,
42:49
Unknown: it's great. Also, every
single one on one I've had with
42:53
my manager, every conversation
I've had with him has he has
42:56
been given me nothing. But I am
doing a great job. I have had
43:00
great activity, I have really
great meetings, I'm picking up
43:04
the products very quickly.
43:05
Adam Curry: By the way, with all
this sounds like great activity.
43:09
That's that's all coming out of
Salesforce. Salesforce is
43:12
showing her activity being
great. You know what I mean?
43:16
That's a good point. That's how
they track that
43:18
Unknown: looking at the products
very quickly. And things have
43:21
been going really, really well.
I make really great
43:24
relationships with my clients.
So I disagree that my
43:29
performance hasn't been I
haven't met performance
43:33
expectations. When I certainly
have just because I haven't
43:38
closed anything officially
officially here. Yeah. Why are
43:44
you doing this? And not my
manager? Not you know, we've
43:47
never met so that my manager has
no idea that this has been
43:52
happening and the director has
no idea that this has been
43:55
happening. So I'm just
definitely confused. And yeah, I
44:01
would love like an explanation
that makes sense.
44:03
Adam Curry: I'm confused. As
does every sales person. I mean,
44:09
I've hired lots of salespeople.
You've, you've been around
44:11
you've you've I don't know, if
you've hired salespeople, I'm
44:14
sure you have actually. You give
someone a certain amount of time
44:19
to close something because a
salesperson usually comes in
44:23
with with a Rolodex. Even if
they're just starting out, you
44:27
know, it's like you're gonna
hire someone who has a contact.
44:30
So maybe it was her three
contacts. These were the ones
44:35
and she couldn't close them. Now
then I'd say you know what? You
44:39
didn't close on the things you
said you should close we need to
44:41
find somebody else. But if
44:43
John C Dvorak: there could be
some and she could be lying
44:45
about the her interaction with
her boss could be could be one
44:49
on one. We don't know. Yeah. And
I get the sense she's honest,
44:53
but I could be wrong because
some of these rumors you don't
44:56
know I mean, we had they have
the reputation of not wanting to
44:58
work at all. coming in late and
doing all this stuff she didn't
45:02
seem like that she seemed like a
go getter no she seemed like a
45:05
like a conscientious person and
she also seemed detail oriented
45:10
the fact that you recorded this
and by the way, this is your
45:14
future nightmare for all
corporations who think they're
45:17
going to get away with firing
people over over a zoom call
45:20
you're not going to get away
with
45:22
Adam Curry: it. Oh, you're
taking you're taking the the the
45:25
Zoomer side here
45:26
John C Dvorak: I am taking the
Zoomer say you have to stop this
45:29
has to stop immediately. Because
this is good. This kind of an
45:33
embed dissuade Zoomers think,
well, wait a minute. I'm getting
45:36
fired. Let me record the whole
thing. I think I'll document
45:39
this. Oh, I just did. Let me
post it. Yeah, good points.
45:43
Makes this makes Cloud Flare
look like a bunch of douche
45:47
bags. And total
45:48
Adam Curry: douche is Yeah. No,
I agree with that. But that's, I
45:51
mean, that is that is Silicon
Valley. And it's interesting
45:56
that this is really one of the
few phone recordings we're
45:59
seeing. Because this happened
constantly. Constantly.
46:04
John C Dvorak: Yes, it's one of
the few This is she is setting a
46:08
new bar now. This is not going
to be the first that we hear
46:13
something like this until they
stop it because this This is
46:16
embarrassing.
46:19
Adam Curry: The I hadn't even
this video was posted kind of
46:22
like look at this Cry Baby
Zoomer. And I think you're
46:26
making some valid points here.
So there I am. Yes. There us why
46:31
there's two of us. Onward. Yeah,
I
46:33
Unknown: would love like an
explanation that makes sense.
46:40
Adam Curry: Okay, you got me
100%. Yeah, with
46:44
Unknown: love, like an
explanation that makes sense.
46:50
Real quick, let me carve out two
threads. A ladder of why I'm on
46:58
this conversation. I'll put that
one. The second half and Rosie
47:02
might be
47:02
Adam Curry: better to explain
shooter said let's put a pin in
47:04
that that would have been
another boring moment. But he
47:07
made a carve out carve out let
me put a pin in that
47:12
Unknown: conversation. I'll put
that one. The second half and
47:15
Rosie my feet better to explain
the process of let's circle back
47:19
who's getting this information
in the prior piece, which is
47:23
your feedback and notes about
your performance? So we had no
47:29
context to that. So just for
clarification, you are not being
47:33
singled out on this. Your peers
are also being collectively
47:38
performance as a collective
collaboration for Cloudflare
47:41
Adam Curry: collective
calibration for Cloudflare
47:43
Cloudflare Hmm, that that sounds
like a annual credit
47:50
John C Dvorak: toward the bling
in there
47:52
Adam Curry: to collective
calibration for Cloudflare SSL
47:57
Unknown: performance as the
collective calibration for
48:00
Cloudflare so I just want to
clarify that piece. I won't be
48:04
able to add any kind of numbers
are we Yeah, no
48:06
Can you explain for me why
Britney peach is getting let go.
48:11
Adam Curry: I won't be able to
by the way, great porn name. I'm
48:14
sorry. No, I hate to say it but
Britney peach is a great name.
48:18
John C Dvorak: Yeah, it's it
would be as peach it would be
48:20
but her name is actually Pietsch
es kind of thing it's a
48:25
complicated even better. Well I
think No I think Brittany PHP e
48:30
AC E would be a good strippers
name.
48:34
Adam Curry: It's also a good
name for a radio show. Hey
48:39
middays Brittany peach with you.
Cheers. Berlin Britain
48:43
John C Dvorak: there's a weather
girl on the Fox Weather Channel
48:46
whose last name is freeze Oh no.
48:50
Adam Curry: Hello I'm Brittany
freeze peach everybody Brittany
48:53
Unknown: peaches getting let go
48:56
I won't be able to go into
specifics for numbers
48:59
Wait why though? I just started
I've been working extremely hard
49:04
just because I haven't closed
anything that has nothing to do
49:07
with my performance on a three
month ramp with just one month
49:11
with to halt major holidays in
the middle. I don't think that
49:15
has anything to do with why I
should be let go if that makes
49:19
sense. So I really need an
answer and an explanation as to
49:22
why for EPs getting let go not
why Cloudflare decided to hire
49:26
too many people then are now
actually realizing that they
49:29
can't afford this many people.
If that's the real answer, I
49:33
would rather just you tell me
that instead of making up some
49:35
bullshit and telling you that it
was my job from someone that
49:39
I've never met before, if you
can respect Okay, first of all
49:45
Adam Curry: she shouldn't have
dropped the bullshit thing
49:47
that's too bad that kind of kind
of ruined everything the way she
49:51
did it. And I have to give it to
her though. When I had to fire
49:55
everyone. We literally lost
clients it this was think new
49:59
idea. This is before I knew you
had but it was the same with the
50:03
with with POD show. We don't
have enough money to say we have
50:07
to cut back. And I literally
said like, we lost clients. We
50:11
don't have work for you. I'm
sorry, I gotta let you go. But
50:14
that was the real reason. And
it, I would just guess that's
50:20
the real reason Cloudflare is
letting people go.
50:25
John C Dvorak: I would say yes
to that, too. And I think she
50:27
was right when she nailed it. I
don't know. I don't object to
50:31
the way she presented it
personally with the bullshit
50:34
because that's one other but you
know, that's good. I think she,
50:38
I think that's what is going on.
And that's what she pointed out.
50:43
And she said, I'd rather you
fire me for that reason, which
50:46
is hey, we fired to me people.
Sorry. You're now at the bottom
50:49
of the list here. You gotta you
gotta go. We can't do anything
50:51
about it. Yeah, that would be
fine. And she, I think she would
50:55
be happy with that. But not the
nonsense, happier. Um, it's
51:00
Adam Curry: not joyful. But no,
she's
51:02
John C Dvorak: not gonna be
happy at all, but happier. Yeah.
51:05
or less. Just
51:06
Adam Curry: be honest. Be
honest. That's, I mean, I've
51:09
I've fired people. It's like,
you're fired. Here's why I'm not
51:11
gonna, you know, they're not
going to pussyfoot around is
51:14
like, you're fired. I gotta let
you go. And here's why. But,
51:18
okay. I hated that so much. I
hated that so much. But I
51:23
certainly didn't push it out and
let HR do it.
51:28
John C Dvorak: Yeah, you have to
do it yourself. Okay, onward. I
51:30
Unknown: can totally respect
that. And I don't think DOM or
51:33
myself today is going to give
you any clarity or answers, it's
51:38
going to meet the expectations
that you're communicating to us,
51:43
Brittany, so I can't speak to
51:46
am I getting let go for no
reason. If you guys can't give
51:49
me a reason, I'm
51:51
happy to follow up with you
separately to give you the data
51:55
that was calibrated for me to
speak with revenue leadership,
52:00
specifically, to see if we can
get that for you. But dominantly
52:04
share that. I cannot share that
with you right now,
52:08
unfortunately,
52:09
Adam Curry: because she doesn't
have that data. It's
52:11
Unknown: understandable how you
feel and your frustration,
52:15
cannot back to the script and
stress that and I have been
52:18
working extremely hard. Sorry, I
just knew that this meeting was
52:22
coming after knowing what's been
happening with my peers and how
52:25
extremely frustrated and upset
everyone is. I know you guys
52:29
must not be able to understand
that given the in the positions
52:31
that you are in. And it must be
very easy for you to just have
52:34
these little 10 minute 15 minute
meetings, tell someone that
52:37
they're fired completely wreck
their whole life. And then
52:39
that's it with no explanation.
That's traumatizing for people
52:43
traumatized, you can imagine
that and I don't. Well,
52:47
Adam Curry: now, back to the
Zoomer position. If these people
52:52
truly were thinking about the
people they're firing being,
52:56
quote, unquote, humane, knowing
that this generation, and even
53:03
the generation before her, I'm
just guessing, they'll have
53:07
always had participation
trophies, and yeah, you're doing
53:11
great, it's okay. Don't worry
about it, it would have been
53:14
much more it was much nicer to
have just blamed and on the
53:19
company's position, which is
ultimately always the truth.
53:22
Like, you know, it's not working
because we need more money and
53:26
you can't deliver but but not,
not this, you know?
53:33
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I wonder
where this evolved from. I mean,
53:35
again, I refer back to the movie
up in the air, which was not
53:39
about a tech company, but it was
the same kind of thing where you
53:42
had this was a big, corporate
big corporation that had to do a
53:46
lot of firing. And I'm trying to
think I didn't get fired a lot,
53:53
but I I have
53:54
Adam Curry: been That's
surprising.
53:58
John C Dvorak: surprising to me,
well, because
54:00
Adam Curry: you brought in the
numbers you brought in the
54:01
moolah, baby, you are the cash
cow. No
54:03
John C Dvorak: one ever went
broke advertising next to a
54:05
Devorah column, right? I'm
talking about but No, I'm
54:10
talking about when I was younger
and working in factories and I
54:15
was almost fired from
International Harvester one year
54:17
but and I was taken in to the my
direct supervisor and he told me
54:21
what was wrong and he said, You
have to stop that. And so I went
54:25
back to work but it was there's
the there was this idea what I
54:29
what I'm interested in is this
third party which again would
54:32
goes back to the movie, this
third party that comes in as
54:35
they've is the hatchet man.
Yeah. And the hatchet man comes
54:39
a week they had one of these at
IDG when I was working for info
54:46
world, there was a hatchet man
known as it computer world, the
54:50
cause Padma govern had to be
loved by everybody. And he was a
54:53
nice guy slap on the back.
Everything's fantastic. And he
54:58
had a hatchet man named Walter
boy. Who was a kind of a gay
55:02
character that wore an urban
coat. And he was very
55:07
flamboyant. And he go in and he
just loved firing people, and he
55:10
would be the hatchet guy and he
come in with you, for me having
55:14
a meeting with Walter Boyd,
you're out. And everybody knew
55:16
in advance, which is kind of
what this girl is going through
55:20
because she knew in advance that
she was gonna get fired by
55:22
these. These these Newton nicks
and nobody knows who they are. I
55:26
just wonder where this
professional, I
55:30
Adam Curry: forget the name of
the company, but I always hear
55:32
it advertised on CNBC. It's like
it's on tip my tongue. And you
55:37
hear these years people calling
him like, you even an employee
55:41
who has horrible body odor, and
I just don't know how to talk to
55:43
him about it, then, yes, we have
an employee he was always late.
55:47
And the you know, so all and
then it's the payoff is don't
55:50
worry, we'll come in, we'll take
care of it for you.
55:53
John C Dvorak: I don't know
this.
55:54
Adam Curry: Oh, man. It's on the
tip of my tongue. I should.
56:00
Yeah, it's an HR company. And
56:03
John C Dvorak: interesting.
Yeah, well, it's somehow along
56:05
the lines has happened. So let's
go. What are we on clip three,
56:08
Adam Curry: four, we're still
four, we're still foreign, we
56:09
John C Dvorak: finish up. But we
still I
56:11
Unknown: don't think that this
is, it's just very, very
56:16
shocking, very, very shocking. I
have like, really given my whole
56:21
energy and life over the last
four months to this job. And to
56:24
be let go for no reason is like
a huge slap in the face from a
56:29
company that I really want it to
believe in, I can
56:32
absolutely understand how you
feel that way and why you feel
56:35
that way. And I'll be honest
with you, there's nothing that
56:38
we're going to say in this call
and the time that we have that's
56:41
going to undo the way that you
feel right in this moment.
56:46
Adam Curry: Back to the script,
the way you feel right
56:48
John C Dvorak: at this my love
this part of the time, we have
56:52
another words you got your 10
minutes was what she said at the
56:55
beginning of these 10 minute
call. Yeah. And this This call
56:58
was nine minutes. In the time
that we have in other words,
57:04
shut up so you can get fire. So
we know the next time I or
57:07
somebody else,
57:07
Adam Curry: we gotta wrap this
up people. Were on the clock to
57:11
Lady Bethany beach. We're on the
clock here.
57:16
John C Dvorak: Yeah, pretty much
is what it amounted to. This is
57:18
the last clip by
57:19
Unknown: her saying we'll do
everything that I can to give
57:22
you as much specific information
as I can, after this call. I
57:26
can't make any promises. I
understand where you're coming
57:30
from. I can tell you that
domande I do care. I understand
57:35
the feeling that you have right
now. And I can't change that. So
57:40
just beyond but
57:41
why can't so but there you guys
have still not given me a reason
57:45
why I'm being let go. Despite
constant positive praise from my
57:50
manager, great meetings that I'm
having the amount of activity
57:56
that I have has all been
positive. I have not received
58:00
any negative inclination. I have
not been put on a performance
58:03
improvement plan. Nothing so I
58:08
Adam Curry: could not good
point. Performance Improvement
58:11
Plan. I'm sure. I'm sure that's
a real thing. Yeah,
58:15
John C Dvorak: yes. In fact, our
guy who sent us our producers
58:18
sent this stuff in was mentioned
a performance improvement plan
58:22
is is code for it is a real
thing. And is Stein when you're
58:28
screwing up and now they're
gonna start documenting it so
58:31
they can fire you with cause
there you go. I know they didn't
58:34
do that with her. But again
before you finish it you have
58:38
Adam Curry: another clip of this
by the way that you have a six
58:40
this is five
58:41
John C Dvorak: oh and then
there's off still stopped
58:44
because you're gonna take
forever.
58:45
Adam Curry: No, I want to hear
them all now. Yeah, I was gonna
58:47
say was Britney's future.
58:50
John C Dvorak: Zoomers? You
know, when they're hired, and if
58:54
they have the reputation that
they have of being super
58:57
sensitive? It's possible that
their managers are kind of
59:02
alerted to this and, and, and
have to treat them with kid
59:05
gloves. And so you never get the
kind of feedback you need to
59:08
say, Hey, you're not working
hard enough. Is I mean, so I'm
59:13
at a crossroads at this part of
her discussion as to how much of
59:17
this is her fault by virtue of
her peers and peer group of
59:23
Zoomers who are not known for
being hard workers. She and me
59:29
but think they are diluted.
59:33
Adam Curry: Let's let's get back
to the tape.
59:35
Unknown: I cannot speak to what
your manager has communicated to
59:39
you directly. But that should be
the indication of poor
59:43
performance based on your
attainment and leading
59:45
indicators of data. That is that
is the rationale.
59:49
But I've been here for only a
month after ramping and that was
59:53
during the holiday. So I don't
understand what those Can you
59:56
explain what those performance
metrics are? Or is that just
59:59
like Have a vague term to give
to everyone that you're speaking
1:00:04
to today.
1:00:05
I will say that the performance
indicators of performance
1:00:08
metrics are well,
1:00:11
Adam Curry: they are what did he
say that? Did he say force
1:00:14
metrics?
1:00:15
John C Dvorak: Sound or what he
said I think it was for spin
1:00:18
that
1:00:18
Adam Curry: that's probably
Salesforce metrics. This is how
1:00:20
this is how you're Oh, you're
right.
1:00:22
John C Dvorak: It has to be
forced forced metric Salesforce
1:00:25
would be, it would be yes.
1:00:29
Unknown: To give to everyone
that you're speaking
1:00:31
Adam Curry: to performance,
people are saying where miss
1:00:33
hearing it performance was
hearing.
1:00:34
Unknown: I'll say that the
performance indicators.
1:00:38
Adam Curry: Mommy's SS force
metrics,
1:00:41
John C Dvorak: performance based
on force metrics, he says
1:00:43
performance force metrics,
1:00:45
Unknown: I'll say that the
performance indicators and
1:00:48
performance metrics are while
they are specifics, there's no
1:00:54
situation will we will be able
to conceive,
1:00:56
I don't even know. Do you guys
even know? Like, why? Like who
1:01:00
you're talking to each day?
Like, every single 1015 minutes?
1:01:04
Do you guys even know who you're
talking to? Like, why you're
1:01:07
letting these people go? When
you don't even understand like
1:01:10
the kind of work and everything
that they've put in?
1:01:15
I hear you what you saying that?
1:01:19
Adam Curry: No, no, no. Wow.
1:01:22
John C Dvorak: No, I wonder
1:01:23
Adam Curry: what this costs for.
For them to hire this team. They
1:01:27
John C Dvorak: could have
probably kept around for another
1:01:28
six months, or what costs are
these two? Right now? I was
1:01:32
going back to force metrics.
This is kind of what happened
1:01:35
with shs it was together the big
the big bomb. No, SP it was SPS.
1:01:44
It was it was another big. It's
a big personnel software system.
1:01:51
Somebody should I only know
Bong. No, no, this is this is
1:01:54
you if I keep thinking shs But
it might be something else. But
1:01:58
it's like three letters or
couple of letters. And they're
1:02:01
the ones who have SLP. SAP SAP
1:02:05
Adam Curry: da. Thanks. net net.
Thanks, Mike. SAP
1:02:09
John C Dvorak: has built it,
which is a system that another
1:02:11
system have you implemented and
you don't have to do any
1:02:14
thinking because you don't have
to meet. Really understand your
1:02:17
employees. You did SAP does the
work for you. And SAP is
1:02:21
incorporated within it. I don't
know if it's from Jack Welch or
1:02:27
they're the ones who first came
up with it. Rank stack ranking
1:02:31
ranking, right. Yeah. And so sap
would would create the stack
1:02:35
ranking situation and you'd get
to fire people without having to
1:02:39
really do any. It's no surprise
and Microsoft stock and the
1:02:43
company has just skyrocketed.
Once they seemingly eliminated
1:02:50
stack ranking from his from
there. They don't do it anymore.
1:02:53
As far as I know. Oh,
interesting. When Ballmer left
1:02:56
out it left with it. I think
Ballmer actually may have
1:02:58
cancelled it while he was there.
But it we didn't get to benefit
1:03:01
from it. And this is a very bad
system, because what it creates
1:03:06
is stacked ranking creates. And
I think that this may be
1:03:09
incorporated into the Salesforce
thing. stack ranking creates a
1:03:14
environment that is very similar
to the TV show survivor, where
1:03:19
people scheme against one guy
they want to get rid of. It's a
1:03:24
scam. It's not useful. No, no,
you end up getting rid of your
1:03:29
best people by accident, or by
shock.
1:03:31
Adam Curry: limbers was a hero
for stuff like this people he
1:03:34
was Yeah,
1:03:35
John C Dvorak: Jack Welch guy.
Yep, pretty much. Right? The
1:03:39
worst?
1:03:40
Adam Curry: Of the worst. We
have one more here. Okay, I hear
1:03:45
you what you're
1:03:45
Unknown: saying. It just doesn't
make it it just doesn't make any
1:03:48
sense that you guys have still
not been able to give me a
1:03:50
reason why I'm being let go.
1:03:53
from a process perspective, your
questions are valid. This isn't
1:03:58
gonna be the four scripts from
the situation where we're able
1:04:00
to go into the detail.
1:04:02
But then when if it's not right,
as I'm getting fired, it's
1:04:05
certainly not going to be after
when I'm no longer part of the
1:04:08
company.
1:04:09
No, no, I don't think there's
anything we can say in this
1:04:13
moment or today, Brittany,
that's going to change the way
1:04:16
that you feel. And it's under
again, like understandable. I'm
1:04:19
taking notes and feedback, oil.
1:04:24
Coming to the meeting,
1:04:26
it's not going to change the
outcome of a situation che so it
1:04:29
may be best if we do get into
more of the specifics of what
1:04:35
the next steps are. Because I
think it's clear that you have
1:04:39
questions that we cannot give
answers to. And if you'd be open
1:04:43
to it, I'd love to move into
what the next steps are so that
1:04:46
you're not any further
blindsided than you already
1:04:50
feel.
1:04:50
Adam Curry: Wrap it up. Okay.
1:04:53
Unknown: Thank you down. Again,
I'm really sorry that you're
1:04:57
having this experience and
feeling this way. I want to
1:05:02
confirm your personal email
address because that's where
1:05:07
Adam Curry: remember people when
you divorce please say to your
1:05:10
ex spouse or future ex spouse
I'm really sorry you're having
1:05:13
this experience it's really the
way to go it's really the way to
1:05:17
go
1:05:18
John C Dvorak: I found this this
little bit to be this where I
1:05:21
slipped it and wanted to discuss
it because I think it portends
1:05:28
for a lot of interesting
situations down the road the
1:05:31
least of which is this this idea
that you're going to get some
1:05:34
and a zoom call and fire him and
get away with it yeah, I think
1:05:38
those days are over well the
1:05:39
Adam Curry: troll room is
business all over this thing
1:05:42
that they know all kinds of
people are getting fired by zoom
1:05:44
it seems to be the standard
1:05:47
John C Dvorak: Yeah, we're
recording this. This is good
1:05:50
material.
1:05:51
Adam Curry: Yes a little long. I
could have done with a little
1:05:53
less but thank well I think
1:05:55
John C Dvorak: I could have I
tried to cut it down but I
1:05:57
decided to put the whole cloth
because I did have commentary
1:06:02
Adam Curry: back to some news
because it's flu season
1:06:05
Unknown: flu season is raging
fever, Jake's and runny noses.
1:06:08
Listen to these nap pops flu
season is raging fever, aches
1:06:12
and runny noses. Especially in
the south.
1:06:16
We have a very early start to
our flu season.
1:06:19
Dr. Andy Shain is the head of
infectious diseases at
1:06:22
Children's Healthcare of
Atlanta, where cases of COVID
1:06:25
and both flu a and flu B are up.
She says the flu vaccine appears
1:06:30
to be working this year. The
problem is people aren't getting
1:06:33
the shot.
1:06:34
vaccination rates of children
are much lower this year. uptake
1:06:38
of vaccination has been less.
1:06:40
The CDC says numbers of
outpatient flu cases decreased
1:06:43
last week, but they have
remained higher than expected
1:06:46
since November. Altogether this
flu season there have been 14
1:06:50
million cases and nearly 10,000
deaths, numbers back to pre
1:06:54
pandemic levels, deadly
illnesses are hitting even those
1:06:58
young and healthy. What
1:06:59
Adam Curry: does that mean
levels back to pre pandemic
1:07:02
levels. Does that mean it's just
back to normal?
1:07:04
John C Dvorak: Yes, what it
sounds like to me she
1:07:06
Adam Curry: makes it sound like
it's back to pre pandemic
1:07:08
levels. Yeah,
1:07:10
Unknown: normal sounds good
numbers
1:07:11
back to pre pandemic levels.
Deadly illnesses are hitting
1:07:15
even those young and healthy,
deadly illnesses like Quinton
1:07:19
Thomas, a 27 year old father of
three died last week after his
1:07:24
family says he contracted flu A
and B at the same time know your
1:07:28
son was otherwise a very healthy
young man. Right?
1:07:33
Hard working young man. Hard to
believe it's too
1:07:37
fast. It's too sudden.
1:07:39
He's distraught father Robert
telling us Quinton was
1:07:42
unvaccinated. Are you gonna go
get vaccinated? Yeah,
1:07:45
Adam Curry: probably. Yeah, I'm
going down.
1:07:48
Unknown: grandbabies rounds with
vaccines remain the best defense
1:07:56
according to doctors, they
1:07:57
really are the optimal way and
the sort of foundation of all of
1:08:02
the efforts that we recommend to
prevent the transmission of flu
1:08:07
and COVID So
1:08:08
Adam Curry: keep the vaccines
common for everything and
1:08:11
anything it's all great even
though the flu shot really
1:08:13
doesn't work at least 50% of the
time.
1:08:16
John C Dvorak: Now here's the
thing that bothers me because I
1:08:18
was watching some news this
morning and the news cast was
1:08:23
bragging about all the good work
they do for the community but
1:08:26
never about covering news. The
news here that needs to be
1:08:30
covered is why we'll all of a
sudden we added the blue MB the
1:08:35
vaccine hesitancy hesitancy has
become so inculcated within the
1:08:42
population as a whole people are
very skeptical about these
1:08:46
vaccines now thank thanks to who
How did that happen? The Hobbit
1:08:51
An explanation for that.
1:08:53
Adam Curry: I have the
explanation. Well, we
1:08:55
John C Dvorak: both that we did
the show has the explanation but
1:08:58
it's because we do have
1:08:59
Adam Curry: is because of the
Dark Horse podcast. Brett
1:09:02
Weinstein which I have to talk
about him in a second. But
1:09:08
first, this continues because
doctors are very alarmed. This
1:09:12
Unknown: is the first time I
have known the flu to be
1:09:15
horrible. Mary Stein and her
three year old son James have
1:09:19
spent the last few nights in the
Dallas hospital.
1:09:22
His cough got so strong and so
hard. We've been here since
1:09:25
Wednesday night diagnosed with
flu A and then that turned into
1:09:30
right side pneumonia.
1:09:31
Coughing kids have kept Dr.
Stephanie a tee up with Dallas
1:09:35
Medical City Children's Hospital
busy for
1:09:37
months, we're seeing more flu
this year than we did last year
1:09:41
or the year before.
1:09:42
Nationally, the number of flu
cases has decreased. But in
1:09:46
southern states flu activity is
still high, including in Dallas
1:09:50
County, where almost 20% of
tests are positive.
1:09:53
One thing that's a little
unusual this flu season is that
1:09:56
we're seeing both flu a and flu
be more or less at the Same
1:10:00
time,
1:10:00
lower vaccination rates could be
to blame. Less than half of
1:10:04
adults and children have gotten
the latest flu vaccine, the
1:10:08
lowest in five years.
1:10:10
I think there definitely is some
vaccine fatigue out there. From
1:10:13
the last couple of years. He
sounds pretty good.
1:10:16
Stein says she is getting her
son's flu shot this year, and
1:10:20
urges parents to take the
1:10:21
flu seriously,
1:10:23
I would definitely go with your
gut, listen to your instincts
1:10:28
and either get the flu shot or
be very proactive in your
1:10:32
treatments. Doctors
1:10:34
say it's still not too late to
get the flu shot.
1:10:37
And they also say if you're
sick, don't go to work. If your
1:10:40
kids are sick, don't send them
to school. Staying home could
1:10:44
help stop the spread.
1:10:46
Nor we know the flu is deadly.
1:10:50
Adam Curry: Flu rather now.
1:10:51
John C Dvorak: So can I just
interject something here? Of
1:10:54
course, because I haven't taken
the flu shot for, I don't know,
1:10:57
20 years. And I did in 2017
catch something that appeared to
1:11:02
be the flu and I would I always
have at the ready and every time
1:11:05
I mentioned this to a doctor,
they say oh yeah, that's a
1:11:07
pretty good idea.
1:11:08
Adam Curry: You OD on vitamin
d3. No, no. Oh, Tamiflu,
1:11:13
John C Dvorak: Tamiflu and
Relenza, right, right, right. So
1:11:16
these are two products that
stopped a flu in its tracks,
1:11:21
literally, and they work. I
think Relenza might work a
1:11:25
little better than Tamiflu. And
they supposedly Relenza works
1:11:28
against bird flu. Nobody. Why is
this not even mentioned in these
1:11:33
reports? That if you catch if
you have a hint that you're
1:11:36
catching the flu, you would take
one of these products if you
1:11:39
weren't maybe weren't
vaccinated? Because the getting
1:11:43
endless flu vaccinations seems
futile anyway.
1:11:46
Adam Curry: Well, I'm just going
to guess that Tamiflu didn't get
1:11:50
John C Dvorak: any money from
GlaxoSmithKline because you guys
1:11:53
are gonna
1:11:54
Adam Curry: guess that is
generic. Would that be crazy? I
1:11:57
mean, Tamiflu seems like Tamiflu
1:11:59
John C Dvorak: is generic at
this point, but not real ends. I
1:12:02
think it's still only available
through Glaxo Tamiflu
1:12:07
Adam Curry: was generic as of
2018. Yeah,
1:12:11
John C Dvorak: so it's a screw
them. Yeah. Screw that pelvic
1:12:15
for actually educating people
Tamiflu. So I, you know,
1:12:18
everyone would say well, I get I
get some more Tamiflu because it
1:12:21
does. has a long shelf life, but
it has an expiration date that I
1:12:25
think is bogus, whatever. And
the doctor, I said, I said, What
1:12:29
do you need Tamiflu for it? So
just in case, if I get the flu,
1:12:32
I like to have some towel flew
around. So I don't have to, you
1:12:34
know, hustle around to get all
it's a great idea. They always
1:12:37
say that. Oh, yeah, that's a
great idea.
1:12:42
Adam Curry: And America's
favorite doctor, Dr. DeVore.
1:12:44
Rock, everybody
1:12:46
John C Dvorak: in America is
telling me it's a great idea.
1:12:49
America's retirement idea, man.
1:12:53
Adam Curry: I have a question. I
have a question. Idea. Man. I
1:12:55
got a question. I got a
question. Isn't it rare that
1:13:00
what I was understood is the flu
vaccine vaccination was always
1:13:04
kind of a guess. But they they
had some data and say, well,
1:13:07
it's either gonna be flu a or
flu b this year. So
1:13:12
John C Dvorak: that they had
three, three choices, usually.
1:13:15
But, but
1:13:16
Adam Curry: it was always like,
Okay, you take, okay, flu, A, B,
1:13:18
or C, but I think a or b is what
I remember. And they would make
1:13:22
the vaccine with a and sometimes
they would guess wrong, and
1:13:25
everyone you know, the shot
would be worthless. Oh,
1:13:27
John C Dvorak: it happens. All
it happened about oh, but during
1:13:30
this show era? Yeah, a couple
times, I think about five or six
1:13:33
years ago, they had these all
the they had all these shots,
1:13:37
and there was getting a shot.
And then there was some
1:13:39
California variant. I
specifically remember this, and
1:13:44
everybody got sick.
1:13:46
Adam Curry: But But have you I
don't recall a time when the A
1:13:50
and the B was out. I thought it
was always a or b. I don't
1:13:54
remember no,
1:13:54
John C Dvorak: no, my
understanding that there's three
1:13:56
blended in there all at all
times three of them. And they
1:13:59
pay and they get it from
Australia. No. Oh, yes. Because
1:14:03
Australia is outside of China.
And then they go and they say
1:14:06
well, what, what do you think is
going to be what's the most
1:14:09
popular where everyone seems to
be getting sick from this one.
1:14:12
So let's manufacture a vaccine.
1:14:13
Adam Curry: Oh, because they are
six months ahead? Yeah. So
1:14:17
they're like, they're like our
crash test dummies?
1:14:21
John C Dvorak: Yeah. So I don't
know what they do. So
1:14:24
Adam Curry: anyway, Well,
speaking of Australia, do you
1:14:26
remember when Australia had a
vaccine for COVID? Yeah. And it
1:14:32
contained HIV. Remember that? I
1:14:36
John C Dvorak: thought that wait
a minute, I thought if you
1:14:38
remember when this all began,
and that French guy, the French
1:14:42
Nobel Prize winner came out and
looked at the at the construct
1:14:47
of the of the virus and he says,
Oh, he's the one who said
1:14:50
there's HIV in it.
1:14:52
Adam Curry: The virus, the virus
or the vaccine.
1:14:56
John C Dvorak: The virus, the
1:14:58
Adam Curry: virus, okay. He said
this age Shaheed
1:15:00
John C Dvorak: HIV and the virus
and his supposition was they
1:15:04
were trying to create he didn't
have a positive attitude about
1:15:09
it. He says this looks like they
were trying to create a vaccine
1:15:13
that could, because it was
impossible to get HIV vaccine
1:15:17
doesn't exist because they can't
crack some wall or something.
1:15:21
And they were thinking this
might be a kind of a half assed
1:15:26
way in to get people
1:15:31
Adam Curry: immunized.
1:15:34
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that's what
his theory wasn't. So there were
1:15:37
and so he's because everyone
said there was HIV. And in the,
1:15:41
in the created virus, the COVID,
the first batch that came went
1:15:45
through,
1:15:46
Adam Curry: well, Deborah Birx
commander Burke's Rear Admiral
1:15:51
Burke's, your buddy, to she aged
dramatically. Just a couple of
1:15:59
years, her I've been her face is
just I
1:16:02
John C Dvorak: think like a
party. You know, I think there's
1:16:05
something to the the idea of a
of a, what to call it a vibe,
1:16:12
or, or a hey, hate vibe, or
something that goes through
1:16:17
black matter and black energy of
the universe, and it goes in and
1:16:21
it lands on somebody eats you
up. And it eats you up? Yeah,
1:16:27
well, I'm almost convinced of
this.
1:16:29
Adam Curry: Well, that's what
she looks like. And she was on
1:16:31
news nation with the Cuomo kid.
And this clip, left me with more
1:16:37
questions than I could ever have
comparisons
1:16:40
Unknown: to HIV, you've done a
ton of research in this. Do you
1:16:43
believe this was a false flag?
Is there something that
1:16:46
contextually people need to
understand about that
1:16:49
comparison, or is this much
darker potential reality than we
1:16:53
knew?
1:16:54
The reason that comparison to
HIV is important is because HIV
1:16:59
was also asymptomatic. I mean,
you couldn't see the virus
1:17:03
through symptoms because people
were infected for 789 years
1:17:07
before they develop symptoms.
But HIV quietly destroyed our
1:17:12
immune system. And we learned a
lot about immunology from HIV,
1:17:16
and it's changed completely our
cancer therapy. We're learning
1:17:19
now about mitochondria and viral
impact and brain fog and the
1:17:25
changes in our neurons and the
cells that nourish our neurons
1:17:31
that really allow us to think
and move. And we're learning
1:17:35
that because what have long
COVID has done. And so there's
1:17:38
two sides of this coin every
time. There's a lot of
1:17:42
destruction that mild and
moderate COVID can do that is on
1:17:46
scene, just like HIV was
destroying our immune system.
1:17:49
But what came out of that is
brilliant science that changed
1:17:54
how we treated HIV. And if
you're diagnosed today, you can
1:17:57
live a very normal lifespan. And
people not only survive, but
1:18:02
thrive, we need to get to the
place where people with long
1:18:05
COVID We've done the research so
that people with long COVID can
1:18:09
not only survive, but thrive.
1:18:12
Adam Curry: I mean, first of
all, the Como kid starts off
1:18:14
with false flag. I don't know
the context of that. But then
1:18:19
she ended up with survive, but
thrive, which sounds like a
1:18:22
marketing slogan to me, though,
and it sounds like there's some
1:18:27
prep, medication coming out for
long COVID or something that you
1:18:33
can take every day kind of like
a statin. So even if you're
1:18:37
infected for seven, eight years
with COVID and don't know it,
1:18:41
you'll survive and thrive, the
whole thing stinks.
1:18:44
John C Dvorak: And she does not
know how to bring it up as a
1:18:47
marketing phrase. Although they
could it would be funny if the
1:18:50
drug was just ivermectin
1:18:54
Adam Curry: in a capsule. She
also I mean, first of all, she
1:18:58
says, we didn't know HIV people
had. I mean, she was on the HIV
1:19:02
team with Fauci. So these people
are experts in in all of this
1:19:07
stuff. And, you know, I was
close to a lot of that. And, you
1:19:13
know, there was no seven eight
years was like, Oh, you got
1:19:16
AIDS, you're gonna die. And then
they were they went into
1:19:18
hospital, they gave him AZT, a
cancer failed cancer drug, which
1:19:23
is what you said, Well, we
learned a lot about cancer from
1:19:25
age. Yeah, we learned that AZT
is a bad drug. It was killed. It
1:19:30
was killing this whole thing
stinks. We got to keep our eye
1:19:34
on Burks now that we are done
with her I'm surprised and maybe
1:19:38
because she's involved with
death that she looks like that.
1:19:42
You think it's the black energy
from from people hating her but
1:19:45
I think she's just around death
medicine all day around death
1:19:50
ideas. Maybe it's disturbing.
Okay, I need to talk about Brett
1:19:57
and Heather.
1:19:59
John C Dvorak: Because I go Get
to note that Jay Jay that
1:20:01
somebody said to notes Oh, dude,
1:20:03
Adam Curry: I got 20 emails. And
I have to say 19 of them. Very
1:20:09
nice, saying, Hey, you're wrong
about Breton. Heather, this is
1:20:14
the dark horse podcast. Yes,
they had we weren't wrong
1:20:19
because we said, you know, Hey,
dude, be we're all in on
1:20:22
everything in the beginning.
1:20:23
John C Dvorak: Well, he No, he
just did yesterday. He just
1:20:27
village.
1:20:28
Adam Curry: I have the clips.
Don't just stick with me.
1:20:31
John C Dvorak: Okay, all right.
So as the tweet is in there,
1:20:34
yeah, yes.
1:20:36
Adam Curry: Go ahead. Yes.
Yesterday, he tweeted, slashed
1:20:39
on X, whatever. I'm deleting
this tweet about masks being
1:20:43
great. Exactly. Because people
keep retweeting it, and it makes
1:20:48
me sound like a douchebag. Okay,
fine. Then he did the I think
1:20:52
that's the point that people
were making. They were saying,
1:20:55
hey, you know, they had Mayor
culpa was all over the place.
1:20:58
They were wrong. They're wrong.
I although I believe they were
1:21:02
pro j&j vaccine, they were
definitely anti mRNA. And they
1:21:07
woke up along the way. So you
know, there was only one person
1:21:10
who was like, Stop shooting
another bad cat or whatever.
1:21:13
Fine. I also want to point out,
people may not know, but when
1:21:18
they were demonetized on
YouTube, I called Brett I spoke
1:21:21
with him. I set up a set him up
on podcasting. 2.0 I set him up
1:21:25
with streaming payments,
everything and he didn't care.
1:21:29
So that's okay. And I'm not I'm
not insulted by that. But I
1:21:31
said, Look, dude, I just want to
set you up. You're doing good
1:21:34
stuff over here. He was thankful
he has a Bitcoin node at home.
1:21:39
All that stuff was set up. I did
that for him. Because I like
1:21:42
them, even though we make fun of
them. I mean, how can you not
1:21:45
cause others to just as fun to
listen to? So then a whole bunch
1:21:53
of as, as these emails come in,
like I want to, I don't want
1:21:56
people to think that we hate
them. No, we don't. We'd love
1:21:59
Amy Goodman to you know, just
it's fun to make fun of her. So
1:22:05
they did on their most recent
episode, called the Dream Team.
1:22:13
She had a mia culpa. And here's
a clip, I have a long bullet
1:22:17
Unknown: list of various of our
positions, with links to where
1:22:21
we first talked about them as
far as I can find in our in our
1:22:24
long list of Dark Horse
episodes, since May of 2020.
1:22:30
Here are a few of the other
things that Bret and I've given
1:22:32
voice to these last three years
conclusions that we came to
1:22:34
through observation, checking of
our assumptions, analysis and
1:22:36
reanalysis. Be careful though,
consider these ideas and who
1:22:40
knows what could happen. And I
begin with what I see is two of
1:22:43
our big mistakes. Early in the
pandemic, we thought that masks
1:22:47
were broadly effective. We were
wrong. First we spoke about the
1:22:50
importance of masks. And as new
evidence came in our position
1:22:53
changed. We spoke about that
too. We also thought that short
1:22:57
early and strong lockdowns had a
chance of stopping the spread of
1:23:00
SARS cov. Two, we were wrong
about that. I don't think
1:23:04
lockdowns could have worked in
part because I don't think
1:23:06
sufficient worldwide compliance
was possible to stop the spread.
1:23:09
And as much as I'm disappointed
to have handed to have landed
1:23:11
here. I no longer trust my
government to borrow any of my
1:23:15
freedoms. So it goes on and on
and on.
1:23:18
Adam Curry: Now, the reason why
I'm doing this is because you
1:23:21
brought up Brett's interview on
Tucker the other day, and I
1:23:24
watched the whole thing. And I
do have some comments that I'll
1:23:27
come back to now. The one thing
that is interesting is Brett is
1:23:33
not 100% against lockdowns, he
has a caveat you just heard
1:23:38
Heather say, I don't trust my
government. Well, welcome to The
1:23:42
Club. We're all on board with
that. Now, I'm not a biologist.
1:23:48
But I still vehemently disagree
with any type of lockdown for
1:23:51
any reason. And Brett has
caveats when it comes to severe
1:23:56
lock downs.
1:23:58
Unknown: So maybe this is the
point to talk about. What my
1:24:02
current position is on lock
downs and what I regret and what
1:24:08
I don't regret. With my current
position, first of all, I do not
1:24:12
believe that given what SARS cov
two is that there was any
1:24:17
potential to control certainly
not control spread and my focus
1:24:22
has been actually driving the
pathogen to extinction. So the
1:24:26
reason that I will not just
simply say, lockdowns could
1:24:30
never conceivably work under any
circumstances against any
1:24:34
pathogen is that there?
Remember, I'm a biologist, I'm
1:24:38
focused on a novel pathogen that
were to jump by human meddling
1:24:46
or some other mechanism into the
human population from some
1:24:51
animals source from the wet
market. That therefore starts
1:24:56
out at some low level but has
significant and very less. So
1:25:00
I'm just painting a scenario
here. We're there to be a novel
1:25:05
pathogen that leapt into people,
but had not yet become endemic
1:25:11
to humanity. If one could drive
it to extinction, in that early
1:25:17
phase, the value to humanity
would be incalculably large. And
1:25:24
I choose that, that phrasing
very carefully. The reason that
1:25:28
it would be incalculably large,
is that the alternative of
1:25:32
allowing it to run its course
and become endemic, is for it to
1:25:36
continue to inflict costs on
humans for as long as humans
1:25:40
continue to exist. So
1:25:42
Adam Curry: that's his Prelude.
And by the way, if you don't
1:25:45
know, Brett Weinstein, he's a
famous guy, he was famous, it
1:25:50
was evergreen University, he
took a stand against wokeness,
1:25:54
he got run out of the
university. And I will, there's
1:25:58
a lot of people who got a lot of
good information from them
1:26:02
during COVID, once they had
figured some stuff out, but this
1:26:05
lockdown thing bothers me
because what he just described
1:26:08
there is again, like it jumping
from a bat or from a pangolin or
1:26:13
whatever, then he's not against
lock downs. And he clarifies
1:26:17
that he thinks that lock downs
will be okay. His caveat is
1:26:20
what's interesting,
1:26:21
Unknown: there is a value to
taking a pathogen, that there's
1:26:25
still the potential to drive it
extinct and doing so rather than
1:26:28
running out the clock and
letting it become endemic. If
1:26:31
one had the ability to drive a
new human pathogen to
1:26:35
extinction, that the value of
doing so would be very high and
1:26:39
would be worth a significant
small, a significant but small
1:26:43
cost. And that is why I have
said, short, intense lockdowns.
1:26:49
However, I do not believe there
is a government on earth today,
1:26:54
at least not at any large scale,
whether a city government could
1:27:00
have some alternative scenario,
I don't know. But the idea that
1:27:03
there's a national government or
an international body on earth
1:27:07
today, that can be trusted with
this kind of power is
1:27:10
preposterous, nor do I expect to
live to see a government worthy
1:27:15
of trust in this regard. So but
the point is, when I have
1:27:21
presented this idea, I have said
it as a brief, intense lockdown,
1:27:28
accompanied by high quality
testing. And the idea is in this
1:27:34
scenario, a pathogen that spread
and burned itself out in some
1:27:40
short period of time, and where
in those rare cases where for
1:27:44
some reason it was able to
bounce around for long enough to
1:27:46
escape that period of weeks, you
would be able to find it with
1:27:50
the testing that would allow in
principle, some properly
1:27:56
organized body to figure out how
to drive a pathogen to
1:27:59
extinction and benefit humanity
tremendously. That
1:28:02
Adam Curry: and here's where I
want to raise a red flag.
1:28:05
Because when you say as a
biologist, I believe that with a
1:28:11
certain type of pathogen that
comes from the pangolin,
1:28:14
whatever, short, severe intense
lockdowns with testing, but it
1:28:19
should only be ordered by a
group that is not a government.
1:28:24
I immediately think, hey, he and
his brother or that member, the
1:28:28
intellectual darkweb member, all
that bullcrap. Yeah. Oh, yeah.
1:28:33
And I'm like, Well, what kind of
group are we talking about? Now
1:28:37
we go to his Tucker interview.
At the very end, he has two
1:28:41
interesting comments, we are
living
1:28:43
Unknown: some crazy story in
which things that are perfectly
1:28:46
obvious are still somehow have
not lodged themselves in the
1:28:50
official public record. And, you
know, I think that has a lot to
1:28:55
do with, frankly, the depth of
journalism. Yes, a lot of us are
1:28:59
doing jobs that we didn't train
for Heather and I are doing some
1:29:03
journalistic job that we
certainly didn't train for
1:29:05
retrained to think about
biology. And you know, we do
1:29:09
that in front of a camera. And
so that functions as a kind of
1:29:12
stand in for journalism. But the
handful of journalists who still
1:29:17
exist, I think, without
exception, are not
1:29:21
scientifically trained. Right.
You know, Matt Taibbi, Glenn
1:29:25
Greenwald, you don't have very
many people doing investigative
1:29:30
journalism and the ones who who
are doing it, they don't have
1:29:37
the skill set that would make
this a natural topic to
1:29:40
investigate. So we have to boot
up some kind of new institution
1:29:46
that will allow us to do this
job well. And presumably that
1:29:49
will involve taking the few
investigative journalists who
1:29:54
remember how to do that job and
the few scientists and doctors
1:29:57
who are willing to still do
their job and And, you know, put
1:30:01
us together, right podcast isn't
the right place to do it. If
1:30:05
that's all we got, that's all we
got. But there's got to be a
1:30:08
better a better method. Okay,
1:30:10
Adam Curry: so I think podcast
is exactly the right way to do
1:30:14
it. He says, We need a new kind
of group when you're new to kind
1:30:17
of Institute, as you know, I've
got my eye on all of these, the
1:30:21
information Mavericks, the info
Mavericks, they're all going on
1:30:24
each other shows, they have the
Westminster declaration, these
1:30:29
are the new journalists and, and
they're all great, no doubt
1:30:32
about it. But be careful,
because people get compromised.
1:30:36
And they and I don't think he's
a bad guy. But when he starts
1:30:40
talking like that, or in the
flex clip, but get a little
1:30:43
worried about who's talking in
his ear,
1:30:46
Unknown: if everybody says it's
too dangerous to stand up, you
1:30:49
know, I'm not suicidal, I'm, I
can't do it, then not enough
1:30:54
people stand up to change the
course of history. Whereas if
1:30:58
people somehow put aside the
obvious danger, their ability to
1:31:05
earn and maybe their lives of
saying what needs to be said,
1:31:08
then we greatly outnumber those
we are pitted against, they are
1:31:16
ferociously powerful. But I
would also point out this
1:31:20
interesting error. So I call the
force that we're up against
1:31:26
Goliath, just so I kind of
remember what the battle is
1:31:30
Adam Curry: just that he's going
biblical. But this is his
1:31:33
version of Vai. It's Goliath is
1:31:35
Unknown: they, Goliath made a
terrible mistake. And it made it
1:31:38
most egregiously during COVID,
which is, it took all of the
1:31:43
competent people took all of the
courageous people, and it shoved
1:31:49
them out of the institutions
where they were hanging out. And
1:31:54
it created in so doing, the
Dream Team, created every player
1:32:00
you could possibly want on your
team to fight some historic
1:32:03
battle against a terrible evil.
All of those people are now at
1:32:08
least somewhat awake. They've
now been picked on by the same
1:32:11
enemy. And yeah, all right,
we're outgunned. It has a
1:32:14
tremendous amount of power, but,
but we've got all of the people
1:32:18
who know how to think. So I hate
to say it, or maybe I like to
1:32:22
say it, but I don't think it's a
slam dunk, but I like our
1:32:25
Adam Curry: odds. So he's
talking about a dream team. And
1:32:29
now he's gotten a lot of
pushback from people like who
1:32:32
determines dreams, I don't care.
But I also got a couple of notes
1:32:36
from people and remember the
word Institute boots something
1:32:40
up Dream Team. People starting
to point me towards the Santa Fe
1:32:44
Institute. You ever heard of
this outfit? The Santa Fe? What
1:32:47
do you know about them? What do
you know about the Santa Fe
1:32:49
offhand?
1:32:50
John C Dvorak: I can't tell you,
but I do know about them. I've
1:32:53
looked into them before and
every time I do something about
1:32:56
them, I don't like well,
1:32:57
Adam Curry: they have 8980 to 90
billion a million dollars a year
1:33:01
coming in. That's a nice money.
It's run by this Krakow guy who
1:33:06
is a evolutionary biologist.
That's the same discipline as as
1:33:11
Brett. So I'm going to the
homepage. I'm just looking
1:33:14
around, you know, oh, MIDI Rs in
there. Lots of people on the
1:33:18
board from banks, big venture
funds a lot
1:33:24
John C Dvorak: of money, first
against the Council of Foreign
1:33:26
relationship. didn't
1:33:28
Adam Curry: do that. But on the
homepage, it says a dream team
1:33:33
of scientists prize winning
ecologist physicist biolog
1:33:37
biologists and others from
Harvard to Vienna. And so I'm
1:33:43
thinking he's being sucked into
something. Yeah, sounds like it
1:33:47
to me. And it looks like a bunch
of transhumanism people be up
1:33:51
now, and I don't like it. I
don't like it. I don't like it.
1:33:56
Don't like, I'm just you know,
and again, it's not a slam
1:33:59
against that these people are
not deserved very fine people.
1:34:03
This might say, very fine
people. Now the only other end
1:34:08
so that's all I got to say about
him. I got my eye on them. Be
1:34:11
careful what you're doing
Britain Heather. The only thing
1:34:13
that breaks my heart breaks my
heart is they got demonetized
1:34:19
they were counting on you know,
they were in growth mode. They
1:34:22
are they're they're they're
doubling and they got screwed by
1:34:25
YouTube. Basically. Now they I
think they have some half deal
1:34:29
with rumble and locals do
everybody. It's the same. By the
1:34:32
way. It's the same. Same thing.
We're Glenn Greenwald goes,
1:34:36
everybody goes to rumble and
locals rumble bought locals. So
1:34:40
there's all that cabal going on.
Yep, that's where the Russell
1:34:43
Brand everybody goes over there.
Podcasting is not going to do
1:34:46
it. Okay. That's fine. I'm a
little heartbroken because they
1:34:51
remembered two intellectuals
they their evolutionary biology
1:35:00
just smart people who think
podcasting is no good podcasting
1:35:05
2.0 You know don't go for value
for value. What breaks my heart
1:35:09
is what they're actually doing
to make money.
1:35:12
Unknown: Okay, speaking of
things to eat Sunday is is our
1:35:15
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1:35:18
our favorites too. It is dog
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feeding where your dog
1:35:55
Adam Curry: now of course, you
really want to make the
1:35:57
advertiser feel happy about the
read the end, this was a very
1:36:00
good read Heather, dog food, but
we really wanted that sponsor to
1:36:04
know that that we really love
their business.
1:36:07
Unknown: Not only that, but in
some sort of mini collapse
1:36:10
scenario. If you ended up having
to share your dog's food. You
1:36:13
will be so glad somedays I speak
from experience. I mean, not
1:36:18
from the mini Apocalypse
experience, but from the having
1:36:21
tried it and that's good.
1:36:22
And not also from getting down
on the ground and eating from
1:36:24
her bowl, which is gross. Oh,
1:36:26
also on dignified, I mean, just
really bad. necessarily
1:36:30
stuff all
1:36:31
John C Dvorak: around his neck
and make some meat.
1:36:34
Unknown: That's true. But that
was more dignified than you
1:36:37
would you would imagine. Yeah.
Much better, much more
1:36:40
dignified. It
1:36:40
was a little badass at some
level. Right? And I mean, you
1:36:43
were only taking your word for
it.
1:36:45
I guess that's true. Yeah, I
didn't see it. Sure. Well, I
1:36:48
might have to repeat it.
1:36:50
On camera even. All right. All
right.
1:36:54
John C Dvorak: Oh my god. But
1:36:56
Unknown: here we go. I have not
tasted it. But it looks edible.
1:36:59
It is. Yeah, it is.
1:37:01
John C Dvorak: Oh, geez. Okay,
I'll give you a clip of the day
1:37:06
for drink get dredging, that
clip. On dredging being the
1:37:12
operative word here.
1:37:15
Adam Curry: That breaks my heart
breaks my heart. Go value for
1:37:20
value people stop right away.
Stop it.
1:37:24
John C Dvorak: Well, these
instance series because it's a
1:37:26
big deal, you know, you have to
have the host read post read ad.
1:37:32
Which, by the way, I've always
thought, in my opinion, a
1:37:38
professionally produced ad by an
ad agency who knows how to sell
1:37:43
as opposed to a host reading a
script is always the way to go.
1:37:47
But no, no, no, no, not in these
these audio context and radio
1:37:53
podcasting the rest of it? Oh,
no. Host Red Hat. Maybe there's
1:37:56
some big thing about it. I you
would know better than I Why
1:38:02
won't exist ever come up in the
conversation. I can
1:38:05
Adam Curry: tell you why because
code bond Gino. You can track
1:38:08
it. Yeah. Yeah, it's it's DRS
direct response is not the same
1:38:13
as an ad. It's direct response
to
1:38:15
John C Dvorak: a direct response
ad.
1:38:17
Adam Curry: Yeah. Well,
1:38:18
John C Dvorak: believe me
commercials that. Okay. The
1:38:21
Adam Curry: answer is the CPM is
much higher. If you if it's a
1:38:25
host read ad.
1:38:26
John C Dvorak: That's the
answer. Is that been documented?
1:38:29
Adam Curry: Oh, extensively. The
CPM for host read ad for these
1:38:33
guys. I'd say it's about 20
bucks. So per 1000 people. They
1:38:38
John C Dvorak: have a million so
they make $40 on that ad?
1:38:42
Adam Curry: No, no, that I'm
sure they're doing okay. But you
1:38:45
know, they're talking about
eating dog food, which gives me
1:38:48
a whole new insight into their
private life. That I didn't need
1:38:51
to know. Yeah,
1:38:52
John C Dvorak: I don't think
anyone that needed to know any
1:38:55
of that anyway, and then they
went on and on about it. That's
1:38:58
what it was bad. I cut out
1:38:59
Adam Curry: most of it. Believe
me. We I made another mistake.
1:39:05
It's a week of mistakes.
Confusing. Ian Bremmer, with
1:39:10
Paul Yammer, sorry about you
know what, and I keep doing
1:39:14
this.
1:39:14
John C Dvorak: I know, this
mistake I thought was
1:39:17
acceptable. Because it's a
mistake that is easy to make.
1:39:21
Yeah, but I've done it
1:39:21
Adam Curry: before.
1:39:22
John C Dvorak: And you've done
it. You do it? Yeah. I'm feel
1:39:25
dumb. Just just say Bremmer
don't well, but I ran but I went
1:39:29
I Bremmer,
1:39:30
Adam Curry: but I went into he's
the guy that had the stacks of
1:39:33
cash in Iraq, and that was Paul
Bremmer, Paul Bremmer, Ian
1:39:36
Bremmer of the Eurasia
Institute, whatever he is now
1:39:39
all over the place can't get
away from him. And he was on
1:39:43
CNN, talking smack about the
president. The
1:39:46
John C Dvorak: Iranians are now
have several of their proxies in
1:39:50
the region that are engaged in
escalating war against the
1:39:53
United States and Israel. I
mean, that's the big concern. I
1:39:56
mean, oil prices up 4% But
they're still under 80 bucks.
1:39:59
That concern For the United
States is what happens if we end
1:40:02
up in direct conflict with Iran,
then we're talking about 150 or
1:40:05
200 minutes of global recession,
both and Biden is going to lose.
1:40:08
But it started with nuisance
strikes in response to what
1:40:13
we're seeing as nuisance
attacks. That's what the White
1:40:14
House was privately saying, now
we have more significant target
1:40:18
attacks against but anyway,
1:40:20
Adam Curry: so his whole thing
was if oil goes up, he says
1:40:23
Biden will lose
1:40:30
John C Dvorak: IOC how oil is
going to be the determining
1:40:33
factor and Biden losing or
winning.
1:40:35
Adam Curry: I'm just telling you
what Bremmer said some sort of a
1:40:39
threat well, I'll just keep that
a climate change for a second
1:40:42
because we have lots of climate
change news by the way,
1:40:45
John C Dvorak: but before we
jump to climate change, I was
1:40:48
staying with the Middle East
because I have a three by three
1:40:50
that refers to exactly what he
was talking about.
1:40:53
Adam Curry: Three by three maybe
five JC D we're comparing
1:40:58
comparing stories from ABC, CBS
and NBC three never ending free
1:41:05
by free Which to me looks like
we have an anomaly today.
1:41:09
John C Dvorak: I suggested to
the Joneses, the Joe Hart Jones,
1:41:15
the slip collector, your dad
Steve Jones, yes, Steve A that
1:41:20
we add a one foreign element to
see if the if the
1:41:24
internationalization of the
bogus same script news actually
1:41:29
goes overseas and shows up at
the BBC or shows up on Deutsche
1:41:34
rail or shows up on France 24
1:41:36
Adam Curry: It ruins that would
be interesting. It ruins the
1:41:38
jingle.
1:41:39
John C Dvorak: No, it's the sea
bass a three by three plus you
1:41:42
just say the word plus How about
1:41:45
Adam Curry: three extra
1:41:48
John C Dvorak: strikes dry extra
extra. Let's start with NBC.
1:41:53
Adam Curry: Oh NBC Today Okay.
Wow.
1:41:56
Unknown: After the Pentagon says
a punishing series of US and
1:42:00
British strikes destroyed more
than 60 Houthi military targets
1:42:03
in Yemen. The first sign of
retaliation, the Iranian backed
1:42:07
militia saying they won't stop
attacking ships firing an anti
1:42:11
ship ballistic missile into the
red sea but hitting nothing.
1:42:15
President Biden was pressed.
What would he do if Houthi
1:42:18
attacks don't stop?
1:42:19
We will make sure that we
respond to his outrageous
1:42:23
behavior along with our allies.
1:42:24
President Biden has been under
pressure to act following months
1:42:27
of Houthi attacks on commercial
ships in the Red Sea through
1:42:31
which the US says 15% of global
sea trade travels including oil
1:42:36
supplies, and some companies had
begun avoiding the Red Sea a
1:42:40
costly disruption. Last night's
operation included US and
1:42:44
British warplane British
dropping bombs and US Navy ships
1:42:47
including a submarine firing
Tomahawk missiles, more than 150
1:42:52
precision guided bombs and
missiles in all, the White House
1:42:55
says they demolished Houthi
ballistic missile launchers,
1:42:58
ammunition warehouses, air
defense radars and more. The
1:43:02
targets
1:43:02
we chose were all valid
legitimate targets that went
1:43:05
right at the Houthis ability to
store to launch and to guide
1:43:12
President Biden writing the
strikes send a clear message
1:43:15
that the United States and our
partners will not tolerate
1:43:18
attacks on our personnel or that
imperil freedom of navigation.
1:43:22
But tonight, Iran who supplies
the Houthis with money, weapons
1:43:26
and intelligence condemned the
strikes saying they are fueling
1:43:30
instability in the region.
Curiosity. I do Meanwhile,
1:43:35
President Biden criticizing
defense secretary Lloyd Austin
1:43:38
for keeping his hospitalization
secret. Austin did not tell the
1:43:41
president or the public for days
that he was off the job and in
1:43:45
intensive care for prostate
cancer treatment. Yes. Okay.
1:43:54
Long
1:43:55
John C Dvorak: report. Too long.
But these are all kind of long,
1:43:58
but have we seen Austin sets
yet? No.
1:44:02
Adam Curry: I need to see him on
the balcony. Wait, you
1:44:06
John C Dvorak: think that's
peculiar? Yes.
1:44:10
Adam Curry: Two bits of data
there. One is was likely not a
1:44:14
full on the but operation,
prostate removal but a partial.
1:44:22
So they probably went through
the urethra to do that
1:44:27
operation. That's how we'd
likely got the UTI. That's one
1:44:30
piece of data. And the other
piece which is kind of
1:44:33
interesting. I don't know this
is kind of a book by the book
1:44:37
guy, as we know from his stellar
military career was that most
1:44:45
men up to four star general in
the in the military. They have
1:44:49
some kind of code where they
don't talk about their their
1:44:53
their issues, their medical
issues or any kind of issue and
1:44:57
so would not be out although I
think it's incorrect for For the
1:45:00
Secretary of Defense, and I'm
not defending his action for him
1:45:06
to not talk to anybody about it
because you know, us tough guys
1:45:10
we just bear down do it, get it
done with and go back to work.
1:45:14
John C Dvorak: day he seems like
a tough guy with his double
1:45:16
masking is a big deal over his
face. Tough guy.
1:45:23
Adam Curry: Okay, again, not
defending just giving you the
1:45:26
info.
1:45:29
John C Dvorak: Let's go to Mary
Bruce. She's on ABC giving the
1:45:32
exact same report.
1:45:35
Unknown: Tonight new video of
the massive US led strikes
1:45:38
against Iranian backed militants
in Yemen more than 60 Houthi
1:45:42
targets hit across 28 locations.
It's the largest US strike in
1:45:48
the Middle East in years, a wave
of 80 Tomahawk cruise missiles
1:45:52
launched from Navy ships and a
submarine backed by fighter
1:45:55
jets. Tonight the Houthis vowing
revenge firing a missile towards
1:46:00
another ship today but missing
as a sea of protesters took to
1:46:04
the streets in Yemen's Capitol
burning American and Israeli
1:46:07
flag. British forces joining the
US assault releasing video of
1:46:13
explosions destroying Houthi
facilities, the Pentagon saying
1:46:16
they degraded the Houthis
capabilities, taking out weapons
1:46:20
depots radar and surveillance
systems as well as attack drones
1:46:24
hoping to cripple the militants
ability to continue terrorizing
1:46:27
the Red Sea. New satellite
images revealing the aftermath
1:46:31
buildings flattened
1:46:33
clearly and the intent here is
for the US and the UK to take
1:46:36
out any military capability that
the Houthis might have to
1:46:39
continue to harass shipping in
the Red Sea
1:46:42
since mid November the Houthis
have launched at least 27
1:46:45
attacks, claiming they are
retaliating for Israel's war
1:46:48
against Hamas, disrupting one of
the most vital shipping routes
1:46:51
in the world. President Biden
today saying the strikes were
1:46:55
successful. Adding Iran the
Houthis backers got the message
1:46:59
have already
1:47:00
delivered the message they know.
1:47:03
But the attack is exactly the
kind of escalation the White
1:47:07
House had been hoping to avoid.
But the President says he's not
1:47:10
ruling out taking additional
measures. And tonight President
1:47:14
Biden is standing by his defense
secretary Lloyd Austin, who as
1:47:18
this attack was being planned
was hospitalized being treated
1:47:21
for prostate cancer, something
he concealed from the president
1:47:24
for several days. But tonight
The White House says Austin was
1:47:27
fully engaged and that he
participated and that it was
1:47:30
seamless
1:47:32
John C Dvorak: to the same thing
why do they structure both
1:47:35
stories exactly the same with
the Austin little kicker at the
1:47:39
end? If they're not in
collusion?
1:47:42
Adam Curry: Or if they're not
just lame and getting all their
1:47:45
information? Yeah, with one
package from one place no
1:47:48
John C Dvorak: I agree that in
fact Yes, that's been well
1:47:51
established. They're getting
their packages from one place
1:47:55
but that doesn't account for the
structure of the story. Why the
1:47:59
Austin kicker at the end of both
stories
1:48:03
Adam Curry: Nothing to see here
people don't be afraid he's
1:48:05
alive and well I can't come up
with a reason for it may have a
1:48:09
reason but I don't want to
interrupt your three by three.
1:48:11
John C Dvorak: So let's go with
CBS and this is our we always
1:48:14
end with CBS we
1:48:15
Unknown: repeated ultimatums
gays at the exact same
1:48:19
Adam Curry: the exact same
beginning with the same image me
1:48:22
here the end let me hear the ABC
again. I'm here ABC. Tonight new
1:48:28
video let me hear the end. NBC
1:48:34
Unknown: ultimatums gave way to
military action overnight is F
1:48:38
18. fighter jets and support
aircraft lead the way in a
1:48:41
bombing campaign against Iranian
backed Houthi militants,
1:48:45
including the use of US warships
and a submarine. British typhoon
1:48:51
fighters took off from bases in
Cyprus covering a distance so
1:48:55
long they needed refueling
aircraft. Cockpit footage is
1:49:00
said to show airstrikes aimed at
degrading Houthi capabilities
1:49:04
and weapons stocks. US Military
officials say more than 150
1:49:09
precision guided munitions
struck over 60 targets at nearly
1:49:13
30 locations, including command
centers, missile and drone
1:49:17
launch sites and air defense
systems. Today in Yemen, 1000s
1:49:23
of demonstrators turned out in
the capitol burning US flags and
1:49:28
chanting God is Great Death to
America Death to Israel. Well in
1:49:33
Yeah, what we're doing with the
leaders have already said
1:49:36
American aggression will not go
unpunished, and that attacks in
1:49:41
the Red Sea will continue. And
the US government has confirmed
1:49:46
that Iranian forces themselves
seized an oil tanker off the
1:49:49
coast of Oman, carrying US
sanction crude oil, raising
1:49:54
tensions even further between
American forces and adversaries
1:49:58
in the region. I'm setting the
stage for more confrontations to
1:50:04
come. With that in mind,
national security Spokesman John
1:50:07
Kirby said we're not interested
in a war with Yemen or a
1:50:10
conflict of any kind.
1:50:12
And yet, Charlie, clearly this
is a widening conflict. What do
1:50:16
we know about Secretary of
Defense Lloyd Austin? I know he
1:50:19
is still hospitalized here in
Washington. But what about his
1:50:22
role in this operation? Yet?
Well,
1:50:23
nor the White House has made
clear that Austin was fully
1:50:27
engaged in ordering the stripe
President Biden told reporters
1:50:30
today he remained confident in
his defense secretary, but he
1:50:34
agreed that Austin displayed a
lack of judgment in not
1:50:37
informing the President about
his hospitalization, or cancer
1:50:41
treatment.
1:50:44
John C Dvorak: You know, it just
is just so peculiar to me. Well,
1:50:48
Adam Curry: I want you to
complete the extra part of the
1:50:51
three by three and then we'll
see if we can come up with some
1:50:53
answers. But it's
1:50:54
John C Dvorak: the BBC is going
to have to be different because
1:50:57
they can't be dealing with the
exact same people and they don't
1:51:00
and they don't produce over
produced the news like we do and
1:51:04
so So will there be any pops and
bombs and jets taking off? Well,
1:51:09
let's find out.
1:51:10
Unknown: We know what US
officials informed can group
1:51:12
sorry. By night, the US and
Britain supported by Australia,
1:51:16
but rain Canada and the
Netherlands have carried out
1:51:19
missile strikes on Houthi
targets, reportedly hitting the
1:51:22
capital Sana and the port of
Hodeidah. The White House
1:51:26
confirmed the strikes in a
statement.
1:51:28
These targeted strikes are a
clear message that the United
1:51:31
States and our partners will not
tolerate attacks on our
1:51:34
personnel cue or allow hostile
actors to imperil freedom of
1:51:38
navigation in one of the world's
most critical commercial routes.
1:51:42
Our Washington correspondent
told me more about the Allied
1:51:45
military strikes, we heard in
that White House statement that
1:51:48
these strikes were according to
the President's successful and a
1:51:52
direct response to what he
called unprecedented Hootie
1:51:55
attacks against international
shipping. We shortly thereafter,
1:52:00
heard from the US Defense
Secretary Lloyd Austin, he said
1:52:03
whatever strikes targeted the
Hutus drone and missile
1:52:06
capabilities, as well as coastal
radar and air surveillance
1:52:11
systems. And the Reuters news
agency said that there had been
1:52:15
a number of explosions quoted
witnesses saying they had seen
1:52:18
and heard explosions. But I
think the narrative that we're
1:52:21
going to see play out in the
next few days is that this is a
1:52:24
defensive mission. Indeed, we've
just heard from a senior
1:52:27
administration official here in
Washington who said that we have
1:52:30
no doubt that ships would have
been struck, perhaps even sunk,
1:52:34
including, in one case, a
commercial ship full of jet
1:52:37
fuel, which is quite a
frightening prospect, isn't it?
1:52:40
So I think that that's going to
be the messaging from the White
1:52:43
House from the Pentagon in the
next few days that the US was
1:52:47
forced into this in order to
protect itself and its allies.
1:52:50
Wow.
1:52:53
Adam Curry: How was really
boring. It
1:52:55
John C Dvorak: was boring,
didn't have any net pops.
1:52:57
Nothing. Zero. NAT POP knows she
1:53:00
Adam Curry: wishes? No. But
1:53:04
John C Dvorak: they did some
analysis and but they wouldn't
1:53:06
do what we did. He said we
talked to Lloyd, nobody's talked
1:53:10
to Lloyd all he
1:53:10
Adam Curry: said he did I heard
him say is a liar. Do you think
1:53:13
he's a liar? It has to be I
think this thing may have
1:53:18
something to do and Austin being
on the scene or not, may have
1:53:22
something to do with the war war
powers resolution. The President
1:53:26
has no you can't the I know
this. Shocker, everybody, but
1:53:31
only Congress can declare war.
But the minute the president
1:53:35
sends force into inactive enacts
force at this level, certainly
1:53:42
we all show that he has to
notify Congress within 48 hours
1:53:49
and then you get 60 days, the
clock starts ticking. And I
1:53:53
believe during that time, the
President is fully in charge.
1:53:59
And and he can can call all the
shots you don't need Austin for
1:54:03
anything. So anyway, here's a
CNN had a little bit about the
1:54:08
War Powers.
1:54:08
Unknown: You know what US
officials informed congressional
1:54:10
leadership in advance of the
strikes that they were going to
1:54:13
be happening. However, you did
hear from some Democrats, House
1:54:16
Democrats in particular, who are
raising serious concerns about
1:54:19
the legal authority behind this
thing using the words
1:54:22
retaliatory and defensive were
very intentional. We'll see the
1:54:25
legal rationale soon from the
administer ministration
1:54:28
particularly what ro Khanna the
congressman from California had
1:54:30
to set the Constitution requires
that if there is not an imminent
1:54:34
threat of self defense that he
has to come to Congress. And
1:54:38
here we know about your own
reporting that this has been
1:54:42
going on since December. He's
assembled an entire
1:54:45
international coalition. He
certainly should have come to
1:54:48
Congress so that we can discuss
whether this actually could put
1:54:51
more American troops at risk.
I'm concerned about retaliation
1:54:55
in Iraq, and whether it could
draw us into a Middle East war
1:54:59
that we could have us Next, our
discussion about war powers and
1:55:03
how this has been operated over
the course of several decades
1:55:06
moving away from Congress. Do
you think those concerns have
1:55:08
merit? There is some merit to
them. But the fact that matter
1:55:11
is the War Powers Act has very
rarely been used in advance of
1:55:15
these things. What you'll see is
the President issue was a
1:55:18
notification probably in the
next few hours about why he
1:55:22
engaged here. I don't think the
President's gonna have a hard
1:55:26
time making a case because it
was just a week ago that we saw
1:55:29
some of the cooties open fire on
US Navy helicopters. And they
1:55:34
responded by sinking those three
ships. And then there were
1:55:38
barraged with 21 missiles and
drones that came in the
1:55:44
direction of American forces. I
think the President's gonna be
1:55:47
able to establish a pretty good
case for why he took these out
1:55:50
on the ground
1:55:52
John C Dvorak: Well, first of
all the BBC in the three by
1:55:56
three mentioned self defense
emphasized that he did so yeah,
1:56:01
that was mentioned they didn't
count they did Yeah, they did.
1:56:05
Well, so that so the self
defense thing is fine then you
1:56:08
can just use that and you don't
have to deal with any of this
1:56:11
which I think is what they're
gonna do.
1:56:13
Adam Curry: How about this one
more thing?
1:56:18
John C Dvorak: Was it the ship
the tanker whatever the hell it
1:56:21
was captured by the Houthis How
can we just don't go take that
1:56:25
back? We got battleships there
we why don't we just boy don't
1:56:30
battleships anymore but we have
plenty of firepower we could go
1:56:34
surround that ship and take
those guys off of there when we
1:56:37
do that said
1:56:38
Adam Curry: sure it's a tourist
attraction because his bull
1:56:40
crowd comes Hey, man, it was a
GoPro with horizon correction.
1:56:45
Listen. How about this just
first scenario Lloyd Austin is
1:56:51
actually a by the book kind of
guy I'm just just throwing it
1:56:54
out there we can laugh all we
want diversity hired cetera it's
1:56:58
all fine. He was definitely
respected within the ranks. He
1:57:03
he actually got a you know, the,
you're supposed to have a
1:57:06
civilian running the US
military, they got a special
1:57:09
exemption from Congress so that
he can become the defense
1:57:12
secretary. What if he is the guy
that you know, I got, I'm gonna
1:57:17
have I got bought cancer,
prostate removal, I'm just gonna
1:57:20
bear down do it. We'll be home
in a day. It's like I can do
1:57:23
this is what we military men do.
Maybe he is by the book guy. And
1:57:28
there are elements who would
like we need to have this war,
1:57:31
we need to be striking the
Houthis we don't want to deal
1:57:35
with stupid Congress. We don't
want anybody in our way. The
1:57:39
President is brain dead. And
probably a little bit worried
1:57:45
that one of these days his his
advisors and consultants are
1:57:48
going to say, hey, you know,
your genocide Joe, you got
1:57:51
people outside the White House
1000s of people protesting,
1:57:55
you're gonna lose the election,
we're gonna lose our butts here.
1:57:58
You got to stop this or do
something and the MRC comes in
1:58:01
and says, ah, get Austin out of
the way. Boom, get them out of
1:58:07
the way. So we can just go Go,
go go go fire, who knows who
1:58:12
gave the order for this? We
could be under complete military
1:58:17
industrial complex control at
this point, doing whatever they
1:58:20
want. That's just another
scenario. I'm not saying that. I
1:58:25
John C Dvorak: I wish I had a
strong argument against it.
1:58:28
Well,
1:58:28
Adam Curry: there is always of
course, peace. I'd love to make
1:58:32
peace. I know. I'd love to make
peace profitable. Again. I have
1:58:37
thought but that's not for this
show. That we have the two state
1:58:42
solution. We also have something
new which Fox 21 news came up
1:58:47
with. Secretary
1:58:48
Unknown: of State Antony Blinken
is pressuring both sides and the
1:58:51
Gaza conflict to come together
as the war grinds on with no end
1:58:55
in sight. Blinking is pushing
for an agreement into a
1:58:58
political solution that would
lead to a Palestinian state with
1:59:02
significant changes to the
current leadership that you
1:59:05
state solution is also a key
domain Come on,
1:59:07
John C Dvorak: man. Did you hear
it? The Jewish state solution
1:59:11
Adam Curry: do state solution
1:59:13
Unknown: so the current
leadership that you state
1:59:15
solution is also a key because
that's
1:59:17
Adam Curry: the best gaff ever
there it is. There's the juice
1:59:20
state solution that's that's the
answer. As always,
1:59:28
John C Dvorak: I am definitely
not one to pick on people for
1:59:30
that sort of thing. In
1:59:32
Adam Curry: the Middle East we
know the argument really is only
1:59:36
about one thing.
1:59:42
John C Dvorak: Oil Pipelines No.
Two things no is nothing no. Who
1:59:48
make dates,
1:59:49
Adam Curry: who makes better
hummus.
1:59:53
Unknown: Guys, for to orange
hummus in San Francisco South of
1:59:56
Market neighborhood proudly
serves Israeli cuisine but
2:00:00
Friday morning when the general
manager opened up shop, he was
2:00:03
greeted with this message. Do
you condemn your hummus spray
2:00:06
painted on the ground at the
front entrance. And on nearby
2:00:10
utility poles flyers were
posted. They called for a
2:00:13
boycott of six eateries that are
being described as really food
2:00:17
and sinus businesses in San
Francisco. We were
2:00:20
very shocked. Right? We're very
shocked. And the main thing is
2:00:23
we're concerned about the safety
of our team and the people that
2:00:26
work for us.
2:00:27
General Manager Randy O'Connor
says he has 45 employees at this
2:00:31
location. He tells me three
weeks earlier, similar flyers
2:00:34
were posted on the windows of
the restaurants Palo Alto
2:00:37
location, Connor says while this
is a Jewish owned business, the
2:00:41
focus is solely on food, not
politics, or
2:00:45
in Thomas was created just to
share the food from the region.
2:00:49
Right we serve great hummus and
we do it well. The flyers
2:00:51
are posted in front of other
Jewish owned businesses in
2:00:54
various neighborhoods, including
Chinatown. People tell me off
2:00:58
camera that they saw a large
group of young people
2:01:00
participating in a pro Palestine
demonstration against Israel
2:01:05
posting these flyers along
various streets on Wednesday. We
2:01:08
saw city workers removing some
flyers Friday night. condemn
2:01:12
Adam Curry: your hummus.
2:01:14
John C Dvorak: Sky have had good
hummus,
2:01:16
Adam Curry: yes, I've had good
hummus too. I
2:01:19
John C Dvorak: was taken to a
restaurant in Jaffa and
2:01:22
specifically to have the hummus
which is made daily by a bunch
2:01:27
of old ladies in the basement
grinding away by hand and mortar
2:01:31
and pestles to get the
consistency. That's perfect. And
2:01:35
I will say that good. Hamas is
pretty spectacular.
2:01:39
Adam Curry: No argument. You
should
2:01:43
John C Dvorak: know that I had a
Hamas good hum. And I had I had
2:01:51
a good Hamas in Los Angeles. At
a I think it was a Palestinian
2:01:57
restaurant. not absolutely sure.
But it was a very obscure little
2:01:59
place, it was near a b&b that we
were all staying at. And the
2:02:03
hummus there was just like this,
this stuff I had in Israel. And
2:02:08
it was she was just I want to if
I'd go daily, I'm gonna drive
2:02:12
past her and get some to go.
2:02:14
Adam Curry: Hamas from the
region should be the title of
2:02:16
the book. Hamas from the region.
Let's stay in the San Francisco
2:02:23
region for a moment. Nancy
Pelosi is backyard she's out and
2:02:28
promoting and talking and for
Biden against Trump. And she's
2:02:33
on CNN. And it's always fun,
because Nancy is just a bundle
2:02:37
of laughs in
2:02:38
Unknown: the election year. And
the President has been working
2:02:42
very hard over the past three
years to do what is necessary to
2:02:47
meet the needs of the American
people. Now he can go talk about
2:02:51
it. And he has a lot to say,
people have to know because
2:02:55
their kitchen table needs are
what are important to them. And
2:02:58
the democracy message relates to
the kitchen table democracy is a
2:03:02
personal issue, freedom of
choice to have a win. And if you
2:03:07
have a family freedom to to
enjoy your work have knowing you
2:03:12
have a pension so that your
family will be secure the
2:03:16
education of your children the
safety of the environment in
2:03:20
which they live, he scores very
high on all of those points. And
2:03:25
many people are appreciating and
enjoying it. They just are not
2:03:29
giving him credit for it. And
this is what we have to do now
2:03:33
is to make sure that not only
the president, but other
2:03:36
validators come forward to to
say what he's done. But what's
2:03:41
really important to people is
what he is going to do. Nobody
2:03:45
votes for you for what you've
done, right? They want to know
2:03:48
what comes next, what you
2:03:50
John C Dvorak: raise prices more
in what universe
2:03:52
Adam Curry: is that? Everybody
votes for what you've done, how
2:03:57
does she even come up with this
bogus nonsense, but he's gonna
2:04:01
do if you
2:04:02
Unknown: look at the legislative
record that you were detailing
2:04:04
the President had in the first
two years and the way that an
2:04:07
individual basis, every single
piece that you laid out their
2:04:10
polls quite well. And yet, this
is a neck and neck race. And no
2:04:15
one feels very comfortable on
the Democratic side of things
2:04:17
that Donald Trump isn't going to
be the next president.
2:04:20
But I don't think that nobody
feels I think many of us know
2:04:24
that it's impossible. For him to
be the president again, what
2:04:28
we're proposing will be
constantly new talking about
2:04:31
what he's talking about now is
more tax cuts for corporate
2:04:34
America and taking them down so
low to the detriment of our
2:04:39
budget and meeting the needs of
people that people have to know.
2:04:43
I have said over and over again.
President LinkedIn said public
2:04:47
sentiment is everything right
with it, you can accomplish
2:04:50
almost anything without it.
Practically nothing. But public
2:04:54
sentiment has to be informed. We
will have to know so we can talk
2:04:58
more about what he is on what it
means at the kitchen table for
2:05:02
people to have lower costs for
prescription drugs, lower costs
2:05:05
for health care, because it's
not just about their good
2:05:08
health, it's about their
financial health and security as
2:05:12
well. This
2:05:13
Adam Curry: is so wrong from a
consultant standpoint. First of
2:05:17
all, kitchen table. I mean, what
that was, that was the days of
2:05:21
Roosevelt. No one cares about
your kitchen table issue.
2:05:24
Second, bringing up the the
racist, Abraham Lincoln. How can
2:05:31
they be using him?
2:05:34
John C Dvorak: That makes no
sense is a rambling she's lost
2:05:38
it. There is,
2:05:39
Adam Curry: however, an
important important change. We
2:05:43
have a hero coming to the rescue
to help Joe Biden, US
2:05:47
Unknown: climate envoy and
former Secretary of State John
2:05:49
Kerry is leaving the Biden
administration later this winter
2:05:53
to join the President's
reelection campaign. Kerry, who
2:05:56
ran for president in 2004, was
instrumental in helping to
2:05:59
broker the 2015 Paris Climate
Agreement. Yeah,
2:06:03
Adam Curry: you know, when I'm
thinking I'm thinking he's going
2:06:07
to help Joe. And, you know, I
might have a shot and 2028. Care
2:06:13
Carrie wants to be president.
He's he's getting in. He's
2:06:18
getting in the game.
2:06:21
John C Dvorak: Well, I'm sure
you're right about he wants to
2:06:24
be president. Yes, but nobody
wants him to be president. He
2:06:31
said him and his wife.
2:06:34
Adam Curry: Yes, of course. But
this front, and you know, the
2:06:36
only problem is we have a
moratorium, we just we can't do
2:06:39
anything with the guy and we
can't play clips. He's boring.
2:06:43
He just usually does nothing
good to
2:06:45
John C Dvorak: say you have
busted the moratorium more than
2:06:48
a few times. I'm
2:06:49
Adam Curry: trying to keep
myself away from it. Well, it's
2:06:53
too bad. We'll miss him on the
climate stage. He's all he's
2:06:55
always the guy who buys the
drinks at the COP. You know,
2:06:58
he's he's got money. He's got
the credit card. He's got he's
2:07:02
got the White House credit card,
2:07:04
John C Dvorak: Bourbon credit
card, and as soon as he jet
2:07:07
Adam Curry: so I found two
individual stories on let me
2:07:12
see. I'm gonna make it right.
One about Germany from Deutsche
2:07:17
Avella. And then another one
from France. 24. And I just
2:07:21
thought this was very peculiar.
They're both like eight minute
2:07:24
pieces. I just took the intro
from each and we start knows we
2:07:28
know Germany is losing their
industry. They shut all the coal
2:07:31
plants that have no way to
2:07:33
John C Dvorak: right yeah, they
shut down the nuclear plants and
2:07:37
everything,
2:07:37
Adam Curry: everything. So they
have the whole open. So they
2:07:41
have the furnaces, they make
steel, all this stuff is a very
2:07:44
energy intensive, and they have
a solution.
2:07:49
Unknown: It is a massive
industry that needs phasing out.
2:07:52
Over the next few decades, the
global fossil fuel industry will
2:07:55
change and changing with it
opportunities, jobs and even
2:07:59
prosperity. But one region in
Germany could be a poster child
2:08:03
for how to do this transition.
And if I can contribute to
2:08:07
driving this hydrogen
production, I'll be extremely
2:08:10
proud of myself. If it doesn't
work
2:08:12
John C Dvorak: in the rural
region, it will work anywhere.
2:08:16
Unknown: The look of it used to
be Germany's powerhouse with
2:08:19
coal mines and steel
manufacturing. Now, it turns to
2:08:22
hydrogen to transform his local
economy to
2:08:25
cost a lot of money. That's for
sure.
2:08:28
Adam Curry: So the idea now is
we're going to use as we
2:08:32
predicted, as we've been on this
tip, we're going to use clean
2:08:35
hydrogen, hydrogen to power the
furnaces of Germany the
2:08:41
industrial engine of the
European Union. Where will we
2:08:45
get this hydrogen is rogue good.
Where will we get this hydrogen
2:08:49
from? France? 24 has an answer
theory
2:08:52
Unknown: deep underground and
unexpected source of carbon free
2:08:56
energy. France, scientists have
uncovered vast deposits of
2:09:01
natural hydrogen, one of the
cleanest fuels in nature, the
2:09:06
discovery could be the biggest
of its kind so far, spurring a
2:09:10
global energy race for the field
of the future.
2:09:15
Adam Curry: So how about that
the guys who fight the world
2:09:18
wars France or Germany? Germany
needs the hydrogen France
2:09:23
apparently has just discovered
the mother lode of hydrogen. I
2:09:26
John C Dvorak: would like some
chemists out there to tell or
2:09:28
somebody is in the business of
steelmaking to tell me how
2:09:32
hydrogen can be can get to the
temperatures of coal and Coke,
2:09:37
which just get to enormous
temperatures when they're
2:09:40
burning, as opposed to hydrogen,
which is actually kind of a mild
2:09:44
flame.
2:09:46
Adam Curry: This is why there's
two of us.
2:09:49
John C Dvorak: I just want
somebody to tell me what how
2:09:51
they're going to do it. I don't
know.
2:09:56
Adam Curry: Got an emergency
alert this morning. Just stick
2:09:58
it on the climate change tip.
emergency alert from Alberta,
2:10:02
Canada. This is an emergency
alert issued by the AMA. This
2:10:07
alert is in effect for AB
Alberta. Extreme cold resulting
2:10:11
in high power demand has placed
the Alberta grid at a high risk
2:10:14
of rotating power outages this
evening. Albertans are asked to
2:10:18
immediately limit their
electricity use to essential
2:10:20
needs only turn off unnecessary
lights and electrical
2:10:22
appliances, minimize the use of
space heaters delay use of major
2:10:27
power appliances, and do not
charge your electrical vehicles.
2:10:34
John C Dvorak: Don't charge your
car. That way. If all hell
2:10:36
breaks loose, you won't be able
to go anywhere
2:10:38
Adam Curry: and you're dead. By
the way. If you're in Texas
2:10:42
enjoy your Eevee they don't have
the same range when it's this
2:10:46
cold. They have no range when
it's that cold got to have some
2:10:49
range, you can get to the next
2:10:51
John C Dvorak: plug, you can
maybe get to the next plug
2:10:53
charging station if you're
lucky.
2:10:56
Adam Curry: Hertz is going to
sell 20,000 EVs because
2:11:01
customers don't like him. Yeah,
you can get a good deal though.
2:11:08
You can get a Tesla for 18
grand.
2:11:11
John C Dvorak: Oh, it's not bad.
Is it a three though those
2:11:14
things are ugly.
2:11:16
Adam Curry: And the EPA finally
set out the rules for proposed
2:11:20
methane fee for waste generated
by oil and natural gas
2:11:25
companies. This is a scandal.
oil and natural gas companies
2:11:31
for the first time would have to
pay a fee for methane emissions
2:11:34
that exceeds certain levels
under a rule proposed Friday by
2:11:38
the Biden administration. And
this is because they presume or
2:11:43
maybe assume that they all that
these companies always leak
2:11:48
methane, which is not true. And
I told him I talked to the oil
2:11:53
baron or sent him this link. My
buddy the oil baron. He says oh
2:11:57
yeah, he gave me the numbers
says the EPA wants to find them.
2:12:03
$8 million. He says I'm able to
talk it down to five but we
2:12:08
can't you know, show me where
we're leaking is just an algo
2:12:12
they just said oh you it's this
big yearly hand this. You have
2:12:16
to be leaking. Well,
2:12:18
John C Dvorak: that's what Adele
ago says. Oh, yeah, exactly. You
2:12:21
have to be Lea. Well, we're not
leaking. Well, you have to be
2:12:24
leaking. Well, we're not you
can't find any leaks. No, no,
2:12:27
no, that's not what the computer
says. Yeah.
2:12:29
Adam Curry: Computer says no. I
mean, that's that's not the
2:12:37
future. Yeah, definitely.
2:12:39
John C Dvorak: So we had the
Taiwan election. I have some
2:12:41
clips. Okay. The Taiwanese did
not elect the Chinese guy. The
2:12:46
Chinese were they're all
Chinese. But the Chinese guy who
2:12:49
is pro China even though this
may or may not cause a problem
2:12:52
is
2:12:53
Adam Curry: like the guy who was
who was anti China, right? Well,
2:12:56
John C Dvorak: yeah, but he's
not that anti China. It's really
2:13:00
anti China. They just don't want
to be
2:13:02
Adam Curry: if you're anti
China, you're dead is basically
2:13:04
the idea. Yeah, they're just
2:13:07
John C Dvorak: China, China
skeptic in terms of China taking
2:13:10
over the place. Okay, actually
enjoy after all these years.
2:13:15
Having a little of democracy
there that seems to work. And
2:13:18
they're all so much more. The
per capita income and the per
2:13:24
capita wealth in that country is
higher than it is in China
2:13:29
score, Taiwan election PBS,
2:13:33
Unknown: elitist voices of
America. This is NPR. We're PBS
2:13:39
Taiwanese voters rebuffed China
by electing as president a
2:13:42
candidate who rejects China's
claim of sovereignty over
2:13:45
Taiwan. The victory of light
chain gives the ruling party an
2:13:49
unprecedented third presidential
term, in his victory speech lie
2:13:53
promise to safeguard Taiwan's
autonomy. So,
2:13:58
for instance, you we are telling
2:13:59
the international community that
between democracy and
2:14:02
authoritarianism we stand on the
side of democracy, Taiwan will
2:14:05
continue to walk side by side
with democracies from around the
2:14:09
world.
2:14:10
China responded with a statement
saying Taiwan is China's Taiwan.
2:14:14
This election will not change
the basic landscape. The Biden
2:14:18
administration congratulated ly,
but responding to a reporter's
2:14:21
question this morning, President
Biden said the United States
2:14:24
does not support independence
for Taiwan lies to be
2:14:28
configurated in May row.
2:14:31
Adam Curry: Okay. Well,
2:14:32
John C Dvorak: it turns out that
that's what he's been saying all
2:14:34
along, but the Taiwanese do some
reading, they seem to think that
2:14:39
they get they're already
independent. They don't need
2:14:43
anybody's, you know. Anybody's
saying they are. I
2:14:49
Adam Curry: mean, to me, it
seems like China is pretty
2:14:52
clear. They want to have a very
nice calm integration of Taiwan
2:14:56
into China eventually,
2:14:57
John C Dvorak: that's where my
guess is, but let's go there
2:14:59
now. Have some analysis from the
same PBS station
2:15:02
Adam Curry: that says is that
the I'm sorry? Oh, yes.
2:15:05
Unknown: Here we go. What that
says is that the KMT itself is
2:15:08
not speaking.
2:15:11
Adam Curry: I'm so sorry. I put
him in the wrong order to here's
2:15:14
one.
2:15:14
Unknown: The Taiwanese
presidential election has big
2:15:17
implications for both Beijing
and Washington. President Elect
2:15:20
Lai Ching, also known as William
rejects Beijing's claim of
2:15:24
sovereignty.
2:15:27
Adam Curry: That was great. The
Taiwanese
2:15:29
Unknown: presidential election
has big implications for both
2:15:32
Beijing and Washington.
President Elect Lai Ching, also
2:15:35
known as William rejects
Beijing's claim of sovereignty
2:15:39
over Taiwan. Earlier, Ali Rogen
spoke with destiny, Ellen
2:15:42
Ebrahimian, the China reporter
for Axios, who's based in
2:15:45
Taiwan, what were the issues
2:15:47
that Taiwanese voters were most
concerned with? And what do
2:15:52
those issues say about the fact
that William y has won? Well,
2:15:56
Taiwanese voters in this
election as with every
2:15:58
presidential election, we're
concerned about cross strait
2:16:03
relations in Taiwan's
presidential elections. The the
2:16:07
relationship with China is
always a key issue. And that was
2:16:10
certainly the case this year.
Over the past year or so the
2:16:14
Chinese government has been
increasingly aggressive in its
2:16:19
coercive actions towards Taiwan.
And so voters and the parties
2:16:23
themselves made that a key issue
the KMT cast this election as a
2:16:29
choice between war and peace.
Vote for the KMT is a vote for
2:16:33
peace with China. They said a
vote for the DPP as a vote for
2:16:37
war. Whereas the DPP cast this
as an election that was a choice
2:16:42
between democracy and
authoritarianism, with a rising
2:16:46
China, you know, a sort of
specter of authoritarianism
2:16:49
looming over Taiwan. But those
weren't the only issues. You
2:16:54
know, basically on the ballot
this year, the economy,
2:16:58
unemployment, and high home
prices were also very much on
2:17:03
voters minds. Now, the fact that
the DPP one part of that has to
2:17:09
do with the fact that this year
for the first time, there was a
2:17:13
very significant third party on
the ballot, that's the Taiwan
2:17:17
People's Party and their
candidate Cohen and Cohen Jaya
2:17:21
got more than 20% of the vote,
which is unprecedented. Now he
2:17:26
was pulling mostly from the KMT.
So if the TPP had not run, then
2:17:32
it's possible we would have seen
a KMT victory.
2:17:37
John C Dvorak: Light that was a
reference to what's going to
2:17:40
happen when Kennedy runs. What
do you mean, he's gonna take
2:17:45
votes away from one of these two
candidates with one?
2:17:50
Adam Curry: Light trunk light
Ching T, also known as William,
2:17:54
but you can call him Bill.
Willie? Hmm.
2:18:03
John C Dvorak: All right. We
have just said the second part
2:18:05
of this and rapid. What
2:18:06
Unknown: that says is that the
KMT itself is not speaking to
2:18:11
Taiwanese voters, they still
think that they still say that a
2:18:15
close relationship with China is
the best way to guarantee Taiwan
2:18:19
security. Most Taiwanese voters
or many Taiwanese voters just
2:18:23
don't feel that that's true
anymore. Hmm.
2:18:28
Adam Curry: Well, I mean, we
clearly we don't want a war with
2:18:32
China. We don't want that. It's
not gonna happen. We're not
2:18:36
selling anything. Taiwan's not
buying much a couple f6 teens? I
2:18:42
mean, it's much better in the
region. Where Yeah, I agree.
2:18:47
Yeah, sorry.
2:18:48
John C Dvorak: I think that the
whole idea that there's going to
2:18:50
be a war, any minute is
overblown. I think that's just
2:18:52
done to sell more stuff. No,
2:18:54
Adam Curry: we're just gonna
continue blowing stuff up in the
2:18:56
region. And the Red Sea is
great. And the you know, just
2:19:00
have to make sure oil doesn't go
up, but doesn't even matter.
2:19:02
Because it doesn't matter. You
know, it just came out of my
2:19:07
mouth. But I think the military
industrial complex is running
2:19:10
everything right now. They're
not gonna waste their time in
2:19:13
Taiwan against China.
2:19:16
John C Dvorak: Not too, too
risky,
2:19:17
Adam Curry: way too risky. No.
All right, well, take a break.
2:19:25
Well,
2:19:25
John C Dvorak: I want to play my
one clip of footage from a
2:19:29
congressman bitching about to
TSA just to get into the clip.
2:19:34
This is Wesley hunt.
2:19:36
Unknown: Yes, it was created
after 911 to oversee security
2:19:39
and all modes of transportation,
including aviation safety. As an
2:19:44
American, you know, we have to
go through security screening
2:19:47
and board a plane just like
everybody else. And what you
2:19:50
also may know was that the TSA
has an entirely different
2:19:53
standard for illegal immigrants.
Yes, that's right. Yes. There's
2:19:58
a different set of was for you,
the American public and illegal
2:20:03
immigrants? Yes. You've all seen
the TSA check line, of course.
2:20:08
Well, I have news for you.
Biden's DHS has created another
2:20:12
line. And here is a picture to
prove it. This is a line in the
2:20:17
Tucson airport specially made
for non citizens. And as you can
2:20:21
see, the sign says non US
citizens without passports,
2:20:26
enter here without passports,
that just tip of the iceberg.
2:20:33
These illegal illegal immigrants
may go unvetted with no
2:20:35
verifiable photo ID at all. And
I guess Biden in my work is
2:20:40
going to talk to trust that
these people are going to say
2:20:43
who they are based on just their
honesty and their word alone.
2:20:47
You know, what a valid form of
ideas for an illegal alien,
2:20:50
according to USA Today. And
arrest warrant not making that
2:20:55
up. could get on a plane. It's
an arrest warrant. And if an
2:21:00
arrest warrant could get an
illegal alien on domestic
2:21:02
flight, then why can't it get
them a one way ticket to jail
2:21:06
where they belong. This is not
only an assault on American
2:21:09
citizen but a grave threat to
our national security. I'm a
2:21:14
member of Congress. I have TSA
PreCheck and clear and when I
2:21:18
get screened by TSA, I have to
prove that I am who I say I am
2:21:23
with an official government ID
for the record. My name is
2:21:27
Wesley P hunt as appearance
shot. But it my airline ticket
2:21:33
says Wesley J hunt. This United
States Congressman ain't getting
2:21:36
on the plane. The TSA is tasked
with airline security, but
2:21:41
they're letting illegal
immigrants on our planes with
2:21:44
unverifiable identities.
2:21:47
Adam Curry: Well, this is not
unknown to the show, but I liked
2:21:50
his presentation. Yeah, it is
ridiculous. Not half of it. Bob.
2:21:57
Here's main, you want to talk
about skipping the line. Dozens
2:22:01
Unknown: of people showed up
this morning to the grand
2:22:03
opening of new apartments at the
Brunswick landing. These units
2:22:06
were built specifically to house
asylum seekers as they wait to
2:22:10
receive their work permits which
can take months, there'll be 60
2:22:14
apartments total here serving
this purpose. 24 of them are
2:22:17
ready now. State government will
essentially pay the rent for two
2:22:20
years after that the buildings
will convert to market rate and
2:22:24
affordable housing units. Some
asylum seekers have already
2:22:27
moved in and say this option of
transitional housing is much
2:22:30
better than living in a hotel or
to shelter.
2:22:33
This is a very unique solution
to a very exciting opportunity
2:22:37
in our society. We have 1000s of
folks coming to Maine who want
2:22:41
to make Maine home. We're doing
everything we can to help that
2:22:46
situation.
2:22:48
Adam Curry: This is what makes
people crazy. And I've seen it
2:22:50
for 20 years in Europe 20 years.
You have people who want to send
2:22:55
their kids to university in
Amsterdam, there is no housing
2:22:58
available, because it's all
filled up with asylum seekers,
2:23:04
which is nice word for illegal
immigrants while they're waiting
2:23:07
for their work permits. This is
this is what is going to
2:23:11
determine the election here
2:23:12
Unknown: in Iowa a top issue of
concern for Republican voters is
2:23:16
the future of immigration and
border security issue is a long
2:23:20
standing concern for Republicans
but there's increased worry
2:23:22
among Democrats and
independents. The reality here
2:23:26
is that Iowa's 3 million
residents are overwhelmingly
2:23:28
white and the state's strong
economy needs immigrant labor.
2:23:32
Iowans
2:23:33
especially here would have a
very difficult time having
2:23:37
anything to eat at dinnertime
without immigrants because
2:23:40
immigrants are the ones who
processed the meat who farmed
2:23:45
the fields who would just
2:23:47
Adam Curry: want slaves cook the
2:23:49
Unknown: food. Brenda
2:23:50
Rodriguez who fled an abusive
relationship in Mexico dam has
2:23:54
lived in the state for nearly 30
years.
2:23:57
We did so many years been under
the shadows. And then so
2:24:03
when you hear these candidates
who are running say that people
2:24:07
who have come here legally have
to go home What do you think of
2:24:09
that?
2:24:09
I deserve a chance to stay. If
I'm paying my taxes and I'm not
2:24:15
doing anything? I don't think
I'm you know, a bad person that
2:24:21
the people from Iowa don't want
me here. Could I will run with
2:24:25
that immigrants like you. I
don't think so.
2:24:31
Adam Curry: Yeah, they have
Don't worry your kids will have
2:24:33
CBDCs and UBI it's all going to
be great. You'll be you you
2:24:38
you'll be you'd buddy. You'll
get UBI Ubu UBI will have
2:24:44
immigrants to come in and wash
your clothes and wash your car
2:24:47
and that is that is not the
American dream. No, I mean, the
2:24:53
American, elitist
2:24:55
John C Dvorak: look at thing yes
and take you elitist take a look
2:24:59
at your homeless situation and
unless you do something about
2:25:01
that first spa,
2:25:03
Adam Curry: well, there is
something that's going to happen
2:25:04
and it's not good. I got a note
from Rob our constitute
2:25:08
constitutional lawyer. And
Oregon, you remember Oregon is
2:25:14
where? Where was North Idaho
where all of this started in
2:25:20
Idaho, right? The homeless
started camping. It's called
2:25:24
camping not not, you know, not
being homeless or unhoused. And
2:25:32
they were camping everywhere in,
in downtown Boise. And when the
2:25:37
cops went to move them, then A
lawsuit was started saying that
2:25:41
this is cruel and unusual
punishment. And that is a
2:25:46
constitutional violation. And
then the thing is the ninth
2:25:51
circuit, they said ours, you
know, they got to a point so we
2:25:54
can't do anything. All these
cities, including Austin took on
2:25:58
that same mantra. Oh, this is
great. So now, it's
2:26:02
John C Dvorak: all based on that
one case in Idaho.
2:26:05
Adam Curry: Now this, the
Supreme Court of the United
2:26:07
States has granted cert to the
city of Grants Pass Oregon has
2:26:11
an important lawsuit. A homeless
woman sued the city under the
2:26:16
Eighth Amendment, the cruel and
unusual punishment clause and
2:26:19
the 14th amendment for equal
protection. Because the city
2:26:23
find homeless for camping on
public property remove park
2:26:27
benches from that property very
cruel and unusual. Failed to
2:26:30
supply warming and cooling
stations. It also voted against
2:26:34
affordable housing. But here's
where it gets nuts. The federal
2:26:37
district court certified a class
action suit against the city
2:26:42
class action. So the ninth, the
full Ninth Circuit affirmed that
2:26:47
decision without being familiar,
our lawyer says it seems to me
2:26:51
that the Supreme Court is poised
to reverse the Ninth Circuit,
2:26:55
but who knows. So we can have
all kinds of cities now the
2:26:59
homeless can file a class action
suit against the city for for
2:27:04
for moving their homeless
encampments. This will be
2:27:09
interesting to see how it
happens. But yeah, you're right.
2:27:13
That's something they could look
at but they don't care. They
2:27:15
don't care. They don't care. I
don't care. But we care. And I'd
2:27:20
like to thank you for your
courage in the morning to you
2:27:22
the man who put the seeds in the
collective calibration of
2:27:25
Cloudflare say hello to my
friend on the other end of
2:27:31
John C Dvorak: the morning to
you Mr. is also in the morning
2:27:34
those ships at sea and boots on
the ground and feet in the air
2:27:37
and subs in the water in the
dames in the nights out there
2:27:46
Adam Curry: the trolls have been
counted. We're late today at a
2:27:49
tooth 2119 on the troll count
that somebody's got listening
2:27:52
and in the drawer of 2119
2:27:56
John C Dvorak: Well, that's down
about 300 It
2:27:58
Adam Curry: was 2357 20 minutes
ago.
2:28:03
John C Dvorak: They're bailing
out.
2:28:04
Adam Curry: Yeah, you know why?
Taiwan? I mean, there's you
2:28:06
might as well play Africa clips.
2:28:09
John C Dvorak: Africa clips to
clear them out.
2:28:12
Adam Curry: Africa clips always
screws it up. Yeah, well, we
2:28:17
want to welcome all of these
trolls you can join in at Oh, hi
2:28:21
feeds, you can try joining a
troll room.io That's where you
2:28:26
can listen live. Of course you
can listen live many different
2:28:29
ways. And you can get into the
troll room through just an IRC
2:28:33
client even it's been around for
a long time. This was a long
2:28:36
standing interactive part
2:28:38
John C Dvorak: of the noise room
called what network? Is it on
2:28:41
the it's
2:28:43
Adam Curry: the void zero.net.
And the room is hash is hashtag
2:28:48
no agenda. It's been around
forever. Yeah. I mean, there's
2:28:52
ways to find it. There's ways to
find it.
2:28:54
John C Dvorak: It's easy to get
zero.net is a network. That's
2:28:58
the server
2:29:00
Adam Curry: as the IRC server
Yeah, you can you can you can
2:29:03
use any, you know, any IRC
client to get in there, but
2:29:07
white void zero saying No, zero
no.net I'm sorry, oops, zero
2:29:10
no.net
2:29:12
John C Dvorak: How could I
release these monitoring this?
2:29:14
Of
2:29:14
Adam Curry: course he is he's
void zero. He doesn't mess
2:29:18
around. Make sure he's 24/7 That
guy was making sure everything's
2:29:22
running love him. Of course, you
can get a modern podcast app.
2:29:27
Now there's an idea. If you get
that then you will be assured
2:29:31
that you can always listen to
the Dark Horse podcast, even if
2:29:36
it gets tossed off of apple and
Spotify, which it's cruisin for
2:29:40
a bruisin. I'm telling you,
podcast apps.com Then you can
2:29:44
also get alerted when when the
show when our show goes live.
2:29:47
You can listen to it live there.
Some of them have the troll room
2:29:50
built right in the chat and 90
seconds after we publish our
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podcast you'll get notified
don't wait an hour on Apple. Why
2:29:58
would you We run this on value
for value. Because we don't like
2:30:04
eating dog food. It's just be
honest, we don't want to have to
2:30:09
taste it, we don't want to have
to promote the product. We just
2:30:13
don't do that love. We love
talking about products that
2:30:16
people our producers make. And
if they're any good, if not, we
2:30:19
probably just won't talk about
it. But when someone has an
2:30:22
outstanding product, we don't
have to worry about it. But we
2:30:26
accept time, talent and treasure
and return for the value that we
2:30:30
bring you twice a week with our
three plus hours of content and
2:30:34
media analysis and
deconstruction. So we very much
2:30:39
appreciate the work that many,
many people do, as
2:30:42
aforementioned, Matt Hamilton,
of course, but we also have Sir
2:30:46
Paul couture, who does the Art
Generator, we have many we've
2:30:48
never built a website ourselves.
And that used to show until Oh,
2:30:53
goodness now at Tim, Tim code
monkey he built the no agenda
2:30:58
show.net website. And this is
this is really valuable to us.
2:31:02
This is this is incredibly
important stuff. And we can't we
2:31:07
could if we had to go pay for
that. I mean, we'd be broke,
2:31:09
like, like Spotify can't do it.
It's not it just can't do it. So
2:31:14
this is why we develop this,
this model and everybody helps
2:31:18
out by producing that's why
you're called producers. And
2:31:22
along those talent and and time
offerings comes the art for the
2:31:29
show. Every single show we have
a different piece of artwork.
2:31:33
This comes from our artists,
they are top notch, they are
2:31:36
professionals. We always have a
hard time choosing because we
2:31:40
have quite an assortment every
single time we do want to thank
2:31:43
the artist who brought the
artwork for us for episode 1624.
2:31:47
We titled that one Bub and Matt
Boisvert or boys vampire, boi S
2:31:55
v e r t I know he's told me how
to pronounce it. But I'm just a
2:31:57
Boisvert brought us the artwork
that we chose. It wasn't that it
2:32:02
wasn't like a stunner. It was
good. It was something about it
2:32:05
that we both liked it I didn't
like to the lack of drop shadow
2:32:09
on the no agenda and our names.
But there was kind of a cool
2:32:13
crowd picture with someone
holding up a sign that said
2:32:15
podcast repent. What else was
there that we did not select?
2:32:21
Well,
2:32:23
John C Dvorak: we didn't really
like any of the art.
2:32:26
Adam Curry: And that's not to be
mean. But you know, we're
2:32:29
discerning clients.
2:32:33
John C Dvorak: So we looked and
looked and I can't think of
2:32:36
anything else that was that was
noteworthy to
2:32:38
Adam Curry: say, well, people
had. Let's see.
2:32:43
John C Dvorak: There was just a
green legged woman,
2:32:46
Adam Curry: while the one we we
discussed, the green legged
2:32:49
woman, the one we discussed the
most was I won't see you from
2:32:53
Darren O'Neal. Which was of
course a a call back to Lloyd
2:32:59
Austin.
2:32:59
John C Dvorak: That was cute.
Yeah. But yeah, the curry
2:33:04
pointed out that is it's a
negative image. It's more than
2:33:07
it is morbid. It's more a bit
more the word morbid. Yeah. So
2:33:11
morbid image, forget it. And I
gotta be you as it would have
2:33:14
won. If it wasn't morbid. Yeah,
2:33:16
Adam Curry: I think the
morbidity factor was a little
2:33:18
bit too high. And there was
airplanes with holes in it. We
2:33:22
also discussed another mat
piece, which was the M five M
2:33:26
flowchart.
2:33:28
John C Dvorak: Yeah, I liked
that piece a lot. Yeah.
2:33:31
Adam Curry: To me, it was just
too PowerPoint. It it just it
2:33:34
just looked like PowerPoint.
2:33:35
John C Dvorak: I don't know. I
just liked it. I mean, yeah,
2:33:38
Adam Curry: I know you liked it.
2:33:39
John C Dvorak: I think that
podcast repent was a better
2:33:41
piece to choose. Yeah. Yeah.
2:33:43
Adam Curry: And I saw that you
used shooter inks. Ham radio,
2:33:50
art for the newsletter, I
believe.
2:33:51
John C Dvorak: Yeah, that came
in for this this show. It was
2:33:55
early 25. Oh, I didn't even see
that. It has 11 people. I will
2:33:59
say this to artists if they want
to know this. If you if you get
2:34:03
your art in with a show number
on it, which is hard to get
2:34:07
picked for the show itself. But
if you do that, it's a good
2:34:11
chance. I'll
2:34:12
Adam Curry: pick it. Yep, that's
right. He's a pushover people
2:34:15
push over. I tell you. You can
follow along with these
2:34:20
wonderful pieces of art at no
agenda art generator.com, which
2:34:23
is fast now. I love it. So fast.
blazingly fast fast. Thank you.
2:34:27
Thank you. So Paul couture.
Thank you, Matt, for bringing us
2:34:30
the album art. It's a very
important piece of our overall
2:34:34
marketing. gets people
interested they see it in the
2:34:37
podcast app to see it posted
around like oh, this is good. I
2:34:41
want to get I want to grab that.
I want to see what's going on
2:34:43
with this. It's funny makes
people laugh. At least we hope
2:34:46
so. And we appreciate all of our
artists as always, and
2:34:51
especially Matt Boisvert of
course today for the album art
2:34:53
for episode 1624 Now, we're
going to thank the people who
2:34:56
delivered us treasure for
episode 1625. No, exactly. Have
2:35:00
producers today? Now does that
do we still have a rule where no
2:35:04
executive producer the top
associate becomes an exec? Or
2:35:07
yeah,
2:35:08
John C Dvorak: he becomes the
Exec. But let's say this say
2:35:13
this we haven't had this
situation since since 2018.
2:35:19
During COVID It never happened
it didn't happen last year
2:35:21
didn't happen to you after that.
This is the first time that this
2:35:24
used to be a common event a
common occurrence in the early
2:35:27
days of the show, but now it's
rare. And this is particularly
2:35:31
rare because that means nobody
wanted to be the executive
2:35:34
producer promoted in the
newsletter there one knows about
2:35:39
it and know nothing. So we ended
up with Scott here in Newcastle.
2:35:44
Who's gonna get bumped up to the
executive producer level. Okay,
2:35:48
Adam Curry: and Scott comes in
with 233 dot 33 which is
2:35:52
beautiful number we love the
magic number. Scott from
2:35:56
Newcastle Australia here Oh, I
wonder if it's Australia dollar
2:35:59
reduce. So he would have been an
exec anyway
2:36:04
John C Dvorak: 233 Maybe so
he'll get by date but he does
2:36:07
get bumped
2:36:08
Adam Curry: up no matter what. I
got hitting them out in the
2:36:10
mouth late 2019 by a YouTuber
named the illusion and if not
2:36:16
myth thank you this a YouTube
donation first of his kind have
2:36:19
not missed an episode since
please do short poems like
2:36:23
Miguel de deuced please use
except this donation of 233 33
2:36:34
your media deconstruction has
been a real eye opener while
2:36:37
keeping my amygdala in check.
Please put me on the birthday
2:36:41
list for the 19th while we have
more on the on the birthday list
2:36:46
of course. As I begin my 52nd
trip around the sun for jingles
2:36:52
may I request the UK foamer oh
there's one I haven't heard for
2:36:56
a while Keep up the good work
gents regard Scott from
2:36:59
Newcastle Australia
2:37:12
you got it. You got it. All
right.
2:37:13
John C Dvorak: Steven Peterson
in Kingaroy Queensland Australia
2:37:16
he got to us he's right in a row
to 2222 Greetings from the
2:37:21
bubble wrap nanny state
socialist utopia of Australia
2:37:26
where everyone is safe fully
boosted and inclusive almost
2:37:32
thanks for your ongoing humor as
we circled a socialist drain no
2:37:37
jingles no karma
2:37:39
Adam Curry: good now we have sir
pursuit of peace and tranquility
2:37:42
from Midland Georgia it says see
attached note I do not have said
2:37:45
attach note
2:37:46
John C Dvorak: it's on the it
was on the email
2:37:49
Unknown: no
2:37:51
Adam Curry: let me double check
I
2:37:52
John C Dvorak: got the same
email you got to saw it right
2:37:54
there.
2:37:55
Adam Curry: Let me see do I know
I just have a title change for
2:38:04
him but what could you read it
for me because I do not have it
2:38:07
this is weird like
2:38:08
John C Dvorak: it's another note
Yeah, I
2:38:10
Adam Curry: came here with the
second I'm sorry
2:38:15
John C Dvorak: this no does have
the title change on it. Yeah, I
2:38:17
Adam Curry: have the title
change but there's no note Oh, I
2:38:21
see. Oh, here's the PDF I'm
sorry for some reason I missed
2:38:24
the PDF. Well let me do this. I
got it here now shall read it
2:38:27
now. I've opened it. I found it.
Crisis averted. It's loading. I
2:38:32
don't know why it's taken. Oh my
god. Okay. 222 22 Row ducks. In
2:38:37
the morning boys. Please accept
this short row of ducks for the
2:38:40
month of January to keep myself
current and advance me to the
2:38:43
title of Baron. Thank you for
last month's jobs karma for our
2:38:47
youngest human resource she has
already landed her dream job and
2:38:51
expects to start this month and
the keeper truly appreciated the
2:38:55
biscuit under birthday at the
risk of expecting too much our
2:38:58
oldest human resources finishing
his PhD this spring and need
2:39:01
some jobs karma in the coming
months. So please extend him
2:39:05
some Pelosi jobs karma will do
it in a moment. Thank you in
2:39:08
advance for fulfilling of my
above request and as always, I
2:39:10
really appreciate your
deconstruction of the media the
2:39:12
issues of the day. It keeps me
sane keeping it brief,
2:39:15
sincerely, sir pursuit of peace
and tranquility in the lands of
2:39:19
the red clay and the cherry
trees jobs,
2:39:22
Unknown: jobs, jobs and jobs.
Pharma.
2:39:31
John C Dvorak: David Weicker are
wicker in Jacksonville, Florida
2:39:34
served
2:39:35
Adam Curry: by wicker. It's
wicker, and he is served by His
2:39:38
grace. He's a knight
2:39:40
John C Dvorak: switcheroo to my
red hot mama Jewess. Wicker AC
2:39:46
can you think Jules
2:39:48
Adam Curry: is Jules? I think I
say Julius. I'm pretty old.
2:39:55
John C Dvorak: As Mimi, can you
kick in June? Here's the penny.
2:40:01
Adam Curry: I got your penny
right there.
2:40:03
John C Dvorak: I want to use our
platform to celebrate the life
2:40:06
of Brian hip is face to face
with our Lord and Savior as of
2:40:12
2am 113 24. He's not an avid
listener but was an amazing
2:40:17
friend and you fought the good
fight Gitmo nation. None of us
2:40:20
are guaranteed our next breath
own this you're curious lot
2:40:24
searching for answers lets you
not be part of this amazing
2:40:28
movement and you are here for a
purpose. I am sure by His grace
2:40:33
jingles Obama you might die and
if cancer plea please Peace be
2:40:38
with you. KYB oh
2:40:40
Adam Curry: and let's go KY Bo
keep your buckets overflowing
2:40:44
you might
2:40:50
John C Dvorak: use karma I'm
gonna read the next one for
2:40:55
reasons you'll soon got will
dawn on you. Yes, Rick. Rick
2:40:59
bunch and La Verkin Utah 20202
Thanks, bro. Appear is the first
2:41:04
ducks and Aigues for the year
from Ricky Bobby and splash
2:41:09
Cadillac. Keep doing what you
are doing. You are the best. Oh,
2:41:16
nothing.
2:41:16
Adam Curry: Thank you. Then we
have Danny Petey from
2:41:19
Churchville, Pennsylvania 233.
And I know I have kind of issue
2:41:25
with this. We don't do scripts
and stuff. You want me to read
2:41:30
this all in a game show voice.
He said here's what he says. In
2:41:35
the morning, Dan petty here
financial advisor helping get
2:41:37
more nation find and fund their
exit strategies with the
2:41:40
exception of Adam and Jhansi. Of
course, instead of notes on my
2:41:43
quest tonight, he would have
decided to have a little fun
2:41:45
along with a way with a brand
new gizmo game I called value
2:41:48
for value trivia. He says yes,
that's right value for value
2:41:56
trivia where the questions
answers and winners are found
2:41:59
only by those who listen to the
full donation segment of each
2:42:02
show. So what is he going to do
here? He says contest today's oh
2:42:11
John C Dvorak: okay says he's
gonna ask this is not worse.
2:42:14
This is not a good idea how it's
not.
2:42:17
Adam Curry: But what he wanted
to do was if you have the right
2:42:21
answer at the end, you email him
which is damn Petey.
2:42:26
newton@gmail.com You'll get $50
from his next door neighbor
2:42:30
donation towards your
knighthood. Yeah. I love you,
2:42:34
man. I love it is the idea is
cool, but it's too complicated.
2:42:37
I will do his question. And the
question is, what were the three
2:42:43
descriptive words Adam used to
describe the traumatizing shirt
2:42:46
he wore as a child? Dude, I
wouldn't even know that one. I'm
2:42:52
gonna give you a double up karma
for that brother. Thank you so
2:42:54
much Dan petty.
2:42:55
Unknown: He's got karma
2:43:02
John C Dvorak: that was the see
through shirt. Yeah, but
2:43:05
Adam Curry: what were the three
descriptive words.
2:43:09
John C Dvorak: It was G through
two words traumatising. Three
2:43:13
Adam Curry: traumatising. See
through body shirt.
2:43:16
John C Dvorak: Linda LAPACK and
meanwhile from Lakewood,
2:43:18
Colorado, she knows how to do it
right she keeps it short and
2:43:20
sweet jobs calm has all she
requests and she wants to say
2:43:24
that for a recipe that resume
that gets results go to Image
2:43:28
makers inc.com and must work for
all your executive resume and
2:43:31
job search needs. That's image
makers equals a K or find Linda
2:43:35
on the producer list. My husband
wants to know who John is.
2:43:41
Unknown: Jobs, jobs, jobs and
jobs
2:43:51
Adam Curry: Yep, yeah, that's a
problem in paradise. Oh, is this
2:43:54
John guy that you keep talking
about? I'm not digging that a
2:43:58
was it but it was. I want to
knock his lights out. Thank you
2:44:02
very much to our executive one
day you're not
2:44:05
John C Dvorak: done. I'm not
know you got one last one to
2:44:09
read. Oh, I'm
2:44:10
Adam Curry: sorry. Pamela
McLean, Fort Worth Texas. Pamela
2:44:13
I'm sorry. $200. No note, double
up karma for you. You've got
2:44:20
karma. And now I'd like to thank
our one executive and the
2:44:25
Associate Executive Producer for
episode 1625. We bring you the
2:44:29
value you send back what it's
worth to you. If everybody did
2:44:32
it, we'd be we'd be just fine.
We do have lots of people who
2:44:36
come in under $50 which we
appreciate highly, usually for
2:44:40
reasons of anonymity and the the
ongoing sustaining donations are
2:44:45
really appreciated particularly
on day like this, which you can
2:44:49
find more about more. You can go
read it a bad divorce
2:44:53
act.org/day or no agenda
donations.com We got some meet
2:44:57
up reports and we have John
taken us through Do the 50s
2:45:00
right now.
2:45:01
John C Dvorak: Yeah, let's go
with starting with Brian
2:45:03
Schumacher and Boyd's Maryland
14646 Shelly Winky. I think in
2:45:10
Fort Wayne, Indiana switcheroo
this actually happy birthday or
2:45:14
smokin hot husband Jared Smith.
I love you. She says 114 75 Rita
2:45:22
Harrington in Sparks Nevada
114 33 Dakota Dakota Welker in
2:45:28
Boise, Idaho 113 86 with a
birthday, Jessie who are Nino
2:45:37
umani yo, Lauren Nino something
along those lines? Ah,
2:45:42
Hicksville, New York. 100. Sir
Chris and Bert came Norway. And
2:45:52
he said I'm had to read this
$100 is $100 He says I'm
2:45:56
saddened that Adam feels in a S
has done its job. Okay, John,
2:46:05
when in Austin, Texas, sad puppy
prevention $100 is not working.
2:46:11
Anonymous and bent mountain
Virginia 100. Sir breath in
2:46:19
Greenfield Park New York's 8866
jobs karma coming at the end of
2:46:26
this list him
2:46:27
Adam Curry: and his wife he is a
night to escape New York for New
2:46:30
Hampshire. You got it.
2:46:33
John C Dvorak: Good luck. Kevin
McLaughlin and Concord North
2:46:36
Carolina. 808. Is the Archduke
Aluna Christian grew grew lash
2:46:43
girlish girlish in Lakeland,
Ohio. 808 he says for the last
2:46:49
time Robert Ross ah, Richmond
Virginia pointy boobs. 707 Ross
2:46:57
quarry in Rego Park, New York.
6969 birthday coming up. Donnie
2:47:03
Eubanks in Canton Ohio 6666 that
Christopher dektor 5678 also sir
2:47:10
be boop in New Brighton
Minnesota 65678. Eli, the coffee
2:47:16
guy at gigawatt Coffee Roasters
Bensenville Illinois 5510 type
2:47:24
in ITM 20 Alexander O'Neal in
Mississauga, Ontario 55 Alex
2:47:34
right why wait that's
2:47:35
Adam Curry: a first time donor
from Scandinavia wants to
2:47:38
deducing
2:47:40
Unknown: you've been de Deus
douching Oh
2:47:46
John C Dvorak: Alex Blatz VOA
two Es and Citrus Heights
2:47:50
California. 5333 Scott
Lynchburg, Virginia 5222. Right.
2:47:56
Adam Curry: Scott says please
call out attorney Dave as a
2:47:58
douchebag
2:48:01
John C Dvorak: anonymous cop in
Redwood City, California 5150
2:48:06
Christine Heinz and Manchester
New Hampshire. 5123. Vie count
2:48:11
sir economic hitman in Tomball,
Texas 5001. And that takes us to
2:48:15
the $50 donors. I'm just going
to read out their names and
2:48:18
locations. And it's not that
many but there's enough. Gary
2:48:22
Mau Woodland Hills Stephen King
and Box Elder South Dakota.
2:48:28
Douglas Moog in in cotton
cochranton. Pennsylvania, a Dane
2:48:33
Patricia Worthington in Miami
Beach or Miami. Real deals now
2:48:38
in San Antonio, Texas. What are
what their deals are for Jared
2:48:43
jaw in Nashville, Tennessee
Brandon sub wide port orchard,
2:48:46
Washington Carey okie in
Freehold New Jersey. And there's
2:48:51
a birthday coming up for her.
Greg Oles OLS camp in Thunder
2:48:56
Bay, Ontario. Kevin dills in
Huntersville, North Carolina
2:49:01
Christian Freeman in San Marcos,
Texas. Diane shawanna Back in
2:49:07
johnsburg, Illinois, Gerald
Preston in Bennington, new in
2:49:12
Nebraska. Wesley Stewart in
Mesa, Arizona and last in our
2:49:17
fabulous list is Baron of
Belmont in Belmont North
2:49:21
Carolina. I want to thank these
people for making this show.
2:49:24
possibility and a reality. Here
we are.
2:49:27
Adam Curry: And here is the jobs
karma for those who needed jobs,
2:49:32
Unknown: jobs and jobs. Let's
vote for jobs. Karma
2:49:38
Adam Curry: thank you all very
much. You are the producers of
2:49:40
this show for episode 1625. We
appreciate
2:49:44
Unknown: it. Our formula is
this. We go out. We get people
2:49:48
in the mouth
2:50:09
Adam Curry: Tracy Sullivan
wishes her Birthday Sir Johnny
2:50:11
bananas happy one he turned 47
on the 13th That's yesterday.
2:50:16
Dakota Walker also celebrated
yesterday karaoke will be
2:50:20
turning 56 tomorrow. Is that a
real name? Karaoke, your parents
2:50:24
played a mean trick on you.
Rusko returned 69 on the 16th
2:50:27
Sir Tony wishes his daughter
sienna, a very happy eighth on
2:50:31
the 18th Scott from Newcastle
Australia turns 52 on the 19th
2:50:35
and Shelley Wangka wishes are
smokin on husband and husband
2:50:39
Jared Smith a very happy
birthday as we said Happy
2:50:42
Birthday to everybody here in
the back office a staffing man
2:50:45
has wrote the best podcast in
the universe
2:50:57
don't want to be introduced and
we do have that one title change
2:51:00
I'm very glad we found the note
from Sir pursuit of peace and
2:51:03
tranquility in the lands of the
red clay in the cherry trees
2:51:06
because of his additional
support and $1,000 or more he
2:51:10
can now claim the title of Baron
and we are very very happy to
2:51:14
have you here thank you very
much sir and that's it no nights
2:51:17
no dames today. But of course we
do have a couple of meetup
2:51:19
reports know what
2:51:28
our first one comes from Los
Angeles the flight of the no
2:51:30
agenda Leo Bravo does them very
regularly. I'd love lost count
2:51:35
of the number of meetups he's
he's organized so far. These of
2:51:39
course are the meetups. You can
find that no agenda meetups.com
2:51:43
This is where you go and find
your clan, your tribe your
2:51:46
community everybody
2:51:47
Unknown: I feel Bravo at fly
doesn't know agenda meeting
2:51:50
number 48. My friends here have
things
2:51:52
to say a be dissolved from
Altadena in the morning. It's
2:51:55
certainly a chem full pop from
Lakewood. That's true.
2:51:58
It's the evening but in the
morning Hey, it's
2:52:00
Steven in the Morning John and
Adam
2:52:04
Adam Curry: 48 Already
phenomenal. Got a report a
2:52:08
written report from a Snipper he
says in the morning at a meet up
2:52:12
report from SV AAMA at Lombok
Hmm, can be summarized as all by
2:52:20
myself to the tune of Eric
Carmen, but we will keep hitting
2:52:24
him in the mouth and retry in
Langkawi Langkawi Where is this
2:52:28
place? I don't know where this
is. Where is Lombok? Oh is that
2:52:35
the eyes are some islands some
crazy island in the near
2:52:41
Indonesia or barley or
something? All right, you're in
2:52:44
let me know we I gotta promote
this better for you give you a
2:52:47
little more lead time. And we'll
do that for any of the meetups
2:52:50
because it is the companion to
the no agenda podcast. This is
2:52:53
where you truly can hang out
with people that that you that
2:52:57
you will be surprised that these
people are no agenda listeners.
2:53:00
You'll have so much in common
and especially in these dark
2:53:03
days of winter when big freezes
can come and weird things can
2:53:06
happen and your EV won't. won't
drive and your phone runs out of
2:53:10
juice. You want to have a place
where you can hang out and know
2:53:13
people that you've hung out
with. That's a no agenda meet up
2:53:16
it's connection that brings you
protection, just like the big
2:53:19
arcade party in Fredericksburg,
Virginia. Hello.
2:53:22
Unknown: Is this happy in
Virginia? The Fredericksburg
2:53:25
arcade party. We got booths in
skee ball. This is Tom
2:53:28
Starkweather I'm meeting people
that went to my high school when
2:53:32
I was there. It's wild.
2:53:34
i This is rowdy, we're having an
arcade meetup in Fredericksburg,
2:53:37
Virginia everyone's here if
you're not here, you're new
2:53:40
you're not fool like me with my
weird hat.
2:53:43
Hey, DC girl in the morning sir
gave the blue collar night
2:53:45
representing FEMA Region seven.
I was expecting more spooks here
2:53:49
it's the same trail chicken from
locust Hill, Virginia oto This
2:53:53
is Amy in the morning,
2:53:54
ITM sir. William
2:53:55
is definitely a spoof hi this is
Marshall 60 miles from spook
2:54:00
Central. Please don't say they
acted rose high in the morning
2:54:02
is Jamie lot of noise here.
2:54:05
Hi, this is Sarah from Richmond
life is a scam. This is
2:54:08
Rob from Richmond in the
morning. Oh there Chris from
2:54:10
King George in the morning.
2:54:11
It is Sir William at
Fredericksburg. Hey want to put
2:54:14
a shout out for the Kernersville
North Carolina meetup. January
2:54:18
20. Trains good plains bad
2:54:21
this has been here at the no
agenda meetup love the new
2:54:24
agenda people and Happy belated
jingle Bengal
2:54:29
Adam Curry: a great group and a
very beautiful group. They are
2:54:31
indeed that is the
Fredericksburg, Virginia. Meet
2:54:35
up. Thank you Tom Starkweather
for putting that one together,
2:54:38
especially the report. We have a
meetup taking place today the
2:54:41
indie na new year resolution
revolt meetup which is underway
2:54:45
as we speak at Grand Junction
brewing in Westfield, Indiana
2:54:48
Markham Maria hosting that for
it's always a party with them.
2:54:51
The next one will be on the
eighth January 18. It's a
2:54:54
Thursday, the Denver Stock Show
meet up 630 at Lincoln's
2:54:57
Roadhouse 1201 South pearls
Street in Denver, and the
2:55:02
Charlotte's 33rd Thursday meet
up seven o'clock Ed's tavern,
2:55:05
Charlotte, North Carolina on
Thursday, January 18, as well,
2:55:09
those are just a few of the
meetups. There's many more
2:55:11
available. Go find one is called
no agenda meetup.com If you
2:55:15
can't find one near you start
one yourself. Start small but
2:55:18
you'll have a party.
2:55:19
Unknown: Sometimes you want to
go hang out with Dyson days.
2:55:26
You'd be triggered. You wouldn't
be where everybody feels the
2:55:34
same. Is like a party. Like a
party. Like a party at
2:55:46
Adam Curry: night. I have two
ISOs why don't I play mine
2:55:52
first? I think I have a winner.
I mean, this is why it's so
2:55:55
important. Such a great
explainer. Thank you. That's a
2:55:58
little too fast for you. But
yeah, no good. This is the one
2:56:02
we know the flu is deadly. I
mean, that's just killer.
2:56:06
John C Dvorak: I mean, it is a
killer. Can you? Can you top
2:56:09
Adam Curry: that?
2:56:10
John C Dvorak: I think so. I
think all three of mine are
2:56:12
better than that. Let's start
with thanks, Bing.
2:56:18
Adam Curry: Thanks for being
with us. No, it's too fast. Just
2:56:20
like the other one. That's no
good.
2:56:22
John C Dvorak: Okay, how about
this one? Bla
2:56:23
Adam Curry: bla bla bla bla bla.
Okay, I guess this is your
2:56:31
killer. The one you got at the
end here.
2:56:34
Unknown: Yeah, think? Think
about it.
2:56:37
Adam Curry: I mean, it's like,
we know
2:56:40
Unknown: the flu is deadly.
Think about it. About that.
2:56:45
John C Dvorak: You just like
think about it. No, I think that
2:56:47
combination would
2:56:48
Adam Curry: work. It's short and
sweet. I'll see that combo. I
2:56:50
think it's a good idea. May I? I
have a 46 second good news
2:56:56
story.
2:56:58
John C Dvorak: Oh, you want to
bump my good news story for
2:57:00
yours? Well, you're
2:57:01
Adam Curry: always doing the
good news stories. And well, you
2:57:03
John C Dvorak: gave me that
assignment. You specifically
2:57:05
told me to do this. And I've
been doing it. Yeah, Mimi's been
2:57:08
helping producers and on it and
now you're gonna jump because
2:57:12
it's so successful. You've
2:57:18
Adam Curry: been Stolen Valor.
Stolen Valor. Go
2:57:21
John C Dvorak: play the good
news story. Now
2:57:22
Unknown: it's time for you
surely see.
2:57:28
Adam Curry: It's a short one.
And if it's no good, I'll never
2:57:32
do it again. How about that? Is
that Is that Is that a deal?
2:57:39
John C Dvorak: For one thing I
don't think you'll be billed.
2:57:42
Stick to that promise. For
starters.
2:57:47
Adam Curry: Well, let's let's
Okay. I'll play mine. And if and
2:57:50
if you feel like it. We can do
yours too.
2:57:52
Unknown: Here we go. Well, we
have talked about flying the
2:57:55
friendly skies but this takes it
to a whole new level. Hoboken
2:57:59
natives Kelly and Jake Levine
were thrilled when their five
2:58:02
month old baby decided I'm not
going to cry on this flight. It
2:58:05
was her second flight ever.
Instead, she watched the woman
2:58:08
across the aisle crocheting that
woman Megan Rubin noticed and
2:58:13
she got an idea with just one
hour left in the flight she
2:58:16
crocheted a hat for sweet Romy
and that hat was a perfect fit
2:58:21
look at it there for me was just
mesmerized watching Megan
2:58:25
crochet and now they've all
become fast friends and Megan
2:58:28
says Up Next she is going to
crochet a maybe dress for Roma
2:58:32
love the worship leader fig is
watching what is
2:58:36
going on. It's a crochet Oh my
goodness. Come
2:58:39
Adam Curry: on.
2:58:41
John C Dvorak: Come on is the
debt is the most Bunnell that's
2:58:45
a great news story about some
woman okay. I think that it's
2:58:52
nothing I can reject in the
point where you'd stop doing
2:58:54
these I'm gonna let you that'll
be the good news for this show.
2:58:57
Adam Curry: Do you want to do
yours just in case I can bump it
2:58:59
is VersaLink people are calling
for yours. They want both they
2:59:04
want they love the segment so
much. They want to good news
2:59:07
stories.
2:59:08
John C Dvorak: Well, this one
here is about a woman who
2:59:10
retires at 84 and from a job
that she's had since night this
2:59:15
1970s at a location new we're
all familiar with. This isn't
2:59:20
quite interesting.
2:59:21
Unknown: Today is something
good. We've been talking about
2:59:23
Katie Kay 75th anniversary and
our co workers like paddy Cobb
2:59:26
who works here for 40 years or
more. Well guess what? I give
2:59:30
Sony A woman tops us off.
2:59:31
Yeah, her name is dot sharp. And
she started working at the
2:59:35
McDonald's in Gibsonia. All the
way back in 1978. I mean, Happy
2:59:40
Meals hadn't even been invented
yet. Well tomorrow at 10am After
2:59:44
45 years through cashier dot
will serve her last order.
2:59:50
I wonder what it's going to be.
Is it going to be the double l
2:59:53
can't be
2:59:53
the double Patty Big Mac though
but it could be chicken nuggets
2:59:56
it could be
2:59:57
dot celebrated her 84th birthday
last month and is looking
3:00:00
forward to retirement we wish
her all the best congratulations
3:00:04
dot think of
3:00:05
all the friends she made all the
people that are used to getting
3:00:07
their breakfast or whatever from
dot the window so funny
3:00:10
because as soon as I heard for I
thought we were gonna say french
3:00:12
fries
3:00:16
Adam Curry: native ad I can't
believe you let a native ad into
3:00:20
the good news segment. What
3:00:23
John C Dvorak: kind of positive
images into McDonald's has an 84
3:00:27
year old woman. Yeah,
3:00:29
Adam Curry: exactly. No no
everyone wants to go get a Big
3:00:31
Mac you oh my god this. That's
horrible. Native Ads are not
3:00:36
allowed to be good news stories.
about.no dot Her name is what
3:00:44
was named dotnet. Does sharp C
sharp dotnet it was it was a
3:00:50
total native ad. Oh, I'm sorry.
3:00:53
Unknown: Google News story from
JC de had the vibes for you. And
3:01:00
we all feel better. Now he's
done his bit. To back to
3:01:05
reality. That's turning to shit.
3:01:08
Adam Curry: Glad I brought the
crochet baby because that was
3:01:11
just
3:01:13
John C Dvorak: you had to bring
another one next show. Well, I
3:01:16
will teach you top to me as a
matter of speak, and it has to
3:01:22
be just as as Bunnell. Bunnell
have been announced.
3:01:27
Unknown: But now is a good word.
3:01:29
Adam Curry: That's a great work.
Night everybody I'm sorry for
3:01:33
that native add at the end at
least it wasn't for dog food. Up
3:01:38
next on the no agenda stream
troll room.io and the modern
3:01:41
podcast app that Larry show.
Stay tuned for that. And we have
3:01:47
end of show mixes from Tom
Starkweather. Professor Jay
3:01:51
Jones and the Maya is back.
Sure. Michael Anthony, on the
3:01:56
wheels of steel. And that will
do it. We were we were before we
3:02:01
will return on Thursday for
another another media
3:02:05
deconstruction just for you.
We're looking forward to it.
3:02:09
Until then, coming to you from
the heart of the Texas hill
3:02:11
country here in FEMA Region
number six. In the morning,
3:02:14
everybody. I'm Adam curry,
3:02:16
John C Dvorak: and from Northern
Silicon Valley, where I
3:02:18
recommend you back off on the
coffee. I'm John C. Dvorak and
3:02:22
Adam Curry: remember us at
devora.org/na We'll see you on
3:02:25
Thursday, everybody until then
adios mofos a hui, Hui, and such
3:02:34
relax.
3:02:35
Unknown: The computer is
processing the data. I will be
3:02:38
notified as soon as there is an
inflammation
3:02:40
and I want to be careful here. I
any advertiser or campaign I
3:02:44
know we're working with them
believe
3:02:46
that its goal is to sell
everything to everyone. Why am I
3:02:50
seeing this ad? Well, that's a
great, great question. Your
3:02:55
User Agreement sucks. We
3:02:57
see more passive listening and
passive monitoring in our own
3:03:00
homes with
3:03:01
the information we have
accumulated on.
3:03:05
We provided support to the Trump
campaign and he's been
3:03:09
terrific. He may be a globalist
but I still like him. He was
3:03:13
calling those things that was
not as though they were is what
3:03:16
he was still indeed. Yes, he
3:03:18
is seriously a globalist there's
no
3:03:20
question but there has never
been a company quite like Amazon
3:03:23
kin to a game of Whack a Mole.
Goodbye and cue
3:03:27
the biggest global risks of 2024
possible Trump victory comet
3:03:32
November on PC Trump being risks
number one domestic Furion fear
3:03:39
civil strife divisions on anyone
who opposes them this world war
3:03:44
three and create havoc
3:03:55
be whisked number one over
3:03:57
the wounds now.
3:04:01
On anyone who opposes them
that's all the strong have been
3:04:06
set by the whimpering propaganda
the weak and create havoc
3:04:18
to perform Shakespeares stuff
like that
3:04:21
possible Trump victory comment
and there's been bird and left
3:04:28
flip dogs of
3:04:31
the ruins of the noblest man
that ever lived in the time of
3:04:37
World War Three and create
havoc.
3:04:55
All going to need
3:04:58
to make a shirt Oh
3:05:06
no lies
3:05:14
in my classroom so get out back
home
3:05:36
and go home
3:05:44
it's time to move
3:05:53
on we got to all y'all keep
eating meat you can't have any
3:06:01
burden. How can you have any put
in if you keep it you?
3:06:13
MoPhO bohra.org/and We know the
flu is deadly. Think about it.