0:00
I have a niner.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:03
It's Thursday, April 3rd, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Gilbert Nation Media
0:07
Assassination episode 1752.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Feeling liberated!
0:15
And broadcast live from the heart of the
0:17
Texas hill country, here in FEMA Region No.
0:20
6.
0:21
Good morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where it's time
0:25
to filibuster the show, I'm John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:28
It's still quite in the morning.
0:32
I want everyone to know that John and
0:35
I are wearing catheters on the show.
0:38
So we can continue to bring you the
0:39
best media deconstruction non-stop.
0:43
They always say that.
0:46
Well, that person who stood there for 24
0:49
hours, they had a catheter.
0:51
Remember that crazy woman who did that?
0:54
No.
0:55
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
0:56
Are you talking about the space astronaut?
0:58
No, no.
1:00
No, she was wearing a diaper.
1:03
I think Cory Booker's wearing a diaper.
1:07
Makes more sense.
1:08
There was another filibuster.
1:12
Ted Cruz did one.
1:14
No, no, it was in the Texas Senate,
1:17
I think.
1:21
Oh, just the abortion bill or whatever it
1:23
was?
1:23
Yeah, it was that Wendy Davis, that's who
1:27
it was.
1:27
Wendy.
1:28
Wendy Davis.
1:29
What ever happened to Wendy?
1:30
She disappeared.
1:33
Well, whatever did happen to Wendy Davis.
1:35
I remember, because I was still in Austin
1:38
then.
1:39
And I think, in fact, I think I
1:41
still hung out with the artist and her.
1:47
Ah, the artist.
1:48
The artist, yeah.
1:48
Another one gone by.
1:51
Yeah, I met her.
1:52
She came to San Francisco for some art
1:54
exhibit.
1:54
Yeah, because she's an artist.
1:57
Yeah.
1:57
She was wacky.
1:59
Yeah, she was running for governor.
2:02
And I remember, I was like, the artist?
2:04
No, no, Wendy Davis.
2:07
Not the artist.
2:08
Wendy Davis.
2:09
I remember when Wendy, oh, Wendy Davis, she's
2:11
so brave.
2:12
She's so courageous.
2:13
You know, she was wearing a catheter.
2:15
She was catheterized.
2:17
She's amazing.
2:19
To be cringe.
2:20
Yeah, so that's exactly what they said of
2:23
Cory Booker.
2:24
But I'm with you.
2:24
I think he was wearing a diaper.
2:25
I think that's much more realistic.
2:28
Yeah.
2:29
Yeah.
2:30
What was that about, Bob?
2:31
Do you have any clips of that?
2:32
Please tell me.
2:33
I only have the summary clip.
2:35
24 hours of that.
2:38
Let's see.
2:39
What was it?
2:40
What do you have?
2:41
Is it under Booker, maybe?
2:43
Oh, it's Borey.
2:45
Booker.
2:45
I got Booker.
2:46
Booker short report.
2:47
This is a lot shorter than what he
2:49
did.
2:50
New Jersey Democratic Senator Cory Booker has been
2:52
speaking on the floor of the U.S.
2:54
Senate since Monday evening, saying he's protesting President
2:57
Trump's agenda.
2:59
NPR's Deidre Walsh has more.
3:01
Booker began speaking on the Senate floor around
3:03
7 p.m. local time and said he
3:05
would remain there for as long as he
3:07
could to use the platform to highlight his
3:09
opposition to Republican policies.
3:12
He stood and declared his intention to, in
3:14
his words, get in some good trouble.
3:17
I rise with the intention of disrupting the
3:19
normal business of the United States Senate.
3:21
For as long as I am physically able.
3:25
Booker's extended speech is not likely to delay
3:27
any legislation and is not technically a filibuster.
3:31
He'll read letters he's received from constituents worried
3:34
about possible cuts to programs like Medicare, Medicaid
3:37
and Social Security.
3:39
Senators from both parties have used similar tactics
3:42
to draw attention to issues, even when they
3:44
were unable to stop Senate votes.
3:47
Well, it completely fell flat.
3:49
It was a lunatic.
3:52
You know, the thing they tried to dramatize
3:55
it on NPR.
3:56
I didn't get this clip, but they went
3:58
on the show that compared it to the
4:02
James Stewart movie.
4:05
And Mr. Smith goes to Washington and how
4:08
James Stewart was.
4:09
He was there protesting the corruption.
4:11
And the way they as they presented, I'm
4:14
starting to think, wait a minute.
4:15
Cory Booker is actually protesting the anti-corruption.
4:20
He was protesting for corruption.
4:23
He wanted more government.
4:24
More waste, please.
4:26
We want more waste.
4:28
Now, this is so I think Chuck Schumer
4:30
started another like, all right, everybody, we can
4:33
do this.
4:34
We all get together and we can we
4:36
can flood flood the zone.
4:37
We'll flood the zone.
4:39
We'll tell everybody what they're doing there.
4:41
Let's just lie.
4:42
Oh, I'm sorry.
4:43
Let's tell them that they're going to take
4:44
away your Social Security.
4:46
Granny, they're doing exactly what the Republicans did
4:49
with the granny in the wheelchair.
4:51
Remember that?
4:51
They're pushing granny over the cliff.
4:53
I remember that.
4:55
Yes.
4:55
So they.
4:56
Yes, you should.
4:57
I know.
4:58
A wheelchair going over a cliff.
5:01
So they they put together a war room,
5:03
a Social Security war room, and they all
5:05
got together and we're going to do some
5:07
speeches and we're going to scare granny.
5:09
Look, Social Security has always been the third
5:12
rail in American politics.
5:14
You touch it.
5:15
You get burnt.
5:16
George W.
5:17
Bush learned that the hard way.
5:19
These this Trump Doge Musk vote administration is
5:25
in such a bubble.
5:26
They don't understand it.
5:28
They are so frothing at the mouth for
5:31
tax cuts.
5:32
Jacques, Jacques, who's frothing at the mouth?
5:36
Chuck Schumer is in such a bubble.
5:38
They don't understand it.
5:40
They are so frothing at the mouth.
5:43
A gas lighter.
5:44
Oh, it gets better because we got Warren
5:46
and that other old bag tax cuts for
5:49
the wealthy that they're willing to even touch
5:51
Social Security.
5:53
And they're not just touching it.
5:55
They're trying to destroy it.
5:56
They're trying to strangle it.
5:58
Elon Musk makes eight million dollars a day.
6:02
The American dream from the federal government.
6:04
And he wants to take away the 65
6:08
dollars a day that the average Social Security
6:11
recipient gets.
6:12
This is really ugly.
6:15
It's I mean, it's such a lie.
6:17
There is no truth, no evidence whatsoever.
6:21
This this is actually now you are scaring
6:24
granny and other people, people and people actually
6:28
are looking at their check.
6:29
Well, let me get my check.
6:30
Let me see.
6:31
Trump and Musk know that they don't have
6:34
the votes in Congress to cut Social Security.
6:37
So instead, they're trying backdoor cuts by dismantling
6:41
the agency that makes sure that Americans get
6:44
the benefits they are legally entitled to.
6:47
How does that even make sense?
6:48
So they know they can't do it, but
6:50
they're going to close the door.
6:53
They're going to stop the checks.
6:54
They're going to lay in front of the
6:55
mail truck.
6:55
Social Security is under siege.
6:58
The chainsaw is pointed at their earned Social
7:01
Security benefits.
7:03
We believe Republicans have manufactured a crisis of
7:06
Social Security.
7:07
And the reality of Social Security is fully
7:10
funded for generations.
7:12
If Congress eliminated the payroll tax cut cap
7:15
for billionaires and collected the money that they
7:18
are illegally evading in taxes.
7:21
So they're getting a head start by laying
7:24
off people who are responsible for collecting taxes
7:27
owed by the wealthy.
7:28
So then they had another tactic.
7:30
Well, I know what we'll do.
7:31
We'll tell everybody Elon's quitting because we're getting
7:35
to him.
7:35
Well, let's stay in the US where media
7:37
reports are saying that Donald Trump has told
7:39
close associates that Elon Musk will soon step
7:43
down from his job in the administration.
7:46
Mr. Musk is head of the Department of
7:48
Government Efficiency, or DOGE, where he's in charge
7:50
of cutting federal bureaucracy.
7:52
Reports emerged after an election in Wisconsin that
7:55
developed into a test of Musk and Trump's
7:58
popularity in the state.
8:00
A tech billionaire poured millions of dollars into
8:02
the election to pick a new judge on
8:05
Wisconsin's Supreme Court.
8:07
Musk's Trump-friendly candidate lost to a liberal.
8:11
The White House responded to the reports by
8:13
saying that Musk will depart from public service
8:16
when his work at DOGE is complete.
8:18
So they started this rumor.
8:21
Oh, Elon's quitting.
8:22
Oh, he's leaving.
8:23
Everybody jumped on it.
8:24
The news.
8:25
The news.
8:26
They had news.
8:28
Here's NBC's version.
8:29
You have some new reporting about Elon Musk
8:31
and his White House role.
8:35
Nothing.
8:36
As we've heard from President Trump.
8:38
That'd be a good chant.
8:39
What do we know?
8:40
Nothing.
8:41
Why do we not know it?
8:42
We're dumb.
8:43
Yeah, Kate, over the last several days, we've
8:45
heard from President Trump in the Oval Office
8:47
on Monday saying that Elon Musk would be
8:51
going back to the private sector in the
8:53
near future.
8:53
Well, we're just hearing from a senior White
8:55
House official that the president did tell his
8:58
cabinet back during a meeting on March 24th
9:01
that Elon Musk, who heads up DOGE and
9:05
of course has become a key figure in
9:07
this administration, that he would be going back
9:09
to the private sector.
9:10
And the White House official tells me that
9:12
this would be at the end of his
9:14
130 days as a special government employee.
9:18
Of course, that would be in late March.
9:20
So of course, Kate, this- How would
9:21
that be late March of next year?
9:25
Comes on the heels of that special election
9:27
in Wisconsin yesterday, where Democrats are seeing that
9:31
as a win.
9:32
Elon Musk, of course, spending millions, his PAC
9:34
spending millions of dollars on that state Supreme
9:36
Court race, and that his candidate lost significantly
9:41
in that race.
9:42
This all comes in that timing.
9:43
But again, the White House saying that this
9:45
was in the works before this, and this
9:47
just simply is Elon Musk's role as a
9:50
government employee running its course, Kate.
9:52
I will say when Musk was running around
9:54
on the stage in Wisconsin with the cheese
9:56
on his head, I thought, man, you are
9:58
a Trump's monkey boy.
10:00
You're really- That's pretty bad.
10:02
He'll do whatever he wants you to.
10:04
I thought that was bad.
10:05
But I don't know.
10:06
The bottom line is Elon is political poison.
10:08
This morning, you can find some Democrats smiling,
10:12
maybe for the first time in the last
10:14
few months.
10:14
That's after some good special election results, an
10:18
outright win in Wisconsin, and some better margins
10:22
in the state of Florida.
10:23
So what does it all mean and what
10:25
really happens- Better margins.
10:26
Data analyst, Harry Enten is here.
10:29
Let's start with a little bit of Wisconsin,
10:31
right, and a moose-boosh on Wisconsin.
10:33
Moose-boosh!
10:34
Elon Musk- Moose-boosh!
10:36
Moose-boosh!
10:37
Would you like some sorbet?
10:42
How do they come up with these-
10:45
The chef has a special treat, especially for
10:48
you, a spoon of goo.
10:51
I had dinner the other night at, what's
10:55
it called here?
10:56
It's Cabernet Grill, which is actually probably the
10:58
best place to get steak.
11:00
And you know what they had as a
11:01
moose-boosh?
11:04
A specialty from the chef before- A
11:07
single pistachio.
11:09
No, no, it's Cabernet Grill, man, we're Texans,
11:13
no.
11:13
They had deep-fried deviled eggs.
11:19
This was- Oh, that's a scotch egg,
11:21
I believe.
11:23
Well, but I mean, no, because it was
11:25
really, they had really done the deviled thing
11:27
inside, you know, so it was half an
11:29
egg and they put the filling in, so
11:32
it was really a deviled egg, not a
11:34
scotch.
11:34
A scotch egg is just the whole egg.
11:37
But anyway, that was their moose-boosh.
11:39
Oh, that's interesting.
11:41
How was it?
11:41
It was probably tasty.
11:42
It was fantastic.
11:44
You know what?
11:44
Yeah, yeah, we go nuts here.
11:46
We try all kinds of stuff in the
11:47
deep- I'm sure that's, like, invented there.
11:52
I like it.
11:53
Moose-boosh on Wisconsin.
11:55
This was a race Elon Musk spent big
11:57
in this race to sway the Supreme Court
12:00
race.
12:00
He also went to Wisconsin, which may honestly
12:03
have backfired.
12:04
Yeah, I think it may have backfired.
12:06
Look, I think there's one thing we should
12:07
be taking away from the results in Wisconsin
12:09
and the polling that we have from Wisconsin
12:11
and National.
12:12
If you are a Republican candidate running in
12:14
a swing state, you don't want Elon Musk
12:16
anywhere near you.
12:17
Yes, maybe you like the money, but you
12:19
do not want his presence in your state.
12:22
Why is that?
12:22
Elon Musk, simply put, is an unpopular guy.
12:25
He is political poison.
12:27
Look at Wisconsin.
12:28
It's net favorable rating.
12:29
Minus 12 points.
12:30
12 points under water.
12:32
It's an stats guy.
12:34
They forgot to mention that Soros spent more.
12:38
They try to downplay the Soros thing.
12:41
I've seen a number of stories where they
12:42
don't even mention Soros.
12:43
It's just that one side was backed by
12:45
a billionaire and the other side, oh, grassroots.
12:48
Yeah, total grassroots, yes.
12:50
And at this point, it's got to be
12:52
Soros.
12:53
Soros has done nothing but damage the system.
12:55
Everybody he puts in has been the soft
12:58
on crime weenies.
13:00
And it's just that this is and you
13:02
think the media would side with anybody but
13:06
Soros.
13:06
But no, no, Soros is great.
13:08
And I think it's Open Society Institute, which
13:10
has got to be Alex at this point.
13:12
I mean, George.
13:13
Yeah, no, George isn't doing anything.
13:15
Yeah, we need to say Alex Soros, just
13:17
to make it clear.
13:18
And is he now married to Aberdeen?
13:22
Is that all done?
13:23
Did that happen?
13:24
I don't think so.
13:25
Hmm.
13:26
Aberdeen, political Aberdeen, Aberdeen.
13:31
Wisconsin is net favorable rating minus 12 points,
13:34
12 points under water.
13:35
That is an even worse number.
13:37
When you look nationally, look at that.
13:38
It's minus 17 points.
13:40
Dude, dude, easy does it.
13:42
So if there's one big lesson to take
13:44
away from Wisconsin is Elon Musk does not
13:46
help Republicans when he shows up.
13:48
If anything, the data suggests that he hurts
13:51
him.
13:51
Republicans, stay clear of Elon Musk.
13:53
If you want to win in a swing
13:55
state, at least in terms of his physical
13:56
appearance in your state.
13:57
Oh, especially with that cheese on his head.
14:00
I'll agree.
14:00
I think the cheese on his head was
14:02
a mistake.
14:03
I would not have advised that.
14:05
I would not have advised that.
14:06
I have one of those cheese heads.
14:10
They deteriorate after about 10 years.
14:12
Oh, they get, they start to break, break
14:14
away like in chunky pieces.
14:16
No, it's like it turns into a powder.
14:18
It's like a bad type of plastic.
14:21
It's like a foam.
14:22
They're made out of foam.
14:23
Yeah, you should get rid of that.
14:24
That's probably toxic.
14:26
Yeah, I can't find it.
14:27
With a mic.
14:29
I'm not surprised.
14:31
It's in the house somewhere.
14:31
I don't know where it is.
14:32
So all of this fell away in the
14:34
backdrop of, and I'm just going to say,
14:37
we didn't know what happened this way.
14:38
It was unexpected.
14:39
But I think we now are officially in
14:41
World War III.
14:44
That's what this is.
14:45
It's a trade war, but we're in World
14:47
War III, Liberation Day.
14:50
And we did it backwards.
14:51
We celebrated liberation first, then we started the
14:54
war.
14:55
It's been amazing to watch.
14:57
I've just been like, because nobody knows what's
15:00
going to happen with these tariffs.
15:02
Every economist, oh, it's going to be great.
15:04
Oh, it's going to be the worst thing
15:05
ever.
15:06
Oh, the whole world's going to go into
15:07
recession.
15:08
Depression, 1930.
15:10
It's all over.
15:11
Oh, no, this is going to make America
15:12
the best.
15:13
It's MAWA, MAWA, MAWA.
15:15
That's the new one.
15:16
MAWA, make America wealthy again.
15:20
My fellow Americans, this is Liberation Day.
15:23
Yeah, April 2nd, 2025 will forever be remembered
15:31
as the day American industry was reborn, the
15:35
day America's destiny was reclaimed, and the day
15:39
that we began to make America wealthy again.
15:44
Going to make it wealthy, good and wealthy.
15:46
MAWA.
15:48
For decades, our country has been looted, pillaged,
15:51
raped and plundered by nations near and far,
15:53
both friend and foe alike.
15:56
American steelworkers, autoworkers, farmers and skilled craftsmen.
16:00
We have a lot of them here with
16:02
us today.
16:03
They really suffered gravely.
16:05
They watched in anguish as foreign leaders have
16:09
stolen our jobs.
16:10
Foreign cheaters have ransacked our factory.
16:14
Foreign scavengers have torn apart our once beautiful
16:17
American dream.
16:18
We had an American dream that you don't
16:20
hear so much about.
16:21
You did four years ago and you are
16:23
now.
16:24
But you don't too often.
16:26
And for many years and decades, even you
16:27
didn't hear too much about our country and
16:30
its taxpayers have been ripped off for more
16:33
than 50 years.
16:34
But it is not going to happen anymore.
16:38
It's not going to happen.
16:40
So there were a couple of really interesting
16:42
things about this announcement.
16:44
I was I was watching the I was
16:45
watching CNBC and Fox News and watching the
16:49
after hours numbers, the after hour trading and
16:52
everything kind of closed on.
16:54
It really surprised me.
16:55
Everything closed up.
16:57
And it was as if no one believed
16:59
he was going to do this.
17:00
The minute he brought that wacky chart out,
17:02
that board, boom, everything started tanking.
17:05
Everyone's like, oh, this is the worst of
17:08
all worst possible scenarios.
17:10
We didn't expect this.
17:11
Well, what do we do like that?
17:14
But you didn't expect him to actually do
17:16
this.
17:17
And there was something else in this in
17:19
this speech, because it's not really about tariffs,
17:21
but a whole bunch of other things.
17:24
For decades, the United States slashed our trade
17:26
barriers on other countries, while those nations placed
17:30
massive tariffs on our products and created outrageous
17:33
non-monetary barriers to decimate our industries.
17:38
And in many cases, the non-monetary barriers
17:40
were worse than the monetary ones.
17:43
They manipulated their currency, subsidized their exports, stole
17:47
our intellectual property, imposed exorbitant VAT taxes to
17:52
disadvantage our products, adopted unfair rules and technical
17:56
standards and created filthy pollution havens.
18:00
They were absolutely filthy.
18:02
But they always came to us and they
18:04
said, we're violating China for it.
18:07
It's all detailed in a very big report
18:09
by the U.S. trade representative on foreign
18:12
trade barriers.
18:13
And I'll just hold it up for you.
18:16
It's a big report available and you don't
18:18
have to pay too much.
18:19
As I understand it, you pay nothing.
18:21
Big report.
18:21
A lot of work.
18:22
A lot of work for something, actually, because
18:25
it's a special it's a special book.
18:27
It's very, frankly, it's very upsetting when you
18:31
read it, when you see what people have
18:32
been doing to us for 30 years.
18:34
So it's the best book ever.
18:36
It's the best, best book ever.
18:38
30 years.
18:39
Going 30.
18:40
Oh, yeah.
18:41
Best book.
18:42
It's a beautiful book.
18:42
I started reading the book.
18:44
I'm like, my eyes are glazing over from
18:46
this book.
18:48
And the way they calculate and I was
18:51
surprising was, you know, with a reciprocal.
18:54
And so the president put exactly 50 percent
18:57
tariffs of all the tariffs that are that
19:00
have been put on us.
19:01
So if you had 40 percent, then you
19:03
got 20 percent from us.
19:05
And the economists are flabbergasted at how they
19:08
did the calculation.
19:10
Some economists have figured out what I wanted,
19:14
which is you're on the Trump clips.
19:15
I had a couple of clips I wanted
19:17
to get in.
19:17
Oh, yeah.
19:18
OK, sure.
19:20
Because I thought that these were the more
19:22
important clips of that speech of his, which
19:25
were the ones that have actual numbers when
19:28
he started bitching about NAFTA.
19:30
And and I believe that the NAFTA thing,
19:33
he might be right about it was the
19:36
deciding factor.
19:38
That's it.
19:38
That's where it's 30 years comes from us,
19:40
from NAFTA.
19:41
Yeah, I think you're right, because it does
19:43
seem to match because that's Clinton came up
19:45
with NAFTA and it really did open the
19:49
drain.
19:50
That's for sure.
19:51
But since the very beginning of NAFTA, our
19:53
country lost 90,000 factories.
19:57
Think of what that is.
19:58
Ninety thousand.
19:59
Think about putting a map up and putting
20:01
tax on it.
20:02
You wouldn't have enough room.
20:03
Ninety thousand.
20:04
I said, is that possible?
20:05
We had it checked four different times and
20:08
it was actually somewhat higher than that.
20:10
And five million manufacturing jobs were lost while
20:13
racking up trade deficits of 19 trillion dollars.
20:18
That was the worst trade deal ever made.
20:21
As a result of these gigantic losses, foreign
20:24
nations now own twenty six trillion dollars more
20:27
of American assets than American.
20:30
Yep.
20:33
I thought those were good numbers.
20:35
Yeah.
20:35
And 90,000 is a lot.
20:38
That's a lot.
20:40
Thank you, Bill Clinton.
20:42
And the other thing was, is that I
20:43
remember because the first thing that came to
20:46
mind with the 90,000 factories gone, the
20:49
first thing that came to mind with me
20:51
was Maytag, the washing machine company.
20:56
Yeah, better.
20:56
Yeah.
20:57
May, the greatest washing machine you could buy
21:00
is still I mean, you still use ones
21:02
are better than the ones you can get
21:03
today.
21:04
And they took that closed down the entire
21:07
operation and moved the whole thing to Mexico.
21:12
And because of NAFTA, it is part two
21:14
of the NAFTA complaint, the United States can
21:17
no longer produce enough antibiotics to treat our
21:20
sick.
21:21
We have a tremendous problem.
21:23
We have to go to foreign countries to
21:25
treat our sick.
21:26
If anything ever happened from a war standpoint,
21:28
we wouldn't be able to do it.
21:29
We import virtually all of our computers, phones,
21:33
televisions and electronics.
21:35
We used to dominate the field.
21:37
And now we import it all from different
21:39
countries.
21:40
A single shipyard in China now produces more
21:43
ships every year than all of the American
21:46
shipyards combined.
21:47
Think of that.
21:48
And it was a business that we used
21:50
to dominate.
21:50
We used to dominate it totally.
21:52
In short, chronic trade deficits are no longer
21:55
merely an economic problem.
21:56
They're a national emergency that threatens our security
22:00
and our very way of life.
22:03
So I want to play this clip from
22:05
Deutsche Welle where they explain the calculation of
22:09
the numbers because they did not really look
22:12
at the tariffs.
22:13
They looked at completely different things.
22:15
Some economists have figured out the way that
22:17
these were calculated by the White House and
22:20
its team.
22:20
And these economists have been flabbergasted at how
22:23
cumbersome these equations are, basically saying that the
22:26
U.S. took the trade deficit that the
22:29
U.S. has with said country and divided
22:31
it by the imports from that country, which
22:33
is a very clunky way of doing things
22:35
and not as surgical as you would expect.
22:38
Some countries, though, however, of course, have tried
22:39
to stave off these tariffs.
22:42
The White House, though, says that it was
22:43
too little too late.
22:45
A senior White House official that we heard
22:47
from said, quote, this is not a negotiation.
22:49
It's a national emergency.
22:52
And they said that the biggest problem was
22:53
not necessarily tariff, the tariffs themselves, but actually
22:57
non-tariff barriers to things like quotas, import
23:00
licenses, embargoes and things like that.
23:03
So there are still some countries, however, trying
23:05
to work their way around these tariffs.
23:07
But right now they will be coming into
23:09
effect in the next couple of days, a
23:11
minimum of 10 percent.
23:12
But some nations paying drastically more than that.
23:15
So they were really looking at the at
23:17
the grand picture.
23:18
I think that's that's kind of smart.
23:21
It's like, look, I thought so, too, which
23:23
brings me to another clip.
23:25
If you don't mind.
23:26
Yeah, of course.
23:27
This is the just talking to the mic,
23:29
man.
23:29
You're not you're not hitting the mic.
23:31
I'm sorry.
23:31
Yeah.
23:32
So I was reaching for something.
23:34
Yeah.
23:35
Well, talking.
23:36
What were you reaching for?
23:39
The paper that has the list of clips.
23:42
The clip list.
23:43
Very important paper.
23:46
NPR, when they discussed this, that they were,
23:49
you know, and you saw this in most
23:50
media.
23:51
In fact, here we start with this tariff
23:53
slant NPR.
23:55
You can hear what they think behind it.
23:58
You know, it's like it is bad.
24:00
Oh, yeah.
24:00
President Donald Trump announced a sweeping plan to
24:03
apply a 10 percent tariff on all imports
24:06
coming into the U.S. And Franco Ordonia
24:09
supports a list of countries will also face
24:11
additional, quote, reciprocal tariffs.
24:13
Some countries will face reciprocal tariffs as high
24:16
as 49 percent.
24:17
And what some experts describe as the most
24:19
aggressive changes to U.S. trade policy in
24:22
decades.
24:23
President Trump announced a plan during a Rose
24:25
Garden ceremony at the White House.
24:27
This is one of the most important days,
24:29
in my opinion, in American history.
24:33
It's a declaration of economic independence.
24:37
U.S. officials say the 10 percent tariffs
24:39
will start April 5th.
24:40
About 60 countries will face additional customized reciprocal
24:44
tariffs starting on April 9th.
24:46
Trump boasted the plan would supercharge the industrial
24:49
base and boost government revenues.
24:51
But most economists warn that tariffs will raise
24:53
prices for consumers and could hurt the economy.
24:56
The exact extent to which the new Trump
24:58
administration tariffs will play out in the economy
25:00
is an unknown.
25:02
But if history is any guide, while the
25:03
tariffs could create jobs in some sectors, they
25:06
will also cause job losses in others.
25:09
Diane Swank is the chief economist at KPMG
25:12
U.S. She says the higher tariffs against
25:14
goods imported from other countries could essentially rewrite
25:17
the way global trade has been conducted, potentially
25:19
pushing up prices for U.S. consumers.
25:22
Tariffs are a regressive tax.
25:25
Not only do they tax those who can
25:26
afford it least, they also tend to trigger
25:29
reactions by our trading partners and can trigger
25:32
a trade war.
25:33
And they cause inflation and stem growth at
25:37
the same time.
25:38
New tariffs will not apply to some goods
25:40
like steel and aluminum, which are already subject
25:42
to tariffs.
25:43
I like this that continuously calling it a
25:46
tax tax.
25:48
It's a tax.
25:49
It's a tax on your own people.
25:50
And then Queen Ursula says, well, you know,
25:53
we're just going to have to raise our
25:55
tariffs.
25:55
Well, aren't you saying you're going to raise
25:56
taxes on your own people then?
25:59
It's a tariff.
26:00
It's a tariff.
26:01
It's never presented that way.
26:03
That's a very good observation.
26:04
Yeah, it's not.
26:05
It's never presented that.
26:06
It's only on our side.
26:07
Everything's bad about us.
26:09
And NPR, you know, they don't have a
26:11
balance.
26:11
They don't have one guy saying something else.
26:13
I mean, I got clips.
26:14
I got it.
26:15
Of course not.
26:16
Why would you do that?
26:17
So I was stunned.
26:19
Oh.
26:20
When Planet Money.
26:22
That's is that Kyle the spook?
26:25
I don't know who it is, but no,
26:27
this is no.
26:27
That was the the other.
26:29
Oh, no.
26:29
The other the other spook.
26:32
The other.
26:32
I don't know.
26:33
Planet Money.
26:34
Yeah.
26:34
Planet Money is similar.
26:36
And Planet Money, which is on NPR, they
26:38
played this.
26:39
These two.
26:39
I got two clips here.
26:41
And they kind of went to the and
26:43
I didn't get the memo, I guess.
26:45
And they kind of took it the other
26:47
way.
26:47
But for a long time, the dominant voices
26:50
in the profession made the case that those
26:52
tradeoffs were really worth it.
26:54
Top lawmakers in both parties in the US
26:56
really bought into this idea that, you know,
26:59
free trade would be great for America.
27:01
And they really pushed it for the rest
27:03
of the world.
27:04
And through the decades of that argument, there's
27:07
been an economist who argued that the dominant
27:09
voices in economics were wrong, that free trade
27:13
actually sometimes held countries back and protectionism could
27:17
help make them richer.
27:19
Hi, I'm Hajun Chang.
27:20
I'm professor of economics at the University of
27:23
London.
27:24
Hajun Chang wrote a book called Kicking Away
27:27
the Ladder in 2002 about how rich countries
27:29
used protectionist policies like tariffs back when they
27:32
were developing and then told everyone else they
27:35
couldn't do that.
27:36
They had to do free trade.
27:38
And being a pro-tariff economist back in
27:41
the early 2000s, it was kind of lonely.
27:43
But he's got kind of the perfect example
27:46
of why tariffs can work.
27:48
My favorite example is Hyundai, the automobile company.
27:53
When Hajun was a little kid growing up
27:54
in South Korea, Hyundai was not yet an
27:57
automobile company.
27:58
Hyundai originally was a construction company, but sometime
28:03
in the late 60s, this company decided that
28:07
they want to build an automobile manufacturing business.
28:10
So first, Hyundai had to figure out how
28:13
to make a car.
28:15
Hajun says it started by placing an order
28:17
with Ford for something called a knockdown kit,
28:21
which is just a big wooden box full
28:23
of all the parts you could ever need
28:25
to build one car.
28:27
The box arrives, you open it up, and
28:29
it's just full of car parts, large and
28:31
small, a door, a bolt, two headlights.
28:35
Isn't that how they put the Cybertruck together?
28:39
The knockdown kit, the knockdown kit.
28:42
Could be.
28:42
Just throw a couple of panels on it.
28:44
That's what they ended up with.
28:45
They had the wrong.
28:46
Yeah.
28:47
Have you ever seen a knockdown kit?
28:49
No, I never have.
28:50
I've heard of them.
28:51
Huh.
28:52
Interesting.
28:54
So, so that goes from there, and then
28:57
the kicker here is exactly what you mentioned
29:00
a minute ago, which is that instead of
29:04
using the tariff number, you, you, you use
29:08
the actual, what they actually did.
29:10
Well, the trade balance in general.
29:12
They took the trade balance.
29:14
Yeah.
29:14
But listen to this piece of of information
29:17
that how Hyundai got into business in the
29:20
first place.
29:20
And now they make a really terrific car.
29:22
But listen to what did you think they
29:25
had to do to get to the point
29:26
where they are now?
29:28
Listen.
29:28
They assembled around 3,000 of those cars
29:32
in the late 60s.
29:35
And then in the mid 70s, South Korean
29:37
government said, we are going to cancel the
29:40
license for auto manufacturers unless they come up
29:43
with their own design.
29:45
Yeah.
29:45
The government was like, actually, we want our
29:47
car industry to be real companies, global players.
29:51
Assembling a Ford car is not our end
29:54
goal here.
29:55
Can you level up a little bit?
29:57
So Hyundai had to come out with their
29:58
own design.
29:59
In 1976, it made the Hyundai Pony.
30:03
It was the first Korean passenger car.
30:05
They made around 10,000 of them in
30:07
a year.
30:08
In the same year, Ford produced 1.9
30:11
million cars.
30:12
General Motors produced 4.8 million cars.
30:15
So they had a ways to go and
30:18
they got a lot of help.
30:20
Initially, this company had to be hugely subsidized
30:24
both by the government and by its own
30:27
existing business, especially construction.
30:31
There was no way this company was going
30:33
to be able to make money without that.
30:36
So, yeah, Hyundai was losing money on this
30:38
new venture.
30:39
And he's saying the government decided to pitch
30:42
in, give it some subsidies and the other
30:44
parts of Hyundai that were profitable sent over
30:46
their money.
30:47
But even that wasn't enough.
30:49
Even then, it had to be protected from
30:52
foreign competition because who's going to buy this
30:56
two bit car when you could import a
30:58
Cadillac or, you know, Mustang?
31:01
Yeah, no way.
31:02
So import of foreign cars were completely banned.
31:05
Yeah, a total import ban, like a tariff
31:08
to infinity.
31:09
The tariff of all tariffs.
31:10
Oh, man.
31:12
That's how you do it.
31:14
Yeah.
31:15
Complete ban.
31:16
I mean, I guess we subsidize our our
31:19
aircraft manufacturing industry with war in a way,
31:24
or maybe that doesn't even count anymore.
31:26
What so and I actually I watch a
31:29
lot of Bloomberg television, which is so much
31:32
superior to CNBC.
31:33
CNBC is just pretty people hair on fire.
31:37
Bloomberg is actually ugly people on Bloomberg.
31:40
And, you know, and they have just the
31:42
video is not the most important thing.
31:45
It's all the stats and the charts around
31:47
it.
31:47
And and they had Tom Ford on.
31:51
He's what is he, the the the governor
31:54
of again, of Ottawa, of Ottawa or no,
31:57
of Ontario, Ontario.
31:59
I think so.
32:00
And so, you know, there's a there's this
32:02
massive carve out for Mexico and for Canada
32:06
based on the USMCA, which is the renegotiated
32:10
version of NAFTA that the president did when
32:12
he was 45.
32:15
And man, it's like this.
32:17
Remember, Tom Ford, I'm going to turn off
32:18
the power.
32:19
We're going to fight you.
32:20
We don't care about you.
32:23
Look at me.
32:24
I smoke crack like my brother.
32:27
And this is a whole new guy.
32:30
Canada got a break and they know it.
32:32
It's great to have you with us, Mr.
32:33
Ford.
32:34
You've called this termination day instead of liberation.
32:37
What will be the response now from Canada?
32:41
Well, let's see where these tariffs go.
32:44
I'm cautiously optimistic that I never saw Canada
32:47
or Mexico on that list.
32:50
And it just goes to show you two
32:52
great countries working together, collaborating together and building
32:57
relationships.
32:58
So, again, I'm cautiously optimistic.
33:02
I think it's if that's the case, it's
33:05
the right thing for both the U.S.
33:08
and Canada.
33:09
Well, and considering Canada was not on that
33:12
list, we understand the existing regime is in
33:14
place of the tariffs that are in place
33:17
with the exemption of goods that are USMCA
33:19
compliant.
33:20
Does that mean, sir, at least in your
33:21
mind, that it wouldn't be appropriate for Canada
33:23
to retaliate for this at this time?
33:26
That is that is correct.
33:29
If that's the case, then I would highly
33:33
recommend to the prime minister not to retaliate.
33:36
And let's carry on a strong relationship.
33:39
Let's build the Amcan fortress, American-Canadian fortress
33:44
around both countries and be the wealthiest, most
33:46
prosperous, safest two countries in the world.
33:49
So he went.
33:50
Wait a minute.
33:52
He went from, you know, shutting off electricity.
33:56
This is no good.
33:58
Trump is declaring war to let's build a
34:00
fence around Amcan.
34:02
Amcan.
34:03
I never heard of that one.
34:04
Amcan.
34:05
He's folding here.
34:06
You suggested that Canada would bring down its
34:08
tariffs if the United States did the same.
34:12
Does this turn into a game of chicken?
34:14
Do you believe that the White House would
34:16
respond accordingly?
34:18
Well, I hope so.
34:20
You know, it's it's we're neighbors for the
34:23
last 200 years.
34:24
And when we show good faith or the
34:27
U.S. shows good faith, you have to
34:29
follow.
34:30
This is a partnership that's going to go
34:31
on for hopefully several hundred more years and
34:34
decades to come.
34:36
And and we have bigger concerns.
34:38
Oh, we got him.
34:39
Oh, wait, just wait for it.
34:40
Both Canada and the U.S. than each
34:43
other.
34:43
We have to keep an eye on other
34:45
countries like like China.
34:47
Who makes the first move in a game
34:49
like that?
34:51
Well, we'll work collaboratively with the administration and
34:54
with our prime minister, and he'll be speaking
34:57
to President Trump, I'm sure, over the next
35:00
day or so.
35:00
And we'll be working with Secretary Lutnick and
35:04
to get a clear picture of what this
35:06
means for Canada.
35:07
Now, the main thing here, which is really
35:08
the biggest industry that we've been talking about
35:11
and most of this deals with, you played
35:13
here and died there a minute ago, is
35:15
the auto industry.
35:16
What about what it means for the auto
35:17
sector in particular?
35:19
Because, of course, I mean, auto sector, we
35:20
learned last week that the president would announce
35:23
what he made final today, which is that
35:24
25 percent tariffs on auto imports will be
35:27
going into place.
35:28
Obviously, parts are going to be included in
35:30
that eventually, sir.
35:33
So what impact do you expect that alone
35:35
will have, even if tariffs on a reciprocal
35:37
tariffs were not applied to Canada today?
35:40
Well, I just hope there's no tariffs on
35:43
on auto because parts go back and forth
35:45
across the border seven, eight times before they
35:47
get assembled, either in Ontario or one of
35:50
the states, be it Michigan or other U
35:52
.S. states.
35:53
It's a system that works and has worked
35:55
since 1965.
35:57
I've always said you can't unscramble an egg
35:59
that's been around since 1965.
36:02
You have to make the omelette larger and
36:04
we're just so much stronger together.
36:06
We we buy as many vehicles as we
36:08
sell down there and the ones that we
36:11
ship to the U.S. 50 percent of
36:13
that automobile is U.S. parts.
36:16
So I think the system is working, is
36:18
working well for both countries.
36:20
And it's it's a great system, especially Canada's
36:24
buying 400 percent more vehicles off the U
36:28
.S. than Mexico does, 200 percent more than
36:30
any other country in the world.
36:32
We have an incredible relationship with the two
36:35
great countries.
36:37
Right.
36:38
So integrated on many different sectors.
36:40
But even the people are integrated, you know,
36:43
millions and millions of Canadians and Americans travel
36:45
back and forth across the border.
36:47
They have family members on both sides of
36:49
the border.
36:50
And we just appreciate and Canadians love Americans,
36:55
Americans.
36:55
I love the U.S. 20 years of
36:57
my life there.
36:58
And we have a tremendous amount of respect
37:01
and friendships with our American counterparts.
37:05
So I heard all that.
37:06
And then this is the last short clip.
37:08
Definitely, definitely, definitely someone showed a picture and
37:11
said, hey, Ford, what's that in your mouth?
37:16
Well, so how I guess in the end,
37:17
do you feel, Mr. Ford, about what we
37:19
heard today from the White House?
37:20
You could frame this as could have been
37:22
worse.
37:23
You could also feel betrayed by some of
37:25
the comments that President Trump delivered.
37:28
How would you describe?
37:29
Well, I never.
37:30
Yeah, I never take anything personal from President
37:34
Trump or or any anyone else.
37:36
I understand he's a businessman and that's the
37:41
way he conducts his business.
37:42
And fair enough.
37:44
He has a job to do.
37:45
We have a job to do.
37:46
And I think any negotiation, we meet in
37:49
the middle and make sure that we grow
37:52
to great countries and make them the strongest
37:55
in the world that no one can touch
37:57
us.
37:57
We'll ship down all the critical minerals.
37:59
We'll ship down all the oil that you
38:03
need and electricity, anything that you need.
38:06
We have more natural resources than anyone in
38:09
the entire world.
38:11
And again, there's no one I'd want to
38:14
ship it down to more than our great
38:16
friends and allies.
38:17
Wow.
38:19
Yeah, that was amazing.
38:21
That was amazing.
38:23
So, OK, so that worked.
38:25
Let's listen to the rest of the world.
38:27
Europe woke up to chaos this morning as
38:29
Trump announced sweeping tariffs on his largest trading
38:32
partners.
38:33
Good morning.
38:34
For Ursula von der Leyen, it is a
38:35
major blow to the world economy.
38:37
The global economy will massively suffer.
38:40
Uncertainty will spiral and trigger the rise of
38:43
further protectionism.
38:45
The costs of doing business with the United
38:47
States will drastically increase.
38:50
And what is more, there seems to be
38:52
no order in the disorder.
38:55
Among Trump's announcements, a 20 percent tariff on
38:58
all goods imported from the European Union.
39:01
I strongly believe that tariffs benefit no one.
39:04
They're bad for the world economy.
39:06
They hurt people.
39:07
They hurt businesses.
39:09
The shockwaves of Trump's aggressivity rippled through global
39:12
Aggressivity is aggressivity.
39:13
This is a new term.
39:16
Aggressively, I think, is what she tried to
39:18
say.
39:18
Oh, look, bad for the world economy.
39:20
They hurt people.
39:21
They hurt businesses.
39:23
The shockwaves of Trump's aggressivity rippled.
39:25
No, she says aggressivity.
39:27
Yeah, but I think she meant aggressive.
39:31
Aggressivity, I guess.
39:33
Aggressiveness is the word I think she really
39:35
meant to say.
39:36
Do they have no line producers there?
39:39
Aggressivity.
39:39
Aggressivity.
39:40
Businesses.
39:41
The shockwaves of Trump's aggressivity rippled through global
39:44
economies.
39:45
China's finance ministry spokesperson spoke of his outrage,
39:48
saying it was not in line with trade
39:50
rules and called it unilateral bullying.
39:52
Whilst Mexico and Canada might have been exempt
39:55
from this round of Trump's trade war, the
39:57
countries are still reeling from the steel and
39:59
aluminum tariffs imposed in March.
40:01
Another 25 percent tariffs on cars kicked in
40:04
on Thursday.
40:05
The series of measures will directly affect millions
40:08
of Canadians.
40:09
We are going to fight these tariffs with
40:10
countermeasures.
40:11
We are going to protect our workers and
40:14
we are going to build the strongest economy.
40:17
As the world prepares their response, many are
40:20
bracing for the devastating impact that this trade
40:23
war will have on consumers worldwide.
40:25
It's a war.
40:26
It's a World War three and a very
40:27
different noise there from Mark Carney versus Tom
40:31
Ford.
40:31
I found that to be rather surprising.
40:33
There's no unity there, but we need to
40:36
check a few more people, including our many
40:38
photos from Epstein Island, including our buddy from
40:43
Australia.
40:44
It's a watershed moment for global trade.
40:47
US President Donald Trump announced universal 10 percent
40:50
tariffs on all imports into the US.
40:53
For some countries, this could be as high
40:55
as 50 percent.
40:56
As the world begins to wake up to
40:58
the news of these staggering tariffs, Australian Prime
41:01
Minister Antony Albanese said it was totally unwarranted.
41:04
The administration's tariffs have no basis in logic
41:07
and they go against the basis of our
41:09
two nations partnership.
41:11
This is not the act of a friend.
41:14
Today's decision will lead to uncertainty in the
41:17
global economy.
41:17
Come on, man.
41:18
I spent time on that.
41:21
Good work.
41:22
I'm glad you I'm glad you preannounced it.
41:24
About two nations partnership.
41:26
This is not the act of a friend.
41:29
Today's decision will add to uncertainty in the
41:32
global economy.
41:33
On the other side of the Atlantic, the
41:34
EU is one of the US's closest allies
41:37
and partners.
41:37
The bloc was hit with a 20 percent
41:39
tariff on all imports.
41:41
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Maloney was the first
41:43
EU leader to respond to the news.
41:45
In a statement on Facebook, she said the
41:47
introduction of tariffs towards the European Union by
41:50
the USA is a measure that I consider
41:52
wrong and that does not suit any party.
41:55
We will do everything we can to work
41:56
a deal with the United States aiming to
41:58
prevent a trade war that would inevitably weaken
42:01
the West in favor of other global actors.
42:03
For many economists and political pundits, these sweeping
42:06
tariffs will have a negative impact.
42:08
The stock market was already rattled after Trump's
42:10
announcement.
42:11
Others say they threaten to push much of
42:13
the world into an economic recession.
42:15
If the EU and other countries retaliate, the
42:18
loss to the global economy will be one
42:20
point four trillion.
42:22
That is trillion with a T.
42:23
This, by the way, some professor who looks
42:25
like Jeff Jarvis dollars.
42:27
This is one of the most, in addition
42:29
to being economically illiterate speeches, it is accompanied
42:32
by the most economically damaging actions that have
42:35
been taken since the last round of high
42:37
tariffs, which was in the 1930s, which helped
42:40
lead to the Great Depression.
42:41
But Trump called it Liberation Day, promising these
42:44
measures will pay off for the US.
42:48
You know, yeah, I have to play this
42:50
guy.
42:50
This is another economist.
42:52
This guy was in the.
42:55
Mainly because they keep bringing up smooth hauling,
42:57
and I think Horowitz brought it up to
42:58
me, too, but I just want to smooth
43:00
hauling who smooth hauling was that was the
43:03
extra tariffs they added right after the stock
43:07
market collapsed.
43:09
In 2020.
43:12
In 1929.
43:14
Oh, OK.
43:15
Yes.
43:15
OK, that's it.
43:16
So they were tariffing at the time and
43:19
then the stock market collapsed in around 1930,
43:23
31 period.
43:24
They introduced a smooth hauling, which added more
43:27
tariffs on top of the tariffs you already
43:29
had.
43:29
Right.
43:30
And it collapsed.
43:31
They think it may have contributed to the
43:33
continued collapse of the economy in the 30s.
43:36
Well, the way the way the way the
43:37
way I keep hearing it is when we
43:39
put tariffs on in 1929, it caused the
43:42
Great Depression.
43:42
That's what I keep hearing.
43:44
Yeah, it's that and that this clip clarifies
43:47
that.
43:47
No, that the smooth hauling came in after
43:49
the crash.
43:51
OK, but they still can say because it
43:54
was before 1933, which was the bottom of
43:56
the crash, they can still say cause the,
43:58
you know, all right.
43:59
But the funny thing was the one little
44:01
element that I didn't realize until I heard
44:03
this guy talk.
44:04
This is a guy named Joe LaVagna.
44:08
It's under the Joe's the clip we're talking
44:10
about.
44:11
Yeah, this guy was a council of economic
44:14
advisors.
44:14
Guy, very smart guy.
44:16
Typical of the other side of the argument
44:18
guy that nobody else seems to be wanting
44:20
to put on.
44:21
So Charles Payne did on his show on
44:23
Fox Business.
44:25
Now, the thing that he noted, and it
44:29
was kind of stepped on by pain in
44:31
this because he likes to chat, but is
44:35
that smooth hauling when it was additional tariffs
44:38
caused deflation, not inflation.
44:42
How interesting.
44:43
And during the Great Depression, it was a
44:45
deflationary period.
44:47
It didn't cause inflation.
44:48
It caused just the opposite.
44:50
So the argument about about this causing inflation
44:53
is nonsense.
44:54
And this guy makes the point of the
44:56
reason why.
44:57
And if and I will just summarize in
44:59
advance, people are always all they're all big
45:02
shots about, you know, Mises.
45:05
And they're all, well, you know, there's all
45:07
these all these theories about supply side economics
45:10
and Milton Friedman and all the rest of
45:12
it.
45:13
And Friedman himself has talked about this to
45:16
an extreme.
45:17
Inflation's always caused by the money supply, period.
45:21
Thank you.
45:23
We're how much of this do you think
45:25
will be absorbed in margins of corporations, adorbs
45:28
on a retail and wholesale level, as opposed
45:30
to just directly passed on to the consumer?
45:33
A lot will be absorbed in the margin,
45:35
which is probably for some companies bad for
45:37
their stock back in.
45:38
It's a smaller subset, of course, back in
45:40
18, 19.
45:41
But most of it was absorbed in the
45:44
margin.
45:44
None of it was paid by the U
45:46
.S. buyer, although that could change in the
45:48
next go around.
45:49
But, you know, Charles, I'm looking at this
45:51
chart.
45:52
The one I'd add another row because I
45:53
see CPI increases and this concept that these
45:57
tariffs are inflationary.
45:58
That's a misnomer.
46:00
Inflation is always and everywhere a monetary phenomenon
46:03
or monetary and credit phenomenon.
46:05
It's a price level adjustment.
46:07
Ultimately, that'll be offset elsewhere if the Fed
46:09
doesn't increase the money supply.
46:11
And this notion somehow that we're going to
46:13
have high inflation because of tariffs just is
46:15
not accurate.
46:17
I mean, and to your point, I mean,
46:18
even Smoot-Hawley, the 1930s, we had the
46:21
greatest deflationary period in history, not inflationary, deflationary
46:25
in history.
46:26
I was arguing with someone on another show
46:28
recently about that.
46:30
And if you look back in the 20s,
46:32
the U.S. was like China is today.
46:34
We were a massive exporter of goods and
46:37
we had big trade surpluses.
46:39
So when the Fed let a lot of
46:40
banks fail and the money supply collapsed back
46:43
in the late 20s, we were a big
46:46
exporter of goods.
46:47
So when Smoot-Hawley went in, we actually
46:48
hurt ourselves.
46:49
It's the exact opposite today.
46:51
Yeah, the exact opposite.
46:53
Well, I mean, what you're seeing is the
46:56
refi mission is on track.
46:58
The 10 year is almost at four percent.
47:01
The dollar has weakened, which is what you
47:03
want for exports.
47:06
And I see here on CNBC, President Trump
47:08
says tariff rollout going very well.
47:10
This is going very well.
47:13
Markets will boom.
47:14
There was another little tidbit in there that
47:17
I thought was interesting, which I think accounts
47:19
for the market, the stock market collapsing.
47:22
Well, because the money is leaving America.
47:24
This is why people like Horowitz are pissed.
47:27
No, no, no.
47:29
The reason it was collapsing, if you listen
47:31
to that in that within that clip, he
47:33
said that most of the with tariffs, most
47:36
of it is taken up by most of
47:39
it's made up for by the companies themselves
47:41
and they're shrinking margins.
47:43
Yeah.
47:44
Oh, which hurts their stock.
47:46
In other words.
47:46
Yes.
47:48
So you're you're making you like Apple, for
47:51
example, has tremendous margins.
47:53
And so they could actually keep the prices
47:56
the same, but they'd have to cut their
47:58
margin to an extreme, which would hurt the
48:00
stock price.
48:01
Your PD ratio goes down.
48:02
So the market right now is not collapsing
48:04
because money's leaving the country, but it's because
48:07
they're they're adjusting for the future because the
48:10
markets are saying, well, this is not going
48:11
to be good for the.
48:12
So we have to, you know, our our
48:14
stocks are going to be worth that much
48:16
more because good point makers, but the profits
48:18
are going to be what it was.
48:20
So so what the naysayers would say is
48:23
and I'm obviously not the expert here.
48:26
You are much more versed in this.
48:27
The naysayers will say, well, they're all just
48:29
going to jack the prices up, which is
48:33
what they keep saying, but it doesn't seem
48:35
likely.
48:35
It's like certainly companies like Apple can take
48:38
a little bit of a hit.
48:40
They can take a huge hit.
48:41
And the the prices don't need to get
48:44
jacked up and people will stop buying.
48:46
And if you don't buy, you know, you're
48:49
not going to sell anything, obviously.
48:50
Well, it's too high.
48:51
I'm not going to pay for that.
48:53
Also, I'll wait.
48:56
I mean, just because something's on the market
48:58
and it doesn't mean you have to buy
49:01
it if it goes up in price.
49:02
Right.
49:03
Right.
49:06
So I have a couple of clips here
49:08
from Scott Besant.
49:10
Again, from Bloomberg, and everybody was doing the
49:13
rounds.
49:14
Everybody was doing the rounds.
49:16
So I'll skip the intro and go straight
49:19
to the negotiations question.
49:21
We're going to have the baseline tariffs come
49:22
into effect first.
49:23
First, then the reciprocal tariffs, a little bit
49:26
more of a different rate for each individual
49:28
trading partner.
49:29
Are you preparing to negotiate with some of
49:31
these trading partners before that tariff rate comes
49:34
into effect on April 9th?
49:35
Well, I think there have been a lot
49:36
of discussions, but I think we're just going
49:38
to have to wait and see what would
49:39
happen.
49:40
What I would say, Anne-Marie, is I
49:42
would advise none of the countries to panic.
49:45
I wouldn't try to retaliate because as long
49:49
as you don't retaliate, this is the high
49:52
end of the number.
49:53
And I think the market could have certainty
49:56
that this is the number barring retaliation.
49:59
And so we've got a ceiling and then
50:02
we can see if there's a different floor.
50:04
I also think doing this half the rate
50:07
is really genius because it's much easier to
50:11
ratchet it up to parody.
50:13
You know, and Trump made this whole this
50:15
thing about we're nice people.
50:17
We're nice people.
50:18
So we're not going to hit you that
50:19
hard.
50:19
We're only going to hit you with half.
50:22
I mean, this is, as Besant will tell
50:23
you here, this is the art of the
50:25
deal.
50:26
So you sound like you're ready for negotiation
50:28
with a number of these partners.
50:29
Has the European Union, has China, has India,
50:32
have these countries reached out?
50:34
Well, they've all reached out, but it's going
50:36
to be up to President Trump to see
50:38
what he wants to do.
50:39
I think the mindset might be to let
50:42
things settle for a while.
50:45
Their tariffs or non-tariff barriers have been
50:47
on a long time, so we'll see where
50:49
it goes from here.
50:50
When it comes to China, they have a
50:52
much higher rate on this list.
50:54
On top of that, there's still that 20
50:56
percent fentanyl tariff rate.
50:57
Is all of this coming together to be
50:59
more than a 50 percent tariff rate for
51:01
Beijing?
51:02
Well, yes, I think it is.
51:04
And I think it's a combination of things.
51:07
And, you know, again, that I think China
51:09
said today that solving the fentanyl crisis depends
51:13
on taking off the fentanyl tariffs.
51:15
And I'm pretty sure that's not the way
51:18
the sequencing is going to work.
51:19
They're exporting the precursor chemicals.
51:22
And every every day, every week, every month,
51:25
Americans are dying.
51:26
And it's going to have to stop.
51:28
So then he throws in, because, of course,
51:30
the market is something Bloomberg wants to talk
51:32
about, he throws in a nice little term
51:34
here that made me smile.
51:36
OK, but since the peaks in February, stocks
51:40
are down eight percent.
51:42
I think the Nasdaq from its high most
51:43
recently is down 12 percent.
51:45
So far, though, these kind of this kind
51:48
of market downdraft so far this year is
51:52
not concerning you.
51:53
Well, look, in my old business, I was
51:55
very concerned about market movements.
51:57
And I'm trying to be a secretary of
51:59
Treasury, not a market commentator.
52:01
What I would point out is that especially
52:03
the Nasdaq, Nasdaq peaked on deep seek day
52:07
that so that's a mag seven problem, not
52:10
a MAGA problem.
52:11
No, yeah.
52:13
Peaked on deep seek mag seven problem, not
52:17
a MAGA problem.
52:18
Oh, yes.
52:19
Bye bye.
52:19
Now, the other side of this is critical
52:24
for it all to work.
52:25
And the president made that clear in his
52:27
rose garden.
52:28
Hold up the sign speech.
52:29
The tax cuts are necessary to keep real
52:33
wages up.
52:35
And that's the big one here.
52:38
OK, so let's talk about what else you've
52:40
been spending a lot of your time doing.
52:42
You have been up on Capitol Hill constantly.
52:45
You are really working on trying to make
52:47
sure that this administration can extend the Tax
52:50
Cuts and Jobs Act.
52:51
On top of that, more tax cuts.
52:54
Right now, how are the conversations going in
52:56
Congress?
52:56
Well, I actually think the most underreported story
53:00
in Washington, not by Bloomberg, of course, is
53:03
the incredible unanimity, unity amongst.
53:07
He's having problems talking today.
53:09
He's got bird feathers in his throat, I
53:11
think.
53:12
Well, what's he giving the business to Bloomberg
53:14
for?
53:16
Says everyone's talking about this, not Bloomberg.
53:19
Yeah, well, I think he's just being show
53:21
busy.
53:22
You know, it's what you do.
53:23
It's like, oh, you know, Joe, only people
53:25
on your show talk the truth.
53:29
Unanimity, unity amongst Republicans.
53:32
And I think it's President Trump's leadership.
53:35
But Mike Johnson, with a very narrow margin,
53:38
issued the reconciliation instructions.
53:42
And then he also passed a clean, continuing
53:47
resolution on the Senate side.
53:50
They are very attentive.
53:52
And I think they may have something done
53:54
by this Saturday.
53:55
Oh, do you imagine that?
53:59
By this Saturday?
54:00
No way.
54:02
Well, that's what he said.
54:03
That's what he said.
54:04
Final clip here is about the consumers.
54:08
Well, all this is happening.
54:10
Consumer sentiment has definitely taken a bit of
54:12
a dive.
54:13
Expectations for inflation have gone up.
54:15
Banks like Goldman are cutting their GDP forecast,
54:18
saying potentially the Fed is going to have
54:20
to cut rates, not the good kind of
54:22
cuts, the kind of cuts because they're nervous
54:23
about growth.
54:25
How concerned are you that the timing of
54:28
all this is going to be incredibly challenging?
54:31
I was waiting for you.
54:32
Where were you?
54:32
She said not the good kind of cuts.
54:35
No.
54:35
What is she talking about?
54:38
She's trying to slip in, I think, tax
54:41
cuts for the rich, which is the narrative
54:43
that has just been drummed into everybody's head.
54:47
But no, it's not.
54:49
In fact, the rich are disadvantaged by this
54:51
whole deal.
54:52
If you've got a lot of stocks and
54:54
bonds, it's at a disadvantage to the rich.
54:58
Not only that, but if you remember the
55:00
first go around back in Trump's first term,
55:02
we had our our our gay accountant guy.
55:06
Yeah.
55:07
Who is the anonymous handles the big, big
55:09
money.
55:10
Yeah.
55:10
The anonymous guy.
55:11
Yeah.
55:12
Anonymous way beneath his his way beneath us.
55:15
But he deigns to give us information every
55:20
so often was telling us how that that
55:24
all his rich clients, which is he's loaded
55:27
with them, were bitching and moaning about where's
55:29
my tax cut for the rich?
55:31
Because it was it did not exist.
55:34
In fact, they were getting screwed because they
55:35
weren't letting him take off enough interest from
55:39
their taxes.
55:40
They've changed that rule.
55:41
And that was didn't that went kind of
55:43
undiscussed by the mainstream media.
55:45
So this bull crap, this and the fact
55:48
that they keep harping, the Democrats keep harping
55:50
on this tax cuts for the rich nonsense.
55:53
It's an embarrassment.
55:55
It really is, because it's just I mean,
55:57
it still works within the media circles because
56:00
you hear her kind of falling for it.
56:02
But the tax cuts will be no tax
56:05
on Social Security.
56:06
So Social Security checks will it should in
56:09
actuality go up.
56:11
No tax.
56:12
No, the Social Security checks will not go
56:14
up.
56:15
If if but they're taxed, aren't they?
56:18
No, they're not taxed.
56:19
You do have to put them up.
56:21
You get your Social Security at the end
56:23
of the year.
56:24
You get a ten ninety nine.
56:25
You better put it on your taxes.
56:27
I'm sorry.
56:27
Yes.
56:28
OK, so the checks won't go up, but
56:30
effectively the money goes up.
56:32
No taxes on tips.
56:36
Interest deduction on your car loan, if it's
56:39
an American made car.
56:41
And and salt becomes deductible again or unlimited.
56:47
Dude.
56:49
That that would make a difference and that
56:51
would make a difference to to billionaires, too,
56:54
obviously.
56:55
And let's finish this off.
56:56
The cut rates, not the good kind of
56:58
cuts, the kind of cuts because they're nervous
57:00
about growth.
57:02
How concerned are you that the timing of
57:05
all this is going to be incredibly challenging
57:07
because of how the American consumer, how corporate
57:11
America is feeling at this moment?
57:13
Well, it tells me a couple of things.
57:14
One, we got to get the tax bill
57:16
done quickly.
57:17
So because that's a confidence builder.
57:19
And two, we're seeing sentiment surveys from the
57:23
American people, but we haven't actually seen them
57:25
take action.
57:27
If the households actually thought that they were
57:29
going to be employed, if their real inflation
57:32
expectations had increased, what would they be doing?
57:35
They'd be hoarding goods and they would be
57:38
demanding wage increases.
57:39
And neither one of those has happened yet.
57:41
So at the moment, you're not concerned about
57:43
some of the soft data we're seeing?
57:45
No, I see nothing.
57:47
And one of the great things, many great
57:50
things about being a treasury is we have
57:52
lots of business people come through.
57:54
And everything we're seeing in the economy is
57:57
still very solid.
57:59
And executives haven't voiced any of these concerns
58:01
on to you.
58:02
No, there's there's some idiosyncratic things.
58:06
But in terms of the expectations actually turning
58:10
into hard data, none of them have seen
58:12
it yet.
58:13
So nobody really knows anything.
58:16
Everyone's just saying, oh, if all these things
58:18
come together, it'll work.
58:20
I have a sneaky suspicion it's really going
58:22
to work.
58:24
And it may start working sooner than people
58:28
think.
58:31
But I don't think anybody really knows.
58:33
It's certainly unprecedented.
58:35
He certainly is shaking things up.
58:37
Well, this seems overdue.
58:40
Yes, because we actually don't make anything except
58:44
jets and bombs.
58:45
Well, and what I love is guys like
58:47
our buddy there in North Carolina after the
58:50
after the storm, you know, he started Pearl
58:53
Boot Company.
58:55
Nice looking boots.
58:56
Good price.
58:57
American made American leather.
58:59
You know, I think he's trying to resurrect
59:01
the shoe company.
59:03
You know, Vietnam, huh?
59:05
Say goodbye to your cheap Timu crap.
59:08
That's over.
59:10
And that's OK.
59:12
I'm OK if we if we can't buy
59:14
cheap crap anymore, it's crap.
59:16
There's a lot of high quality products coming
59:19
out of Asia.
59:19
That's the real problem.
59:21
You can call it crap.
59:21
Like what?
59:22
Like what do you buy?
59:23
Nikon cameras are made in China.
59:25
This is one of the finest cameras you
59:26
can buy.
59:27
Do you really need it?
59:30
Well, I already have one.
59:31
Exactly.
59:31
So next.
59:33
But but it's not cheap crap.
59:35
OK, but there's a lot of I agree.
59:38
There's a lot of cheap crap that comes
59:39
out.
59:39
It looks like it should be fine.
59:41
And then, you know, a couple of years
59:42
later, it breaks.
59:43
How about unnecessary crap?
59:45
We don't need all the crap, whether it's
59:48
cheap or not.
59:49
No, the reason we have all this crap
59:50
is because it's cheap.
59:51
Exactly.
59:52
The Chinese have done that.
59:54
They have this part of their philosophy and
59:57
which has always been kind of interesting to
59:59
me, is that they just go into a
1:00:01
market and make it a product cheap to
1:00:04
the point where nobody can compete because they
1:00:06
got subsidies and they got all kinds of
1:00:07
they get cheating ways.
1:00:09
They steal intellectual property, which is Trump complained
1:00:11
about.
1:00:12
And they make a cheap product.
1:00:13
And then they then they take over the
1:00:15
market completely.
1:00:16
Nobody wants to even bother competing with them.
1:00:18
And they never go into monopoly.
1:00:22
They never go into the monopolistic mentality.
1:00:25
They just keep it cheap.
1:00:27
Yeah.
1:00:28
It's like total alien to all Western civilization.
1:00:32
That's not what you do.
1:00:33
What you're supposed to do is you wipe
1:00:36
out a market, take it.
1:00:38
You now you own the market and now
1:00:39
you gouge the customer.
1:00:41
That's what we do.
1:00:42
That's the that's America.
1:00:44
Phone number one, Western, Western philosophies is British
1:00:48
is actually where it really comes from.
1:00:51
And and that's what you do, because that's
1:00:53
why that's why you go through the trouble
1:00:54
of taking the market over.
1:00:56
You go through a lot of effort to
1:00:57
get the market to yourself.
1:00:59
And then once you get it to yourself,
1:01:01
you gouge.
1:01:02
The Chinese never go to the gouging phase.
1:01:06
I'll tell you, you know, I'm not in
1:01:08
the market for a car.
1:01:09
I think I probably bought my last car.
1:01:10
You know, it can last another 20 years
1:01:12
easy.
1:01:12
No, then I'll just need a golf cart.
1:01:15
Well, one of those one of those Wal
1:01:17
-Mart things.
1:01:19
But if I were in the market for
1:01:21
a new car, I'd be looking at an
1:01:22
American car.
1:01:24
Why not?
1:01:24
And this is in the past, presidents, you
1:01:28
know, Bush one and two and Clinton.
1:01:31
I was like, buy America.
1:01:33
We're going to buy America to buy America,
1:01:34
act by and Obama, buy America.
1:01:36
They they were there's right with this good
1:01:39
union jobs.
1:01:39
He didn't do anything for the unions.
1:01:41
They're all on Trump's side now.
1:01:43
Of course they are.
1:01:44
But, you know, so what Trump did is
1:01:47
he actually did it instead of just making
1:01:49
a marketing campaign.
1:01:51
Oh, we're going to buy America.
1:01:52
Oh, goodbye.
1:01:53
Put a flag on it.
1:01:54
It'll sell.
1:01:56
No, I'm looking forward to our ingenuity.
1:02:00
I'm looking forward to a lot of young
1:02:03
people with high school diplomas skipping the indoctrination
1:02:08
factory and going into robotics, stuff like this.
1:02:13
Welding.
1:02:14
Well, man, welding, welding.
1:02:16
You can make 90 bucks an hour welding.
1:02:19
Unbelievable.
1:02:21
You know, and OK, so I don't know,
1:02:25
I feel good about it.
1:02:27
I do.
1:02:28
And of course, we will we will never,
1:02:31
ever impose a tax on our friends for
1:02:35
no agenda show donations, no tariffs.
1:02:38
It's reciprocal.
1:02:39
We give you value.
1:02:41
You accept that without a tariff.
1:02:42
We receive value from you.
1:02:43
No tariff.
1:02:45
Because we're good people.
1:02:47
We're nice people.
1:02:49
Now, the EU immediately tries to, oh, we'll
1:02:53
get him with this one.
1:02:54
Check it out.
1:02:55
The European Union is sticking to its plans
1:02:57
to enforce new laws on social media platforms
1:03:00
like X, TikTok and Facebook.
1:03:02
Despite pressure from the US in an interview
1:03:05
with Euronews, European Commission Executive Vice President Hanna
1:03:08
Varkunen, who oversees security and technology, explains that
1:03:12
these laws are vital to protecting democracy from
1:03:16
disinformation and market abuses.
1:03:18
Our rules are very fair because they are
1:03:20
same rules for everybody who is operating and
1:03:22
doing business in the European Union.
1:03:24
So we have same rules for the European
1:03:26
companies, for American companies, for the Chinese companies.
1:03:29
The Digital Services Act, which addresses disinformation and
1:03:32
the Digital Markets Act aimed at ensuring a
1:03:35
fair digital economy have come under significant scrutiny
1:03:38
from Donald Trump's prominent advisor, Elon Musk.
1:03:41
The EU will not resile from implementing the
1:03:45
DSA and DMA where and when needed, despite
1:03:48
the confrontation with the United States.
1:03:50
It's super important for us that we are
1:03:52
fully enforcing DMA and DSA, because when it
1:03:56
comes to DMA, then we want to make
1:03:57
sure that the big players, that they are
1:04:01
not the dominant players.
1:04:03
They are not misusing their market power, that
1:04:06
also new innovations can enter to the markets
1:04:08
in the European Union.
1:04:09
And DSA is very much for making sure
1:04:11
that illegal content and products are taken down
1:04:14
and we have safe and democratic, fair environment.
1:04:18
Now, it's not up to me, of course,
1:04:21
but it wouldn't be just fabulous if X
1:04:25
and Facebook or X and Meta and even
1:04:28
Google just said, you know what, no more
1:04:31
services for you.
1:04:33
Go make your own social network, go do
1:04:37
your own search.
1:04:39
That would be so much.
1:04:40
I can imagine what a disarray they would
1:04:42
be in if that happened.
1:04:44
Well, you think they, you know, if they
1:04:46
had the capabilities to do anything, they would
1:04:49
have done it by now.
1:04:51
Oh, the Europeans?
1:04:52
Yeah.
1:04:53
No, they're kind of preannouncing they're going to
1:04:55
do.
1:04:55
They're going to they're going to do.
1:04:56
They're going to start.
1:04:57
They're not going to do anything.
1:04:58
They can't do anything.
1:04:59
They haven't got what it takes.
1:05:00
All they can do is fines, fines, fines,
1:05:03
fines.
1:05:03
Oh, you you overstep the bounds.
1:05:05
I'm just saying it would be fun to
1:05:06
cut them off.
1:05:07
Just cut them off.
1:05:08
Like, yeah, we're not that way.
1:05:12
President Curry would shut him off.
1:05:16
And it turns out, turns out we are
1:05:19
pretty right about the true value of TikTok
1:05:21
because it's really just a shop with a
1:05:25
social network around it, because who's the new
1:05:29
bidder?
1:05:29
Amazon has submitted a bid to buy TikTok.
1:05:31
Media reports say the offer to buy the
1:05:33
social media app was made to the White
1:05:35
House.
1:05:36
It comes just days before Saturday's deadline for
1:05:38
TikTok's owner, ByteDance, to divest itself of the
1:05:41
app's U.S. operations.
1:05:43
CNBC reports that mobile technology company Applovin has
1:05:46
also made a bid for TikTok.
1:05:47
If there's no deal to buy TikTok before
1:05:50
the April 5th deadline, the app again faces
1:05:53
a potential shutdown of its U.S. operations,
1:05:55
which would severely hurt the show.
1:05:59
Obviously, well, it would hurt.
1:06:03
I don't think that you actually believe that.
1:06:06
Believe what?
1:06:07
That it would hurt the show.
1:06:08
I would.
1:06:09
Well, I have a clip today that that
1:06:12
begs to differ.
1:06:14
Oh, you have a TikTok?
1:06:15
I do.
1:06:16
I do.
1:06:17
I have.
1:06:17
Well, I have.
1:06:18
First of all, I have to tick that
1:06:19
when you just played, I have a kind
1:06:21
of another summary just so we can do
1:06:24
the TikTok.
1:06:26
The TikTok story, I can read the story.
1:06:31
Story conundrum.
1:06:32
You should work for Euronews.
1:06:35
Top officials in the Trump administration are set
1:06:37
to meet today to discuss a TikTok deal.
1:06:39
As NPR's Bobby Allen explains, Trump has set
1:06:42
Saturday as a sell by date for the
1:06:43
video app under a federal ban law.
1:06:46
It's not noticeable by using the app, but
1:06:47
TikTok is technically operating in violation of a
1:06:50
law Congress passed requiring the service to sever
1:06:52
ties with China.
1:06:53
The Trump administration has promised not to enforce
1:06:55
the law, while President Trump holds something of
1:06:57
a public auction for the hit app.
1:06:59
Now, President Trump is set to meet with
1:07:01
Vice President J.D. Vance and other advisers
1:07:03
to weigh TikTok's options.
1:07:05
Software company Oracle, owned by Trump supporter and
1:07:07
billionaire Larry Ellison, appears to be leading the
1:07:09
pack of bidders.
1:07:10
The New York Times reported Amazon has sent
1:07:13
in a last minute TikTok offer.
1:07:15
Yet one key hurdle remains winning the approval
1:07:17
of Chinese regulators, who may use TikTok as
1:07:20
leverage in tariff negotiations.
1:07:23
Amazon is the only logical choice, but Amazon
1:07:25
will ruin it.
1:07:28
Of course they will ruin it, but I
1:07:31
think Oracle would, too.
1:07:33
Yeah, well, because with Oracle, they have no
1:07:36
business model because Oracle doesn't have a shop
1:07:38
to plug into it.
1:07:39
And and the the bizarre thing is, is
1:07:42
when Podshow pivoted, we're going to make a
1:07:46
pivot.
1:07:46
Everybody to me, Vio and video.
1:07:49
That we pitched so hard to tell Amazon
1:07:52
you want to have shows built around your
1:07:56
shopping.
1:07:57
I'll give Bloom that still a good idea
1:07:59
is a great idea.
1:08:01
But if Amazon buys TikTok, will we ever
1:08:04
get a clip like this?
1:08:06
You actually don't see homosexual behavior like out
1:08:08
in nature, like you don't see other mammals
1:08:10
behaving almost sexually, only humans, because they came
1:08:13
up with it in their brains.
1:08:15
Really?
1:08:16
You've never met a gay dog.
1:08:17
You think every dog you've ever met is
1:08:20
straight.
1:08:21
You've never met a dog that even gave
1:08:22
you a vibe.
1:08:24
Baby dogs are almost as gay as dolphins.
1:08:25
You need to get it together, my guy.
1:08:27
You need to get it.
1:08:28
I like that.
1:08:29
You need to get it together, my guy.
1:08:31
Dogs are gay.
1:08:33
It's gay as dolphins, as gay as dolphins.
1:08:39
Have you ever seen?
1:08:41
Do you think you've ever had a gay
1:08:42
dog?
1:08:44
It's a serious question.
1:08:46
I mean, it's possible.
1:08:48
I don't know.
1:08:49
I've had several dogs in my life.
1:08:50
I cannot remember one that I got a
1:08:52
vibe from.
1:08:54
Vibe.
1:08:54
Yeah, you know, gay vibe.
1:08:55
Gay vibe.
1:08:56
Looks like you're funny.
1:08:57
Gay vibe from my dog.
1:08:59
How come you're not picking up that quarter
1:09:01
that's there?
1:09:07
Well, I have something since you got the
1:09:08
TikTok going.
1:09:09
Oh, TikTok.
1:09:13
Stop.
1:09:13
Talk.
1:09:14
Talk.
1:09:14
TikTok.
1:09:15
All right.
1:09:18
Don't do that.
1:09:19
I have four clips.
1:09:20
Save some for the end.
1:09:21
Do two and save two for the end.
1:09:23
Do two now.
1:09:24
It's called programming.
1:09:25
OK, I can do that.
1:09:26
Yeah, well, don't.
1:09:27
Don't start with the old one, which has
1:09:29
been sitting around, which is the arrogant Fourth
1:09:31
of July girl.
1:09:32
OK, if you voted for this, do not
1:09:34
celebrate the Fourth of July.
1:09:36
Do not celebrate the Fourth of July.
1:09:38
I know the left has complicated feelings about
1:09:41
the Fourth of July.
1:09:42
And it's like to be so patriotic and
1:09:44
celebrate a country that was built on the
1:09:46
backs of colonialism and G-side and bigotry.
1:09:50
But I dare I say this Fourth of
1:09:52
July, I say we reclaim patriotism in the
1:09:56
name of improving our country and making it
1:09:58
great for the first time.
1:09:59
Hopefully, if we're ever able to, without completely
1:10:02
dismantling the country and building a new one,
1:10:04
which I really hope is the way to
1:10:07
do it.
1:10:09
But if you voted for it, if you
1:10:12
voted for this, you do not love this
1:10:14
country.
1:10:15
You do not love the people in it.
1:10:16
You do not deserve to rep like to
1:10:18
proudly celebrate the country because you're destroying it
1:10:22
is also if you're apathetic and have said
1:10:25
anything about anything that's going on.
1:10:27
Also, you shouldn't celebrate the Fourth of July.
1:10:29
None of you guys should celebrate the Fourth
1:10:30
of July.
1:10:31
You should feel embarrassed.
1:10:32
You should know that we're all looking at
1:10:33
you a little funny.
1:10:34
Like I know you guys don't know how
1:10:36
to read, but read the room.
1:10:40
Boy, I'll miss them.
1:10:41
I'll miss them when Amazon buys it.
1:10:43
This is all going away.
1:10:44
It's all going away.
1:10:47
Well, yeah, maybe get him in now.
1:10:51
Here, let's go to the redheaded liberal.
1:10:55
This should come as absolutely no surprise.
1:11:00
But Donald Trump has the lowest approval rating
1:11:04
of all time with one exception.
1:11:08
Do you know what that exception is?
1:11:09
Do you know who else had the lowest
1:11:12
approval rating that he is coming in second
1:11:14
to Donald Trump?
1:11:16
It's him.
1:11:16
His first term.
1:11:17
I knew he was at the lowest approval
1:11:19
rating at this point.
1:11:22
So he's number one in that regard.
1:11:25
And he's bringing the rest of the country
1:11:28
down.
1:11:29
Even people who voted for him, who are
1:11:31
not diehard maggots, can acknowledge that he is
1:11:35
not doing right by them.
1:11:37
There are so many people in the federal
1:11:39
government who are fed up from what they've
1:11:42
seen in less than two months so far.
1:11:45
We are not even two months in to
1:11:48
his current presidency, and he is screwing things
1:11:52
up every single day.
1:11:54
And then there's Elon Musk.
1:11:57
Well, this brings me to the slate money
1:11:59
podcast.
1:12:01
This is a, you know, financial podcast.
1:12:06
We talk about things that are on slate
1:12:08
on who owns slate is slate its own
1:12:11
thing.
1:12:12
Or is that Washington Post?
1:12:13
Wapo, wapo, wapo.
1:12:15
So they have a podcast.
1:12:16
It's always been a left wing operation.
1:12:18
So so I'm going to listen to what
1:12:20
amounts to modern neocommunists.
1:12:24
Yeah, about about money and investment.
1:12:27
I don't think I would say trans Maoists
1:12:30
more because the question here is all of
1:12:33
these unhappy liberals, but let's call them delusional
1:12:37
Dems for purpose of example.
1:12:41
Where are they going to move to when
1:12:42
they leave our our sinking ship?
1:12:45
This horrible atrocity, this fascistic state, this this
1:12:51
trash heap that Donald Trump has turned just
1:12:54
into into a rat infested piece of crap.
1:12:58
Where are they going to move to and
1:12:59
why?
1:13:00
So wait, I just want to follow up
1:13:01
because I'm now I'm looking at the New
1:13:02
York Times article and its characteristics of places
1:13:05
Democrats were more likely to move to.
1:13:08
31% of Democrats were more likely to
1:13:10
move to a place within five miles of
1:13:12
a Trader Joe's, only 10% of Republicans.
1:13:15
It gets much better.
1:13:17
Republicans have no list of a store on
1:13:20
their characteristics.
1:13:21
There's where property tax below point five percent
1:13:24
within five miles of a forest.
1:13:28
Whoa.
1:13:28
Ask pro shop, rural or small town.
1:13:32
They're twice as likely to move to a
1:13:34
rural or small town than Democrats.
1:13:36
Well, another way to look at it is
1:13:37
the way the administration is treating marginalized communities
1:13:40
is a big factor, too.
1:13:42
If you have a kid, I think this
1:13:43
may be a marginalized community speaking trans or
1:13:46
you're an immigrant and you may not feel
1:13:49
safe in a neighborhood that's super red.
1:13:53
So that was definitely like one of the
1:13:54
guys I talked to who does foreign residency
1:13:56
and foreign passports.
1:13:58
He was like, I had nine families with
1:14:01
trans kids.
1:14:02
What contacted him within a week after Trump
1:14:04
signed one of his anti-trans executive orders?
1:14:08
Interesting.
1:14:09
A pro woman bill is, according to Slate,
1:14:13
an anti-trans executive order.
1:14:16
That's that's a good way of putting it.
1:14:18
They were just like, we have a kid
1:14:20
who is who has is undergoing medical care
1:14:24
for which they need medical care, medical care.
1:14:28
You mean puberty blockers and stuff like that?
1:14:31
Medical care.
1:14:33
Drugs and they need to take the drugs
1:14:35
continuously.
1:14:36
And we're very worried that those drugs are
1:14:37
not going to be available to us in
1:14:38
the United States.
1:14:39
We want to make sure that we're living
1:14:41
somewhere where those drugs are available.
1:14:43
Well, relatedly, I talked to a guy last
1:14:44
night who has HIV and has been treated
1:14:47
for it for the last 15 years.
1:14:49
And he said, I'm not sure I'm going
1:14:51
to be able to get the drugs that
1:14:52
I need this time next year.
1:14:53
And he said, if I don't have them,
1:14:55
I have two years to live.
1:14:57
So it's really existential for a lot of
1:15:00
people.
1:15:00
Why would it be difficult to get HIV
1:15:01
drugs?
1:15:01
Because the Trump administration is cutting funding and
1:15:04
programming.
1:15:05
And they're not just available on health insurance.
1:15:07
So it's too expensive.
1:15:08
No, I mean, they're they're cutting treatment.
1:15:10
You know, a lot of the clinics that
1:15:12
provide HIV drugs and particularly at low cost
1:15:15
to people are having their funding cut off
1:15:18
by the administration.
1:15:19
And it seems to be, you know, a
1:15:21
political issue.
1:15:21
Complete bullcrap.
1:15:24
There's no clinics getting their funding cut off.
1:15:30
It's how they make this stuff up as
1:15:32
they go along, because they think that's probably
1:15:34
what they would be doing if they were
1:15:35
on the.
1:15:36
Well, that's an interesting projection of some sort.
1:15:39
That's an interesting thought.
1:15:41
That's an interesting thought.
1:15:45
They are speaking of drugs.
1:15:46
I got some interesting notes from producers.
1:15:50
And one of our producers, he said, you
1:15:52
know, is driving along and I'm listening to
1:15:55
the report about the pope.
1:15:58
And, you know, that that he almost died
1:16:00
and they they had to decide whether to
1:16:03
just let him die.
1:16:04
And he says that this was a flub
1:16:07
that the news model said that they were
1:16:10
going to they were considering taking him off
1:16:13
as adrenochrome.
1:16:14
But then she corrected herself.
1:16:16
The critical moment came on February 28th when
1:16:18
the pope had a breathing crisis.
1:16:21
The choice was whether to stop treatment and
1:16:23
let him pass or try more aggressive drugs.
1:16:27
A dream.
1:16:28
Oh, I drew.
1:16:30
Wow.
1:16:30
That's a that's an obscure catch, but I
1:16:33
might be right.
1:16:34
I like it.
1:16:34
Or try more aggressive drugs.
1:16:37
A drink, a drink, aggressive drugs, adrenochrome.
1:16:41
I'm just saying.
1:16:42
But the best one.
1:16:45
Wow.
1:16:46
That's a good that that's the funniest catch
1:16:48
of the day.
1:16:49
Well, here's another one.
1:16:51
This is from Salah.
1:16:53
Salah says, I'm a truck driver just now
1:16:56
listening to Sunday show in the clip where
1:16:59
RFK Jr. is talking about downsizing.
1:17:02
He talks about merging it into a new
1:17:04
unit with the acronym acronym.
1:17:06
Aha.
1:17:08
Growing up with my father, who was Arabic,
1:17:10
I never learned the language, but you definitely
1:17:12
pick up assorted words and definitely the swear
1:17:15
words.
1:17:16
Aha.
1:17:17
Exactly how RFK pronounce it is slang in
1:17:20
my dad's mostly Egyptian dialect for shit or
1:17:24
damn.
1:17:26
Listen to how he says it so we
1:17:28
can replicate it.
1:17:29
Kennedy also plans to consolidate agencies within HHS
1:17:32
or can eliminate an entire alphabet soup of
1:17:35
departments and agencies while preserving their core functions
1:17:39
by merging them into a new organization called
1:17:42
the Administration for a Healthy America or AHA.
1:17:45
The FDA will lose three five hundred.
1:17:48
Aha.
1:17:49
Aha.
1:17:50
So it's aha.
1:17:52
Don't say that.
1:17:53
Aha.
1:17:53
Don't say that in Egypt, people.
1:17:58
Aha.
1:17:58
Language is a funny thing.
1:18:00
Aha.
1:18:01
Aha.
1:18:05
I have some more.
1:18:07
Do you want is anything you want to
1:18:08
jump in on here?
1:18:09
Because I have I have a couple more
1:18:10
series of some kind of interesting stuff.
1:18:14
I have.
1:18:16
Yeah, I got a couple of series I
1:18:17
got to.
1:18:18
Well, I can put this like Dead B
1:18:20
should be a second half of show.
1:18:22
Why don't you go ahead?
1:18:24
I got plenty of stuff.
1:18:25
Well, we have a new show.
1:18:27
And it's called the Mark and Marco show.
1:18:30
And if this keeps on going, we need
1:18:32
a jingle.
1:18:32
It's the Mark and Marco show.
1:18:34
It's the Mark and Mark and Marco.
1:18:36
Yes.
1:18:37
Mark Rutte.
1:18:38
Mark Rutte has a show with Marco.
1:18:41
You know, Marco, your secretary of state, Marco.
1:18:45
Hello, Marco.
1:18:47
Marco, I want to commend you for your
1:18:49
tireless diplomacy over the last couple of months.
1:18:52
You've traveled the whole world.
1:18:54
You travel the whole world.
1:18:56
How many points do you have on your
1:18:58
on your frequent flyer miles?
1:19:00
I also want to thank you for what
1:19:02
you did before as a senator supporting NATO.
1:19:05
And we will have a lot to discuss
1:19:08
over the coming two days.
1:19:09
Of course, Ukraine.
1:19:10
Yes.
1:19:11
As I said before, President Trump, the team
1:19:14
you broke the deadlock.
1:19:15
You started a process of negotiations.
1:19:18
Very good.
1:19:18
You started it because I know I'm here
1:19:20
to get you more money, Marco.
1:19:22
With our full support to bring the Ukraine
1:19:25
war to a lasting, to a durable peace.
1:19:30
And in the meantime, the Europeans are stepping
1:19:33
up.
1:19:33
They're stepping up.
1:19:34
Providing a lot of military support into Ukraine.
1:19:38
And we have seen the latest numbers coming
1:19:39
in that overall NATO allies have provided in
1:19:43
the first three months over 20 billion dollars
1:19:46
in support to Ukraine to make sure they
1:19:48
can stay in the fight as long as
1:19:50
it continues.
1:19:51
This is money that we get here in
1:19:53
America.
1:19:53
This 20 billion for more bullets.
1:19:56
We will also discuss the other threats over
1:19:58
the next two days.
1:19:59
Of course, Russia, which is our long term
1:20:02
threat.
1:20:02
Long term threat.
1:20:04
Peace or no peace.
1:20:05
Long term threat.
1:20:06
War is always on the horizon.
1:20:08
But also the increasing problems we have with
1:20:10
China.
1:20:11
Of course, North Korea, Iran and all of
1:20:14
these four getting more and more connected in
1:20:15
these two theaters, getting more and more connected
1:20:19
and working intertwined.
1:20:20
It's great.
1:20:21
But wait, there's more.
1:20:22
There will be more to spend.
1:20:24
We know that the United States is a
1:20:26
staunch ally in NATO.
1:20:27
I had a very good meeting with the
1:20:29
president, with President Trump.
1:20:31
But that commitment comes with an expectation.
1:20:34
And the expectation is that the European allies
1:20:37
and Canada need to spend more.
1:20:39
More.
1:20:41
Can you stop for a second?
1:20:43
Yeah.
1:20:45
For Mark and Marco, does this guy, does
1:20:47
Ruta ever stop talking?
1:20:50
Yeah, he does in a minute.
1:20:53
So Rubio is just standing there.
1:20:55
At a certain point, he's looking down at
1:20:56
his shoes.
1:20:57
He's like Mark on the floor here.
1:21:00
He's looking around.
1:21:01
He's getting really bored.
1:21:03
And Ruta is just blah, blah, blah, blah,
1:21:05
blah.
1:21:05
But it's but he's he's doing his job.
1:21:08
And Marco knows it from Canada and Europe
1:21:10
has been 700 billion up to now.
1:21:12
But when you look at the hundreds of
1:21:15
billions of euros, less dollars now rolling in,
1:21:18
rolling, rolling in, rolling, the money is rolling
1:21:23
in.
1:21:23
Marco, this is probably the biggest surge in
1:21:26
defense spending we have seen in Canada and
1:21:28
Europe since the Cold War, since the Berlin
1:21:30
Wall came down.
1:21:31
So that is good news.
1:21:32
But still, we need to do more good
1:21:34
news.
1:21:35
But still, we need to do more.
1:21:36
And now this is so good.
1:21:41
And so Marco comes in.
1:21:42
This guy's a clown.
1:21:45
Yes.
1:21:45
Well, we knew that.
1:21:47
We knew he was a clown.
1:21:48
We've all Dutch people know he's a clown
1:21:50
and the Dutch people can't believe it.
1:21:52
And like this guy is top dog now
1:21:55
in the international stage.
1:21:56
So Mark has done his job.
1:21:58
And now Marco must go for the five
1:22:01
percent.
1:22:01
We have to go up to five percent.
1:22:04
But Marco is a bit flustered.
1:22:05
The United States is in NATO.
1:22:07
We are an active as we speak right
1:22:08
now.
1:22:08
The United States is as active in NATO
1:22:10
as it has ever been.
1:22:11
And some of this hysteria and hyperbole that
1:22:14
I see in the global media and some
1:22:15
domestic media in the United States about NATO
1:22:17
is unwarranted.
1:22:19
The United States President Trump's made clear this
1:22:23
is his new name.
1:22:24
President Pump, that's his new name.
1:22:28
I'd like that again.
1:22:30
Take media in the United States about NATO
1:22:32
is unwarranted.
1:22:33
The United States President Trump's made clear.
1:22:36
President Pump, I think I said Trump.
1:22:39
No, he did not.
1:22:40
No, I listen to it loud and soft.
1:22:43
Yeah, it's like one of the mishearing I
1:22:46
do is very similar.
1:22:47
OK.
1:22:48
Trolls, are you hearing pump?
1:22:50
I'm hearing pump.
1:22:51
The United States about NATO is unwarranted.
1:22:53
The United States President Trump's made clear.
1:22:55
He says pump.
1:22:57
Trust me.
1:22:57
He says pump.
1:22:58
No, he says I could hear the T.
1:23:00
No, everyone's hearing pump.
1:23:02
Well, yeah, because you primed them.
1:23:05
Well, does it matter, then?
1:23:06
That's the president Trump's made clear.
1:23:08
He supports NATO.
1:23:10
We're going to remain in NATO.
1:23:11
He's made clear.
1:23:12
But we want NATO to be stronger.
1:23:14
We want NATO to be more viable.
1:23:15
And the only way NATO can get stronger,
1:23:16
more viable is of our partners.
1:23:19
The nation states that comprise this important alliance
1:23:21
have more capability.
1:23:23
More capability.
1:23:24
Collection, not just to partners and allies, but
1:23:26
of advanced economies of rich countries who have
1:23:29
the capability to do more.
1:23:30
We understand that's a trade off.
1:23:32
We have to do it every single year
1:23:34
in our country.
1:23:35
Yeah, I assure you that we also have
1:23:37
domestic needs.
1:23:38
We do.
1:23:38
But we've prioritized defense because of the role
1:23:40
we've played in the world.
1:23:42
And we want our partners to do the
1:23:43
same.
1:23:44
And I understand there's domestic politics after decades
1:23:46
of building up vast social safety net that
1:23:50
maybe don't want to take away from that
1:23:51
and invest more in national security.
1:23:53
But the events of the last few years
1:23:55
are a full scale ground war in the
1:23:57
heart of Europe is.
1:23:58
Oh, he's using full scale here.
1:24:00
That is full scale invasion.
1:24:02
Full scale ground war.
1:24:04
He's using the terms.
1:24:05
That maybe they don't want to take away
1:24:07
from that.
1:24:08
And invest more in national security.
1:24:09
But the events of the last few years.
1:24:11
A full scale ground war in the heart
1:24:13
of Europe is a reminder that hard power
1:24:15
still necessary as a deterrent.
1:24:17
And so we do want to leave here
1:24:19
with an understanding that we are on a
1:24:20
pathway, a realistic pathway to every single one
1:24:24
of the members committee and fulfilling a promise
1:24:26
to reach up to five percent of spending
1:24:28
that includes the United States will have to
1:24:29
increase its percentage because the threats truly are
1:24:32
as dire as I believe they are and
1:24:34
the members of this alliance believe they are
1:24:36
then that threat has to be confronted by
1:24:39
a full and real commitment to have the
1:24:41
capability to confront these things and then they
1:24:44
wrap it up with the true next theater
1:24:48
which is the Arctic I would not be
1:24:53
surprised if the Arctic would be raised today
1:24:56
by allies and this is an issue and
1:24:59
the Arctic of course is not only Denmark
1:25:01
the king of Denmark which of course has
1:25:05
Greenland as part of its kingdom this is
1:25:08
also Iceland it's Canada to the US it
1:25:11
is Norway Finland Sweden so we have seven
1:25:12
allies which are present in the Arctic we
1:25:17
know that the Chinese are opening sea lanes
1:25:19
we know that the Russians are rearming there
1:25:21
we know and as I said yesterday it
1:25:23
seems to be a detail but it is
1:25:24
an important detail it's not trivial and that
1:25:28
is the issue of icebreakers so more and
1:25:32
more the seven Arctic countries are working together
1:25:34
to make sure we keep that part of
1:25:36
the world safe and NATO is more and
1:25:39
more involved yeah Greenland's really important it's on
1:25:44
they need icebreakers forth global warming is gonna
1:25:46
melt all those with all that ice don't
1:25:50
ruin don't break the spell of course we
1:25:55
don't need that global warming take care of
1:25:58
it all there's no ice let's go back
1:26:04
to domestic I got two clips okay this
1:26:07
is the FDA being gutted PR again is
1:26:12
it our buddy no I don't have any
1:26:16
of our buddies clips today I'm sorry he's
1:26:19
on vacation or something have any BBC stuff
1:26:22
and again no I decided to give it
1:26:26
a break ah so there's no beef so
1:26:29
you can't play your jingles I have a
1:26:32
whole production never mind okay I guarantee you
1:26:36
next show your BBC's gonna be featured and
1:26:40
Scott I need BBC and Scott I can
1:26:42
find Scott I haven't seen him for a
1:26:43
while hmm the Food and Drug Administration the
1:26:46
agency that regulates a lot of the things
1:26:48
Americans eat and the medicines we take is
1:26:51
now part of a huge reorganization the Trump
1:26:54
administration announced Thursday that it will cut 20
1:26:57
,000 jobs from the Department of Health and
1:27:00
Human Services 3,500 of those are from
1:27:03
the FDA NPR consumer health correspondent Yuki Nobuchi
1:27:06
joins us now to talk about this good
1:27:09
morning Yuki good morning do you have any
1:27:12
specifics about these jobs well they've given some
1:27:15
general indications that they want to trim in
1:27:18
HR and IT for example but the FDA
1:27:21
didn't respond to my inquiries and so we
1:27:22
really don't know the specifics but Peter Marks
1:27:26
who spearheaded the development of the COVID-19
1:27:29
vaccine at the FDA said he was pushed
1:27:31
out last week and Robert Califf who's actually
1:27:34
a two-time FDA Commissioner most recently under
1:27:37
Biden sounded alarms at a press conference with
1:27:40
Washington Democratic Senator Patty Murray noting that these
1:27:44
cuts are on top of other big departures
1:27:47
the cut of an additional 3,500 people
1:27:50
on top of the arbitrary cuts that have
1:27:52
already occurred I miss his name he may
1:27:57
be someone we need to pay attention to
1:27:58
most recently under Biden sounded alarms at a
1:28:03
press conference with Washington Democratic Senator Patty Murray
1:28:06
noting that these cuts are on top of
1:28:09
other big departures the cut of an additional
1:28:12
3,500 people on top of the arbitrary
1:28:15
cuts that have already occurred in addition to
1:28:18
all the people who are leaving is likely
1:28:20
to leave the FDA unable to do its
1:28:22
critical work that is such an old-school
1:28:26
Washington DC cadence kind of a who's who
1:28:29
is some guy that was booted out like
1:28:34
Buckley it gets better in the second clip
1:28:43
and either the critical work he refers to
1:28:46
is you know safety reviews for things like
1:28:49
new drugs food safety tobacco vaccines and tobacco
1:28:53
safety drugs food safety tobacco vaccines and devices
1:29:00
like you know heart pacemakers you know a
1:29:02
lot of everyday can the way she says
1:29:04
this is so like well you know you're
1:29:07
gonna die because you know none of the
1:29:09
pacemaker and these drugs won't be safe and
1:29:12
MPR yeah hello vaccines and devices like you
1:29:17
know heart pacemakers you know a lot of
1:29:19
everyday consumer items are regulated by the FDA
1:29:22
you key what is the White House saying
1:29:24
about how these cuts and read and this
1:29:27
realignment fits with its priorities yeah it's led
1:29:31
by Robert F Kennedy jr.
1:29:33
the new Health and Human Services secretary and
1:29:36
he says the country's health agencies are too
1:29:38
bloated and ineffective at fighting in particular chronic
1:29:42
disease he and others dislike the country's past
1:29:46
approach to public health generally and Peter Marx
1:29:49
wrote a bitter resignation letter suggesting Kennedy's cutting
1:29:52
back on vaccine efforts because that work doesn't
1:29:56
align with Kennedy's personal beliefs on the other
1:29:59
hand Kennedy has led this campaign to make
1:30:02
America healthy again and that phrase has now
1:30:05
got its own acronym Maha and has a
1:30:08
broad following but Caleb says these cuts are
1:30:11
not consistent with that idea and it's really
1:30:14
striking to me how the rhetoric of for
1:30:17
example better nutrition enhanced food safety innovation and
1:30:22
medical products runs contrary to what's being done
1:30:26
with the workforce a lot of people afraid
1:30:28
of heights not me I'm afraid of widths
1:30:31
you know he even quipped that this seems
1:30:33
like a good way to make America not
1:30:35
healthy again brother what a of airtime so
1:30:43
I slipped a Steven Wright in there that
1:30:45
was notice I did I laughed at it
1:30:48
okay I left at it I was listening
1:30:51
to this guy it's a reason for the
1:30:52
clip yeah it was highbrow highbrow highbrow I
1:30:55
would listen to the clip because this guy's
1:30:57
voice he was either sound like Steven Steve
1:30:59
Landis Berg who used to be on on
1:31:03
the TV show the thing is no one
1:31:06
knows our boomer humor right so I found
1:31:13
the Steven Wright clip that fit right in
1:31:15
yeah but no I mean people didn't even
1:31:17
get my Elmer Fudd we are we are
1:31:19
boomer humor is is failing it's falling flat
1:31:22
people we have enough of us well that
1:31:25
audience which is small I say 10%
1:31:29
of our audience gets some of this material
1:31:30
I'm gonna go for five on those guys
1:31:35
should donate more this is true this is
1:31:38
true boomer humor to the rescue oh man
1:31:42
oh man yeah Barney Miller was the show
1:31:48
with Steve Landon's Landis yeah that's he has
1:31:51
the exact same voice that's stretching it though
1:31:53
well on the HHS FDA LMNOP major Garrett
1:32:00
she be our CIA broadcasting systems brought on
1:32:03
Deborah Birx who why do they bring these
1:32:08
old hacks on that are notorious they're already
1:32:12
proven to be phonies and they've lied to
1:32:15
the public and admitted it in public that
1:32:18
there are liars and they bring them back
1:32:20
or do they have like a one Rolodex
1:32:22
it's just being passed around and it's like
1:32:25
they can't come up with anybody new I'm
1:32:28
not quite sure but she I mean since
1:32:31
she left after kovat she's been the CEO
1:32:35
of a company she's been on the board
1:32:37
of a couple other companies I think in
1:32:39
one of these clips she has to be
1:32:41
a spook well she what she was a
1:32:44
ranking officer in the Navy so I don't
1:32:50
know if she was naval intelligence but you
1:32:53
know now she's claiming for the last few
1:32:55
years she's been working in rural Texas right
1:32:59
so yes there is something very odd about
1:33:02
her but she's actually not very negative about
1:33:06
RFK jr.
1:33:08
welcome back Health and Human Services Secretary Robert
1:33:10
F Kennedy jr.
1:33:11
is planning to lay off at least two
1:33:13
-thirds of the staff at the National Institute
1:33:15
of Occupational Safety and Health it is the
1:33:18
federal agency within HHS that attempts to prevent
1:33:21
workplace related injuries and illnesses those firings are
1:33:24
part of the 10,000 jobs that are
1:33:26
expected to be cut across the agency I
1:33:29
want to bring in former White House coronavirus
1:33:31
response coordinator dr.
1:33:32
Debra Brooks to evaluate all this dr.
1:33:34
Brooks I'm so glad you're with us you
1:33:36
have vast experience in the federal government in
1:33:38
the federal bureaucracy you know you say that
1:33:41
but this is CBS so that can't be
1:33:43
a coincidence how do you read these reductions
1:33:48
within HHS some people are expressing tremendous alarm
1:33:51
where do you fall on that spectrum well
1:33:54
you know I was in DOD HHS stayed
1:33:57
on the White House 41 years in federal
1:34:00
service and let me just say my federal
1:34:02
service colleagues I worked with a lot of
1:34:04
dedicated hard-working people but what has happened
1:34:07
over the years that you're not hearing about
1:34:09
you're hearing about fraud waste and abuse but
1:34:11
there's something else that has been going on
1:34:13
and that's a lot of duplication among the
1:34:16
HHS agencies and so when COVID hit you
1:34:20
had things that were Asper was doing that
1:34:22
also CDC was doing and it caused a
1:34:24
lot of confusion I think what they're trying
1:34:26
to do in which I hope they are
1:34:28
trying to do is bring back fundamentals stop
1:34:33
the duplication get people remission focused and hold
1:34:37
people accountable to improvements in Americans health because
1:34:41
we're spending more we have more personnel about
1:34:44
17% increase in just the last four
1:34:46
years yet the health of America has not
1:34:49
improved and so I think we have to
1:34:51
get back to really understanding what is the
1:34:53
job of HHS and that's the Health and
1:34:55
Human Services of the American people and I
1:34:58
hope that's what this gonna come back in
1:34:59
this focus I was surprised when I heard
1:35:02
that I'm like okay so she's kind of
1:35:03
saying it's good Asper by the way is
1:35:05
the administration for strategic preparedness and response which
1:35:10
I can't even remember hearing that that acronym
1:35:14
during COVID do you know so here's the
1:35:17
comes on with this very good kind of
1:35:19
semi positive approach right after Musk visited the
1:35:23
CIA no there you go so here's the
1:35:28
follow-up question if these cuts these cuts
1:35:31
are they good as you read the headlines
1:35:33
as you talk to your colleagues still in
1:35:35
do you think that the process that is
1:35:37
going on is in moving in that direction
1:35:40
or is kind of pell-mell and sort
1:35:43
of well it's just cut as big a
1:35:44
number as we can think of what pell
1:35:47
-mell is it pell-mell isn't it Paul
1:35:50
mall or no no tell me I said
1:35:52
it means a chaotic boomer phrase well right
1:35:59
5% of the listeners know what a
1:36:01
pell-mell I'm thinking Paul mall those the
1:36:05
Paul mall reds man those were hardcore I
1:36:07
haven't heard that I haven't heard the term
1:36:13
pell-mell for decades well decades they know
1:36:18
their audience don't they is moving in that
1:36:21
direction or is kind of pell-mell and
1:36:23
sort of well it's just cut as big
1:36:25
a number as we can think of maybe
1:36:27
it's a they're trying to bring back all
1:36:29
these cool cool phrases you know just to
1:36:31
sound intellectual it's a kind of pell-mell
1:36:34
I'm gonna start using it well don't start
1:36:38
you this that sounds dumb this Trump administration
1:36:42
is completely pell-mell you know I see
1:36:44
the work at HHS being pretty deliberative the
1:36:48
fact that they put asper back within the
1:36:50
CDC so that CDC who is also working
1:36:53
on disease control is she something is up
1:36:56
with asper she you know why is she
1:37:00
so talking about asper this and no one
1:37:02
no one talks about asper but she well
1:37:04
that must be the spook part of the
1:37:06
agency doing the same thing as asper so
1:37:09
that we're ready for the next pandemic because
1:37:11
when you have two agencies thinking they're both
1:37:14
in charge it caused a lot of confusion
1:37:16
around that table of trying to get the
1:37:19
best job of COVID for the American people
1:37:21
and so what I'm hoping comes out of
1:37:24
this is a much more horizontal structure where
1:37:27
the NIH I just say being at CDC
1:37:29
there are a hundred and fifty different databases
1:37:32
none of which talk to each other she's
1:37:35
totally talking must stuff here oh the databases
1:37:38
don't talk to each other okay so there's
1:37:41
an injury database there's a flu database Americans
1:37:45
are whole people so I think figuring out
1:37:47
how do we get more horizontal data so
1:37:50
we can find where things are going well
1:37:52
and learn from them and the things that
1:37:55
aren't going well in specific counties particularly rural
1:37:58
counties who are well well behind in life
1:38:01
expectancy compared to urban counties are we doing
1:38:04
something to address that and then holding the
1:38:07
federal government to outcomes the job of the
1:38:11
federal government is not to analyze data the
1:38:13
job of the federal government is to use
1:38:15
data to find solutions to actually improve outcomes
1:38:20
and impacts that's not a second how does
1:38:22
that even make any sense you don't analyze
1:38:24
it you use it it's the same thing
1:38:26
you use it without analyzing it don't analyze
1:38:29
it just use it asper is the secretary's
1:38:32
principal advisor on matters related to bioterrorism and
1:38:36
other public health emergencies they are responsible for
1:38:40
coordinating interagency activities between the other ones who
1:38:43
made the Lyme's disease other federal departments for
1:38:48
Dietrich there you go that look Manhattan Long
1:38:53
Island in July 2019 the blue ribbon study
1:38:57
panel on biodefense announced a new idea to
1:39:00
improve u.s. national security against bioterrorism a
1:39:04
quote Manhattan project for biodefense what could I
1:39:08
call the mRNA vaccine what could possibly go
1:39:10
wrong Wow and we've net we did not
1:39:15
hear of this I at least I can't
1:39:16
remember well she's brought it to the fore
1:39:19
for a reason yeah so we now we've
1:39:21
heard of it so now it's it's in
1:39:24
play you know now it's in play it's
1:39:26
in play for some reason she and this
1:39:28
was the point of her being on CBS
1:39:30
Evening News let's see what she says in
1:39:32
this last clip about the head of the
1:39:34
FDA dr.
1:39:35
Brooks I want to ask you about something
1:39:36
that going on at FDA because Peter Marks
1:39:38
who as you know was the FDA's head
1:39:41
of biologics resigned and in his resignation letter
1:39:43
he said biologics is vaccines Robert F Kennedy
1:39:47
jr.
1:39:47
who leads the Department of Health and Human
1:39:50
Services is subservient he seeks subservient confirmation of
1:39:55
his misinformation and lies that's a direct quote
1:39:58
related to vaccines and their effectiveness and the
1:40:02
Wall Street Journal recently editorialized that mr.
1:40:05
Kennedy rightly criticized the Biden administration's kovat response
1:40:08
for ignoring science but he won't restore public
1:40:11
confidence if he feeds skepticism about vaccines that
1:40:14
have saved countless lives the Wall Street Journal
1:40:17
editorial board writes our worst fears about mr.
1:40:20
Kennedy are coming true do you share any
1:40:22
of those anxieties well what I've seen on
1:40:25
the ground because I've been working the last
1:40:27
four years in rural Texas what really him
1:40:30
coming out and saying I believe in the
1:40:33
MMR vaccine it is effective I want people
1:40:36
to get it he supported CDC to go
1:40:39
in there and support increased access to vaccination
1:40:43
federal dollars went to increasing vaccination in that
1:40:46
area so you know you have to look
1:40:49
at people's actions and really try to understand
1:40:52
what is being said and what is being
1:40:54
actually done on the ground and I think
1:40:57
what is being done on the ground in
1:40:59
West Texas is consistent with improving vaccination rates
1:41:02
oh boy there's a lot to unpack in
1:41:06
that commentary mm-hmm one the Wall Street
1:41:10
Journal is anti Kennedy why is that and
1:41:14
that's a Rupert Murdoch operation or Murdoch operation
1:41:18
the second thing is she's in rural Texas
1:41:21
and then coincidentally of a measles outbreak as
1:41:25
it were yeah breaks out where she you
1:41:27
know she's in the in the vicinity I
1:41:29
from the sounds of it she's definitely in
1:41:32
rural Texas and she's aware of this this
1:41:34
situation in the few people with the measles
1:41:38
there and the one phony one that supposedly
1:41:40
died from measles mm-hmm now this is
1:41:44
very suspect the see these she's defending Kennedy
1:41:50
yes so Kennedy's obviously gonna do nothing so
1:41:57
Don oka Don O'Connell is the I
1:42:02
guess she's she was the assistant secretary for
1:42:04
Asper no it looks like she's the German
1:42:09
operation called Asperger let's see Office of Public
1:42:14
she looks like a real spook by the
1:42:17
way is Don O'Connell hmm well there's
1:42:24
definitely something up here see Asper dot HHS
1:42:28
yeah it was given it was rolled out
1:42:30
for a reason program to let us know
1:42:32
yes what's going on give us a backgrounder
1:42:36
and I didn't know what we're supposed to
1:42:39
would put this what we can do with
1:42:41
it let's see who the boss is John
1:42:43
Knox wait he's the principal deputies where's the
1:42:49
I guess they don't have don't they have
1:42:51
a they only have a deputy no I
1:42:55
guess so John Knox where's he from Los
1:43:01
Angeles County Sheriff's Department hmm I don't know
1:43:06
but something's in play there with Asper I
1:43:08
I agree with you and and Burks all
1:43:10
of a sudden I've been in rural Texas
1:43:12
all these years no four years it makes
1:43:16
no sense I'm so confused it makes no
1:43:19
sense you're right I'm very confused aspect to
1:43:22
this I'm very confused about her I'm not
1:43:24
sure what she's doing it doesn't feel right
1:43:26
yeah it doesn't feel right doing something yeah
1:43:32
well let's see where this we have a
1:43:39
interesting donation segment why did you see the
1:43:43
length of some of those notes oh yeah
1:43:45
especially the guy who insists on on the
1:43:47
note well there's at least five of them
1:43:50
that are that need to be truncated and
1:43:52
we just needs to be truncated well there's
1:43:54
one guy he insisted the note be read
1:43:56
but the one that's five pages long no
1:43:59
it's not that long how about musk and
1:44:05
doge goes to the CIA okay let's do
1:44:07
that and then then we can deal with
1:44:09
the notes as good billionaire Elon Musk has
1:44:12
shared his doge team's cost-cutting plans with
1:44:15
officials at the CIA the agency has already
1:44:18
taken steps to fire employees who worked on
1:44:20
diversity issues a federal judge has ordered the
1:44:23
CIA to reconsider those job cuts citing constitutional
1:44:27
statutory and regulatory concerns well how does that
1:44:32
fit in I don't know and I don't
1:44:36
know what the judge has got to do
1:44:37
with CIA hiring practices but okay these judges
1:44:40
are something's got to have happened with these
1:44:42
judges well it isn't President Trump firing the
1:44:46
judges no no here's a fire these judges
1:44:50
these are judges that are not fireable oh
1:44:52
and he has to either impeach him which
1:44:55
no one's gonna it's not gonna happen because
1:44:56
you can't get the votes in the Senate
1:44:58
no or you're gonna or the Supreme Court's
1:45:00
gonna have to tell him hey you can't
1:45:01
be doing what you're doing because this is
1:45:03
not you know your district guys no good
1:45:05
to be doing national stuff oh and the
1:45:09
Supreme Court's still on the draw on this
1:45:11
why weren't they already involved I don't know
1:45:16
I don't know no one seems to be
1:45:19
paying attention any of that the news is
1:45:23
not is not the news oh I discovered
1:45:26
something the news is not the news I
1:45:29
thought this was rather interesting though for those
1:45:32
who are so concerned about Elon Musk the
1:45:34
Nazi and Donald Trump the Nazi and the
1:45:37
Republicans the Nazi and the Texans the Nazis
1:45:41
we're all Nazis how about some actual Nazi
1:45:43
info Argentina's president Javier Millet says that he
1:45:47
is declassifying government documents on how a Nazi
1:45:50
war criminals escaped Europe and resettled in South
1:45:53
America following World War two it's thought as
1:45:56
many as 5,000 Nazis evaded arrest in
1:45:59
Argentina the most prominent was Adolf Eichmann seen
1:46:03
here during his trial in Israel in 1961
1:46:06
Eichmann was one of the architects of the
1:46:08
Holocaust Israeli agents captured him and took him
1:46:11
to Jerusalem where he was tried and sentenced
1:46:14
to death well I'm joined now by the
1:46:16
man known as the last Nazi hunter dr.
1:46:19
Efrem Zuroff has played a key role in
1:46:21
helping to bring Nazi and fascist war criminals
1:46:25
to trial dr.
1:46:26
Zuroff is good to have you back on
1:46:28
the program what are you expecting to find
1:46:31
in these files that are being made public
1:46:34
in Argentina I assume that we'll be able
1:46:38
to get many many details regarding the identity
1:46:43
of the Nazis who fled to Argentina and
1:46:47
the identities of I'm gonna tell you this
1:46:55
could be bigger than the Epstein files when
1:46:58
we really find out who the Nazis were
1:47:00
that were escapes and who helped them it's
1:47:02
gonna open up an interesting can of worms
1:47:04
yeah especially the Hitlers on the list speaking
1:47:09
of Israel the Prime Minister is breaking the
1:47:13
law in a defiant gesture towards the International
1:47:16
Criminal Court Benjamin Netanyahu is visiting Hungary it
1:47:20
will be his first trip to the European
1:47:21
Union since an arrest warrant was issued against
1:47:24
him the Israeli Prime Minister is wanted for
1:47:27
alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in
1:47:30
the Gaza Strip Prime Minister Viktor Orban extended
1:47:33
the invitation in November last year quickly flouting
1:47:36
the ICC ruling we have no choice but
1:47:41
to defy this decision and I will invite
1:47:44
the Israeli Prime Minister Mr. Netanyahu to visit
1:47:46
Hungary where I will assure him that the
1:47:49
International Criminal Court's ruling will have no effect
1:47:52
in Hungary and we will not follow its
1:47:54
terms.
1:47:55
As a signatory of the ICC Hungary is
1:47:58
formally obliged to take Netanyahu into custody but
1:48:01
for the next four days Orban is expected
1:48:03
to welcome him into Budapest with open arms
1:48:06
and it is not the only time they
1:48:09
have put their friendship first.
1:48:11
In 2017 when Orban was accused of anti
1:48:14
-semitism towards the American Jewish billionaire George Soros
1:48:18
the Israeli PM came to his rescue in
1:48:21
July last year Budapest vetoed an EU statement
1:48:24
that condemned the Knesset's rejection of a Palestinian
1:48:27
state and the Hungarian leader has unconditionally supported
1:48:30
Israel's offensive in Gaza which has claimed more
1:48:33
than 50,000 lives according to Gaza Authority.
1:48:38
So what is he doing in Hungary?
1:48:40
That's what I'd like to know.
1:48:42
What is he doing there?
1:48:43
There's gotta be some something going on behind
1:48:45
the scenes that we don't know about it's
1:48:46
gonna happen there and why there?
1:48:49
Well maybe he wants to ship some some
1:48:51
Palestinians over there.
1:48:53
Israel is slowly tightening its grip on the
1:48:55
Gaza Strip.
1:48:56
Defense Minister Israel Katz said the army's operation
1:48:59
was expanding to seize large areas that would
1:49:02
be incorporated into what he called Israeli security
1:49:05
zones without saying how much territory would be
1:49:08
seized.
1:49:10
But he also said that Palestinians would have
1:49:13
to be evacuated.
1:49:15
Katz also called on the enclave's residents to
1:49:17
expel Hamas and return hostages roughly a week
1:49:20
after this rare footage showed Palestinians protesting against
1:49:24
the militant group but representatives of the families
1:49:26
of hostages accused the Israeli government of sacrificing
1:49:30
the hostages for the sake of territorial gains.
1:49:33
Katz's announcement comes a week after he warned
1:49:35
that the Israeli military would operate with full
1:49:37
force in the territory.
1:49:39
The ceasefire which came to an end on
1:49:41
March 18th is now a distant memory for
1:49:43
Palestinians living in Gaza.
1:49:45
At daybreak Gaza health officials said at least
1:49:48
15 people including children were killed in airstrikes
1:49:51
on homes in Khan Younis and the Nusayrat
1:49:54
refugee camp.
1:49:55
The UN has also warned that stockpiles of
1:49:57
flour are running out in Gaza after Israel
1:50:00
closed crossings to humanitarian aid.
1:50:02
The UN has urged Israel to reopen its
1:50:05
crossings to humanitarian aid to avert a food
1:50:07
crisis.
1:50:08
What is this?
1:50:10
So maybe he's checking out a new place
1:50:13
in Hungary where he's going to flee to?
1:50:17
What is going on?
1:50:19
People hate, people hate Israel.
1:50:23
Well they're definitely not doing, I don't know
1:50:27
what the issue is there but that reminds
1:50:30
me of another European story that we're gonna
1:50:32
mention.
1:50:33
You're gonna move it right along.
1:50:35
Unless you want to keep talking about Israel.
1:50:37
Well I was just, I was thinking of
1:50:39
some witty banter.
1:50:41
Like what is going on?
1:50:42
I can't think of anything witty.
1:50:44
I'm not witty today but let's go with
1:50:46
the real strange story is the arrest of
1:50:51
Marine Le Pen.
1:50:53
Oh man, even her, even other party leaders
1:50:58
are saying this was bullcrap.
1:51:01
Yeah I got the clip here it's Eva,
1:51:02
E-V-A.
1:51:03
Okay so the lawfare being used against right
1:51:05
-wing politicians in Europe is being taken to
1:51:07
a whole new level.
1:51:09
This is your buddy, this is your buddy
1:51:12
Eva, whose last name I can never pronounce,
1:51:15
a Dutch girl.
1:51:16
Oh, Fluttegebrake.
1:51:18
Flutte, Flutte, Flutte, whatever her name is.
1:51:21
She's very pretty and she's very erudite.
1:51:25
She kind of dropped off the radar.
1:51:28
She got married.
1:51:29
Yeah I noticed that but she's back with
1:51:31
a vengeance with this Marine Le Pen story.
1:51:35
If I could give her a little bit
1:51:36
of advice I'd say cut your hair a
1:51:38
little bit shorter.
1:51:40
It detracts from her obvious deep knowledge of
1:51:45
affairs.
1:51:45
Okay so the lawfare...
1:51:46
Well she could put a ponytail up and
1:51:48
that would be fine.
1:51:49
Yes, I'm just thinking from a television standpoint
1:51:53
you know this just it's like...
1:51:54
Yeah she is distractingly pretty and the hair
1:51:57
doesn't help.
1:51:57
Exactly.
1:51:58
Okay so the lawfare being used against right
1:52:00
-wing politicians in Europe is being taken to
1:52:02
a whole new level.
1:52:04
Marine Le Pen, the leader of Rassemblau Nationale,
1:52:07
the populist right-wing party in France, has
1:52:09
just been sentenced to four years in jail
1:52:11
of which two suspended and has been barred
1:52:14
from partaking in French politics for the next
1:52:17
five years.
1:52:18
That means that she's been barred from running
1:52:20
against Macron for the position of the president
1:52:23
of France.
1:52:24
She's been convicted for allegedly embezzling European funds,
1:52:30
misusing European funds for her national fraction of
1:52:34
the party instead of the European fraction of
1:52:36
the party.
1:52:36
Which I dare to bet money on the
1:52:38
fact that if any judicial system in any
1:52:42
European country would launch an investigation into left
1:52:45
-wing parties to see if they were doing
1:52:47
that that let's say 80% of them
1:52:50
would be found guilty of the same thing
1:52:52
because I used to work in a European
1:52:54
Parliament and trust me this is something that
1:52:57
I think happens a lot more than they
1:52:59
want you to believe.
1:53:01
And of course we will never know that
1:53:02
because they don't launch investigations into left-wing
1:53:05
parties because the whole aim of this is
1:53:07
to crush the right-wing in Europe because
1:53:10
we're growing too fast and so the system,
1:53:13
the cabal, needs to come down on us
1:53:15
to another way.
1:53:16
And what do they do?
1:53:18
Lawfare.
1:53:19
They're banning us, they're banning our parties, they're
1:53:22
banning politicians from running.
1:53:24
They're convicting us of hate speech and hate
1:53:27
crimes.
1:53:27
That's how they do it, that's a new
1:53:29
strategy.
1:53:30
And you know like think about it for
1:53:33
a second, embezzlement of European funds, Ursula von
1:53:35
der Leyen, the president of the European Commission,
1:53:38
is under investigation for corruption because she closed
1:53:40
a 50, no 35 billion euro deal with
1:53:44
the CEO of Pfizer via text message and
1:53:47
we still don't have those text messages but
1:53:49
she is the president of the European Commission
1:53:51
and Marine Le Pen is not allowed to
1:53:53
run as a president of France.
1:53:55
If that is not two-tier politics I
1:53:57
don't know what is.
1:53:58
Well who's this we she's talking about?
1:54:00
Is she a political member of a party?
1:54:05
She's far right.
1:54:06
Well speaking of that here's a this is
1:54:09
I think this is a France 24, they
1:54:14
give a little more detail on this story.
1:54:16
Arriving at the National Rally headquarters, Jordan Bardella
1:54:19
was tight-lipped but Marine Le Pen's protégé
1:54:22
took to X to post that French democracy
1:54:24
was executed on Monday with the unjust verdict.
1:54:27
As president of the party, Bardella now looks
1:54:30
set to become its de facto candidate for
1:54:32
the 2027 election after a court barred Le
1:54:35
Pen from running for office for five years
1:54:37
with immediate effect for embezzlement.
1:54:39
The National Rally and right-wing allies have
1:54:41
accused the court of overreach against a candidate
1:54:44
whom polls show is among the frontrunners.
1:54:48
The court is stating its political will, not
1:54:51
its judicial or legal will, but its political
1:54:55
will.
1:54:56
It's the first time in 40 or 50
1:54:58
years that I've seen this written down in
1:55:00
black and white and that's what's absolutely unbelievable.
1:55:05
But political rivals such as communist Fabien Roussel
1:55:08
posted that justice was justice and must be
1:55:10
the same for everyone, reminding that Le Pen
1:55:13
herself regularly called for a firmer justice system.
1:55:16
Jean-Luc Mélenchon and his far-left France
1:55:18
Unbowed Party though seemed less comfortable with the
1:55:21
verdict, emphasizing that they would rather fight the
1:55:23
National Rally at the ballot box than in
1:55:25
court.
1:55:26
Outside of France, Le Pen's far-right allies
1:55:29
rallied around her, including Hungary's Viktor Orban who
1:55:32
declared I am Marine in support, and the
1:55:35
Netherlands Geert Verders who said he still believed
1:55:37
in her becoming president.
1:55:39
The Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov meanwhile accused more
1:55:42
and more European capitals of violating democratic norms.
1:55:46
Le Pen has a long history of political
1:55:48
and financial support from Moscow.
1:55:52
Of course, of course you have to throw
1:55:55
that in there.
1:55:56
She's been financed by Putin.
1:55:59
You know, ever since the earthquake in Myanmar,
1:56:05
formerly known as Burma, from Burma to Bangkok,
1:56:08
which would have been a much better headline,
1:56:10
the white Christian nationalist eschatological podcasts have gotten
1:56:15
all heated up.
1:56:17
And there is a a growing concern, or
1:56:21
a growing suspicion I should say, that the
1:56:25
Antichrist might be Emmanuel Macron.
1:56:30
Married to a dude.
1:56:32
Well, it doesn't help his case.
1:56:35
Let's put it that way.
1:56:37
Married to a dude.
1:56:38
The Antichrist is Macron.
1:56:40
I like it.
1:56:42
That's hilarious bullcrap.
1:56:45
By the way, and somebody did point out,
1:56:47
one of our producers pointed out, there is
1:56:48
a giant fault that runs right through Burma.
1:56:52
There is, yes, I saw that.
1:56:54
He sent us a fault map, a link
1:56:55
to a fault maps, and yeah, those are
1:56:58
all the big faults.
1:56:58
He doesn't even, and that's just the giant
1:57:01
faults.
1:57:01
The little faults are all over the place,
1:57:03
and that wasn't on that map.
1:57:04
Let's face it, the biggest fault is us,
1:57:07
brother.
1:57:07
We're the fault.
1:57:08
We are the fault.
1:57:11
Hey, with that, I want to thank you
1:57:12
for your currency in the morning.
1:57:13
To you, the man who put the C
1:57:15
in Amcan.
1:57:17
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:57:18
end, the one and only Mr. John C.
1:57:21
DeMora.
1:57:25
Seamless and raffling the air, so there's no
1:57:26
more names and heights out there.
1:57:29
Hello trolls, let me count you.
1:57:31
Here we go, here we go, here we
1:57:33
go.
1:57:34
We're about on track.
1:57:37
1949 is our troll count for today.
1:57:41
Okay, so that's pretty good, it's about the
1:57:44
average, just a tad above the average.
1:57:47
And these trolls are listening at trollroom.io,
1:57:49
the modern podcast apps at podcastapps.com.
1:57:53
Speaking of which, our conversation about the Podfather
1:57:57
Awards has got legs.
1:58:01
People are doing AI, Scaramanga's doing AI videos
1:58:05
of us hosting the Podfather Awards.
1:58:08
We've gotten a lot of, not the greatest
1:58:10
suggestion, but people are coming in with suggestions.
1:58:13
I've had people already saying, I want tickets,
1:58:16
take my money.
1:58:19
There's something here, John.
1:58:23
I'm on it.
1:58:26
All right.
1:58:26
It was a great idea, everybody.
1:58:28
When you hear those words, you know nothing's
1:58:30
going to happen.
1:58:31
Exit strategy is far away.
1:58:32
That's not true.
1:58:33
I've been wanting to do these for 10
1:58:35
years, so I'm right on track.
1:58:37
The timing is good.
1:58:38
The timing is perfect.
1:58:41
You're about, yes, ever since you were 63,
1:58:45
it's unbelievable, I can't believe we're just about
1:58:47
- Yeah, I do have a birthday coming
1:58:48
up, and there's also a big meetup in
1:58:50
Albany, not Albany, but Oakland at the pizza
1:58:54
place for my birthday.
1:58:56
Oh, that's nice.
1:58:57
Invite everybody there.
1:58:58
Oh, that's cool.
1:58:59
It should be on the list for today's
1:59:00
meetup.
1:59:00
I think it is.
1:59:01
I think it is.
1:59:04
Of course, we- Violetas.
1:59:05
Violetas.
1:59:06
We run no agenda, value for value.
1:59:10
No tariffs.
1:59:11
We give you the value.
1:59:12
We give it.
1:59:13
We just send it out to you.
1:59:14
You can do whatever you want with it.
1:59:15
You can copy the value.
1:59:16
You can throw it around.
1:59:17
You can make it your own and pretend
1:59:19
that you made up all these great things
1:59:20
and this great information that we gave you.
1:59:22
You can be really smart at the water
1:59:24
cooler at work or in the health club,
1:59:28
wherever you hang out with people.
1:59:30
When you send value back to us, we
1:59:32
do not charge you any tariffs.
1:59:34
Not at all.
1:59:35
We just do one for one, value for
1:59:37
value, time, talent, or treasure.
1:59:40
And we- You okay?
1:59:42
Sound like you fell over.
1:59:44
No, I just rolled my chair over what
1:59:47
appeared to be kind of a lump in
1:59:49
the rug.
1:59:50
Oh.
1:59:50
And I made a thunking sound, which then
1:59:52
transferred onto the- Is Theo looking for
1:59:56
his hamster?
2:00:00
Wow, that took a little too long.
2:00:04
Immediately come to mind.
2:00:06
We love what our artists do.
2:00:08
The artists, I have to say, are getting
2:00:09
better.
2:00:09
I see the artists also using AI more
2:00:12
as a tool now instead of just throwing
2:00:15
stuff in there and hoping something great comes
2:00:17
out, which usually doesn't.
2:00:19
We have more and more artists who are
2:00:20
understanding how to use it, which appears to
2:00:22
still be the only thing AI is really
2:00:24
good at is generating stuff, generating images, generating
2:00:30
video, generating spam messages.
2:00:33
I was talking to my buddy, Dave Jones,
2:00:35
and he works in a 100 firm CPA
2:00:40
firm, and he does the administration.
2:00:44
He says, this is the worst year ever
2:00:46
with phishing attacks from spam, and AI is
2:00:50
really generating a lot of this.
2:00:52
And it's at scale.
2:00:53
Oh, that's interesting.
2:00:54
That makes sense.
2:00:55
Email is the worst.
2:00:57
I was like, yeah, that's interesting.
2:00:58
So AI can help make email worse, but
2:01:02
can't seem to fix it, or at least
2:01:04
no one has tried that.
2:01:06
Well, that would be a nice product.
2:01:08
That's a product I would be interested in.
2:01:11
So we want to thank our artists for
2:01:13
episode 1751.
2:01:14
We titled that Talking Toilet.
2:01:17
And we like this one.
2:01:19
We had some ideas for improvement, but it
2:01:21
was the piece by GoFox, and it was
2:01:25
the...
2:01:26
What do you call them?
2:01:27
The babushka dolls?
2:01:28
What do you call them?
2:01:29
Yeah, babushka.
2:01:30
The nesting dolls is technically what they are.
2:01:33
So you had a Twitter doll.
2:01:34
Nesting Russian dolls.
2:01:35
Nesting Russian dolls, yes.
2:01:37
Do you have any?
2:01:37
I have a whole collection of them, personally.
2:01:40
I remember having them when I was a
2:01:42
kid.
2:01:42
I know we had them.
2:01:43
I bet my sister still has them.
2:01:44
I bought them in Russia.
2:01:46
When I was in Russia, I bought them.
2:01:47
And how many were there?
2:01:48
Because I think we had five that fit
2:01:50
in, and that...
2:01:51
I have a niner.
2:01:52
Wow.
2:01:53
A niner.
2:01:53
That's huge.
2:01:54
A niner.
2:01:56
That's what she said.
2:01:57
Dvorak's got a niner.
2:01:58
It's huge.
2:02:00
It's beautiful.
2:02:01
It was a good piece.
2:02:02
It was the Twitter to X to Grok.
2:02:06
Cute little faces.
2:02:08
We thought it would have been even better
2:02:09
if there was a little Elon that could
2:02:11
fit inside the Grok, if I recall our
2:02:13
conversation.
2:02:13
Yes, there's always...
2:02:14
In all these nesting dolls, there's always one
2:02:16
little solid piece.
2:02:18
It's a little dinky thing.
2:02:19
That's the last one.
2:02:19
That always gets lost.
2:02:20
You give one of these things to a
2:02:21
kid, somehow that little one is gone.
2:02:24
Or the Dvorak.
2:02:24
The dog's chewing on it.
2:02:26
I mean, it's something.
2:02:27
The little one.
2:02:28
And the little one, a little Biddy Musk
2:02:30
would have been perfect, and also the balance
2:02:35
of the piece, it could have been shifted
2:02:36
to the left, I think.
2:02:37
To the left a little bit.
2:02:38
Yeah, just a tad.
2:02:39
Even I agree.
2:02:39
It's not quite composed perfectly.
2:02:42
And the Kareem Dvorak color of the letters
2:02:45
was not great.
2:02:46
Even...
2:02:47
Could have been more contrasty.
2:02:47
Could have been more contrasty.
2:02:48
Or have an outline.
2:02:49
Black outline helps.
2:02:50
But that's just...
2:02:52
I mean, we're just giving you a little
2:02:54
minor points.
2:02:55
It was good.
2:02:56
There were other things we looked at.
2:02:57
You liked the Take Our Money, the Canadian,
2:03:00
the Mad Canadian with cash in his hand.
2:03:02
Yeah, I did like the Mad Canadian holding
2:03:04
a bunch of cash.
2:03:05
You used the Angry Baby stomping around.
2:03:09
I liked the Angry Baby too, yeah.
2:03:10
You like Angry Babies.
2:03:12
You liked the Angry Baby.
2:03:13
That was Capitalist Agenda.
2:03:18
And Triple J did a deal-no-deal
2:03:21
with the Taliban, but we didn't think anyone
2:03:24
would really get that one.
2:03:26
No one's going to get it.
2:03:27
No one's going to get that.
2:03:29
Triple J also did Alphabet Soup, aha, kind
2:03:32
of done.
2:03:34
I think that was it, really, the things
2:03:38
that we thought were good enough.
2:03:43
These are all beautiful.
2:03:44
We appreciate it.
2:03:45
And I think every single one of them
2:03:46
gets used in the chapters on the Modern
2:03:48
Podcast App.
2:03:49
Give it a try.
2:03:50
PodcastApps.com.
2:03:51
Try out PodVerse.
2:03:52
Try out Podcast Guru.
2:03:54
Try out Fountain.
2:03:55
I don't think you'll be disappointed.
2:03:57
They're really good.
2:03:57
And they use the Podcast Index, which I
2:04:00
might point out, according to a recent survey,
2:04:03
is the number one index for all podcasts
2:04:07
above Spotify, above Apple, above YouTube.
2:04:11
Number one.
2:04:12
Foam finger number one.
2:04:13
You know why?
2:04:14
Because we don't take stuff out.
2:04:18
It's uncancellable when you're on the Podcast Index.
2:04:21
This is where you say, hey, that's great,
2:04:23
congratulations.
2:04:24
That's fabulous.
2:04:28
So sincere.
2:04:31
Let's thank our supporters, who we like to
2:04:34
call our...
2:04:35
Do you have a No Agenda plug on
2:04:37
that page?
2:04:37
Because that's a lot of people looking at
2:04:39
it.
2:04:39
I don't.
2:04:40
I don't.
2:04:41
No.
2:04:42
No, I don't.
2:04:44
Wouldn't hurt.
2:04:45
I guess.
2:04:47
I'm sure it wouldn't hurt.
2:04:50
I want to thank the people who sent
2:04:51
us treasure, value in the form of treasure.
2:04:55
We thank every single person who sends us
2:04:58
money, $50 or above.
2:05:01
And in this case, in this particular segment,
2:05:04
we thank people who have sent us $200
2:05:05
or more.
2:05:07
And that makes you not only an associate
2:05:09
executive producer, which is a credit, is real
2:05:11
Hollywood credit, can use it anywhere credits are
2:05:13
accepted, including imdb.com.
2:05:15
We will also read your note, or most
2:05:17
of it, depending on how long it is.
2:05:19
If you come in with $300 or above,
2:05:21
well, bam, you're an executive producer and we
2:05:23
will read your note.
2:05:24
And it's always interesting to see that the
2:05:26
higher the amount, the shorter the note.
2:05:28
It's some kind of weird voodoo.
2:05:32
It always works that way.
2:05:35
The lower the number, the longer the note.
2:05:38
What do you think that is?
2:05:39
Oh, I see what you're talking about.
2:05:40
Yeah, I know.
2:05:41
Now you see it.
2:05:44
So we'll have to truncate some of it.
2:05:45
We're going to start off with Brent Walker
2:05:47
in Springfield, Oregon, who comes in.
2:05:50
Oh, there she is.
2:05:51
For something I didn't, I didn't see.
2:05:54
He asks for a de-douching right off
2:05:55
the bat.
2:05:57
You've been de-douched.
2:06:01
And then he says, I'd like a fractal
2:06:05
jingle.
2:06:06
Fractal jingle.
2:06:07
Man, that's, I have the fractal jingle here.
2:06:10
Then he also asked for an Obama, you
2:06:12
may, you might die.
2:06:14
Where's my Obama, you might die.
2:06:18
And I'd like to, oh, he's going in
2:06:19
for a Commodore ship.
2:06:20
He'd like to be known as Commodore Dubs.
2:06:22
And he says, thank you for your courage.
2:06:24
It's a fractal jingle.
2:06:27
You might die.
2:06:28
Have not heard the fractal jingle in many
2:06:31
years.
2:06:32
Yeah, I agree.
2:06:33
That's a long time.
2:06:34
Thanks Brent.
2:06:34
Good one.
2:06:36
JLGS LLC in Rockport, Texas.
2:06:41
Sorry for being a douche for the longest
2:06:42
time.
2:06:43
Please let me know, let me know Adam,
2:06:46
let me know Adam, what the name of
2:06:49
the dentist you went to to get that
2:06:52
surgery done on your teeth.
2:06:53
My dad has the same problems for years
2:06:56
and here in Texas and has been, and
2:07:00
has been to count.
2:07:02
I'm sorry.
2:07:02
He's been to countless doctors with no cure.
2:07:04
Also to all the aviators that work on
2:07:07
them, on the teeth and drive them or
2:07:12
own them.
2:07:13
I don't think it's the teeth.
2:07:15
That's what he said.
2:07:16
Look us up.
2:07:17
We are in aircraft parts and tooling sales
2:07:20
company down in Rockport, Texas near Corpus Christi
2:07:23
plus parts, or I should know, Pius parts,
2:07:26
P-I-U-S.
2:07:28
It's the name of my company.
2:07:29
We have some Cirrus stuff.
2:07:32
Cirrus?
2:07:33
What is that?
2:07:34
That's the kind of airplane I fly.
2:07:36
It's the plastic airplane with the parachute, Cirrus.
2:07:39
Oh those things.
2:07:40
Okay.
2:07:40
Mostly King Air, a Citation Lear and Challenger
2:07:44
stuff.
2:07:44
Nice.
2:07:46
The Salty Air is really good for these
2:07:49
parts down here.
2:07:50
So hurry up.
2:07:52
They're not.
2:07:53
He's being cynical.
2:07:54
He's being very cynical.
2:07:55
Yeah.
2:07:56
Salty Air is bad.
2:07:57
Mitch Ponsford is my periodontist name.
2:08:00
P-O-N-S-F-O-R-D.
2:08:02
He's in Burney, Texas.
2:08:04
Mitch Ponsford.
2:08:05
Tell him Adam sent you for 10%
2:08:07
off your first extraction.
2:08:10
And thank you, J-L-G-S.
2:08:13
Then we have Cervantes in Topsham, Maine, 3
2:08:17
-8-0-0-8.
2:08:18
Nice.
2:08:19
Nice.
2:08:19
I see you there with your boob.
2:08:22
Quick correction for John.
2:08:23
The correct phrase in retail is the customer
2:08:26
is always right in matters of taste.
2:08:29
Yeah.
2:08:30
I sent him.
2:08:32
This is bull crap, okay?
2:08:35
Wow.
2:08:36
All you have to do is go to
2:08:37
the wiki page and they document the whole
2:08:39
thing.
2:08:39
It goes way back.
2:08:40
So wiki is true.
2:08:42
Somebody some years ago put this in matters
2:08:45
of taste in at the last minute and
2:08:49
it got around.
2:08:50
Somebody got around virally as bull crap.
2:08:55
Really?
2:08:56
Because people are sending me, I've gotten a
2:08:58
lot of, is that?
2:08:59
Go to the wiki page on the customer
2:09:02
is always right.
2:09:02
It has a history.
2:09:04
Okay.
2:09:05
I mean, so we can't say wiki is
2:09:07
any truth.
2:09:08
Is that what you're saying?
2:09:09
The wiki page documents this and then refers
2:09:12
to Snopes who also documents this as bullshit.
2:09:16
I don't know how many times I have
2:09:17
to say it.
2:09:18
Hmm.
2:09:19
Let me ask Grok.
2:09:22
Grok will probably get it right.
2:09:24
Let me see.
2:09:26
The customer is always right is actually a
2:09:28
shortened version of a longer sentiment.
2:09:30
The full idea behind it was more nuanced.
2:09:32
It was popularized in the early 20th century
2:09:34
by retailers like Harry Gordon Selfridge from Selfridges,
2:09:38
John Wanamaker, and Marshall Field who used phrases
2:09:41
like the customer is always right in matters
2:09:44
of taste.
2:09:45
No.
2:09:46
I'm just telling.
2:09:47
Okay.
2:09:47
Well, that's.
2:09:48
Oh, that's slop.
2:09:49
Hey, now you're talking my language.
2:09:52
It's slop.
2:09:54
He goes on to say anyone who's worked
2:09:56
with the public will understand that the customer
2:09:57
can't always be right in all things because
2:09:59
the customer are pricks.
2:10:04
Anyways, this is now my fourth annual birthday
2:10:07
donation.
2:10:07
Happy birthday, John.
2:10:08
Please add me.
2:10:09
Cervantes, my daughter, Ayla, who's turning 18, both
2:10:13
on the fifth and niece, Leona, who's turning
2:10:15
seven on the fourth on the birthday list
2:10:17
for this episode.
2:10:18
They're on there.
2:10:19
COVID woke me up, and your relentless deconstruction
2:10:22
has been more a constant caffeine drip that
2:10:25
keeps waking me up more and more and
2:10:27
more and more just without the jitters.
2:10:29
Now I need something that's the midpoint between
2:10:31
Nazi propaganda and Zionist propaganda, since you guys
2:10:35
are just a couple of Zionist boomer shills.
2:10:37
Yeah.
2:10:38
Love you guys.
2:10:38
Cervantes, may you never find an exit strategy,
2:10:41
Cervantes from Topsom, Maine, and he wants a
2:10:45
Rogan donation.
2:10:45
Trump, I'm going to come and do the
2:10:47
climate change.
2:10:48
Rogan donation.
2:10:50
I'm going to come.
2:10:52
Due to climate change.
2:10:54
All right.
2:10:55
There you go.
2:10:56
Tracy Sullivan in Fowler, Indiana, Fowler, comes in
2:11:01
with 350 bucks, and she has a note,
2:11:04
which I can click to.
2:11:05
I have it open, I believe, right here.
2:11:09
Dear John and Adam, it's been a while
2:11:10
since our last...
2:11:11
She has very pretty printing in a card,
2:11:15
it's almost like comic, it's a comic style.
2:11:20
It's been a while since...
2:11:21
It is cute, yes.
2:11:22
Don't you think?
2:11:23
Yeah.
2:11:23
It's been a while since our last donation.
2:11:25
We finally got out of Illinois and moved
2:11:27
to a much better place, arrow pointing to
2:11:30
Indiana with a little heart.
2:11:34
We plan on checking out the indie meetups
2:11:37
as soon as we can.
2:11:38
Well, there's plenty of them, and they're packed
2:11:40
to the gills.
2:11:42
This donation also gets me to Dame Hood,
2:11:45
please dub me Dame Sally Bananas.
2:11:49
Yay, Sally Bananas.
2:11:51
Sally Bananas.
2:11:53
I hope the happy puppy on the card
2:11:56
gives you good donation karma, little smiley face.
2:11:59
Thank you, and God bless Dame Sally Bananas,
2:12:02
Tracy Sullivan, $350.
2:12:05
Thank you, Tracy, and we'll see you on
2:12:06
the podium later.
2:12:07
Sir Amzie is a new Rockford, North Dakota,
2:12:10
333.33, and he says, oh, please credit
2:12:16
this donation to my dad, Preston Meyer.
2:12:19
Am I doing that right here?
2:12:20
Yes, Preston Meyer.
2:12:21
Where's that?
2:12:22
It's at the very top of the note.
2:12:23
It's probably not visible on here.
2:12:25
Oh, yeah, I can't see because the note's
2:12:27
so damn big that it's blocked.
2:12:28
There it is.
2:12:29
You probably can't see that on your cell.
2:12:31
On February 22nd, I saw exactly 333 emails
2:12:38
in my box.
2:12:39
Lo and behold, the 333th email was a
2:12:41
newsletter from No Agenda, which usually end up
2:12:43
in my spam folder.
2:12:44
I knew I had to donate.
2:12:47
This is true.
2:12:49
On 1750, Adam said that he isn't part
2:12:51
of a religion and that organized religion is,
2:12:54
quote, a problem.
2:12:57
I was raised going to various Protestant churches.
2:12:59
My mom is a pastor.
2:13:00
In 2018, I was confirmed a Lutheran.
2:13:02
I have a good amount of experience with
2:13:04
Protestantism.
2:13:07
In my experience, there was always something missing
2:13:09
with Protestantism, even when reading a verse or
2:13:12
passage.
2:13:12
It seemed like Protestants would intentionally miss the
2:13:14
main message of a passage to fit their
2:13:16
beliefs, depending on the denomination of how liberal
2:13:19
-slash-conservative they were.
2:13:20
There are multiple examples of Protestants not taking
2:13:23
the words of Jesus literally or explaining them
2:13:25
away to me.
2:13:26
Nothing.
2:13:26
I'm not sure what you're saying here yet,
2:13:27
but let's read on.
2:13:29
Two years ago, I met my now-wife,
2:13:30
who led me to the Catholic Church.
2:13:32
I was confirmed in December.
2:13:33
I found my way to Catholicism through the
2:13:35
2,000-year history of the Church.
2:13:37
The evidence of miracles and insights into my
2:13:39
own life preached continues to strengthen my faith,
2:13:42
along with knowing that Jorge Mario Bergoglio, Francis,
2:13:47
is not the Pope.
2:13:48
He's an imposter and a liar.
2:13:51
So is he agreeing with me here?
2:13:53
I'm not sure.
2:13:53
Well, Void Zero is definitely on that bandwagon.
2:13:56
Adam and John, Christians of no agenda, I
2:13:59
implore you to look deep into the history
2:14:00
of the Church.
2:14:01
Mass of the Ages is a good docuseries
2:14:03
for understanding the reasons that people leave the
2:14:05
Catholic Church.
2:14:06
I also recommend Michael Knowles.
2:14:08
There are countless conversion stories on YouTube to
2:14:12
listen to.
2:14:13
Look up Ann Barnhart's YouTube channel, and the
2:14:15
Barnhart podcast to understand why Jorge Bergoglio is
2:14:19
the anti-Pope.
2:14:21
God bless you both.
2:14:22
Thank you for your courage.
2:14:23
I'm praying for you.
2:14:24
Well, thank you, Preston.
2:14:25
I'm not quite sure where you went with
2:14:26
the note, but...
2:14:27
I think I brought up anti-Pope once
2:14:29
on this show, and it got nothing but
2:14:31
grief.
2:14:32
Hey, listen, this is a donation note.
2:14:34
It's not you or me, brother.
2:14:35
We're just saying it.
2:14:37
Sir Richard in Burbank, California comes in with
2:14:39
the same amount, 33333.
2:14:41
And he writes a short note.
2:14:42
He's in Hiroshima, actually, Japan.
2:14:45
He's not in Burbank, but that's where he's
2:14:46
from.
2:14:46
Is it Hiroshima or Hiroshima?
2:14:49
I think both ways.
2:14:50
I've heard it's pronounced Hiroshima and Hiroshima.
2:14:55
And the Japanese probably...
2:14:57
I was shocked, shocked, he says, to discover
2:15:02
that I had not donated to Noah Jenner
2:15:03
for almost two years.
2:15:07
Thank you for creating this outstanding product, Sir
2:15:11
Richard of Burbank, north of the five.
2:15:13
So he just came in with the 33333,
2:15:17
and a short note.
2:15:19
We appreciate that.
2:15:20
Marty is in Olten in, looks like, Sweden?
2:15:24
I mean, Switzerland?
2:15:26
CH?
2:15:26
Switzerland?
2:15:26
Yeah, Switzerland.
2:15:27
Switzerland.
2:15:28
And Marty said...
2:15:30
Marty.
2:15:30
I'm sorry.
2:15:31
It should be Marty.
2:15:32
Let's drop...
2:15:33
Hey, let's drop 333.33 from Marty in
2:15:36
Olten, a beautiful town in the midst of
2:15:38
the north of Switzerland.
2:15:40
I appreciate the groundwork being laid in the
2:15:42
psychological warfare arsenal from the, in this moment,
2:15:45
insecurity management to hypophora and emotive conjugation.
2:15:50
Please, let's extend this list.
2:15:52
Bertrand Russell was quite the guy.
2:15:54
John, direct questions about Minecraft to me.
2:15:57
Adam has my email address.
2:15:58
I annoyed him in recent months with telling
2:16:01
him that I've heard John's Bohemian Grove story
2:16:04
multiple times on the show.
2:16:07
Why?
2:16:09
I don't understand.
2:16:12
Why do people email me about stuff that
2:16:14
you do?
2:16:16
Because that's exactly the way the world is
2:16:18
supposed to be.
2:16:20
Adam at curry.com for all complaints.
2:16:23
No, no.
2:16:29
And he wants this...
2:16:31
He's celebrating his 40th birthday.
2:16:35
I know, but I'm looking at it.
2:16:35
I'm looking for the chant, the donate to
2:16:38
no agenda.
2:16:39
How does that go again?
2:16:41
It's called donate, I think.
2:16:42
Do you know how many, do you know
2:16:45
how many there are of donate?
2:16:47
It was donate.
2:16:49
It was like a chant, wasn't it?
2:16:51
Yeah.
2:16:52
Donate to no agenda.
2:16:55
Yeah.
2:16:56
How does it end?
2:16:58
I don't remember.
2:17:00
All I remember is it's hypnotic.
2:17:02
It's very hypnotic, but I...
2:17:05
Oh, no.
2:17:05
He's singing a donate, donate.
2:17:08
He's singing to that one.
2:17:09
No, there is a different one.
2:17:11
It's a different one.
2:17:12
Anyway.
2:17:15
Celebrating 40 revolutions around the sun on 4
2:17:17
-8 Gregorian donation chant for jingles.
2:17:20
Maybe it's on the Gregorian chants.
2:17:25
I guarantee that's not what it's called.
2:17:27
No.
2:17:29
Donate.
2:17:29
Well, you're just going to get a different
2:17:32
donate.
2:17:32
I can't help you.
2:17:33
I'll give you the donate, John.
2:17:35
Sorry.
2:17:37
You've got...
2:17:40
Donate.
2:17:42
Donate.
2:17:42
Yeah, that's Gregorian.
2:17:44
No, that's not the one.
2:17:47
Donate to no agenda.
2:17:51
If I knew the rest of the...
2:17:53
Yeah, you can sing it yourself, but you
2:17:55
can't.
2:17:55
So, Chap Williams is up.
2:17:56
He's in Edmond, Oklahoma.
2:17:58
And this is the best one.
2:17:59
This came in as a check, 333.33.
2:18:01
There's no note, no nothing.
2:18:02
So, he gets to double up karma.
2:18:06
You've got...
2:18:08
Karma.
2:18:09
Are you mad?
2:18:11
Are you mad today?
2:18:12
I'm angry.
2:18:14
Are you really?
2:18:15
You seem a little bit on edge.
2:18:17
No.
2:18:18
It's just the EQ.
2:18:21
Calipigious Colin.
2:18:23
He's in Willow Spring, North Carolina, 331.25.
2:18:27
And this donation is in honor of the
2:18:29
birth of their newest human resource.
2:18:31
Our sweet baby girl, Chloe Susanna.
2:18:34
Born on 331.25. Hence the donation.
2:18:37
Please add her to the birthday list and
2:18:38
to all the other slaves of my nation
2:18:40
who are of childbearing age.
2:18:42
We made another baby.
2:18:43
Now the ball is in your half court.
2:18:46
See, there's someone who listens and knows how
2:18:48
it works.
2:18:49
Yeah, that's for sure.
2:18:50
No jingles, no karma.
2:18:51
Thanks for what you do, says Calipigious Colin
2:18:54
in Dub Spring, North Carolina.
2:18:55
Thank you.
2:18:58
Is that a guy?
2:19:00
Calipigious Colin?
2:19:01
I would think so.
2:19:02
I don't know why you would use that
2:19:04
phrase as a descriptor.
2:19:07
Sir Tim in Louisville, Texas, 28743.
2:19:11
273 donation plus fees for the old man's
2:19:15
birthday.
2:19:16
Listen to these boomers and check your recurring
2:19:20
donations.
2:19:21
This is his note to the public out
2:19:23
there.
2:19:24
In other words, listen to the boomers.
2:19:25
That would include me and it would include
2:19:28
Adam.
2:19:29
He says, mine were cut off, by the
2:19:32
way.
2:19:32
His recurring donation was cut off months ago
2:19:34
and the guilt is eating me alive.
2:19:37
Sir Tim of the Tarrant Swamplands.
2:19:41
Wow.
2:19:44
Where's Tarrant?
2:19:45
I don't know.
2:19:47
In Texas?
2:19:48
I guess.
2:19:49
I have no idea.
2:19:50
Now here's the note you're talking about.
2:19:51
So it is from Kieran Zverner in Brevard,
2:19:59
North Carolina.
2:20:02
RoaDux222.22. Starts off by saying, I can
2:20:05
hear you groaning about the length of this
2:20:07
note already, but a huge part of what
2:20:08
makes this show so important is the feedback
2:20:10
loop between you and the producers.
2:20:12
It makes us all better.
2:20:13
I hope you consider this a contribution of
2:20:15
time, talent, and treasure.
2:20:18
No, it's theft of time.
2:20:20
No, it's just a robbery.
2:20:22
It's a robbery.
2:20:23
I've been sitting on this note since this
2:20:25
donation and note since February, waiting to close
2:20:27
on House and then just being a tightwad
2:20:29
douchebag.
2:20:30
So some of this refers to old but
2:20:32
still highly relevant news.
2:20:34
And then he's talking about the laugh tale.
2:20:37
He's talking about Michio Kaku.
2:20:42
Then he has something to say about our
2:20:44
analysis on climate change clips, biodiversity.
2:20:48
Brother, there's no way we can read this.
2:20:51
There's just no way.
2:20:52
This is a 10-pager.
2:20:52
It really is super, super helpful.
2:20:54
He even goes on to GLP1.
2:20:56
Okay, that's it.
2:20:57
After all, I should add that I love
2:20:58
the show.
2:20:59
Since I think producer age is of interest
2:21:01
to you, I'll also mention that we're both
2:21:03
28.
2:21:04
I started listening in December of 2021 and
2:21:06
promptly hit my wife in the mouth.
2:21:08
We came for Adam.
2:21:09
We stayed for John.
2:21:10
It makes me feel special.
2:21:12
My parents are a bit tougher than her,
2:21:15
but I'm trying.
2:21:16
Anyway, we rarely missed a show since, even
2:21:18
while living off the grid in the cloud
2:21:20
forest in Ecuador for six months in 2023.
2:21:24
We climbed mountains to get service and download
2:21:26
the latest show.
2:21:28
Okay, that is very cool.
2:21:30
Keep up the good work.
2:21:32
What does he do?
2:21:33
When they were living in Ecuador, they climbed
2:21:35
up a mountain to get service to download
2:21:37
the episode.
2:21:38
Oh, wow.
2:21:39
That's dedication right there.
2:21:40
Yeah, I like it.
2:21:41
So thank you very much.
2:21:43
We appreciate it.
2:21:43
That should have been at the top.
2:21:45
That's the lead, we call it.
2:21:48
And Kiernan asked for They're Eating the Dogs,
2:21:51
followed by Don't Be So Flippant, Man.
2:21:54
Now, this is interesting.
2:21:55
I went looking for Don't Be So Flippant.
2:21:57
Do you know that that never was a
2:21:58
jingle?
2:21:59
Don't Be So Flippant?
2:22:00
I never heard it as a jingle.
2:22:02
No, but I clipped it just for him
2:22:04
because the long note and I knew we
2:22:06
weren't going to read it.
2:22:08
Annie says, P.S. It was great to
2:22:10
hear Mimi on the old-fashioned On Purpose
2:22:12
podcast.
2:22:13
She's so cool.
2:22:15
Did Mimi do the podcast?
2:22:16
Yeah, she does a lot of podcasts that
2:22:18
promote the Too Many Eggs book, which is
2:22:21
also available for free at TooManyEggs.com.
2:22:24
They're Eating the Dogs.
2:22:26
Don't Be So Flippant, Man.
2:22:30
I'm glad I got that one.
2:22:31
I got to play that one one more
2:22:32
time.
2:22:33
Anonymous.
2:22:34
Hold on.
2:22:34
Don't Be So Flippant, Man.
2:22:36
Got to goot karma.
2:22:37
Goot karma.
2:22:37
You've got karma.
2:22:41
Anonymous comes in.
2:22:43
I'm lucky here.
2:22:44
220-222, that came in as a check.
2:22:46
So, there's no jingles, no karma involved and
2:22:50
no note.
2:22:51
So, give them a double up.
2:22:52
Double up karma coming your way, Anonymous.
2:22:54
You've got karma.
2:22:59
And there's Sean Holman from Noblesville, Indiana to
2:23:02
1911.
2:23:03
1911 is the number because he says, don't
2:23:05
be a juice bag.
2:23:06
Visit StealthArms.net and design your own 1911
2:23:11
platypus today.
2:23:12
It takes double stack glock mags.
2:23:15
Jesus is king.
2:23:20
No, I should put a Stealth.
2:23:22
Okay, StealthArms.
2:23:23
Okay.
2:23:24
Yeah, StealthArms.net.
2:23:25
C.E. Martin in Clarksville, Indiana.
2:23:27
210-60.
2:23:30
Dear John and Adam, please accept my donation.
2:23:31
No agenda in the amount of 210-60.
2:23:33
Cobbled together from 2025 book royalties and a
2:23:37
little bit of my paltry VA disability pay
2:23:40
to round things out.
2:23:42
I'm making this donation as a way to
2:23:44
say thank you for your content from 2012
2:23:47
to roughly 2019.
2:23:51
I wrote and self-published on Amazon, Apple,
2:23:54
Nook, Smashwords, and several other platforms.
2:23:59
Wow.
2:23:59
15 novels.
2:24:00
Wow.
2:24:01
That's a little more productive than me.
2:24:02
And a number of shorter works, primarily in
2:24:06
the men's adventure supernatural thriller genre.
2:24:09
Oh.
2:24:10
I took a break from writing in 2020
2:24:12
after a series of unfortunate incidents, including a
2:24:15
car wreck, falling down some stairs, treatment and
2:24:18
surgery for my daughter's scoliosis, FOXVID-19, et
2:24:23
cetera.
2:24:25
FOVID.
2:24:26
I'm sorry.
2:24:27
Mispronounced.
2:24:28
FOVID.
2:24:29
F-A-U-X-VID.
2:24:30
FOVID.
2:24:31
Instead of COVID.
2:24:32
Get it?
2:24:32
I've considered returning to the writing craft several
2:24:35
times, but work and my deteriorating health always
2:24:40
seems to block my path.
2:24:41
Somehow, without any advertising or promotion, my books
2:24:44
have started selling again in 2025 without any
2:24:46
promotion or effort on my part.
2:24:48
It's not a lot.
2:24:49
So, by the way, you used the word
2:24:50
promotion.
2:24:51
Too many times.
2:24:52
You made a mistake.
2:24:54
I hate it when that happens.
2:24:56
It's not a lot so far, but enough
2:24:58
to make a contribution to the greatest podcasting
2:25:01
universe.
2:25:01
Thank you for your twice-weekly shows, which
2:25:03
drown out my military grade tinnitus.
2:25:08
Tinnitus.
2:25:08
Tinnitus.
2:25:10
Oh, yes, I know.
2:25:11
Tinnitus.
2:25:12
It's pronounced tinnitus, but I pronounce it tinnitus.
2:25:15
That's wrong.
2:25:16
But it's still the same word.
2:25:18
And take my mind off my chronic pain
2:25:20
while I'm working on my day job and
2:25:22
for more about my writing or my never
2:25:25
-ending battles with the VA, check out my
2:25:28
author's blog, troglodad, T-R-O-G-L
2:25:34
-O-D-A-D, troglodad.info, as it
2:25:37
rises from the ashes of abandonment.
2:25:40
Like the mighty phoenix this week, assuming I
2:25:42
can remember how to update the DNS.
2:25:47
Good promotion there.
2:25:50
Get the DNS set up for your promotion.
2:25:51
Could have been better.
2:25:53
Coming in with $204.03 is Gigawatt Coffee
2:25:57
Roasters from Bensonville, Illinois.
2:25:59
That's our buddy, Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:26:01
He says, can I get a jobs karma
2:26:02
for the incredible new team member we just
2:26:05
hired?
2:26:05
John, they're growing.
2:26:07
This is proof.
2:26:08
American coffee company right there in Bensonville, Illinois.
2:26:11
Who knows where they get the beans from,
2:26:13
but it's an American company by American from
2:26:16
Gigawatt Coffee Roasters.
2:26:19
So they're growing.
2:26:19
They got a team member.
2:26:20
A huge thank you to all the producers
2:26:22
in Gitmo Nation who fuel their day with
2:26:24
Gigawatt.
2:26:25
You've helped us grow, and that means jobs
2:26:27
saved or created.
2:26:31
Support the American dream and try our delicious
2:26:34
fresh roasted coffee today.
2:26:36
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for
2:26:40
20% off your order.
2:26:41
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:26:44
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:26:48
Let's vote for jobs.
2:26:51
Okay.
2:26:54
Gina Petaris in FV, North Carolina.
2:27:01
Fuquay Varina.
2:27:02
I don't know.
2:27:03
It's Fuquay.
2:27:04
Fuquay.
2:27:05
Fuquay.
2:27:06
Fuquay.
2:27:06
200 bucks.
2:27:07
She's Sunday, March 30th.
2:27:09
Please see my note.
2:27:10
Sent the notes at noagendashow.net.
2:27:13
And there's a little parentheses here.
2:27:15
Did not receive.
2:27:18
That's Jay's commentary.
2:27:20
I didn't receive anything either.
2:27:22
Notes at noagendashow.net.
2:27:25
Which is the right address.
2:27:27
It should have been received.
2:27:28
Resend.
2:27:29
Resend.
2:27:29
Resend and we'll read it later.
2:27:31
$200.
2:27:32
There she is, Linda Lou Patkin from Lakewood,
2:27:34
Colorado.
2:27:34
We all know and love her.
2:27:35
Happy birthday, John.
2:27:36
Jobs karma.
2:27:38
For a resume that gets results, go to
2:27:40
imagemakersinc.com.
2:27:41
For all of your executive resume and job
2:27:43
search needs, that's Image Makers Inc.
2:27:45
with a K.
2:27:46
And work with Linda Lou, the Duchess of
2:27:49
Jobs and writer of resumes.
2:27:51
Jobs.
2:27:51
Jobs.
2:27:52
Jobs.
2:27:53
And jobs.
2:27:54
Let's vote for jobs.
2:27:56
Yes!
2:27:57
Karma.
2:27:59
Well, I hate to tell you this, but
2:28:00
you're going to have to read the next
2:28:02
one because it takes up my spreadsheet.
2:28:03
Yeah, that's really not okay.
2:28:05
I mean, you need a better spreadsheet.
2:28:06
Mark.
2:28:09
No, I don't.
2:28:10
Well, yes.
2:28:12
You like reading long notes.
2:28:13
I do not.
2:28:14
And you're a better reader than I am.
2:28:15
That's true.
2:28:15
By a lot.
2:28:16
Yes.
2:28:16
Mark.
2:28:17
Yeah, you're a good reader.
2:28:18
You're very talented in that regard.
2:28:21
Flattery.
2:28:21
I always will defer the long notes to
2:28:23
you.
2:28:24
Flattery will get you everywhere.
2:28:27
Mark Calabian.
2:28:28
Calabian.
2:28:29
You blow it up.
2:28:31
He's in Glendale, California.
2:28:33
$200.
2:28:33
Long time listener.
2:28:34
Almost every episode for the past four years.
2:28:36
And douchebag here.
2:28:38
In the spirit of value for value, though,
2:28:39
I did leave a shout out to No
2:28:40
Agenda on my company's website for nearly all
2:28:43
of 2024, garnering a few hundred thousand impressions.
2:28:46
Well, that's good.
2:28:47
Frankly, I would have donated, but I'm a
2:28:49
very broke entrepreneur.
2:28:51
Pouring the past two years of pretty much
2:28:52
everything I have into building a new kind
2:28:54
of dating app, which finally launches the day
2:28:57
this episode airs.
2:28:58
And now, at last, I'll have an excuse
2:29:00
to start donating properly.
2:29:01
It's called Data-ing.
2:29:04
Data-ing.
2:29:05
D-A-T-A-I-N-G.
2:29:07
Data-ing.
2:29:08
And I'm pretty proud of it.
2:29:09
With help from David Nair, an author of
2:29:12
SPSS and core contributor to Cluster Analysis.
2:29:15
Oh, they've done something AI-y.
2:29:17
Oh, Cluster Analysis.
2:29:20
Cluster.
2:29:20
We're hoping there's some cluster F-ing going
2:29:23
on.
2:29:23
Yeah, exactly.
2:29:25
We built a data-driven dating platform that
2:29:27
matches people based on interests, personalities, and lifestyles.
2:29:31
Basically, it's a smart data-driven matchmaker designed
2:29:34
to connect people authentically and meaningfully, even to
2:29:37
no-agenda listeners.
2:29:39
This sounds a lot like the plot to
2:29:41
Bridget Jones' diary.
2:29:44
Tell it about your dream girl, and it'll
2:29:47
go find her.
2:29:49
Ha ha ha ha ha ha.
2:29:51
No prompts, no bios, no pay-to-play.
2:29:53
Our system rates every person on a constantly
2:29:56
updating 1,200-trait scale, writes your bio,
2:29:59
and crafts custom descriptions for why every match
2:30:02
may or may not work, all of which
2:30:04
adapts with users over time.
2:30:06
And this is just the bootstrap version one.
2:30:09
Oh, my God, you don't even have to
2:30:11
show for the date.
2:30:12
It does it for you.
2:30:13
I know you guys aren't totally sold on
2:30:16
AI, correct, but this will be a good
2:30:19
test because there's a lot of incels in
2:30:21
the no-agenda community, as I received a
2:30:22
lot of notes.
2:30:23
And this is better work.
2:30:25
I did not.
2:30:25
I got a lot of notes.
2:30:27
From incels?
2:30:28
Yes.
2:30:29
After my incel presentation of the last show?
2:30:31
Yes.
2:30:32
In fact, I have a series of clips
2:30:33
if we have time.
2:30:35
Black appeal.
2:30:36
Black appeal, yeah.
2:30:39
I know you guys aren't totally sold on
2:30:41
AI, but I think it's probably good we
2:30:42
teach it, how to bring people together to
2:30:44
balance out the tearing people limb from limb.
2:30:47
Plus, if we can do it while repopulating
2:30:50
the earth again, it seems like a worthwhile
2:30:51
endeavor.
2:30:54
Anyways, I've spent too long typing this, and
2:30:56
I have way too much to do before
2:30:58
tomorrow, but I would love to someday hear
2:31:00
about a no-agenda love story made possible
2:31:02
by this note.
2:31:03
Thankful for all you do.
2:31:05
Ladies and gentlemen, go try out Data-ing,
2:31:08
the Data-ing app, and let me know.
2:31:11
Let Adam Curry know how it works out
2:31:13
for you.
2:31:14
Adam at curry.com.
2:31:15
Yes, please.
2:31:16
Last on our list is Crypto Cockney in
2:31:19
Bedford, UK.
2:31:21
200 bucks.
2:31:23
The British are coming, all caps, to liberate
2:31:26
you two boomers.
2:31:27
Hopefully, the Associate Executive Producer donation will keep
2:31:31
Crypto Grouch John happy and fully stocked on
2:31:35
vintage Costco wine.
2:31:38
Plus, Jesus-approved beautiful hair care products for
2:31:41
your good self.
2:31:43
Bedanks for all your value-tainment.
2:31:47
I couldn't live without it.
2:31:48
Four more years.
2:31:49
Please play a Bitcoin crypto jingle if you
2:31:52
have one or create one.
2:31:53
Plus, your hilarious Trump as a Nazi, Putin
2:31:57
on the Ritz is what it is, and
2:32:01
F.U. China.
2:32:03
Love and good karma to all your listeners.
2:32:07
They're saying that all hell is going to
2:32:10
break loose and you're going to need a
2:32:11
Bitcoin.
2:32:14
Donald loves Nazis.
2:32:17
Donald loves Nazis.
2:32:20
CNN say that he's KKK and he shouts
2:32:23
a sick hail with it.
2:32:24
Wow.
2:32:27
F.U. and you don't know where there's
2:32:30
fake news.
2:32:30
Why don't you get your Gitmo fix?
2:32:33
Putin on the Ritz.
2:32:37
Chinese asshole.
2:32:40
You've got karma.
2:32:42
Well, that was a very nice sequence of
2:32:46
executive and associate executive producers.
2:32:48
I do want to congratulate Carolyn Blaney.
2:32:54
We all know Carolyn Blaney.
2:32:56
She and her husband have pooped out a
2:32:58
child, or she has actually.
2:33:00
She gave birth to the first child December
2:33:01
6, 2024.
2:33:04
And I have...
2:33:05
Why is she...
2:33:05
I guess she's been away for a while.
2:33:07
A beautiful, healthy baby girl named Evelyn Dorothy
2:33:11
Carter.
2:33:12
A month prior to giving birth, I became
2:33:14
a lawful permanent resident of the United States.
2:33:17
My girl was born in Ohio.
2:33:18
Anchor baby.
2:33:20
Fantastic.
2:33:21
I love my daughter and being a mother,
2:33:22
I feel so blessed every day.
2:33:24
God is good.
2:33:24
And we say congratulations.
2:33:26
Welcome to Gitmo Nation.
2:33:28
Evelyn Dorothy Carter.
2:33:30
Too bad you were not named after Adam
2:33:32
and John, but that's how it goes.
2:33:34
I would like to thank Aaron Stager.
2:33:37
I was speaking at the Leadership Gillespie County
2:33:40
yesterday here in Fredericksburg.
2:33:43
And he came up to me.
2:33:44
Well, I knew it was a show because
2:33:46
it was like a media panel and he
2:33:47
had a question.
2:33:48
Hey, can you tell me about value for
2:33:50
value?
2:33:52
Okay.
2:33:53
He came up and he pressed a crisp
2:33:55
$100 bill in my hand.
2:33:56
I just want to thank him for that.
2:33:58
That was very nice and unexpected.
2:34:00
And an emergency jobs karma for our producer,
2:34:06
Sir Aero, Knight of the Knots and King
2:34:09
of the Boostergrams.
2:34:10
For the first time in his 35-year
2:34:12
professional career, he was laid off from his
2:34:14
job yesterday from a company that has bit
2:34:17
the farm on AI.
2:34:19
So we need to give him a jobs
2:34:21
karma.
2:34:21
Emergency jobs karma for knights always.
2:34:23
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:34:26
Let's vote for jobs.
2:34:28
Karma.
2:34:30
And thank you to our executive and associate
2:34:32
executive producers.
2:34:33
We appreciate everything you do for us every
2:34:35
single episode.
2:34:36
These credits are good for your entire lifetime.
2:34:39
You can put them anywhere.
2:34:40
Your LinkedIn, your bio, your resume, which you
2:34:43
might get from Lindaloo Packing.
2:34:44
Or just go to imdb.com and see
2:34:46
over a thousand executive and associate executive producers
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2:34:51
We'll be thanking people $50 and above in
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a little bit.
2:34:54
And remember, you can always set up a
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Check again.
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They do seem to expire.
2:34:59
Go to noagendadonations.com.
2:35:01
Thank you again for supporting us for 1752.
2:35:04
Our formula is this.
2:35:06
We go out.
2:35:07
We hit people in the mouth.
2:35:13
Order.
2:35:15
Order.
2:35:17
How dare you be so flippant, man?
2:35:19
Shut up, Steve.
2:35:24
So, incense.
2:35:25
I have an Ask Adam.
2:35:27
Oh, you do?
2:35:28
I wasn't prepared for an Ask Adam.
2:35:32
You can play a quick jingle.
2:35:33
Yeah.
2:35:35
If you can't find it, that's okay.
2:35:36
I used to have these kind of at
2:35:39
the ready, but I don't know what happened.
2:35:42
Yeah, what happened?
2:35:43
I don't know what happened.
2:35:45
Something happened.
2:35:47
For some reason, it's okay.
2:35:52
Here we go.
2:35:52
Here we go.
2:35:54
Ask Adam.
2:35:56
Ask.
2:35:56
Question.
2:35:57
Okay.
2:35:58
There we go.
2:35:58
That's the question.
2:35:59
Yes.
2:35:59
Answer the question.
2:35:59
So, I'm going to play the clip, then
2:36:01
I'm going to ask you a question about
2:36:03
the clip.
2:36:03
Okay.
2:36:04
Because I consider that there's what I would
2:36:08
call an illogic moment.
2:36:11
It's the Ask Adam clip.
2:36:13
The General Services Administration announced it is significantly
2:36:17
scaling back government-run childcare services.
2:36:20
WAMU's Jackson Zinnenberg has the story.
2:36:23
Up until this month, the GSA ran an
2:36:25
office of childcare services that oversaw a network
2:36:28
of 82 government-run services across the U
2:36:31
.S., including Puerto Rico.
2:36:33
Some are housed in federal office buildings, especially
2:36:35
those in D.C. Others are independent businesses
2:36:38
supported by the government that give preferential admission
2:36:41
to the children of federal workers.
2:36:42
Those childcare centers will now face closure or
2:36:45
significantly higher operating costs.
2:36:47
Okay.
2:36:48
What was the question?
2:36:51
The question will be, if they're having their
2:36:54
money taken away, why is there going to
2:36:57
be significantly higher operating costs?
2:37:01
That's what he said.
2:37:03
It makes no sense.
2:37:07
They're having their money taken away.
2:37:09
Where was that from?
2:37:10
That's very interesting.
2:37:11
It was from WAMU in Washington, D.C.
2:37:14
It's a local PBS station.
2:37:16
Well, that explains it.
2:37:17
But I just – what?
2:37:19
This is like the same thing where they
2:37:21
say, oh, you know, it generates – you're
2:37:24
taking a billion dollars away from the park
2:37:26
service.
2:37:26
Do you realize that that $1 billion generates
2:37:28
$55 billion in revenue?
2:37:32
Well, you get $55 billion in revenue.
2:37:34
Why don't you recycle some of it?
2:37:36
I mean, we hear these illogic complaints constantly.
2:37:44
Well, that's what the media does.
2:37:46
I mean, they just take the press release
2:37:49
and read it.
2:37:50
I don't think they're doing any work anymore.
2:37:52
No, I think they stopped doing work some
2:37:54
time back.
2:37:56
So I have a series of clips.
2:37:58
Do we have time?
2:38:00
I'm wondering if I should keep it for
2:38:01
Sunday.
2:38:02
Maybe I'll keep this for Sunday.
2:38:03
Well, what series is the clip about?
2:38:05
Well, Morning Joe – so it was in
2:38:08
relation to the incel's black pill.
2:38:11
And I did get a number of very
2:38:13
interesting notes from one of our producers who
2:38:16
is an incel, and he explains why.
2:38:19
I got notes from teachers saying, yes, you
2:38:23
know, we try to do ballroom dance class
2:38:26
to get boys and girls comfortable with each
2:38:29
other.
2:38:30
And it is ballroom dance.
2:38:31
Which we try to do.
2:38:32
It's different than forcing it.
2:38:33
Yes, correct.
2:38:34
No, he says forcing.
2:38:35
I think he actually mentioned forcing.
2:38:38
Well, at what age?
2:38:42
Well, he is a – didn't say, just
2:38:47
teacher.
2:38:47
It makes a difference.
2:38:48
When you're forced to dance with a girl
2:38:50
in the second grade, first, second, and third
2:38:53
grade, it has a different impact on you
2:38:56
than eighth grade.
2:38:58
We got a note from Matt saying, we
2:39:00
used to have junior assembly.
2:39:02
A junior assembly.
2:39:03
That's something similar.
2:39:05
Then he says, now we're raising a young
2:39:07
man here.
2:39:07
He has a good head on his shoulders,
2:39:08
thanks to his mom.
2:39:09
But the battle is real.
2:39:10
And every day it's, the battle is real.
2:39:13
And so – and I can keep these
2:39:14
for Sunday if you want.
2:39:15
But Morning Joe – Morning Joe had a
2:39:19
piece on how Gen Z men are more
2:39:24
religious than Gen Z women.
2:39:27
And that this is – there's a trend
2:39:29
here.
2:39:29
A trend of young men discovering Christianity.
2:39:35
And I thought it was interesting because it
2:39:37
was on Morning Joe, if I can say
2:39:39
that enough.
2:39:40
Would you like to hear – Yeah, you
2:39:41
said it again.
2:39:42
Would you like to hear this report?
2:39:43
Well, I think so.
2:39:45
Because you've played some Christian clips, some white
2:39:49
Christian nationalist clips in the past two shows.
2:39:51
So I figure I would reciprocate.
2:39:53
None that I can recall, but sure.
2:39:55
Yes, you did.
2:39:56
What do you mean?
2:39:57
Yes.
2:39:59
I like the way your voice changed there.
2:40:01
Now to a remarkable shift happening.
2:40:03
Remarkable shift happening.
2:40:05
Remarkable shift.
2:40:06
Jesus is trending.
2:40:07
American public life.
2:40:09
Ever since the baby boomer generation, surveys have
2:40:11
shown women are more religious than men.
2:40:14
But not anymore.
2:40:17
Two new surveys show Gen Z men are
2:40:20
more likely to claim religious affiliation and even
2:40:23
attend church than their female counterparts.
2:40:27
Let's bring in NBC News correspondent and NBC
2:40:29
News Now Daily anchor, Morgan Radford, for a
2:40:33
closer look at this trend.
2:40:34
Is she the new anchor?
2:40:35
There's a new anchor at NBC Daily?
2:40:39
I don't watch the network that much.
2:40:42
And what it means, even politically, Morgan.
2:40:45
Mika, great question.
2:40:46
It has a lot of political implications, especially
2:40:49
if you sort of look down in the
2:40:51
decades to come.
2:40:52
But it's a trend that America's religious leaders
2:40:54
have been paying attention to.
2:40:55
But it's also something that a growing number
2:40:58
of political groups are tracking since this shift
2:41:00
toward religion.
2:41:01
It's happening at the very same time.
2:41:03
There were also seeing more young men lean
2:41:05
conservative on a number of social issues.
2:41:08
It's a shift that has huge implications, as
2:41:11
we mentioned, for the future of both parties.
2:41:13
Ah, huge implications for politics.
2:41:15
This is a bull crap story that's designed
2:41:18
to explain away the fact that younger Gen
2:41:22
Z men are voting Republican and they're eschewing
2:41:28
the Democrats and their stupidities and coming in
2:41:32
conservative.
2:41:33
And there's a big stink about it.
2:41:34
So now what they're doing here is they're
2:41:36
blaming it on those horrible Christians.
2:41:39
Have you seen this report?
2:41:41
No, I'm just telling you that's what I
2:41:42
believe is going on.
2:41:44
Well, let's have a listen.
2:41:46
20-year-old Owen Girard has changed.
2:41:49
I was on the steps of the Florida
2:41:50
State Capitol, you know, advocating for climate activism,
2:41:53
the Green New Deal, all that stuff.
2:41:54
A lot.
2:41:55
And then now?
2:41:56
And I'm a staunch conservative.
2:41:58
A conservative voter and a conservative Christian.
2:42:01
What changed?
2:42:02
Oh, wait a minute.
2:42:04
He was all in on our team.
2:42:05
He switched teams.
2:42:06
This is an example.
2:42:08
This would be MSNBC's gambit of association.
2:42:12
They use this trick.
2:42:15
So there's something going on that we don't
2:42:17
like.
2:42:18
And we know that our audience hates Christians.
2:42:22
They're a bunch of atheists.
2:42:23
And so we're going to make the associations
2:42:25
and do the linkage that doesn't exist.
2:42:29
It exists with one guy or this guy
2:42:31
or that guy.
2:42:31
But whatever it is, we're going to generalize
2:42:33
from that and make everybody look like a
2:42:35
bunch of boneheads.
2:42:36
All young men are Christians, John.
2:42:38
Are you kidding me?
2:42:39
They're all Republicans.
2:42:40
Well, really, it was the faith journey that
2:42:42
really fundamentally transformed my political views.
2:42:47
For the first time in modern American history,
2:42:50
more young men than women are claiming religious
2:42:53
affiliation, a gender gap of 7 percent.
2:42:56
While men under 30 who lean Republican have
2:42:59
also outpaced Democrats for the first time in
2:43:01
more than a decade.
2:43:02
You get a line with other men that
2:43:04
are like, hey, I actually have the same
2:43:05
views as you.
2:43:06
And it's like, it's OK to have that
2:43:08
view.
2:43:10
Here at the Faith Forward Pastor Summit in
2:43:12
Gainesville, Georgia, hosted by an arm of the
2:43:15
conservative activist group Turning Point USA.
2:43:17
The call from young conservative men.
2:43:20
We're called to be biblical and we're called
2:43:22
to be political.
2:43:24
By the way, if you want to make
2:43:27
Christians look crazy, get one of those guys.
2:43:30
We're called to be men and we're called
2:43:31
to be political.
2:43:33
Called to be biblical and biblical and political.
2:43:36
That's exactly what's going on here.
2:43:37
This is a propaganda piece.
2:43:39
Which is great.
2:43:39
We're called to be political.
2:43:42
Is finding a bigger audience than ever before.
2:43:45
I had a burning desire in my heart,
2:43:47
a heavenly desire that wasn't being filled by
2:43:49
anything of this of this world.
2:43:52
And so they bring in one of these
2:43:54
groups and they're the promise keepers.
2:43:58
For Shane Winnings, who leads the National Men's
2:44:00
Ministry Group Promise Keepers.
2:44:02
What kind of man are you?
2:44:03
It's all part of a bigger strategy.
2:44:05
I think it's very intentional.
2:44:07
And I think the messaging from the administration
2:44:09
was very intentional.
2:44:10
Ah, you see?
2:44:12
Yeah, yeah, yeah, see?
2:44:13
This is the president.
2:44:13
The president determines culture.
2:44:16
Yeah, it was to win those kind of
2:44:18
people.
2:44:19
Who?
2:44:19
You know, the young people, the men who
2:44:21
want to be men.
2:44:22
If you fear culture, then you don't fear
2:44:23
God.
2:44:24
Men who want to, or can be convinced
2:44:26
to, return to what he calls traditional values.
2:44:30
What we're seeing in this erosion where now
2:44:32
anyone can be a family, you know.
2:44:34
Two men can be a family, and they
2:44:36
can adopt kids.
2:44:37
They hate gays!
2:44:38
Which I think is problematic.
2:44:39
Two women can be a family, they can
2:44:40
adopt kids.
2:44:41
Marriage doesn't mean anything anymore.
2:44:43
What threat is that to you, if those
2:44:45
two men love each other?
2:44:46
Because you can point statistically to our society
2:44:50
being eroded from within, because two men automatically
2:44:54
create an unstable household, because that is not
2:44:57
God's design for a family.
2:44:58
And you think that hurts America?
2:44:59
Absolutely.
2:45:00
Which extends to policy issues that he believes
2:45:03
are fundamentally against God.
2:45:05
Oh yeah, now we're getting into the nitty
2:45:07
-gritty.
2:45:08
I mean, you're absolutely right.
2:45:10
I think it backfires what they're trying to
2:45:12
do here.
2:45:13
Let's hit wokeness.
2:45:15
When we talk about the intertwining of faith
2:45:17
and politics, a lot of the messaging here
2:45:19
is about eradicating wokeness.
2:45:22
Yeah.
2:45:22
What does that mean?
2:45:23
Well, I think wokeness, you know, is really
2:45:26
anything that comes against God's design.
2:45:28
It's this progressive mentality.
2:45:30
Oh, please.
2:45:31
Wokeness is like DEI.
2:45:34
Wokeness is- You think that's against God?
2:45:36
Yes, 100%.
2:45:37
How so?
2:45:37
Well, I mean, it is everything it claims
2:45:40
to be against.
2:45:42
You know, DEI is discriminatory.
2:45:44
It is racist.
2:45:46
DEI says, what's your skin color and who
2:45:48
do you sleep with?
2:45:49
You're getting to the front of the line.
2:45:50
Can I push back on that?
2:45:51
Please.
2:45:52
My interpretation of DEI and affirmative action is
2:45:57
essentially saying not that you must promote me
2:46:00
because I'm black, but you are not allowed
2:46:03
to discriminate against me because I'm black.
2:46:05
But that's already a part of our constitution
2:46:08
and already a part of our laws.
2:46:10
DEI has been used to push people to
2:46:12
the front of the line who don't belong
2:46:13
there.
2:46:13
If someone calls some point and says that's
2:46:15
a DEI hire- I think that's wrong
2:46:17
too.
2:46:17
Do you think they're pointing at you or
2:46:18
you think they're pointing at me?
2:46:19
I don't know.
2:46:20
I'll tell you what though, I think it's
2:46:21
wrong to make a snap judgment.
2:46:23
Like, that is not godly.
2:46:24
Because it assumes that the only people who
2:46:26
can have good things are straight white men.
2:46:28
Exactly.
2:46:29
And that's a problem.
2:46:30
I'm excited.
2:46:30
You have your Bible?
2:46:31
So at Promise Keeper- Hold on a
2:46:34
second.
2:46:34
I love this.
2:46:35
First of all, what kind of reporter gets
2:46:37
into an argument- Can I push back
2:46:40
on that, please?
2:46:42
With someone they're interviewing?
2:46:43
Yeah, well- I mean, they're supposed to
2:46:45
be hearing the point of view and then
2:46:47
maybe finding somebody else with a different point
2:46:49
of view.
2:46:49
You do all this kind of thing.
2:46:50
You're supposed to be fairly neutral.
2:46:51
But then to get into an argument as
2:46:53
though you're the contradiction to whatever this guy's
2:46:57
saying is bad journalism.
2:46:59
It is.
2:47:00
But it's what they're pushing today.
2:47:02
You gotta do that.
2:47:03
You gotta do that.
2:47:04
We're gonna go back to the studio now.
2:47:06
Let's talk about the politics of all this.
2:47:09
Obviously, we were just talking to the head
2:47:11
of the DNC about what happened in November.
2:47:13
Why Democrats may have lost.
2:47:15
Men central to that.
2:47:17
I'm not just talking about white men.
2:47:18
I'm talking about men.
2:47:19
Young men in particular.
2:47:21
So what are the political implications of that
2:47:24
report you just showed us?
2:47:25
I'm actually glad that you said not just
2:47:26
white men because this coalition that is bubbling
2:47:29
up is actually becoming more inclusive racially.
2:47:32
Which has been a little bit surprising, frankly,
2:47:33
to watch in the data.
2:47:35
But what economists say is that if you
2:47:37
actually look- If women are leaving the
2:47:39
church, where are these far-right men going
2:47:41
to meet these women?
2:47:42
If you're not meeting at the church, you're
2:47:43
not meeting at the bar.
2:47:44
But they're saying this actually could have implications
2:47:46
romantically.
2:47:46
It could have implications on the birth rate.
2:47:49
Because you can't pair if women are ideologically
2:47:51
so far left and you're moving so far
2:47:52
right.
2:47:53
Which means you're actually sort of compromising or
2:47:55
putting at risk the very traditional family that
2:47:58
you're trying to see.
2:47:59
So I found this to be an interesting
2:48:01
stretch.
2:48:02
It's like, if you join the church, you're
2:48:04
actually going to become an incel because there's
2:48:06
no women there.
2:48:07
No women in the church!
2:48:09
That'll be the day, by the way.
2:48:12
Right.
2:48:14
And so now they bring in two fun
2:48:15
terms.
2:48:16
I always use the term sparkle clergy or
2:48:21
rainbow church, but they have new ones.
2:48:23
Well, I'm reading a lot about women not
2:48:26
getting married, opting not to get married, not
2:48:29
finding- We've talked about that, yeah.
2:48:31
I'm curious.
2:48:33
These young men, are they going to the
2:48:34
church first and then finding the conservative political
2:48:38
messaging?
2:48:39
Or are they seeking it out?
2:48:41
Are they being indoctrinated?
2:48:43
And finding it in churches?
2:48:44
It's a great question.
2:48:46
Another great question!
2:48:48
Like the chicken or the egg, and the
2:48:50
answer is both.
2:48:51
And what surprised me is that the pastors
2:48:53
we spoke to said that the more strident
2:48:55
their message is against the mainstream.
2:48:57
We already know that basically two-thirds of
2:48:59
the country believes that same-sex marriage is
2:49:01
okay, abortion is okay, that transgender rights should
2:49:04
be part of the tapestry of this country.
2:49:05
But they're saying the more strident they are
2:49:07
against those things, they can use that as
2:49:09
a recruitment tool.
2:49:10
They said, we don't believe in gummy bear
2:49:12
Jesus or candy Christianity.
2:49:15
And they said- I love gummy bear
2:49:16
Jesus.
2:49:17
I never forgot sort of the analogy of
2:49:19
one pastor.
2:49:20
He said, look, you're welcome to come break
2:49:22
bread with us and have food at the
2:49:23
table.
2:49:24
But don't think we're changing the menu.
2:49:25
The menu was set millennia ago.
2:49:28
Yes, and then the final clip is about
2:49:30
the loneliness and regression.
2:49:31
To me, as we were having the same
2:49:34
conversation around the loneliness epidemic of men, young
2:49:38
men especially, it sounds like that the church
2:49:40
is a place where people are finding community.
2:49:43
And that community potentially could be- I
2:49:45
mean, the only time I can think of
2:49:47
is radicalizing them around this particular- There
2:49:50
you go, there you go.
2:49:52
Radicalize them!
2:49:54
Ideology as it relates to the nuclear family
2:49:57
and what millennia said.
2:50:00
It's crazy stuff they're doing there.
2:50:02
I don't think millennia had you in mind.
2:50:04
Or you.
2:50:05
Or me.
2:50:06
Did they know you were black?
2:50:07
That's what I want to know.
2:50:09
That wasn't the real question yet.
2:50:11
No, but the community, the community question.
2:50:14
Yeah, look, I think they are saying it's
2:50:16
a place that they can find community, but
2:50:18
it's what that community looks like now.
2:50:20
And they're saying they want to revert back
2:50:22
to this traditional community.
2:50:24
But they say that progress was such a
2:50:26
bad word.
2:50:27
Yes.
2:50:27
They don't want to see progress.
2:50:29
So the question is- I didn't hear
2:50:31
anyone say they don't want to see progress.
2:50:33
I didn't hear that either.
2:50:34
Where's she getting that from?
2:50:36
Or does it need to be regressive?
2:50:37
From her lesbian friends.
2:50:39
Yeah, exactly.
2:50:41
They don't want to see progress.
2:50:42
So the question is, is traditional even enough?
2:50:45
Or does it need to be regressive community?
2:50:47
And the opposite side of it is you
2:50:49
look at a lot of these progressive Christians
2:50:52
who say, Look, if you're denying someone inclusion
2:50:54
in your church because of DEI or some
2:50:57
such thing, are you reflecting the fact that
2:50:59
God created us all in his image?
2:51:01
It's interesting.
2:51:01
No one said they reject anyone.
2:51:04
Because if he created us in his image,
2:51:06
he created all of us and all of
2:51:08
our multiplicities.
2:51:09
So it's an interesting conversation.
2:51:10
Remarkable piece and remarkable conversation.
2:51:13
Oh, remarkable my ass.
2:51:19
Remarkable my ass.
2:51:21
Yeah, they don't know what to do with
2:51:24
it.
2:51:25
Well, they do actually.
2:51:26
Like, oh, just make it Trump.
2:51:29
It's Trump.
2:51:30
That brings us to the last two TikTok
2:51:32
clips.
2:51:33
Oh, I'm so happy.
2:51:34
Let's go with the TikTok clips.
2:51:36
Let's start with Kathy.
2:51:38
Kathy it is.
2:51:39
I just had dinner with a friend that
2:51:40
works for Catholic Charities of Dallas, Texas.
2:51:46
Okay, stick with me here.
2:51:47
This is going to disturb all of you.
2:51:49
They just got a letter from the tip
2:51:54
-top of the people in Washington telling them
2:51:58
that they would not get money to help
2:52:01
their charitable organization feed people if they did
2:52:06
not give up all of the names, addresses,
2:52:10
and information of all of the El Salvadorian.
2:52:14
El Salvadorian.
2:52:16
I can't even do it.
2:52:17
I can't even talk about it.
2:52:18
Because it makes me want to cry.
2:52:21
She said she is so torn.
2:52:24
But it came down from up above that
2:52:26
they have to give them up.
2:52:29
They have to give up all of their
2:52:31
information if they want the money to help
2:52:35
everyone.
2:52:36
How is this what we are living in?
2:52:38
How is this what is happening?
2:52:41
I can't.
2:52:42
I'm laughing earlier today, but I'm finishing out
2:52:44
the day fucking crying.
2:52:46
Oversocialized and undereducated.
2:52:49
They want to get a hold of the
2:52:51
MS-13 people, and they won't be able
2:52:54
to feed them.
2:52:55
But the Catholic Charities that she's talking about
2:52:57
is an immigrant resettlement organization.
2:53:00
Yeah, it's a scam.
2:53:01
It's a scam, yeah.
2:53:02
And I like how there's a subtext there.
2:53:04
It's coming from up above like God is
2:53:06
doing it.
2:53:08
We know what he's talking about.
2:53:10
He's coming from Trump.
2:53:12
Subtext, yeah.
2:53:13
Not God.
2:53:15
And here we have our Wisconsin nut.
2:53:18
Elon?
2:53:19
With the cheese on his head?
2:53:20
No, another one.
2:53:22
So Elon Musk is getting charged with a
2:53:25
possible felony in the state of Wisconsin for
2:53:28
bribery charges.
2:53:29
And if he comes to the state of
2:53:30
Wisconsin, he will be arrested.
2:53:33
Also, Mike Johnson was just arrested.
2:53:38
It's coming unraveled.
2:53:39
What?
2:53:40
I said that I thought eventually Elon Musk
2:53:43
was leaving and wasn't sure if he was
2:53:45
being deported, but it seemed like it.
2:53:48
Just thought I would let you guys know.
2:53:51
Blessings to you.
2:53:52
Make it a great day.
2:53:53
And I am one more day proud to
2:53:55
be from the state of Wisconsin.
2:53:56
All right.
2:53:57
Well, I have to say this is no
2:53:58
nuttier than Hillary Clinton is already at Gitmo.
2:54:04
And I'll admit quantum dots, quantum dots on
2:54:08
the ballots and the grid is going down.
2:54:11
Oh, man.
2:54:12
Social media is ruining.
2:54:14
Johnson's already been arrested.
2:54:17
And Elon, if he shows up in Wisconsin,
2:54:19
we saw him in Wisconsin, is going to
2:54:22
be arrested if he shows up.
2:54:24
It's unbelievable.
2:54:25
It's worse than anything.
2:54:32
Oh, yeah.
2:54:41
Still on the way, we have three dynamite
2:54:43
brand new end of show mixes you will
2:54:45
not want to miss.
2:54:46
We have tips of the day because I
2:54:47
also have a tip of the day today,
2:54:49
which I'm excited to share.
2:54:51
It's not always John.
2:54:52
Sometimes it's also me.
2:54:53
And we have meetups galore.
2:54:56
So if John will hop to it, we've
2:54:58
got a nice list of well wishes for
2:55:01
your 73rd birthday.
2:55:02
And by the way, John, in advance, happy
2:55:05
birthday.
2:55:05
Well, thank you very much.
2:55:07
And we're going to start off with some
2:55:08
people that helped us here and starting with
2:55:10
Joan.
2:55:11
Joan Gasparone in Isle of Palms, South Carolina,
2:55:15
133.
2:55:17
Hey, hack on and recent hack on.
2:55:21
What do you think?
2:55:21
I don't know.
2:55:22
Five thirty five.
2:55:24
That's a that's a birthday donation for his
2:55:25
niece.
2:55:26
Tilda, who turned to a geek rolling in
2:55:31
Coeur d'Alene, Idaho.
2:55:33
One oh one oh one.
2:55:34
Matthew Toy in Carnegie, Pennsylvania.
2:55:37
One hundred.
2:55:38
And he's donating for all the free entertainment.
2:55:41
Curtis Thomas.
2:55:43
One hundred.
2:55:46
He's in from parts unknown.
2:55:50
He has a long note of how great
2:55:53
we are.
2:55:54
Thank you very much.
2:55:55
Great.
2:55:55
We appreciate that.
2:55:56
Baron Lattican in Houston, Texas.
2:55:58
One hundred.
2:55:59
John Robben, a hundred.
2:56:01
Kellen Prince in Hollywood, Florida.
2:56:03
One hundred.
2:56:05
Sir F.
2:56:06
A.
2:56:07
N.
2:56:07
Beck in Vista, California.
2:56:10
One hundred.
2:56:10
Then we got to Kevin McLaughlin.
2:56:12
Eight oh eight.
2:56:13
He's the Archduke of Luna.
2:56:14
Lover of American lover of boobs.
2:56:16
Concord, North Carolina.
2:56:19
Baron.
2:56:19
And now we have birthday.
2:56:21
These are all happy birthday, John.
2:56:23
Donations.
2:56:23
I'm going to skip it.
2:56:24
I don't know why we don't have cities
2:56:26
in most of these because it comes right
2:56:29
off the spreadsheets.
2:56:30
This happens with PayPal once in a while.
2:56:32
I don't know what causes it, but we're
2:56:34
going to thank everyone in order.
2:56:37
Starting with Baron Victor and then Dame Flying
2:56:39
Fish.
2:56:40
They both wish me a happy birthday.
2:56:45
William Bullock.
2:56:48
Marjorie Santelli.
2:56:50
James Borders.
2:56:53
Also mentions four more years.
2:56:54
There's Kevin McLaughlin again.
2:56:56
Seventy five.
2:56:57
Sixty eight.
2:56:58
He's the Archduke of Luna.
2:57:00
Thank you, Kevin.
2:57:01
Patricia.
2:57:03
Come back.
2:57:04
K.
2:57:04
M.
2:57:04
A.
2:57:04
C.
2:57:05
K.
2:57:05
What a great name.
2:57:06
Come back.
2:57:08
Irma and Anita.
2:57:10
And they're in Holland.
2:57:12
Irma and Anita.
2:57:13
Happy birthday from Irma and Anita.
2:57:16
Love the show.
2:57:18
Oh, thanks.
2:57:19
We find out about before COVID hit.
2:57:21
We find out the right time.
2:57:22
That's right.
2:57:23
David Schwendinger followed by Dave Schwannbeck.
2:57:30
Schwendinger and Schwannbeck.
2:57:33
Schwendinger and Schwannbeck.
2:57:36
And then Devin O'Connell.
2:57:38
And he has a birthday himself on the
2:57:40
ninth.
2:57:41
Paolo.
2:57:42
Paolo.
2:57:43
Paolo.
2:57:43
Paolo.
2:57:44
Paolo.
2:57:45
Paolo.
2:57:47
Porco.
2:57:48
Porco.
2:57:49
Porco.
2:57:49
Porco.
2:57:50
I'm not sure.
2:57:51
Serfina.
2:57:53
Ryan Zukowski.
2:57:55
Brendan Blemmer.
2:57:57
Baron Nettes.
2:57:58
Ellen.
2:58:00
She says she does have a Montgomery, Alabama.
2:58:04
That did come through.
2:58:05
Wow.
2:58:05
73 revolutions, J.C.D. No wonder you're
2:58:08
so grouchy.
2:58:11
But then she says, love your insight.
2:58:13
No, no.
2:58:14
Baron Nettes.
2:58:14
Ellen wants house-buying karma.
2:58:16
Oh.
2:58:17
It's David Sousa who says, no one.
2:58:20
Wait, where is the?
2:58:22
I'm sorry.
2:58:22
Brendan Flemmer.
2:58:23
Brendan Flemmer.
2:58:23
She loves my insight.
2:58:24
Brendan Flemmer was so grouchy.
2:58:26
Brendan Flemmer.
2:58:27
She's the one.
2:58:28
Or he.
2:58:28
Brendan.
2:58:29
Brendan's a he.
2:58:30
Yes.
2:58:30
And he's the one.
2:58:32
Okay.
2:58:32
Baron Nettes.
2:58:33
Ellen in Montgomery, Alabama.
2:58:35
You're right.
2:58:36
That's different.
2:58:36
I was right.
2:58:37
She needs some house-buying karma.
2:58:41
We'll give you that at the end.
2:58:42
David Sousa in Turlock, California.
2:58:46
Sousa.
2:58:47
Oh, you.
2:58:50
Baron Anonymous Cop.
2:58:51
Hold on.
2:58:52
David Sousa says he donated 133 last year
2:58:55
for the first time and was never de
2:58:56
-duced.
2:58:58
You've been de-duced.
2:58:59
By the way, what an opportunity.
2:59:01
This is your Ham Radio birthday.
2:59:03
This is your 73.
2:59:03
73, it's your ham, it's your ham birthday.
2:59:07
Oh, well that's, that's, I'll make a note
2:59:09
of that in the next newsletter.
2:59:11
73's everybody.
2:59:14
You got to item 49 and you finally,
2:59:18
it dawned on you, great, it hasn't dawned
2:59:19
on me, you got me beat.
2:59:21
Just realized.
2:59:24
This is the way we do it.
2:59:25
Yeah.
2:59:26
Baron, oh, we missed out on that idea.
2:59:28
Baron Anonymous Cop, our buddy there, is 73
2:59:31
bucks, he's on the peninsula.
2:59:32
Joshua Collins, Sir David French, Baron of Bits,
2:59:38
Bites, and Bourbon, Sir Dan in Canton, Georgia,
2:59:43
Dame Rita, there she is, she's in Sparks,
2:59:46
Nevada.
2:59:51
What?
2:59:52
Or Texas.
2:59:53
Wait, uh, you, you, you crapped out for
2:59:56
a moment.
2:59:58
Dame Rita and Tony Helps.
2:59:59
Yes, yes, she, Dame Rita's in Nevada, Nevada,
3:00:03
and Tony Helps is in Texas.
3:00:05
Fort Worth, where all the money is.
3:00:08
Joe Drake in Ferndown, UK.
3:00:12
Consider this, this interesting, this is a show
3:00:15
multiplier, but it's $70, this has got nothing
3:00:18
to do with anything.
3:00:19
Uh, my birthday, that was all the birthday
3:00:21
hellos, there's 30 of them, thank you very
3:00:23
much everybody.
3:00:24
And Joe, Joe Drake wanted to de-douche.
3:00:27
You've been de-douched.
3:00:30
Onward with Ethan Moss in Roanoke, Texas, Chad
3:00:33
Hewitt in Folsom, California.
3:00:36
Oh, you know what it is?
3:00:38
What?
3:00:39
That's interesting.
3:00:42
Um, I'll tell you after the show.
3:00:46
Les Tarkowsky in Kingman, Arizona, Chad Hewitt in
3:00:50
Folsom, California, Ethan Moss, I said that in
3:00:54
Roanoke, Texas, going backwards, Brian Furley, I said
3:00:57
that, 55-10 for him.
3:00:58
Dame Tracy and Sir Cain Brake in St.
3:01:02
George, Louisiana, 55-10, Harry Mattson in Ventura,
3:01:08
54-20, Heather Harper in Lubbock, 53-33,
3:01:15
John Bassano in Madison, Alabama, 52-72, Jennifer
3:01:20
Williams in Davy Crockett, National Park, is that
3:01:25
what that is, Texas?
3:01:26
I thought that was the Alamo.
3:01:27
National Forest.
3:01:28
National Forest.
3:01:29
National Forest, okay, 52-72.
3:01:33
James Burrows in Landrum, South Carolina, FEMA Region
3:01:38
4, de-douche.
3:01:41
You've been de-douched.
3:01:43
Also, Housebuying Karma at the end for you.
3:01:46
And now we go to the $50 donors,
3:01:48
name and location, Scott McCarty in Lodi, Jordan
3:01:52
Tierney in Oro, South Dakota, Tony Lang in
3:01:55
Castle Pines, Colorado, Foster Birch in New York
3:01:58
City, Matt Frazee in St. John's, Florida, Daniel
3:02:02
Laboe in Bath, Michigan, Rebecca Haugh, H-A
3:02:06
-U-G-H, which is Haugh, I think,
3:02:08
Haugh, Haugh, Haugh, Haugh, Haugh, Haugh, Haugh, in
3:02:10
Memphis, Tennessee, James Charametta, we haven't heard from
3:02:14
him for a while, he's in Abenak, New
3:02:15
York, Leslie Walker in Roseburg, Oregon.
3:02:21
She says, I wish I could give more
3:02:24
each month, you are a huge part of
3:02:26
my life, you give accurate information so we
3:02:28
can function in these crazy times.
3:02:30
Yes.
3:02:32
Carlos Estrada in Spring, Texas, and Aichi Kitagawa
3:02:37
in San Francisco, these are the people that
3:02:39
helped us produce and get show 1752 off
3:02:43
the ground, I want to thank each and
3:02:44
every one of them.
3:02:45
Very good group, Housebuying Karma for two people
3:02:48
here.
3:02:48
You've got karma.
3:02:50
And thank you all so much, we do
3:02:52
not mention people under $50 so that there's
3:02:54
a spot where you can always be anonymous,
3:02:56
however, a reminder once again, we do have
3:02:59
those recurring donations and they help a lot,
3:03:01
you can set them up any amount, any
3:03:03
frequency by going to noagendadonations.com and again,
3:03:06
thank you to our executive and associate executive
3:03:08
producers who helped us produce episode 1752.
3:03:17
Hockland Andresen wishes his niece Tilda a very
3:03:20
happy birthday, now she celebrated her second birthday
3:03:23
on March 24th.
3:03:24
Calipages Collin, happy birthday to their newest human
3:03:27
resource, Chloe Susanna, happy birth, he says, born
3:03:30
March 21st, 2025.
3:03:32
Jules Wicker turns 44 today.
3:03:35
Happy birthday, Jules.
3:03:35
John is turned, oh, John, that's you, you
3:03:38
turned 73 on April 5th, that'll be, what
3:03:40
is that, Saturday, happy birthday, John.
3:03:43
Cervantes wishes his niece Leona a very happy
3:03:45
birthday, turns seven tomorrow.
3:03:48
Cervantes shares your birthday, John, on April 5th.
3:03:50
Cervantes also wishes his daughter, Isla, a happy
3:03:54
18th on John's birthday again, it's a popular
3:03:56
day.
3:03:57
Marty turns 40 on the 8th and Devin
3:03:59
O'Connell celebrates on the 9th.
3:04:01
We say happy birthday to all of these
3:04:03
birthday boys and girls from everybody here at
3:04:05
the best podcast in the universe.
3:04:09
We have two Commodores to welcome into the
3:04:12
Commodore ship, which includes a very handsome certificate
3:04:15
that you can hang on the wall.
3:04:17
It's really, it's quite a nice piece of
3:04:18
work.
3:04:18
You can see it and find out more
3:04:20
at noagendarings.com, check out the Commodore tab.
3:04:24
So we would like to congratulate Commodore Doug
3:04:27
and Commodore JLGS LLC, both of you Commodores
3:04:33
of no agenda.
3:04:35
Commodores arriving and go to noagenderings.com, give
3:04:39
us an address, we'll be sure to take
3:04:41
care of you.
3:04:41
Then we have a dame, one dame with
3:04:45
a cool name, a dame with a cool
3:04:46
name, got a blade here.
3:04:48
I got the dame blade.
3:04:50
The dame blade, oh, beautiful.
3:04:54
Tracy Sullivan.
3:04:55
Skip, I'm up.
3:04:56
Tracy, thanks to your support of the No
3:04:58
Agenda Show and the amount of $1,000
3:05:00
or more, anybody can do it.
3:05:02
Even people on the Knight or Dame layaway
3:05:04
can become a Knight or a Dame and
3:05:06
you are there.
3:05:07
And I hereby am very proud to pronounce
3:05:09
Hay-Bee as Dame Sally Bananas.
3:05:12
For you, we've got some hookers and blow,
3:05:15
rent boys and chardonnay, that may be more
3:05:17
for you.
3:05:18
We also have harlots and howl-doll, redheads
3:05:20
and ryes.
3:05:21
We've got rubinous, luminous, rosé, gayson, and sake,
3:05:23
vodka, vanilla, vongage, and bourbon, sparkling cider, estorts.
3:05:26
We've got breast milk and pablum, ginger ale
3:05:29
and gerbils or always the mutton and the
3:05:31
mead.
3:05:34
And you, Dame Sally Bananas, can go to
3:05:37
NoAgendaRings.com.
3:05:39
There is your ring waiting for you.
3:05:40
We need to have your ring size.
3:05:42
Just use the handy ring sizing guide and
3:05:45
send that to us along with a place
3:05:47
we can send your ring.
3:05:48
It's a Cignet ring, so you also get
3:05:49
some wax.
3:05:50
With that, you can imprint your ITM logo
3:05:53
and hit them in the mouth in Latin
3:05:55
on your important correspondence and as always, it
3:05:58
also comes with a certificate of authenticity.
3:06:00
Thank you for supporting the show.
3:06:01
Value for value, NoAgendaDonations.com.
3:06:05
Anybody can support us in some small way.
3:06:07
You can also do that recurring donation, NoAgendaDonations
3:06:13
.com.
3:06:21
We love the meetups.
3:06:22
We love the meetup reports.
3:06:24
There's going to be a cool meetup.
3:06:26
Actually, there's a couple of cool meetups on
3:06:28
John's birthday.
3:06:29
But first, we have a report from a
3:06:31
very small meetup, but that doesn't matter.
3:06:32
A report is a report from the Not
3:06:34
For Fools meetup in Knoxville.
3:06:36
In the morning, No Agenda Nation.
3:06:38
This is Commodore Baron Bones checking in from
3:06:40
Barley's at the Knoxville meetup.
3:06:41
Only two people showed up, me and someone
3:06:44
else.
3:06:44
We'll hand off the microphone here in just
3:06:46
a moment.
3:06:46
But next time, we'll do a better job
3:06:48
of announcing this.
3:06:50
Because you get me a jingle that says,
3:06:51
Hey, it's Adam Currie in the No Agenda
3:06:53
Zone.
3:06:53
Make sure all of you Knoxville producers can
3:06:56
check it out.
3:06:56
Kind of a lonely night.
3:06:57
It's a Tuesday night.
3:06:58
I'm a disco jockey.
3:06:59
That's right.
3:06:59
Got to do it on a school night
3:07:00
because I'm busy on the weekends.
3:07:02
In the morning.
3:07:02
Adam, John, I want to thank you for
3:07:04
your courage.
3:07:05
This is Commodore Hogfather coming to you live
3:07:08
from Knoxville, Tennessee.
3:07:09
Wow, two Commodores and they didn't have anybody
3:07:12
else.
3:07:12
You people missed out in Knoxville.
3:07:14
And of course, you could have had your
3:07:15
server in there.
3:07:16
Add your servers in your meetup reports.
3:07:19
They love it.
3:07:19
The establishments love it.
3:07:20
And it's fun to listen to.
3:07:22
There's a meetup taking place right now.
3:07:24
The No Agenda New York City Meetup at
3:07:26
the Perfect Pint West in New York City.
3:07:28
If you're in New York, go hang out
3:07:30
with them.
3:07:30
Also, the Northern Wake Public Slave Gathering starts
3:07:34
in about an hour from now.
3:07:35
Hoppy Endings in Raleigh, North Carolina.
3:07:37
On Saturday, in Japan, Osaka, Japan.
3:07:40
Sir Bill of Osaka has organized the Osaka
3:07:42
Castle Cherry Blossom Viewing and Amygdala Shrinking Meetup
3:07:46
at 1.33 Japan time.
3:07:49
And there it is, the Northern Silicon Valley
3:07:51
JCD Birthday Extravaganza Bash, 3.33 p.m.
3:07:56
Pacific at Pizzeria Violetta in Oakland, California.
3:08:01
Go say hi to John.
3:08:02
Ladies, make sure you kiss him.
3:08:05
He loves it.
3:08:07
That's it for our meetups.
3:08:09
Many more on the list.
3:08:10
You can find them all at noagendameetups.com.
3:08:12
You can search by list, search by area.
3:08:15
And thank you all for the producers who
3:08:17
organized these.
3:08:17
They are producer-organized, but it's a great
3:08:20
way to get some protection because that's what
3:08:22
you get with that connection.
3:08:23
They are your first responders in an emergency.
3:08:26
noagendameetups.com If you can't find one near
3:08:28
you, I recommend you start one yourself.
3:08:43
You want to be where everybody feels the
3:08:46
same, it's like a party.
3:08:50
As we always like to do, we like
3:08:51
to select an end-of-show ISO, which
3:08:54
is really nothing more than just propagating the
3:08:57
truth that artificial intelligence is only good for
3:09:01
ISOs.
3:09:02
There's no other reason to use it.
3:09:04
Here's my real ISO.
3:09:06
I call him a spook.
3:09:07
That's all I got.
3:09:08
And I'm sure yours are much better.
3:09:10
Oh, you could have done better.
3:09:11
No, I'm not even trying.
3:09:13
I'm not even trying.
3:09:14
Well, I'm going to stop doing these if
3:09:15
you stop trying.
3:09:17
You have a lozenge in your mouth.
3:09:19
Yeah, I'm chewing on it now to get
3:09:21
rid of it.
3:09:22
Okay, let's start with the ISO.
3:09:23
This is better.
3:09:24
Wow, that was better than a dirty Sanchez.
3:09:33
How can I compete?
3:09:35
I can't compete.
3:09:36
And you have a dirty mind, John C.
3:09:39
Dvorak.
3:09:39
And still going strong with this dirty mind.
3:09:42
That was a good one.
3:09:43
What's the next?
3:09:44
Uh, this is a fine.
3:09:49
No, that doesn't beat the dirty Sanchez.
3:09:52
Yeah, but you can't use it.
3:09:53
Try this one.
3:09:54
The last was so good.
3:09:59
That's the one, man.
3:10:01
That's the one.
3:10:02
That's a winner.
3:10:02
This is no two ways about it.
3:10:04
Hey, it is time now for John's illustrious
3:10:07
tip of the day.
3:10:09
Great advice for you and me.
3:10:12
Just a tip with JCD.
3:10:15
And sometimes Adam.
3:10:18
Created by Dana Brunetti.
3:10:19
Can I do my, uh?
3:10:20
Yeah, do yours first and I'll follow up.
3:10:22
Uh, we were talking about toilet seats on
3:10:25
a pre on several.
3:10:26
We have talked about toilet scenes quite a
3:10:28
bit on this show as it turns out.
3:10:30
We shouldn't.
3:10:30
Well, there is a, uh, a toilet seat
3:10:34
that is a electronic bidet toilet seat.
3:10:37
It does the full, the full wash, the
3:10:40
full, uh, everything you want.
3:10:42
It has the heated seat and it doesn't
3:10:44
look dorky.
3:10:45
It actually looks pretty cool.
3:10:48
It is the washlet.
3:10:51
C5 round electronic bidet toilet seats.
3:10:55
And I get it.
3:10:57
Wash let wash.
3:10:58
Let's the washlet w a s h l
3:11:01
e t c five round electronic bidet toilet
3:11:05
seats.
3:11:06
And it won't break the bank.
3:11:08
Now I have, I have a, it's not
3:11:09
a whole toy.
3:11:10
It's just the seat.
3:11:10
It's just the seat.
3:11:11
Yes.
3:11:12
But it's not like some dorky, you know,
3:11:14
it looks like a normal seat.
3:11:15
It has a remote control supposed to look
3:11:17
like it has a remote control and you
3:11:20
can control the sprayer.
3:11:21
It has a remote control.
3:11:23
So somebody can walk by while you're in
3:11:24
the pot.
3:11:25
Next thing you know, you're soaked.
3:11:27
Well, you should use, you keep the remote
3:11:29
control in the bathroom.
3:11:31
Um, but why does it need to be
3:11:32
remote?
3:11:33
Then you're right there.
3:11:34
Well, because otherwise you have the, like a
3:11:36
huge handle sticking out of the seat and
3:11:38
that's what makes it looks dumb.
3:11:39
Looks like a geriatric device.
3:11:42
So there's a bunch of these is the
3:11:43
Toto.
3:11:43
There's the washlet.
3:11:44
Yeah, that's it.
3:11:46
The Toto.
3:11:46
The Toto is 350 bucks from Amazon, but
3:11:49
the washlet C5, which looks like the exact
3:11:52
same thing in Chinese version from Ali expresses
3:11:56
two 77.
3:11:58
Yeah.
3:11:58
But you, you, you're forgetting to include the
3:12:00
54% tariff.
3:12:04
Well, now's the time before the tariff goes
3:12:06
into play.
3:12:07
Get your toilet seat quick, everybody.
3:12:09
Meanwhile, Walmart has the same seat for 493.
3:12:14
And well, this is good.
3:12:16
So there's, there's different places.
3:12:18
You can get an example of Amazon actually
3:12:20
having cheaper than Walmart, which is not usually
3:12:23
the case.
3:12:24
Interesting.
3:12:24
And you can get it in two days
3:12:26
from price.
3:12:29
Yeah, I, I know, but I'm, I'm considering
3:12:36
this.
3:12:37
Why did you get the one from China
3:12:38
then?
3:12:39
I always feel exact product.
3:12:41
If there's anything you use every single day,
3:12:43
like shoes, you know, uh, mattress, you know,
3:12:48
I use our toilet every day.
3:12:49
I, I am definitely, you don't think the
3:12:51
same, this one is from Amazon's not the
3:12:54
China one is the same one.
3:12:56
I didn't say it wasn't.
3:12:57
I'm just talking about the model.
3:12:58
I'm just saying, this is what you want.
3:13:00
This looks sleek.
3:13:01
It looks modern and it does the deed.
3:13:04
It's a good looking product.
3:13:07
It's a good looking products.
3:13:08
All right.
3:13:08
You are in a grouchy mood.
3:13:11
All right.
3:13:14
Well, I got something that's off beat, although
3:13:16
we can just stay with that one tip.
3:13:18
We don't need two.
3:13:18
I want your tip.
3:13:22
Uh, this is something JC turned me on
3:13:24
to and I, so I got one and
3:13:27
I checked it out.
3:13:28
It's kind of cool to have.
3:13:29
I think it's important to have one in
3:13:30
around the house, a Geiger counter.
3:13:34
I have a Geiger counter.
3:13:36
Do you have the little handheld one?
3:13:38
It's about the size of a cell phone.
3:13:40
No, I have a, uh, a world war
3:13:42
two Geiger counter.
3:13:43
One of those.
3:13:43
Yeah, no, this is a newer version.
3:13:45
Yeah.
3:13:45
Yeah.
3:13:46
Yeah.
3:13:46
I had one of those.
3:13:47
They're too big and clunky.
3:13:48
Yeah.
3:13:48
They're very clunky.
3:13:50
This is a modern Geiger counter.
3:13:52
Of course it's made in China and a
3:13:55
GQ electronics.
3:13:56
It's actually says Seattle.
3:13:58
It says Seattle, Washington on the, when it
3:14:00
opens, but it's Chinese.
3:14:02
Give me a break.
3:14:02
And it's the G Q E a GMC
3:14:06
800.
3:14:06
You can get that, but there's other ones
3:14:08
that are similar.
3:14:08
They're all under a hundred dollars and they
3:14:12
have a little sensor on the side of
3:14:13
the Geiger tube, uh, at least a modern
3:14:16
version, I guess, is somebody's miniaturized it.
3:14:19
And I think it's handy to have.
3:14:20
And I had checked it out.
3:14:22
I have a uranium rock amongst my collection.
3:14:27
Of course you do.
3:14:28
Doesn't everybody have a uranium rock laying around
3:14:31
next to the uranium rock next to the
3:14:34
cheddar cheese hat?
3:14:35
It's it's it's sealed in a lead thing.
3:14:38
And I checked it.
3:14:39
Yup.
3:14:39
It could see the uranium.
3:14:42
And so it works.
3:14:44
It's funny because I'm actually slightly radioactive.
3:14:48
Wow.
3:14:48
Seems like humans.
3:14:50
I mean, the background on this, the background
3:14:52
is around eight or just no radiation at
3:14:55
all.
3:14:56
And then when you're, when you're hanging it
3:14:57
around a person, it'll go up to 10.
3:15:00
Now, if you hit the uranium sky, have
3:15:02
you tried a banana?
3:15:05
Not yet.
3:15:06
Not to mention I should try a banana.
3:15:08
What other things?
3:15:09
I mean, what is the actual usefulness of
3:15:11
a Geiger counter around the house?
3:15:14
To check your water supply, maybe to check
3:15:17
to see if there's somebody serving you tea.
3:15:19
You might want to make sure it's not
3:15:21
laced with plutonium to try to kill you.
3:15:23
That's one good use.
3:15:25
Is this a portable device that you can
3:15:26
take with you?
3:15:26
Yeah, it's the size of a cell phone.
3:15:28
It's very small.
3:15:29
Oh, you can take it with you to
3:15:30
the Russian tea room where they might try
3:15:32
something.
3:15:32
You could take it to the Russian tea
3:15:33
room and then you could pull it out.
3:15:35
You could also take to the fish market
3:15:37
to make sure you're not getting radioactive salmon.
3:15:39
These are all, this is tips within tips.
3:15:42
Yeah, there's a lot of potential uses.
3:15:46
So I just think everyone should have a
3:15:48
Geiger counter.
3:15:48
Come on, it's 2025.
3:15:51
Yeah, that's right, everybody.
3:15:52
Get your Geiger counter.
3:15:53
Find out more at tipoftheday.net, noagendafund.com.
3:16:03
Wow.
3:16:08
Wow, wow, wow.
3:16:10
That's why people stick the whole show out,
3:16:12
John, just to hear stuff like that.
3:16:14
It is 2025.
3:16:15
Everybody should have a Geiger counter.
3:16:17
I cannot disagree.
3:16:19
Cannot disagree, particularly at the Russian tea room.
3:16:22
It's very important.
3:16:26
Let's see.
3:16:27
We have, oh, Bowl after Bowl coming up
3:16:29
next on the No Agenda stream.
3:16:32
Stick around in the troll room if you're
3:16:33
still there, trollroom.io. Or you can just
3:16:35
keep listening on your modern podcast app.
3:16:37
Everything switches over automatically.
3:16:40
It's a beautiful system.
3:16:42
From the number one podcast directory in the
3:16:44
universe, podcastindex.org.
3:16:48
End of show mixes.
3:16:49
We have new ones.
3:16:51
Hugh Allison, haven't had one from him in
3:16:52
a while.
3:16:53
Steve Jones of the Jones Brothers Syndicate is
3:16:56
back.
3:16:56
And James Boss.
3:16:58
All wonderful end of show mixes.
3:17:01
And we'll be back on Sunday.
3:17:03
You will, of course, enjoy the media deconstruction.
3:17:07
The news rip apartage.
3:17:10
And I will be coming to you then
3:17:11
again from the heart of the Texas Hill
3:17:14
Country in FEMA region number six.
3:17:16
In the morning, everybody.
3:17:17
I'm Adam Curry.
3:17:18
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain.
3:17:21
I'm John C.
3:17:21
Dvorak.
3:17:22
See you guys at the Violetta Pizzeria in
3:17:24
Oakland next Saturday.
3:17:26
Happy birthday, John.
3:17:27
And remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:17:31
Until Sunday, adios, mofos, hui hui, and such.
3:17:34
I'm not buying it.
3:17:36
I'm not buying.
3:17:37
I'm not buying.
3:17:38
You're not buying it.
3:17:39
I'm not buying the fact that she's.
3:17:41
It's bullshit.
3:17:42
Again, not buying it.
3:17:43
You're not buying anything.
3:17:44
Can I sell you anything today?
3:17:46
For that, I'm not buying it.
3:17:51
I am, as you would say, not buying
3:17:53
it.
3:17:54
Yeah, I saw the fly.
3:17:56
I'm not buying it.
3:18:00
Do you buy that?
3:18:02
I mean, I'm not quite sure why.
3:18:04
Not buying it because I'm just not buying
3:18:06
it.
3:18:07
I don't buy that.
3:18:08
I'm not buying that.
3:18:11
I know what you're doing.
3:18:13
Yeah, but I'm not.
3:18:14
You're not buying it.
3:18:15
I didn't say that.
3:18:16
Oh, I came so close.
3:18:18
Shut up, slave.
3:18:20
Thank you.
3:18:20
Thank you.
3:18:21
Thank you for holding us down, down.
3:18:24
Five years.
3:18:25
We are a toddler, toddler.
3:18:27
And we are in these streets in this
3:18:28
world.
3:18:34
When you are in the midst of a
3:18:35
crisis, and specifically a crisis of democracy, how
3:18:39
do you resist?
3:18:41
When fascism isn't just coming, it's already here.
3:18:46
We are going to talk about what people
3:18:49
are actually doing to resist this.
3:18:55
Drank it old-fashioned.
3:18:56
Old-fashioned.
3:18:57
Number two, took a nap.
3:18:59
Old-fashioned, took a nap.
3:18:59
Number three, delighted co-workers with sarcasm.
3:19:02
Sarcasm, sarcasm.
3:19:04
Put Black History Month stickers, stickers, stickers, on
3:19:08
bulletin board and gave out emotional support dumpster
3:19:10
fires.
3:19:14
And last but not least, number one, executed
3:19:17
low productivity tasking.
3:19:19
Number two, identified opportunities for transition to high
3:19:21
productivity tasking.
3:19:22
Executed low productivity tasking.
3:19:24
Low productivity tasking.
3:19:25
Developed a plan for Doge to F off.
3:19:41
The Russian leader with puffy face.
3:19:47
Putin coughing continuously.
3:19:50
Continuously.
3:19:53
Legs shaking uncontrollably.
3:19:56
Restless leg syndrome, I guess.
3:19:58
He's going to die.
3:19:59
Putin will die soon.
3:20:01
The Russian leader with puffy face.
3:20:03
He's got puffy face.
3:20:05
And making jerky movements.
3:20:08
Legs shaking uncontrollably.
3:20:12
The Russian leader with puffy face.
3:20:15
Putin coughing continuously.
3:20:17
He's going to die.
3:20:22
Restless leg syndrome, I guess.
3:20:25
The Russian leader with puffy face.
3:20:38
Mofo.
3:20:43
Wow, that was better than a Dirty Sanchez.