0:00
I'm taking credit for the blurt.
0:02
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:04
It's Sunday, February 23rd, 2025.
0:06
This is your award-winning Kibble Nation Media
0:08
Assassination Episode 1741.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Booing!
0:14
Voila!
0:15
And broadcasting live from the heart of the
0:17
Texas air country here in FEMA Region Number
0:20
6.
0:20
In the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley where the witch
0:25
is dead, I'm John C.
0:26
Dvorak.
0:27
It's crackpot and buzzkill.
0:29
In the morning.
0:32
Uh, let me guess, you're referring to Joy
0:35
Reid.
0:36
Yes.
0:38
You know what?
0:40
It's hurting the show.
0:42
It hasn't done anything yet.
0:44
Joy Reid is a staple.
0:46
Hurting the show.
0:47
Joy Reid is a staple.
0:50
She's going to be a podcaster, let's face
0:52
it.
0:53
But she's a...
0:54
She's going to be a TikToker, I think.
0:56
I think she'll be a TikToker.
0:58
She's done a lot of TikTok already.
1:00
Yep, could be.
1:02
She's actually more unhinged on TikTok than she
1:04
is normally.
1:06
You know who's going to replace him, don't
1:08
you?
1:09
Just a team of jerk-offs.
1:11
Yeah, what's the guy's name?
1:13
Michael Steele's one of them.
1:15
Yeah, exactly.
1:16
Here, I have...
1:18
Listen, this is the team that will be
1:20
replacing Joy Reid on MSNBC.
1:22
And tell me this isn't hurting the show.
1:24
What would you have us do?
1:25
I would actually...
1:27
You know what?
1:28
I'd just like you to show that you
1:29
give a damn.
1:30
That you got a little emotion about the
1:32
fact that people are losing their jobs indiscriminately.
1:36
That this individual sitting at down the 1600
1:42
Pennsylvania Avenue has given absolute power to one
1:46
man who brings his son into the Oval
1:49
Office whose son says to him, you're not
1:52
the president.
1:53
You shouldn't be in that chair.
1:55
Where did he get that from?
1:57
He got it from his daddy.
1:59
Because that's what his daddy thinks of the
2:00
man who brought him into the Oval Office.
2:02
So I just like to see somebody wake
2:04
the hell up and get excited about the
2:06
fact that your country is under assault.
2:09
They're not at the gate anymore.
2:12
They're in your bedrooms.
2:13
They're in your living rooms.
2:15
They're in your businesses.
2:17
They got your data, dumbass.
2:19
They got all your stuff.
2:21
Elon Musk has his tentacles in everything you're
2:24
doing.
2:24
Not just off of X, but now he's
2:27
in the Treasury Department.
2:28
He's in the Labor Department.
2:30
He's in the Department of Homeland Security.
2:33
And nobody seems to give a damn.
2:35
And so it's all I want somebody to
2:37
show that they care enough to get off
2:39
their fat ass and say something about it.
2:43
This is all part of the Democrats, and
2:48
he, of course, is supposed to be a
2:50
Republican, just going unhinged.
2:53
I mean, we've been noticing the cursing, and
2:56
he had a lot of...
2:57
The cursing's out of control.
2:57
Damn this, damn that, off your fat ass.
3:00
Did you hear James Carville?
3:03
He was cursing?
3:04
Well, he's...
3:05
No, no, no, no.
3:07
He's always cursing.
3:09
This is not even a cursing clip.
3:11
He is so upset.
3:13
And he was on...
3:15
What's the blockhead?
3:16
Sean Hannity show.
3:18
Was the microphone pointing up his nose this
3:21
time?
3:22
What LSU outfit was he wearing?
3:25
No, he was wearing an LSU hoodie, of
3:26
course.
3:27
And he was on with Sean Hannity, which
3:31
by itself is always kind of fun.
3:32
Carville was on Sean Hannity, I missed it.
3:34
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
3:35
Listen to his voice.
3:36
I see your party screaming and yelling and
3:39
acting like lunatics, and you're smarter than that
3:42
because that's not you.
3:44
And you're kind of spinning a little on
3:46
me because you got your ass kicked in
3:48
this election, and everyone thought you were all
3:49
going to win.
3:50
Okay, I lost a point.
3:54
What was that?
3:57
That was his voice.
4:01
I have no idea what that was.
4:02
It was like something locked in his vocal
4:06
cords.
4:07
Listen again.
4:07
Your ass kicked in this election, and everyone
4:09
thought you were all going to win.
4:11
Okay, I lost a point.
4:14
He's doing a voice.
4:16
No, no, no, I did not do that.
4:18
I don't think he was doing a voice,
4:20
man.
4:21
That was very strange.
4:24
Now I have to go back and watch
4:25
that show and see what he does.
4:27
The brand new chair of the DNC, Ken
4:32
Martin.
4:33
No, that guy.
4:34
The white guy from Minnesota.
4:36
The milk toast from Minnesota.
4:37
Oh, the milk toast from Minnesota.
4:41
Well, even he's swearing, and it was difficult.
4:45
I don't think he wanted it to come
4:47
out this way, but he couldn't even hold
4:48
back himself.
4:49
He was talking to my new favorite show
4:51
to watch, Politics Girl.
4:53
You ever watch her?
4:55
Politics Girl.
4:58
Yeah, she's good.
4:58
I think she'll be a source of information
5:00
for the future.
5:01
Hey, listen to this.
5:02
We cannot show up four months before an
5:04
election, and the first conversation we have with
5:06
someone is asking them to do something for
5:09
us, to vote for our candidates or our
5:11
party.
5:12
I mean, think about this.
5:14
Why are we losing ground with Latino voters?
5:16
Why are we losing ground with young voters?
5:18
Why are we losing ground with every single
5:20
demographic group?
5:21
There's a million reasons, but one is because
5:24
they only see us during an election, usually
5:27
the last few months, and when they hear
5:29
from us, we're asking them for something in
5:32
return.
5:33
And then they don't see us again for
5:34
two years.
5:35
They feel like we're using them for their
5:37
vote versus actually caring a shit about what's
5:40
happening in their lives.
5:41
So we've got to get back to actually
5:43
showing them that we give a damn.
5:45
Where did that...
5:46
What?
5:47
Because the phrase is giving a, not caring
5:50
a.
5:51
I know, but it's so rampant throughout this
5:54
milieu that the word shit just has to
5:57
come out.
5:58
And he's not used to it.
5:59
You can tell, otherwise he would have said,
6:01
you know, giving a shit.
6:03
He said, we got carrying a shit.
6:05
I said shit.
6:08
He said like carrying.
6:09
I've got a pile of it in this
6:12
bucket, and I'm carrying it.
6:14
And he even ends with a damn at
6:16
the end.
6:16
Actually showing them that we give a damn.
6:18
We give a damn.
6:19
They're all in the same room, these people.
6:23
But the funniest, and I don't know if,
6:26
I don't think he's, I don't, I think
6:27
he's probably politically agnostic, but he is back
6:29
on the show, ladies and gentlemen, making his
6:33
re-entry.
6:34
The one and only Reverend Manning.
6:36
Elon the monkey wore a hat, a cap
6:40
into the sacred Oval Office.
6:43
The late, great Ronald Reagan, it is reported,
6:47
would not go into the Oval Office without
6:49
having a jacket on.
6:51
That's how much he honored the work of
6:53
Abraham Lincoln and all the other presidents, Franklin
6:56
Delano Roosevelt and John Kennedy and a bunch
6:58
of others that came before him.
7:00
Ronald Reagan wouldn't go into the Oval Office
7:03
without a jacket on.
7:05
And yet that Elon the monkey stood there
7:08
in a black t-shirt and a black
7:10
hat and wouldn't take the hat off while
7:12
standing in the Oval Office.
7:14
You take your hat off when you show
7:15
respect.
7:16
You take your hat off to be courteous.
7:20
You take your hat off to recognize a
7:22
power greater than you.
7:24
Well, Elon Musk kept his hat on because
7:26
there ain't no power greater than him.
7:27
Trump ain't greater than him.
7:29
The Constitution ain't greater than him.
7:30
And you saw that, and you know it.
7:32
You saw it and you know it.
7:34
Elon the monkey.
7:38
That's good, that's good.
7:40
It's good, I like it.
7:41
That's a good one, Elon the monkey.
7:44
Of course, referring to Doge, we are the
7:47
Department of Podcast Efficiency here, also known as
7:50
DOPE.
7:53
So I was listening to, well, there's a
7:57
lot of stuff that took place.
7:58
The CPAC had their annual fest.
8:02
Oh yeah, yeah, there was a lot going
8:04
on there.
8:05
And I have some clips from it because
8:07
I think the one thing I caught-
8:09
Explain what CPAC is.
8:10
CPAC's the Conservative Political Action Committee.
8:17
But it's also run by, it's a-
8:19
I think it's conference.
8:21
I think it's action conference.
8:22
I think CPAC is, I don't think it's
8:25
committee.
8:26
Well, people can look it up and then
8:28
correct me.
8:28
I'm looking it up.
8:29
Or you.
8:29
Yes, conference.
8:31
Conservative Political Action Conference, yes.
8:33
Okay, so the big conference takes place once
8:35
a year.
8:35
It's been going on forever.
8:37
It was out of the public eye for
8:41
a long time because it was a bunch
8:42
of- It was boring.
8:43
It was boring.
8:45
Yeah, Trump came along and livened things up.
8:47
Exactly.
8:49
But he also brought some of his cronies
8:51
into livening things up.
8:52
But I just want to play two clips
8:53
from Tom- Tom Holman.
8:57
Holman, yeah.
8:59
These are very short.
9:00
And this is the kind of thing this
9:02
guy does.
9:03
How you doing?
9:04
Look.
9:04
How you doing?
9:05
All right, right there.
9:07
That should just be our universal greet.
9:09
How you doing?
9:10
Look.
9:10
How you doing?
9:11
Look.
9:12
Let me start out by saying this.
9:14
If I offend anybody today, I don't give
9:16
a shit.
9:18
Don't care.
9:20
The media in the back room, I'm sure
9:21
I'll be reading a lot of hip pieces
9:22
on me tomorrow.
9:24
I don't give a shit what you think
9:26
about me.
9:28
I get asked all the time, does it
9:29
bother you that there's a big part of
9:31
this country that hates your guts?
9:32
I don't care.
9:34
I don't care.
9:35
Because we got a job to do.
9:37
You know, I wake up every day for
9:39
the last four years pissed off because the
9:43
Dwight administration took the most secure border in
9:45
my lifetime and unsecured it on purpose, right?
9:49
I worked for six presidents starting with Ronald
9:51
Reagan.
9:51
Every president I ever worked for- Hold
9:53
on a second.
9:55
How old is this guy?
9:57
He worked under Ronald Reagan?
9:59
I don't think so.
10:00
He's 63.
10:02
Well, he probably worked under Ronald Reagan when
10:05
he was in his 20s.
10:06
Okay.
10:08
Right?
10:08
He's 63, he looks 80.
10:12
I'm just saying what I, I don't know.
10:14
Right?
10:14
Right.
10:15
I worked for six presidents starting with Ronald
10:17
Reagan.
10:17
Every president I ever worked for took steps
10:19
to secure the border.
10:21
Even Clinton Obama took steps to secure the
10:23
border because they clearly understood you can't have
10:25
national security without border security.
10:27
They got it.
10:28
Joe Biden's the first president in the history
10:30
of the nation who came into office and
10:32
unsecured the border on purpose.
10:36
So for four years, I wake up every
10:37
day pissed off.
10:39
That changed November 5th.
10:44
Now I wake up every day excited because
10:46
I worked for the greatest president of my
10:49
lifetime, Donald J.
10:51
Trump.
10:53
When was- So they did a lot
10:54
of that kind of thing.
10:55
But I have the second Holman clip, which
10:57
I think is, I don't know what the
11:00
point of having him even talk was, just
11:02
to go up there and grouse.
11:04
Police commissioner of Boston, you said you doubled
11:07
down on not helping the law enforcement office
11:10
of ICE.
11:11
I'm coming to Boston.
11:12
I'm bringing hell with me.
11:21
I looked at the numbers this morning.
11:24
I counted, I stopped counting at nine.
11:26
Nine child rapists that were in jail in
11:33
Massachusetts.
11:34
But rather than honoring an ICE detainer, released
11:37
them back into the street.
11:40
You're not a police commissioner.
11:42
Take that badge off your chest, put it
11:44
in the desk drawer.
11:45
Because you became a politician, you forgot what
11:48
it's like to be a cop.
11:50
Oh my goodness.
11:51
84, Reagan was still in office?
11:54
Yeah, he was in office until 88.
11:56
Okay.
11:57
So he was at INS as a border
12:01
patrol agent.
12:01
Okay.
12:03
He started young.
12:05
And you know what?
12:05
He clearly doesn't give a shit.
12:08
He's like, this is the typical profanity.
12:11
Now we have, I'm going to play these
12:12
quickies from Trump, because I think I've caught
12:15
some new material.
12:17
Trump, they've taken a lot from his speech
12:20
that he gave on all the different networks.
12:22
They took a piece here and a piece
12:23
there.
12:24
Yeah, well, of course, that's what you do
12:25
is snippety up.
12:27
In fact, here's the typical example.
12:29
This is Trump's CPAC summary on NPR.
12:32
President Trump used a speech at the Conservative
12:34
Political Action Conference to tout his agenda one
12:38
month into his second term in office.
12:41
Speaking to CPAC attendees, Trump said he wants
12:44
something in return from Ukraine for the billions
12:47
of dollars the U.S. spent helping the
12:49
country defend itself against Russia.
12:51
Europe gave it in the form of a
12:53
loan.
12:54
They get their money back.
12:55
We gave it in the form of nothing.
12:58
So I want them to give us something
12:59
for all of the money that we put
13:01
up.
13:02
And I'm going to try and get the
13:03
war settled.
13:04
And I'm going to try and get all
13:05
that death ended.
13:07
Russian state media say preparations are underway for
13:10
a face to face meeting between Trump and
13:13
Vladimir Putin.
13:16
Yeah.
13:18
So, you know, it sounds like it was
13:20
actually kind of a no, that's not true
13:22
that Trump gave some pretty funny bits.
13:25
He had some new material.
13:27
OK, in fact, I think most of the
13:28
speech was new material.
13:29
I think he's working on some stuff.
13:31
OK, so what's and I have a few
13:33
of them.
13:33
What are his bits?
13:34
Well, here's one of them.
13:35
He this one here, he kind of abruptly
13:37
ended.
13:38
But this was his his bit on going
13:41
after Rachel Maddow.
13:43
And we have great confidence and they've lost
13:44
their confidence.
13:45
As I said, they really lost their confidence.
13:47
I watched them.
13:48
They're really screwed up.
13:49
I watched this MSNBC, which is a threat
13:51
to democracy.
13:52
Actually, this stone cold thing.
13:56
But there's stuttering.
13:58
They're all screwed up.
14:00
They're all mentally screwed up.
14:01
They don't know what their ratings have gone
14:02
down the tubes.
14:04
I don't even talk about CNN.
14:05
CNN sort of like that.
14:07
I don't know that they're pathetic, actually.
14:10
But MSNBC was mean.
14:12
Their ratings are absolutely down this Rachel Maddow.
14:15
What does she have?
14:16
She's got nothing, nothing.
14:19
She took she took a sabbatical where she
14:22
worked one day a week.
14:23
They paid her a lot of money.
14:24
She gets no ratings.
14:26
I should go against her in the ratings
14:28
because I'll tell you, she gets no rest.
14:31
All she does is to talk about Trump,
14:33
Trump, Trump, Trump, Trump, all different subjects.
14:35
Trump this Trump that.
14:37
But these people are really I mean, they
14:39
lie.
14:41
They shouldn't be allowed to lie every night.
14:43
They are really a vehicle of the Democrat
14:46
Party.
14:47
Yeah.
14:49
Anyway, then he drops it wasn't all that
14:51
it wasn't all that funny.
14:53
No, I know I'm getting to the funny
14:54
one.
14:55
OK, so now we have him with talking
14:58
about Bill O'Reilly.
14:59
OK, together we've achieved more in four weeks
15:02
than most administrations achieve in four years.
15:05
We made we made a lot of progress.
15:07
I heard O'Reilly last night say Donald
15:10
Trump for the first four weeks is the
15:12
greatest president ever in the history of our
15:14
country.
15:15
That was O'Reilly.
15:17
Bill O'Reilly is all right.
15:20
You know, he said second was George Washington.
15:24
I beat George Washington.
15:26
I love beating George Washington.
15:28
Thank you, Bill.
15:29
OK, so that means he listens to Chris
15:33
Cuomo show.
15:35
Oh, because did O'Reilly say it on
15:38
Cuomo?
15:39
No, that only place I know that O
15:41
'Reilly shows up is on Cuomo.
15:44
OK, got it.
15:46
So that's kind of interesting.
15:47
And so there he goes off on what
15:49
the one we expect is Joe Biden.
15:51
And this is this I think is good.
15:53
He could go with cameras on him, television,
15:55
fake news on him, probably because he knows
15:57
it wouldn't cover it badly.
15:58
You know, they covered him as well as
16:00
you can cover him.
16:01
How the hell can you cover the guy?
16:02
Well, but but he had this incredible ability.
16:06
He could barely walk in the sand.
16:08
Somebody thought he looked great in a bathing
16:10
suit.
16:12
And he'd walk in the sand pulling a
16:14
thing that weighed about six ounces.
16:16
You know, those aluminum, see, aluminum is very
16:18
good.
16:20
You can a child.
16:21
It's meant for children and very old people
16:22
to lift, right?
16:24
So he would put it down and he'd
16:27
put it down and he'd fall into it
16:29
and he'd immediately fall asleep in front of
16:31
the media.
16:32
I could never do that.
16:33
That's the only thing.
16:34
That's the only thing I could never do
16:36
it.
16:37
Now he was sleepy Joe, but he was
16:39
crooked as hell.
16:40
You know, there's no question.
16:42
It was a sleepy, crooked guy.
16:47
Terrible, terrible president.
16:48
He was the worst president in the history
16:50
of our country.
16:51
I don't care, I'll say it.
16:54
Jimmy Carter passed away recently and he passed
16:57
away a happy man.
16:59
He was a happy man when he passed
17:01
away because he said that it's not even
17:05
close.
17:07
Joe was the worst and believe me, I
17:09
have to clean up the mess.
17:10
I'm cleaning up the mess and it is
17:12
a mess on the border with inflation.
17:15
To go over every single thing he touched
17:18
turned to shit.
17:19
Okay, every true.
17:22
It's true.
17:25
That's true.
17:26
Now Franklin Graham's angry at me.
17:28
You know that Franklin wrote me a letter.
17:30
He said I love your speeches.
17:31
I love them.
17:32
I love them so much.
17:33
But they'd be better if you would never
17:36
use foul language.
17:38
And I told him, I said, Franklin, you
17:40
know, Franklin Graham's a great guy, by the
17:42
way, does a great job.
17:44
The son of the great Billy Graham, right?
17:46
But I said to Franklin, you know, sometimes
17:48
you need it for emphasis.
17:51
You know, based on your theory of how
17:54
important the president is for culture, we're going
17:57
to have toddlers walking around saying shit this
17:59
and shit that.
18:00
No, it's terrible.
18:03
It's not my theory, by the way.
18:05
It's a political science thesis that every political
18:08
science course teaches in universities across the world.
18:12
Well, I'm giving that the president is the
18:14
moral authority.
18:15
I'm giving you full credit.
18:17
Yeah, I'm not going to take it.
18:19
The president is moral authority.
18:21
And so when he starts cussing, which he
18:23
does, everyone starts cussing.
18:27
It's just like part of the thing.
18:29
But is that maybe why you see all
18:32
these news hosts doing it as well because
18:35
of the president?
18:37
It has to be.
18:39
But they're not good at it.
18:41
I mean, it's like, it's the F-bombs
18:44
from the left that are, because I get
18:47
all these TikTok clips.
18:48
I try to, I don't have any today.
18:50
I have one maybe.
18:51
Dodge that bullet.
18:53
And so these poor women, they're just throwing
18:57
out F-bombs left and right as though
18:59
it's something cool.
19:00
I'm not getting what the thinking is on
19:02
this.
19:03
It's really sounding like truckers and the worst
19:08
kind of trucker.
19:09
Even truckers don't cuss this much.
19:11
I have a very short CPAC clip.
19:13
Like I said, all this gold at Fort
19:15
Knox, it's the public's gold.
19:17
It's your gold.
19:19
So I think you have a right to
19:20
see it.
19:21
Can I take a tour?
19:21
Yeah, I think we should have a tour.
19:25
And then the president last night was like,
19:27
I think he's in favor of it.
19:28
That'd be cool.
19:29
And then it should be like a live
19:31
tour.
19:31
Like you can see what's going on, open
19:33
the door, like what's behind it.
19:36
I think I'd watch that.
19:38
You know what that reminds me of?
19:43
Geraldo.
19:43
Geraldo Rivera with Al Capone's vault.
19:47
Because I think what's going to happen is
19:48
they're going to open it.
19:49
It's going to be there.
19:51
The gold's going to be there.
19:52
It's going to be there.
19:53
And they won't be like, oh, that was
19:55
bogus.
19:56
But for all we know, it's tungsten.
20:00
Well, we've all forgotten the tungsten scandal.
20:03
No, I haven't.
20:04
I haven't.
20:05
Could be.
20:05
It could be tungsten.
20:06
But we can, I guess weighing it doesn't
20:08
make any difference.
20:09
You've got to drill it.
20:11
Yeah, you got to drill it, otherwise you
20:13
can't tell what it is.
20:16
I think it's a mistake.
20:18
As a callback for people who don't know
20:20
what we're talking about.
20:20
There was a, I think this was about
20:23
10 years ago.
20:24
There's a big scandal.
20:25
People were selling gold bars, but all they
20:27
were chunks of tungsten coated in gold.
20:31
I think it's more than 10 years ago.
20:33
It was a while back.
20:35
It was when you were a gold bug
20:37
back in the day.
20:38
I still am.
20:39
I just don't have it anymore.
20:41
Yeah, well, we won't need to get into
20:43
that.
20:44
But you'd be loaded.
20:47
I'd be loaded.
20:48
I'd be rolling in dough.
20:49
The idea was that people were buying gold
20:51
bars because it was a big deal to
20:53
do so, but a lot of them were
20:54
scams because tungsten has pretty much the same
20:57
weight as gold.
21:01
So you coat it with gold and you
21:03
got a gold bar when it's really tungsten.
21:06
And I guess it was a lot of
21:07
it that was showing up out of the
21:09
blue all over the world.
21:13
So take credit for the blurt.
21:15
Take credit for the blurt.
21:17
I'm taking credit for the blurt.
21:19
I won't take credit for the cussing, but
21:21
I'll take credit for the blurt.
21:22
You can take credit for the blurt.
21:23
And the blurt is working.
21:25
The blurt is paying off.
21:28
And the first blurt was the Magaza blurt.
21:33
We're going to own that.
21:34
We're going to take it.
21:35
We're going to take all of Gaza.
21:37
We're going to own it.
21:38
We'll take very good care of it.
21:39
We're going to turn it into the Riviera.
21:40
It's going to be great.
21:42
And it is paying off in spades.
21:44
The Arab summit in Riyadh is billed as
21:46
an unofficial fraternal meeting.
21:49
Diplomatic sources say the main point on the
21:51
agenda is how to counter Donald Trump's proposed
21:53
plans for Gaza, which sparked global outrage.
21:56
The U.S. president said the U.S.
21:58
would take over Gaza, in his words, own
22:00
it, and turn it into what he called
22:02
the Riviera of the Middle East, and to
22:04
achieve that, forcibly displace two million Palestinians to
22:08
Jordan and Egypt.
22:10
Diplomats from those countries are attending the Riyadh
22:12
summit, along with the six members of the
22:14
Gulf Cooperation Council.
22:15
The Palestinian Authority has also been invited.
22:20
Egypt has already begun formulating a plan for
22:22
Gaza that would unfold over three to five
22:25
years.
22:26
It hasn't yet been published, but it's understood
22:28
it would begin with debris removal, and eventually
22:31
lead to the reconstruction of infrastructure, housing and
22:34
services, as well as steps towards an independent
22:36
Palestinian state.
22:38
The proposal could include $20 billion in funding
22:41
from wealthy Arab states, but financing such a
22:44
plan could be the biggest challenge.
22:47
None of those states are going to be
22:48
willing to put in, you know, finance and
22:51
begin a reconstruction process unless the political process
22:55
is in play.
22:56
We can be sure that the conditions would
22:58
be set around a political arrangement or a
23:02
political governing structure that they can all agree
23:05
to, and one that Israel accepts and one
23:08
that the U.S. is fully behind.
23:10
Displaced people in Gaza have been returning to
23:12
their homes, but they're finding mass destruction.
23:15
The U.N. estimates rebuilding Gaza will cost
23:18
more than $50 billion.
23:20
So right down to the amount, right down
23:23
to the need for political reform.
23:26
And I'm glad you got this clip.
23:28
I have another one which will lead you
23:29
into your bonus clip.
23:31
This blurt thing is interesting.
23:34
And I don't know if...
23:35
Well, before you play the second clip, then
23:37
let me just throw this interjection in, because
23:39
I didn't get these clips.
23:42
There was a PBS people went into Dearborn
23:45
to talk to some Muslims about this, because
23:49
the Muslim community in Michigan supported Trump in
23:53
a big way.
23:54
And so they went in and said, what
23:56
about, you know, because they hated Biden and
23:58
his policies in the Middle East.
23:59
And so they talked about this.
24:02
Well, he wants to get rid of all
24:03
these Palestinians.
24:04
He wants to do this.
24:05
He wants to get them riled up the
24:06
way PBS would do.
24:07
What did they say?
24:10
They said, you know, yeah, that's what he
24:14
said.
24:14
But he also wants Canada to be the
24:17
51st state, which is obviously never going to
24:20
happen.
24:21
And the Muslims, they all agreed that, no,
24:24
this is the way Trump operates.
24:26
It's not a big deal.
24:27
Why are you taking it so seriously?
24:29
We're not.
24:31
It's an interesting template, because the news media
24:36
can't resist going all in and saying how,
24:39
and, you know, they, of course, they need
24:41
that because there's no news anymore.
24:42
It's just all opinion.
24:44
Rachel Maddow's opinion, CNN, everything's a bit Fox,
24:47
everything's opinion.
24:48
So they, you know, so Fox can go,
24:50
oh, we're just going to own it, we'll
24:52
clean that right up.
24:53
And then Rachel Maddow's head explodes and CNN
24:55
pretends to be all intellectual about it.
24:58
But meanwhile, he's just that believable enough that
25:05
the Egyptians, the Jordanians and the Saudis who
25:09
go, you know, we probably should do something
25:11
here because that guy's crazy.
25:14
He just might.
25:15
And, you know, from time to time, he's
25:16
going to have to come through on stuff
25:19
and, you know, and do something just to
25:22
keep that fear alive.
25:23
So here's the other blurt that was, well,
25:28
it's been a constant blurt about give us
25:30
all your minerals.
25:31
We want all your minerals.
25:32
The minerals deal between the U.S. and
25:34
Ukraine may be closer than ever.
25:37
On Friday, Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky indicated that
25:40
his country was working on a draft agreement.
25:43
Today, Ukrainian and U.S. teams are working
25:45
on a draft agreement between our governments.
25:48
This is an agreement that can add value
25:49
to our relationship.
25:51
And the main thing is to work out
25:52
the details so we can work.
25:54
I hope for a fair result.
25:56
U.S. President Donald Trump wants Ukraine to
25:58
give U.S. companies access to its vast
26:00
natural resources as compensation for the tens of
26:03
billions of dollars of aid delivered during the
26:05
war.
26:06
In return, Ukraine is seeking security guarantees from
26:09
the United States.
26:10
Sources say that the two sides made significant
26:13
progress during a visit to Ukraine this week
26:15
by retired General Keith Kellogg, Trump's special envoy
26:19
to Ukraine and Russia.
26:20
Although there is no concrete timeline on how
26:22
long such a deal would last, those talks
26:25
came just days after the U.S. President
26:27
fired several barbs at his Ukrainian counterpart, including
26:30
calling Zelensky a dictator and falsely blaming Ukraine
26:33
for starting the war.
26:35
Some have speculated that was a tactic to
26:37
try and rattle the Ukrainians.
26:39
And now Trump is more confident than ever
26:41
of getting a deal done.
26:43
I think we're pretty close.
26:44
I think they want it and they feel
26:46
good about it.
26:47
And it's significant.
26:48
It's a big deal.
26:49
But they want it.
26:50
And it keeps us in that country.
26:52
And they're very happy about it.
26:54
Ukraine's soil holds some 5% of the
26:56
world's mineral resources.
26:58
The proposed partnership would give the United States
27:00
access to deposits of critical minerals, including aluminum,
27:04
gallium and titanium.
27:06
You know, we're not going to get any
27:07
money back.
27:08
We're just going to get exclusive access to
27:10
it, which is what he wanted in the
27:11
first place to shorten, you know, to cut
27:14
off China's leverage.
27:16
At least that's what it seems to me.
27:18
And then we're going to give security guarantees
27:20
in exchange.
27:21
This will be, this is his new chit.
27:23
So you want security?
27:24
You're not going to get it from NATO.
27:27
You get it from me.
27:28
They still have, Zelensky's still a roadblock.
27:31
In fact, this is what this clip is
27:32
leading to the clip that you, the bonus
27:35
clip.
27:36
Yeah.
27:36
Now, before, before you play that, which is
27:41
a, which is Marco Rubio telling one of
27:45
the yeah, it was Harridge.
27:47
Yeah.
27:48
Was it Harridge?
27:49
Um, that the Zelensky's a two-faced liar
27:53
is what he basically says.
27:55
But I was thinking about this.
27:57
You have, they have this resource.
28:00
They have these resources.
28:02
They have the minerals that are important minerals.
28:05
They have oil.
28:06
We know about that.
28:07
That's been discussed in the past.
28:09
And they're the breadbasket of probably Africa and
28:12
much of Europe.
28:13
But that deal was already done.
28:14
Cargill already has it though.
28:15
No, I'm just saying, this is the, I'm
28:17
talking about the country itself.
28:18
It has these resources.
28:20
Yeah.
28:21
And it has a nuclear power all over
28:23
the place to power the play.
28:25
This is like a gold mine of riches.
28:28
And these, and the two bit mentality of
28:31
the Ukrainian should just be a bunch of
28:33
thieves and a crooked corrupt operate basically, you
28:38
know, the penny anti-corruption.
28:40
It's, it's an embarrassment.
28:43
Well, but it's all, well, yes it is.
28:45
But the, because of the resources is why
28:48
the corruption has always been so rampant.
28:51
It's just, it's just, it's all two bits
28:53
stuff because if, you know, if he really,
28:55
you know, leveraged it, you know, and did
28:57
your job, right.
28:58
You'd be making tons of money every which
29:00
way, but okay.
29:01
Yeah, but it's historical.
29:02
They, there wasn't, they didn't have the strong
29:04
leader to shore it all up.
29:06
And, you know, and everyone got hoodwinked into
29:09
thinking, oh, okay.
29:10
Minsk, we're good with Minsk.
29:11
And there was the Europeans, the EU who
29:14
used the Minsk two agreement to arm up
29:17
because they have their own agenda.
29:19
And they're, if anything, I'd say the European
29:20
union are the stupid ones.
29:22
They should be looking at it and saying,
29:24
you know, this is kind of what we
29:27
need.
29:28
And they had plenty of time to do
29:29
that, but instead they want to go fight
29:31
Russia.
29:33
So here we have Rubio sitting down with
29:36
Harwich discussing a meeting he and Vance had
29:40
with Zelensky.
29:42
And this is very, I mean, I'm liking
29:44
Rubio more and more as he does this
29:46
stuff because he's, he is not, he just
29:50
plays it so straight.
29:53
He has an interesting way of biting his
29:55
lower lip when he's done with a sentence.
29:57
Have you seen that?
29:58
Oh no, I'll have to look for it.
30:01
He's biting his lips so he doesn't say
30:02
anything off base.
30:05
He's like, I finished a good sentence, stop.
30:06
Okay.
30:09
Okay.
30:09
When president Trump posts that president Zelensky is
30:13
a dictator without elections, what are you thinking?
30:16
I think president Trump is very upset at
30:19
president Zelensky in some case and rightfully so.
30:22
Look, number one, Joe Biden had frustrations with
30:24
Zelensky.
30:24
People shouldn't forget it.
30:25
There are newspaper articles out there about how
30:28
he cursed at him in a phone call
30:29
because Zelensky, instead of saying, thank you for
30:31
all your help, is immediately out there messaging
30:34
what we're not doing or what he's not
30:36
getting.
30:36
I think the second thing is, frankly, I
30:38
was personally very upset because we had a
30:40
conversation with president Zelensky, the vice president and
30:43
I, the two, three of us, and we
30:45
discussed this issue about the mineral rights.
30:46
And we explained to them, look, we want
30:48
to be a joint venture with you, not
30:49
because we're trying to steal from your country,
30:51
but because we think that's actually a security
30:53
guarantee.
30:54
If we're your partner in an important economic
30:56
endeavor, we get to get paid back some
30:59
of the money the taxpayers have given close
31:00
to $200 billion.
31:03
And it also, now we have a vested
31:05
interest.
31:06
He said some of the tax, some of
31:08
the money, the taxpayer plus $200 billion.
31:10
It was kind of, no, he said, he
31:12
said it was 200 billion.
31:14
I thought it was much, I thought it
31:15
was 350 billion.
31:17
Well, he thinks the numbers are all over
31:19
the place on this.
31:20
That's a problem.
31:21
Yeah.
31:21
Let's listen again.
31:22
Country, but because we think that's actually a
31:24
security guarantee.
31:25
If we're your partner in an important, which
31:27
is exactly what you said one or two
31:30
shows ago, you said Zelensky saying, we're not
31:33
going to do that without security guarantees.
31:40
So we don't have to be at a
31:46
joint venture with you.
31:50
If we're your partner in an important economic
31:54
endeavor, we get to get paid back some
31:56
of the money the taxpayers have given close
31:58
to $200 billion.
32:00
And it also, now we have a vested
32:02
interest in the security of Ukraine.
32:04
He said, sure, we can't sell you the
32:05
whole country.
32:05
we want to do this deal.
32:06
It makes all the sense in the world.
32:08
The only thing is I need to run
32:09
it through my legislative process.
32:11
They have to approve it.
32:12
I read two days later that Zelensky's out
32:14
there saying, I rejected the deal.
32:16
I told him no way that we're not
32:17
doing that.
32:17
Well, that's not what happened in that meeting.
32:19
So you start to get upset by somebody.
32:21
We're trying to help these guys.
32:23
One of the points the president made in
32:24
his messaging is not that we don't care
32:26
about Ukraine, but Ukraine is on another continent.
32:28
You know, it doesn't directly impact the daily
32:30
lives of Americans.
32:31
We care about it because it has implications
32:33
for our allies and ultimately for the world.
32:36
There should be some level of gratitude here
32:37
about this.
32:38
And when you don't see it and you
32:39
see him out there accusing the president of
32:41
living in a world of disinformation, that's highly,
32:44
very counterproductive.
32:45
And I don't need to explain to you
32:46
or anybody else, Donald Trump's not, President Trump's
32:49
not the kind of person that's going to
32:50
sit there and take that.
32:51
He's very transparent.
32:52
He's going to tell you exactly how he
32:53
feels.
32:54
And he sent a message that he's not
32:55
going to get gamed here.
32:56
He's willing to work on peace because he
32:58
cares about Ukraine.
32:59
And he hopes Zelensky will be a partner
33:01
in that.
33:01
And not someone who's out there putting this
33:03
sort of counter messaging to try to, you
33:05
know, hustle us in that regard.
33:06
That's not, that's not going to be productive
33:08
here.
33:09
I agree with you.
33:10
I'm liking Rubio.
33:13
The problem I have with him is, one,
33:17
he, because I watched all 40 minutes of
33:19
this interview with Katherine Harridge, and she's independent
33:21
now.
33:22
She's no longer with a news organization.
33:24
She's on X, as far as I can
33:27
tell.
33:27
And he never cracks a smile, never has
33:31
a joke.
33:32
And, and he's funny.
33:34
I think he is.
33:35
He can be very funny.
33:36
He's made some good jokes.
33:36
No, he was, when he was trying to
33:38
be funny, when he ran against Trump the
33:39
first time in 2016.
33:41
The tiny hands thing.
33:42
That was kind of funny.
33:42
The tiny hands gag and some other stuff.
33:44
And he was doing basically a standup routine.
33:47
It was quite funny.
33:48
We played a bunch of clips from it.
33:51
It was, his timing was good.
33:52
Everything was good.
33:53
He knows he has good stage presence.
33:55
And then he got, of course, he lost
33:57
big time.
33:59
Bigly.
34:01
Bigly.
34:02
And he stopped doing it.
34:04
He stopped trying to be funny.
34:06
And all of a sudden he became very
34:07
serious.
34:08
And he's, you're right.
34:08
He hasn't cracked a smile.
34:10
I am happy.
34:12
I have heard from a very reliable source
34:15
that there is a team going into the
34:17
state department outside of Doge to check on
34:20
what they're doing, which is kind of interesting.
34:24
It's not a Doge team.
34:25
It's another team.
34:27
And I was happy to hear that because
34:29
that's, you know, you don't hear Doge going
34:31
into the state department.
34:33
Haven't heard about it at all.
34:34
And we know there's an intelligence agency in
34:37
there.
34:37
They've got their tentacles and everything.
34:39
Every embassy is a CIA station.
34:42
There's a lot going on in the state
34:44
department.
34:45
The techno experts, who said, do they get
34:47
fired when Hillary Clinton left?
34:49
Didn't she have 2000 techno experts?
34:53
A lot of them.
34:54
All kinds of stuff going on.
34:56
The internet in the suitcase.
34:57
Yeah.
34:58
I have two other shortish clips of Heritage
35:01
with Rubio, which I thought were worthwhile.
35:03
This is about Havana syndrome.
35:04
You recall at embassies, people were getting zapped
35:07
or we didn't know exactly what was happening
35:09
with them.
35:10
And what was the, what was the basic
35:12
narrative about that?
35:13
It was true.
35:14
Then it wasn't true.
35:15
It was like a microwave weapon.
35:18
They were weaponizing and they were aiming it
35:20
in the hotel rooms of American diplomats.
35:25
And whether it was true or not, they
35:26
still had never been totally resolved.
35:29
Well, here we go.
35:30
I want to ask a question about Havana
35:31
syndrome or AHIs, these debilitating neurological conditions.
35:35
State Department personnel, intelligence, community, military, even families
35:40
have directed energy weapons been used against U
35:43
.S. government personnel.
35:45
I do not believe in the conclusions that
35:47
we've seen in the past.
35:48
And I think evidence in time will prove
35:49
me correct that these things happened by accident,
35:52
that these things were a result of mass
35:54
hysteria or some preexisting conditions.
35:57
Now, in some cases, maybe.
35:58
But I have no doubt in my mind
36:00
that something caused people to be suffering from
36:02
these things and different posts around the world,
36:04
not just limited to Havana.
36:06
There's a lot of work still going on.
36:07
I think we're going to learn a lot
36:08
more about it over the next few years
36:10
as more work goes into it.
36:12
But I've met some of these people.
36:13
I've interacted with them for years and I
36:15
can't explain every case.
36:17
But I think there are most definitely cases
36:19
where there is no logical explanation other than
36:22
the fact that some external mechanism caused them
36:24
to suffer brain injuries that in many cases
36:27
look like they were hit over the head
36:28
with a baseball bat or assaulted somewhere.
36:31
We can't ignore that.
36:32
And in the meantime, what we have to
36:34
ensure is that whether they were State Department
36:35
personnel or working for some other agency, that
36:38
those people are getting the treatment and the
36:40
support that they need.
36:41
And it's a top commitment of mine to
36:42
make sure these are people we sent abroad
36:44
to serve our country.
36:45
They were harmed in the service of our
36:46
country, and they deserve our ongoing support, not
36:49
to be not being accused of things like
36:52
mass hysteria or, you know, they're just...
36:55
It's government gaslighting.
36:56
Well, I think it's outrageous.
36:58
And I don't know what the intent was
37:00
behind that.
37:01
But ultimately, this State Department is going to
37:03
be transparent with them.
37:04
Anything we know, they will know.
37:06
And in the meantime, we are going to
37:07
assume the worst and we're going to treat
37:09
them as if they were victims.
37:10
No matter what, we're going to treat them
37:11
as if they were people that were harmed.
37:13
Okay.
37:13
Well, Rubio's all over it.
37:15
And then just at the very end, it
37:18
was just interesting because I'm sitting there like,
37:20
wow, you know, this is Rubio with heritage.
37:22
That's, you know, she's a networkless person, a
37:26
networkless pixie.
37:28
And she brought it up.
37:29
Will you open up the State Department briefing
37:31
room to independent journalists?
37:33
Yes.
37:33
We're here today.
37:34
We're here to talk.
37:35
I was going to say, Secretary Rubio, you
37:37
could have given this interview to any reporter,
37:40
any major corporate outlet, but you chose an
37:43
independent journalist who posts on X.
37:46
Yeah.
37:46
And I don't want to hurt anybody's feelings.
37:47
But here's my observation.
37:48
We have to go where the people are.
37:50
And so we need to communicate with people.
37:52
We need to be able to...
37:53
This is their State Department.
37:54
It's not my State Department.
37:55
I'll be here for a number of years
37:56
and then my job is done and I'll
37:58
go back to being a private citizen.
37:59
But this will always be their State Department.
38:01
And we're making decisions every day and they
38:04
deserve to hear from us.
38:05
Where are people getting their news and information?
38:07
That's where we need to be delivering our
38:09
news and information.
38:10
I still talk to them.
38:11
I just went overseas.
38:12
We had a bunch of people from different
38:13
traditional outlets on our trip and we're not
38:16
going to exclude them.
38:17
But we have to be able to communicate
38:18
people where they're getting their news and information.
38:21
What we can't allow to have happen is
38:23
we can't allow our message to solely be
38:26
provided through the filter of legacy traditional media
38:29
outlets who's, sadly, I don't mean to hurt
38:32
their...
38:32
I'm not trying to be mean here, but
38:33
the readership is down.
38:34
The viewership is down.
38:36
The ratings are down.
38:38
We have to take our message where people
38:40
are getting their news and information and any
38:41
sort of long form interviews where you're getting
38:43
serious questions and can provide answers to nuanced
38:46
issues, not little sound bites that they run
38:49
during the cable news hour for news and
38:52
entertainment purposes.
38:53
So we'll engage everybody, but we'll most certainly
38:55
see a greater emphasis on independent journalism because
38:59
that's where people are getting their news and
39:00
information.
39:01
Yeah, there you go.
39:02
That's a smart move.
39:04
I want to go to my new go
39:06
-to for some analysis.
39:08
It's crazy that it comes from the CBC.
39:11
I played him on the last show, Andrew
39:13
Rassoulis, former defense guy in Candanavia, and he
39:17
had some good points about what the president
39:21
said at CPAC and about Ukraine.
39:23
U.S. President Donald Trump has once again
39:26
signaled that he wants to end the war
39:28
in Ukraine, but with a condition for Kiev.
39:31
Earlier today, he spoke at a conservative gathering
39:33
in Maryland.
39:34
Trump said he wants to recover the cost
39:36
of American military aid sent to Ukraine by
39:39
securing access to certain resources.
40:14
Andrew, let's start on that point that Donald
40:18
Trump was making in that speech rather defiantly,
40:23
saying we want anything we can get, specifically
40:26
zeroing in on those rare minerals.
40:31
What's behind this?
40:32
I mean, he had said he wants to
40:34
achieve peace in Ukraine.
40:36
He'd said that pretty much from the get
40:37
-go.
40:38
But this week, he has been really forceful
40:40
about getting President Zelensky to accept his terms.
40:45
What do you think is behind all this?
40:47
Well, it represents the major shift in Trump's
40:51
foreign policy, particularly as we see it in
40:54
Ukraine, which is not based on protecting the
40:59
liberal rules-based international order, which the Biden
41:02
administration has been doing.
41:04
And it's not so much a defense of
41:06
democracy versus autocracy.
41:08
What Trump is doing across the board, he
41:10
is advancing America's interests.
41:13
That is financial interests, security interests, but you
41:16
have to understand it's transactional interests.
41:19
And so he's saying, you know, Ukraine isn't
41:22
that important for the United States.
41:24
He said repeatedly, they're on the other side
41:27
of the ocean.
41:28
You know, we spend a lot of money
41:30
and we want to get a bit of
41:31
a financial payback.
41:32
That's exactly the line he's taking.
41:34
And that is, of course, again, a major
41:36
shift from the previous administration and from previous
41:39
administrations that the United States have had more
41:42
or less since 1945.
41:43
It seems very logical because, of course, we've
41:46
heard him say this over and over again.
41:49
Years ago, he went to the World Economic
41:52
Forum and said, no, no, no, patriots, our
41:54
own country first.
41:55
But this is, I mean, I'm just realizing
42:00
that the elites of the world, from media
42:02
to politicians, they're shocked.
42:05
They're absolutely shocked.
42:06
He only cares about America.
42:09
What?
42:10
That's not how you're supposed to play.
42:12
You're supposed to be for the rules based
42:14
liberal world order.
42:17
And they are shocked.
42:19
But this is what I wanted to ask
42:20
you.
42:21
I mean, how rare is this?
42:22
It's rare.
42:23
The aid that Ukraine received from the previous
42:26
U.S. administration, specifically in ammunitions, in military
42:30
aid that President Biden had promised and delivered
42:34
to Ukrainians, under no circumstances did it seem
42:38
like that came with a caveat that you're
42:40
going to have to repay us in kind
42:42
or in any other way.
42:44
How rare is this in terms of American
42:47
foreign policy?
42:48
It's just crazy, I tell you.
42:50
It's extremely rare.
42:51
And you have to really go back certainly
42:54
to pre-World War II and sort of
42:57
the isolationist period.
42:59
And Trump himself sees America between the Civil
43:02
War and World War I as a golden
43:05
age with the economic tariffs and all that
43:07
stuff.
43:08
And America was very isolationist in that period.
43:11
So it's America first, America in the Western
43:13
Hemisphere, that's also very important, and basically motivated
43:17
by enriching America's financial interests.
43:20
What a crazy idea.
43:23
How could you ever think of doing something
43:25
like that?
43:26
I think it's really shaking these world leaders
43:29
up a lot.
43:30
They just can't believe that he doesn't want
43:33
to play ball.
43:34
And when he says, well, there's a whole
43:35
ocean in between us and Ukraine, it's not
43:37
such a big deal for us.
43:40
And I have, if you want to hear
43:41
him, I have a couple, I have a
43:43
report by Richard Engel, our NBC resident spook.
43:47
Oh, yeah.
43:48
Oh, about the war, it was filled with
43:49
Nat Pops and all kinds of beautiful things.
43:52
President Trump is pushing for American access to
43:55
Ukraine's wealth of valuable minerals as part of
43:58
a deal to end the war with Russia.
44:00
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky, under intense pressure from
44:04
the United States, is considering the proposal as
44:07
President Trump's possible...
44:08
Listen to the music.
44:09
Oh, it's almost...
44:10
That's not Richard Engel.
44:11
No, no, he's coming up.
44:12
This is the intro to Richard Engel.
44:13
But the music, it's so demure, it's like,
44:16
oh, who needs it?
44:17
Oh, boy.
44:18
Approach to Zelensky raises concerns about the future
44:21
of Ukraine and the terms of peace in
44:24
the war Russia started three years ago.
44:26
Russia started.
44:28
NBC News Chief Foreign Correspondent Richard Engel has
44:31
our Sunday Focus.
44:34
Three years ago, Russian President Vladimir Putin ordered
44:38
his troops to invade Ukraine.
44:41
We were here as columns of Russian tanks
44:44
streamed across the border.
44:45
I just have to remind everybody who doesn't
44:47
know what a Nat Pop is.
44:49
This is a television term used by the
44:52
news producers where they just cut in bombs
44:56
and explode or screaming ladies, dying children, anything
45:00
to just get your emotions going.
45:02
Capturing Ukrainian cities on their way to the
45:05
capital, Kyiv.
45:06
Russia is picking off Ukraine's military facilities one
45:10
after another.
45:10
But Ukrainian troops are fighting back.
45:14
Putin said his goal was to overthrow President
45:17
Zelensky, who saw his country's future with the
45:20
United States in Europe instead of Russia.
45:25
Putin claimed Zelensky, who's Jewish, was actually a
45:29
dangerous American-backed Nazi.
45:32
Russia cannot feel safe, develop and exist with
45:36
a constant threat emanating from the territory of
45:39
modern Ukraine.
45:40
I got so tired just from this first
45:42
report.
45:42
It's like, oh, man, it's like this.
45:46
Putin's so bad.
45:48
And Zelensky, who's Jewish, he couldn't be a
45:51
Nazi.
45:51
Oh, no.
45:53
So it was a shock to Ukrainians when
45:56
President Trump this week, adopting the role of
45:59
peacemaker, blamed Zelensky for starting the war.
46:02
You should have never started it.
46:03
You could have made a deal.
46:05
And beyond rewriting history, Trump opened peace talks
46:10
in Saudi Arabia with the Russian side.
46:12
Ukraine wasn't invited.
46:14
Russia occupies 20 percent of Ukraine's territory.
46:18
I mean, the lies are amazing.
46:21
Yeah.
46:22
Rewriting history.
46:23
Well, no, if you look at the history,
46:25
it was kind of Ukraine saying they were
46:28
going to get nuclear weapons in and be
46:31
part of NATO that started it with our
46:33
with our coup in 2014.
46:37
Yeah.
46:38
Yeah.
46:38
So it's no eclipse going around now.
46:41
McCain over there taking movies of the video
46:44
in the Maidan thing.
46:47
Oh, yeah.
46:47
Newland.
46:48
Yeah.
46:49
Oh, yeah.
46:50
Don't stop.
46:52
Stop rewriting history.
46:53
Trump officials have suggested Putin may be allowed
46:56
to keep it at a school in Harkiv
46:59
built with USAID funding.
47:02
President Trump.
47:03
Oh, throw that little plug in.
47:05
Oh, yeah.
47:06
Teachers and staff wonder why Trump seems to
47:09
be.
47:09
This is a propaganda piece.
47:11
Yes, it is.
47:12
But it's but it's so transparent and and
47:14
almost over the top.
47:16
It's almost as done as though it's like,
47:18
let's overdo it.
47:19
So people notice that this is a propaganda.
47:21
Oh, no, no, no, no.
47:23
This is working extremely well on people who
47:25
are open to this type of messaging.
47:28
Trump is horrible.
47:30
I mean, he took away the USAID money
47:32
from children, from children.
47:34
I tell you, Ludmilla Ivanova is a math
47:37
teacher.
47:37
What do you make about the things that
47:39
President Trump is saying and doing about Ukraine?
47:42
It is very sad because we feel we
47:44
have lost a partner and a friend, and
47:47
we hope that soon President Trump will change
47:49
his position.
47:50
She said a few miles away, the troops
47:53
manning the front lines see ominous signs.
47:57
Oh, man, you have two more pieces to
47:59
this.
47:59
You want to hear it or is it
48:00
too much?
48:01
Yeah, it's pretty, pretty tedious.
48:04
I would play one more, see how it
48:06
goes.
48:07
Out here in eastern Ukraine, the fighting is
48:09
relentless with Russian drone and missile attacks coming
48:12
almost constantly, especially when the weather is clear
48:15
like today.
48:15
But now Ukrainian troops say they have perhaps
48:18
an even bigger problem.
48:19
Wondering whether they still have support from Washington.
48:22
Does it feel like decisions are being made
48:25
about Ukraine without Ukraine's input?
48:28
Does it feel like it?
48:31
Yes, this is exactly the feeling we have,
48:33
said Ivan, a commander of the 127th Brigade.
48:36
It does influence the mood.
48:39
It's very demotivating.
48:41
At a rehab clinic, some soldiers told us
48:44
they think Ukraine is caught between a rock
48:46
and a hard place and has few options.
48:49
But Vladimir Chayka is a sergeant in the
48:51
Storm Brigade.
48:52
Some critics have said that President Trump is
48:55
exploiting Ukraine, is taking advantage of its position
48:59
right now in order to- Exploiting, exploiting
49:02
Ukraine.
49:03
How are we exploiting Ukraine?
49:05
Extract resources.
49:08
Between two evils, you have to pick the
49:10
better one, he says.
49:11
If I have to choose between the United
49:12
States and the possibility that Russia will take
49:15
over our country, I pick the United States.
49:18
False equivalency.
49:19
I might as well play the last one
49:20
because this kind of boils it all down
49:22
to what Richard Engel is trying to communicate.
49:25
Some Republicans, Richard, pushing back this week on
49:28
President Trump's characterization of Zelensky as a dictator
49:30
in Ukraine, as the aggressor in the war.
49:33
But what does his hostile stance mean for
49:36
a potential deal to end the war?
49:38
Well, it makes Ukrainians, as you saw in
49:39
that package, very nervous.
49:41
They think that Trump and Putin have some
49:44
sort of special relationship that they are trying
49:47
between the two of them to carve up
49:49
Ukraine.
49:50
And Ukrainians say that if there is a
49:52
bad deal, if they are forced to accept
49:54
a deal that leaves this country weak and
49:57
unstable, it would only lead to more conflict
50:00
in years to come.
50:02
They see right now the future of this
50:04
country is being decided.
50:06
The future map of Ukraine is being locked
50:08
into place, at least for now.
50:11
The borders are going to be potentially redrawn.
50:14
And they're very skeptical, based on what they've
50:15
seen so far, that President Trump is going
50:18
to be an honest broker.
50:19
And they worry much more that he's going
50:21
to cut a favorable deal for Vladimir Putin,
50:24
potentially forcing the Ukrainians to sign away natural
50:27
resources.
50:28
But they say if they're in a weak
50:29
position, it's bad for Ukraine.
50:31
And long term, it's bad for Europe and
50:34
also bad for the United States.
50:38
Wow.
50:38
Everything's bad.
50:39
It's bad.
50:40
It's all.
50:40
And, you know, the thing that I'm working
50:42
on a supercut, I just don't have enough
50:43
good ones.
50:44
This guy.
50:45
No, it's Engel, man.
50:46
I don't have enough good ones yet.
50:48
But there's this ongoing messaging that I'm seeing
50:52
from M5M.
50:56
And the message is there's a growing backlash.
51:01
Voters are fed up with Doge and fed
51:04
up with what Trump is doing.
51:05
And they're pressuring Republican lawmakers.
51:08
They're pressuring them.
51:10
And, oh, there's a lot of pressure from
51:12
people.
51:12
I see no evidence of this.
51:15
There is zero evidence of what you just
51:17
said.
51:17
I'm noticing it, too.
51:18
I'm noticing on MSNBC and NBC, mostly, also
51:22
a little ABC doing this.
51:25
They're making these claims that all his numbers
51:27
are down.
51:28
But Trump's numbers are going to even PBS
51:30
will go that far, although they Brooks and
51:34
Capehart will.
51:35
Oh, you have a Brooks and Capehart.
51:38
Well, this is if you if I'm going
51:40
to bring this one, I'm going to it's
51:42
going to probably have a follow up.
51:43
But this is Brooks and Cape.
51:44
This is the classic example of PBS's analysis.
51:49
They bring Brooks and Cape this last Friday.
51:51
They bring Brooks and Capehart to talk about
51:53
what's going on with Ukraine and Trump.
51:57
So let's start with Ukraine.
51:58
No one expected Donald Trump to handle global
52:01
affairs like his predecessors, but he has fully
52:04
adopted Russia's false propaganda on Ukraine.
52:08
We didn't say playbook.
52:09
What's wrong with the script?
52:11
Rewrite that script.
52:12
Tater falsely stating that it was Ukraine that
52:15
started the war.
52:16
This this is this is the literal rewriting
52:20
of history that they're doing.
52:22
This is an ongoing rewrite of history, falsely
52:25
stating that Ukraine started the war.
52:27
This is amazing.
52:29
Rhetorically turning against a democracy that was invaded
52:32
in favor of the invader.
52:34
What are the implications?
52:36
Yeah, it's pretty revolutionary.
52:37
I mean, I think first you can say
52:38
goodbye to NATO and NATO is really built
52:40
around Article five, the promise we make to
52:42
each other that we will defend each other.
52:44
And I don't think Trump is going to
52:46
defend anybody else.
52:47
But I think the bigger story is a
52:48
shift in values that American foreign policy and
52:51
Western foreign policy has been built around democracy,
52:53
promotion, human dignity, human rights.
52:56
So we banded together to sort of promote
52:58
those causes.
52:59
Donald Trump doesn't see that world that way.
53:01
He sees the world as a place where
53:03
ruthless mafiosos get to do what they can.
53:06
There's a famous line from the Peloponnesian Wars
53:08
that strong do what they can, the weak
53:09
suffer what they must.
53:11
And so I think in Donald Trump's world,
53:12
there are three ruthless mafioso countries.
53:15
Russia will have hegemony over its region.
53:18
We will have hegemony over our region, and
53:20
China will have hegemony over their region.
53:22
And so anything that gets in the way
53:24
of ruthless mafioso is being eliminated.
53:27
And some of that is international alliances.
53:29
But some of this is just the idea
53:31
that you shouldn't interfere in other people's elections.
53:33
And some of it is the idea that
53:34
you shouldn't be able to invade neighboring countries.
53:36
And so all those rules are being rewritten
53:38
by somebody who wants to turn all of
53:41
global affairs into survival of the fittest.
53:43
What about that?
53:44
Are we on the precipice of the end
53:45
of the alliance as we know it?
53:47
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
53:50
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
53:53
There's nothing David said that I disagree with.
53:57
So is this the idea of perspective?
54:00
So when we watch PBS NewsHour, we get
54:03
some sort of indication that maybe we can
54:06
get some understanding of what's going on.
54:08
But no, we have two guys who agree
54:10
with each other on everything they say, all
54:13
anti-Trump.
54:14
You got the one guy, the Capehart, the
54:16
Prissy character, who just hates Trump because he's
54:20
a big Kamala supporter.
54:21
And you have David Brooks, who claims to
54:23
have once been a conservative, and he hates
54:25
Trump because he's always been wrong about him
54:27
from the get-go.
54:28
And so we have two haters on here,
54:31
and this supposedly gives the public perspective.
54:34
Stop giving these people money.
54:41
Why can't they find someone who can maybe
54:46
describe what Trump is doing in some positive
54:50
way or in any way other than, oh,
54:52
he's just a mafioso.
54:54
All he wants to do is push people
54:55
around.
54:56
Come on.
54:59
You are tilting at windmills, my friend.
55:02
I am.
55:03
Play the Trump versus Zelensky, which is another
55:05
PBS clip.
55:07
President Trump levied new shots against Ukrainian president
55:10
Volodymyr Zelensky today.
55:12
First, he told a radio interviewer that he
55:14
didn't think it's very important that Zelensky attend
55:17
meetings aimed at bringing the war to an
55:19
end.
55:19
Then President Trump stepped up his criticism while
55:22
speaking to a group of governors gathered at
55:24
the White House.
55:25
I've had very good talks with Putin, and
55:27
I've had not such good talks with Ukraine.
55:31
They don't have any cards, but they play
55:33
it tough.
55:34
But we're not going to let this continue.
55:37
This war is terrible.
55:39
These latest comments follow a week of escalating
55:41
tensions between Trump and Zelensky, which has seen
55:44
the president refer to Zelensky as a dictator
55:46
and falsely claim that Ukraine started the war.
55:50
They keep doing that.
55:52
Yeah, they falsely, falsely claimed.
55:55
Yeah.
55:55
That he started.
55:56
He mentioned in passing, there was a clip
55:59
that you played earlier where he says if
56:01
he hadn't started the war, in other words,
56:03
he didn't go right to the negotiating table
56:06
and he'd begun fighting in defense, we could
56:09
say, which is fair.
56:11
But it's not the same as this guy
56:13
started the war.
56:14
He never said that.
56:16
In fact, a lot of stuff that's going
56:17
on on PBS, both mostly PBS, by the
56:21
way, is false accusations that they're saying stuff
56:26
that didn't happen, didn't exist.
56:28
You can play this clip if you want
56:30
to continue this kind of thinking.
56:32
This is the Pentagon firings and certain kinds
56:35
of BS in this report from PBS.
56:38
President Trump's shakeup of Washington reached the Pentagon
56:40
as he fired several top military leaders, including
56:43
the chairman of the Joint Chiefs and the
56:46
leading the Navy.
56:47
Last night, Mr. Trump and Defense Secretary Pete
56:49
Hegseth said they were dismissing Air Force General
56:52
CQ Brown as the country's senior military officer.
56:56
Admiral Lisa Franchetti, the first woman to lead
56:58
the Navy.
56:59
General James Slyfe, the vice chair of the
57:02
Air Force, as well as the top lawyers
57:04
for the Army, Navy, and Air Force.
57:06
President has selected retired Air Force Lieutenant General
57:10
Dan Cain to be the new Joint Chiefs
57:12
chairman.
57:12
That job requires Senate confirmation.
57:15
Mr. Trump has spoken highly of Cain since
57:17
meeting him in Iraq during his first term.
57:20
Eric Edelman has served in several senior positions
57:23
in the State and Defense Departments under both
57:25
Republican and Democratic presidents.
57:27
He's now at the Center for Strategic and
57:29
Budgetary Assessments.
57:31
Mr. Edelman, how unusual is this?
57:33
A new president coming in in his first
57:35
month, getting rid of the chairman of the
57:37
Joint Chiefs and a bunch of other leaders.
57:40
It's crazy.
57:40
It's unprecedented, John, as far as I'm aware.
57:43
We've had presidents relieve other senior commanders of
57:48
positions.
57:48
Of course, President Truman relieved General MacArthur during
57:52
the Korean War.
57:54
President Obama relieved General Stan McChrystal.
57:58
But that was for cause.
58:00
And in this instance, no cause has been
58:03
given.
58:03
So it's really unprecedented as far as I
58:06
can see.
58:07
Oh, hold on a second.
58:09
Lyndon B.
58:10
Johnson, 1964, he just got in, walked in
58:13
the office, immediately appointed William Westmoreland as chief
58:17
of staff, fired the other guy.
58:19
You're out, you're in.
58:20
As soon as Richard Nixon got in, immediately
58:23
replaced Westmoreland with Creighton Abrams in 72, the
58:27
minute he got in.
58:28
Gerald Ford appointed William Wayland as chief of
58:32
staff in 74, served until 76.
58:35
George H.W. Bush, as soon as he
58:37
got in, appointed General Marshall Thurman.
58:41
This is bullcrap.
58:42
And they're just playing this straight up because
58:44
this guy comes on and says, oh, I
58:46
don't think so.
58:47
This is unprecedented as far as I know.
58:49
And this is PBS playing this as news?
58:53
Are you kidding me?
58:55
The difference here is President Trump fired them.
59:00
He should have said, I've relieved them of
59:02
duty.
59:03
You see, it's a little kinder.
59:05
I've relieved him of duty.
59:08
That's what it should have been, relieved him
59:09
of duty.
59:12
These reports from PBS are pathetic.
59:15
We're never going to make four more years
59:17
at this rate, people.
59:20
This is no good.
59:21
I want to get back to this backlash,
59:23
though, because I have a boots on the
59:24
ground report.
59:26
Tonight, the Pentagon announcing it will eliminate the
59:28
jobs of some 5,400 employees beginning next
59:31
week, the latest and one of the deepest
59:33
known cuts to any one federal department.
59:36
A DOD statement saying the termination of as
59:39
much as 8 percent of the civilian workforce
59:41
is to, quote, produce efficiencies and refocus the
59:44
department on the president's priorities.
59:46
A new Washington Post poll shows the president's
59:48
early actions are unpopular, supported by just 43
59:51
percent of Americans, 57 percent of respondents telling
59:55
the Post they believe the president has exceeded
59:57
his authority.
59:58
The president dismissing concerns about the cuts without
1:00:01
providing evidence.
1:00:02
No evidence.
1:00:03
We've polled it.
1:00:04
And people are thrilled.
1:00:05
They can't even believe it's happening.
1:00:06
Earlier, the president speaking to a bipartisan gathering
1:00:09
of governors at the White House, the president
1:00:11
also butting heads with Maine's Democratic Governor Janet
1:00:14
Mills over her state's refusal to comply with
1:00:16
the president's executive order seeking to ban transgender
1:00:19
women from women's sports, threatening the state's federal
1:00:22
funding.
1:00:23
You better comply because otherwise you're not getting
1:00:25
any any federal funding for every state.
1:00:29
Good.
1:00:29
I'll see you in court.
1:00:30
I look forward to that.
1:00:31
That should be a real easy one.
1:00:34
And enjoy your life after governor, because I
1:00:36
don't think you'll be in elected politics.
1:00:39
So just on the backlash.
1:00:42
And by the way, there was like now
1:00:44
there's a video going around of this governor
1:00:47
in a drag show.
1:00:49
Oh, really?
1:00:50
Yeah.
1:00:50
She's dancing and prancing on the stage in
1:00:53
some sort of weird outfit.
1:00:55
That's what you do.
1:00:57
That's what you do as governor.
1:00:59
So Tina and I were invited to the
1:01:02
annual Lincoln Reagan dinner here in Fredericksburg Friday
1:01:06
night.
1:01:06
Rick Green from the Patriot Academy invited us
1:01:09
to go and sit at his table.
1:01:10
He was emceeing the event.
1:01:12
And so this is I, you know, I
1:01:15
don't support any political party.
1:01:17
I don't never belong to any political party.
1:01:20
This was the Gillespie County Hill Country, Texas
1:01:24
GOP.
1:01:26
One hundred percent.
1:01:28
And Chip Roy was there and he did
1:01:30
a couple of minutes of of shtick saying
1:01:35
he really was talking about his latest resolution
1:01:38
to get us out of the UN.
1:01:40
He did talk about that.
1:01:41
He talked about all of the different bills
1:01:45
that are coming that are meant to put
1:01:47
the executive orders into law.
1:01:50
So he talked about that.
1:01:51
Then we also had Ellen, Ellen Troxler, I
1:01:54
think Troxler, she she was our our district,
1:02:01
this district's representative.
1:02:05
And she was she she did a lot
1:02:08
of hey guys, you know, a little waffling.
1:02:10
But so the keynote speaker was actually interesting.
1:02:13
This young Latino kid, Abraham Enrique, and he
1:02:20
talked about how how they got the Latino
1:02:23
vote for Trump.
1:02:24
And, you know, because it was a Lincoln
1:02:26
Reagan dinner, he referred to Reagan, I guess,
1:02:29
said at one point he says Latinos are
1:02:34
Republicans.
1:02:34
They just don't know it yet.
1:02:36
And his big joke of the evening was
1:02:39
Republicans are Latinos.
1:02:40
You just don't know it yet.
1:02:42
The kid was funny.
1:02:44
It's a good twist.
1:02:45
Yeah, the kid was good, but we like
1:02:48
Mexican food.
1:02:49
But there was there was no pushback.
1:02:52
No one was booing any of the things
1:02:54
that were being discussed.
1:02:56
You know, cheers for Doge.
1:02:58
Everything's fantastic.
1:02:59
The thing that that was really disappointing is
1:03:03
everything was Democrats are stupid.
1:03:07
The liberals are insane.
1:03:09
They're no good.
1:03:10
Yeah, they're no good.
1:03:11
I'm like you people this this is like
1:03:14
that's not you know, at one point, this
1:03:17
Enrique kid, he says, you know what Democrats
1:03:19
don't do and people think they don't go
1:03:21
to church.
1:03:22
I'm like, dude, like they are just as
1:03:25
unhinged as the Democrats.
1:03:27
And I think they're making a big mistake
1:03:29
by this rah rah rah.
1:03:31
It's also great.
1:03:33
It's all fantastic.
1:03:34
Spiking the ball.
1:03:35
And then yes.
1:03:36
And then the final speaker.
1:03:38
This was a huge mistake.
1:03:39
So he was like a politics nerd.
1:03:41
He might he might be he's doing stuff
1:03:43
in the Texas Senate.
1:03:44
And he went on.
1:03:46
He had 100 PowerPoint slides, you know, with
1:03:50
graphs and pie charts.
1:03:53
And he's telling everybody that.
1:03:55
And this is true.
1:03:56
I know that the the the Republicans in
1:03:59
the Texas House at the Capitol, they are
1:04:02
they're all teaming up with the Democrats just
1:04:04
to get get on the right committees.
1:04:06
And they're not really doing any of the
1:04:09
things that that you'd expect Republicans to do.
1:04:12
And he was so boring that his message
1:04:15
was lost.
1:04:16
And there was a Trump.
1:04:17
It's all great.
1:04:18
And they're missing that their own state is
1:04:22
in peril by, you know, I guess what
1:04:24
you'd call rhinos.
1:04:26
It was it was it was kind of
1:04:28
disturbing and disappointing.
1:04:30
It's like, no, just as you need to
1:04:32
have a counterbalance, a smart counterbalance in our
1:04:36
political system, which we don't have.
1:04:38
Democrat Party is all trans.
1:04:42
You know, you can't just sit around going
1:04:44
like, yeah, Trump took care of it.
1:04:46
You're going to be disappointed in like 24
1:04:48
months.
1:04:50
When because that's you know, this president, he
1:04:52
really has like 100 days to get everything
1:04:55
done, because then everyone's going to start thinking
1:04:57
about midterms and all going to be running
1:04:59
around trying to unseat each other.
1:05:02
So, you know, this was not it was
1:05:05
I was like, really, that's what it is.
1:05:10
Disappointing.
1:05:11
Yeah.
1:05:11
These kinds of things are always that way.
1:05:14
Yeah, I've never been to one.
1:05:15
So partisanship, it's just very dull.
1:05:18
They did have good pulled pork for dinner.
1:05:20
I'll have to say the pulled pork was
1:05:21
amazing for Texas.
1:05:24
Texas is not pulled pork country.
1:05:25
It's a beef country.
1:05:26
Yeah, it was good.
1:05:27
It was good.
1:05:28
Here's another.
1:05:29
Let's see.
1:05:29
Federal firings is from ABC tonight.
1:05:31
President Trump taking a victory lap, touting his
1:05:34
federal firing spree to a crowd of supporters
1:05:37
gathered at the Conservative Political Action Conference.
1:05:40
I've ended all of the so-called diversity,
1:05:43
equity and inclusion programs across the entire federal
1:05:45
government and the private sector and notified every
1:05:52
single government DEI officer that their job has
1:05:56
been deleted.
1:05:58
They're gone.
1:05:59
They're fired.
1:06:00
You're fired.
1:06:01
Get out.
1:06:02
You're fired.
1:06:03
And tonight, Elon Musk posing a new ultimatum
1:06:05
to federal workers.
1:06:06
Explain what you've done or resign.
1:06:09
Posting on X, all federal employees will shortly
1:06:12
receive an email requesting to understand what they
1:06:15
got done last week.
1:06:16
Failure to respond will be taken as a
1:06:18
resignation.
1:06:20
Musk giving no details about the criteria or
1:06:22
who will judge the responses.
1:06:24
But polls show voters are concerned.
1:06:26
A Washington Post Ipsos poll shows 53 percent
1:06:29
of Americans disapprove of what Trump has done.
1:06:32
Not doing it right.
1:06:33
This 57 percent said Trump has gone beyond
1:06:36
his authority as president and only 34 percent
1:06:39
approve of how Musk has handled his role.
1:06:41
Republican lawmakers starting to feel the heat.
1:06:44
Angry Americans across the country from Georgia to
1:06:47
Kansas are pushing back.
1:06:49
We are all freaking pissed off about this.
1:06:51
You're going to hear it.
1:06:53
And overnight, President Trump firing the nation.
1:06:55
They literally have one.
1:06:57
So Americans everywhere are there.
1:06:58
Oh, they're pushing back.
1:06:59
It's a real problem.
1:07:00
They have one soundbite.
1:07:01
It's across the country from Georgia to Kansas
1:07:04
are pushing back from Georgia to Kansas.
1:07:08
Is that across the country?
1:07:09
That's not across the country from Georgia to
1:07:12
Kansas.
1:07:12
It's like a like a four hour drive
1:07:15
across the Bible Belt right through the buckle.
1:07:18
But that's about it.
1:07:19
Angry Americans across the country from Georgia to
1:07:22
Kansas are pushing back.
1:07:24
We are all freaking pissed off about this.
1:07:26
You're going to hear it and feel it.
1:07:28
And overnight, President Trump firing the nation's top
1:07:31
military leadership, ousting General CQ Brown as chairman
1:07:34
of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the nation's
1:07:37
top military officer, alongside several other senior leaders.
1:07:41
Trump aims to rid the military of leaders
1:07:43
who support diversity, equity and inclusion efforts, as
1:07:47
Brown and some of the others who were
1:07:48
fired had done.
1:07:51
The so a lot a lot of our
1:07:53
producers work in government and I've received a
1:07:56
lot of emails from people and they receive
1:07:58
this.
1:07:59
Tell me the five things you've done.
1:08:01
And the general consensus that I'm hearing is,
1:08:03
first of all, funny enough, they feel their
1:08:06
work life balance has improved now that they
1:08:08
have to go back to the office.
1:08:11
Ah, yes, I can see why I think
1:08:15
that makes sense.
1:08:16
That's your that's work.
1:08:17
And then you, you know, you go and
1:08:19
you go home as opposed to just being
1:08:21
being being working the whole time and running
1:08:24
back to your laptop.
1:08:26
And this is a very typical business move.
1:08:29
I mean, I've I've fired people from my
1:08:31
companies.
1:08:32
I fired people who I was friends with.
1:08:34
It's very difficult.
1:08:35
But certainly if you're like, think new ideas
1:08:38
was a service business and we lost the
1:08:40
client and the team has to go if
1:08:42
you can't replace it.
1:08:43
You can't have a, you know, eight eight
1:08:45
people dragging down on a slim margins as
1:08:48
they were.
1:08:49
It's very hard.
1:08:50
Sucks.
1:08:52
And then, you know, when we had 700
1:08:54
people at one point and then, yeah, you
1:08:56
say, OK, you know, we've been around for
1:08:58
a year and a half now.
1:08:59
Let's see what everyone's doing.
1:09:01
So we understand and we'd say, you know,
1:09:03
describe what you're doing.
1:09:04
What have you done?
1:09:05
But there was always a follow up.
1:09:08
And it was how could we make you
1:09:10
more productive?
1:09:12
And I don't know if they're going to
1:09:13
do that.
1:09:14
And and everything I'm reading from people is,
1:09:16
you know, our system suck.
1:09:19
The middle management sucks.
1:09:21
We we're not empowered as a big one.
1:09:23
We're not empowered.
1:09:25
So I wonder where they're going to put
1:09:27
the actual E in Doge into efficiency, because
1:09:33
something has to change in the in the
1:09:35
way things are done.
1:09:37
Yes, I think not.
1:09:41
You think that's not going to happen or
1:09:42
you don't think it's necessary?
1:09:44
Both.
1:09:46
And because a lot of this is work,
1:09:49
make work.
1:09:51
Sure, sure.
1:09:52
It's a giant welfare system to keep people
1:09:57
employed and keep the economy running.
1:09:59
A lot of these government jobs, it seems
1:10:01
to me.
1:10:02
And having worked in the government, I said,
1:10:05
you don't.
1:10:05
OK, well, you definitely have that experience.
1:10:07
Well, I'm going to lead you into another
1:10:08
list of clips we have, as we know,
1:10:12
and quite a number of Postal Service workers
1:10:15
who listen to the No Agenda show.
1:10:17
Mail carriers are big podcast listeners.
1:10:20
Surprise, surprise.
1:10:21
Well, they should be.
1:10:22
They should be.
1:10:23
They love listening to the podcast.
1:10:25
They're not watching YouTube.
1:10:26
No, they're listening to the podcast while they're
1:10:28
running around.
1:10:29
People have been there for twenty five years
1:10:31
or more.
1:10:32
And now they're very worried about what President
1:10:36
Trump is going to do with the post
1:10:38
office and the United States Postal Service.
1:10:41
And I see that you have a number
1:10:42
of clips about this.
1:10:44
I do.
1:10:45
And the thing is, again, we're dealing with
1:10:47
a I think a slanted reporting from PBS,
1:10:52
incredibly inaccurate.
1:10:55
There's they're they're promoting that, you know, this
1:10:57
is all anti-Trump stuff.
1:10:59
And can we just say that the Postal
1:11:01
Service was written up in the Constitution?
1:11:04
It's not like I don't think it's something
1:11:06
you can just get rid of.
1:11:08
No, you can't.
1:11:10
And it's also actually predates the Constitution.
1:11:13
Does it?
1:11:13
Oh, really?
1:11:14
I didn't I didn't realize that to these
1:11:15
clips.
1:11:16
But yes, I think it was formed in
1:11:18
seventeen twenty five.
1:11:19
I'm if I'm not I'm not mistaken.
1:11:21
Wow.
1:11:22
And it was part of the system that
1:11:24
was needed for it's a great idea to
1:11:26
have this.
1:11:27
Well, it's also the only I mean, we're
1:11:30
supposed to have true privacy where you can
1:11:32
send anything to the mail.
1:11:33
It's illegal to you.
1:11:34
You have a lot of yes.
1:11:35
And there's laws that allow us to bust
1:11:37
criminals for all kinds of different things.
1:11:40
Mail fraud.
1:11:40
Yes.
1:11:41
Yeah.
1:11:41
It's a handy little thing.
1:11:42
Yeah.
1:11:43
What do they call it?
1:11:44
Law enforcement benefits from the way it operates.
1:11:47
Yes.
1:11:49
So the thinking is, is they're trying to
1:11:52
stick Trump with Trump with Trump.
1:11:54
He wants to look at it, but they're
1:11:56
trying to they're trying to promote the idea.
1:12:00
And there's no evidence.
1:12:01
And I'll say to use that phrase, no
1:12:03
evidence.
1:12:04
It's going to be a show title one
1:12:05
of these days.
1:12:07
No evidence that he wants to privatize it.
1:12:10
Right.
1:12:10
But they're going to our mail carriers are
1:12:13
have been completely inundated with PSYOP.
1:12:16
And they are that's the number one thing
1:12:18
they worry about is if he privatizes it,
1:12:21
it's going to be too expensive.
1:12:22
It's going to be no good.
1:12:23
It's going to be horrible.
1:12:24
They're they're all freaked out about that one
1:12:26
thing.
1:12:27
Yes, because that's the one thing that the
1:12:30
PBS and the mainstream media wants to stick
1:12:33
on Trump, because they know to freak out
1:12:35
people.
1:12:36
And it's just a freak out mechanism.
1:12:38
Let's just blame Trump.
1:12:41
Currently, Trump's thinking about maybe incorporating the Postal
1:12:45
Service into the Commerce Department and leaving it
1:12:48
at that for what for a number of
1:12:51
reasons.
1:12:51
But the notion of privatizing is is bullcrap.
1:12:56
If you listen to the report, you can
1:12:58
kind of pick up where they kind of
1:13:00
imply that Trump wants to privatize it.
1:13:03
Trump has never said this, but let's go
1:13:06
with clip one.
1:13:07
President Trump reportedly plans to fire the governing
1:13:09
board of the U.S. Postal Service and
1:13:11
place the independent agency under the control of
1:13:14
the Commerce Department, a move that could be
1:13:17
the.
1:13:17
When when they say independent agency, what does
1:13:22
that even mean?
1:13:23
I don't know what it means and they
1:13:24
don't explain it.
1:13:25
And an agency under the control of the
1:13:27
Commerce Department, a move that could be the
1:13:29
first step in privatizing a service.
1:13:32
How can it be independent if it's under
1:13:35
the control?
1:13:36
Well, I think what they're doing is they're
1:13:38
trying to compare it to USAID, that that
1:13:40
was independent.
1:13:41
It's all isn't everything an independent agency.
1:13:44
This is all propaganda.
1:13:46
This is propaganda.
1:13:47
We'll start over.
1:13:48
President Trump reportedly plans to fire the governing
1:13:50
board of the U.S. Postal Service and
1:13:53
place the independent agency under the control of
1:13:55
the Commerce Department, a move that could be
1:13:58
the first step in privatizing a service established
1:14:01
250 years ago.
1:14:03
The White House initially denied that an executive
1:14:06
order to make that change is in the
1:14:07
works.
1:14:08
But late today, President Trump admitted that he's
1:14:10
considering it.
1:14:11
Jacob Bogage broke the story for The Washington
1:14:14
Post.
1:14:15
And he joins us now.
1:14:15
Thanks for being with us.
1:14:16
Hold on.
1:14:16
Jacob Bogage?
1:14:18
Is he the progenitor of Bogativeness?
1:14:22
Jason Bogus.
1:14:23
Nice.
1:14:23
Hey, great to hear from you, Jeff.
1:14:24
Thanks for having me.
1:14:25
So what are your sources telling you about
1:14:27
what the administration is planning and what it
1:14:28
could ultimately mean for the U.S. Postal
1:14:31
Service?
1:14:31
Well, step one here would be to place
1:14:33
the Postal Service, take it out of independent
1:14:35
status and embed it inside the Commerce Department.
1:14:40
Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was just sworn in
1:14:42
today.
1:14:44
And we've reported over the course of months
1:14:46
that he's been engaging with then-president-elect
1:14:50
and now-president Trump about privatizing this agency.
1:14:54
So taking it out of that independent status
1:14:56
would be step one.
1:14:58
And step two would be leadership changes.
1:15:00
Postmaster General Louis DeJoy announced he plans to
1:15:03
retire soon.
1:15:04
And the board of governors can be fired
1:15:07
for cause by the president.
1:15:08
That could be another step.
1:15:11
Okay.
1:15:12
So this report has already introduced the idea
1:15:14
of privatization twice with no evidence.
1:15:17
No evidence.
1:15:18
Well, this will certainly lead to legal challenges.
1:15:22
What have experts been telling you about the
1:15:23
authority the president would have to dissolve the
1:15:26
Postal Service leadership and then effectively move it
1:15:29
to the Commerce Department?
1:15:30
So the Postal Service has to have a
1:15:33
board of governors.
1:15:34
These are bipartisan individuals appointed by the president,
1:15:38
confirmed by the Senate, and then they together
1:15:42
select or can remove the Postmaster General.
1:15:46
There are powers that the Postal Service has
1:15:49
on things like service, on things like rates
1:15:52
and prices, on major investments that can only
1:15:56
be made by the governors.
1:15:58
So you have to have a board in
1:16:00
place.
1:16:01
And that's kind of what's complicating this for
1:16:04
the White House a little bit.
1:16:05
How do you take these individuals who can
1:16:08
only be removed for cause from an agency
1:16:11
that by law is independent?
1:16:13
You can't legally move it into the Commerce
1:16:15
Department.
1:16:16
How do you bring that under the control
1:16:18
of the White House?
1:16:19
You know, that's a legally dubious question.
1:16:22
He sounds dubious.
1:16:26
Okay.
1:16:26
So it's a legally dubious question, and there's
1:16:28
no evidence they're doing any of this.
1:16:30
In fact, the way they presented it earlier
1:16:32
is there's no, you know, there was going
1:16:34
to be an executive order and then there
1:16:36
was not going to be.
1:16:37
And then Trump says, well, I was thinking
1:16:38
about it, maybe.
1:16:39
This is really propaganda that we're listening to.
1:16:44
Just to slam Trump.
1:16:46
It took the media a couple of weeks
1:16:49
to get on their feet.
1:16:51
And now they're full bore.
1:16:53
Full bore.
1:16:54
Anything they can pick up on is just,
1:16:56
oh man, you should hear that Midas Touch
1:16:58
podcast.
1:17:00
You know, the one that has dethroned Joe
1:17:02
Rogan.
1:17:03
Yeah.
1:17:04
Oh my God.
1:17:05
It's 15 episodes a day of Trump sucks.
1:17:09
That's seriously.
1:17:10
Play this clip.
1:17:11
Trump sucks.
1:17:12
He's worried.
1:17:13
So this is the WTF clip of the
1:17:16
series.
1:17:18
And there's just a real eye roller in
1:17:20
here.
1:17:21
Well, President Trump, as you well know, he's
1:17:23
long mused about privatizing the Postal Service.
1:17:25
And as you mentioned, the Commerce.
1:17:27
Hold on.
1:17:27
Stop.
1:17:28
This is the third mention of privatized because
1:17:30
Trump has long mused.
1:17:33
Mused.
1:17:33
What does this even mean?
1:17:35
He's long mused.
1:17:35
Where's the evidence?
1:17:36
Has he written a statement saying he wants
1:17:38
to do this or he's just mused?
1:17:41
I mean, I've mused about it.
1:17:42
So what?
1:17:43
What does mused actually mean?
1:17:45
Oh, kind of think about it in a
1:17:48
casual way.
1:17:48
No, no.
1:17:49
To become absorbed in thought.
1:17:51
To think about something carefully and thoroughly.
1:17:54
It's not what you said.
1:17:55
Not casually.
1:17:57
No, he's been thinking about this.
1:17:59
And these people are familiar with the President's
1:18:01
thinking.
1:18:01
The Postal Service.
1:18:02
Yeah, they're mind readers.
1:18:04
Mentioned the Commerce Secretary was sworn in today.
1:18:07
And here's what the President had to say
1:18:08
about USPS during that ceremony.
1:18:11
Well, we want to have a post office
1:18:13
that works well and doesn't lose massive amounts
1:18:16
of money.
1:18:17
And we're thinking about doing that.
1:18:19
And it'll be a form of a merger,
1:18:21
but it'll remain the Postal Service.
1:18:24
And I think it'll operate a lot better
1:18:26
than it has been over the years.
1:18:27
It's been just a tremendous loser for this
1:18:31
country.
1:18:31
Tremendous amounts of money are being lost.
1:18:33
It's undeniable that the Postal Service has been
1:18:36
losing money.
1:18:37
It had a lot to do with the
1:18:38
way its pensions were organized.
1:18:41
It's lost more than $9 billion in the
1:18:43
most recent fiscal year.
1:18:45
Does that strengthen the case for privatization?
1:18:48
Does that $9 billion include the prefunding of
1:18:51
the pensions?
1:18:51
He didn't quite make that clear.
1:18:54
Well, he kind of indicated it might.
1:18:57
But yes, it obviously is why they lost
1:19:00
so much money.
1:19:04
How did that end?
1:19:04
I'm sorry.
1:19:05
That was it.
1:19:05
How did that end?
1:19:10
It's lost more than $9 billion in the
1:19:13
most recent fiscal year.
1:19:15
Does that strengthen the case for privatization?
1:19:18
Again, privatization.
1:19:19
Privatization.
1:19:20
So it's PBS and the media that are
1:19:24
pounding the privatization thing as though it's a
1:19:29
theme when it's not.
1:19:30
It's not a theme.
1:19:30
This is a creation.
1:19:32
This is their creation.
1:19:34
They may have actually pulled it off and
1:19:37
make it privatized because of the way they're
1:19:40
promoting it.
1:19:40
But this is their promoting it.
1:19:42
Nobody else is.
1:19:44
All right.
1:19:44
Sorry.
1:19:45
Well, President Trump, as you well know, he's
1:19:46
long mused about privatizing the Postal Service.
1:19:49
And as you mentioned, the Commerce Secretary was
1:19:51
sworn in today.
1:19:52
And here's what the president had to say
1:19:54
about USPS during that ceremony.
1:19:57
Well, we want to have a post office
1:19:58
that works well.
1:19:59
Wait a minute.
1:20:00
No, this is clip four.
1:20:01
This is clip four.
1:20:02
Is it the same length?
1:20:05
Let me see.
1:20:06
Clip two.
1:20:08
No.
1:20:09
Clip three.
1:20:11
No.
1:20:11
Okay.
1:20:11
Well, obviously, I failed to clip off the
1:20:15
beginning of this one.
1:20:16
You're going to have to play it.
1:20:17
I'll pick it up.
1:20:18
That was a blunder.
1:20:20
It was another one of my editing mistakes.
1:20:22
I take full responsibility.
1:20:24
People are pushing back on you, Dvorak.
1:20:26
People are mad.
1:20:27
They're pissed off at your editing skills.
1:20:31
The Postal Service didn't have a profit motive.
1:20:33
Its motive was to serve people all across
1:20:35
the equal and reliable service.
1:20:38
We changed that in 1970 for—it's a long
1:20:41
story we don't need to get into right
1:20:42
now.
1:20:43
But we changed that to be more of
1:20:45
like a crown corporation or a government sponsored
1:20:47
corporation.
1:20:49
So what do we lose without an independent
1:20:52
Postal Service?
1:20:54
Well, this is an agency that belongs to
1:20:56
all of us.
1:20:57
It doesn't belong to the White House.
1:20:59
Because it's independent, it has an obligation to
1:21:02
serve all of us equally, reach everybody's address
1:21:04
with the same service and the same pricing.
1:21:07
A privatized Postal Service or one in which
1:21:11
mail delivery becomes political will not have those
1:21:14
same motivations.
1:21:18
Okay.
1:21:18
Again, now they're just doing hypotheticals and then
1:21:21
imagining what bad things are going to happen
1:21:23
because of the privatization.
1:21:25
Yeah.
1:21:25
And there's postal union, of course, so they
1:21:29
can rile those people up.
1:21:30
This is all meant to rile people up.
1:21:32
And it's working.
1:21:33
It's working.
1:21:34
All right.
1:21:35
Now you've— And the last one is just
1:21:37
a little gotcha in here.
1:21:38
I played this little bonus ending clip, which
1:21:41
is like, wait a minute, let me think
1:21:43
about this.
1:21:44
To your point, in many cases in parts
1:21:46
of the country, it's the only mail carrier,
1:21:49
the only mail service.
1:21:50
And e-commerce giants like Amazon rely on
1:21:53
the Postal Service for those last mile deliveries.
1:21:56
So how could that affect the mail and
1:21:58
packages that Americans get?
1:22:02
Okay.
1:22:02
He said that in some parts of the
1:22:04
country, the U.S. Postal Service is the
1:22:06
only mail service.
1:22:08
Are you in some part of the country
1:22:09
where there's a competitor?
1:22:11
No, no.
1:22:13
I've never seen a competitor.
1:22:15
I think it's illegal.
1:22:16
That's a good point.
1:22:17
That's a good point.
1:22:18
So, but they bring it up as, oh,
1:22:20
in some parts of the country, the Postal
1:22:21
Service is the only Postal Service.
1:22:23
But FedEx won't deliver?
1:22:25
I'll bet you they will.
1:22:27
Well, it's beside the point.
1:22:29
The only one that does Postal Service, the
1:22:32
FedEx doesn't do Postal Service.
1:22:34
You know, they do messaging.
1:22:36
It's basically an overflown messaging service.
1:22:42
It's like a bike messenger, basically.
1:22:45
Postal Service is Postal Service.
1:22:47
There's no competition.
1:22:49
So why would you say what he's just
1:22:51
said that, oh, in some parts of the
1:22:53
country, it's the only mail service?
1:22:55
As if.
1:22:57
This is a terrible operation, this PBS.
1:23:00
It just gets worse by the minute.
1:23:03
And it's slanted and propagandistic.
1:23:05
And this reporting, they're part of the reason
1:23:08
that everyone's all worked up about privatization.
1:23:11
They're the ones who are bringing it up.
1:23:12
Nobody else is.
1:23:14
There's some ex-account called, that was Doge
1:23:17
underscore USPS.
1:23:19
And it's all, you know, people have been
1:23:22
following.
1:23:22
It's not, I don't think it's an actual
1:23:23
Doge account.
1:23:24
It's probably PBS put that together.
1:23:29
Yeah.
1:23:30
But they're just trying to, and I think
1:23:31
it's part of their methodologies to try to
1:23:34
regain union support.
1:23:36
Union, yeah, exactly.
1:23:37
Get the unions all riled up.
1:23:39
There was a good, I didn't clip it,
1:23:40
but Trump had a very good bit about
1:23:42
why he picked the Labor Secretary woman, because
1:23:46
she's a little left of center.
1:23:48
He says, he says, the Labor Party's all
1:23:50
supporting me.
1:23:50
I had to throw him a bone.
1:23:52
A woman, but he's a misogynist.
1:23:56
I mean, look at what he's done.
1:23:58
He's got women everywhere.
1:23:59
They don't say misogynist much these days.
1:24:03
He's also a racist.
1:24:06
So he brought a whole bunch of token
1:24:08
black people to the White House.
1:24:12
And I jest, of course.
1:24:15
And he threw them a bone.
1:24:18
The last administration tried to reduce all of
1:24:21
American history to a single year, 1619.
1:24:24
But under our administration, we honor the indispensable
1:24:29
role black Americans have always played in the
1:24:32
immortal cause of another date, 1776.
1:24:35
We like 1770s.
1:24:37
In the very first skirmish of the Revolutionary
1:24:41
War at Lexington Green, an enslaved black man
1:24:44
named Prince Estabrook, you know Prince Estabrook?
1:24:48
Yeah.
1:24:49
Answered history's call and fought as the minute
1:24:52
man alongside the other patriots of the very
1:24:56
small Massachusetts town.
1:24:58
Couldn't protect itself, but they did a good
1:25:00
job.
1:25:01
Prince was wounded in the early morning battle,
1:25:03
becoming not only the first African American soldier
1:25:06
to fight in the revolution, but among the
1:25:08
very first Americans to spill their blood.
1:25:11
One of the first in the nation to
1:25:13
spill blood in that very, very tough time.
1:25:17
Soon, Estabrook joined the Continental Army and ultimately
1:25:19
won his own freedom along with that of
1:25:21
his fellow Americans.
1:25:23
His legacy will endure and we're very proud
1:25:26
to honor him today.
1:25:28
It's a very important day in our country
1:25:30
and we honor him.
1:25:32
First person to spill blood happened to be
1:25:35
Tim Estabrook.
1:25:37
Today, I'm pleased to
1:25:43
announce that we will be including the statue
1:25:52
of Prince Estabrook in our new National Garden
1:25:56
of American Heroes.
1:25:57
We're going to be doing a Garden of
1:26:01
American Heroes.
1:26:02
And now that I think of it, I
1:26:03
didn't have, I must tell you, you know,
1:26:05
sadly, most of them, I guess all of
1:26:08
them are not with us any longer.
1:26:10
I was going to put Tiger in the
1:26:11
garden.
1:26:12
He's talking to Tiger Woods.
1:26:15
There was one interesting moment.
1:26:19
And I mean, he handles this in a
1:26:22
typical Trump fashion, where he's calling out people.
1:26:26
Great business leaders are here with us.
1:26:28
They have no idea why Albert Bourla, the
1:26:31
CEO of Pfizer, was there at the-
1:26:34
To get booed.
1:26:36
Yes.
1:26:36
Appreciate it very much.
1:26:38
We also have the head of Pfizer here.
1:26:40
So I want to thank him, one of
1:26:41
the great, great people, one of the great
1:26:43
businessmen.
1:26:45
Thank you, Albert.
1:26:46
Thank you.
1:26:50
Thank you very much.
1:26:55
Now, do you think he's saying thank you
1:26:59
just because he thinks that the microphones won't
1:27:02
pick up on the booing?
1:27:04
Or is he saying thank you for booing
1:27:05
him?
1:27:06
He smirked.
1:27:06
He's saying thank you for booing him?
1:27:09
No, I don't think he's saying thank you.
1:27:11
I don't think he's that crass.
1:27:12
I don't know, man.
1:27:13
But he was smirking.
1:27:14
He thought it was funny that Bourla was
1:27:16
getting booed.
1:27:17
It was interesting.
1:27:18
It was very interesting.
1:27:19
It was a very, very funny moment.
1:27:22
So Big Pharma is going nuts right now.
1:27:28
There's report after report about measles, and we're
1:27:32
all going to die in the bird flu.
1:27:35
And, whoa, man, there's a new...
1:27:39
What is this?
1:27:39
A global concern grows for new pandemic after
1:27:43
research team in China detects COVID-like virus
1:27:46
in bats with the same potential to infect
1:27:49
humans.
1:27:49
It goes on and on and on.
1:27:51
Closer to home, the GLP-1 providers, Osempic,
1:28:00
Wigovi, they are doing everything they can to
1:28:05
make sure that you do not get your
1:28:07
GLP-1 except in their approved...
1:28:12
Overpriced package.
1:28:13
Overpriced package, yes, which is...
1:28:16
Look, it has a dial so you can
1:28:17
never shoot up too much.
1:28:19
And I had to get these two clips.
1:28:22
This is from WGN in Chicago.
1:28:25
I think it's the...
1:28:26
Right after the morning news, it's the morning
1:28:28
show.
1:28:29
It's a coffee clutch.
1:28:30
And they bring in...
1:28:32
I think she's called an injection doctor, which
1:28:35
is even crazier.
1:28:36
I swear to God.
1:28:37
I think it's like injection doctor.
1:28:40
And she's very well versed in what she's
1:28:45
saying.
1:28:45
She's not saying the drugs that you're buying
1:28:49
on the black market.
1:28:50
She's not saying that they are not good.
1:28:54
She's saying you're doing it wrong and you
1:28:56
don't have the expert supervision of the packaging
1:29:01
that we have.
1:29:02
And your provider who...
1:29:04
Of course, you could only have your provider
1:29:07
can only give you the very expensive approved
1:29:10
GLP-1 products.
1:29:12
I'm against all of this.
1:29:13
And she even throws in the side effects
1:29:17
that you can get if you basically inject
1:29:19
too much.
1:29:20
That's what this is all about.
1:29:21
But it's brought to you by this team
1:29:24
who, of course, are ultimately being paid by
1:29:28
pharmaceutical advertisements as don't get the black market
1:29:32
stuff.
1:29:32
Everyone is running towards the cheapest available versions
1:29:35
of Ozempic and Manjaro.
1:29:37
But what are the dangers of getting these
1:29:38
injectables online?
1:29:40
Aesthetic nurse injector Neha Thengel joins us now.
1:29:42
Nurse injector.
1:29:43
I've never heard of someone like that.
1:29:46
She's a nurse injector.
1:29:48
A nurse injector.
1:29:49
Manjaro, but what are the dangers of getting
1:29:51
these injectables online?
1:29:53
Aesthetic nurse injector Neha Thengel joins us now
1:29:55
to break it all down.
1:29:56
I saw an article recently of a big
1:29:58
brother candidate or somebody who was on the
1:30:01
show who almost died from getting black market
1:30:04
Ozempic.
1:30:05
Yeah, she was on the UK Big Brother.
1:30:09
She almost died from getting black market Ozempic.
1:30:13
This is GLP-1 is not patented.
1:30:17
It's I don't even think it's patentable.
1:30:19
It's it's what does he call it?
1:30:21
It's a one of those things called peptide.
1:30:25
It's a peptide.
1:30:26
So, you know, it's available.
1:30:28
But yeah, it's black market getting black market
1:30:31
Ozempic.
1:30:32
Yeah, she was on the UK Big Brother.
1:30:34
Yeah.
1:30:35
And she said that she got this injectable
1:30:37
on the black market.
1:30:39
She took quite a bit of it, more
1:30:41
than her recommended dose.
1:30:42
So she took more.
1:30:43
She took too much of it.
1:30:44
OK, so was it the black market stuff
1:30:46
or that she took too much of it?
1:30:48
Doesn't matter because it was on TV.
1:30:50
It was on Big Brother in the UK.
1:30:51
Perfect.
1:30:52
She said she was puking.
1:30:53
She was diarrhea.
1:30:56
And at one point she had three bags,
1:30:58
bags of vomit next to her.
1:30:59
Oh, my goodness.
1:31:00
Oh, no.
1:31:01
And then here I just read another article.
1:31:03
This 26 year old, she was a social
1:31:05
media influencers.
1:31:06
You know how every company wants to use
1:31:08
these social media influencers to get their name
1:31:10
out.
1:31:10
They gave her the medication for free.
1:31:12
OK, she took five times her recommended dose.
1:31:15
OK, well, then that was dumb.
1:31:18
She took five times the recommended dose.
1:31:20
OK, so it's not that it's not the
1:31:22
stuff.
1:31:23
It's the dosage, the dosage.
1:31:25
She didn't know that.
1:31:26
They told her to take point five.
1:31:28
She took point five and ended up in
1:31:29
the hospital puking.
1:31:31
So she knew what they told her to
1:31:32
do still.
1:31:33
Apparently.
1:31:34
And she contacted them and their response was,
1:31:37
well, nausea is a side effect of it.
1:31:39
So, you know, good luck.
1:31:41
And ended up taking five times her dose.
1:31:43
Went back to the hospital with heart palpitations,
1:31:45
had some liver, elevated liver enzymes.
1:31:47
I mean, she could have really died.
1:31:49
Right.
1:31:49
So to get these medications online and not
1:31:51
knowing who you're going to go to, where
1:31:54
like the sterility, the sterility of the drug
1:31:56
and where it's being made and who you're
1:31:58
getting it from is such a big, big
1:32:00
issue out there.
1:32:02
This went on for seven minutes.
1:32:05
I only have another minute and a half.
1:32:07
I won't I won't torture you too much,
1:32:09
but it was just you're going to see
1:32:11
a lot of this in so many ways
1:32:14
in this relatable format.
1:32:16
This was done on network TV.
1:32:18
They discussed this situation.
1:32:20
What happened was the Ozempic people who also
1:32:24
make Wegovy, same group, they finally got their
1:32:28
supply chain down so they could start cranking
1:32:30
it out again to the point where there's
1:32:32
not a shortage of supposedly was a shortage.
1:32:34
That's what allowed the FDA to approve the
1:32:37
ability of these of these pharmaceutical or I'm
1:32:40
sorry, these compounding pharmacies to make this stuff.
1:32:43
And now they're in fact, way the reports
1:32:46
all ended was and now we can put
1:32:48
these guys out of business.
1:32:50
I imagine that's why they're so cheap because
1:32:52
you don't know what's in it.
1:32:54
No, because it should be cheap, right?
1:32:56
Because it's a jip otherwise.
1:32:58
What do you mean?
1:32:59
You don't know what's in it.
1:33:01
That's it's cheap.
1:33:02
It's cheap.
1:33:03
I imagine that's why they're so cheap because
1:33:05
you don't know what's in it.
1:33:06
People should be strung up.
1:33:09
There's no reason for the news media to
1:33:11
be this corrupt.
1:33:12
Well, to be fair, this is my thing
1:33:13
for today because everything you hear or every
1:33:16
report we're playing is just bad.
1:33:18
It's bad information.
1:33:19
This is so good.
1:33:20
They're lying to us.
1:33:21
It's so good that all time.
1:33:23
Now you're a little bit more expensive.
1:33:24
You know, I can get it on, you
1:33:26
know, this a little bit more.
1:33:28
It's like 60 bucks for one in 1200
1:33:31
for the other expensive.
1:33:33
You know, I can get it on, you
1:33:35
know, this website or this website for 50
1:33:37
bucks or a hundred bucks.
1:33:38
And I say, you know, you're not paying
1:33:39
for just a drug.
1:33:39
You're paying for the expertise, the knowledge, the
1:33:42
support.
1:33:43
You can go online and just ask for
1:33:44
the medication and someone's going to give it
1:33:45
to you.
1:33:46
But how do you know you qualify for
1:33:47
it?
1:33:47
And how do you know what drugs are
1:33:49
good for you and what medications and what
1:33:52
side effects in a given week, probably anywhere
1:33:54
from three to five messages I get, Hey,
1:33:57
I have this vial.
1:33:58
What do I pull the injections out to?
1:34:00
Or, Hey, I'm having this side effects.
1:34:02
What do you think I could do?
1:34:03
And it's like, I can't really guide you
1:34:06
because I'm not your medical provider.
1:34:08
You need to reach out to the company
1:34:09
that you got the medication from, but there
1:34:11
are just so many people that are looking
1:34:13
for that bargain.
1:34:14
And I, and Hey, look, I know times
1:34:15
are tough.
1:34:16
I'm for that bargain, but at what cost,
1:34:20
looking for the segment, I all of a
1:34:21
sudden found, you know, Facebook clickbait.
1:34:24
I mean, there is just no way that
1:34:26
you can get an injectable for $50.
1:34:28
Come on.
1:34:28
I scrolled through Instagram.
1:34:29
There's no way you can get an injectable
1:34:31
for $50.
1:34:32
That's just not possible.
1:34:33
If not expensive, it's $50 is high.
1:34:37
Facebook clickbait.
1:34:38
Oh my gosh.
1:34:39
It's just no way that you can get
1:34:40
an injectable for $50.
1:34:42
Come on.
1:34:42
I scrolled through Instagram and no more than
1:34:45
seven or eight different companies pop up.
1:34:47
And yeah, I got on there once just
1:34:48
to see what it was.
1:34:49
And I went through the profile and they
1:34:51
recommended three drugs they'd never heard of.
1:34:52
Yeah.
1:34:53
And I was like, lady, all the drugs
1:34:55
I see on TV.
1:34:56
I've never heard of.
1:34:57
I can't remember the names.
1:34:59
Recommended three drugs.
1:34:59
I've never heard of.
1:35:01
Yeah.
1:35:01
And I was like, Oh yeah, this is
1:35:03
a bad idea.
1:35:04
Well, you know, are the drugs coming from
1:35:05
China or like Europe or, you know, some
1:35:07
other drugs come from China or like Europe.
1:35:11
That's literally where Ozempic comes from, from Europe.
1:35:17
Is it from Norway?
1:35:20
Uh, I guess one of the European drug
1:35:23
makers.
1:35:23
Yes.
1:35:24
Oh, if it comes from Europe, you can't
1:35:26
trust it.
1:35:27
Let's see what it was.
1:35:27
And I went through the profile and they
1:35:29
recommended three drugs I'd never heard of.
1:35:31
Yeah.
1:35:31
Oh yeah.
1:35:32
This is a bad idea.
1:35:33
Well, you know, are the drugs coming from
1:35:35
China or like Europe or, you know, someplace
1:35:37
like that?
1:35:37
Are they being regulated?
1:35:39
Um, and do you know if you're a
1:35:41
candidate, if you don't even have like a
1:35:44
meeting with a provider consultation, how do you
1:35:46
know that you're okay?
1:35:47
If you're 300 pounds, you need it.
1:35:49
But if you have an underlying thyroid issue
1:35:51
or you have elevated liver enzymes or you
1:35:54
really are a diabetic and have hypertension and
1:35:56
things like that, like I know times are
1:35:57
tough, but at what cost do you say
1:36:00
I'm going to take the cheaper route and
1:36:02
not go see a medical provider?
1:36:04
I mean, I think isn't even Kim Kardashian
1:36:07
marketing a GLP-1 drug now?
1:36:10
Is that right?
1:36:11
Yeah, I think so.
1:36:13
Maybe Chloe.
1:36:14
Oh, one of those.
1:36:16
Probably Chloe.
1:36:16
She looks like the type.
1:36:18
She looks like the type.
1:36:19
Um, but there's a lot of, a lot
1:36:22
of worry in the market about, uh, RFK
1:36:25
Jr. He hasn't really, I guess Monday, tomorrow
1:36:27
will be his first day already.
1:36:29
He's issued two bombshell orders on vaccines because,
1:36:32
you know, he's an anti-vaxxer.
1:36:33
It has mainstream doctors terrified.
1:36:36
He ordered, they're terrified.
1:36:37
They ordered the CDC to scrub its digital
1:36:39
wild to mild flu vaccine campaign.
1:36:44
Uh, that was too, uh, so that's good.
1:36:48
Yeah.
1:36:48
That's what I would think.
1:36:50
He's changing the advisory committee, you know, from
1:36:55
shills to maybe someone who has a crush.
1:36:58
He cares.
1:36:59
And then, and this is my favorite.
1:37:02
Uh, when he was sworn in, uh, he
1:37:05
had a little speech and I'll tell you
1:37:07
what people have emailed me about.
1:37:09
Actually, I think it's in this clip in
1:37:11
case you didn't hear it.
1:37:12
There was an interesting comment by RFK Jr.
1:37:16
in a speech he made after being confirmed
1:37:18
as secretary of health and human services.
1:37:21
This guy, this is, this is the kind
1:37:23
of stuff I get emailed, but it's going
1:37:24
around.
1:37:25
It's, it's worthless.
1:37:26
It's only 40 seconds.
1:37:27
Here's the part I'm referring to.
1:37:30
For 20 years, I've gotten up every morning
1:37:34
on my knees and prayed that God would
1:37:37
put me in a position where I can
1:37:39
end the childhood chronic disease epidemic in this
1:37:41
country.
1:37:43
On August 23rd of last year, God sent
1:37:48
me president Trump.
1:37:51
We need a man on a white horse.
1:37:54
Kennedy's reference to Trump as a man on
1:37:57
a white horse is rather interesting from a
1:38:00
biblical perspective as the rider of the white
1:38:03
horse is the first of the four horsemen
1:38:06
of the apocalypse.
1:38:07
He is also the antichrist.
1:38:12
So Trump is the antichrist.
1:38:15
I just wanted to say, I'm pretty sure
1:38:18
that the rapture comes before the tribulation.
1:38:20
So if, if Trump is the first of
1:38:23
the four riders of the apocalypse, as long
1:38:25
as I'm still doing the podcast, you have
1:38:27
nothing to worry about.
1:38:28
If I get zapped away and I'm not
1:38:29
here anymore, then you should worry.
1:38:31
Until then, calm down, everybody.
1:38:33
Calm down.
1:38:35
Does that mean I get all the checks?
1:38:37
You get all the, you also have to
1:38:38
do all the production.
1:38:40
I can do production.
1:38:42
Yeah.
1:38:42
I just don't like doing production.
1:38:44
Sure.
1:38:45
You're so great at editing.
1:38:46
I mean, what could possibly go wrong?
1:38:49
Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey, um, have you,
1:38:54
you know, have you heard about the super
1:38:56
pigs?
1:38:57
The super pigs.
1:38:59
Yes.
1:38:59
The super pigs.
1:39:00
It's a, it's another plague from Canada.
1:39:03
Blame Canada.
1:39:04
Oh, I thought it was the, I thought
1:39:05
it was the, okay.
1:39:06
Man, there was like three or four ways
1:39:09
I could have gone with that joke and
1:39:10
I dropped the ball on all three.
1:39:12
So.
1:39:13
On the US Canadian border, there's an epic
1:39:15
battle between man and beast going on.
1:39:17
And it seems the beasts are winning.
1:39:20
Large wild hogs are wreaking havoc on ranches
1:39:23
and farmland on both sides of the border.
1:39:26
In tonight's In Depth, CBS's Adam Yamaguchi travels
1:39:29
to Canada to track the so-called super
1:39:32
pigs.
1:39:33
Super pigs.
1:39:34
We got super pigs.
1:39:35
As the sun sets on the Canadian prairie,
1:39:38
the search begins for one of North America's
1:39:40
most destructive animals.
1:39:42
These tracks are clearly quite fresh, right?
1:39:45
And you can see them going in both
1:39:46
directions.
1:39:46
Professor Ryan Brook of the University of Saskatchewan
1:39:49
has been tracking them for years.
1:39:51
They're here for sure.
1:39:52
No question.
1:39:53
And like lots of them, not just two,
1:39:55
three.
1:39:55
There's a lot of pigs.
1:39:56
It's kind of mildly alarming.
1:40:00
Brook is one of Canada's leading authorities on
1:40:02
the so-called super pigs.
1:40:04
He calls them an ecological train wreck.
1:40:08
They're crossbreeds, wild boars deliberately bred with domestic
1:40:11
pigs, big, smart, and prolific breeders.
1:40:16
Their population now spreading out of control.
1:40:19
Why is it so difficult to eradicate this
1:40:21
problem?
1:40:21
I think there's two challenges in Canada.
1:40:25
One is their biology makes them very, very
1:40:28
hard to get rid of.
1:40:29
They reproduce faster than you can shoot them.
1:40:32
They will eat anything to survive with devastating
1:40:36
consequences.
1:40:36
You've eaten everything that's of value off of
1:40:38
it.
1:40:41
He's lost all this.
1:40:44
You know, the problem is Canada needs more
1:40:47
guns.
1:40:48
We have an active tourism industry in Texas
1:40:52
of shooting wild hogs, the super pigs.
1:40:57
In fact, you can rent a helicopter.
1:41:01
You and your buddies can go around flying,
1:41:03
shooting up hogs.
1:41:04
Shooting pigs, look at this guy.
1:41:06
They'll give you a 50 Cal, whatever you
1:41:08
want.
1:41:09
They are a soup.
1:41:10
They're a horrible plague.
1:41:12
They ruin everything.
1:41:13
Oh, they're terrible product.
1:41:14
We have them in Marin County.
1:41:16
But they're good eating.
1:41:19
Let's look at the positive side.
1:41:21
No, I've heard that they're not good eating.
1:41:24
No, I've heard nothing.
1:41:25
But they were first, they first showed up
1:41:28
in Marin County because somebody brought some real
1:41:31
ones, some marcusans, because they were used to,
1:41:33
they butchered when they're young.
1:41:35
When they're old, I don't know what that's
1:41:37
like.
1:41:37
But when they're young, they make a terrific
1:41:39
bacon.
1:41:40
You can have wild boar bacon.
1:41:41
You can also have wild boar steaks.
1:41:47
But wild boar bacon is just dynamite.
1:41:50
If it's just dynamite, you can buy it.
1:41:53
Whole Foods has it often.
1:41:56
And it's yeah, no, they're delicious.
1:41:58
In fact, it was the idea was to
1:41:59
bring marcusan in for a couple of restaurants
1:42:01
in the Bay Area that like to serve
1:42:02
this wild boar.
1:42:05
And then they escaped into Marin County and
1:42:09
started breeding like nuts.
1:42:10
So now there's like 1000s of these stupid
1:42:12
pigs all over the place.
1:42:14
They breed real quick that they like every
1:42:16
six weeks or something.
1:42:17
They're popping out piglets.
1:42:18
Yeah, they have so that's an issue.
1:42:20
And so they haven't been able to control
1:42:22
them.
1:42:22
And in Marin County, everyone's goes, he goes
1:42:26
like his guns.
1:42:27
Yeah, you don't have exactly, you can have
1:42:30
the same as the Canadians attitude about these
1:42:33
things.
1:42:34
And in Marin County, they're afraid.
1:42:35
So the pigs are taken over.
1:42:38
Super pigs.
1:42:39
Yeah, not just pigs.
1:42:40
They are good.
1:42:41
He can show me some evidence or not.
1:42:43
I've had wild boar.
1:42:45
I used to have Marcus on it.
1:42:46
There's a place a restaurant in San Rafael
1:42:49
called Maurice and Charles, which for a long
1:42:51
time was the number one gourmet restaurant in
1:42:53
Northern California.
1:42:54
And they would serve these various pig dishes
1:42:57
from these wild boar killer.
1:43:00
Let me set you up.
1:43:01
Have you heard about the pig problem in
1:43:03
Canada?
1:43:05
Come on, come on, throw one.
1:43:07
You don't have one ready, at least one
1:43:08
of them.
1:43:09
What one one clip?
1:43:11
No one joke.
1:43:12
Like you had all these jokes ready.
1:43:13
And I said, no, I believe me.
1:43:15
I dropped the ball.
1:43:16
For some reason, I'm not on my game
1:43:17
today.
1:43:18
Choking.
1:43:18
You could tell that ever since I had
1:43:20
that one bad edit.
1:43:21
Yeah, which then gave me grief about later
1:43:23
in the show.
1:43:24
I have been I have not been myself.
1:43:26
No, but that's when you said that you
1:43:27
would get all the checks and you would
1:43:29
and you could do everything yourself.
1:43:31
I didn't start with the right away.
1:43:33
I'm dead.
1:43:33
You're the one that says you're going to
1:43:35
leave the show by going floating up into
1:43:37
the atmosphere out of the blue.
1:43:39
I get raptured.
1:43:40
And then you're like, all you can think
1:43:41
is how about the checks?
1:43:43
Well, that seems to be the most important
1:43:45
thing.
1:43:46
OK, on a more serious note, things are
1:43:53
not going well with the pope.
1:43:54
Well, it does seem that his condition has
1:43:56
deteriorated today.
1:43:58
The Vatican said that he had a prolonged
1:44:00
respiratory crisis today in hospital that required a
1:44:04
high flow of oxygen.
1:44:06
He also had a blood transfusion for a
1:44:09
disorder that seemed to be related to anemia.
1:44:13
Now, the doctors briefed the media yesterday for
1:44:16
the first time since Pope Francis was admitted
1:44:19
to hospital a week ago.
1:44:21
And they said yesterday one of the biggest
1:44:23
concerns is septus, which is a blood infection.
1:44:28
And if he does get that kind of
1:44:30
infection, it could affect his organs and ultimately
1:44:33
cause his demise.
1:44:37
So at the moment, a great deal of
1:44:38
concern.
1:44:40
The crisis has been named by the Vatican
1:44:43
as a crisis, and his condition has been
1:44:46
considered critical.
1:44:48
So a lot of millions, well, millions of
1:44:51
Catholics are going to be watching on very
1:44:52
anxiously at the pope's health.
1:44:54
What is his outlook like?
1:44:56
Well, the doctors who briefed the media yesterday
1:44:59
said that he would have to stay in
1:45:01
hospital at least another week now.
1:45:03
He's already been in there for eight days.
1:45:07
He's staying on the 10th floor of the
1:45:10
Gemelli Hospital in Rome.
1:45:11
He has a private suite.
1:45:13
And we're getting updates in the morning and
1:45:15
the evening.
1:45:16
But there is a great deal of concern
1:45:18
about the deterioration that we seem to have
1:45:21
seen today.
1:45:22
And tonight will be critical in terms of
1:45:24
what happens next.
1:45:26
Now, this, of course, is very bad news
1:45:29
for the pope.
1:45:30
At 88, there's talk of sepsis and double
1:45:35
pneumonia.
1:45:35
These are not good things at an old
1:45:37
age.
1:45:38
What it is good for is for the
1:45:41
Academy Awards vote.
1:45:43
And we never want to put anything past
1:45:45
the entertainment industry.
1:45:46
The movie Conclave is up for a vote.
1:45:51
And if you don't want to know what
1:45:53
the movie is about, then don't listen.
1:45:55
I'm going to spoil it.
1:45:57
Do you know the plot?
1:45:59
How are you going to give away the
1:46:00
entire plotline?
1:46:02
How are you going to spoil it?
1:46:03
It's not possible.
1:46:04
Yes, I'm going to give away the entire
1:46:05
plotline.
1:46:06
Okay, go.
1:46:07
Okay.
1:46:08
The pope dies right before they seal up,
1:46:12
you know, to go talk and blow smoke
1:46:15
out the chimney.
1:46:16
A mystery cardinal shows up and he had
1:46:20
the secret diocese of Kabul.
1:46:24
So all these scandals...
1:46:26
Is this the Stanley Tucci character?
1:46:28
I don't know who plays him.
1:46:31
Scandals.
1:46:32
The frontrunner for new pope falls from grace
1:46:37
after the mystery guy gets in after some
1:46:40
stirring speech.
1:46:42
But then turns out the new guy, the
1:46:46
mystery guy who shows up has an appendectomy.
1:46:49
Turns out he also has ovaries.
1:46:53
Only Hollywood could come up with this one.
1:46:57
And then there's some Islamic terrorist plots and
1:47:00
there's all kinds of...
1:47:01
Oh, brother.
1:47:03
Yeah, I can see what you're saying.
1:47:05
Spoil it by ruining the movie by telling
1:47:07
us it stinks.
1:47:10
I like the ovaries part.
1:47:12
That's kind of like, whoa, all right, didn't
1:47:14
see that one coming.
1:47:17
That's very interesting.
1:47:19
I'll probably watch it now because of that.
1:47:22
Yeah, good.
1:47:23
Give us a review when you're done.
1:47:25
I think there's reports coming in on the
1:47:28
pope are contradictory.
1:47:30
There's reports this morning, oh, he's going to
1:47:32
be fine.
1:47:33
He's not critical.
1:47:34
And they're always going to be dead tomorrow.
1:47:36
So you don't know.
1:47:37
It seems to me that he's a goner.
1:47:39
I think so, too.
1:47:40
I think so, too.
1:47:41
And that means we have to get back
1:47:43
into our predictive modes.
1:47:45
And that means you, mostly, as the guy
1:47:50
with second sense about these things.
1:47:52
I cannot make my prediction.
1:47:53
You know, this is going to be it
1:47:55
because you blow this one.
1:47:56
Then I'm done.
1:47:58
Then I'm toast.
1:47:59
Then you might as well take over the
1:48:01
show, take all the checks for yourself.
1:48:03
Take the checks and let you go float
1:48:05
up to the sky.
1:48:06
But there's more disappointments ahead, everybody.
1:48:09
I saw your appearance at CPAC with Ben
1:48:11
and with Ted Cruz.
1:48:12
And one of the things that you alluded
1:48:14
to, and this is something Donald Trump has
1:48:16
talked about.
1:48:17
He's talking to Pam Bondi.
1:48:18
The DOJ may be releasing the list of
1:48:21
Jeffrey Epstein's clients.
1:48:23
Will that really happen?
1:48:24
It's sitting on my desk right now to
1:48:26
review.
1:48:27
That's been a directive by President Trump.
1:48:30
I'm reviewing that.
1:48:31
I'm reviewing JFK files, MLK files.
1:48:34
That's all in the process of being reviewed
1:48:36
because that was done at the directive of
1:48:37
the president from all of these agencies.
1:48:39
So have you seen anything there?
1:48:41
You said, oh, my gosh.
1:48:42
Not yet.
1:48:44
What?
1:48:44
Yes.
1:48:45
What?
1:48:46
There's no, oh, my gosh, in the Epstein
1:48:48
client list.
1:48:49
What?
1:48:51
No, didn't she say yes?
1:48:52
No, no, no.
1:48:53
That's not what she said.
1:48:55
No, listen, listen.
1:48:56
That's all in the process of being reviewed
1:48:58
because that was done at the directive of
1:48:59
the president from all of these agencies.
1:49:01
So have you seen anything there?
1:49:03
You said, oh, my gosh.
1:49:04
Not yet.
1:49:05
Not yet.
1:49:06
Oh, not yet.
1:49:06
No, there's no, oh, my gosh.
1:49:08
She hasn't even looked at it, I'm sure.
1:49:10
They're sitting on her desk.
1:49:13
Bull crap.
1:49:15
I can't believe she said, but she has
1:49:18
the JFK file, the MLK files.
1:49:20
All on the desk.
1:49:22
And they got that.
1:49:22
Do you know the JFK files is like
1:49:24
a room full of documents?
1:49:26
How could it be on her desk?
1:49:27
Why?
1:49:28
Why?
1:49:28
I ask you.
1:49:29
Well, my question to you.
1:49:31
I'm just going to parray with a question.
1:49:34
Why are they on her desk?
1:49:35
They have to be disclosed.
1:49:37
That was the executive order.
1:49:38
Did it say Pam Bondi gets to check
1:49:40
it first?
1:49:41
Is she in charge of redacting?
1:49:44
She's ad libbing.
1:49:46
Oh, well, disappointment.
1:49:48
I, she should be saying, well, she should
1:49:51
have at least said, well, you know, you
1:49:54
never know.
1:49:54
I can't wait.
1:49:55
You know, it's on my desk.
1:49:56
I haven't, I haven't gotten through all of
1:49:58
it yet.
1:49:59
But instead she says, no, I'm not.
1:50:00
She shouldn't be going through any of it.
1:50:02
It's supposed to be released and released as
1:50:04
means of release.
1:50:04
Well, the Epstein list, was that in the
1:50:06
executive order?
1:50:07
I don't think so.
1:50:09
And what is this list?
1:50:10
Is it just a list of people he
1:50:11
knows?
1:50:12
Or does it have like five chicks, three
1:50:15
chicks, adrenochrome?
1:50:19
I mean, what is going to, what is
1:50:20
in this list?
1:50:21
Yeah.
1:50:21
You're asking the wrong guy.
1:50:22
I never got invited.
1:50:25
You only went to that owl place.
1:50:27
That's the only place you went.
1:50:29
And that was, and that was a dud
1:50:31
too.
1:50:31
The owl.
1:50:32
Yeah.
1:50:32
What was that place called again?
1:50:34
The Bohemian Grove.
1:50:36
Bohemian Grove.
1:50:36
And you said it was a huge dud
1:50:38
with a bunch of old farts.
1:50:39
It was just, it wasn't what everyone says
1:50:42
it is.
1:50:42
It's just a drinking club as most things.
1:50:45
You didn't get invited to the special party.
1:50:47
You didn't get invited to the freak off.
1:50:48
That's what happened.
1:50:49
I guess not.
1:50:51
I do have one, a Bohemian Grove story
1:50:54
though.
1:50:54
There's always just this.
1:50:56
There we go.
1:50:56
There's this story about the owl, this giant
1:50:59
owl.
1:50:59
Yeah.
1:51:00
That's was Gollum or whatever the hell.
1:51:02
The effigy that they burned.
1:51:04
It's a big giant owl.
1:51:06
It's like a giant monster's owl.
1:51:08
And this guy says, you want to go
1:51:11
see the owl?
1:51:12
I said, yeah, hell yeah.
1:51:13
I want to see the owl.
1:51:15
The owl is, there's nothing left.
1:51:17
It's rotted.
1:51:18
It's like a stump.
1:51:20
And it's like, he says, there it is.
1:51:22
I said, where is it?
1:51:23
I said, that's what's left of it.
1:51:25
This owl has been gone for 40 years.
1:51:27
It's been just rotted away from the day
1:51:29
they built it.
1:51:30
And it's just a nothing.
1:51:32
And it's like, well, that's kind of disappointing.
1:51:34
And that's not what Alex Jones is telling
1:51:36
us.
1:51:38
Wait, but there were no old guys walking
1:51:40
around naked, burning up the owl?
1:51:42
No, but I did learn something interesting.
1:51:45
Ah, here we go.
1:51:49
So I'm floating around with some guy.
1:51:51
I got this flashlight.
1:51:52
We're just roaming around at night.
1:51:53
And there's all these crickets and birds and
1:51:56
all the frogs, all this noise.
1:51:59
And the guy says, stop, don't move.
1:52:01
So you stop and you wait about 15
1:52:04
seconds.
1:52:05
All the noise stops.
1:52:08
It's silent.
1:52:11
And now take a few steps.
1:52:13
Add to all, there's all the frogs and
1:52:14
birds.
1:52:15
It's piped in.
1:52:17
No.
1:52:19
Yeah, it was dynamite, by the way.
1:52:21
I was thinking of doing it in my
1:52:22
backyard.
1:52:23
So there's motion sensors.
1:52:24
So you're walking around at night.
1:52:26
It's so interesting, you know, and there's chirp,
1:52:28
chirp, chirp, chirp, chirp, chirp.
1:52:30
And then you stop moving.
1:52:33
Boom, silent.
1:52:35
Then you move again.
1:52:36
Ah, there it is.
1:52:37
Chirp, chirp, chirp.
1:52:38
It was, I thought it was a fabulous
1:52:40
idea.
1:52:41
That is crazy.
1:52:43
That was crazy.
1:52:45
Huh.
1:52:46
A little known fact, only on the No
1:52:48
Agenda show, ladies and gentlemen.
1:52:49
And with that, I'd like to thank you
1:52:51
for your courage.
1:52:51
Say in the morning to you, the man
1:52:53
who put the C in the no evidence.
1:52:56
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:52:57
end.
1:52:57
The one, the only Mr. John C.
1:53:00
Dvorak.
1:53:03
And in the morning to you, Mr. Adam
1:53:04
McRae.
1:53:04
In the morning, ships, sea, blue, sun, and
1:53:05
ground, feet in the air, subs in the
1:53:06
water, dames and knights out there.
1:53:07
And in the morning to the trolls.
1:53:09
Hello there, trolls.
1:53:10
How you doing?
1:53:12
Oh, very nice, trolls.
1:53:14
Very nice.
1:53:15
Above average.
1:53:17
2573 on the troll room count today.
1:53:19
Those trolls are very spicy today, John.
1:53:22
I've even kicked one out just to show
1:53:24
them that I have power.
1:53:26
Which only, you know.
1:53:28
You're fired.
1:53:31
You have been relieved of your troll, trolled
1:53:34
rapture.
1:53:35
Yeah, you've been relieved of your troll duties.
1:53:37
They come back after five minutes.
1:53:39
It's okay.
1:53:39
It's just like refragging.
1:53:40
It's no big deal.
1:53:42
They're in the troll room at trollroom.io.
1:53:44
That's where you can join anytime we do
1:53:45
a show live.
1:53:46
Of course, it's the No Agenda stream, which
1:53:48
means you can join in anytime, 24 hours
1:53:50
a day.
1:53:51
There's always somebody in there trolling about something,
1:53:54
tons of live shows.
1:53:55
And if you want, you can also listen
1:53:57
on the Modern Podcast app.
1:53:59
Like Fountain.
1:54:01
And you can boost.
1:54:03
There's chats.
1:54:04
There's comments.
1:54:05
There's all kinds of things.
1:54:06
We have the chapters, obviously, of these Modern
1:54:08
Podcast apps.
1:54:09
You can find it at podcastapps.com.
1:54:13
And speaking of the art for the chapters,
1:54:17
that comes from our No Agenda artists.
1:54:19
They upload to one of our value for
1:54:22
value websites.
1:54:22
Which, let's be honest, every single one of
1:54:24
our websites is value for value.
1:54:26
Meaning, we didn't build them.
1:54:27
Our producers built them for us.
1:54:28
As a return in value for the value
1:54:30
they receive from the show.
1:54:32
And they do that at noagendaartgenerator.com.
1:54:35
And we always like to thank the artists
1:54:38
who we chose for the album art.
1:54:40
But again, a lot of this shows up
1:54:41
in the chapter art.
1:54:42
Which Dreb Scott always diligently diligently puts together
1:54:46
for us.
1:54:47
And we chose a piece by Tante Neal.
1:54:52
Which we have to be quick to point
1:54:54
out.
1:54:55
We did not choose it because she groused
1:54:56
about the one before that.
1:54:58
Yes, we have to mention that.
1:54:59
You have to mention that.
1:55:00
It was not my favorite, honestly.
1:55:02
It was okay.
1:55:03
It was the war of the words in
1:55:06
the Russian disinformation space.
1:55:08
I did like the font that she used.
1:55:10
And it was a nice rubble-ized image.
1:55:12
There were a couple other ones that we
1:55:15
looked at.
1:55:15
And by the way, that brings...
1:55:16
Where's Tante Neal on the leaderboard?
1:55:18
Let me see.
1:55:19
She's one of our Dutch masters.
1:55:22
She is...
1:55:23
Wow, where is she?
1:55:26
Oh, that's all time.
1:55:28
Let's see, rolling annual.
1:55:30
She's number...
1:55:30
She's third place on the rolling annual.
1:55:33
Rolling six months, she's sixth.
1:55:35
Rolling 90 days, she's sixth.
1:55:37
But all time...
1:55:38
Oh, she's also sixth place of all time.
1:55:40
Okay.
1:55:41
She's up there, man.
1:55:42
She's important.
1:55:44
She's a very good artist.
1:55:45
And she doesn't use AI, which is something
1:55:47
that I like.
1:55:48
As we look down the list, there were
1:55:51
a lot of female pilots.
1:55:54
Oh, by the way, turns out, as far
1:55:56
as I understand, the pilot of the Canadian
1:56:00
Air that landed hard and...
1:56:04
A Delta.
1:56:04
A Delta that landed hard and wound up
1:56:06
upside down was a 26-year-old female
1:56:09
pilot who...
1:56:12
Now, it's not...
1:56:13
In fact, it's quite normal for the first
1:56:15
officer to land...
1:56:16
She was first officer, so co-pilot.
1:56:19
Not abnormal for them to land the plane
1:56:21
while the pilot does the radio.
1:56:23
She had 1,500 hours, which is more
1:56:26
than enough.
1:56:27
She qualified, bad day.
1:56:29
We still don't know if it was just
1:56:30
a hard landing or if there was a
1:56:32
mechanical failure.
1:56:34
But it's kind of sad because now everyone's
1:56:36
like, well, it was a female helicopter pilot
1:56:38
who crashed into the CRJ.
1:56:43
It was a female pilot who...
1:56:44
This is bringing back the woman driver idea.
1:56:48
There's one tree in the desert and she
1:56:50
hits it.
1:56:51
And in both cases, there was a responsible...
1:56:55
A sexist would say.
1:56:56
Yes.
1:56:56
There was a responsible pilot in command who
1:57:01
is ultimately responsible for what happens, whether you're
1:57:04
the instructor on a check ride or if
1:57:06
you're the captain and you're allowing your co
1:57:09
-pilot to land, it's still ultimately your responsibility.
1:57:12
But I get all kinds of messages.
1:57:14
You still think female pilots are as good
1:57:16
as men?
1:57:17
Well, yes.
1:57:17
Meanwhile, of course, she was named and shamed.
1:57:20
Of course.
1:57:21
So she's going to be...
1:57:23
Oh, no.
1:57:23
No, she's toast.
1:57:24
She's scarred and it's unfair.
1:57:27
I mean, most...
1:57:27
It's unfair.
1:57:28
I think so too.
1:57:28
Yeah.
1:57:29
Most...
1:57:29
Nobody died.
1:57:31
That's the key.
1:57:32
That's what we call a good landing in
1:57:33
aviation.
1:57:34
If everybody walks away...
1:57:35
She's having to be upside down, but still...
1:57:37
Yeah.
1:57:37
If everyone walks away...
1:57:38
You got a story for life.
1:57:40
Yeah.
1:57:40
Well, she's probably scarred for life.
1:57:44
Because yeah, they immediately...
1:57:45
I'll bet she is.
1:57:46
I feel bad.
1:57:48
Was this ever happened before this exact kind
1:57:51
of scenario where the plane flips over?
1:57:54
Jeez.
1:57:54
Yeah.
1:57:54
It was quite a classic.
1:57:55
Well, we still don't know exactly what happened,
1:57:58
but we'll know eventually.
1:57:59
But we do know one thing.
1:58:00
It was upside down.
1:58:01
It was upside down.
1:58:01
Yes.
1:58:03
Let's see.
1:58:04
There were a lot of Dogecam pieces of
1:58:06
art.
1:58:08
Dogecams on dogs.
1:58:10
Dogecams on people.
1:58:12
Dogecams on chicks.
1:58:14
A lot of rented chickens.
1:58:15
A lot of rented chickens.
1:58:17
There was an on Gigi.
1:58:19
And I never met on Gigi, so I
1:58:22
don't know if that was a true depiction
1:58:24
by Darren O'Neill.
1:58:26
But no one would understand that piece of
1:58:28
art.
1:58:28
No one would understand it.
1:58:30
You kind of liked the chicken cam.
1:58:32
The chicken taking a selfie, which baffled me.
1:58:36
But I did like that piece.
1:58:37
Yeah.
1:58:38
Then there was lots of black popes.
1:58:41
Little too early for the pope jokes, people.
1:58:43
Little too early.
1:58:45
Yeah, I'd say.
1:58:46
It's like, we're not.
1:58:47
We're not.
1:58:48
Yeah, too soon.
1:58:48
We're not going to do that.
1:58:50
So in general, a lot of AI slop.
1:58:52
And then a very acceptable piece from Tantaniel.
1:58:55
I didn't see much else.
1:58:57
Ness Works.
1:58:58
No, it was pretty lame.
1:58:59
It was, yeah, it was light.
1:59:01
Light on goodness, I would say.
1:59:03
But you can only blame the show.
1:59:06
If we don't come home with the goods.
1:59:09
Yeah.
1:59:09
And deliver some interesting storylines that people can
1:59:13
develop art from.
1:59:15
It's our fault, not theirs.
1:59:16
Did we do anything for this show?
1:59:18
Do you think that we...
1:59:19
Not yet.
1:59:20
But wait, the show isn't over yet.
1:59:22
We still have time.
1:59:25
We also, in our time, talent and treasure
1:59:27
return of Value for Value, we'd like to
1:59:29
thank people who supported us financially.
1:59:31
It's incredibly important so that we can do
1:59:33
stuff like pay bills.
1:59:35
And we thank everybody who donates $50 and
1:59:38
above on every single episode.
1:59:39
If you donate $200 or above, not only
1:59:43
do we read your note, we will also
1:59:45
bestow upon you the title of Associate Executive
1:59:47
Producer, which is an actual Hollywood credit.
1:59:50
So valid, in fact, that you can use
1:59:52
it on imdb.com.
1:59:54
If you don't have an account, you can
1:59:55
open one up.
1:59:55
We just keep adding them.
1:59:56
Collect all thousand.
1:59:58
1,741.
2:00:01
$300 and above, we'll read your note and
2:00:03
you get an Executive Producer credit.
2:00:05
And that is exactly what Aditya Trimurti did,
2:00:10
who is from Hyderabad in Pakistan, I believe.
2:00:17
No, in India.
2:00:20
What is AP?
2:00:23
AP?
2:00:24
Yes.
2:00:24
It's probably the province.
2:00:25
Oh, okay.
2:00:26
Sorry, I said Pakistan.
2:00:27
That was a huge blunder on my part.
2:00:29
In India...
2:00:30
Yeah, oh yeah, you insulted him.
2:00:31
He'll never donate again.
2:00:32
Actually, Aditya emailed me a longer note.
2:00:36
Let me see if I can find this.
2:00:38
About censorship.
2:00:42
And this will probably make Aditya never donate
2:00:44
again, because Aditya will probably get rolled up.
2:00:48
But Aditya said that freedom of speech in
2:00:54
India is almost gone.
2:00:58
And he says, our Prime Minister Modi is
2:01:01
a mixture of Robert Mugabe and Idi Amin.
2:01:06
And he's been weaponizing agencies, throwing people in
2:01:09
jail.
2:01:11
You know, there was a cartoon of Modi
2:01:14
that he had everybody, every magazine was forbidden.
2:01:19
It was forbidden to actually print it.
2:01:23
It got scrubbed off of the internet.
2:01:26
He cut off Facebook, YouTube, and X.
2:01:29
Or whenever he wants to, he gets them
2:01:32
to shadow ban accounts.
2:01:34
And he says, that stupid ignorant bitch, Palki
2:01:38
Sharma, that you and John rely on for
2:01:40
Indian news is Modi's mouthpiece now.
2:01:44
So...
2:01:45
Not me.
2:01:46
No, I'm not relying on her, but at
2:01:48
least she's understandable.
2:01:50
No offense.
2:01:51
But, you know, it's like Africa news, you
2:01:54
know.
2:01:54
Africa news, us white people here in the
2:01:57
West can't understand it.
2:01:59
This freedom of speech issue around the world,
2:02:00
Germany, UK, India.
2:02:04
And I can't even imagine what's going on
2:02:06
in some of these other countries.
2:02:07
It's pathetic.
2:02:08
It is.
2:02:10
And remind me, I have a clip about
2:02:12
that after we're done.
2:02:16
So Aditya sent us $733.33. We love
2:02:20
that.
2:02:20
Thank you.
2:02:21
And said, thank you so much, Adam and
2:02:22
JCD.
2:02:23
Jingle requests is jobs, jobs, jarbs.
2:02:25
Jarbs?
2:02:26
Jobs, jobs, jarbs.
2:02:28
And karma for all.
2:02:29
And please de-douche my fellows in India.
2:02:33
You've been de-douched.
2:02:37
And Aditya becomes a knight with this donation
2:02:40
and requests a samosa and Johnny Walker blue
2:02:43
at the round table.
2:02:45
Johnny Walker blue.
2:02:48
That's...
2:02:48
Is that any good?
2:02:49
The Johnny...
2:02:49
Have you ever had the Johnny Walker blue?
2:02:50
The Walker blue is the top of the
2:02:52
top.
2:02:52
Yeah, it's the expensive stuff.
2:02:54
Is it good?
2:02:55
Is it any good?
2:02:56
It's really good.
2:02:57
You know, but for the money, I would
2:03:00
tell people to get the green.
2:03:02
I think Johnny Walker green has a just
2:03:05
delicious scotch flavor that is for the, for
2:03:09
the price.
2:03:09
There's no comparison for the price.
2:03:11
Okay.
2:03:12
By the way, my knight name will be
2:03:15
Sir Tenty of the New East India Company.
2:03:20
All right.
2:03:22
Sir Tenty, as in certainty.
2:03:24
Sir Tenty of the...
2:03:25
Certainty.
2:03:26
Certainty.
2:03:27
Yes, sir.
2:03:27
Another pun.
2:03:28
Certainty.
2:03:29
Yes.
2:03:29
Thank you very much.
2:03:31
We appreciate you.
2:03:33
Piers Chidley.
2:03:34
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
2:03:35
I'm sorry.
2:03:35
I had to do the jobs, Karma.
2:03:37
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:03:40
Let's vote for jobs.
2:03:43
So we got Piers Chidley.
2:03:48
I'm guessing Chidley, C-H-I-D-L
2:03:51
-E-Y in Brighton East, Victoria, Australia.
2:03:53
Chidley, probably.
2:03:54
Chidley.
2:03:55
I'd just guess.
2:03:57
I'm going to stick with Chidley.
2:03:59
Okay.
2:04:00
He came with 526.36, which is, if
2:04:05
that's American money, that's a lot of Australian
2:04:07
dollars.
2:04:08
ITM gentlemen, medium time listener, first time donating.
2:04:12
So please de-douche me firstly.
2:04:15
You've been de-douched.
2:04:18
Been listening for about six months from Melbourne,
2:04:21
Australia, and can't get enough.
2:04:24
Had to get myself...
2:04:25
There's another country with issues with free speech.
2:04:28
Yes, a lot of issues.
2:04:29
Had to get myself some Commodore ship.
2:04:32
Love your work, guys.
2:04:34
Thank you.
2:04:35
Okay, well, thank you.
2:04:36
You got it.
2:04:37
Just got a message on Telegram.
2:04:39
Bro, bro, your quote, she doesn't use AI
2:04:44
about Tantaniel and no agenda is wrong.
2:04:47
She used AI for the last two artworks
2:04:49
that she won, just for your info, because
2:04:51
truth matters if you want to go to
2:04:54
heaven.
2:04:55
Okay.
2:04:56
Thank you.
2:04:57
I'm happy.
2:04:58
I'm good to go now.
2:05:00
Yeah, thanks for the input.
2:05:03
Sean in La Habra, California, 51538 and says,
2:05:07
I'll take Commodore over douche bag any day.
2:05:09
Just a thorough de-douching and some jobs
2:05:11
karma from my friend Sam.
2:05:14
You've been de-douched.
2:05:18
Thank you, John Adam, my in-check amygdala.
2:05:21
And I appreciate you, Sean from La Habra,
2:05:23
California.
2:05:24
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:05:28
Let's vote for jobs.
2:05:30
Karma.
2:05:35
Yeah, now we go to a note that
2:05:36
came in from Crystal Galarte in Napa.
2:05:42
Napa, Napa, Napa, $333.33. And the note,
2:05:47
which is handwritten, says, ITM, John and Adam,
2:05:50
please add this donation to the Randy Goulart
2:05:54
Contributions, 333.33. Thank you for the perspective.
2:05:58
This is, in other words, for his knighthood,
2:06:00
I guess.
2:06:00
Thank you for the perspective on current events.
2:06:04
You are our entertainment on morning walks and
2:06:08
long car rides.
2:06:10
Yes.
2:06:11
Yes.
2:06:11
And there we have Sir Donald of the
2:06:13
Fire Bottles, written on United Federation of Planets
2:06:17
Starfleet Command letterhead, which I just noticed is
2:06:20
trademarked.
2:06:22
Is that an intergalactic trademark, or is that
2:06:25
just a trademark for the U.S.? I
2:06:27
noticed that.
2:06:29
Gentlemen, and this is 333.33, I feel
2:06:33
douchebaggery creeping up on me.
2:06:35
To dispel the evil vapors, please accept this
2:06:38
one-tenth of a Rubilizer donation.
2:06:40
Long live the North Idaho Sanity Brigade.
2:06:44
No jingles, no karma.
2:06:45
Sir Donald of the Fire Bottles.
2:06:50
Commodore J-Stroke?
2:06:52
Yep.
2:06:53
In Norton, Ohio?
2:06:54
J-Stroke?
2:06:55
Yeah.
2:06:56
Commodore J-Stroke.
2:06:56
333.
2:06:56
Hey, John and Adam, I'd appreciate John not
2:06:58
dismissing my note with a hum.
2:07:02
Can I get a harumph?
2:07:04
Check out chopacabra...
2:07:08
Check out chupacabracanoe.com.
2:07:14
For some great content and gear.
2:07:16
What is that?
2:07:17
Chupacabra.com.
2:07:18
I'm sorry, chupacabracanoe.com.
2:07:22
You guys are the best.
2:07:23
In four more years, give me a China
2:07:26
is asshole, sign Commodore J-Stroke.
2:07:30
Donald Trump don't trust China!
2:07:32
China is asshole!
2:07:33
I'm looking at it right now.
2:07:35
Do they sell canoes?
2:07:38
Let me see.
2:07:39
They sell...
2:07:39
Oh, they sell...
2:07:41
That's hoodies.
2:07:43
Okay.
2:07:44
All right.
2:07:45
So much for the canoe.
2:07:48
Kathleen C.
2:07:48
Melody, St. Clair Shores, Minnesota.
2:07:51
Michigan, I'm sorry.
2:07:53
The first associate executive producer for the bunch.
2:07:55
$250.56. Hello, Adam and John.
2:07:58
My dear friend, Mike, turned me on to
2:08:00
your show.
2:08:01
It is indeed the best podcast in the
2:08:03
universe.
2:08:03
Can I get two screaming goats, please?
2:08:06
Thank you and good business to you both.
2:08:09
All the best, Kathleen C.
2:08:11
Melody.
2:08:13
There's one.
2:08:15
And there's two.
2:08:19
Sky Kilbury in Belfair, Wash...
2:08:23
Belfair?
2:08:24
I've never heard of that town.
2:08:25
Washington.
2:08:27
$210.60. I want to congratulate my son,
2:08:30
Airman Aaron Kilbury, for graduating from the U
2:08:34
.S. Air Force basic training.
2:08:36
God bless.
2:08:37
No agenda and the USA.
2:08:40
Beautiful.
2:08:40
Eli the Coffee Guy, Bensonville, Illinois is here.
2:08:43
$202.23. He says this donation is for
2:08:46
John's literary wit in the newsletter.
2:08:49
When describing the newest manifestation of Trump derangement
2:08:52
syndrome, he quotes your newsletter, Democrat women largely
2:08:57
represented by liberal women online who dropped more
2:09:00
F-bombs than a...
2:09:01
What is this?
2:09:03
A stevedore.
2:09:04
Stevedore fired from an all-girl ocean voyage.
2:09:09
That is quite some wit there, John.
2:09:13
I'm killing it.
2:09:16
Yes, you are killing it.
2:09:18
That line had me rolling.
2:09:20
Those who haven't signed up for the newsletter
2:09:21
should do so.
2:09:23
It's always good for a laugh.
2:09:25
Jingles.
2:09:25
Oh, eating the dogs.
2:09:26
I hadn't seen you wanted eating the dogs.
2:09:28
Okay.
2:09:29
I got eating the dogs for you.
2:09:30
What else does he want here?
2:09:32
Producers in need...
2:09:34
In need of fantastic fresh roasted coffee should
2:09:38
visit...
2:09:39
Oh, here it comes.
2:09:41
gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20
2:09:44
% off your order.
2:09:45
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:09:48
They're eating the dogs.
2:09:53
Curtis Cole.
2:09:54
Uh, cool.
2:09:55
Uh, cool.
2:09:56
That's how you pronounce it, actually.
2:09:57
It's cool.
2:09:58
It's cool.
2:09:59
I knew a guy named Joe Cool.
2:10:01
No.
2:10:02
Yep.
2:10:02
Did he smoke camels?
2:10:04
No.
2:10:06
East, uh, Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania.
2:10:08
200.
2:10:09
No, Joe Cool was a notorious, uh...
2:10:12
This is a period way back in the
2:10:14
day when we were building cars from scratch.
2:10:16
I had a Sterling.
2:10:17
I built it.
2:10:18
Wait a minute.
2:10:18
You...
2:10:18
Oh, stop.
2:10:19
Here's a story I don't know.
2:10:20
You built a car from scratch?
2:10:23
Well, you buy the body from a, you
2:10:25
know, fiberglass operation.
2:10:27
These were called Sterlings.
2:10:28
You can look them up.
2:10:29
Yeah, they were kits, right?
2:10:31
Yeah, a car kit.
2:10:31
And yeah, I had a Volkswagen mid-frame
2:10:34
with a Porsche engine.
2:10:36
I put a Porsche in it.
2:10:37
You had one of the...
2:10:38
These are awesome looking cars.
2:10:41
Yeah, I had one for a couple years.
2:10:42
It's like a Corvette that's been stepped on
2:10:44
and elongated.
2:10:46
It's smashed, yeah.
2:10:47
Wow.
2:10:48
It was fun to drive, too.
2:10:49
Nice.
2:10:50
So the problem was is that the taillights
2:10:53
were never approved properly.
2:10:56
Uh, so you had to get a different
2:10:57
back end for the thing because of the,
2:10:59
uh...
2:11:00
Because this guy, Joe Cool, who had bought
2:11:03
one of these Sterlings, was driving around ditching
2:11:07
cops and they finally caught up to him
2:11:11
and they threw the book at him and
2:11:13
then they threw the book at the car.
2:11:17
So they impounded his car?
2:11:19
Well, they took the car and they made
2:11:21
it so everything that was on it was
2:11:22
illegal, you know, because it was pretty, you
2:11:25
know, you look at the car, it's obviously
2:11:26
there's some issues with the legality of the
2:11:29
thing.
2:11:29
And so the taillights were the big sticking
2:11:33
point.
2:11:33
So they had to swap out the taillights
2:11:35
on all the cars.
2:11:37
No thanks to Joe Cool, who, I don't
2:11:39
know whatever happened to him, but that was...
2:11:41
Did you complete the kit?
2:11:43
Yeah, I had driven it for a couple
2:11:44
years.
2:11:45
And it says here the price of the
2:11:47
kit was $2,100?
2:11:49
Yeah, yeah.
2:11:50
It's cheap.
2:11:52
What happened to it?
2:11:53
I sold it to some auto mechanic down
2:11:56
in San Jose after I put in mothballs
2:11:59
because there's a couple of features, just a
2:12:02
couple of things that fell off.
2:12:03
Like brakes didn't work.
2:12:04
No, the brakes were...
2:12:05
No, the car worked fine.
2:12:08
The thing, the hardest part was getting a
2:12:10
Porsche engine onto the Volkswagen transmission and it
2:12:15
took a...
2:12:16
It was an experience in itself based on...
2:12:19
It had all had to do with the
2:12:21
flywheel.
2:12:22
And so you had to get a flywheel
2:12:25
from a fastback, some screwball Volkswagen.
2:12:28
I finally got the right one and everybody
2:12:31
was...
2:12:32
It was unbelievable.
2:12:33
I gave up on doing anything mechanical.
2:12:35
You know what they should do?
2:12:36
They should do one of these kits where
2:12:38
you just take a Tesla car engine and
2:12:43
the chassis basically, and then you could build
2:12:47
your own car on top of it.
2:12:51
The guy who used to run BoardWatch Magazine
2:12:53
has essentially started, has been doing this.
2:12:57
Really?
2:12:57
What you just described.
2:12:58
Really?
2:12:59
Well, there goes that idea.
2:13:00
Another exit strategy ruined.
2:13:03
So Curtis Cool in East Stroudsburg, Pennsylvania came
2:13:08
in with $200.
2:13:10
Halfway to knighthood with this $200.
2:13:12
Keep up the Commodore going for a while
2:13:15
longer.
2:13:16
I want a star and an anchor on
2:13:18
my shoulder too.
2:13:20
Commodore.
2:13:21
Um, okay.
2:13:23
Please call out my older brother, Doug is
2:13:25
a douche bag.
2:13:28
Tina's right.
2:13:29
Tina's right.
2:13:31
Tina.
2:13:32
Tina.
2:13:32
Tina, my wife.
2:13:33
Is right.
2:13:34
He says, he writes this down very emphatically
2:13:37
that Tina's right.
2:13:38
You guys could handle a few chickens.
2:13:42
I think there's a thing going on at
2:13:44
the household there.
2:13:45
Yes, I believe so.
2:13:46
I believe so.
2:13:47
Yes.
2:13:48
He says, she's right.
2:13:50
That Tina, your wife, Tina is right.
2:13:53
We got the message.
2:13:55
We have 12 chickens with two coops and
2:14:00
they're pretty easy to care for.
2:14:02
Sure.
2:14:04
They care for, yeah.
2:14:05
Get some meat rabbits instead if you don't
2:14:08
want.
2:14:10
I can just imagine the rabbit poop is
2:14:15
cold fertilizer and can be put directly into
2:14:18
a garden.
2:14:20
I'm with you, Curtis.
2:14:22
This is not a good idea.
2:14:24
She will never hear this segment.
2:14:26
I will cut it out.
2:14:29
And $200.
2:14:31
There she is, Linda Lou Patkin from Lakewood,
2:14:33
Colorado.
2:14:33
And she asked for jobs, karma, and she
2:14:36
has changed the copy.
2:14:38
She says beat the job bots and get
2:14:41
a competitive edge.
2:14:42
Go to image makers inc.com for all
2:14:44
of your executive resume and job search needs.
2:14:47
That's image makers inc with a K and
2:14:49
work with Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and
2:14:51
writer of resumes.
2:14:52
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:14:56
Let's vote for jobs.
2:15:01
Stephen Peterson in Kingaroy, Queensland, Australia.
2:15:06
We got a lot of Aussies today.
2:15:08
That's a good thing.
2:15:08
That is good.
2:15:10
$200.
2:15:10
Greetings from Queensland, where we are fast becoming
2:15:14
a Starmer state.
2:15:17
Starmer-ish, he says.
2:15:19
Starmer-ish, which is, you know, the head
2:15:20
prime minister of the UK who's a dick.
2:15:24
Thanks for your entertaining.
2:15:26
Wait, wait, wait.
2:15:26
You can never go.
2:15:27
You can't go to that wedding in the
2:15:29
UK now because they're going to arrest you
2:15:30
at the airport.
2:15:31
I just said he's a dick.
2:15:33
Yeah, you can't.
2:15:33
Who knows that?
2:15:34
You cannot say that.
2:15:36
You can't.
2:15:37
Thanks for your entertaining.
2:15:38
Well, okay.
2:15:39
I'm sorry.
2:15:40
Too late.
2:15:41
That doesn't count.
2:15:42
Thanks for your entertaining and informative work.
2:15:46
No jingles, no karma.
2:15:47
Well, thank you for the help from down
2:15:50
under.
2:15:50
Yes.
2:15:51
And even though it's, I guess that's Queensland
2:15:53
dollary dues.
2:15:55
Yeah, well, it doesn't get to the three.
2:15:57
It's all right.
2:15:57
Well, he gets in as an associate executive
2:15:59
producer, along with other associate executive producers and
2:16:03
executive producers.
2:16:04
And we do have some Commodores to welcome
2:16:05
on later on.
2:16:06
Thank you all very much.
2:16:07
We will, of course, thank everybody, $50 and
2:16:10
above in our second segment.
2:16:11
Go to noagendadonations.com to support the show.
2:16:14
It's value for value.
2:16:15
Whatever you get out of the show, just
2:16:17
send it back to us, noagendadonations.com.
2:16:20
And you can always set up a recurring
2:16:22
sustaining donation.
2:16:24
That's any amount, any frequency.
2:16:25
It's all up to you, whatever it's worth
2:16:27
to you.
2:16:28
That's why you don't get plus bundles.
2:16:29
You don't get any hoops, no Patreon levels,
2:16:32
no tote bags, no subscriptions, and no ads.
2:16:36
Please go to noagendadonations.com.
2:16:39
Sorry, that's not what I meant to play.
2:16:41
Go to noagendadonations.com and sponsor the show.
2:16:45
Our formula is this.
2:16:48
We go out, we hit people in the
2:16:50
mouth.
2:17:03
So there's a lot of news about privacy.
2:17:08
And we were just talking about the UK
2:17:09
and your friend, the prime minister over there,
2:17:11
your buddy.
2:17:13
As the UK had said to Apple, we
2:17:17
have to be able to access everybody's stuff.
2:17:20
You cannot encrypt it.
2:17:22
And here it is.
2:17:24
Apple scraps encryption security feature after order to
2:17:27
create a backdoor for big brother Starmer to
2:17:30
access British iPhone users' texts, audios, videos, and
2:17:34
pictures.
2:17:34
Yes.
2:17:35
Yes.
2:17:36
They had this.
2:17:37
So you have an end-to-end encryption
2:17:38
feature on Apple that also goes into iCloud,
2:17:42
which means you encrypt it and then it
2:17:45
can't be decrypted on the iCloud.
2:17:47
That's what they say.
2:17:48
That is now no longer available to UK
2:17:50
users of the iPhone product.
2:17:53
So they are easy to buckle.
2:17:56
In the Netherlands, looks like the Netherlands will
2:18:00
be the first with a digital ID from
2:18:04
the government.
2:18:05
Yay.
2:18:07
Yes.
2:18:08
So you will have to authenticate for all
2:18:11
kinds.
2:18:11
Everything in the Netherlands is digital.
2:18:13
You will need this government digital ID in
2:18:17
order to access any services with the government,
2:18:21
which means, of course, it's just one small
2:18:24
step away from, I don't know.
2:18:27
Chipping.
2:18:27
Well, no.
2:18:28
To be authorized or authenticate yourself in order
2:18:33
to use social media.
2:18:34
Oh, and then take your money away.
2:18:35
Social credit score.
2:18:39
And well, yeah.
2:18:41
I mean, you will be known.
2:18:43
And this is apparently also there's a bill
2:18:46
for this in the UK.
2:18:47
But don't worry.
2:18:49
You don't have to worry.
2:18:50
Don't worry, people.
2:18:50
Don't worry.
2:18:51
A new piece of legislation introduced last week.
2:18:54
Where I say it's a new piece of
2:18:55
legislation, it's a rehash of an old piece
2:18:57
of legislation that the Tory government had attempted
2:18:59
to push through, but didn't get it through
2:19:01
in time before the general election.
2:19:03
This is called the Data Brackets Use and
2:19:05
Access Bill.
2:19:06
And the scope of this is all encompassing.
2:19:08
And the aspect of this today that I
2:19:11
want to focus on is digital identity.
2:19:13
One type, this is going back a couple
2:19:15
of years, one type of digital identity which
2:19:17
could be developed under the trust framework is
2:19:19
similar to a wallet, but created securely on
2:19:22
your device.
2:19:22
It lets you store various trusted pieces of
2:19:24
information about yourself.
2:19:26
We call these pieces of personal information attributes.
2:19:29
The really excellent thing that the government has
2:19:32
now announced, and everybody will be extremely impressed
2:19:34
by this, I have no doubt, is the
2:19:36
Office for Digital Identity and Attributes.
2:19:39
This has been launched in the last few
2:19:41
days.
2:19:42
This organization is all about enabling digital identities.
2:19:45
And they say in this blog post, to
2:19:47
prove who you are across the economy today,
2:19:49
you have to use a patchwork of paperwork
2:19:51
from the government and the private sector, proving
2:19:54
your age in the supermarket, opening a bank
2:19:56
account, buying a house.
2:19:57
These processes are complicated, time-consuming and expensive.
2:20:01
There is a better way to check that
2:20:03
someone is who they say they are.
2:20:04
We call this digital identity.
2:20:07
Digital identity can make people's lives easier and
2:20:09
unlock billions of pounds of economic growth.
2:20:12
And they say in this blog, we're doing
2:20:13
this without any form of government identity card.
2:20:16
So don't worry, it's all absolutely voluntary.
2:20:19
This system does not involve a centralized database,
2:20:22
they say.
2:20:23
Using a digital identity will be completely voluntary.
2:20:26
You will be in control of your data
2:20:27
and who it's shared with.
2:20:29
And they say that instead of a centralized
2:20:31
database, you'll be able to choose from a
2:20:32
range of digital identity and attribute providers based
2:20:36
in the private and charity sectors.
2:20:38
I think No Agenda should register to be
2:20:40
an attribute provider.
2:20:42
OK.
2:20:43
I think that's a great idea.
2:20:45
You know, already I'm getting emails from people
2:20:48
saying, I want to move to the States.
2:20:51
Will you vouch for me?
2:20:54
See, I won't sponsor you, but yeah, I'll
2:20:56
vouch for you.
2:20:57
Sure.
2:20:57
You're a good producer of the No Agenda
2:21:00
show.
2:21:00
That's what I will say.
2:21:01
You're a solid person.
2:21:03
People are leaving the country.
2:21:06
I can see why.
2:21:08
I mean, and the fact that they say,
2:21:11
don't worry, don't, and whenever the government says,
2:21:14
don't worry, don't worry, you're probably in trouble.
2:21:19
Now, there was one thing that, I don't
2:21:23
know exactly where the $5,000 number came
2:21:25
from, but President Trump is talking about the
2:21:28
savings of Doge.
2:21:31
Or as Kara Swisher likes to say, doggy.
2:21:35
Which is exactly what Matt, she got that
2:21:37
from Rachel Maddow.
2:21:38
She's the one who developed that joke.
2:21:39
Yeah, but she has to keep saying doggy.
2:21:41
That's what I call it.
2:21:42
Doggy.
2:21:42
That's what I call it.
2:21:43
Doggy.
2:21:44
That's what I call it.
2:21:47
It's not even cute.
2:21:48
It's dumb.
2:21:50
Anyway.
2:21:51
I meant that sarcastically.
2:21:52
Yeah.
2:21:53
He says 20%.
2:21:56
What was he saying?
2:21:57
20% will go to pay off the
2:21:58
debt.
2:21:59
60% will go towards the budget for
2:22:02
next year.
2:22:03
And 20%, he's going to give to Americans
2:22:06
cash, a check, $5,000.
2:22:11
Have you heard about this?
2:22:13
Oh, yeah.
2:22:13
I think Musk is the one who introduced
2:22:15
the idea to Trump who ran with it.
2:22:18
I mean, can they even do that?
2:22:23
He can't do that.
2:22:23
This is another blurt.
2:22:25
It's a blurt.
2:22:27
Okay.
2:22:29
All right.
2:22:31
I get the check for five grand out
2:22:33
of the blue.
2:22:33
I'll be happy.
2:22:34
According to New York Democrat Jasmine Crockett.
2:22:40
Oh, yeah.
2:22:40
What a dipshit she is.
2:22:42
Now, President Trump says he likes the idea
2:22:44
of giving some of the savings from Doge
2:22:46
back to Americans as kind of a dividend.
2:22:48
Would you support that?
2:22:49
Listen, he's just telling a lie.
2:22:51
He's not the one that had anything to
2:22:53
do with the $1,200 refunds that people
2:22:57
had during the that was done by Democratic
2:22:59
House and Democratic Senate.
2:23:01
Right now, what they're going to do is
2:23:02
say, hey, we want to give you a
2:23:04
refund, but Congress won't let us because they
2:23:08
already know that there's just no money for
2:23:10
that.
2:23:11
The only reason that those refunds came before
2:23:14
was because we were living in different times.
2:23:17
This was a time in which hopefully we
2:23:19
won't ever go through again.
2:23:20
We had a once in a lifetime pandemic.
2:23:23
The bad part is that I don't know
2:23:25
if it's once in a lifetime because we
2:23:26
know that Ebola, unfortunately, was detected right here
2:23:30
in New York here recently.
2:23:32
And if we continue down this road of
2:23:34
getting rid of scientists or deciding that we
2:23:36
don't want to rely on experts as relates
2:23:39
to what they're telling us to do, or
2:23:41
we don't want to deal with vaccines and
2:23:43
medicine in this country, then we may be
2:23:45
facing not only our next pandemic, but our
2:23:47
next two, three or four pandemics because of
2:23:50
their incompetence.
2:23:51
So, no, we are not in the business
2:23:54
of giving out money.
2:23:55
And honestly, I don't know what $5,000
2:23:58
will do for you.
2:23:59
What?
2:24:01
Okay, this woman.
2:24:03
Five thousand.
2:24:04
I can do a lot for me.
2:24:06
I do a lot from anybody.
2:24:07
So she is like they're grooming her to
2:24:10
be the next presidential candidate.
2:24:13
They're really pushing her.
2:24:14
She's got it.
2:24:16
She has a machine behind her.
2:24:17
Yeah.
2:24:18
Huh?
2:24:20
This is because she's a chatterbox and she
2:24:23
can keep yakking away.
2:24:24
I think they can mold her into something
2:24:27
that's important.
2:24:28
She's in total dipshit.
2:24:30
You know, let's talk about Germany.
2:24:32
They got the elections coming up.
2:24:33
Their results are coming in today.
2:24:35
It's taking place as we speak.
2:24:37
And it looks like, let me see.
2:24:39
I have the latest here.
2:24:40
I don't think we have a full count
2:24:42
yet.
2:24:43
According to the two parties, the two main
2:24:48
parties, each lingering near the 5% market
2:24:50
just barely crossed the threshold, razor thin margin.
2:24:53
If the numbers holds a final outcome, Friedrich
2:24:56
Merz will not be able to build a
2:24:58
coalition.
2:24:59
And the Alternative for Deutschland has doubled their
2:25:02
amount of percentages and supposedly seats in the
2:25:07
German parliament.
2:25:08
So that will be very interesting to see
2:25:10
what happens.
2:25:11
We really won't know until tomorrow, I guess.
2:25:13
We're going to play these clips about the
2:25:15
elections.
2:25:16
And again, it's a public broadcasting propaganda.
2:25:20
And let me guess, far right, extreme right,
2:25:23
Nazi.
2:25:24
There's a little of that, but it's more
2:25:27
subtle in this case.
2:25:28
They're talking about the dangers, of course, of
2:25:31
the AFD.
2:25:32
But the other thing is they keep making
2:25:34
the assertion that the Trump administration is supporting
2:25:38
the AFD and it's counter to American interests
2:25:41
and the Trump administration supporting them and blah,
2:25:45
blah, blah.
2:25:45
When in fact, Elon Musk is indeed supporting
2:25:48
them.
2:25:49
And then what JD Vance said at the
2:25:53
Munich Security Conference, where he scolded the EU
2:25:56
in general and Germany specifically about their freedom
2:25:59
of speech issues.
2:26:01
He never said anything about the AFD, but
2:26:03
they're making the implication that because he said
2:26:07
that, that means he's supporting the AFD.
2:26:09
In the German capital of Berlin today, a
2:26:12
man was critically wounded in a knife attack
2:26:14
at the city's Holocaust Memorial.
2:26:16
And the suspected attacker was arrested hours later
2:26:19
near the scene with blood on his hands.
2:26:22
All this just two days before voters go
2:26:24
to the polls in an election dominated by
2:26:26
concerns about immigration.
2:26:28
The country is expected to reject the incumbent
2:26:30
left-leaning Chancellor Olaf Schultz in favor of
2:26:34
a center-right candidate followed closely by an
2:26:36
anti-immigration party that has the backing of
2:26:39
the Trump administration.
2:26:40
Special Correspondent Malcolm Brabant reports now from Germany.
2:26:46
Magdeburg in former East Germany.
2:26:49
Two months have passed since the terror attack
2:26:51
by a Saudi Arabian doctor who drove his
2:26:54
car into a packed Christmas market, killing a
2:26:56
nine-year-old boy, five women and injuring
2:26:59
300.
2:27:01
The tributes have diminished, but not the grief
2:27:03
of El Capet.
2:27:05
There have since been two more Islamist attacks
2:27:08
in southern Germany that have claimed four lives
2:27:10
and driven Magdeburg street food vendor Diana Daum
2:27:14
to despair.
2:27:15
One attack after another happens.
2:27:17
How far does it have to go?
2:27:19
The attacks have galvanized support for the anti
2:27:21
-immigrant AFD, the Alternative for Germany party.
2:27:28
Now is the time for our security, says
2:27:30
leader Alice Weidel.
2:27:32
Now is the time for a new beginning.
2:27:41
You know, this other guy, Mertz.
2:27:43
Yeah, he's, uh, it looks like he and,
2:27:45
uh, he's this, um, the Christian Democrats and
2:27:49
the CSU.
2:27:50
What does that stand for?
2:27:51
The Christian Democrat Union.
2:27:54
Okay, so they, they, it looks like they
2:27:56
are claiming victory.
2:27:58
They should win.
2:28:00
And this Mertz guy who's, as I mentioned
2:28:02
in the newsletter, and there's a photo of
2:28:04
him compared to Mr. Peepers, a character from
2:28:08
the 50s.
2:28:08
He does look like Mr. Peepers, doesn't he?
2:28:10
He looks just like him.
2:28:11
He's a wimpy guy, just total wimp.
2:28:14
And he, but he speaks, his English is
2:28:16
really good.
2:28:17
Oh, okay.
2:28:18
Do you have a clip of him speaking?
2:28:20
No.
2:28:20
Oh, great.
2:28:21
I mean, there may be him speaking within
2:28:23
these clips, but this is just a rundown
2:28:25
of the election and the propaganda that somehow
2:28:28
Trump is supporting the AFD when that's not
2:28:31
true, but the PBS wants to push that
2:28:33
narrative because they're far right, far right, far
2:28:36
right, far right.
2:28:36
While the AFD has doubled its popularity since
2:28:39
the last election, it's expected to come second,
2:28:42
but barred from joining the next governing coalition.
2:28:45
Barred.
2:28:45
All the opinion polls suggest that the center
2:28:48
-right Christian Democrats, the CDU, will win the
2:28:51
election and lead Germany's next government.
2:28:54
They've accused the outgoing left-leaning coalition of
2:28:57
being soft on immigration.
2:28:59
The CDU is promising to restore law and
2:29:02
order and make the country safe again.
2:29:04
Unless there's a major upset, Germany's next chancellor
2:29:08
will be Friedrich Merz, a pro-business lawyer.
2:29:11
During a debate with Social Democrat rival Olaf
2:29:14
Scholz, Merz warned of the consequences of failing
2:29:18
to tackle migration and Germany's flagging economy.
2:29:21
Then we will finally slide into right-wing
2:29:25
populism, and I am standing here to avoid
2:29:27
exactly that.
2:29:28
I will only sign a coalition agreement that
2:29:31
includes a turnaround on migration and a turnaround
2:29:33
on the economy.
2:29:36
Scholz, the outgoing chancellor, also signaled his willingness
2:29:39
to get tough on immigration.
2:29:42
Perpetrators must be severely punished, and if they've
2:29:45
committed such offenses and do not have German
2:29:47
citizenship, then they must certainly expect that we
2:29:50
will return them to their country of origin.
2:29:53
I have big talk.
2:29:54
Big talk.
2:29:55
Big talk.
2:29:56
Where were you years ago, dude?
2:29:58
Yeah, dude.
2:29:59
Dude.
2:30:01
So, on with three.
2:30:02
Despite its popular support, the AFD is regarded
2:30:06
as beyond the pale by all the mainstream
2:30:08
parties, and they've agreed a so-called firewall
2:30:11
to keep the far right out of office.
2:30:14
But can Merz create a stable coalition government
2:30:17
without the support of the AFD?
2:30:19
Catherine Kluver-Ashbrook is a German-American political
2:30:22
scientist.
2:30:23
If that coalition hold is strong enough in
2:30:26
terms of its majority, then he can absolutely
2:30:29
push out and sideline the AFD.
2:30:31
Now, is that majority going to be stable
2:30:34
enough for the AFD to not hit the
2:30:37
coalition with a lot of obstructionism and make
2:30:40
their life very hard?
2:30:41
Those are what the numbers on Sunday will
2:30:43
show.
2:30:43
Right now, those numbers are very, very tight.
2:30:47
Helped controversially by Elon Musk, who declared his
2:30:50
support for the AFD when he interviewed Alice
2:30:53
Weidel on X.
2:30:54
Only AFD can save Germany.
2:30:57
End of story.
2:30:57
Yes, because you rightly said there is a
2:31:01
difference of making a law and then enforcing
2:31:03
it.
2:31:04
Then Vice President JD Vance entered the fray
2:31:07
at the Munich security conference.
2:31:09
What German democracy, what no democracy, American, German
2:31:13
or European will survive is telling millions of
2:31:17
voters that their thoughts and concerns, their aspirations,
2:31:20
their pleas for relief are invalid or unworthy
2:31:24
of even being considered.
2:31:26
Vance's intervention played well in Magdeburg.
2:31:31
We want to be heard, but we're not
2:31:34
being listened to.
2:31:36
The politicians up there do whatever they want.
2:31:39
They lie to us and serve only themselves
2:31:42
instead of serving the people.
2:31:46
They call themselves Democrats, but behave in a
2:31:50
way that is far from democratic in my
2:31:51
eyes, especially because they always refer to German
2:31:54
history.
2:31:56
This exclusion and marginalization, we've seen that before.
2:31:59
And it must never happen again to anyone,
2:32:02
not even to the AFD.
2:32:05
So this Merck's guy is a former BlackRock
2:32:08
board member.
2:32:09
BlackRock.
2:32:10
Oh, I didn't know that.
2:32:11
Yeah.
2:32:12
Yeah.
2:32:12
Kind of makes sense.
2:32:13
Looking at him, you know, like one of
2:32:16
those guys.
2:32:18
So the idea that you can hear it
2:32:22
there, they at the beginning of the report,
2:32:23
the PBS NewsHour claimed that Trump administration was
2:32:28
supporting the AFD.
2:32:30
And throughout the report, we have Musk, who
2:32:33
is, but he's not the Trump administration.
2:32:36
And J.D. Vance, who just talked about
2:32:37
free speech, he's got nothing to do with
2:32:39
it.
2:32:39
So that was basically just another propagandistic lie
2:32:42
on the part of PBS.
2:32:45
But can't they now say Trump's no good
2:32:48
because he failed, he didn't get AFD to
2:32:52
win?
2:32:52
Yeah, that's what they'll do.
2:32:53
Yeah.
2:32:55
Was that the last clip?
2:32:56
No, no, there's one more.
2:32:57
Here we go.
2:32:57
But there was outrage elsewhere.
2:32:59
We respect the presidential elections and the congressional
2:33:03
elections in the U.S. And we expect
2:33:06
the U.S. to do the same here.
2:33:09
Whether it's the defense minister or the chancellor
2:33:11
or the president, but also average people feel
2:33:14
highly offended by the fact that somebody would
2:33:16
attempt to officially meddle in the way that
2:33:19
they perceive the functionality of their democracy.
2:33:21
But the AFD's deputy leader, Beatrix von Stork,
2:33:25
couldn't be happier.
2:33:26
How important is the endorsement of the United
2:33:28
States vice president?
2:33:30
I don't think it shifts numbers, but it
2:33:33
shows to our enemies that they maybe should
2:33:37
be a bit careful and that we have
2:33:41
got strong allies.
2:33:42
We have got strong connections towards the United
2:33:45
States and towards Russia.
2:33:50
In recent weeks, there have been large protests
2:33:52
against Germany's lean to the right actor and
2:33:55
musician Herbert Grönemeyer.
2:33:59
Our democracy is under fierce attack, be it
2:34:02
from smear campaigns, disinformation, fake news trolls, or
2:34:06
from enemies of democracy in the parties and
2:34:07
in the media who do not just want
2:34:09
to jeopardize our peaceful liberal coexistence, but destroy
2:34:12
it.
2:34:14
Yeah.
2:34:15
There you go.
2:34:16
There you go.
2:34:17
Well, all right.
2:34:19
Scrambling.
2:34:20
Yeah.
2:34:21
They really hate populists.
2:34:23
They don't want to listen to the public.
2:34:25
It's just sort of the global guys.
2:34:27
The global.
2:34:29
Dead end.
2:34:30
What do we call those global guys?
2:34:31
You know, there's like the global guys.
2:34:33
Those guys.
2:34:35
I do want to call out the Daily
2:34:36
Caller for stealing your line.
2:34:40
Headline, Daily Caller.
2:34:42
It appears Democrats have finally picked a hill
2:34:44
to die on.
2:34:47
That is, that's lifted right from you.
2:34:51
Well, there you go.
2:34:53
Democrat lawmakers.
2:34:53
We get a lot of stuff lifted from
2:34:54
this show, by the way.
2:34:55
I'm sure they do.
2:34:56
Yeah.
2:34:56
And they say the Democrats are dying on
2:34:58
the hill of trans.
2:35:01
Yeah, they are.
2:35:02
Well, the way I'm seeing it is that
2:35:06
they have one last shot because they're true
2:35:09
believers.
2:35:11
And people should, there's a good book by
2:35:13
Eric Hoffer called The True Believers, required reading
2:35:17
for anyone with an actual education.
2:35:21
Or not.
2:35:22
It's just required reading.
2:35:25
And you're subscribed to such an extreme and
2:35:27
you're sincere.
2:35:29
That's the thing that's always overlooked by the
2:35:30
right.
2:35:31
The right thinks these people are insincere, but
2:35:33
I don't.
2:35:33
They're sincere and they're going to give it
2:35:35
one more go round, which takes them right
2:35:38
through the midterms.
2:35:40
Like, yeah, no, this is, we're going to
2:35:42
stick with this because it's the right side
2:35:45
of history and it's the way, because everyone
2:35:46
should be trans.
2:35:48
And we should, you know, love our trans
2:35:50
people.
2:35:51
And make people trans and introduce them to
2:35:53
the ideology of trans.
2:35:56
And then after the midterms, that's when the
2:36:00
rebuke will take place where they get serious.
2:36:07
So they're going to lose the midterms.
2:36:09
It seems to me the Democrats, which normally
2:36:11
they wouldn't.
2:36:12
Well, if they keep going at this pace.
2:36:14
They're not going to stop.
2:36:15
Why would they stop?
2:36:17
I had, it was kind of funny.
2:36:19
Because of James Carville lecturing on that guy.
2:36:24
Let me see.
2:36:25
No, the, that guy who I played the
2:36:31
clip from earlier, the, yeah, Ken Martin.
2:36:36
So he's the guy that's supposed to provide
2:36:39
the direction for the party, right?
2:36:40
He's the, he's the chair of the DNC.
2:36:42
Isn't he supposed to?
2:36:44
The milquetoast.
2:36:45
Yeah, milquetoast.
2:36:46
What do we call him?
2:36:48
I already forgot what we called him.
2:36:50
I had a good name for him.
2:36:52
Milquetoast Martin.
2:36:53
There we go.
2:36:54
Milquetoast Martin.
2:36:55
Milquetoast Martin.
2:36:55
Yeah, perfect.
2:36:56
So here's another clip of him on Politics
2:36:58
Girl, which is interesting.
2:37:00
No one watches it, but it's an interesting
2:37:02
podcast.
2:37:02
And I think the thing is, is that
2:37:04
you were saying in the campaign for DNC
2:37:06
chair, that one of your biggest concerns coming
2:37:08
out of the 2024 election was America's perception
2:37:11
of the two parties, right?
2:37:12
That they had switched somehow.
2:37:14
That people somehow think the Republicans are the
2:37:16
party of the working class, and Democrats are
2:37:19
the party of the elites, which of course,
2:37:20
based on policy, couldn't be further from the
2:37:22
truth.
2:37:23
So what do we do about that?
2:37:24
Because the Republicans clearly have used their extraordinary
2:37:27
messaging machine to paint the Democrats as the
2:37:30
enemy.
2:37:31
So how does the party then redefine itself
2:37:33
under those constraints?
2:37:35
Here you go.
2:37:36
I mean, this is straight from the horse's
2:37:38
mouth.
2:37:39
We're going to find out exactly how they're
2:37:40
going to do it.
2:37:41
Define itself under those constraints.
2:37:43
Well, I think it's really important to realize,
2:37:45
and I don't know when this happened, Lee,
2:37:47
but our party started to message to smaller
2:37:50
and smaller parts of our coalition, right?
2:37:53
And while I think that worked to a
2:37:55
certain degree, what we lost is the thing
2:37:58
that connects all parts of our coalition, all
2:38:00
of these disparate groups of folks, right?
2:38:03
In Minnesota, I'll use an example.
2:38:05
I mean, what connects a corn farmer in
2:38:07
southern Minnesota with a steel worker on the
2:38:10
Iron Range with a new refugee in the
2:38:12
Twin Cities?
2:38:13
It's economics, right?
2:38:14
It's kitchen table issues.
2:38:15
It's a belief in the American dream.
2:38:17
The belief that if you work hard, no
2:38:19
matter where you're from, no matter where you
2:38:21
live, no matter who you are or who
2:38:23
you love, you should be able to actually
2:38:26
achieve economic success and climb the economic ladder,
2:38:29
build a better life for your family, right?
2:38:31
Yet so many people right now, and this
2:38:34
has been happening for some years, so many
2:38:37
people who are part of our coalition feel
2:38:39
that they can't achieve that American dream, that
2:38:42
there are obstacles in their way, that they're
2:38:44
being forgotten and left behind, right?
2:38:47
They're working their asses off.
2:38:49
They're working harder than they ever have before,
2:38:51
and they don't feel seen or heard by
2:38:53
a government, whether it's state and local government
2:38:55
or the federal government, they don't feel seen
2:38:58
or heard by politicians.
2:39:00
But that doesn't sound like much of a
2:39:01
strategy to me.
2:39:03
But it does lead to a clip.
2:39:06
Bingo, boom, shakalaka.
2:39:08
This clip, this is the cult clip.
2:39:10
This is, I got this off of Twitter,
2:39:14
and I like to see the whole thing.
2:39:17
You got it off the net.
2:39:18
I got it off the net.
2:39:20
And they're discussing which party is a cult,
2:39:23
and they talk about how the Democrat Party
2:39:25
is a cult.
2:39:25
And what he described kind of fits into
2:39:28
what this woman's saying about being an ex
2:39:30
-Democrat, a cult member, because they don't let
2:39:35
you talk to them.
2:39:37
They shut you down.
2:39:38
Here we go.
2:39:39
I think both sides are very tribal.
2:39:41
Yeah.
2:39:41
But in terms of cult, at this moment
2:39:44
in time, I think the left is more
2:39:45
cult-like.
2:39:46
I was in it for 20 years.
2:39:48
What's known today as the woke left, but
2:39:50
we used to call it social justice left,
2:39:52
progressive left.
2:39:53
Known by conservatives as woke.
2:39:55
Right.
2:39:55
But here's some of the characteristics that I
2:39:57
think make it more cult-like than perhaps
2:40:00
the conservative side.
2:40:01
One is that if you had questions, you
2:40:05
had to check your privilege, or there was
2:40:06
always some line that they would use to
2:40:08
get you to stop asking questions, which is
2:40:10
sort of cult-like.
2:40:11
And then the other thing was, there was
2:40:13
this encouragement to separate from people who didn't
2:40:15
agree with you.
2:40:16
And so I slowly over time whittled my
2:40:19
world down to just people who were in
2:40:21
the social justice left.
2:40:23
And there was really, for people who left,
2:40:25
which they did eventually, which was a long
2:40:27
process, it's a bit like you become an
2:40:31
apostate.
2:40:31
You don't just leave or have different opinions.
2:40:35
It's like once you leave, you can't come
2:40:37
back.
2:40:38
Oh man, this reminds me of a story.
2:40:40
I didn't hear this story firsthand.
2:40:41
I heard it from Tina, who heard it
2:40:43
from someone here at the women's group.
2:40:45
One of the many women's groups, a lot
2:40:47
of women's groups here, and I learned a
2:40:48
lot from them.
2:40:50
New, relatively new people moved from California to
2:40:53
Texas.
2:40:55
And they had a dinner party, and they
2:41:00
had a big mansion, and so everyone's in
2:41:02
there, and so it's a big to-do.
2:41:06
There's all kinds of other details, which I'm
2:41:08
going to leave out.
2:41:09
I'll tell you later about those details.
2:41:13
And so at the table, the topic of
2:41:19
the Dixie Chicks comes up.
2:41:22
And I had to look it up.
2:41:25
The Dixie Chicks said something disparaging about then
2:41:28
-president H.W. Bush, W.
2:41:33
And I had to look up what it
2:41:34
was.
2:41:35
It was kind of funny in hindsight, because
2:41:37
they said on stage, we're ashamed that our
2:41:41
president is from Texas.
2:41:42
That was the entire line.
2:41:45
And they got deplatformed.
2:41:48
They had the number one song on the
2:41:52
country charts, the number one album for three
2:41:56
years.
2:41:56
They could not get their record played on
2:41:58
country music stations.
2:42:01
And they ultimately wound up changing their name
2:42:03
to the Chicks, which I thought was kind
2:42:06
of odd, you know.
2:42:07
It's like Lady Antebellum just had to change
2:42:12
her name to Lady A, because they're all
2:42:13
so woke.
2:42:15
And so the hostess says, what do you
2:42:17
think of that for the Dixie Chicks?
2:42:21
And someone said, well, I thought it was
2:42:23
kind of ridiculous.
2:42:24
The hostess picks up her plate, slams it
2:42:28
down on the table, and storms out and
2:42:30
didn't come back for the rest of the
2:42:31
party.
2:42:34
What?
2:42:35
Yeah.
2:42:37
Completely unhinged.
2:42:38
But what was she unhinged about?
2:42:40
That they didn't agree that the Dixie Chicks
2:42:45
were straight up heroes for saying they were
2:42:47
embarrassed the president was from Texas.
2:42:50
And that someone had the audacity in her
2:42:52
home to say, well, no, it's kind of
2:42:54
ridiculous, that whole thing.
2:42:55
So this woman that stormed out was a
2:42:57
Republican?
2:42:58
No, she's from California.
2:43:00
Hello.
2:43:02
See, I'm not getting the gist of this
2:43:04
then.
2:43:06
Because she didn't defend the Dixie Chicks as
2:43:09
being righteous.
2:43:10
Yes, then the hostess, who was clearly-
2:43:12
And so the hostess in California thought that's
2:43:14
because she should have.
2:43:16
Yes, but she's in the Democrat cult, got
2:43:21
so outraged that she lifted up her full
2:43:23
plate of food and slammed it on the
2:43:25
table and then stormed out.
2:43:28
Wow.
2:43:29
That's cult, man.
2:43:30
That's cult behavior.
2:43:32
Yeah, very much.
2:43:34
I guess you had to be there.
2:43:36
Would have been better.
2:43:37
I'd like to have been there.
2:43:39
Well, I don't think we're going to get
2:43:41
invited now.
2:43:42
That ship may have sailed.
2:43:45
A little interesting tidbit about Newsom's Inferno here
2:43:48
in California.
2:43:49
By the way, I think that battery plant
2:43:54
is still igniting as we speak.
2:43:56
No, it reignited.
2:43:57
Yeah, that's why I said it reignited.
2:43:59
The word still is not in the plot
2:44:01
yet.
2:44:01
I'm sorry.
2:44:02
It reignited.
2:44:02
It reignited.
2:44:03
Well, there's some lessons to be learned about
2:44:07
filling up your state with battery cars.
2:44:10
With its sun-drenched lifeguard towers, bronzed surfers,
2:44:13
and bikini-clad volleyball players, Will Rogers State
2:44:16
Beach is one of the most recognizable stretches
2:44:19
of sand in the world.
2:44:21
Thanks to the global cult classic Baywatch.
2:44:25
But now the iconic beach is barely recognizable.
2:44:30
Surrounded by the ruins of burned homes and
2:44:32
palm trees, the parking lot is a sorting
2:44:34
ground for hazardous waste from the wildfires.
2:44:38
The beach babes have been replaced by Environmental
2:44:40
Protection Agency crews in hazmat suits.
2:44:44
The decision to sort through hazardous waste along
2:44:47
the coast has prompted protests.
2:44:49
Sort the hazardous waste in its place.
2:44:52
Sort the hazardous waste in its place.
2:44:56
The EPA says there is no ideal spot
2:44:58
and that speed is of the essence.
2:45:01
Steve Kalinog is the EPA's incident commander for
2:45:04
the L.A. fires.
2:45:05
What about all those Teslas and electric cars
2:45:08
that were incinerated?
2:45:10
Where did they go?
2:45:10
The lithium-ion batteries is a unique phenomenon
2:45:13
in our modern day life.
2:45:15
When lithium-ion batteries are damaged, and in
2:45:19
this case by high heat and flames, they
2:45:22
have the potential for reigniting and exploding days,
2:45:27
weeks, months after they've been impacted.
2:45:30
So we have to treat them like unexploded
2:45:32
ordnance, or as the military calls UXL.
2:45:35
We have to process them so they can
2:45:36
be transported safely to a recycling or disposal
2:45:39
facility.
2:45:40
Yeah, who knows where that facility is?
2:45:45
It's over here, over here on Moss Point.
2:45:50
Throw it in here, no one's going to
2:45:51
know, they'll think it's part of the old
2:45:53
fire.
2:45:54
Months later, it can reignite?
2:45:57
Yeah, this stuff, this is bad, bad stuff.
2:46:00
This is not a good product.
2:46:03
Well, since you brought this up, here's the
2:46:04
L.A. fire chief, the mayor fired her.
2:46:07
That was funny.
2:46:08
The mayor of Los Angeles, Karen Bass, dismissed
2:46:11
the city's fire chief today over her handling
2:46:13
of last month's deadly wildfires.
2:46:16
In a statement, Bass said she's removing Chief
2:46:18
Kristin Crowley effective immediately, adding that 1,000
2:46:22
firefighters that could have been on duty on
2:46:25
the morning of the fires broke out were
2:46:27
instead sent home on Chief Crowley's watch.
2:46:30
The Palisades fire erupted in early January and
2:46:33
went on to destroy or damage 8,000
2:46:35
homes and other structures.
2:46:37
At least 12 people were killed.
2:46:41
Because they don't mention it as part of
2:46:42
a back-and-forth because the fire chief
2:46:44
blamed the mayor, and then the mayor went
2:46:47
to Africa, and then meanwhile, the associate, whoever,
2:46:50
the assistant fire chief murdered the other lesbian,
2:46:55
murdered.
2:46:56
What?
2:46:57
She murdered her?
2:46:58
She got murdered.
2:46:58
I didn't hear about that.
2:47:00
Oh yeah, she got murdered, and they think
2:47:02
it may be the wife.
2:47:04
No.
2:47:05
She, the wife can't be found, at least
2:47:07
as of a couple days ago.
2:47:09
Did you hear that?
2:47:09
Yeah, she got murdered, stabbed to death.
2:47:11
I didn't hear about that.
2:47:12
In her own house.
2:47:14
That's the big burly one, the one that
2:47:16
says, ah, you know, if you're in it,
2:47:17
far too bad.
2:47:18
She got stabbed to death?
2:47:20
Yeah, she's dead.
2:47:22
Did you hear the so-called, I don't
2:47:25
know if it was, actually, the mayor of
2:47:28
Los Angeles, Karen Bass, that call about her
2:47:30
trip that, you know, that got leaked?
2:47:33
You heard this from, I think this is
2:47:36
from CJF, so that's O'Keefe.
2:47:39
Did you hear this call?
2:47:40
No, I don't think so.
2:47:41
Listen to this.
2:47:43
Just in terms of my trip, just so
2:47:45
you know, I'm missing two work days.
2:47:48
That's it.
2:47:49
And if President Biden extends me an invitation,
2:47:53
I took it.
2:47:54
And hopefully you can read in between the
2:47:56
lines.
2:47:57
But I would just appreciate, just, and it's
2:48:01
hard for me to tell you this, but
2:48:05
hold tight.
2:48:06
You will understand soon.
2:48:09
Ooh, creepy.
2:48:11
I couldn't understand a word she said.
2:48:13
Well, that's why I didn't clip it.
2:48:16
She says, I'm going on this trip and
2:48:18
President Biden, I'm only going to miss two
2:48:21
work days.
2:48:21
President Biden extended an invitation to me and
2:48:24
just hold on.
2:48:25
You will find out in just a few
2:48:27
days.
2:48:29
Yeah, it's a lot of insinuation.
2:48:31
Find out in a few days about what?
2:48:33
Well, that was a few days before the
2:48:34
fire, of course.
2:48:36
So insinuating that she knew that there was
2:48:38
going to be a fire.
2:48:41
Yeah, that's O'Keefe, man.
2:48:42
You know, I was like, I got props
2:48:44
for O'Keefe.
2:48:45
He's doing interesting stuff.
2:48:47
But you just never know.
2:48:48
So here is the, what I call the
2:48:51
wow clip for the day.
2:48:52
Oh, a wow clip.
2:48:53
We'll take a wow clip.
2:48:54
Although this has been played up a little
2:48:55
more than at the time this came out.
2:48:57
This was a clip of another lawsuit against
2:49:00
NBC that they're just whatever.
2:49:02
This is the way it goes.
2:49:04
NBC has settled a defamation suit filed by
2:49:07
a Georgia gynecologist who had been falsely labeled
2:49:11
a uterus collector.
2:49:13
NPR's David Fulkenflik reports the segment aired on
2:49:17
the shows of MSNBC.
2:49:18
The coverage at issue kicked off in September
2:49:20
2020 after advocacy groups presented a whistleblower complaint
2:49:23
to federal authorities.
2:49:24
The whistleblower was a former nurse at a
2:49:27
facility run by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement.
2:49:29
She alleged the doctor had performed mass hysterectomies.
2:49:32
The presiding judge ruled in June that, quote,
2:49:35
the undisputed evidence establishes that multiple NBC statements
2:49:38
are false and found that the plaintiff, Dr.
2:49:40
Mahendra Amin, had performed only two hysterectomies there.
2:49:44
NBC was not protected by the fact it
2:49:46
was relaying false claims by others, the judge
2:49:48
noted.
2:49:48
The announcement in court papers of the settlement
2:49:50
follows a number of high profile settlements of
2:49:52
cases by media companies, several involving President Trump.
2:50:22
Give him a hysterectomy.
2:50:23
And it was if I understand the case,
2:50:25
it wasn't so much about the the incorrect
2:50:28
reporting was more about Rachel Maddow and others
2:50:31
saying he was the uterus collector.
2:50:34
I think that was part of it.
2:50:35
That was malice.
2:50:36
Yes, it's malice.
2:50:39
What's the difference between malice and what's the
2:50:43
what's the other term?
2:50:45
I don't know.
2:50:46
Well, yeah, you can sue slander.
2:50:48
You got slander.
2:50:49
You got a slander and libel.
2:50:50
No, malice is an element.
2:50:53
Slander and libel, one's in print, one's by
2:50:56
saying something in public.
2:50:58
But the malice is meaning that you're doing
2:51:02
it on purpose to defame.
2:51:06
You're purposely defaming somebody with malice.
2:51:10
That means malice.
2:51:11
If you did it by accident, then that's
2:51:15
different.
2:51:16
Then the lawsuit's harder to throw at you.
2:51:18
But if you're doing it because you're just
2:51:20
a mean prick.
2:51:22
So if she just reported straight up without
2:51:25
her typical snarky editorial, that probably would not
2:51:29
have been a strong lawsuit.
2:51:31
That's kind of what I'm driving at.
2:51:33
Yeah, I think that's probably true.
2:51:35
Yeah, she does her normal snarkiness.
2:51:38
Don't be snarky, Rachel.
2:51:39
But the thing is, it's a $30 million
2:51:41
settlement that person gets, which is a nice
2:51:44
payout.
2:51:44
But that was Maddow's salary.
2:51:48
So there's a spit in the bucket for
2:51:50
NBC and Brian Roberts, the guy who's the
2:51:52
CEO of Comcast, who really is behind all
2:51:54
this, I might add.
2:51:55
It sets a dangerous precedent because now, you
2:51:58
know, she says something snarky.
2:51:58
They should be suing and more suits should
2:52:01
happen, I think.
2:52:03
Before we go into our break, I'd love
2:52:06
to hear your Mangione clip.
2:52:08
It's just an update on Mangione's.
2:52:10
Here we go.
2:52:11
Also in New York, Luigi Mangione, the man
2:52:14
accused of killing UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson, appeared
2:52:18
in court today for the first time since
2:52:20
his arraignment on state murder and terror charges
2:52:22
two months ago.
2:52:24
His attorney said there were search and seizure
2:52:26
issues during Mangione's arrest.
2:52:29
Outside the courthouse, she said a number of
2:52:31
factors are complicating his right to a fair
2:52:33
trial.
2:52:35
He is being publicly treated as guilty and
2:52:41
having the presumption of guilt, as opposed to
2:52:44
the presumption of innocence, which is what he
2:52:46
is entitled to.
2:52:48
Mangione has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
2:52:51
He faces a separate federal case that could
2:52:53
carry the death penalty.
2:52:55
That's interesting because I got a text from
2:52:57
the Zoomer in New York and she said,
2:52:58
I'm boots on the ground, I'm boots on
2:53:00
the ground.
2:53:01
And there were tons of people, free Luigi.
2:53:05
They all had free Luigi masks on.
2:53:08
They're all running around, people with free Luigi
2:53:10
written on their bald heads.
2:53:12
There was a lot of pro.
2:53:15
Well organized.
2:53:16
Yeah, pro Luigi stuff.
2:53:18
Here's kind of a related clip.
2:53:23
Tonight, as Luigi Mangione's murder case moves forward,
2:53:27
reports that the Justice Department is now investigating
2:53:29
UnitedHealth Group's billing practices.
2:53:32
According to the Wall Street Journal, the new
2:53:34
civil probe is looking into allegations the company
2:53:36
profited off false diagnoses.
2:53:38
Last summer, the journal reported UnitedHealth added diagnoses
2:53:42
to patient records for conditions they weren't treated
2:53:44
for, triggering an extra $8.7 billion in
2:53:48
payouts to insurers.
2:53:49
News of a DOJ investigation sending UnitedHealth stocks
2:53:52
plunging 7% yesterday, a $30 billion loss
2:53:56
in market value.
2:53:57
The company calling reports of fraud misinformation.
2:54:01
And as for that federal investigation into UnitedHealth
2:54:03
Group tonight, the DOJ declining to comment.
2:54:06
Yeah, yeah, I think they're going down on
2:54:08
that.
2:54:09
I think so too.
2:54:10
This whole thing is going to implode.
2:54:13
And Kennedy's and Bondi together are going to
2:54:17
make life miserable for a lot of these
2:54:19
operations, which are scammers.
2:54:21
Yes.
2:54:21
And by the way, I'd love to have
2:54:22
a free Luigi hoodie.
2:54:27
I finally got my, I got a bunch
2:54:29
of people finally chimed in and I'm getting
2:54:32
me myself some Ohio State gear.
2:54:35
Yes.
2:54:36
I want to thank everybody for giving me
2:54:38
a shout out, or not a shout out,
2:54:40
but an email.
2:54:40
The notes I saw were like, the reason
2:54:42
no one sends it to you is because
2:54:43
you called it a third-rate institution.
2:54:46
That's what, that was so long ago and
2:54:49
it had nothing to do with the football
2:54:50
team.
2:55:05
They're like elephants there, man, in Ohio.
2:55:07
You got to be careful.
2:55:08
When you say something disparaging, they remember.
2:55:12
Well, I'll tell you something, the people that
2:55:14
aren't third-rate are our donors.
2:55:16
That's correct.
2:55:16
Starting with Jonathan Halper in Charlotte, North Carolina,
2:55:20
16346.
2:55:24
That's a belated Valentine gift to Zelensky.
2:55:28
Aww, to Zelensky.
2:55:30
He wants some jingles you might want to
2:55:32
add at the end, maybe.
2:55:33
Anonymous UK accountant in Bromley, UK, 10535.
2:55:39
He wants some karma too.
2:55:41
Sir Andy, I'd like to know where this
2:55:46
is.
2:55:48
Niceville, Florida.
2:55:50
Niceville?
2:55:51
Niceville.
2:55:51
Oh, that sounds nice.
2:55:53
10101, it's a happy birthday to Christy.
2:55:55
And she needs a biscuit for her birthday,
2:55:57
we'll give her that maybe.
2:55:58
Yeah.
2:55:59
Ian Field, 100.
2:56:01
Daniel George in Danbury, Connecticut, 100.
2:56:04
ITM from FEMA Region 1.
2:56:05
Let me give you the biscuit, I just
2:56:07
found it.
2:56:07
They always give me a biscuit on my
2:56:09
birthday.
2:56:09
It took me a minute to find it.
2:56:10
Yeah, that's Kamala.
2:56:11
No, it's not.
2:56:14
Brian Lillard in Prosper, Texas, 8888.
2:56:19
Kevin McLaughlin in Concord, North Carolina.
2:56:21
He is the Archduke of Loon, a lover
2:56:23
of American boobs, 8008.
2:56:27
He continues his stretch.
2:56:31
Sir Herb Lamb in Sugar Hill, Georgia.
2:56:33
We haven't heard much from recently, but there
2:56:35
he is with 8008.
2:56:37
He's the Duke of the Deep South.
2:56:39
He said he's been a bit overboard since
2:56:41
before the holidays, but I guess he's back.
2:56:43
Welcome back, Duke.
2:56:47
Richard Lindquist in Squim, Washington, 7903.
2:56:52
Matthew Elwart in Weatherford, Texas, 6006.
2:56:57
Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 6006.
2:57:02
Kurt Labanowski in Ramsey, New Jersey, 57.
2:57:07
By the way, some donations from Matt using
2:57:09
Apple Pay and Stripe work.
2:57:12
Oh, way to go.
2:57:13
So you can just do it right from
2:57:14
your phone.
2:57:14
You go to knowitinthedonations.com and you can
2:57:17
hit it where you can pay right on
2:57:18
your phone.
2:57:19
Because it doesn't get much better than that.
2:57:20
Yeah, you hit the donation button.
2:57:21
It comes up and it'll give you a
2:57:22
little thing.
2:57:23
You can click on that and boom, you're
2:57:25
good to go.
2:57:26
Troy Zellman in Roscoe, Illinois, 5555.
2:57:30
These are de-douching.
2:57:32
You've been de-douched.
2:57:34
Sir Glenn in Raleigh, North Carolina, 5510.
2:57:38
Organic Hemp Society in Lansdale, Pennsylvania, 5333.
2:57:47
Baron Henry in Rancho Pelos Verdes, California, 5242.
2:57:54
Future Sir of Cascadia in Portland, 5150.
2:58:01
He needs a de-douching.
2:58:03
You've been de-douched.
2:58:07
So special shout out to John in his
2:58:08
modern hype machine powerhouse of a newsletter.
2:58:15
Modern hype machine powerhouse, nice.
2:58:21
Forrest Martin in Parts Unknown, 5505.
2:58:26
Now we got to the $50 donors and
2:58:28
there's not a lot of them.
2:58:29
Michael Sikora in New Richmond, Wisconsin.
2:58:35
Matty, Matty Strozak in Hickson, Tennessee.
2:58:40
Alexa Delgado in Aptos.
2:58:43
Commodore Crummy in El Cajon.
2:58:48
Nice.
2:58:52
David Moreno, M Moreno in Atlantic, Iowa.
2:58:57
He's actually in Davenport.
2:59:00
He has a website, DaveMorenoSoftware.com.
2:59:05
I wonder what he does.
2:59:06
I bet he does some sort of software.
2:59:09
Oh, software, wow.
2:59:11
Yeah, well, shareware.
2:59:14
Already we're...
2:59:14
Oh, I'm not kidding.
2:59:17
He does freeware and donationware.
2:59:20
Oh, does he now?
2:59:21
Yes, DM File Note.
2:59:24
DM File Note allows you to create descriptions
2:59:26
for any file or folder, regardless of type.
2:59:31
And last on our very short list, and
2:59:33
we're padding obviously, Sir Greg in Newport, North
2:59:36
Carolina, 50 bucks.
2:59:38
So we want to thank all these people
2:59:39
for supporting show 1741 with their help and
2:59:43
contributions to keep this thing going.
2:59:46
And thank you to everyone who came in
2:59:47
under $50, which is never mentioned for reasons
2:59:50
of absolute anonymity.
2:59:52
It is assured.
2:59:53
Of course, there are people down there who
2:59:55
also support us with much smaller amounts, and
2:59:58
that is typically a sustaining donation, which are
3:00:00
highly appreciated.
3:00:01
You can go to noagendadonations.com, enter any
3:00:04
amount and any frequency, and it'll be automatic.
3:00:07
And check if you have one of those.
3:00:09
We've got a couple people who checked, saw
3:00:10
that their sustaining donation had expired.
3:00:13
So please check that.
3:00:14
And again, thank you to our executive and
3:00:16
associate executive producers for episode 1741.
3:00:25
And not a very long list today.
3:00:27
Scott wishes his dad Brian Tweed a happy
3:00:30
birthday.
3:00:30
He turns 69 tomorrow.
3:00:33
And Sir Andy says happy birthday to Christy.
3:00:35
And finally on the list is Kurt Labanowski.
3:00:38
Happy birthday to these people for everybody here
3:00:40
at the best podcast in the universe.
3:00:44
We do have three Commodores as the promotion
3:00:47
continues, but only of course, if you subscribe
3:00:49
to the newsletter.
3:00:50
Every single No Agenda episode show notes contains
3:00:53
a link for you to subscribe to said
3:00:55
newsletter.
3:00:55
And we would like to welcome Commodore Aditya
3:00:58
Trimurti, Commodore Pierce Chidley, and Commodore Sean Mattern.
3:01:04
Welcome and go to noagendarings.com to give
3:01:08
us an address to send your certificate of
3:01:10
Commodore-ship.
3:01:12
Commodores arriving.
3:01:14
Ah, close.
3:01:17
Almost made it.
3:01:18
And then one night, it's our Indian night.
3:01:21
So I'm going to grab out a nice...
3:01:23
Oh, this is a nice Indian blade.
3:01:24
It looks good, this one.
3:01:25
Ah, look at this one.
3:01:26
They're encrusted in jewels.
3:01:28
Oh, jewels, I tell you.
3:01:31
Aditya Trimurti, thank you very much for braving
3:01:34
the censorship of your country and supporting the
3:01:37
best podcast in the universe.
3:01:39
Thanks to your support of $1,000 or
3:01:41
more, I'm very proud to pronounce you as
3:01:43
certainty of the new East India Company.
3:01:47
Because certainty is certain that a new East
3:01:50
India Company is coming.
3:01:52
That's quite the theory on that.
3:01:54
For you, we've got hookers and blow, rent
3:01:56
boys and chardonnay.
3:01:57
But as you requested, we have samosa and
3:01:59
Johnny Walker blue.
3:02:00
It's the good stuff, along with that bong,
3:02:02
hits and bourbon, sparkling cider and escorts, ginger
3:02:05
ale and gerbils, breast milk and pablum, and
3:02:07
the mutton and the mead, which I'm sure
3:02:09
you will enjoy consuming.
3:02:12
You should also go to noagenderings.com and
3:02:15
there you will find a ring sizing guide.
3:02:17
Make sure you get us the right size
3:02:19
and an address.
3:02:19
We'll send that off to you.
3:02:21
And it is a signet ring.
3:02:22
So if you hit someone in the mouth,
3:02:23
it'll leave a nasty mark, or you can
3:02:25
use it to seal your important correspondence with
3:02:27
the provided wax and also a certificate of
3:02:30
authenticity.
3:02:30
Thank you and welcome to the round table.
3:02:40
And we do have a couple of meetups.
3:02:42
The producer organized groupings that take place.
3:02:47
There's going to be a big one in
3:02:48
the sky, John, but you're not going to
3:02:50
be a part of that.
3:02:51
Everyone's real sad.
3:02:52
You're just going to sit here and take
3:02:54
all the checks.
3:02:56
But there's one Sunday.
3:02:59
There's a couple happening today.
3:03:00
There's another one.
3:03:01
The checks that float up with you.
3:03:04
That's no good.
3:03:05
I'm taking my Bitcoin with me.
3:03:07
Hey, here's the meetup from Arlington, Virginia.
3:03:09
This is DC girl at the Arlington meetup
3:03:11
at Astro Donuts and Beer Hall.
3:03:14
Jeff from Springfield.
3:03:14
Glenn here.
3:03:15
John and Adam, I feel so plugged in
3:03:17
like a battery for the New World Order.
3:03:19
This is Sir Bob, Black Knight of the
3:03:20
Chesapeake Bay.
3:03:21
Not a spook.
3:03:22
Hi, Adam and John.
3:03:23
This is Edgar the Puppet.
3:03:25
And I dropped Adam's name in order to
3:03:27
score an interview with Lara Logan at CPAC
3:03:30
yesterday.
3:03:30
I'm so proud of myself.
3:03:32
Hello, Adam and John.
3:03:33
This is Paulo.
3:03:34
Scott Horton sent me.
3:03:36
And this is Sir William of West Kentucky.
3:03:37
Don't forget to wax your ceiling.
3:03:39
This is Roundy.
3:03:40
I had nothing to do with that puppet.
3:03:43
Now I got to check Edgar.
3:03:45
So Roundy gets himself on this thing twice?
3:03:48
Yeah, as Edgar and as Roundy.
3:03:49
One as a puppet and one as himself?
3:03:52
Now I have to go see what he
3:03:54
did with Lara.
3:03:55
Lara Logan, she hasn't yet a new podcast,
3:03:57
John.
3:03:58
She's got a new podcast.
3:03:59
It's Going Rogue with Lara Logan.
3:04:03
Available on YouTube and Rumble.
3:04:06
Yes.
3:04:08
So it was Lara Logan.
3:04:09
I thought I heard her say Laura Loomer.
3:04:11
But no, no, I said Lara Logan.
3:04:13
And he dropped my name.
3:04:14
So she'd be like, oh, yeah, I know
3:04:15
him.
3:04:16
He's my neighbor, Adam Carolla.
3:04:18
Anyway, meetups.
3:04:20
She's actually, wait, did I tell you that
3:04:21
story?
3:04:23
No, we were at the opening of some
3:04:25
bar here on Main Street.
3:04:27
The White Elephant, I think, is what it's
3:04:29
called.
3:04:30
And she's there and she's my neighbor.
3:04:33
And she said, and she's introduced me to
3:04:34
Adam Carolla.
3:04:34
Hey, I want to introduce you to Adam
3:04:36
Carolla.
3:04:37
And I'm like, oh, brother.
3:04:39
No.
3:04:39
Yeah.
3:04:40
She felt bad about it because someone corrected
3:04:42
her.
3:04:43
She felt bad about it after someone corrected
3:04:45
her?
3:04:46
Well, yeah.
3:04:47
Shouldn't she have caught herself?
3:04:49
No.
3:04:49
No.
3:04:50
Oh, my God.
3:04:51
It's a common mistake.
3:04:53
It happens.
3:04:54
What?
3:04:55
It happens more often.
3:04:57
I mean, how many people used to say,
3:04:59
hey, man, I love your dad's work?
3:05:03
Referring to Tim Curry, the actor.
3:05:07
That's kind of died off.
3:05:08
Yeah, that's died off with the years.
3:05:10
Yeah, I used to get a lot of
3:05:12
that.
3:05:12
Today, the Orlando Yoga and Lunch Meetup.
3:05:16
It's actually underway at Great Southern Box Company.
3:05:18
The yoga is optional.
3:05:20
It's in Orlando, Florida.
3:05:21
But of course, it's organized by the very
3:05:24
entertaining Dame Meowters.
3:05:25
And so I expect a good meetup report
3:05:27
from her.
3:05:28
The Indie No Agenda 33 Days of DJT
3:05:32
Huzzah.
3:05:33
Also underway as we speak in Indianapolis at
3:05:35
the Dugout Bar.
3:05:36
They're always good for a fantastic report.
3:05:38
It's a big group.
3:05:39
Over 100 people usually show up.
3:05:41
On Thursday, our next show day, the North
3:05:43
Georgia Monthly Meetup.
3:05:44
Six o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in
3:05:45
Alpharetta, Georgia.
3:05:46
And that's what's coming up in the near
3:05:48
future.
3:05:48
We do have San Francisco, California just at
3:05:50
the end of the month on the 28th.
3:05:52
And many more actually to be found all
3:05:55
around the globe, including the Netherlands, Osaka, Japan,
3:06:00
Culemborg.
3:06:01
Also in the Netherlands, Tilburg.
3:06:03
Wow, the Netherlands are going crazy, man.
3:06:05
And also Wisconsin and New Jersey.
3:06:07
Go to noagendameetups.com.
3:06:08
That's where you can find an entire beautiful
3:06:10
calendar.
3:06:11
It's a fantastic website with lots of features.
3:06:14
You can send people RSVPs, replies, updates, all
3:06:18
kinds of things.
3:06:18
Thank you very much to Sir Daniel for
3:06:21
providing that very valuable website.
3:06:24
noagendameetups.com.
3:06:25
If you can't find anything on there near
3:06:27
you, you should just start one yourself.
3:06:29
It's easy, and it's always a party.
3:06:48
It's like a party.
3:06:51
Yeah, baby, always a party.
3:06:55
Tim Curry, 78.
3:06:56
Nah, he's too young.
3:06:58
Too young to be my dad.
3:07:00
Um, I have, uh, it's been quite the
3:07:03
struggle.
3:07:04
He could have had a kid when he
3:07:05
was 18.
3:07:06
Yeah.
3:07:08
Yeah, possible.
3:07:09
But then I wouldn't be working.
3:07:11
I'd be rich.
3:07:12
Living off daddy's teats would have been great.
3:07:15
Instead of just podcasting.
3:07:19
Um, it's been a struggle to keep up
3:07:21
with your end of show isos.
3:07:22
You have had so many good ones.
3:07:24
So I'm gonna, I have three, you have
3:07:26
three.
3:07:27
It's time to determine which iso we will
3:07:29
stick at the end of the show, and
3:07:31
I'm gonna go first.
3:07:32
Elon the monkey!
3:07:36
No, I guess not.
3:07:37
I like it as a clip.
3:07:39
Yeah.
3:07:39
But I don't, you know, it's in the
3:07:40
show.
3:07:41
I don't think.
3:07:41
You're fired!
3:07:43
No.
3:07:44
No.
3:07:44
How about this?
3:07:45
This reveals a perverted mind.
3:07:49
That's actually pretty decent.
3:07:51
Not bad.
3:07:52
Not bad.
3:07:52
That's not great.
3:07:53
It's not bad.
3:07:53
Let's try.
3:07:54
I'll start with a maze.
3:07:55
That was a maze balls.
3:07:57
Oh man.
3:07:59
Already you've knocked my clip off the board.
3:08:02
Here we go with crazy.
3:08:03
It's crazy.
3:08:05
No, it's not.
3:08:07
I don't like the.
3:08:08
You know what that was?
3:08:09
No.
3:08:10
Jon Stewart and AOC.
3:08:14
Yeah.
3:08:15
No, no.
3:08:16
Let's try top that.
3:08:17
Try and top that for a killer show.
3:08:20
That was a maze balls.
3:08:23
I think a maze balls.
3:08:24
Try and top that for a killer show.
3:08:27
Hold the top that one because.
3:08:30
That was a maze balls.
3:08:31
That's just too good.
3:08:33
Where did you get that?
3:08:35
That came from a book.
3:08:37
I can't think of which one.
3:08:38
These books.
3:08:39
People start looking at books and get me
3:08:41
some clips.
3:08:42
I need some end of show isos.
3:08:44
And now as always time for Jon's tip
3:08:46
of the day.
3:08:47
Great advice for you and me.
3:08:50
Just the tip with JCD.
3:08:53
And sometimes Adam.
3:08:56
Created by David Letty.
3:08:57
So this tip comes from the last show
3:09:00
we did.
3:09:01
Where I had to move my gear over
3:09:03
to another machine.
3:09:04
And you went on and on.
3:09:05
How great I sounded.
3:09:07
Yes, you did.
3:09:08
You actually sounded great.
3:09:11
Well, then after the show was over and
3:09:13
I moved stuff around.
3:09:14
I noticed that as great as I sounded.
3:09:18
I was actually coming in from South America
3:09:20
on a VPN.
3:09:23
Oh, really?
3:09:25
Yeah, that's what I said.
3:09:27
That's interesting.
3:09:29
So I want to recommend a VPN.
3:09:31
The one I use.
3:09:33
Okay.
3:09:34
The one I use was I've done enough
3:09:36
research on VPNs.
3:09:38
I don't like the fact that this VPN
3:09:39
exists in the United States.
3:09:40
Because it could be a spook operation.
3:09:42
But I'm not sure.
3:09:42
But it does a really good job.
3:09:43
But it does a fabulous job with bandwidth.
3:09:47
You send out a fast signal.
3:09:49
Megabit or gigabit.
3:09:51
I have gigabits material here.
3:09:53
Goes out and comes back faster than you'd
3:09:55
imagine.
3:09:55
Last show we did came in from South
3:09:57
America.
3:09:58
So I had to.
3:09:59
I'm shipping my voice to South America.
3:10:01
It's doing a turnaround and coming back into
3:10:04
Texas.
3:10:05
And it sounded great.
3:10:07
As Adam said.
3:10:08
So this.
3:10:09
So this product is private internet access.
3:10:12
And this will be the VPN I recommend.
3:10:14
Yeah, it's PIA.
3:10:15
Just one letter different from you know who.
3:10:20
PIA.
3:10:23
So yes, from CIA.
3:10:26
So that's probably you don't know.
3:10:29
But it's good.
3:10:32
Only use it for your podcast, people.
3:10:34
Just use it for the podcast.
3:10:35
If you're doing a podcast with me, it's
3:10:37
perfect.
3:10:38
So the VPN comes in handy for any
3:10:41
kind of illicit activities.
3:10:42
Yes, which you don't.
3:10:44
It also prevents you from getting certain kinds
3:10:46
of diseases off the net.
3:10:48
It doesn't prevent you from getting various malware
3:10:51
from what I can tell.
3:10:52
But it does a good job of keeping
3:10:54
you isolated.
3:10:56
And poison pen letters.
3:10:58
Perfect idea to have one.
3:11:00
Don't want to get in trouble.
3:11:01
And it's a good product.
3:11:03
And it works well.
3:11:04
And you and they have nodes all over
3:11:06
the world and all over the United States.
3:11:08
If you have to stay in the country.
3:11:10
You want to watch some videos that are
3:11:12
that are that are.
3:11:15
You have to be part of that country.
3:11:17
You have to be in the country to
3:11:18
watch the video.
3:11:19
This is when we gather news.
3:11:20
We need to do this once in a
3:11:22
while.
3:11:22
You put a VPN up, put yourself in
3:11:24
the UK, and you can get stuff that
3:11:26
you might not be able to get over
3:11:27
here.
3:11:28
And what is the cost of said products?
3:11:30
Ah, it's pretty cheap.
3:11:31
It's like 10, 10 or 12, 15 bucks
3:11:33
a month, something like that.
3:11:34
Because I got the you know, Christina's in
3:11:37
this reality show in Holland.
3:11:39
Did I tell you that?
3:11:40
Yeah, you told us a couple of times.
3:11:42
Yeah.
3:11:42
So I, I wanted to watch.
3:11:44
And it's so crazy that it streams on
3:11:48
a thing called Videoland, which is an endemol
3:11:50
service.
3:11:52
And so she gave me her login.
3:11:54
I'm like, okay, I'll go get a VPN.
3:11:56
And I got the ProtonMail VPN.
3:12:00
Those guys are pretty reliable, right?
3:12:02
And they've got, I would, I would go
3:12:04
with that.
3:12:05
They got tons of servers in the Netherlands.
3:12:07
And so I hook it up to a
3:12:10
Netherlands server.
3:12:11
And right away, the Videoland says, no, that
3:12:15
video is not available in your country.
3:12:17
How does it know?
3:12:18
I tried all the different VPN servers in
3:12:22
Holland.
3:12:22
I mean, I guess they must know that
3:12:24
that, I mean, and by the way, There
3:12:26
is, there is a blacklist that floats around.
3:12:30
I've found there's some of this PIA stuff
3:12:33
sometimes hits one of these lists, depending on
3:12:36
which, which nodes you're coming in from.
3:12:38
And you have to be aware of that.
3:12:40
And so you have to try a different,
3:12:42
different provider.
3:12:43
Well, I'm going to try PIA.
3:12:45
The crazy thing is I would pay for
3:12:47
it if they just let me, but no,
3:12:50
no, you're not in Holland.
3:12:51
So you can't pay for it.
3:12:52
Is that crazy?
3:12:53
Or are these people insane?
3:12:55
Yeah, they're insane.
3:12:56
Exactly.
3:12:57
Not insane as John's tip of the day.
3:12:59
Find it at tipoftheday.net.
3:13:08
And sometimes Adam.
3:13:10
Created by Dana Brunetti.
3:13:12
That's right.
3:13:14
Also, noagendafund.com, which has all kinds of
3:13:16
other groovy things that we do, such as
3:13:19
our, our book list, our movies list.
3:13:23
And find that at noagendafund.com.
3:13:26
Of course, tipoftheday.net for all of those
3:13:28
tips of the day, which is a fan
3:13:30
favorite.
3:13:32
We are going to shut down the broadcast
3:13:34
for today, but we will return on Thursday
3:13:36
to bring you the latest media deconstruction.
3:13:39
I'm sure there will be a plenty.
3:13:41
Probably from some stuff from, I don't know,
3:13:44
EU, NATO, Ukraine, Deutschland.
3:13:48
The usual suspects.
3:13:49
The usual suspects, yes.
3:13:51
But we love doing it for you and
3:13:52
keep those, keep those far right.
3:13:56
Coming up next on the No Agenda stream,
3:13:58
you can just keep listening if you're in
3:13:59
trollroom.io. It's a brand new value for
3:14:02
value music show.
3:14:03
It's the Mountain Music Happy Hour.
3:14:05
So check that out.
3:14:08
And we'll be back on Thursday.
3:14:11
End of show mixes.
3:14:12
Only two.
3:14:13
I had to cut one out.
3:14:14
We've got Sir Michael Anthony with the Aunt
3:14:17
Gigi Psy mix and David Kekta.
3:14:20
Both perfect end of show mixes.
3:14:23
Coming to you from the heart of the
3:14:24
Texas Hill Country in the morning, everybody.
3:14:26
I'm Adam Curry.
3:14:27
And I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where I
3:14:29
remain.
3:14:29
I'm John C.
3:14:30
Dvorak.
3:14:30
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:14:32
Until then, adios, mofos, hui hui, and such.
3:15:11
I just filed my paperwork at the courthouse
3:15:12
and you can see right here the date
3:15:14
of separation.
3:15:14
It's just super cool.
3:15:15
I'm not just doing this because of the
3:15:17
action of booing.
3:15:18
I'm doing this because of everything that it
3:15:20
represents in our relationship.
3:15:22
I have loved Taylor Allison Swift since I
3:15:24
was 12 years old.
3:15:25
That's not a man.
3:15:26
That's a boy.
3:15:27
And when you see that, you can't really
3:15:31
unsee it.
3:15:32
Get an MRI.
3:15:33
Get a 360 MRI of your head.
3:15:37
Have you ever noticed how Elon Musk has
3:15:41
a resting, rich, asshole face?
3:15:46
Get a 360 MRI of your head.
3:15:49
HIV is important.
3:15:54
She raised her asshole face.
3:16:00
We're learning now about mitochondria and viral impact
3:16:05
and brain fog and the changes in our
3:16:08
neurons and the cells that nourish our neurons
3:16:12
that really allow us to think and move.
3:16:28
That was amazeballs.