Cover for No Agenda Show 1758: Scream Circle
April 24th • 3h 21m

1758: Scream Circle

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0:00
Go Boomers!
0:01
Adam Currie, John C.
0:03
DeVora.
0:03
It's Thursday, April 24th, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Gitmo Nation Media
0:07
Assassination Episode 1758.
0:10
This is No Agenda.
0:12
Picking pokes and broadcasting live for over 17
0:16
years from the heart of the Texas Hill
0:17
Country here in FEMA Region Number 6.
0:20
In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Currie.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we should
0:25
be rolling out the No Agenda meme coin.
0:28
I'm John C.
0:29
DeVora.
0:34
I was at a wedding last night and
0:36
people are asking me like, what do you
0:38
think of Trump's cryptocurrency?
0:41
I'm like, do you really want me to
0:42
get into this with you?
0:44
This meme coin?
0:47
Oh, man.
0:48
So I'm at this wedding.
0:51
This is the former...
0:54
This is the wedding you were at when
0:55
Andrew tried to get a hold of you.
0:57
Yes, this is the former Kerrville cop with
1:01
anger management issues wedding.
1:03
Oh, there's nothing like a cop with anger
1:05
management issues.
1:06
Well, especially since he's now the lieutenant for
1:09
the Sheriff's Office of Gillespie County.
1:12
Okay.
1:13
Which is good.
1:13
We like knowing our buddy Mike.
1:16
Yeah, I would think so.
1:19
Don't want to piss him off.
1:21
So the whole, you know, there's...
1:23
There must have been 10 sheriffs, deputies, all
1:26
in uniform.
1:28
Half of them look like the mustache guy
1:30
from the village people for some reason.
1:32
It's like, you know, you look kind of
1:34
like that gay guy from the village people.
1:36
Did you say that to him?
1:37
Yes, of course.
1:39
They think it's funny.
1:41
They think it's all hilarious.
1:42
No good for them.
1:43
They're good guys.
1:44
Yeah.
1:44
So Andrew calls me.
1:45
I'm like, no.
1:46
So I text him, I said, no, I'm
1:47
at a wedding.
1:48
And then I just, I decided I'm going
1:49
to ghost him.
1:54
Because he's now using it as engagement farming.
1:57
He's all over X.
1:59
Like, is there a feud?
2:00
What's going on?
2:01
What's happening?
2:02
Ooh, what could be happening?
2:03
Oh, he hasn't texted me back.
2:05
I'm glad we can provide some promotion for
2:07
DH unplugged.
2:10
I haven't had a chance to listen to
2:11
the show.
2:12
Did he bring it up on Tuesday?
2:13
Uh, kinda.
2:14
Yeah.
2:15
Oh, did he?
2:16
Because he did send me an email early
2:18
in the week.
2:19
He was befuddled.
2:20
People are saying that we're fighting.
2:22
Is everything okay?
2:23
I presume it's an inside joke, right?
2:24
Right, right, right.
2:25
Come on, right?
2:26
I'm like, I think so.
2:28
I don't know.
2:28
Maybe you should listen to our show.
2:30
Well, until you listen to the show, you'll
2:32
be funneled continually.
2:37
Are we under martial law yet?
2:39
Is the main question of the day.
2:43
Oh, that was supposed to happen on Sunday.
2:47
Yeah, I don't.
2:48
Yeah, guess not.
2:50
I guess it hasn't happened.
2:52
And I haven't seen anybody posting about it.
2:55
Why it hasn't happened.
2:56
Because they have to have a new date.
3:00
So there was...
3:01
It's been put off to some other date.
3:05
So I make a joke about this at
3:07
the wedding yesterday.
3:10
And Joe was there, Laura Logan's husband.
3:15
And apparently...
3:16
Was Laura there?
3:16
No, no.
3:17
Who knows?
3:17
She's doing a speech in Atlanta.
3:19
She's all over the place.
3:21
And apparently he had already told a few
3:23
people a week ago, martial law is coming.
3:27
Was he a believer in this?
3:31
I guess so.
3:32
Because other people said, yeah, Joe, what happened
3:34
to that?
3:34
And I'm like, Joe, what?
3:36
That's like a libtard thing.
3:38
No, no, no.
3:39
He just wouldn't do it on Easter.
3:41
Like, come on, man.
3:44
What?
3:45
Yes.
3:46
It's crazy.
3:48
That's all right.
3:49
Then I hit him right back with this.
3:50
Okay.
3:50
It all changed when JFK Jr. is our
3:53
vice president.
3:56
It's...
3:56
I have a...
3:57
I'm talking about screwball things.
3:59
I have a bet with my son.
4:03
Okay.
4:04
I may have brought this up, but I
4:06
don't think I have.
4:07
Okay.
4:07
I'll remind you if you did.
4:10
Yeah, I'm sure you will.
4:12
He made a substantial bet.
4:15
And I have to put this down.
4:17
I have to get this in writing.
4:18
I have to send some email back and
4:20
forth because I do have one witness.
4:22
And he's just adamant about it.
4:24
Is one not enough?
4:26
Do you need more witnesses?
4:28
I...
4:28
Well...
4:29
Oh, no, wait.
4:30
I think you have brought this up.
4:31
The JD Vance will become president and then
4:34
Trump will be vice president.
4:35
He'll quit and then he'll become president.
4:37
Exactly.
4:38
Yeah.
4:39
And he's adamant about it.
4:41
You told me that.
4:41
We're all witnesses.
4:42
You have a million witnesses.
4:43
We've heard this.
4:44
Yeah, I know.
4:45
But it has to be...
4:46
Yeah, he's gonna...
4:47
What?
4:48
And I can't refer to a podcast.
4:50
I can't dig it up and make it...
4:52
How dare you denigrate the show?
4:54
No, no, it's not that.
4:55
It's that I have to keep track of
4:57
the date of this podcast, then refer to
4:59
it.
4:59
Oh, you can get it on Bing.
5:01
As opposed to something in an email, which
5:03
I can put aside.
5:04
You'll be able to go to bingit.io
5:06
and send a direct link to the audio.
5:08
We have the best resources for this.
5:11
But that's the kind of thing that's very
5:12
similar to...
5:13
It reminds me of the idea that we're
5:16
gonna have Marshall Loft or whatever.
5:18
And there's no reason for any of this.
5:19
There's no reason to expect Trump to pull
5:21
a stunt like that, which would irk everyone.
5:26
There's no reason for him to pull a
5:27
stunt like Marshall Loft.
5:28
All of my screens here in the studio
5:31
have identical...
5:32
Breaking news!
5:34
Trump on Ukraine war.
5:36
We're getting close.
5:38
We're getting closer.
5:39
It's almost there.
5:41
There's no closer.
5:43
I actually have some...
5:45
In fact, I think Russia bombed Kiev again
5:47
this morning.
5:48
Yeah, this is it.
5:49
The worst attacks on Kiev since the start
5:52
of the war.
5:53
In an attack on the Ukrainian capital, Russia
5:55
launched 215 missiles and drones overnight, according to
5:59
the Ukrainian Air Force, causing the collapse of
6:01
numerous residential buildings.
6:03
Some residents, still in shock, were awakened by
6:06
the explosions.
6:08
I had time to get out when it
6:10
exploded.
6:11
And then there was nothing.
6:12
The neighboring house was destroyed and everything in
6:15
our house just flew away.
6:17
And I didn't see anything.
6:18
I'm scared.
6:20
Others had time to find refuge in bomb
6:22
shelters.
6:23
We were sleeping when we heard the first
6:24
explosion.
6:25
It was very strong.
6:27
The windows in our apartment were damaged.
6:29
Kitchen appliances flew off the countertop.
6:32
But luckily, we were alive.
6:33
Following the attack, the Ukrainian government denounced Russian
6:37
President Vladimir Putin, saying he only has the
6:40
desire to kill.
6:41
President Zelensky said that Russia must stop strikes
6:44
immediately and unconditionally.
6:45
But after three years of fighting, some Ukrainians
6:48
say they no longer believe that peace is
6:50
possible.
6:51
I honestly don't know how this will all
6:53
end.
6:53
It's very scary.
6:54
I don't believe it.
6:56
I only believe that if we can stop
6:57
them on the battlefield, that's it.
6:59
Diplomacy doesn't work here.
7:01
You can see it from the news, from
7:03
the dead.
7:04
Attacks on Kiev, as well as Kharkiv, resumed
7:07
following a brief Easter truce.
7:09
This looked pretty bad, I have to say.
7:12
And I don't think there's been a bombing
7:13
in Kiev that has been this bad.
7:15
They'll kind of work backwards in the timeline,
7:17
because before what happened last night, we had
7:20
this.
7:21
Tonight, President Trump lashing out at Ukraine's President
7:24
Vladimir Zelensky on social media.
7:27
Right.
7:27
Is that not what we call hyperbole?
7:31
Lashing out.
7:32
That used to be the pet phrase of
7:35
Amy Goodman.
7:36
Lashing Vladimir Zelensky on social media, writing, He
7:40
can have peace or he can fight for
7:42
another three years before losing the whole country.
7:46
The man with no cards to play.
7:48
Is this Martha Radnich?
7:49
It sure is.
7:51
Radnich, Radnich.
7:52
Is she still working?
7:54
Radnich, Radnich.
7:55
Well, I don't know why I don't think
7:57
her name is Radnich.
7:58
From now on, she is Martha Radnich.
8:01
That's fine.
8:01
We have pet names for people in the
8:05
show.
8:05
Yes, she's still working.
8:06
No cards to play should now finally get
8:09
it done.
8:10
Nice.
8:11
I don't know if that was a quote
8:12
or editorializing.
8:13
Trump angered by Zelensky's refusal to accept a
8:16
U.S.-proposed peace deal that would prohibit NATO
8:20
membership for Ukraine and would include Ukraine giving
8:24
up land that Russia has seized since its
8:27
invasion.
8:27
There it is.
8:28
In addition to giving up Crimea.
8:31
Zelensky saying, There's nothing to talk about.
8:34
It is our territory.
8:35
The territory of the Ukrainian people.
8:39
Vice President J.D. Vance threatened to end
8:41
the negotiations if Ukraine does not accept the
8:43
U.S. proposal that calls for Ukraine to
8:46
give up land to Russia.
8:48
We've issued a very explicit proposal to both
8:50
the Russians and the Ukrainians.
8:52
And it's time for them to either say
8:54
yes or for the United States to walk
8:56
away from this process.
8:57
And what's odd about this is just around
9:00
this time, we got this news about President
9:03
Putin.
9:04
Russian President Vladimir Putin has expressed for the
9:07
first time in years a willingness to hold
9:10
direct talks with Ukraine.
9:12
This marks potential diplomatic movement as pressure mounts
9:16
from the U.S. for both sides to
9:18
reach a ceasefire deal.
9:20
Speaking to Russian state media, Putin claimed Moscow
9:23
was open to discussing the possibility of halting
9:27
strikes on civilian infrastructure with Kiev.
9:30
How'd that work out?
9:30
Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky has also signaled readiness
9:34
for dialogue, proposing a 30-day ceasefire to
9:38
end attacks on civilians.
9:40
Though Russia has yet to accept the offer.
9:43
As talks intensify, the U.S. has warned
9:46
that it could withdraw its support for peace
9:48
efforts if there's no visible progress.
9:51
With negotiations set to continue in London this
9:55
week, the coming days could determine whether renewed
9:57
diplomacy finally leads to peace.
10:01
So it's interesting when you look at these
10:04
four screens.
10:05
So I have Fox, MSNBC, CNN, and the
10:07
BBC.
10:08
The white balance, the color of the Oval
10:12
Office is so different in each one.
10:16
That shouldn't be.
10:17
Oh, yeah.
10:17
So Fox is very vibrant.
10:20
MSNBC actually looks a little out of focus.
10:23
CNN looks somewhat washed out.
10:26
And the BBC, the gold behind the president
10:30
on the fireplace is just beaming at me.
10:33
It's interesting.
10:35
That's being done on purpose.
10:37
You got to think it.
10:40
Or no, people just don't care anymore.
10:42
Maybe they just run AI over this stuff.
10:44
Well, white balance, schmike balance.
10:46
Let the computer do it.
10:48
Well, the idea that they don't care, they're
10:51
careless or they're sloppy or they don't, you
10:53
know, that is possible.
10:56
But I would get the impression that they
10:58
are purposeful.
11:00
Let's look at the headlines.
11:01
But then again, you know, it's, you know,
11:03
it's the falling off of quality of MSNBC
11:08
and CNN over the years could be reflected
11:11
in a lot of different ways.
11:12
Now, it wouldn't surprise me.
11:14
It wouldn't surprise me.
11:15
I have the NTD version of the update
11:19
between Russia, Ukraine.
11:20
It's the Russia, Ukraine update.
11:22
President also talked about Russia and Ukraine today.
11:25
Tell us the latest on that.
11:27
Sure.
11:27
So inside the Oval Office, President Trump now
11:29
said that he thinks Russia is ready to
11:32
have a deal and that the U.S.
11:33
already had to deal with Russia.
11:35
But it turns out that Ukraine is now
11:37
the more difficult one to negotiate with.
11:39
Watch.
11:39
I think Russia is ready.
11:42
And a lot of people said Russia wanted
11:43
to go for the whole thing.
11:46
And I think we have a deal with
11:49
Russia.
11:50
We have to get a deal with Zelensky.
11:52
And I hope that Zelensky, I thought it
11:54
might be easier to deal with Zelensky.
11:56
So far, it's been harder.
11:58
But that's OK.
11:58
It's all right.
12:00
But I think we have a deal with
12:03
both.
12:03
I hope they do it because I'm looking
12:05
to save.
12:06
And, you know, we spend a lot of
12:07
money.
12:07
But this is about a lot of humanity.
12:11
Meanwhile, in the True Social Post this afternoon,
12:13
President Trump criticized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky for
12:17
making it more difficult to settle the war
12:19
by saying that Ukraine won't recognize Russia's claim
12:23
of Crimea, which happened back in 2014.
12:26
Meanwhile, Zelensky responded later by pointing to a
12:29
2018 statement during the first Trump term, saying
12:33
that the U.S. will never recognize Russian
12:36
sovereignty over Crimea.
12:38
Meanwhile, Vice President J.D. Vance today is
12:41
saying that if Russia and Ukraine don't strike
12:44
a deal, the U.S. would well just
12:46
walk away.
12:46
And meanwhile, the U.S. is focused on
12:49
talking with Russia this week with a Trump
12:51
special envoy, Steve Wyckoff, in Russia this week
12:54
to talk to Russian President Vladimir Putin for
12:57
the fourth time.
12:58
You know, the problem with all of this,
13:01
let's say we get a truce, end of
13:05
the war.
13:08
There are so many weapons that have now
13:12
been funneled from Ukraine into Europe.
13:15
I mean, it's undeniable.
13:19
And we're talking.
13:22
Assault rifles, grenade launchers, anti-tank weapons.
13:25
What would it be going to Europe and
13:27
not Africa?
13:29
Well, I would say they'd be funneled through
13:32
Europe.
13:33
But think about the people who are in
13:35
Europe, the people who have been let in.
13:38
Oh, you think there could be a fifth
13:41
column?
13:41
Yeah.
13:42
Well, well, fifth column.
13:44
I mean, just nut jobs, nut jobs throughout
13:48
Europe.
13:48
We kind of saw this after.
13:52
What was it?
13:56
What was the Yugoslav Wars of the 90s?
14:00
Lots of weapons throughout Europe.
14:02
And, you know, we had gangs, gangs using
14:04
them, terrorist attacks.
14:06
And now we've got all kinds of crazy
14:09
people in Europe.
14:11
I mean, the war could be going to
14:14
the streets.
14:16
I think Europe may not be realizing what
14:20
could possibly happen if this ends.
14:24
Well, that's kind of a grim view of
14:26
things.
14:26
Well, I have a kid there, you know,
14:28
so I think about these things.
14:29
Yeah, yeah, it is grim.
14:31
But, you know, weapons have a weird way
14:34
of going the other direction.
14:37
It's not that hard.
14:40
So I don't know.
14:42
I don't know.
14:43
We'll see.
14:44
I mean, demilitarized zone is what it would
14:46
have to be.
14:47
You keep Crimea, you get a DMZ, and
14:50
it's the end of it.
14:52
Yeah, well, they can't seem to get this
14:53
to happen.
14:54
Well, because they like the war.
14:55
The European leadership likes it.
14:58
They want, they're all in.
14:59
They can't turn back their financing and all
15:02
these.
15:02
They have, they have probably, there has to
15:04
be something behind Zelensky's reluctance.
15:08
Besides, it's just pigheadedness.
15:10
It's got to be the Europeans telling him,
15:11
don't worry about it, we'll back you up.
15:13
Yeah, we'll put you in the EU.
15:15
You'll become a part of Europe.
15:16
We promise, pinky swear.
15:17
Come on, come on, just keep going, keep
15:19
going, don't stop.
15:20
Here's your script.
15:21
Yeah, I would, I would think so.
15:24
I would think so.
15:28
Anyway, happy news, everybody.
15:30
Happy, happy days, good times.
15:32
It's all fantastic.
15:36
But there's, I got a couple of clips
15:38
on Elon Musk quitting.
15:40
Now, is it quitting or is he going
15:43
to reduce his involvement?
15:46
I think he's not quitting or reducing.
15:49
I think he's just saying all this.
15:52
You don't even think it's true at all.
15:54
He said there's no pullback.
15:57
He's got his team in place.
15:59
He likes to be in the...
16:01
In the know.
16:03
Well, not that, but within the power structure.
16:06
He should take a sabbatical or say he's
16:08
taking time to focus on his multiple families.
16:12
He should, you're right.
16:14
I think he's trying to do that, but
16:15
he's doing it in a funny way.
16:17
I've got some clips from NPR, which will
16:20
have a slant to him.
16:21
And so this is Musk out.
16:24
Okay.
16:25
Elon Musk says he'll pull back from his
16:27
work in the Trump administration to focus on
16:29
running his electric car business, Tesla.
16:31
For the last few months, Musk has had
16:33
massive access and power within the White House.
16:36
NPR's Danielle Kurtzleben reports on the relationship that
16:39
was mutually beneficial until things got complicated.
16:43
On election night, Donald Trump gave special attention
16:45
to one of his biggest supporters.
16:48
Let me tell you, we have a new
16:50
star.
16:51
A star is born, Elon.
16:53
Their political courtship was only a few months
16:55
old.
16:56
Musk endorsed Trump shortly after the July assassination
16:59
attempt in Butler, Pennsylvania.
17:01
Musk later explained his attraction at another Trump
17:03
rally in Butler in October.
17:05
We had one president who couldn't climb a
17:07
flight of stairs and another who was fist
17:11
pumping after getting shot.
17:13
Fight, fight, fight.
17:17
Blood coming down the face.
17:19
Musk would go on to spend a quarter
17:21
of a billion dollars supporting Trump and other
17:23
Republicans in the 2024 election.
17:26
By the time Musk took the stage at
17:28
Trump's October Madison Square Garden rally, Trump had
17:31
already said Musk would lead a project they
17:33
called the Department of Government Efficiency, or DOGE.
17:37
Howard Lutnick, who is now Commerce Secretary, introduced
17:39
Musk.
17:40
How much do you think we can rip
17:43
out of this wasted $6.5 trillion Harris
17:47
-Biden budget?
17:49
Well, I think we can do at least
17:50
$2 trillion.
17:51
Yeah!
17:53
Musk brought a chaotic, chaotic, chaotic energy to
17:55
his new political role.
17:56
He grabbed headlines when he twice made a
17:59
straight-armed gesture that resembled a Nazi salute
18:02
at Trump's inauguration.
18:04
Musk denied that, then joked about it on
18:05
social media.
18:07
Once Trump took office, Musk was everywhere.
18:10
I keep getting notes from the EU, from
18:13
the European countries, mainly the Netherlands, who correct
18:17
me on Tesla and say, no, no, no,
18:18
no, no, you're wrong.
18:21
The reason some people are not buying Teslas
18:25
or renouncing their ownership is because of the
18:30
Nazi salute and his support of AFD.
18:34
They truly think he's a Nazi.
18:37
Yes, I believe this to be true.
18:39
I've noticed this following some of the foreign
18:42
news coverage.
18:43
There is this strong belief that he's, and
18:46
you see it even on late night comedy
18:48
shows, he's a Nazi, period.
18:52
It's not even an issue.
18:54
It's not even a question.
18:55
It's obvious.
18:56
Yeah, he did this and that's what you
18:57
do as a, I mean.
18:58
That's what Nazis do.
19:00
It's like, it's delusional.
19:06
Do you think?
19:07
It's truly, but it's concerning.
19:11
It's concerning that people, you know, that the
19:14
machine is so strong that people actually believe
19:18
this, whether they've even seen it or not,
19:20
or they've maybe seen a picture somewhere.
19:23
They hear people talking about it.
19:24
You have this shot of him doing his
19:26
salute.
19:27
I mean, Waltz did the exact same salute.
19:30
No, I mean, I know, we know that.
19:32
Everyone who's listening to the show knows that.
19:36
But that doesn't matter.
19:37
The fact that you can still launch that
19:39
into the media, into the universe, really, into
19:45
the ether, let's put it that way.
19:46
You can launch it into the ether and
19:48
people just go, oh yeah.
19:49
And make it stick.
19:51
And it sticks, yeah.
19:53
I mean, we all should be very worried
19:55
about that.
19:56
That is, yeah, it's a phenom for sure.
19:59
Yeah, it's amazing.
20:01
And that's why we have to, it has
20:03
to be fought.
20:03
But it's a hopeless battle.
20:08
That's why you listen to the Noah Jenner
20:10
show, because it makes you smarter.
20:12
It also makes you more, it makes you
20:15
more attractive to the opposite sex.
20:16
And the hit of every party.
20:18
It does.
20:19
Thank you, Daryl.
20:21
So they continue with this.
20:24
This is more, and as you listen to
20:26
this, this is kind of like an eulogy.
20:30
They talk about the entire Musk story.
20:33
It's more like a movie.
20:35
Oh, are they sad he's going?
20:36
Is that what's happening?
20:37
They're like, oh, well.
20:38
I can't say that's the case.
20:40
It's just like they're wrapping it.
20:42
It's like a wrap.
20:43
Maybe.
20:44
Musk wrap.
20:46
Maybe they, Musk wrap.
20:48
I like that.
20:48
Maybe it's because they had all the packages
20:50
and the scripts written when they told everybody
20:53
that they were going to break up months
20:56
ago.
20:57
And they're just like, oh, we still got
20:58
this stuff on the shelf.
20:59
Should we use it now, boss?
21:01
That's always possible.
21:03
I don't think NPR is that into having
21:05
these, because that's TV stuff, because you have,
21:08
it takes more work, but it's possible.
21:11
Here we go.
21:12
Riding on Air Force One and taking questions
21:14
with the president in the Oval Office.
21:15
Once with his four-year-old son in
21:18
tow.
21:19
Trump was generous with Musk, constantly praising him
21:21
and letting him speak at length, even at
21:24
cabinet meetings.
21:25
At the first one, Trump jokingly chided Musk
21:27
at one point.
21:32
At Doge, Musk had almost unrestricted ability to
21:34
look at the details of agencies that oversaw
21:37
his businesses, companies that do a lot of
21:39
work for the federal government.
21:40
He gleefully set to work reshaping the bureaucracy
21:43
he railed against as a businessman, even brandishing
21:47
a chainsaw on stage at a conservative conference
21:49
earlier this year.
21:53
A little bit out of context, but okay.
21:58
Under Musk, Doge has effectively dismantled some agencies
22:01
and left others.
22:03
He must have had the MMR jab as
22:06
a kid.
22:06
There's no doubt about it.
22:07
Musk is so on the spectrum, it's not
22:10
funny anymore.
22:12
Under Musk, Doge has effectively dismantled some agencies
22:16
and left others reeling after slashing tens of
22:18
thousands of jobs.
22:20
But big savings have been hard to find.
22:23
On the campaign trail, Musk had said he
22:24
was shooting for $2 trillion.
22:26
But by a cabinet meeting earlier this month,
22:29
the goal was much smaller.
22:30
I'm excited to announce that we anticipate savings
22:34
in FY26 from reduction of waste and fraud
22:37
by $150 billion.
22:39
Courts have halted many of Doge's actions, including
22:41
attempts to obtain access to sensitive data.
22:44
By spring, Trump was saying that cabinet members
22:46
would be taking more of the lead in
22:48
making decisions about their agencies.
22:50
Hundreds of billions of dollars of waste and
22:53
fraud and abuse has been found, already found.
22:56
And that doesn't mean they don't have a
22:59
little bit of an argument here and there
23:00
about something or maybe personnel arguments.
23:03
There were also signs that Musk was becoming
23:05
a political liability.
23:07
He spent and campaigned heavily for the conservative
23:10
in a Wisconsin Supreme Court election in April,
23:12
who then lost.
23:14
You know, the conservative television and radio media,
23:17
they don't really cop to the fact that
23:19
it's $150 billion, significantly less than what was
23:22
promised.
23:24
Well, there's an assumption that it's going to
23:26
continue and grow.
23:29
$150 billion isn't chicken feed.
23:31
No, this is what we gave to Ukraine.
23:33
We guess.
23:34
We don't even know that.
23:35
We don't know anything.
23:35
We know anything about the numbers.
23:37
No, we don't know anything.
23:38
It's just, we know nothing.
23:39
It's just numbers that people throw out there.
23:42
Who knows?
23:43
Who knows?
23:45
But, you know.
23:47
Well, you left $80 billion plus in gear
23:50
in Afghanistan that could have been retrieved.
23:53
That's $80 billion, just, well, there you go.
23:56
But you see, I'm not looking at the
23:59
actual value.
24:00
It's the marketing numbers.
24:01
The marketing numbers.
24:02
A billion dollars is nothing these days.
24:04
We didn't even know what came after a
24:06
million when I was a kid.
24:07
What comes after a million?
24:09
I don't know.
24:11
You know, we had no idea.
24:12
With all of our devaluation of currency through
24:17
printing, now the billionaire is the new millionaire.
24:21
And we don't even think about what that
24:22
means anymore.
24:24
If you went on the street and said,
24:25
how many millions is a billion?
24:27
I don't think people even know.
24:30
Well, they know.
24:31
So they've come up with 5% of
24:33
their proposed savings.
24:36
That's not impressive.
24:38
It's a lot of money, but it's not
24:39
impressive.
24:40
And they're not saying more to come.
24:43
So marketing-wise, I think it's kind of
24:45
a flop.
24:46
They are saying more to come.
24:48
It's that these reports aren't saying more to
24:49
come.
24:52
They're also saying he's not Hitler, but the
24:54
reports say he is.
24:55
So I'm just looking at perception of the
24:57
media.
24:59
Well, let's wrap it with the third clip.
25:01
Meanwhile, widespread Tesla takedown protests were happening at
25:04
dealerships nationwide.
25:09
Musk openly disagreed with Trump's tariff policy, at
25:12
one point calling trade advisor Peter Navarro dumber
25:15
than a sack of bricks.
25:17
Musk's job at Doge was always supposed to
25:19
be a temporary assignment.
25:21
Recently, Trump has been vague about Musk's future,
25:24
but complimentary as always.
25:26
Well, I think he's amazing, but I also
25:28
think he's got a big company to run.
25:30
And so at some point, he's going to
25:31
be going back.
25:32
He wants to.
25:33
Would you want to keep him around?
25:35
Oh, I'd keep him as long as I
25:36
could keep him.
25:37
He's a very talented guy.
25:39
This week, Tesla reported dismal earnings, and Musk
25:42
announced to shareholders that he would be paring
25:43
back his role at Doge.
25:46
The White House has not responded to NPR's
25:48
questions about how much Musk will be scaling
25:50
back.
25:51
I do have, I think, a Franz Van
25:54
Contra clip that includes some of the quarterly
25:57
call.
26:01
That's the one where everybody typically calls up
26:04
and says, great queue, guys, really good.
26:07
Not so in this case.
26:08
It hasn't been a great year for Tesla,
26:10
the US automaker headed by billionaire Elon Musk.
26:13
For months, protesters have been vandalizing Tesla cars
26:16
and showrooms, upset at Musk spearheading mass layoffs
26:20
at major government agencies.
26:22
Now, if we were running France 24 and
26:25
this guy auditioned, would you say, yeah, that's
26:27
a go for on-air voice?
26:30
Play it again.
26:31
Through his work at Doge, it's been so
26:33
bad that President Donald Trump has threatened to
26:36
imprison the protesters in El Salvador.
26:38
I'd be like, no, pass.
26:40
I think it'd be more for some gay
26:42
channel.
26:43
Deliveries of Tesla's aging lineup of cars have
26:46
nosedived, and Tesla's profits have been hollowed out.
26:49
Tesla's net income has fallen 71% from
26:53
the same time last year.
26:54
Investors have sold off the company's stock at
26:57
a rapid pace, causing its price to drop
26:59
by about half since December.
27:01
Nonetheless, on an earnings phone call with analysts
27:04
on Tuesday, Musk defended his work with the
27:06
Trump administration.
27:08
There's been some blowback for the time that
27:10
I've been spending in government with the Department
27:12
of Government Efficiency or Doge.
27:14
I believe the right thing to do is
27:15
to just fight the way forward and get
27:17
the country back on the right track.
27:18
And working together with President Trump and his
27:21
administration, because if the ship of America goes
27:24
down, we all go down with it, including
27:26
Tesla and everyone else.
27:28
Yielding to investors' worries, Musk said that next
27:30
month he will begin allocating more time to
27:33
Tesla and cut back his time at Doge.
27:36
He returns as the company faces difficulties from
27:39
Trump-imposed tariffs.
27:40
Tesla paused imports of some China-sourced components
27:43
after U.S. tariffs on the Asian country
27:46
rose to 145%.
27:47
China has responded with tariffs of its own,
27:51
leading Tesla to suspend some orders in the
27:54
country.
27:55
I was watching a report on BYD, the
27:59
Shanghai auto show.
28:00
They launched the new models.
28:02
Oh, man.
28:04
Those are gorgeous.
28:06
I know.
28:07
They're really, like, cool-looking car.
28:09
I mean, I still would not want a
28:11
battery car, but they're cool-looking cars.
28:15
You know, and then you look at the
28:16
Tesla, it's like, feels kind of 2010-ish.
28:20
It's old-fashioned-looking.
28:22
Yeah, yeah, that's his problem.
28:23
It was good-looking when it came out.
28:25
Well, he had that designer guy, right?
28:26
He had the OG designer.
28:28
He had some designer that did a, you
28:30
know, they've been kind of, like, that guy
28:35
wasn't around anymore and everything's gotten stale-looking.
28:38
Yeah, after the S, after the S.
28:40
The S was the good-looking one.
28:41
Wasn't that the guy who designed the car
28:43
that kept catching on fire?
28:44
Remember that one?
28:46
Fisker.
28:46
Fisker.
28:47
Fisker.
28:49
He's just driving five feet.
28:51
Catches on fire.
28:52
I know, you know, I thought it was,
28:54
but it turns out it, I don't know
28:55
if it was or not.
28:56
I had some, I wrote something up about
28:59
the designer, and then I got people sending,
29:01
no, you got the wrong guy.
29:03
And so I don't know what the story
29:05
is with any accuracy on who designed the
29:08
original S.
29:09
But that guy's not there.
29:10
Whoever it was, he's not there.
29:12
He's not there, that's the point, yes.
29:14
I do have a related clip, which is
29:17
from Al Gore, who had this very, it's.
29:21
Oh, I'm glad you got the Al Gore
29:22
stuff.
29:22
This, he gave the speech.
29:24
Yes.
29:24
And by the way, I did mention the
29:26
newsletter.
29:27
We missed again.
29:28
Oh no, Earth Day.
29:29
I think for the 15th year in a
29:30
row.
29:31
Earth Day.
29:33
We missed our annual Earth Day promotion.
29:36
Yes.
29:37
Shame on you.
29:40
I saw the local news doing a thing
29:42
about Earth Day cocktails.
29:44
Earth Day cocktails.
29:46
Yeah, what's that?
29:47
Dirt in a jar?
29:48
No, it's just alcohol.
29:50
You know, it's just, you cut up the
29:52
lime so you can make it look like
29:54
the continents, and then you drink it on
29:56
Earth Day.
29:56
I'm like, what is this?
29:57
They don't even have anything to say about
30:01
it.
30:02
It's so deluded.
30:04
Who even organizes Earth Day?
30:06
Do we even know?
30:07
Who's in charge of this?
30:08
Hold on a second.
30:08
I think whoever designed it.
30:10
I think, didn't this start in the 70s?
30:13
Let's see here, earthday.org.
30:15
The official site.
30:17
I'm being verified by CloudFlare.
30:19
They don't think I'm a human.
30:20
Ah, I've been approved.
30:22
You've been kicked.
30:23
Here we go.
30:23
About us.
30:25
Aboot.
30:25
Aboot us.
30:27
Aboot.
30:27
Aboot.
30:28
Let's see, our vision.
30:29
No, it doesn't say anything.
30:30
Oh, board of directors.
30:31
Oh, a bunch of ugly people.
30:34
Let me see about, oh, they have their
30:35
history.
30:35
What's their history then?
30:39
Yes.
30:40
Every year on April 22nd, Earth Day marks
30:43
the anniversary of the birth of the modern
30:45
environmental movement in 1970.
30:48
You are right.
30:51
You are right.
30:53
The stage was set for change.
30:55
And the environmental movement did not begin in
30:57
1970.
30:57
No, well, but here it is.
30:58
The stage was set for change with the
31:00
publication of Rachel Carson's New York Times bestseller,
31:04
Silent Spring, in 1962.
31:09
Well, eight years later is what they're saying.
31:12
Yeah.
31:13
Senator Gaylord Nelson.
31:16
No, Silent Spring was a massive bestseller.
31:19
Yeah, did you read it?
31:21
Yeah.
31:21
What was it about?
31:23
It was about how we're gonna all die.
31:27
Oh, an uplifting book.
31:30
Anyway.
31:32
Pesticides and things.
31:33
Oh, yeah.
31:33
And acid rain.
31:34
No, that came later.
31:36
No, that's later.
31:37
Yeah.
31:37
We had acid rain.
31:38
We had the ozone hole.
31:39
I remember as a kid, we had the
31:41
ozone hole.
31:41
The ozone layer.
31:42
The hole in the ozone layer.
31:45
That was in the 70s.
31:45
We'd be looking up like, where is it?
31:47
How come I can't see it?
31:48
How do I see the...
31:49
It's because of your washing machine.
31:53
So yeah, so here's...
31:54
It was Freon.
31:55
It was a refrigerator that was causing the
31:57
ozone layer to pull.
31:59
Yeah, another good one.
32:01
Freon.
32:02
Yeah, Freon.
32:02
But then they came up with something else.
32:04
Ah, it doesn't use Freon.
32:05
Then it was hairspray.
32:06
Yeah, it was more toxic, but it doesn't
32:08
put a hole in the ozone.
32:09
And then there was hairspray.
32:10
Hairspray was doing it.
32:11
Hairspray, bad.
32:11
I personally am responsible for a lot of
32:15
bad things in the environment during the 80s
32:17
and 90s.
32:19
So Al Gore does this very interesting thing.
32:21
He says, I don't like calling people Hitler,
32:24
but you know, these guys are Hitler.
32:25
I want to note that before I agree
32:28
with what is not a precedent, I understand
32:30
very well why it is wrong to compare
32:32
Adolf Hitler's Third Reich to any other movement.
32:35
It was uniquely evil, full stop.
32:38
I get it.
32:39
But there are important lessons from the history
32:41
of that emergent evil.
32:43
And here is one that I regard as
32:44
essential.
32:46
In the immediate aftermath of World War II,
32:50
a small group of philosophers who had escaped
32:53
Hitler's murderous regime returned to Germany and performed
32:57
a kind of moral autopsy on the Third
33:00
Reich.
33:02
The most famous of the so-called Frankfurt
33:04
School of Philosophers was a man named Jürgen
33:07
Habermas.
33:08
Best known, I would say.
33:10
But it was...
33:11
Do you know who that guy was?
33:12
Jürgen Habermas?
33:13
What's his name?
33:14
No.
33:15
I know about the Frankfurt School, but I
33:16
don't know specific guys.
33:18
Okay.
33:18
Famous of the so-called Frankfurt School of
33:21
Philosophers was a man named Jürgen Habermas.
33:24
Best known, I would say.
33:26
But it was Habermas's mentor, Theodor Adorno.
33:30
Do we know him?
33:32
Yeah.
33:33
Yes.
33:34
He wrote a book called The Authoritarian Personality.
33:37
Oh, okay.
33:38
Very famous guy.
33:39
Oh, thank you.
33:40
Who wrote that the first step in that
33:44
nation's descent into hell was, and I quote,
33:48
the conversion of all questions of truth into
33:53
questions of power.
33:56
Oh, okay.
33:58
Conversion of all questions of truth into questions
34:01
of power.
34:02
So let's see.
34:03
How is he going to spin this to
34:05
Trump?
34:05
How is he going to spin this?
34:08
He described how the Nazis, and I quote
34:11
again, attacked the very heart of the distinction
34:13
between true and false, end quote.
34:18
Ah, we're going to do some lies.
34:21
The Trump administration is insisting on trying to
34:24
create their own preferred version of reality.
34:29
They say Ukraine attacked Russia instead of the
34:31
other way around.
34:32
Never said that.
34:34
I don't think they ever said that.
34:35
They said they provoked.
34:36
This is a creation talk.
34:38
See, what he's going to do.
34:40
Is lie.
34:40
He's the liar.
34:42
Yes.
34:42
But that's what you do.
34:44
You take the examples, you create a methodology
34:47
that you show that the other side's bad,
34:49
and then you use those techniques against the
34:54
audience.
34:54
This is really good.
34:55
He's good at it.
34:56
On trying to create their own preferred version
34:59
of reality.
35:01
They say Ukraine attacked Russia instead of the
35:03
other way around.
35:05
And expect us to believe it.
35:07
At home, they attack heroes who have defended
35:10
our nation in war and against cyber attacks
35:14
as traitors.
35:16
Well, he's talking about the veterans.
35:20
Remember, he said they're losers because they, you
35:22
know, John McCain.
35:23
Oh, they never lie.
35:24
Yeah, losers.
35:24
Losers, suckers, and losers.
35:26
Suckers and losers.
35:27
Yes, suckers and losers.
35:28
Yes.
35:28
They say the climate crisis is a hoax.
35:31
Well, yeah.
35:32
Okay.
35:33
I'll give you that one.
35:35
Invented by the Chinese to destroy American manufacturing.
35:38
Oh, a little laughter there.
35:41
Invented by the Chinese.
35:43
No, invented by you.
35:44
That's why he's laughing.
35:46
They say it's the Chinese.
35:48
It was me.
35:49
Yeah, it was the Chinese.
35:50
They don't know anything.
35:51
I'm the one who did it.
35:51
I'm the one who did that.
35:53
They say coal is clean.
35:55
No.
35:57
What did he say?
35:58
What was that one?
35:58
They say coal is clean.
36:00
No, they're talking about clean coal.
36:02
Yeah, clean coal.
36:03
Which is marketing.
36:04
Agreed.
36:04
But it is much cleaner than it used
36:06
to be.
36:07
Well, coal is coal.
36:10
The problem is coal is coal.
36:12
It's not, it doesn't change.
36:14
It doesn't, you know, lignite, which is the
36:16
good coal, which is pretty clean, doesn't change
36:19
over the eons.
36:20
It's the same damn stuff.
36:22
Except that the methodology, the floating bed burners
36:26
and all the rest of it that create
36:28
coal power, coal power energy has improved over
36:32
the years with scrubbers on the one end
36:33
and and the floating bed on the other.
36:36
And you get a pretty good burn job
36:38
without it being a mess.
36:40
So that's what they're referring to when they
36:42
say clean coal.
36:43
But he takes the president.
36:45
He's a liar.
36:45
Well, he takes the president's words literally by
36:48
saying, you know, because he said clean, beautiful
36:50
coal.
36:53
So but yeah, OK, I guess.
36:56
They say coal is clean.
36:58
They say wind turbines cause cancer.
37:00
They say sea level rise.
37:01
That's never happened either.
37:03
I don't think anyone said it.
37:04
Who said the wind turbines cause cancer?
37:06
The president may have alluded to it at
37:08
some point.
37:08
No, he made some joke about it.
37:11
Why about Martha, I can't watch the TV.
37:13
But people have definitely claimed to become sick
37:17
from the sound of wind turbines.
37:19
And there have been higher instances of cancer
37:22
near wind farms.
37:24
But, you know, we still don't know what
37:27
is causing all of this cancer everywhere.
37:29
We have no idea what could it be.
37:31
So anyway, they say wind turbines cause cancer.
37:35
They say sea level rise is creates more
37:37
beachfront property.
37:39
Well, yeah, nobody says this.
37:41
No, he did.
37:42
The joke was if if the sea level
37:44
rises, then I'll just it's what I always
37:46
say.
37:47
If we're really going to have sea level
37:48
rise, I'll have beachfront property in Fredericksburg.
37:51
That's the I have it right here for
37:53
sure.
37:53
Yes, it's a joke.
37:55
But OK, I guess he takes it seriously.
37:57
Their allies in the oligarchic backlash to climate
38:01
action argued that those who want to stop
38:03
using the sky as an open sewer, for
38:05
God's sake, the sky is an open sewer.
38:07
Now there's a lie need to be more
38:10
realistic and acquiesce to the huge increases in
38:15
the burning of more and more fossil fuels,
38:17
which is what they're pushing, even though that
38:20
is the principal cause of the climate crisis.
38:24
Oh, yeah, there you go.
38:26
You know, I actually.
38:28
So the oil and gas guys are busy.
38:31
They are very busy because all this nuclear
38:34
talk, all this talk about, you know, small.
38:37
I mean, even at the wedding last night,
38:39
by the way, who gets married on a
38:41
Wednesday night?
38:42
I'm sorry, what?
38:43
Who gets married on a Wednesday night?
38:45
Wednesday nights.
38:46
That's what Horowitz is asking everybody.
38:48
Yes.
38:48
Well, he's he's he's just a sheriff's lieutenant.
38:51
He doesn't have a lot of money.
38:53
So I think that's it.
38:54
Oh, Wednesday discount night for marriage discount night.
38:59
They ask for money for their honeymoon, honeymoon
39:01
instead of gifts, which I'm cool with.
39:03
Did they?
39:04
Yeah.
39:05
Yeah, that's cool.
39:06
I get it.
39:07
Well, as a police department, you know, they
39:09
make money, but they couldn't.
39:11
He doesn't make a lot of money.
39:13
And for getting shot at.
39:14
No, he doesn't make a lot of money
39:16
for getting shot or dealing with the public.
39:17
He runs he runs the SWAT team and
39:20
everything.
39:20
He's a cool dude.
39:21
He's a he's a good guy to have
39:22
on speed dial.
39:23
Let me tell you that.
39:25
He's the guy you want as a friend.
39:28
Anyway, so all this talk.
39:30
Why does he have a SWAT team there
39:31
for?
39:32
It's Fredericksburg, man.
39:34
We got MS-13.
39:36
We got Trinidad and Tobago here.
39:39
One guy.
39:40
According to Laura Logan.
39:41
He's like a Lyft Uber driver, does both.
39:44
No, they just live here.
39:45
You see, they don't cause trouble here.
39:48
They just live here.
39:50
This is.
39:51
We got this all last night from Joe
39:52
in the car.
39:54
It's Trinidad and Tobago everywhere.
39:55
They're here.
39:56
They're right here in Fredericksburg.
39:58
They just live here.
39:59
Oh, OK.
39:59
Well, I feel good about that then.
40:02
Anyway, all this talk about data centers going
40:04
on nuclear.
40:06
You know, the Three Mile Island being part
40:08
of it being fired up again.
40:10
Nuclear, nuclear, nuclear.
40:12
Bill Gates, everybody nuclear.
40:13
We can't have this.
40:14
Let's call CBS.
40:16
Hello, CBS.
40:17
We'd like to do a buy.
40:19
Yeah, we'll do triple the rate.
40:20
So we do 360s.
40:22
And could you make it into a package?
40:24
Why sure.
40:25
Just 15 miles away from St. Louis's Gateway
40:28
Arch, nuclear waste was stored for decades.
40:31
It was all top secret.
40:33
Linda Maurice lived near Coldwater Creek for 18
40:36
years.
40:37
The waterway ran right by the storage site.
40:39
There was a deposit site where the processes
40:43
and waste of the Manhattan Project had been.
40:49
The Manhattan Project?
40:51
Was that a nuclear project?
40:55
Are you kidding me?
40:56
Well, I mean, the nuclear bomb.
40:57
But but they they tested it with waste
41:00
on the ground.
41:03
I have no idea what she's talking about.
41:05
And it wasn't that wasn't that in the
41:07
desert somewhere?
41:08
It was out and it was in New
41:09
Mexico.
41:10
Yeah.
41:11
Where the processes and waste of the Manhattan
41:16
Project had been stored, that is to say,
41:20
dumped in the open or put in barrels
41:23
that rusted.
41:24
Eventually, Linda's mother, father and brother would all
41:28
die of lymphoma.
41:31
I think there are people to this day
41:33
who don't know the story.
41:35
It wasn't until 1989, 43 years after the
41:39
waste was first dumped, that the Environmental Protection
41:42
Agency classified the area as hazardous.
41:45
They said it was dangerously contaminated and ordered
41:48
a government cleanup.
41:49
But by that time, more than 60,000
41:52
people lived within just one mile of the
41:54
creek, including Kristen Camuso.
41:56
I had to have a total hysterectomy.
41:58
I've been diagnosed with thyroid cancer.
42:00
They found a new tumor on my remaining
42:03
adrenal gland.
42:04
And this is horrible fear mongering, the way
42:08
I see it.
42:09
Now, where was this?
42:10
Where was this?
42:11
Pennsylvania.
42:13
Why would they move it from all the
42:14
way from New Mexico to Pennsylvania?
42:16
When they have New Mexico and Arizona and
42:19
Nevada is like Nevada, Nevada.
42:23
Yeah.
42:24
Tell me.
42:25
Nevada.
42:25
They're loaded with deserts that could be used.
42:29
Holes can be dug.
42:30
Stuff can be tossed in there with nobody
42:32
nearby.
42:34
It makes no sense to me.
42:35
Well, the tell here is the Manhattan Project.
42:38
I mean, do you get nuclear waste before
42:41
the fusion, before the atoms have clashed and
42:46
the heat is generated?
42:47
Well, they were doing, they had to do
42:49
some extraction, I suppose, in the process.
42:53
It's possible.
42:54
Camuso is a policy director for the Missouri
42:56
Coalition for the Environment.
42:58
She's been pushing for the remaining waste to
43:00
be removed for more than 12 years.
43:02
I was quite literally laying in my hospital
43:05
bed and I promised myself.
43:08
By the way, stop the clip.
43:11
Another good reason to pay attention to the
43:13
tips of the day on the No Agenda
43:15
show.
43:16
And you would buy a Geiger counter.
43:18
Yes.
43:19
And you would know what's going on.
43:22
Well, now you've made me stop for a
43:25
second because I was going to talk about
43:27
this later, but something very concerning has taken
43:29
place.
43:32
Let me see if I can find it
43:33
here.
43:34
With the Geiger counter?
43:36
No, with the tip of the day.
43:39
Oh, there is another scandal.
43:42
Yes.
43:42
The tip of the day has become the
43:43
most scandalous part of the show.
43:47
Yes.
43:48
Yeah, now I think it has to do
43:50
with the live disc product.
43:55
No, no, no.
43:56
This is the scandal.
43:58
This is the Bill O'Reilly show.
44:01
Now, we have a brand new thing for
44:03
concierge and premium members called tip of the
44:05
day.
44:06
What?
44:06
Starts tomorrow.
44:07
What?
44:08
And every day on the website, I'm going
44:10
to put a tip that will make your
44:12
life better.
44:13
That's a lot of tips.
44:15
Some of them will be frothy, entertainment, there's
44:18
a good book to read, there's a good
44:19
movie to see, whatever it may be, that
44:21
kind of thing.
44:21
But some will be important.
44:24
Okay, just for concierge and premium members.
44:27
We should be doing it for premium members.
44:30
Yeah, concierge and the bundle, the No Agenda
44:34
bundle.
44:35
Concierge members of the No Agenda show get
44:38
their tip of the day, but only if
44:39
you're a concierge member.
44:41
Man, that guy just ripped us off.
44:45
Ripped us off.
44:45
He ripped off Dana Brunetti.
44:47
Dana Brunetti should be outraged.
44:49
He should send him a cease and desist.
44:51
I think so.
44:52
Last year, Camuso and the Washington University Environmental
44:55
Law Clinic analyzed the Corps' cleanup plans.
44:59
Not only are they concerned about the slow
45:01
pace, they say the Corps is leaving behind
45:04
nearly three times more radioactive isotopes than the
45:06
Department of Energy said is safe.
45:08
What they're finding is mostly thorium-230, and
45:12
that is an alpha emitter.
45:15
What does that mean?
45:15
So basically, it becomes dangerous when you inhale
45:17
or ingest it, and once it's in your
45:19
body, it will continue to fire for the
45:21
rest of your life.
45:22
The Corps told us their cleanup plans are
45:24
safe, but the Environmental Protection Agency wasn't convinced.
45:28
CBS News found that in 2020, EPA scientists
45:32
asked the Corps for specific data on the
45:34
contamination, but the Corps did not respond to
45:37
those requests.
45:38
Everybody has been touched by this legacy, and
45:41
I feel it's a responsibility of mine.
45:44
Now that I know this information, I can't
45:46
just sit on it.
45:48
The Corps has promised an update on the
45:49
contamination in four months when it's set to
45:52
publish its latest five-year review.
45:54
But while the people here wait for the
45:56
threat to be dealt with, the creek continues
45:59
to flow.
46:00
Okay, so I can't see that any other
46:03
way than that's oil and gas, you know,
46:06
like, let's get something going.
46:08
Hey, remember that thing we had in Pennsylvania
46:09
in the 70s?
46:11
Let's bring that back.
46:13
You got anybody who's dying of cancer?
46:14
Yeah, let me see.
46:15
Yeah, we got this.
46:16
That's such an interesting theory of yours, because
46:20
it doesn't really benefit anybody to do these
46:22
stories except oil and gas.
46:24
Now, we had the same thing around here.
46:26
We have a nuclear waste dump on Treasure
46:34
Island in San Francisco.
46:35
Yes, yes, I remember.
46:37
Over in one corner, I know exactly where
46:38
it is, and they supposedly buried it, or
46:41
I don't know what they did, but now
46:42
they put buildings over there because they've privatized
46:45
the island.
46:47
And wasn't Google or something going to buy
46:50
that at some point?
46:51
Do I remember something like that?
46:53
It's a bunch of these treasure ball things
46:55
going around.
46:56
It's all military.
46:57
You know, the military, or the vaunted military,
47:00
they get a hold of something and they
47:02
don't care.
47:04
So lots of fear mongering.
47:06
I only have the opening, which will tell
47:08
you enough.
47:09
60 minutes.
47:10
Now, of course, we need to blame everything
47:12
on Trump.
47:13
Bird flu has been circling the globe for
47:15
decades, so the discovery in 2024 that the
47:19
deadly pathogen had jumped from a wild bird
47:23
to a cow came as a shock to
47:25
virus watchers.
47:26
It came as a shock to virus watchers.
47:28
Hey, how many virus watchers do you know?
47:30
Be quiet.
47:32
I'm watching a virus.
47:34
Now, in just over a year, the virus
47:37
has ripped through America's dairy herds and poultry
47:40
flocks.
47:40
It has jumped to other mammals, including humans.
47:43
It has jumped to other mammals, including humans,
47:47
implying it could jump from human to human.
47:50
This is an obvious pharma segment here.
47:53
70 Americans have caught the virus.
47:55
One has died.
47:57
Long feared as a possible pandemic, doctors and
48:00
veterinarians fighting the virus told us Biden's government
48:04
was slow to act, while the Trump administration
48:07
has now laid off more than 100 key
48:10
scientists.
48:11
Oh, no.
48:12
As the virus keeps spreading.
48:14
Yeah, so when you die, you know who
48:16
to blame.
48:17
When we create this, you'll know who to
48:19
blame.
48:20
The question is, can we actually ramp up
48:24
another pandemic now that the World Health Organization
48:27
is falling apart?
48:28
He described the large sudden drop in funding
48:31
in US foreign aid as severe.
48:33
The United Nations Health Agency has no choice
48:36
but to slash jobs and operations.
48:38
The refusal of the US to pay its
48:40
assessed contributions for 2024 and 2025, combined with
48:44
reductions in official development assistance by some other
48:47
countries, means we are facing a salary gap
48:49
for the 2026-27.
48:51
Salary gap.
48:52
This is about, for some reason, the beginning
48:54
got cut off, but it's about the World
48:55
Health Organization saying they have to lay off
48:58
people.
48:58
But listen to the- I thought Bill
48:59
Gates was financing this and the Chinese.
49:02
Why do we have anything to do with
49:03
it?
49:03
When you hear the numbers, you'll understand why.
49:06
Some other countries means we are facing a
49:08
salary gap for the 2026-27 biennium of
49:11
between $560 and $650 million.
49:14
In addition to stopping- That's half a
49:17
billion dollars salaries alone.
49:20
Contributions the Trump administration plans to fully withdraw
49:23
from the organization next January.
49:25
In remarks to member states, the WHO chief
49:27
Dr. Tedros said they would be saying goodbye
49:29
to a significant number of colleagues.
49:31
He said the funding gap represented about 25
49:34
% of staff costs, but- It's only
49:36
25%.
49:38
Their salary is $2 billion a year?
49:43
For what?
49:44
Thank you.
49:45
They've got, you know, the video shows buildings
49:48
everywhere.
49:49
What are they doing?
49:50
They actually explain what they do.
49:52
Stress that did not mean a 25%
49:54
cut in the number of positions.
49:56
The leadership team in the organization's headquarters will
49:58
be reduced, and there's a possibility some WHO
50:00
offices in wealthier countries will be closed.
50:03
The agency, which coordinates the world's response to
50:06
health emergency, prevents disease and expands access-
50:09
It prevents disease.
50:10
Don't you hear that?
50:12
Oh, they do that?
50:13
Yeah, with the $2 billion, apparently.
50:16
Your countries will be closed.
50:17
The agency, which coordinates the world's response to
50:20
health emergency, prevents disease and expands access to
50:23
healthcare, needs to reduce its activities and re
50:26
-center on its core functions.
50:28
The news comes shortly after WHO member countries
50:30
finalized an historic agreement to help prevent the
50:33
next pandemic.
50:34
And they were going to help prevent the
50:36
next pandemic with an agreement.
50:38
They have paper.
50:39
So how many great pandemics have we had
50:41
over history?
50:42
Two.
50:44
Well, over recent history, we had two.
50:46
We had the Spanish flu in 1917.
50:49
Then we had 100 years later.
50:51
Yeah, we had COVID.
50:52
So it's about every 100 years.
50:54
Yeah, so two that I can recall.
50:55
And we had the Black Plague, of course.
50:58
That's way before.
50:59
That was, I think, the 1400s.
51:01
Yes, that was Elizabeth the Great.
51:03
But there was a Elizabeth the Great.
51:07
She was great.
51:08
What was her name?
51:09
It was Elizabeth the Great.
51:11
I know I'm right.
51:11
There was no Elizabeth the Great.
51:13
Yes, it was.
51:14
Yes, her name of Russia.
51:17
Catherine the Great.
51:18
That's what I mean.
51:19
Her name was Catherine Elizabeth the Great.
51:22
Catherine Elizabeth.
51:24
Good Catholic girl.
51:26
Mary Ellen Elizabeth Catherine.
51:28
Catherine Elizabeth the Great.
51:31
That's why there's two of us, everybody.
51:33
Just so you know.
51:36
So they happen about every 100 years, maybe.
51:39
But they keep trying to make them happen.
51:41
This is what it looks like to me.
51:43
Oh, yeah.
51:43
Oh, yeah.
51:44
And here's proof.
51:45
And so we cut our foot.
51:46
We just say, hey, get lost, you guys.
51:48
The next thing you know, they're going out
51:49
of business.
51:49
Were we the sole supporter of this?
51:51
Were we this as the U.S. taxpayer,
51:55
the sole support for all these bogus agencies
51:58
and government operations?
52:00
Hey, Doge now has saved 151 billion dollars.
52:04
It's good news.
52:07
That's how you need to look at it.
52:09
150 billion dollars.
52:11
One billion or two.
52:13
Let's call it two billion.
52:14
So a little more than one percent funded
52:18
the entire WHO.
52:19
Just imagine what that 150 billion could be
52:21
funding, what kind of nonsense.
52:24
And the outflows of that funding of nonsense
52:27
probably creates a lot more issues for people,
52:30
certainly in the United States.
52:32
But there's more.
52:33
Because now we have to keep on hammering
52:35
away at Bobby the op.
52:36
Misinformation about measles is spreading fast.
52:40
A new poll shows parents are nuts.
52:42
It's spreading like measles.
52:43
That measles, though, it's the misinformation.
52:45
Yes.
52:46
That's spreading fast.
52:47
But I like the way they they put
52:49
it together in such a way where it
52:51
were in your brain.
52:52
It sounds like measles is spreading fast.
52:55
This is another one of these tricks we
52:56
keep finding.
52:58
It's good misinformation of measles is spreading fast.
53:01
It's fantastic.
53:02
If you chopped a sentence up, it just
53:04
says measles is spreading fast.
53:06
It's great.
53:07
It's perfect.
53:08
Misinformation about measles is spreading fast.
53:12
A new poll shows parents are not sure
53:14
what to believe about the measles vaccine.
53:16
Health Secretary Robert F.
53:18
Kennedy, Jr. has amplified some misconceptions about a
53:20
link between the vaccine and the diagnosis.
53:23
That's another tricky word.
53:24
He has amplified.
53:27
Other people were saying, but he has amplified
53:29
it with his amp.
53:31
He's got an amp.
53:32
The guy can barely talk.
53:33
Health Secretary Robert F.
53:34
Kennedy, Jr. has amplified some misconceptions about a
53:37
link between the vaccine and the diagnosis of
53:40
autism.
53:41
An estimated six out of 10 adults have
53:43
heard a false claim about the measles vaccine.
53:46
Uncertainty has led some parents to delay or
53:49
skip getting their child vaccinated altogether.
53:52
There have been 800 confirmed measles cases across
53:55
24 states so far this year.
53:57
They forgot to mention how many dead.
53:59
So the memory is a funny thing.
54:02
We, I have been mentioning often about Robert
54:06
De Niro that he pulled a documentary from
54:11
his Tribeca Film Festival.
54:13
And I thought that he had created that
54:15
he was a documentary that he had created.
54:18
And I knew that he had an autistic
54:20
son.
54:21
And, you know, so I've been, in fact,
54:23
spouting misinformation.
54:25
It's much worse.
54:27
One of our producers sent me the OG
54:30
clip from, I think it's the NBC Today
54:34
show where De Niro and his co-founder
54:38
of the Tribeca Film Festival, Rosenthal is her
54:42
name, where they came on to explain what
54:44
happened.
54:45
This, to think that this is Robert De
54:48
Niro, just keep that in your brain.
54:50
This is Robert De Niro.
54:51
Now this is, I think this is 2015,
54:55
maybe.
54:56
It's at least 10 years old.
54:57
But listen to this.
54:59
Is this pre-Trump?
55:00
Oh, this is, it may even be older
55:02
than that.
55:04
Well, I mean, older than pre-Trump, do
55:06
you mean?
55:06
Oh, it's way older.
55:07
It's pre-Trump for sure.
55:09
Okay, pre-Trump is all we need.
55:10
Pre-Trump is all I need to know.
55:12
There was a bit of controversy, some headlines
55:14
at the beginning of this year's festival when
55:16
it was announced that this film called Vaxxed
55:18
would be screened at the festival.
55:20
Later, the festival pulled it.
55:22
Was it because of the backlash were you
55:24
surprised that people reacted the way that they
55:27
did?
55:27
I was shooting a movie.
55:29
I was in the middle of a lot
55:30
of stuff.
55:31
I think the movie is something that people
55:34
should see.
55:35
There was a backlash which I haven't fully
55:38
explored, and I will.
55:40
And I didn't want it to start affecting
55:42
the festival in ways that I couldn't see.
55:46
But definitely there's something to that movie.
55:48
And there's another movie called Trace Amounts.
55:51
And there's a lot of information about things
55:54
that are happening with the CDC, the pharmaceutical
55:56
companies.
55:57
There's a lot of things that are not
55:58
said.
55:59
I, as a parent of a child who
56:01
has autism, I'm concerned.
56:03
And I want to know the truth.
56:05
And I'm not anti-vaccine.
56:06
I want safe vaccines.
56:09
Some people can't get a certain type of
56:12
shot, and they can die from it, even
56:14
penicillin.
56:15
So why should that not be with vaccine,
56:17
which it isn't?
56:18
So you went public for the first time
56:21
saying that your 18-year-old son does
56:22
have autism.
56:23
That had been a very private thing for
56:25
you.
56:25
And part of the reason you wanted this
56:26
film shown was to start that conversation.
56:28
Absolutely.
56:29
Do you believe you'll now have a role
56:30
in that conversation going forward?
56:32
Possibly, yes.
56:32
Because the thing is, if they shut it
56:34
down, there's no reason to.
56:36
If you're a scientist, let's see.
56:38
Let's hear.
56:38
Everybody doesn't seem to want to hear much
56:40
about it.
56:41
It's shut down.
56:42
And you guys are the ones that should
56:44
be the investigating, do the investigating.
56:46
So a couple things here.
56:48
One, the documentary called Vax.
56:51
That's a Del Bigtree documentary.
56:53
That was his first big breakthrough.
56:55
Del Bigtree, who, of course, produced The Doctors
56:58
and all these different shows.
57:00
And it's a great documentary.
57:03
So The Backlash.
57:04
Now, do you remember where The Backlash came
57:06
from?
57:07
No.
57:08
Neither did I.
57:09
But his co-founder of the festival, Rosenthal,
57:12
explains it.
57:12
I think the film was controversial because people
57:15
felt that the filmmaker had been discredited.
57:18
Even he, I'm not so sure about.
57:20
At the end of the day, even him.
57:23
One thing, there weren't sponsors or donors that
57:28
were threatening to pull out of the film
57:30
festival.
57:30
It was our filmmakers.
57:31
And we're known for having amazing documentary films.
57:35
You can take a look at our lineup,
57:36
whether it's what we're starting with tonight or
57:39
some other documentaries that are equally controversial that
57:43
we have at the festival.
57:44
So it was our filmmakers that were pulling
57:47
out.
57:47
It was the filmmakers themselves who said, oh,
57:50
if you air that documentary, I'm pulling out.
57:53
I don't understand that at all.
57:55
Well, there should be more documentation of this.
57:57
Who were these filmmakers that were pulling out?
57:59
I'm glad you asked.
58:00
It's a beautiful film, but it's another thing.
58:02
It's the result of, it's not about, it's
58:04
not questioning how people, some people got autism,
58:08
how the vaccines are dangerous, if not given
58:12
a dangerous to certain people who are more
58:14
susceptible.
58:15
And they don't, nobody seems to want to
58:16
address that.
58:17
Or they say they've addressed it and it's
58:19
a closed issue, but it doesn't seem to
58:20
be because there are many people who will
58:22
come out and say, no, I saw my
58:24
kid change like overnight.
58:25
I saw what happened and I should have
58:28
done something and I didn't.
58:29
So there's more to this than meets the
58:33
eye, believe me.
58:33
Is that the experience you had, Robert?
58:35
Something changed overnight?
58:37
My wife says that.
58:39
I don't remember, but there was, my child
58:42
is autistic and every kid is different, but
58:45
there is something there.
58:46
There's something there that people aren't addressing.
58:48
And for me to get so upset here
58:50
today on the Today Show with you guys
58:52
means there's something there.
58:54
That's all I wanted was the movie to
58:55
be seen.
58:56
People can make their own judgment, but you
58:58
must see it.
58:59
There are other films, other things that also
59:01
just document and show.
59:04
It's not such a simple thing.
59:06
I'm sorry, the answer to your question comes
59:09
in this final clip.
59:10
But please, don't you know, Mr. De Niro,
59:14
the science is in?
59:16
Robert, it is nearly consensus in the scientific
59:18
community that there's no link there.
59:20
Do you believe that's not true?
59:21
I don't.
59:22
I believe it's much more complicated than that.
59:24
It's much more complicated than that.
59:26
There is a link and they're saying there
59:28
isn't.
59:29
But there's certain things.
59:30
There's the obvious one is thimerosal, which is
59:32
a mercury-based preservative.
59:35
But there are other things there that I
59:37
don't know.
59:37
I'm not a scientist, but I know because
59:40
I've seen so much reaction about just let's
59:44
find out the truth.
59:45
Let's just find out the truth.
59:47
I'm not anti-vaccine, as I say, but
59:51
I'm pro-safe vaccine.
59:53
And there are some people who cannot take
59:55
a vaccine and they have to be found
59:58
out and warned that they just don't give
1:00:01
a kid a bunch of shots.
1:00:03
And then something happens.
1:00:04
Some parents, even in this document, they say,
1:00:06
I knew I shouldn't have done it.
1:00:08
I knew I shouldn't have done it.
1:00:09
I talked to the doctor and he's a
1:00:11
doctor.
1:00:11
I should listen.
1:00:12
I should listen.
1:00:12
I did it the next day.
1:00:15
Imagine how the parent feels.
1:00:17
The worry is that people who hear those
1:00:19
words and wonder about it will then not
1:00:22
have their child's vaccinated, which has led to
1:00:24
a higher incidence of things like mumps and
1:00:26
measles.
1:00:26
I don't know if those statistics are accurate.
1:00:28
I'm not the one to say, but I
1:00:29
would question even that.
1:00:31
There's a kind of a hysteria, the knee
1:00:32
-jerk reaction.
1:00:34
Let's see.
1:00:34
As I say, everyone should have the choice
1:00:37
to take vaccines.
1:00:38
Some places it's becoming mandatory, but it does
1:00:40
benefit the big drug companies, funnily enough.
1:00:44
Okay, sorry.
1:00:44
He didn't answer the question.
1:00:45
He said he didn't know who the filmmakers
1:00:47
were.
1:00:47
Well, I think it would be nice to
1:00:49
bring up the liability thing, which I think
1:00:51
could be.
1:00:53
Imagine De Niro saying that now, today.
1:00:56
People would lose their ever-loving minds.
1:00:58
Yes, well, he said it then and he
1:01:00
meant it then.
1:01:01
And then they showed him a picture and
1:01:03
he shut up real quick.
1:01:05
Something happened.
1:01:06
It's like, probably him and Jenny McCarthy.
1:01:10
I have a picture of two of them.
1:01:13
I have the autism update clip.
1:01:18
Okay, well, let's go.
1:01:20
National Institutes of Health Director Jay Bhattacharya says
1:01:23
the project that will study the causes of
1:01:25
autism will take longer than initially indicated.
1:01:29
NTT correspondent Jason Blair reports.
1:01:31
NIH Director Jay Bhattacharya says that the study
1:01:34
looking into the causes of autism will take
1:01:37
a little longer than the projected September date
1:01:40
by Secretary of Health Robert F.
1:01:42
Kennedy, Jr. Bhattacharya says that he thinks preliminary
1:01:45
results will be pulled out within a year.
1:01:48
The NIH will be leading the project that
1:01:51
is expected to be formally announced within two
1:01:53
weeks.
1:01:54
We're going to announce a series of new
1:01:56
studies to identify precisely what the environmental toxins
1:02:01
are that are causing it.
1:02:03
This has not been done before.
1:02:05
Bhattacharya says that he thinks to answer the
1:02:07
question of why autism is rising, there needs
1:02:10
to be large samples of people.
1:02:12
He says that they'd like to, quote, get
1:02:15
access to the medical records of a large
1:02:18
portion of the American population.
1:02:21
And these records would be a very important
1:02:23
part of the study.
1:02:24
Dr. Bhattacharya says the reason that autism is
1:02:27
rising is a question that is at the
1:02:29
front of the minds of so many parents
1:02:31
across the country worried about their kids.
1:02:35
And yet scientific progress on this has been
1:02:38
slow because scientists are frankly scared to ask
1:02:41
the question.
1:02:41
Bhattacharya said that the budget for the study
1:02:44
has not been set yet.
1:02:46
And health director Robert F.
1:02:47
Kennedy, Jr. says that the health department will
1:02:50
be restoring their Freedom of Information Act or
1:02:53
FOIA offices.
1:02:54
And we're going to try to get as
1:02:56
close as we can to total transparency.
1:02:58
The HHS told NTD sister media, The Epoch
1:03:01
Times, that these cuts were part of streamlining
1:03:04
operations and improving efficiency and that the FOIA
1:03:08
offices within the agency did not communicate with
1:03:10
each other or report to the department.
1:03:13
The papers that we produce in this agency
1:03:15
do not belong to us.
1:03:17
They belong to the American people.
1:03:20
Man.
1:03:21
So they had the FOIA offices weren't producing
1:03:24
any of the documents that people asked for.
1:03:26
Well, no, why would you?
1:03:29
The whole thing is, this is the most
1:03:31
corrupt thing I've ever seen is the entire
1:03:35
Health and Human Services Division.
1:03:37
And the tentacles of the pharmaceutical companies.
1:03:41
Yeah, the whole thing's ridiculous.
1:03:45
Headline.
1:03:46
The top CDC vaccine safety officers records appear
1:03:50
to have gone missing.
1:03:52
How about that?
1:03:53
How about the records of the payments from
1:03:56
Big Pharma?
1:03:57
The pay stubs.
1:03:59
Oh, Bobby, the app was very busy.
1:04:02
This has also been a long time coming.
1:04:04
From cereal to snacks to juices and yogurt.
1:04:07
It's hard to shop for items that don't
1:04:10
contain artificial dyes.
1:04:12
When you've got mouths to feed.
1:04:14
You've got kids who are nice.
1:04:17
Nice.
1:04:17
Nat pop.
1:04:18
Did you catch that?
1:04:18
I like it.
1:04:19
Yeah, it's a great artificial dyes.
1:04:22
When you like you don't.
1:04:24
So listen to this report.
1:04:25
But when you have mouse defeats, mommy, you
1:04:28
don't care if there's poison in there.
1:04:30
You need to feed your kid because your
1:04:31
kid's gone.
1:04:32
Items that don't contain artificial dyes.
1:04:35
When you've got mouths to feed.
1:04:38
You've got kids who are potentially adversely affected.
1:04:42
Some of what prompted a big step Tuesday
1:04:44
to phase out the remaining eight synthetic dyes
1:04:47
from America's food supply by the end of
1:04:49
next year.
1:04:50
We're going to try to work with Congress
1:04:51
and the White House to make sure that
1:04:54
we have adequate labeling.
1:04:55
So mothers who go into the grocery stores
1:04:58
know what is good for their children and
1:05:00
what is not.
1:05:01
Health and Human Services Secretary R.F.K.,
1:05:04
Jr. and the FDA announcing a national standard
1:05:07
and timeline for the food industry to transition
1:05:10
from petroleum-based dyes to natural alternatives.
1:05:13
I didn't know that they were petroleum-based.
1:05:17
Yeah.
1:05:17
It's just oil.
1:05:19
You can do amazing things with crude oil.
1:05:23
Yeah.
1:05:24
Petroleum-based dyes to natural alternatives.
1:05:26
The FDA is starting the process to revoke
1:05:29
authorization for citrus red number two and orange
1:05:33
B in the coming months and authorizing four
1:05:35
new natural color additives in the coming weeks.
1:05:39
Do you know what the natural color additives
1:05:40
are?
1:05:42
A lot of it comes from beetles.
1:05:45
Well, that's not what the guy said.
1:05:47
Stand by.
1:05:48
For a lot of vegetables, a beet is
1:05:50
a good one.
1:05:51
Yeah, that's a good one.
1:05:52
Yeah, close, close.
1:05:53
In the coming weeks.
1:05:54
For companies that are currently using petroleum-based
1:05:58
red dye, try watermelon juice.
1:06:01
Yeah, watermelon juice.
1:06:04
Watermelon juice.
1:06:05
He has a little cup of watermelon juice,
1:06:07
all red and sappy.
1:06:08
Several dyes have been linked to behavioral issues
1:06:11
in children or have been shown to cause
1:06:13
cancer in mice, not yet in humans.
1:06:16
But other countries have already banned the additives.
1:06:19
The FDA is also partnering with the National
1:06:21
Institutes of Health to find out what those
1:06:23
dyes are really doing to children.
1:06:25
Yeah, nothing good.
1:06:27
No, a lot of the kids, there are
1:06:28
examples of kids that red dye number two,
1:06:32
I think is the one of them.
1:06:33
Yes.
1:06:34
It gets them all riled up for some
1:06:36
reason.
1:06:37
So there was a huge study published in
1:06:39
JAMA.
1:06:41
JAMA.
1:06:42
That's the Journal of American Medical Association.
1:06:45
I thought that should be in the RICO
1:06:47
deal.
1:06:47
What happened to that?
1:06:49
Well, I don't know.
1:06:49
Kennedy's promise.
1:06:50
Well, they published this.
1:06:51
And this was a study, population based study.
1:06:55
Now, this is Finnish citizens from the Finns,
1:06:59
born between January 1st, 1985 and December 31st,
1:07:04
1997, whose demographic, health and school information were
1:07:08
linked from nationwide registers.
1:07:10
So and they followed these kids up until
1:07:13
their 17th year.
1:07:15
And the question that they asked, the question
1:07:18
of this study was, is having peers with
1:07:22
a mental disorder in the same social network
1:07:25
during adolescence associated with later risk of mental
1:07:28
disorder?
1:07:29
And mental disorder, of course, is everything that
1:07:32
you can imagine it is, from ADHD to
1:07:35
eating disorders, to cutting, to all this stuff.
1:07:39
And so the findings, the very short conclusion,
1:07:45
yes, the findings say that mental disorders might,
1:07:48
I'll give it, I'll give that to it,
1:07:49
might be transmitted with adolescent peer networks.
1:07:52
And the only thing I can think as
1:07:54
I'm reading through the study is social networks.
1:07:57
This is this turbo charges, this contagion.
1:08:02
Social contagion.
1:08:03
Social contagion.
1:08:04
Yes.
1:08:05
Affects teenage girls more than anything.
1:08:07
Yes.
1:08:07
And so this is quite the study.
1:08:10
I mean, there's a lot of, you know,
1:08:11
this is pretty robust data.
1:08:13
And yes, there is.
1:08:16
Classmates diagnosed with a mental disorder in the
1:08:18
ninth grade of comprehensive school was associated with
1:08:21
increased risk of receiving a mental disorder diagnosis
1:08:24
later in life.
1:08:26
This would account for all the dancing.
1:08:30
I think it's more than dancing.
1:08:32
But yes.
1:08:33
Yes.
1:08:35
This is what social media is doing to
1:08:37
your kids.
1:08:40
Literally social networks.
1:08:42
And they weren't even, they didn't even have
1:08:43
social media when they were doing this.
1:08:45
They were, this was just kids hanging out.
1:08:47
Well, they should do the study again.
1:08:49
Oh, they'll never, they'll never let that happen.
1:08:53
But when they find out the truth of
1:08:55
that, oh, it's going to be so bad.
1:09:00
It's going to be bad.
1:09:01
Yeah, it'd be so bad for my clippage.
1:09:03
Oh, give us some examples of social contagion,
1:09:08
John.
1:09:08
Do you have any trans Maoism TikTok clips
1:09:11
to share?
1:09:11
Actually, I do have some trans Maoism TikTok
1:09:14
clips.
1:09:14
Okay, all right.
1:09:15
And I want to start with this one.
1:09:16
I got three clips.
1:09:19
And this is the one, let's start with
1:09:22
trans wisdom.
1:09:23
This is a very handsome looking girl giving
1:09:27
us some thoughts about where trans is really
1:09:31
headed.
1:09:31
Just so that we're all abundantly clear here,
1:09:34
not only are trans people sacred, they are
1:09:35
wildly, wildly evolved human beings.
1:09:38
I'm going to invite you to imagine for
1:09:40
a moment the amount of strength, courage, self
1:09:43
-knowing and profound self-development that is required
1:09:47
in order to walk through the world in
1:09:48
your authentic embodiment, knowing, knowing that most people
1:09:52
will deeply misunderstand you.
1:09:54
The average person will not walk through the
1:09:56
world in their authentic embodiment, knowing that even
1:09:58
one or two people in their circle will
1:10:00
misunderstand them.
1:10:02
From a psychological and a spiritual perspective, there
1:10:05
is absolutely, other than love, nothing more important
1:10:08
or more valuable than authenticity.
1:10:10
That's why we come here into human bodies.
1:10:14
We come here to self-actualize, to know
1:10:18
who we truly are and to live as
1:10:20
our authentic selves.
1:10:21
That's the whole point.
1:10:23
Trans people are wildly evolved.
1:10:26
And one day we will understand them as
1:10:29
wisdom keepers and we will bow at their
1:10:31
feet.
1:10:32
Wow, wow, wow.
1:10:35
All right, I'm going to give it to
1:10:36
you.
1:10:36
That was well worth it.
1:10:39
Wow, I did not expect that.
1:10:41
Well, it's interesting that, you know, to walk
1:10:44
boldly with your transness as who you are
1:10:47
spiritually as a person is completely okay, but
1:10:50
don't try that as a Christian.
1:10:54
Interesting.
1:10:56
Well, here's a good example of this kind
1:10:59
of wisdom that we're all going to bow
1:11:01
down to from a trans person.
1:11:05
And this is the misgendered clip.
1:11:07
I don't understand what is so hard about
1:11:11
correcting other people when they misgender others.
1:11:14
Like, it takes you like two seconds, but
1:11:17
you know what it takes for me to
1:11:18
have to constantly do that?
1:11:20
A lot of fucking unnecessary emotional labor that
1:11:22
I already have to take on on a
1:11:24
daily basis just to fucking exist and be
1:11:27
who I am.
1:11:28
But you don't have the energy to speak
1:11:30
up and say something on my behalf?
1:11:33
Oh, tell me she had to GoFundMe.
1:11:35
She needs to GoFundMe.
1:11:39
Well, let's take another level up to another
1:11:43
transgender person.
1:11:44
But wait, there's more.
1:11:45
There's more.
1:11:46
Who also would be, I guess, looking for
1:11:51
great spiritual wisdom from this person.
1:11:55
So I'm coming home from a bar.
1:11:57
And I was kissing this straight guy.
1:12:02
He wanted to take me to his house
1:12:04
because, you know, he really liked me.
1:12:07
And I told him I was on my
1:12:09
period.
1:12:12
But that's not true.
1:12:15
I don't get my period.
1:12:17
I just didn't want to tell them that
1:12:20
I was trans.
1:12:21
Oh, man.
1:12:25
So there's a kind of trans geniuses out
1:12:27
there that we have to bow down to.
1:12:30
They are going to bow down.
1:12:32
They'll be the leaders of the free world.
1:12:34
Their wisdom.
1:12:35
Yes, and they will be.
1:12:38
Well, probably the most email topic I received
1:12:42
over the past week.
1:12:44
I'm sure you can guess what it is.
1:12:47
No, I can't.
1:12:48
Oh.
1:12:50
Well, who's the next pope going to be,
1:12:52
Curry?
1:12:52
Come on, Curry, come on, Curry.
1:12:55
Who's the next pope?
1:12:56
You got to know who's the pope.
1:12:57
You're the one.
1:12:58
Well, this is, I didn't guess that.
1:13:00
I could have because, in fact, I was
1:13:03
going to bring it up.
1:13:04
I don't have it on my list, but
1:13:05
I was going to bring it up with
1:13:07
you.
1:13:07
Although we have a week or so.
1:13:09
Oh, no, no.
1:13:10
We have a couple more.
1:13:11
A couple of weeks, a couple of weeks.
1:13:12
A couple of weeks.
1:13:13
We got a couple.
1:13:13
Well, we have a week before you have
1:13:15
to make the prediction.
1:13:16
Yes.
1:13:16
Can't do it after the.
1:13:18
No, no, that would not be a prediction.
1:13:20
That would be lame.
1:13:21
No, that would not be good.
1:13:22
And it's a tough one for me.
1:13:24
But first, let's play some clips and see
1:13:27
if we can get some insight.
1:13:28
Francis is the next head of the Catholic
1:13:31
Church.
1:13:32
A few names are already being mentioned.
1:13:34
First, the Vatican Secretary of State, 70-year
1:13:37
-old Pietro Parolin.
1:13:39
He's an experienced diplomat and seen as a
1:13:42
compromise candidate between progressives and conservatives.
1:13:45
Another Italian, Matteo Maria Zuppi, the Archbishop of
1:13:49
Bologna, is also a possibility.
1:13:51
Like Francis, the 69-year-old cardinal is
1:13:54
known for his social commitment to migrants and
1:13:56
the poor and cares little about pomp and
1:13:59
protocol.
1:14:00
Outside Europe, there's Cardinal Sergio de Rocha from
1:14:03
Brazil or Luis Antonio Tagli in the Philippines.
1:14:07
They will enter a conclave in a few
1:14:10
weeks.
1:14:11
Men who come from Ulaanbaatar, Lesotho, East Timor.
1:14:15
So truly from the four corners of the
1:14:17
world with concerns that will not be those
1:14:20
of the European heavyweights.
1:14:22
It's not just where the next pope comes
1:14:24
from but also what direction that pope takes
1:14:27
the church.
1:14:28
Could the keys be given to another progressive?
1:14:30
Jean-Marc Avelin, the Archbishop of Marseilles, shares
1:14:33
the same views on immigration and church relations
1:14:36
with other religions as Francis.
1:14:38
On the other hand, the College of Cardinals
1:14:41
could choose a more conservative leaning pope like
1:14:43
Robert Serra shown on the left or German
1:14:46
Gerhard Müller.
1:14:47
There's also politics at play.
1:14:49
We must not underestimate the influence of the
1:14:52
Catholic Church's very large financial sources which can
1:14:55
come also from the United States, from Africa
1:14:58
and elsewhere and which want to refocus the
1:15:01
church.
1:15:02
They want to get even with the pope
1:15:04
who wanted to decentralize his church and who
1:15:06
wanted a church that reflected the poorest and
1:15:09
those who suffer.
1:15:10
Whoever is selected, the choice of the future
1:15:12
pope will send a strong signal in a
1:15:14
context of growing tension within the church.
1:15:18
So there was a couple listed there.
1:15:20
The list is quite long of possibilities.
1:15:23
Thank you all for sending me all.
1:15:25
And by the way, the prophecy of the
1:15:28
last pope, that's a good one.
1:15:30
Oh man, it's like if it's Peter of
1:15:34
Rome, then this will be the last pope
1:15:35
and then the end times are here.
1:15:38
A lot of that.
1:15:39
No, the guy talking about Pietro Parolin.
1:15:46
What, of the last pope?
1:15:47
Is that going to be the last guy?
1:15:48
Because he's the Italian that's in the running.
1:15:51
Well, so the prophecy of the last pope.
1:15:57
Where did this come from?
1:15:58
Where did the prophecy of the last pope
1:16:00
appear?
1:16:01
Well, it appeared in my email a million
1:16:04
times.
1:16:06
It appeared in the email.
1:16:08
In the email.
1:16:09
Yeah, the prophecy.
1:16:10
Let me see.
1:16:11
It's the Malachi prophecy.
1:16:13
Saint Malachi, apparently.
1:16:17
Made prophet.
1:16:19
Apparently, yes.
1:16:19
We're just assuming.
1:16:21
Made prophecy of the end times by Roman
1:16:23
Catholic Archbishop Malachi.
1:16:27
You know, there's a whole theory behind it.
1:16:29
And I'm sorry, I just don't buy any
1:16:31
of that.
1:16:32
Now, actually, I will reveal my prediction today.
1:16:37
I might as well get it in early.
1:16:39
I have to say I'm very conflicted.
1:16:41
The last time I predicted the pope, I
1:16:44
was only politically minded.
1:16:46
And, you know, I was just looking at,
1:16:47
okay, Jesuit makes sense.
1:16:49
Yes, you're doing it the way we pick
1:16:51
soccer games.
1:16:52
Yes, exactly.
1:16:53
So, but I'm conflicted because, well, it was
1:16:55
this report that, at the end of the
1:16:58
report that gave me some pause to think
1:16:59
about it.
1:17:00
Because you would hope, me as a believer,
1:17:03
that God would have his hand on this
1:17:05
and that he would pick a good person.
1:17:07
Now, I'm not a Catholic.
1:17:08
And I have my questions about, you know,
1:17:11
is the pope really the guy that talks?
1:17:12
Please don't email.
1:17:14
Is the guy that, you know, he talks
1:17:15
to God.
1:17:16
AdamMcCree.com.
1:17:17
AdamMcCree.com.
1:17:18
I'm not going to answer it.
1:17:19
So I'm not a Catholic.
1:17:20
I just don't think that there's any guy
1:17:22
who's going to be bigger than anybody else.
1:17:24
But if that's your thing, that's fine.
1:17:26
People believe in John Smith and Mormon church,
1:17:30
whatever.
1:17:31
It's all good.
1:17:32
I got my own thing going.
1:17:33
I'm not a member of a religion.
1:17:35
But I do think there's a guy in
1:17:38
Africa.
1:17:40
And it was the first thing that came
1:17:41
to mind.
1:17:42
And I saw this report from Deutsche Welle.
1:17:45
Although he's not mentioned, interestingly enough, I think
1:17:48
I can give you my prediction.
1:17:50
Let's listen to this.
1:17:51
Pope Francis was seen by many Africans as
1:17:53
a champion of the continent.
1:17:55
Francis's anti-colonial stance and fierce criticism of
1:17:58
imperialism won him many fans there.
1:18:02
Now, with his passing, many are asking if
1:18:05
it is time for the first African pope.
1:18:07
Some African contenders' names have been circulating, but
1:18:10
it remains unclear how much of a chance
1:18:13
they really have.
1:18:14
In the heart of the Kenyan capital of
1:18:16
Nairobi, hundreds of Catholics gathered to bid a
1:18:19
final farewell to a man who they felt
1:18:22
spoke out for Africa.
1:18:24
With his fierce criticism of imperialism, colonialism, and
1:18:29
global inequality, Pope Francis became a voice for
1:18:33
the continent.
1:18:34
He was the first Latin American pope.
1:18:36
Now many here feel that an African pope
1:18:39
is not a question of if, but when.
1:18:42
Among the African contenders for the papacy are
1:18:45
Cardinal Peter Turkson, who was Pope Benedict's peace
1:18:49
envoy to South Sudan.
1:18:50
He has spoken out against criminalizing homosexuality.
1:18:55
Another candidate is the archbishop of Kinshasa, Fridolen
1:18:59
Mbongo Besungu, a critic of global oil and
1:19:02
mining companies.
1:19:04
Both have the respect of Pope Francis, and
1:19:07
many hope that if elected, they would continue
1:19:10
his legacy.
1:19:11
But the final choice, according to millions of
1:19:13
Catholics, is not solely up to the cardinals.
1:19:16
What we believe is that the whole process
1:19:20
of electing a pope is not simply in
1:19:22
the hands of the cardinals who do it.
1:19:24
We believe that it is in the hands
1:19:26
of the Holy Spirit, that the Holy Spirit
1:19:28
moves and acts in the church in order
1:19:31
to provide us with the leader that we
1:19:34
need at any point in time.
1:19:35
The Vatican says that over the past year,
1:19:38
seven million Africans have converted to Catholicism, making
1:19:42
the continent one of the fastest growing regions
1:19:45
for the church.
1:19:47
Many in Africa believe Pope Francis was one
1:19:50
of the main reasons for this.
1:19:52
I don't think that's true.
1:19:54
A lot of Catholics don't like Pope Francis.
1:19:57
But the guy not mentioned is the guy
1:19:59
I'm going to predict, and it's been on
1:20:01
my heart, been on my mind, ever since
1:20:03
the first time I looked at the list.
1:20:05
Like, this is the guy.
1:20:07
I think I even mentioned on the show,
1:20:08
and you scoffed at me.
1:20:10
Because you said...
1:20:11
I probably would.
1:20:11
Yeah, that would sound like me.
1:20:13
Yes.
1:20:14
I believe it will be Cardinal Robert Sarrah,
1:20:17
or Sarah, S-A-R-R-A-H.
1:20:20
He's from Guinea, which is West Africa.
1:20:24
And he's almost 80, so not a big
1:20:28
risk.
1:20:28
No, that's good.
1:20:28
Not a big risk.
1:20:29
That's good.
1:20:30
Not a big risk.
1:20:31
You want that.
1:20:33
He's outspoken.
1:20:35
He's funny.
1:20:35
He speaks Italian, English, French, and Guinea Spanish.
1:20:43
So French, English, Spanish, and Italian fluently.
1:20:47
He is against...
1:20:49
He called gender ideology a radicalization that threatens
1:20:55
the family.
1:20:57
That's Robert Sarrah?
1:20:59
Yes, Robert Sarrah.
1:21:00
S-A-R-R-A-H.
1:21:01
Yes, Robert Sarrah.
1:21:02
He is going to be my prediction for
1:21:04
Pope.
1:21:05
Okay.
1:21:06
Well, I have the list of the next
1:21:09
Pope.
1:21:10
I talked about this on the DHM plug
1:21:12
show you didn't listen to.
1:21:13
No, I'm sorry.
1:21:14
I will, though, because I've got to hear
1:21:16
what Horowitz said so I can lash out.
1:21:19
This is the list that I receive, because
1:21:22
I'm on mailing lists that you can't believe,
1:21:24
the oddspr.com.
1:21:26
I believe it.
1:21:27
I believe you're on the mailing list.
1:21:29
The Pope mailing list, yes.
1:21:31
It fires up once every 40 years.
1:21:33
It's a great list.
1:21:34
This is the list in order of the
1:21:36
next Pope.
1:21:38
Odds.
1:21:39
Odds.
1:21:39
Oh, I have odds.
1:21:41
Okay.
1:21:42
The even bet is Louis Tagli, the Filipino.
1:21:47
Yes, I would say I understand why they're
1:21:49
saying he's a possibility.
1:21:50
Number two pick on the list, two to
1:21:53
one odds, is Pietro Apparolin, the Italian guy
1:21:58
who is the diplomat.
1:22:01
Yeah, he would be the last Pope.
1:22:03
That would be the one everyone chooses.
1:22:04
That I would pick if I was picking
1:22:08
Popes.
1:22:08
But you're not picking Popes.
1:22:10
No, I'm not.
1:22:11
I'm obviously not picking Popes.
1:22:13
I'm the Pope picker.
1:22:16
And Horowitz even said that he'd bet on
1:22:18
this guy, because about time we went back
1:22:20
to the Italians being the Pope, but okay.
1:22:23
Let's assume that's not going to happen.
1:22:25
It falls off rather quickly after that.
1:22:29
Matteo Zuppi comes in at six to one
1:22:31
odds, and then a couple six to one,
1:22:35
six to one, six to one.
1:22:36
Then we get to Mark Ouellette, ten to
1:22:39
one.
1:22:40
And your man, Robert Serra, is on the
1:22:42
list.
1:22:42
Oh, he's there.
1:22:43
He's on the list.
1:22:44
Not in the media reports, but he's on
1:22:46
the list.
1:22:47
He's on the list at ten to one.
1:22:49
Ten to one.
1:22:51
Place your bets.
1:22:51
So it's not a long shot by any
1:22:53
means.
1:22:54
It goes up to guys like Malcolm Raniff
1:22:58
at 25 to one.
1:23:00
There's a whole bunch of them.
1:23:00
Fifty to one for Blaro Tisi and Blaro
1:23:04
with an O.
1:23:06
Wilfred Napier is 50 to one.
1:23:09
Mario Placenza is 50.
1:23:13
There's a lot of these.
1:23:14
So he's ten to one.
1:23:14
So he's not a complete dark horse that
1:23:18
you picked.
1:23:18
And it's interesting that you picked him at
1:23:20
all.
1:23:21
Well, you know, I think that they want,
1:23:23
hey, let's get a Schwarze in there.
1:23:26
I like the idea of, I like the
1:23:28
basic thing because he's so old.
1:23:30
Yes.
1:23:31
We bring our token black guy and finally
1:23:34
bring a black guy who's going to die
1:23:36
any minute.
1:23:38
And that is the way the church would
1:23:40
think.
1:23:41
Yeah.
1:23:41
Yeah.
1:23:42
Smart money.
1:23:43
Because after that Polish guy, they are very
1:23:46
leery.
1:23:47
Yeah.
1:23:47
We don't want anyone hanging around too long.
1:23:49
I was around too long.
1:23:52
We like the conclave thing.
1:23:53
It's a lot of fun.
1:23:54
We get good food.
1:23:56
Yeah.
1:23:56
And just in case you were wondering, thank
1:23:59
you, Euronews.
1:24:00
No, it's fake news.
1:24:03
J.D. Vance did not kill the Pope.
1:24:05
In the wake of Pope Francis' death, tributes
1:24:07
have been flooding social media, including from U
1:24:09
.S. Vice President J.D. Vance, having been
1:24:12
one of the last people to hold an
1:24:14
audience with Pope Francis before his death.
1:24:17
J.D. Vance wrote on X, I just
1:24:19
learned of the passing of Pope Francis.
1:24:21
I was happy to see him yesterday, although
1:24:24
he was obviously very ill.
1:24:26
Due to the timing of this meeting, many
1:24:28
were the jokes turned to conspiracy theories that
1:24:31
this meeting has sparked, claiming that J.D.
1:24:34
Vance killed Pope Francis.
1:24:37
Others claiming, can you meet with Putin next?
1:24:41
Amplifying these jokes was none other than JF
1:24:43
Kennedy's grandson, Jack Schlossberg.
1:24:46
He writes a similar claim on X, saying,
1:24:50
OK, J.D. killed the Pope, as he
1:24:53
also posted this image on Instagram with the
1:24:55
caption that reads, What did J.D. do?
1:24:58
VP of Little Faith meets with Pope yesterday.
1:25:01
Today, Pope dies.
1:25:03
So not much debunking to do here, needed
1:25:05
on this one.
1:25:06
These are fake claims.
1:25:07
The Vatican reports there was no foul play.
1:25:09
Pope Francis had been ill, admitted to a
1:25:12
Rome hospital on February 14th for life-threatening
1:25:15
pneumonia.
1:25:16
Where he was, although he was able to
1:25:18
hang on to one final Easter as he
1:25:21
delighted the crowds at the Vatican with a
1:25:23
surprise Easter blessing on Sunday and what is
1:25:26
now known as his final public appearance.
1:25:29
I love that they spend so much time
1:25:31
on that.
1:25:31
How did they do that?
1:25:32
How do they get?
1:25:33
Who is the editor of this operation?
1:25:36
This is not a story.
1:25:37
This is a bogus story.
1:25:39
She had a big smart board and she
1:25:41
was showing, you know, swiping up these tweets
1:25:43
and putting big X's on it.
1:25:46
And oh, yeah, it's called Verify.
1:25:48
It's the Verify segment.
1:25:51
Oh, they got that from French 24.
1:25:54
We had that.
1:25:54
I used to play a couple of clips
1:25:56
from that myself.
1:25:57
The BBC has a whole show that does
1:25:58
it now.
1:25:59
It's like misinformation, debunking everything.
1:26:03
By the way, right on cue.
1:26:05
Amazing.
1:26:05
Once again, ladies and gentlemen, the season of
1:26:08
reveal.
1:26:09
She stayed silent for over 30 years.
1:26:13
Now, Hélène Perlon, daughter of French Prime Minister
1:26:15
François Bayrou, is speaking out.
1:26:18
In an interview with Perimatch magazine, she reveals
1:26:21
she was a victim of physical violence by
1:26:24
a priest at a Catholic school summer camp.
1:26:27
One evening while we were unpacking our sleeping
1:26:29
bags, he suddenly grabbed me by the hair.
1:26:32
He dragged me along the ground for several
1:26:34
meters and punched and kicked me all over
1:26:37
my body, especially in the stomach.
1:26:39
Perlon was 14 years old at the time.
1:26:42
She claims she said nothing to her father
1:26:45
to protect him from political repercussions.
1:26:48
This former student was in the same class
1:26:50
as François Bayrou's son, the victim's brother.
1:26:53
He encouraged her to speak out to no
1:26:55
avail.
1:26:57
I think that because children's voices weren't listened
1:26:59
to at the time, she wasn't able to
1:27:01
express herself at home.
1:27:02
She may have wanted to protect her father
1:27:04
too, but perhaps François Bayrou wasn't very present
1:27:07
at home due to his political duties.
1:27:08
And as a child, she wanted to protect
1:27:10
her father.
1:27:11
On May 14th, François Bayrou is set to
1:27:14
testify before a parliamentary commission investigating abuse in
1:27:18
the Catholic congregation that ran the summer camp.
1:27:21
Bayrou says he had no knowledge of the
1:27:24
physical and sexual assaults reported by 200 former
1:27:28
students of the congregation's Notre-Dame-de-Bétrame
1:27:31
school.
1:27:31
Talk about burying the lead.
1:27:33
200, 200.
1:27:36
It was burying the lead.
1:27:38
My gosh.
1:27:38
That's really with the very end.
1:27:40
My God.
1:27:41
You know, Pope Sarah, he'll take care of
1:27:44
all that nonsense.
1:27:45
He'll clean all that out.
1:27:46
What's he got to lose?
1:27:48
He's from a different continent.
1:27:49
He's got millions of Africans behind him.
1:27:51
It'll lift up all of Africa.
1:27:58
Yeah, another, not a death, but resignation, of
1:28:01
course.
1:28:01
We need to just discuss this.
1:28:03
Klaus Schwab stepping down as...
1:28:05
Oh, yes.
1:28:05
I don't have any clips on this, but
1:28:07
yes, this I thought was fundamental.
1:28:09
Well, I don't have clips, but apparently there's
1:28:13
a report that Schwab stepped down after the
1:28:17
World Economic Forum's board of trustees called for
1:28:23
his resignation internally because of all kinds of
1:28:26
corruption.
1:28:28
Corruption.
1:28:30
You take one look at that guy, you
1:28:32
don't think of corruption.
1:28:34
Financial and ethical misconduct.
1:28:36
So there's a letter apparently floating out there
1:28:38
that Schwab used the organization's funds for personal
1:28:41
expenses, instructed junior staff to withdraw cash for
1:28:44
private use, including massages, during official trips.
1:28:50
I need a massage.
1:28:53
Get one of those.
1:28:54
It's not like he's buying fleets of Rolls
1:28:57
Royces.
1:28:58
Also alleged that Hilde, his wife, used WEF
1:29:03
money for luxury hotel stays during personal trips.
1:29:07
Well, that's what you do.
1:29:09
That's what you do.
1:29:10
That's what you do.
1:29:11
I had a company credit card.
1:29:14
I used to take you out to expensive
1:29:15
lunches all the time.
1:29:18
Yeah, that's what you do.
1:29:19
Yeah.
1:29:20
You had a company credit card.
1:29:21
Yeah, that's what you do.
1:29:22
And which had on it, no sweat off
1:29:25
my balls, written right on there.
1:29:28
I thought that was, I don't know how
1:29:29
you manage that.
1:29:32
I don't recall that, but I'll take it
1:29:34
as gospel from you any day.
1:29:37
Yes, that's what you do.
1:29:39
But he's gone.
1:29:39
Ding dong, the witch is dead.
1:29:41
I think that breaks the whole organization.
1:29:43
Without Schwab, it's not fun to make fun,
1:29:45
unless they get a real good guy, you
1:29:47
know, bad and other like evil person to
1:29:50
step in.
1:29:51
But I haven't seen anyone who even comes
1:29:53
close to what Schwab was.
1:29:55
David Hogg.
1:29:56
Now, that would be awesome.
1:29:58
That would be awesome.
1:29:59
That would be fantastic.
1:30:01
Yeah, we can only hope for that.
1:30:05
You got anything else before we take a
1:30:07
break here?
1:30:08
Some pre-break stuff.
1:30:10
Pre-break stuff.
1:30:11
It can be anything.
1:30:12
The floor is yours.
1:30:14
I yield the remainder of my time to
1:30:16
the distinguished gentleman from Berkeley.
1:30:20
Well, there's a couple of things.
1:30:22
This is just a short clip, but it's
1:30:25
worth playing.
1:30:26
This is the EU doing its thing and
1:30:30
gouging Apple and Meta just for no good
1:30:34
reason.
1:30:34
The European Commission fined Apple $570 million and
1:30:38
Meta nearly $230 million.
1:30:40
It comes after a ruling that both companies
1:30:43
had restricted customer choices and violated the European
1:30:46
Union's Digital Markets Act.
1:30:48
Member of European Parliament, Andreas Schwab, said European
1:30:51
law is becoming very costly for companies that
1:30:54
don't obey it.
1:30:55
The message is very clear.
1:30:57
Competition matters.
1:30:59
Open societies need open markets.
1:31:02
That's an important message for Europe, but also
1:31:04
for the US.
1:31:05
And we hope to endeavor with these decisions
1:31:08
to get more services for our citizens.
1:31:11
The Digital Markets Act, or DMA, seeks to
1:31:14
ensure that large gatekeeper platforms operate in a
1:31:17
fair way and allow room for competitors.
1:31:20
The European Commission found Apple imposed restrictions on
1:31:22
developers, which meant they could not take full
1:31:24
benefit of distribution channels other than Apple's App
1:31:28
Store.
1:31:28
As for Meta, the EU's fines relate to
1:31:31
the company's consent or pay advertising model.
1:31:34
EU users of Instagram and Facebook had to
1:31:37
choose between consent for Meta to use their
1:31:39
private data for advertising, or pay a monthly
1:31:42
subscription for an ad-free service.
1:31:44
Under the DMA, gatekeeper platforms must provide a
1:31:48
less personalized but equivalent alternative to users who
1:31:52
do not consent to the usage of their
1:31:54
personal data.
1:31:55
A Meta spokesperson told the Epoch Times that
1:31:58
the European Commission is attempting to handicap successful
1:32:01
American businesses while allowing Chinese and European companies
1:32:04
to operate under different standards.
1:32:07
In a statement to Reuters, Apple said it
1:32:09
would challenge the EU fine and called it
1:32:11
another example of being unfairly targeted in decisions
1:32:14
that are bad for the privacy and security
1:32:17
of users.
1:32:18
The fines come amid trade tensions between the
1:32:20
United States and the EU, notably the tariffs.
1:32:32
Well, can I just stay on big tech
1:32:34
for a second, or are they also big
1:32:35
tech?
1:32:36
No, stay on big tech.
1:32:37
A very concerning executive order was signed yesterday.
1:32:41
I don't like this one at all.
1:32:44
President Trump signed seven executive orders on education.
1:32:48
One order targets the federal government's process for
1:32:50
deciding what colleges and universities can access billions
1:32:53
of dollars in federal student loans and Pell
1:32:56
Grants, which go to poorer students.
1:32:58
It also directs the U.S. Attorney General
1:33:00
and Secretary of Education to investigate unlawful discrimination
1:33:04
by higher education institutions.
1:33:06
The president also signed an executive order aimed
1:33:09
at bringing artificial intelligence into K through 12
1:33:13
schools.
1:33:15
You don't like, you don't like the AI
1:33:17
part?
1:33:18
No, it's horrible.
1:33:20
Like all these guys, all the guys who
1:33:24
were in there, they finally got what they
1:33:25
wanted.
1:33:26
Now, of course, it's a task force, so
1:33:28
it's not done yet, but they have 90
1:33:30
days to come up with plans for the
1:33:33
presidential artificial intelligence challenge.
1:33:38
The challenge shall encourage and highlight student educator
1:33:41
achievements in AI, promote wide geographic adoption of
1:33:45
technological advancement, and foster collaboration between government,
1:33:48
academia, philanthropy, and industry to address national challenges
1:33:52
with AI solutions.
1:33:57
I didn't pay attention to that when it,
1:34:00
the whole thing, to be honest.
1:34:01
The whole, it's nice to know that you're
1:34:04
on it.
1:34:05
It's, it's, it's, it's, it makes part of
1:34:08
your, your, your one man fight, fight against
1:34:12
AI.
1:34:13
Yes, you're a Don Quixote approach to AI
1:34:17
windmills.
1:34:19
Within 120 days, this is long, I'll just,
1:34:21
I'm just highlighting some things.
1:34:22
Within 120 days of the day, this order,
1:34:24
the director of the NSF shall take steps
1:34:27
to prioritize research on the use of, research
1:34:29
on the use of AI in education.
1:34:31
Oh yes, they're going to use it in,
1:34:32
in, in the schools.
1:34:35
Utilize existing programs to create teacher training opportunities
1:34:38
that help educators effectively integrate AI-based tools
1:34:43
and modalities in classrooms.
1:34:49
Go homeschool.
1:34:51
When I was a kid, they wouldn't let
1:34:53
us have a calculator in the school.
1:34:57
Oh, and it's all going to be public
1:34:59
-private partnerships.
1:35:01
It's a bonanza.
1:35:03
It's, I see this really as a bailout.
1:35:06
Bail out of this nonsense.
1:35:10
It hasn't even jumped the shark yet.
1:35:15
It's troubling.
1:35:16
I don't like it.
1:35:18
It's troubling to me.
1:35:19
It's troubling.
1:35:19
Yes, it is.
1:35:20
I knew that would be the case.
1:35:24
Two quickies and then we can go.
1:35:26
All right.
1:35:26
Now this is Scott Besant.
1:35:28
He came and went and gave a lecture
1:35:31
to the IMF.
1:35:32
This is our treasurer's secretary.
1:35:35
The treasury secretary.
1:35:37
He's the guy.
1:35:37
He's the money guy.
1:35:38
He's the money guy.
1:35:39
I have two versions of the same, of
1:35:41
the same presentation.
1:35:42
This one's NPR and one's NTD.
1:35:45
And I want to play them back to
1:35:47
back.
1:35:48
But Besant lectured the IMF about how screwed
1:35:51
up they are.
1:35:53
And now I thought the NTD was so
1:35:56
much better than NPR.
1:35:57
And now you have just, just help me.
1:35:59
You have two Besant.
1:36:02
Those are dupes.
1:36:03
Oh, okay.
1:36:04
They're dupes.
1:36:04
All right.
1:36:05
Good.
1:36:05
Okay.
1:36:06
The NPR clip is the one to go
1:36:08
start with.
1:36:08
All right.
1:36:09
All right.
1:36:09
Here we go.
1:36:10
Treasury Secretary Scott Besant says the U.S.
1:36:12
wants to remain a leader in the global
1:36:14
economy.
1:36:14
Even as President Trump's tariffs cast a cloud
1:36:18
over worldwide trade.
1:36:19
NPR's Scott Horsley reports Besant spoke this morning
1:36:22
on the sidelines of a global economic summit.
1:36:25
Besant addressed a gathering of the International Monetary
1:36:28
Fund and the World Bank, two institutions set
1:36:30
up in the wake of World War II
1:36:31
to foster peace and global prosperity.
1:36:35
Besant accused the IMF and World Bank of
1:36:37
straying from their core missions to tackle problems
1:36:39
such as climate change.
1:36:41
He urged the World Bank to finance more
1:36:43
nuclear and fossil fuel projects in developing countries.
1:36:46
Energy abundance sparks economic abundance.
1:36:51
That's why the bank should encourage an all
1:36:55
of the above approach to energy development.
1:36:59
The IMF has downgraded its forecast of global
1:37:01
economic growth this year, largely as a result
1:37:04
of President Trump's trade war.
1:37:06
Oh, this is what the president said.
1:37:08
IMF stay out of politics.
1:37:11
Right.
1:37:12
So that was kind of a bland, bland,
1:37:14
bland and slanted.
1:37:15
It was bland and boring.
1:37:17
And it was like and they had a
1:37:18
little slam against Trump.
1:37:19
And it was the whole thing was just
1:37:22
as typical NPR crap.
1:37:24
I thought that this one was more meaningful
1:37:27
and it had about the same length, a
1:37:31
little bit longer.
1:37:32
It was I think it's more meaningful and
1:37:34
more in depth.
1:37:35
And I thought it hit this mark.
1:37:37
And this is from NTD.
1:37:39
China in particular is in need of a
1:37:41
rebalancing.
1:37:43
Recent data shows the Chinese economy tilting even
1:37:47
further away from consumption toward manufacturing.
1:37:50
China's economic system, with growth driven by manufacturing
1:37:55
exports, will continue to create even more serious
1:37:59
imbalances with its trading partners if the status
1:38:02
quo is allowed to continue.
1:38:05
China's current economic model is built on exporting
1:38:08
its way out of its economic troubles.
1:38:10
It's an unsustainable model that is not only
1:38:14
harming China, but the entire world.
1:38:16
Besant added, quote, treating China, the second largest
1:38:19
country in the world, as a developing country
1:38:21
is absurd.
1:38:22
In addition to pushing for more pressure on
1:38:24
China, Besant urged the IMF to reprioritize the
1:38:28
world economy.
1:38:29
The treasury secretary denounced the World Financial Organization
1:38:32
for devoting, quote, disproportionate time and resources to
1:38:36
work on climate change, gender and social issues.
1:38:39
Besant added, quote, mission creep has knocked these
1:38:42
institutions off course.
1:38:45
Hmm.
1:38:46
I didn't know the IMF was working on
1:38:48
gender issues.
1:38:50
This is out of control, this gender thing.
1:38:54
They're trying, but they're not getting anything.
1:38:57
They're not going to be able to move
1:38:59
this forward.
1:39:00
It's just not happening.
1:39:02
I keep reading about the Mar-a-Lago
1:39:04
Accords everywhere, though.
1:39:06
It's like, oh, we're in this.
1:39:07
It's time now.
1:39:08
It's time.
1:39:08
We need a new, uh, uh, what was
1:39:12
it called?
1:39:12
The original one in 47.
1:39:16
We need a new Bretton Woods.
1:39:18
Oh, Bretton Woods, yes.
1:39:19
Signed for the Mar-a-Lago Accords.
1:39:20
I keep reading it everywhere.
1:39:21
And I think we were the first ones
1:39:23
to use the term.
1:39:23
I don't read it anywhere.
1:39:25
Oh, really?
1:39:27
Yeah.
1:39:28
Yeah, no, yeah, let me see.
1:39:30
Well, it's investing.com, whatever that is.
1:39:34
What the proposed Mar-a-Lago Accord could
1:39:36
mean for investors.
1:39:39
Uh, while not officially endorsed, the framework outlines
1:39:42
measures designed to preserve the U.S. dollar's
1:39:45
global dominance while intentionally weakening its value, which
1:39:48
is what we need.
1:39:50
UBS strategists note that these measures aim to
1:39:53
lower trade.
1:39:53
So the idea is to create new bonds.
1:39:57
Um, a hundred-year bond.
1:39:59
It's like the trillion-dollar coin, only upside
1:40:01
down.
1:40:03
And so everybody gets a new bond for
1:40:05
your old bond.
1:40:06
You get a hundred-year bond.
1:40:08
And I guess it has a lower yield,
1:40:10
I guess.
1:40:12
I don't know how any of this works.
1:40:17
I don't understand any of this stuff.
1:40:20
Did you guys talk about it at all?
1:40:22
Not the hundred-year bond, no.
1:40:24
We talked about it, but actually, the trillion
1:40:26
-dollar coin doesn't come up either.
1:40:28
Well, no, that's the stablecoin.
1:40:30
That's on deck.
1:40:31
I think that's going to be part of
1:40:32
the Mar-a-Lago Accord.
1:40:33
To finalize, though, I got a great list
1:40:36
of 23 subtle but alarming recession indicators.
1:40:41
Now, we have a recession.
1:40:43
We have one, I think, one recession indicator,
1:40:46
which is the Dvorak Law.
1:40:49
Maybe you'd like to reiterate it.
1:40:51
The one about hookers?
1:40:52
Yeah, that one.
1:40:53
That's the one.
1:40:56
That when in a recession, the hookers get
1:40:59
better looking and are cheaper.
1:41:03
Wasn't there another one?
1:41:04
Didn't we have the hairdressers?
1:41:07
We had the hairdresser one.
1:41:08
That's yours.
1:41:09
Yes, we had the hairdresser one, which is
1:41:10
women no longer get expensive hairdos, and they
1:41:15
start dyeing their hair at home.
1:41:17
But here are 23 more, which I think
1:41:19
is worth mentioning.
1:41:23
Five-dollar blackjack tables at the Aria instead
1:41:29
of the typical 25.
1:41:33
Plumbers.
1:41:33
Dollar blackjack tables everywhere.
1:41:36
Well, this is the Aria.
1:41:37
The Aria.
1:41:38
Okay, the Aria is a very special casino
1:41:40
in Vegas.
1:41:41
Plumbers showing up on time.
1:41:45
I like that.
1:41:46
I've never had an issue with plumbers showing
1:41:48
up on time.
1:41:49
Well, Berkeley is never going to be in
1:41:50
a recession.
1:41:51
Italian sandwich shops in prime locations struggling.
1:41:58
Companies moving overseas.
1:41:59
I don't think that's right.
1:42:01
Real estate ghost towns.
1:42:03
Have we seen that yet?
1:42:04
I don't think so.
1:42:05
I like number seven.
1:42:06
A lack of Botox.
1:42:11
A lack of...
1:42:12
Okay, keep reading.
1:42:13
I don't know.
1:42:13
These are terrible, by the way.
1:42:14
Empty strip clubs.
1:42:18
Fixer cars on Facebook.
1:42:21
Here's one I think is true.
1:42:22
A used guitar surplus.
1:42:26
Everyone's selling their acts like, I gotta get
1:42:29
rid of my guitar, man.
1:42:31
Home cooked lunches.
1:42:34
Owner sold cars.
1:42:36
You know when you drive in a neighborhood
1:42:38
and you got a...
1:42:39
They got the car out there and it
1:42:40
says...
1:42:41
That's what Craigslist is for.
1:42:42
Well...
1:42:43
It's been going on for years, owner.
1:42:46
Availability at the vet office.
1:42:50
No.
1:42:52
Short fast food lines.
1:42:55
Hmm, I'm not seeing that here.
1:42:56
I haven't seen that anywhere.
1:42:58
They opened up a Chick-fil-A in
1:42:59
Fredericksburg.
1:43:00
Holy moly.
1:43:01
Oh, did they now?
1:43:01
Well, it's outside the town center.
1:43:02
Have you had the chicken sandwich?
1:43:04
I'd like to get a review of it.
1:43:06
I really don't like Chick-fil-A.
1:43:08
I've had it maybe once, maybe twice.
1:43:10
I'm not a fan.
1:43:12
It's just chicken mush in a sandwich.
1:43:15
Is that right?
1:43:16
I thought it was a pretty good quality
1:43:18
product.
1:43:19
I don't know.
1:43:19
I've never had one, so I don't know.
1:43:22
Well, it's right near the church.
1:43:24
But unfortunately, they're not open on Sunday.
1:43:29
Card collections on sale.
1:43:33
Plenty of card collections.
1:43:34
You know, like baseball cards.
1:43:36
People trying to sell stuff.
1:43:37
Sell their baseball cards.
1:43:40
Yeah.
1:43:40
No.
1:43:41
Parking.
1:43:41
Plenty of parking.
1:43:45
Declined payments.
1:43:46
I've seen this a lot at the grocery
1:43:49
store.
1:43:51
Declined payments.
1:43:52
Stand behind somebody like they got open.
1:43:55
Yeah, payments declined.
1:43:56
Yeah, that happened.
1:43:57
That's it.
1:43:57
So none of them are any good.
1:43:58
Yeah, I guess not.
1:44:00
I don't think that was a very good
1:44:01
list.
1:44:01
I think we should come up with our
1:44:02
own.
1:44:03
Well, we have two.
1:44:04
It's a start.
1:44:05
We do have two.
1:44:06
But mine's no good anymore since the OnlyFans
1:44:08
come around.
1:44:09
There are no more hookers.
1:44:11
That's the exit strategy, by the way.
1:44:13
Holy moly.
1:44:15
Some girl just retired from OnlyFans.
1:44:18
67 million dollars in three years time.
1:44:20
She's like, nah, I'm good.
1:44:22
I'm done.
1:44:26
20 million a year?
1:44:27
Yeah.
1:44:27
Oh, I believe it.
1:44:29
Well, she must be really a true talker.
1:44:30
No, and she actually never even really took
1:44:33
her clothes off, apparently.
1:44:35
She just did poses.
1:44:36
Sweet talker.
1:44:37
She knows what she's doing.
1:44:38
And with that, I'd like to thank you
1:44:39
for your courage.
1:44:40
Say in the morning to you, the man
1:44:41
who put the sea in John C.
1:44:43
Dvorak's economic woes indicators.
1:44:45
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:44:47
end.
1:44:47
The one, the only Mr. John C.
1:44:49
Dvorak!
1:44:53
Yeah, in the morning to you, Mr. Adam
1:44:55
Currie.
1:44:55
In the morning, strips, sea boots, and a
1:44:56
raffineer.
1:44:58
In the morning, yeah, trolls.
1:45:01
Let me say it.
1:45:02
For a second.
1:45:07
1,914 listening live right now.
1:45:10
Yeah, we're kind of on a, we're going,
1:45:12
we're moving sideways with this chart, people.
1:45:14
Sideways.
1:45:15
Side to sideways movement.
1:45:17
That's okay.
1:45:17
But we love the trolls, especially the ones
1:45:19
who hang out in the troll room and
1:45:21
comment, give all kinds of interesting idea.
1:45:24
Whenever a Jewish name comes up, you see
1:45:26
people with emojis going, hmm, yes, there are
1:45:29
a bunch of anti-Semites there.
1:45:31
It's great.
1:45:33
So there's anti-Semites in the, in the
1:45:35
troll room.
1:45:36
Gambling?
1:45:41
Yeah, whenever it's a Jewish name, like, oh,
1:45:44
oh, okay.
1:45:44
I don't know what is up.
1:45:47
I don't know what's up either.
1:45:49
Yeah, you can join them.
1:45:52
Practice your Hitler salute.
1:45:54
Jump on in trollroom.io. Everybody loves hanging
1:45:57
out and have fun there.
1:45:58
I have not kicked somebody off in a
1:46:00
long time.
1:46:01
Yeah, you're overdue.
1:46:03
I don't get mad anymore.
1:46:06
I just given up on being offended.
1:46:07
It's like, it's not worth it.
1:46:09
I feel much better.
1:46:10
By the way, I will remind you, there's
1:46:12
plenty of shows still to come after this
1:46:14
donation segment.
1:46:15
We have, well, we definitely have to discuss
1:46:17
Hegseth.
1:46:19
I got some, some funny clips there.
1:46:21
And maybe we should do some tariff stuff
1:46:23
just to keep everybody up, up to speed.
1:46:26
And of course, the tip of the day
1:46:28
now so popular that Bill O'Reilly is
1:46:30
ripping us off.
1:46:32
You know, we get ripped off constantly.
1:46:34
I think people, you know, they think it's
1:46:36
some sort of a secret that this show
1:46:38
exists.
1:46:39
And they listen, they have their producer listening.
1:46:40
I got an idea we can steal it
1:46:42
from those guys and no agenda.
1:46:44
I think, I think the thing is, we
1:46:46
have a pretty big audience that knows what's
1:46:47
going on.
1:46:48
Yeah.
1:46:49
And, and they pay attention.
1:46:50
And for some reason, they listen to Bill
1:46:52
O'Reilly.
1:46:53
And hey, wait a minute, Bill, what you
1:46:54
doing?
1:46:55
But of course, that's only for what was
1:46:57
it?
1:46:57
What was the term he had?
1:46:58
His concierge members.
1:47:02
We don't have concierge members.
1:47:05
We don't have a bundle.
1:47:07
We don't have no agenda plus for anything
1:47:09
else.
1:47:09
No, we just give it to you.
1:47:11
Club, no agenda.
1:47:12
Club, no agenda.
1:47:13
Good one.
1:47:14
We feel it's important that you get this
1:47:17
information no matter what your, no matter what
1:47:20
your financial status.
1:47:21
You know, I feel the same way about,
1:47:23
by the way, I, although I don't produce
1:47:25
as much as I should on Substack, I
1:47:27
have, I've decided that it will have a
1:47:31
value for value approach toward it.
1:47:33
I mean, I always have free content.
1:47:35
I'm never going to close it off for
1:47:37
the, oh, you have to be a subscriber.
1:47:40
And today I, I just unsubscribed to Seymour
1:47:44
Hersh's Substack.
1:47:46
Oh, interesting.
1:47:46
I'm still subscribed and I still pay.
1:47:49
I don't pay.
1:47:50
I refuse to pay because I'm cheap compared
1:47:55
to you.
1:47:56
I just want to support the old man
1:47:58
doing some work.
1:47:59
That's, he's got plenty of support, but it's
1:48:02
beside the point.
1:48:03
I would support him if I could read
1:48:05
these, some of these columns, but he just
1:48:06
writes teasers and then you have to subscribe
1:48:09
to read the rest of it.
1:48:11
And I'm not a fan of this idea
1:48:14
of writing a teaser and then trying to
1:48:16
make you make you subscribe because of, oh,
1:48:18
there's maybe something here.
1:48:20
If you keep reading further.
1:48:21
I didn't realize that.
1:48:22
So I just gave up.
1:48:23
Yeah, no, I'm against that too.
1:48:25
I mean, I support him because I, you
1:48:28
know, I just want to support his work,
1:48:29
but I didn't realize that he was doing
1:48:31
teasers and it was all, all in the
1:48:34
bundle.
1:48:35
And for concierge, so I'm a concierge member
1:48:37
apparently of Seymour Hersh.
1:48:40
Yeah, I would, I, I'm against that.
1:48:43
Yeah, it's not value for value.
1:48:44
That's just, you're being a tease.
1:48:46
You're a tease is no good.
1:48:48
You might as well be an only fans,
1:48:50
never taking your clothes off.
1:48:52
Yeah, there's, there's a visual.
1:48:54
I don't need of Seymour Hersh, but thanks.
1:48:56
I feel much better.
1:48:57
Well, he's not taking his clothes off.
1:48:59
Hey, by the way, you want to use
1:49:00
one of those modern podcast apps.
1:49:02
If you're listening to the show for a
1:49:04
number of reasons.
1:49:05
First of all, you get the, the live
1:49:07
stream in the modern podcast apps.
1:49:09
You get, you get the bat signal when
1:49:10
we go live and not just for our
1:49:12
show.
1:49:12
Any, almost any show on the no agenda
1:49:14
stream now utilizes this system.
1:49:16
So you want that, you want it for
1:49:18
the transcripts.
1:49:19
You want it for the chapters, you want
1:49:20
it for the chapter art.
1:49:21
And let's talk about that for a second.
1:49:24
Because it's what we do every single show.
1:49:26
We have hundreds of artists who are listening
1:49:28
to the show live and they're creating fun
1:49:31
art that we, I had actually, I helped,
1:49:33
I helped somebody audit their, their feed and
1:49:36
their podcast yesterday.
1:49:37
I said, cause they, it was one of
1:49:38
the first people ever said, Hey, we have
1:49:40
a pretty big successful show.
1:49:42
Would you mind hopping on a zoom call
1:49:45
with the team and, uh, and walking us
1:49:48
through what you think about, you know, our
1:49:49
feed, how we publish, are we, are there
1:49:51
any best practices?
1:49:52
And I said, I said, no one has
1:49:55
ever asked me to do that.
1:49:57
This is unbelievable what you just said.
1:49:59
No one has been harping on this for
1:50:01
not that I'm your agent.
1:50:05
Well, if you want a crabby job, if
1:50:07
I was, if you were, I would have
1:50:08
made money on the deal.
1:50:09
But no, okay.
1:50:10
And I didn't.
1:50:11
But the point is, is that this is
1:50:13
ridiculous that you have not been consulted on,
1:50:17
which, you know, it's, it's a pet peeve
1:50:18
of mine, not consulting the experts.
1:50:21
I remember when, uh, when Halsey started, uh,
1:50:25
CNET and you were, you auditioned there.
1:50:27
Yeah.
1:50:28
Well, I always, I got hired there, but
1:50:30
I, I didn't take the deal stupidly.
1:50:32
He ended up with a local guy.
1:50:35
But anyway, the point is, is he would
1:50:37
always find definitive people.
1:50:41
Uh, he would just do a little research.
1:50:43
Didn't take much.
1:50:43
And he just asked him if they wanted
1:50:44
to get in.
1:50:46
I mean, he did the thing with the,
1:50:47
with his website.
1:50:47
He found some guys that were one of
1:50:49
the early website developers.
1:50:50
And it's always, you go to the definitive
1:50:52
guy, the guy who invented it.
1:50:54
If you can find the guy who invented
1:50:56
the whole process, hey, get ahold of them.
1:50:58
See if he'll talk to you.
1:51:00
This never happens except there's a few guys
1:51:04
who understand it.
1:51:05
And I'm stunned that anyone got that, got
1:51:08
a clue.
1:51:09
You will even be more stunned by who
1:51:10
it was.
1:51:11
Who was it?
1:51:12
Chip Ingram.
1:51:16
Who?
1:51:16
You don't know Chip Ingram.
1:51:17
No.
1:51:18
Chip Ingram is a pastor.
1:51:21
He is on well over a thousand radio
1:51:24
stations, has millions of people listening to his
1:51:27
podcast.
1:51:29
Uh, it's called Living on the Edge.
1:51:31
And he has his board of directors.
1:51:34
You know, he's, uh, the, the, the, was
1:51:36
it the chairman of the board?
1:51:38
And they had the technology people.
1:51:39
I was like, wow, how smart are you
1:51:42
guys?
1:51:43
And he doesn't, it's not gonna, you know,
1:51:45
that must be a three, $4 million a
1:51:47
year operation or more or more.
1:51:50
Yeah.
1:51:51
I was stunned.
1:51:52
I was stunned by the invitation.
1:51:54
Like, yeah, I'll do that.
1:51:56
Absolutely.
1:51:59
That's how pros operate, man.
1:52:01
Where's Bill O'Reilly?
1:52:02
No, no, no, no.
1:52:04
Instead he just steals stuff from us.
1:52:06
Yeah, exactly.
1:52:08
And we usually miss the point.
1:52:10
Big time.
1:52:10
Stealing, but it only goes to the concierge
1:52:13
service.
1:52:13
Oh, please.
1:52:15
So back to the artist.
1:52:17
We always thank the artist who brought us
1:52:20
the artwork for the previous episode.
1:52:22
In episode 1757, which we titled Word Veto,
1:52:27
a lot of people liked this art.
1:52:28
It was a combo piece.
1:52:30
It was by Fluff Comet.
1:52:32
Of course, 420 was Easter.
1:52:35
We always work on holidays if they fall
1:52:37
on show day or most of that.
1:52:39
I think we haven't missed one once.
1:52:40
It was also 420, well known under the
1:52:43
herb lovers of the group.
1:52:47
So it was a bunny munching on a
1:52:48
marijuana leaf.
1:52:49
The only thing we missed was Hitler in
1:52:51
there for Hitler's birthday.
1:52:52
Otherwise, it was a perfect piece.
1:52:54
I think we even mentioned that.
1:52:56
It was a perfect piece.
1:52:56
And the bunny munching on the pot plant
1:52:59
was amusing.
1:53:01
It was just cute.
1:53:02
It was cute.
1:53:03
And there were many people who tried eggs.
1:53:05
We really don't like bunnies and eggs.
1:53:07
I'll be honest about it.
1:53:08
We're like, ah, bunnies and eggs, bunnies and
1:53:10
eggs, lots of bunnies and eggs.
1:53:13
Yeah, it was a bit too much.
1:53:15
In hindsight, I thought Geraldo rolling the stone
1:53:18
away was kind of funny.
1:53:21
Although I'm always religious.
1:53:24
Yes, yeah.
1:53:25
Art is not necessarily, yeah.
1:53:26
You're very sensitive.
1:53:28
I am, I'm very sensitive to it.
1:53:30
Yeah, it's appreciated.
1:53:32
Let's see, what else was there?
1:53:34
There was a chocolate Easter bunny and a
1:53:37
chocolate Jesus.
1:53:38
And Jesus is melting the bunny with a
1:53:42
hair dryer.
1:53:45
I thought it was a great piece, but
1:53:46
it was like, I don't quite get it.
1:53:48
The bunny is melting.
1:53:50
It was wrong in so many ways.
1:53:53
It was just, it was a screwy piece.
1:53:56
Now, Scaramanga, you have this guy, you know,
1:53:59
he's one of the more creative guys out
1:54:01
there.
1:54:02
Oh yeah, that was Scaramanga.
1:54:03
He keeps doing these great AI videos of
1:54:05
us for the podcast awards.
1:54:07
Do you ever, do you even see them?
1:54:09
He's always tagging you.
1:54:10
I have not seen one of them.
1:54:11
Oh man, he always tags you.
1:54:12
He must be shadow banned somehow.
1:54:15
Maybe.
1:54:16
He's always tagging Brunetti.
1:54:17
Come on, Brunetti, let's make the movie.
1:54:19
Let's do it.
1:54:19
Like, Scaramanga, Brunetti's never going to make a
1:54:23
movie with you.
1:54:24
And let me just tell you straight up,
1:54:26
not going to do it.
1:54:29
He's not going to make a movie with
1:54:30
anyone the way he's going.
1:54:31
No, he won't listen to advice.
1:54:34
He gives out the advice.
1:54:36
He did give the idea for tip of
1:54:39
the day.
1:54:39
Yeah, well, and there you go.
1:54:41
He makes no money and he's getting ripped
1:54:43
off.
1:54:43
Yeah, there it goes.
1:54:45
Yes, but it was voluntarily.
1:54:46
Yeah, well, there you go.
1:54:47
He gets a credit.
1:54:48
Oh, he gets a credit.
1:54:49
For O'Reilly's tip of the day.
1:54:51
No, it should have said created by John
1:54:53
C.
1:54:54
Dvorak.
1:54:54
No, created by Danny Brunetti.
1:54:58
That's who should get the credit.
1:55:00
If he just said it once, that would
1:55:01
be okay.
1:55:02
But he won't.
1:55:04
So lots of AI stuff.
1:55:05
Surprise, surprise.
1:55:07
Lots of AI stuff.
1:55:08
Then all that's coming in is AI stuff.
1:55:10
AI stuff.
1:55:10
Tons of AI stuff.
1:55:12
It's not working, people.
1:55:14
You should be, this is really going to
1:55:15
teach kids in school.
1:55:18
Great.
1:55:19
We'll have a country of people who can
1:55:21
do chocolate bunnies and Jesus being melted with
1:55:24
a hairdryer.
1:55:25
What a future.
1:55:26
What a future.
1:55:29
So we do, of course, want to thank
1:55:31
Fluff Comet.
1:55:32
And Fluff, I think Fluff Comet's a new
1:55:34
artist as well.
1:55:35
No, wait a minute.
1:55:35
No, Fluff Comet's done a lot.
1:55:37
Fluff Comet's done a lot.
1:55:38
A lot of graffiti stuff.
1:55:40
These are all top-notch artists, whether using
1:55:42
AI or not, I'm always impressed and we
1:55:44
appreciate it.
1:55:45
Moreover, you can contribute.
1:55:47
You can be a part of it.
1:55:48
noagendaartgenerator.com or you can be listening live
1:55:50
and refreshing on the fly to see stuff
1:55:53
as it pops in.
1:55:54
And again, on those modern podcast apps, just
1:55:57
watch along as the art changes.
1:56:00
Dreb Scott does that expertly for us every
1:56:02
single show and it's highly appreciated.
1:56:05
Now on to the treasure part of our
1:56:08
time, talent, and treasure.
1:56:09
The three T's of value for value, which
1:56:11
is the only way it works.
1:56:11
We'd like to close the loop by reading
1:56:13
notes for people.
1:56:15
We thank everybody, $50 and above.
1:56:16
If you donate $200 for a show, you
1:56:19
become an associate executive producer.
1:56:21
This is an absolutely real credit.
1:56:23
You can use it anywhere.
1:56:25
Credits are accepted.
1:56:25
I got a note from one of our
1:56:27
producers.
1:56:27
He was a little mad.
1:56:29
He's like, Curry, I don't understand it.
1:56:32
I became an associate executive producer.
1:56:34
I'm still not on imdb.com.
1:56:40
That's a good one.
1:56:41
We don't do it for you.
1:56:43
You know, you gotta do your own account
1:56:46
and he's like, Oh, and then he emails
1:56:48
me back.
1:56:48
Ha, I'm on it.
1:56:50
I'm good to go.
1:56:51
He's really happy, but no, it's not automatic.
1:56:53
We don't have access.
1:56:55
Like their dog in the show.
1:56:57
Let's see what we got today, Bill.
1:56:58
Oh, these guys, let me write it down.
1:57:00
Put it in there for them.
1:57:01
It's like we have access to the API,
1:57:03
you know, it just hit a button and
1:57:05
you're in there.
1:57:06
No.
1:57:07
So not only do you get that credit,
1:57:08
which you can put yourself on imdb.com
1:57:11
because they recognize it as a true show
1:57:12
business credit.
1:57:13
We'll read your note.
1:57:14
Same goes for $300 or above.
1:57:16
Only then you get the coveted title of
1:57:18
executive producer for this episode.
1:57:20
And we will read your note.
1:57:21
We kick it off with Carrie Cates, who's
1:57:23
in Gainesville, Texas, $500 and says, ITM gentlemen,
1:57:26
you are the best.
1:57:28
Keep up the amazing work.
1:57:30
He wants a de-douching.
1:57:33
You've been de-douched.
1:57:35
And along with that, a double up karma.
1:57:37
We are happy to oblige.
1:57:38
You've got double up karma.
1:57:43
Well, Carrie's note was short and sweet, but
1:57:47
I think Mike Topser from Fairmont, West Virginia,
1:57:52
also $500, no jingles, no karma.
1:57:55
Thanks, John and Adam.
1:57:56
Mike in Fairmont, West Virginia.
1:57:59
A beautiful one.
1:58:00
Jared Hardegree, Hardegree, yes.
1:58:03
Edmond, Oklahoma, comes close with 350 and 93
1:58:08
cents.
1:58:09
No jingles, gents.
1:58:10
Just keep up the good fight.
1:58:11
From Jared in Edmond, Oklahoma.
1:58:13
Thank you, Jared.
1:58:15
And now they start to get longer.
1:58:18
Starting with Mark Kachansky in Aurora, Colorado, $348
1:58:25
.90. This donation of $348.90 should complete
1:58:29
my knighthood.
1:58:31
I'd like to be known as Sir Red
1:58:32
Devil, and I'd like Sapporo and sushi at
1:58:36
the round table.
1:58:38
Can I get a Trump's Jobs Karma for
1:58:40
my son, Ryan?
1:58:42
And the following jingles.
1:58:44
She looks like she stinks.
1:58:46
Now, do we have that one?
1:58:48
Yeah, you clipped it.
1:58:50
You clipped it out.
1:58:50
No, but it wasn't stinks.
1:58:52
It was...
1:58:53
Yeah, she looks like she stinks is exactly
1:58:55
what it was.
1:58:56
Because I can't find it now.
1:58:58
That's why I'm confused.
1:58:59
No, it was something else.
1:59:01
Well, you may have titled it something else,
1:59:03
but that's what I said.
1:59:05
She looks like she stinks.
1:59:08
Followed by due to climate change, which is
1:59:11
a sensible combination.
1:59:13
Thanks for everything you do.
1:59:14
Here's to four more years.
1:59:17
Well, can you say she looks like she
1:59:19
stinks?
1:59:20
Because I can't find it.
1:59:20
I have to, I will.
1:59:21
All right.
1:59:23
She looks like she stinks.
1:59:25
Due to climate change.
1:59:31
You've got karma.
1:59:33
I'm sorry, I don't know what happened to
1:59:34
it.
1:59:35
I must have mislabeled it.
1:59:38
We move on to Joe Dunn, Park City,
1:59:41
Utah.
1:59:41
A favorite donation number 333.33. ITM, Adam
1:59:46
and John, please deduce me.
1:59:49
You've been deduced.
1:59:51
Not too long ago, Adam mentioned that he
1:59:53
may never go on a ski vacation again.
1:59:55
Yeah, I'm not going to ski because I'm,
1:59:57
you know, I'm going to break something.
1:59:58
Here in Park City, that kind of thinking
2:00:00
is just weird.
2:00:02
Skiing is a lifelong sport that brings families
2:00:04
together while building skills and having fun.
2:00:07
If you're a skier and want to improve
2:00:09
your skills, check out my YouTube channel, Ski
2:00:11
Dad TV.
2:00:13
As an NCAA All-American ski racer and
2:00:16
now fully certified ski instructor, I'll show you
2:00:20
how to shred and show the joys of
2:00:23
being a ski dad.
2:00:24
I think I saw his, I think I
2:00:27
saw him with his little kid.
2:00:30
That's truly coincidental.
2:00:32
I think I came across that video.
2:00:34
Do you want to touch your hip to
2:00:35
the snow while carving?
2:00:37
No.
2:00:38
Then check out Ski Dad TV where you
2:00:40
can get the best ski teaching content on
2:00:42
YouTube.
2:00:43
Ski Dad TV.
2:00:45
R2D2 Virality Karma, please.
2:00:48
Says Joe Dunn.
2:00:50
All right, Joe Dunn.
2:00:51
Good job, brother.
2:00:52
You thought.
2:00:55
Karma.
2:00:56
I love it.
2:00:57
Good one.
2:01:01
Baron Steve Banstra in Nashville, Tennessee.
2:01:04
Three, three.
2:01:04
He got upgraded today.
2:01:06
Yes.
2:01:06
Nice.
2:01:07
ITM Gents.
2:01:09
This donation not only elevates me to Viscount,
2:01:12
but also puts me ahead of Dana Brunetti
2:01:15
on the NA producer list, according to IMDb
2:01:18
and the Mueller Report.
2:01:21
Steve Banstra, Baron.
2:01:23
Now, Viscount of BNA Boogity.
2:01:25
Oh, he's of BNA.
2:01:28
Whatever BNA is.
2:01:29
Yes.
2:01:29
Boogity, Boogity Jingle, please.
2:01:39
Sir Haggis is in Sarasota, Florida.
2:01:41
Also 333.33. So he gets an executive
2:01:44
producer credit.
2:01:45
ITM gentlemen, hope all is well.
2:01:47
This donation is to celebrate two birthdays.
2:01:49
Firstly, my brother whose birthday was on 4
2:01:51
-20.
2:01:52
Sir Ramen Noodles had his 44th jaunt around
2:01:54
the sun.
2:01:54
I want to wish him a very happy
2:01:56
birthday.
2:01:56
I love you, mate.
2:01:57
Secondly, and more self-importantly, I am celebrating
2:02:00
my 50th journey around said sun.
2:02:02
So please put Sir Ramen Noodles and Sir
2:02:05
Haggis on the birthday list.
2:02:06
You are there.
2:02:07
I would also like to give a quick
2:02:08
shout out to my two boys who are
2:02:09
my greatest accomplishment in life.
2:02:11
So to my Hamish and Ronan, you are
2:02:14
my entire world.
2:02:15
And I love you so much.
2:02:17
I couldn't be more proud as a dad
2:02:18
to watch you become young men.
2:02:20
I tried to come up with some witty
2:02:21
jingle combo, but I'll just settle on some
2:02:24
karma for everyone out there in the immortal
2:02:26
words of Bill Hicks.
2:02:27
Remember, it's just a ride.
2:02:30
Hugs and kisses, Sir Haggis.
2:02:32
All right, Sir Haggis, thank you.
2:02:34
You've got karma.
2:02:37
Now we have, we go to the associate
2:02:39
executive producers with our first donation in that
2:02:42
category from a downer named Jack DeAngelis in
2:02:47
Emmett, Idaho.
2:02:48
250 bucks.
2:02:50
And he says, we need a Great Depression.
2:02:53
This nation needs to be humbled to be
2:02:56
healed.
2:03:00
That's not true.
2:03:02
God will hear our prayers and heal our
2:03:04
land.
2:03:05
That's how you need to think, brother.
2:03:07
Duke, Sir Dr. Sharky.
2:03:09
There he is, Jackson, Tennessee.
2:03:11
Hey, I haven't heard from him forever.
2:03:12
He's back, 234.56. John and Adam, you
2:03:15
continue to be the source of sanity in
2:03:17
this increasingly insane world.
2:03:19
Karma of protection as I travel to the
2:03:22
grand resources.
2:03:24
The grand resources?
2:03:25
What's the grand resources?
2:03:26
I have no idea.
2:03:27
Okay, Duke.
2:03:28
To see the grand resources.
2:03:30
Oh, to see the grand resources.
2:03:31
What are the grand resources, I wonder?
2:03:33
Anyway, he signs off.
2:03:35
Duke, Sir Dr. Sharky.
2:03:36
Lord of Mars.
2:03:37
He's going to Mars.
2:03:39
You've got karma.
2:03:42
Ronan, Colorado.
2:03:43
In Colorado Springs, 222.22 is a row
2:03:47
of ducks.
2:03:48
Happy birthday to John, same age as me.
2:03:51
Go boomers.
2:03:53
Number one rule for boomers is don't fall
2:03:56
down.
2:03:58
Hello to the nice people of the Antelope
2:04:00
Ridge Meadery that apparently provided his libation for
2:04:07
the day, that provided the space for our
2:04:10
meetup.
2:04:10
Love you both.
2:04:12
Mean it.
2:04:13
And coming in with 204.24, it's Eli
2:04:16
the Coffee Guy who says, life imitates art
2:04:19
as the movie Conclave is now at the
2:04:21
top of the charts.
2:04:22
That's right.
2:04:23
Plus, according to the internet theorist, we only
2:04:25
get one more pope before the end is
2:04:27
nigh.
2:04:27
See, he's heard about it.
2:04:29
Brings to mind the peace dove attacked by
2:04:31
a crow at the coronation of Pope Francis.
2:04:33
I forgot about that.
2:04:35
Do you remember that?
2:04:37
The dove was flying and the crow was...
2:04:39
Does that make sense?
2:04:40
I don't remember it, but it does a
2:04:43
lot of symbolism going on.
2:04:47
Still, the world is filled with small miracles.
2:04:50
RFK bans chemical food dyes as Klaus Schwab's
2:04:53
resignation from the WEF.
2:04:55
What an exciting time to be alive.
2:04:57
And that calls for exciting coffee.
2:05:01
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for
2:05:04
20% off your order.
2:05:06
Stay caffeinated, says Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:05:11
Schweddy.
2:05:12
Schweddy.
2:05:13
S-C-H-W-E-D-D-Y
2:05:15
in McKinney, Texas.
2:05:17
McKinney.
2:05:18
M-C-K-N-N-E-Y.
2:05:21
Hey, John and Adam, is it time of
2:05:23
the year again for the annual tax return
2:05:25
donation?
2:05:26
Yes.
2:05:26
Annual tax return donation.
2:05:28
I'll repeat that.
2:05:28
Yes.
2:05:29
This plus layaway plan should give me a
2:05:32
spot at the coveted round table giving back
2:05:34
and thanking you for what you do.
2:05:37
Title request.
2:05:39
Sure.
2:05:39
Sir.
2:05:40
Sure.
2:05:40
Sir.
2:05:41
Schweddy.
2:05:43
Request.
2:05:44
Bell Haven Scottish Ale on tap.
2:05:48
Of course.
2:05:49
Of course.
2:05:50
Jingles.
2:05:51
No sweat off my balls.
2:05:53
And goat karma.
2:05:55
It's no sweat off my balls.
2:05:58
You've got karma.
2:06:01
You nailed it.
2:06:01
It was identical.
2:06:02
It was identical.
2:06:05
And almost at the end here with $200,
2:06:07
as she always does, just like Eli the
2:06:09
Coffee Guy coming in with $200, she says,
2:06:11
jobs karma, please.
2:06:13
And for a competitive edge with a resume
2:06:15
that gets results, go to ImageMakersInc.com.
2:06:18
That's ImageMakersInc with a K for all of
2:06:21
your executive resume and job search needs.
2:06:23
And work with Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs
2:06:26
and writer of resumes.
2:06:27
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:06:31
Let's vote for jobs.
2:06:35
David Selden in Arlington, Texas.
2:06:39
That's Arlington.
2:06:40
$200.
2:06:41
ITM get most slaves.
2:06:43
I think I'm a knight, but we'll have
2:06:45
to look that up some other time.
2:06:47
Been over seven years.
2:06:48
Please de-douche.
2:06:51
You've been de-douched.
2:06:53
Over seven years.
2:06:54
I doubt if you've made it yet with
2:06:56
$200.
2:06:57
But Adam Curry has said words matter.
2:06:59
At Pocket Verses, we agree.
2:07:02
In fact, words are way more powerful than
2:07:05
we can understand.
2:07:06
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2:07:08
created a small shareable cards with Bible verses
2:07:11
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2:07:14
Check out pocketverses.org, a completely free service.
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It's free.
2:07:19
Good news.
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Carry God's word with you and pass it
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on with joy.
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Visit pocketverses.org.
2:07:30
Okay.
2:07:31
I think the message is clear.
2:07:33
Did someone tell them that if you say
2:07:35
it three times, people remember?
2:07:36
Is that what's going on here?
2:07:39
It could be.
2:07:39
Yeah.
2:07:40
And finally, our last associate executive producer is
2:07:42
Trevor Malkinson.
2:07:44
He's in Courtenay.
2:07:45
That's in British Columbia, Canada.
2:07:48
And he says, Dear John and Adam, my
2:07:50
wife and I have been saying for a
2:07:51
while that it was time to donate to
2:07:54
the show again.
2:07:56
And then I bought a beer the other
2:07:57
day, and my bill was $33.33. Yeah,
2:08:03
it got shipped.
2:08:04
That's one beer in Canada.
2:08:06
Man, that Canadian dollar is devalued.
2:08:10
Anyway, I knew it was time.
2:08:11
I'm in Canada, and Trump has many sheeple
2:08:13
here, very activated.
2:08:14
It's both hilarious and pathetic.
2:08:16
Anyway, thanks for everything you do on the
2:08:19
show.
2:08:19
Can you call out Chuck as a douchebag?
2:08:23
And for jingles, can I please get big,
2:08:25
beautiful dumps and the howling dog that sounds
2:08:28
like Pink Floyd?
2:08:29
Cheers, says Trevor on Vancouver Islands.
2:08:33
They did dumps.
2:08:34
They call them dumps.
2:08:35
Big, massive dumps.
2:08:46
And that concludes our executive and associate executive
2:08:49
producers for episode 1758 already.
2:08:56
Oh, man, it's really moving along.
2:08:58
17 years, 1700 shows.
2:09:01
We are just killing it, I tell you.
2:09:03
We will be thanking the rest of the
2:09:04
people who donated to the show today and
2:09:06
$50 or more in our second segment.
2:09:09
And we'd like to remind everybody, if you
2:09:11
go to noagendadonations.com, there are many opportunities
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for you to become a knight, a dame.
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Everything is on the website, including how you
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become a layaway knight.
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You can do this over many years, and
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eventually you do get to that level.
2:09:24
Many people do.
2:09:25
Actually, we have a couple of knights coming
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up in a moment.
2:09:28
And you can also hit us up with
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a sustaining donation, which means any amount, any
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frequency.
2:09:33
You choose.
2:09:34
You make it up.
2:09:35
noagendadonations.com.
2:09:36
Thank you again.
2:09:37
Ouch.
2:09:38
Thank you again for supporting the best podcast
2:09:40
in the universe.
2:09:41
Episode 1758.
2:09:43
Our formula is this.
2:09:46
We hit people in the mouth.
2:09:55
It's no sweat off my balls.
2:10:02
Uh, Hegseth.
2:10:03
Hegseth.
2:10:04
I got a couple of Hegseth clips.
2:10:05
Can we do a little interregnum for something
2:10:08
I want to do?
2:10:09
An interregnum?
2:10:10
An interregnum?
2:10:11
What exactly is an interregnum?
2:10:14
It's, you know, just a break.
2:10:16
Okay.
2:10:18
I ran into this clip while I was
2:10:20
going through the archives.
2:10:22
Uh-huh.
2:10:23
Our archives?
2:10:23
Show archives?
2:10:24
Yeah, our archives.
2:10:26
The disc of clips.
2:10:28
The disc.
2:10:29
And I just ran it because I was
2:10:30
looking for something else.
2:10:31
And I ran into this.
2:10:31
I didn't realize, I forgot all about this.
2:10:34
This was from, uh, probably 2017.
2:10:39
Mm-hmm.
2:10:40
And I don't even remember it.
2:10:42
But this is the kind of nuttiness that
2:10:44
during the first Trump administration, this is the
2:10:47
kind of screwball story that this was amongst
2:10:50
the thing where, you know, he watched Gorilla
2:10:52
TV and all the bogus nonsense that the
2:10:56
media fed us about Trump.
2:10:58
Yeah.
2:10:59
The Gorilla TV was my all-time favorite.
2:11:02
But this is one that I forgot.
2:11:03
I don't even remember, to be honest about
2:11:05
it.
2:11:06
It was so stupid.
2:11:07
This clip is the classic.
2:11:10
Mm-hmm.
2:11:11
Scream at the sky.
2:11:13
Oh, is it that time again?
2:11:15
Here we go.
2:11:16
Tonight, thousands of peoples and cities across the
2:11:19
country will scream helplessly at the sky one
2:11:22
year after the election of President Donald Trump.
2:11:26
The events are being planned on Facebook in
2:11:27
Dallas, Boston, New York, Miami, Philly, Austin, and
2:11:30
Washington State.
2:11:31
In the details section, it reads, quote, Rage,
2:11:34
rage against the dying of the light.
2:11:36
Mark the one-year anniversary of the so
2:11:37
-called election of the so-called president by
2:11:39
joining the national primal scream.
2:11:42
Howl at the sky.
2:11:43
Gnash your teeth.
2:11:43
Bang your drums.
2:11:44
And it goes on from there.
2:11:47
The Dallas event starts at 6 tonight on
2:11:49
the Continental Avenue Pedestrian Bridge.
2:11:52
But as the Facebook page itself warns, it
2:11:54
will be 48 degrees and rainy outside.
2:11:56
Matt Uris for CBS 11 News.
2:12:00
I remember this.
2:12:02
I remember it.
2:12:04
And I'm thinking we might actually have some
2:12:06
clips of the screaming, don't we?
2:12:08
There was.
2:12:09
I actually had the clip of the scream.
2:12:10
You can look it up.
2:12:11
I didn't put it on here because it
2:12:13
was pretty lame.
2:12:15
But just people screaming.
2:12:17
It just wasn't anything more than the scream
2:12:20
he just played.
2:12:21
But it's unbelievable how stupid this TDS Trump
2:12:28
derangement syndrome was and is.
2:12:31
Well, we have the science to back it
2:12:33
up from JAMA.
2:12:35
Social networks spread contagion.
2:12:38
Mental illness.
2:12:41
It makes nothing but sense to me.
2:12:44
Well, it's sick.
2:12:46
No, it's sad.
2:12:48
It's sad that people get so worked up.
2:12:49
And again, it's still COVID trauma.
2:12:52
None of this has gone away.
2:12:54
This was pre-COVID.
2:12:57
No, but Trump derangement syndrome now is you
2:13:01
can you can trigger anything with anybody.
2:13:04
This was pre-COVID.
2:13:05
I want to remind you that this screaming
2:13:07
at the sky was pre-COVID.
2:13:09
Trump watching Gorilla TV was pre-COVID.
2:13:12
You're right.
2:13:12
I'm just saying that that still is.
2:13:15
OK, never mind.
2:13:16
You get what I know.
2:13:17
I understand what you're saying.
2:13:18
COVID has created another level.
2:13:20
Well, you can bring anything.
2:13:21
It was pretty bad.
2:13:22
I want the screaming to come back.
2:13:24
How do we do that?
2:13:25
I we just reinitiate this.
2:13:28
This is a reminder.
2:13:29
Maybe somebody out there will get this thing
2:13:30
going again.
2:13:31
We can start screaming.
2:13:32
But it has to be a year anniversary.
2:13:34
So it would be next.
2:13:37
January, I guess they do it.
2:13:39
Well, they can do a scream in.
2:13:41
A scream in.
2:13:42
Yeah, I think we should promote that.
2:13:44
You know, screaming, screaming, screaming, screaming, screaming.
2:13:49
We should probably put that in the concierge
2:13:51
level.
2:13:54
Yes.
2:13:55
So the bundle, the plus bundle.
2:13:57
So as you astutely put in the newsletter,
2:14:00
Signal Gate continues completely stupid.
2:14:04
The whole thing is just what?
2:14:07
And so I went to the source to
2:14:09
find out, you know, what what exactly is
2:14:11
this about?
2:14:11
Can we get some details?
2:14:13
And NPR had the most serious reporting.
2:14:16
And boy, you know, NPR, they can make
2:14:17
a story out of nothing when they have
2:14:19
nothing.
2:14:19
They got nothing, but they made a story
2:14:21
out of it anyway.
2:14:21
It's amazing.
2:14:22
We're waiting to see how, if at all,
2:14:24
President Trump addresses the leadership at the Defense
2:14:27
Department.
2:14:28
In a moment, Democratic Senator Jack Reed calls
2:14:30
for a wider investigation of Defense Secretary Pete
2:14:33
Hexeth.
2:14:34
First, we report on what the White House
2:14:36
is doing.
2:14:36
One U.S. official tells NPR that the
2:14:38
search is underway to replace Defense Secretary.
2:14:42
So they've got sources.
2:14:44
There's a search underway.
2:14:45
Deep Throat in the White House says so.
2:14:47
Pete Hexeth publicly.
2:14:48
The president is standing behind him after a
2:14:51
tumultuous week.
2:14:53
Hexeth's office fired some of his aides.
2:14:55
Then came revelations that the secretary shared details
2:14:58
of impending airstrikes in Yemen again.
2:15:01
NPR confirmed this second chat on the messaging
2:15:03
app Signal, which included Hexeth's wife, his brother
2:15:07
and his personal lawyer.
2:15:09
The first chat was with top officials and
2:15:11
a journalist who was inadvertently included.
2:15:13
NPR's Quill Lawrence is here to tell us
2:15:15
more.
2:15:15
Quill, good morning.
2:15:16
Hey, good morning.
2:15:17
Good morning.
2:15:17
Hey, good morning.
2:15:17
So we'll note that you're reporting this story
2:15:19
with our colleague.
2:15:20
I like what you do with that stuff.
2:15:22
So now you've got me doing it.
2:15:25
It's unavoidable.
2:15:26
A journalist who was inadvertently included.
2:15:28
NPR's Quill Lawrence is here to tell us
2:15:30
more.
2:15:30
Quill, good morning.
2:15:31
Hey, good morning.
2:15:32
Good morning.
2:15:32
Hey, good morning.
2:15:32
So we'll note that you're reporting this story
2:15:34
with our colleague Tom Bowman.
2:15:36
What are you guys hearing?
2:15:37
Yeah, a U.S. official told us that
2:15:39
the search has begun after this second.
2:15:42
As sources say, an official unnamed.
2:15:45
Round of headlines about Hexeth.
2:15:47
I should add that the White House has
2:15:48
said our anonymous source doesn't know what they're
2:15:51
talking about.
2:15:52
But at a Rose Garden event yesterday.
2:15:54
What?
2:15:56
That was poorly phrased.
2:15:57
The anonymous source said they didn't know what
2:16:00
they were talking about.
2:16:01
The White House.
2:16:01
The White House says.
2:16:02
No, I know.
2:16:03
But it's the way it was put together.
2:16:05
It's like the measles, you know.
2:16:09
Disinformation is spreading.
2:16:10
Yes, I got you.
2:16:11
Search has begun after this second round of
2:16:13
headlines about Hexeth.
2:16:14
I should add that the White House has
2:16:16
said our anonymous source doesn't know what they're
2:16:18
talking about.
2:16:20
But at a Rose Garden event yesterday, the
2:16:22
president stood firmly by Hexeth, at least publicly.
2:16:25
No, he's doing a great job.
2:16:27
It's just fake news.
2:16:28
It just bring up stories.
2:16:29
I guess it sounds like disgruntled employees.
2:16:32
You know, he was put there to get
2:16:33
rid of a lot of bad people.
2:16:35
And that's what he's doing.
2:16:37
Disgruntled employee.
2:16:40
You know, so besides bringing back the scream
2:16:43
circle, that's a good term for it, actually.
2:16:45
Not to scream in, but a scream circle.
2:16:47
I think we should bring that back.
2:16:48
I like scream circle.
2:16:50
Disgruntled.
2:16:50
That's a good show title, too.
2:16:52
I like it.
2:16:52
Yeah.
2:16:54
Who came up with that?
2:16:56
Net Ned.
2:16:58
Besides that, disgruntled employee.
2:17:00
You know what disgruntled employees used to do?
2:17:04
They used to go postal.
2:17:06
They used to go postal.
2:17:07
What happened to those guys?
2:17:08
What happened to those days?
2:17:10
Quill, that phrase disgruntled employees.
2:17:13
I think Hegseth used a similar phrase in
2:17:15
his public remarks about this and referred to
2:17:18
people who were fired in his office.
2:17:20
What's he talking about?
2:17:22
Yeah, there were four senior advisors to Hegseth
2:17:24
who left in just the past week.
2:17:27
Former Defense Department spokesman John Elliott resigned last
2:17:30
week and then published a quite extraordinary opinion
2:17:33
piece calling the past month at the Pentagon
2:17:36
a, quote, full blown meltdown and saying that
2:17:39
this infighting is hurting President Trump.
2:17:41
He served in Trump's first administration and appears
2:17:43
to want to continue to serve.
2:17:45
Three other Pentagon advisors, Colin Carroll, Dan Caldwell
2:17:48
and Darren Selnick were escorted out of the
2:17:51
Pentagon and accused of leaking information to the
2:17:53
press.
2:17:54
They then put out as a trio, the
2:17:56
three of them put out a joint statement
2:17:58
on X saying that their dismissal was unconscionable
2:18:01
and that they haven't even been told what
2:18:03
they stand accused of leaking.
2:18:05
All three of them served in uniform.
2:18:07
They say they understand the importance of information
2:18:09
security.
2:18:11
Caldwell and Selnick, notably, are longtime associates of
2:18:14
Hegseth.
2:18:15
They've worked with him over a decade back
2:18:17
to when he was at Concerned Veterans for
2:18:19
America Policy Group.
2:18:22
So disgruntled employees, their version of going postal
2:18:25
is, we're going to write an op-ed
2:18:27
in the New York Times.
2:18:28
News says it's no good.
2:18:29
This is the military industrial complex trying to
2:18:32
worm Hegseth out.
2:18:36
And he's the final one.
2:18:37
NPR, they really have nothing.
2:18:39
They have nothing.
2:18:41
So I'm trying to figure out what all
2:18:43
of this adds up to.
2:18:44
The White House does appear to be backing
2:18:46
Hegseth, but he's been revealed.
2:18:49
NPR has confirmed the original New York Times
2:18:51
report that there was a second chat group
2:18:54
on Signal where he was sharing information about
2:18:57
an impending attack.
2:18:58
So they don't even have a chat group?
2:18:59
They don't have, don't have screenshots like the
2:19:01
first time?
2:19:02
It's just these disgruntled employees who said that
2:19:05
in the New York Times?
2:19:06
Is that what I'm led to believe here,
2:19:07
John?
2:19:09
I think that's what you're led to believe.
2:19:11
Yeah, I mean, with the first chat group,
2:19:14
it was against Pentagon policy to use Signal
2:19:16
for that.
2:19:17
There were a lot of security issues with
2:19:18
it, discussing details of an attack hours before.
2:19:22
What's that?
2:19:23
It's news that it was Pentagon policy not
2:19:26
to use Signal, and it was the CIA
2:19:27
that provided the Signal channels.
2:19:30
I said, this is news to me.
2:19:32
Yeah, I mean, with the first chat group,
2:19:34
it was against Pentagon policy to use Signal
2:19:37
for that.
2:19:37
There were a lot of security issues with
2:19:39
it, discussing details of an attack hours before
2:19:42
the bombs hit in Yemen.
2:19:44
But the people in that chat were the
2:19:46
vice president, the secretary of state, people who
2:19:49
would need to know this second group.
2:19:52
It appears that Hexeth was just cut and
2:19:54
pasting this actionable intelligence to his wife.
2:19:58
I can't think of any conceivable need they
2:20:01
would have to know this information.
2:20:03
I'll be bluntly honest, though.
2:20:06
If this was Obama or anyone else, we
2:20:08
would have been laughing all over.
2:20:09
We wouldn't have been great.
2:20:10
These horrible people, impeach them.
2:20:13
So the guy, so his wife is on
2:20:17
the Signal chat.
2:20:18
Why isn't his wife, he sleeps with the
2:20:21
woman?
2:20:22
Yeah, and his lawyer, he sleeps with his
2:20:24
lawyer, too.
2:20:24
Well, he doesn't sleep with the lawyer, necessarily,
2:20:26
but he might.
2:20:28
But this is beyond me.
2:20:31
Now, my understanding, I tried to figure out
2:20:34
what was going on here.
2:20:35
I thought it was like because of his
2:20:36
LGBTQ thing.
2:20:38
But then I saw some analyst on one
2:20:39
of the channels going on.
2:20:42
And she said that this is all because
2:20:44
Hexeth was one of the influencers telling Trump
2:20:51
not to bomb Iran or listen to the
2:20:54
Israelis at all and to get into the
2:20:58
negotiations instead of going to war.
2:21:00
Another war in the Middle East is a
2:21:02
bad idea.
2:21:03
Hexeth was largely responsible, or at least one
2:21:05
of the voices in that regard.
2:21:08
And the Pentagon supposedly is still filled with
2:21:11
neocons.
2:21:12
And they wouldn't put up with this.
2:21:13
I believe that.
2:21:14
The thing that I thought was really strange,
2:21:17
I don't know if you've, I'm about halfway
2:21:19
through it, is that one of these guys
2:21:22
shows up on Tucker the day later.
2:21:24
Right, that one of his old associates.
2:21:27
Caldwell.
2:21:28
Yeah, Caldwell.
2:21:29
What's up with that?
2:21:30
That's strange.
2:21:32
And he, well, he makes the claim that
2:21:34
it wasn't Hexeth that fired.
2:21:37
It was like, it was part of a,
2:21:39
two things happened.
2:21:40
One, there was a cabal because he says
2:21:42
he never had the lie detector test they
2:21:43
were threatening everybody with.
2:21:45
They just rousted three of Hexeth's old pals
2:21:51
who were also against being neocons, or they're
2:21:56
against the neocons.
2:21:57
So that may have been a political move.
2:22:00
And then this Elliott guy who was actually
2:22:02
really was fired, he's the one who got
2:22:05
the New York Times piece.
2:22:06
I mean, it seems unlikely that this would,
2:22:07
unless it was all schemed out, that you're
2:22:10
going to get a New York Times op
2:22:11
-ed, you know, ready to go.
2:22:14
I mean, come on.
2:22:15
Yeah, right away.
2:22:16
I mean, if you and I had to
2:22:18
write a New York Times op-ed, it'd
2:22:19
take us a couple days.
2:22:21
Yeah, it wouldn't be the next day.
2:22:23
I mean, I wouldn't take it.
2:22:24
You could crank one out if you had
2:22:26
it already.
2:22:26
If we were going to be published in
2:22:28
the New York Times, we would take some
2:22:30
time.
2:22:30
Yeah, you would take a day or two
2:22:31
to get some work done.
2:22:33
But it would be, this is bullcrap.
2:22:36
Yeah.
2:22:36
This is, I believe it is, I think
2:22:39
there's an analyst who said that it was.
2:22:41
Bullcrap.
2:22:42
That this is all about the neocons trying
2:22:45
to, you know, and it was part of
2:22:46
the Wesley Clark group, you know, Iran is
2:22:48
last.
2:22:49
I believe it.
2:22:50
I believe that for sure.
2:22:52
They wanted to bomb Iran and it's like,
2:22:53
oh, this guy's screwing things up.
2:22:55
Yeah, he's not doing a good job.
2:22:56
He's messing around with the Houthis.
2:22:59
Stop it.
2:22:59
Go for the, go for the big cheese.
2:23:02
So then he goes on Fox and Hegseth
2:23:06
is not good at this.
2:23:08
He doesn't come across confident.
2:23:12
And then his whole defense is, it wasn't
2:23:16
confidential to start with.
2:23:17
So it doesn't make any difference who I
2:23:18
sent it to.
2:23:19
That's his, that's his defense.
2:23:22
But when Brian Kilmeade introduces you in the
2:23:25
following manner, you've got to wonder what's really
2:23:28
out there in the media space.
2:23:30
Well, that was President Trump doubling down on
2:23:32
his support for Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth 24
2:23:34
hours ago, denying a New York Times report
2:23:37
about sharing sensitive information on another signal chat
2:23:40
called Team Huddle.
2:23:41
Here to set the record straight himself, the
2:23:43
former Secretary, the current Secretary of State Pete
2:23:46
Hegseth, former host right here on Fox and
2:23:48
Friends.
2:23:48
Wow.
2:23:52
How about that?
2:23:53
Former, and he's going to double down.
2:23:55
I mean, he is the Secretary of Defense,
2:23:58
but he says former Secretary of Defense.
2:24:01
How, how does he come up with that?
2:24:04
How does that happen?
2:24:07
That's a great catch.
2:24:08
Here to set the record straight himself, the
2:24:11
former Secretary, the current Secretary of State Pete
2:24:13
Hegseth, former host right here on Fox and
2:24:15
Friends.
2:24:16
Pete, great to see you, Mr. Secretary.
2:24:18
Mr. Secretary, Mr. Secretary, I'm sorry, Mr. Secretary.
2:24:20
I know you're never going to take my
2:24:21
call again.
2:24:21
You want to answer my text, Mr. Secretary.
2:24:23
So your thoughts on what's been reporting of
2:24:26
Team Huddle and the signal chat that the
2:24:29
New York Times says took place between you,
2:24:32
your wife and your brother and some others.
2:24:33
So now Hegseth is, it's just, I just
2:24:36
clipped a little bit of it.
2:24:37
He's waving his hands.
2:24:39
He's smirking.
2:24:40
He's sticking his tongue out.
2:24:41
This is not good, Pete.
2:24:43
So Brian, if you remember when this all
2:24:45
started, the first go around, because this is
2:24:46
the second go around, right?
2:24:47
They peddle old stuff.
2:24:49
They kick it back up.
2:24:50
I said repeatedly, no one's texting war plans.
2:24:54
You know why I said that?
2:24:54
Because I'm in the bowels of the Pentagon
2:24:56
every single day.
2:24:57
Just 10 minutes ago, I was looking at
2:24:59
actual war plans of things that were ongoing
2:25:01
or pending things to happen.
2:25:03
What?
2:25:03
What?
2:25:05
Is there a war pending?
2:25:06
What's happening?
2:25:08
Brian, ask him, what war plans are you
2:25:10
looking at?
2:25:11
Do you always look at war plans?
2:25:12
We have war plans.
2:25:12
Does it get, what's it going on?
2:25:13
Because that's the first thing I jump on.
2:25:16
Yeah.
2:25:16
And he sounds coked up or too much
2:25:18
coffee.
2:25:19
Yeah.
2:25:19
Yeah.
2:25:20
You know what it is?
2:25:21
Gigawatt.
2:25:21
10 minutes ago, I was looking at actual
2:25:24
war plans of things that were ongoing or
2:25:25
pending things to happen because that's on a
2:25:28
regular basis on classified systems.
2:25:30
That's my job for the war.
2:25:32
Did he say war pending?
2:25:35
Brian, if you remember when this all started
2:25:37
the first go around, because this is the
2:25:39
second go around, right?
2:25:40
They pedal old stuff.
2:25:41
They kick it back up.
2:25:42
I said repeatedly, no one's texting war plans.
2:25:46
You know why I said that?
2:25:46
Because I'm in the bowels of the Pentagon
2:25:48
every single day.
2:25:49
Just 10 minutes ago, I was looking at
2:25:51
actual war plans of things that were ongoing
2:25:53
or pending things to happen because that's on
2:25:56
a regular basis on classified systems.
2:25:58
That's my job for the war fighters, for
2:26:01
the president of the United States.
2:26:02
I look at war plans every single day.
2:26:05
What was shared over signal then and now,
2:26:08
however you characterize it, was informal, unclassified coordinations
2:26:13
for media coordination, other things.
2:26:15
That's what I've said from the beginning.
2:26:17
At the beginning, it was left wing reporters
2:26:19
from the Atlantic who got a hold of
2:26:21
it and then wanted to create a problem
2:26:23
for the president.
2:26:23
This is what it's all about.
2:26:25
Trying to get at President Trump and his
2:26:26
agenda.
2:26:27
I'm protecting the president.
2:26:28
Don't you see what I'm doing?
2:26:30
I'm protecting President Donald J.
2:26:32
Trump.
2:26:33
By the way, World War III is pending.
2:26:37
It's just pending.
2:26:40
It's pending.
2:26:41
Looking at what war plans is the first
2:26:43
thing I say.
2:26:44
Now, Hexhead was one of the reasons he
2:26:48
was picked because of his military service and
2:26:50
the fact that he is media savvy.
2:26:53
But to watch him go hysterical like this
2:26:57
is not media savvy.
2:26:58
No, at all.
2:27:00
He has to slow down and be calm
2:27:06
and be a little less hysterical.
2:27:08
He sounds like he's like an old lady.
2:27:11
Said the disgruntled podcasters.
2:27:14
That's who we are.
2:27:16
Says the disgruntled podcasters.
2:27:19
It's not a good look.
2:27:23
Should take him aside and say, you know,
2:27:25
less coffee.
2:27:26
It's not a good look.
2:27:30
Have you heard about the baby bonuses?
2:27:34
Yeah, well, this is an interesting situation, the
2:27:36
baby bonuses, because all of a sudden now
2:27:38
the left is saying this is terrible idea.
2:27:42
And the whole I hope maybe you have
2:27:43
the clips from the view.
2:27:45
I have clip.
2:27:46
No, no, no, no.
2:27:48
They condemned him.
2:27:50
Well, of course, the Trump administration is considering
2:27:52
ways to encourage more women get married and
2:27:56
have children, including a five thousand dollar baby
2:27:59
bonus.
2:28:00
Sounds like a good idea to me.
2:28:02
The money would be offered to every American
2:28:04
mother after she gives birth, an incentive aimed
2:28:07
at increasing the country's historically low birth rate.
2:28:10
Do you think they come in with those
2:28:12
big checks?
2:28:13
Good job, mom.
2:28:15
You know, with those publishing clearinghouse giant confetti,
2:28:18
which has declined since 2007.
2:28:21
That year, approximately four point three million babies
2:28:25
were born compared to three point six million
2:28:27
last year.
2:28:28
Since taking office, the administration has made an
2:28:31
effort to promote families.
2:28:33
So let me say very simply, I want
2:28:36
more babies in the United States of America.
2:28:39
Simone Collins is a pro natalist pushing for
2:28:41
easier for people to have kids.
2:28:45
As much as I personally love the idea
2:28:47
of getting five thousand dollars for another kid,
2:28:49
it's not going to move the needle and
2:28:51
it's certainly not going to be enough for
2:28:53
parents to decide that they can have that
2:28:55
next kid or their first kid.
2:28:57
All right.
2:28:57
So now that now the problem is, it's
2:28:59
not enough.
2:29:00
Trump's not doing enough.
2:29:02
What is the vice president Harris have?
2:29:05
Didn't she have three thousand?
2:29:07
Yes.
2:29:08
Thirty five hundred or something.
2:29:09
Yeah.
2:29:09
So it's not great.
2:29:11
It's not enough dead.
2:29:12
She says there are simpler and cheaper ways
2:29:14
the government can ease the burden on parents,
2:29:17
such as loosening regulations on daycare programs and
2:29:21
car seats.
2:29:22
Collins and her husband have submitted several draft
2:29:25
executive orders to the White House.
2:29:28
Loosening regulations on car seats.
2:29:30
Yeah.
2:29:31
You want the ones that kill the baby.
2:29:33
I don't know.
2:29:35
How is that better than five thousand dollars
2:29:38
cash money?
2:29:39
Sounds to me like there's a lobbying lobby
2:29:42
going on.
2:29:43
The baby car seat lobby is getting in
2:29:45
on the action here.
2:29:46
The government can ease the burden on parents,
2:29:48
such as loosening regulations on daycare programs and
2:29:52
car seats.
2:29:53
Collins and her husband have submitted several draft
2:29:56
executive orders to the White House, including one
2:29:59
that would give a national medal of motherhood
2:30:01
to women with six or more children.
2:30:04
We don't want to shame or walk.
2:30:06
Right.
2:30:07
If she can walk to women with six
2:30:11
or more children, we don't want to shame
2:30:13
or curse anyone into having children.
2:30:15
It's really a movement about making it easier
2:30:18
for people who really like having kids to
2:30:20
have the number of kids they want.
2:30:22
We have a lot of producers who have
2:30:24
eight or nine kids.
2:30:26
God bless them.
2:30:27
I know we do.
2:30:28
And you know what they never complain about?
2:30:30
You never hear them complain about money.
2:30:33
I said, we can make it work.
2:30:35
Look at Laura Ingalls.
2:30:36
The whole hand-me-down thing works fine,
2:30:38
too, that's always ignored.
2:30:40
Yeah.
2:30:40
Hand-me-down and you can start a
2:30:43
publishing company, can make all the kids work.
2:30:45
I'm sorry, that's you.
2:30:47
Put the kids to work eventually.
2:30:48
Put the kids to work, yeah.
2:30:49
Start a home business, have them all working
2:30:52
on the assembly line.
2:30:54
It's the American way.
2:30:56
You got a farm, you got kids, you
2:30:57
need kids to work on the farm.
2:30:59
I'm all for it.
2:31:00
I encourage it.
2:31:02
I will come and give you a baby
2:31:03
bonus.
2:31:07
A big medal.
2:31:10
We should have no agenda medals for that.
2:31:13
So many ideas.
2:31:16
Well, in general, of course, I know we
2:31:21
have the clips.
2:31:21
I'm not going to look them up.
2:31:22
But this was a racist idea because what
2:31:25
they're really saying is we want more white
2:31:26
babies.
2:31:27
If they have, it'll come back again.
2:31:29
They'll start saying it.
2:31:31
They're only talking about white babies and they
2:31:34
want women to be baby factories.
2:31:35
We're in the handmade sale.
2:31:39
You can bet on it.
2:31:41
It's coming.
2:31:42
Good idea.
2:31:44
That's what immigration was about.
2:31:45
The Democrat Party idea was, hey, we're not
2:31:49
having babies.
2:31:50
Open the gates.
2:31:51
Bring them on in.
2:31:52
They're cheap.
2:31:53
Whereas the cheapest labor is your own kids.
2:31:57
Five bucks a week.
2:31:59
And I'm serious.
2:32:00
I'm not being flippant.
2:32:02
It's great for kids to be doing stuff
2:32:04
around the house.
2:32:05
If you have a family, start a side
2:32:08
hustle.
2:32:09
Have them packing up products.
2:32:13
That is truly the American way.
2:32:15
I'm not being flippant, man.
2:32:17
It's true.
2:32:18
You're the living example of that.
2:32:21
Let's play this clip on food poisoning.
2:32:26
Oh.
2:32:27
That's a segway.
2:32:28
That's a downer.
2:32:29
Help us understand just how safe our food
2:32:31
is in the U.S. Sure.
2:32:34
So the U.S. food supply is...
2:32:36
Sure, said the British lady.
2:32:38
Sure.
2:32:38
Sure.
2:32:39
Sure.
2:32:39
So the U.S. food supply is generally
2:32:42
considered safe.
2:32:43
But foodborne illness is still very common.
2:32:47
There is the equivalent, essentially, of one in
2:32:50
six Americans getting sick from foodborne illness every
2:32:53
year.
2:32:53
That's about 48 million cases annually.
2:32:56
Oh, my God.
2:32:57
How bad is that?
2:32:58
There's vocal fry.
2:32:58
And by the way, yeah, I know she's
2:33:00
got vocal fry and she's got an accent.
2:33:02
That means everybody, with every six years, everybody's
2:33:05
gotten food poisoning.
2:33:07
Yeah, well, no.
2:33:09
No.
2:33:09
And as you mentioned, there are...
2:33:10
Yeah, that's the stat.
2:33:12
One in six per year.
2:33:15
So that means every six years, everybody will
2:33:19
have food poisoning.
2:33:20
I mean, it's basically statistics.
2:33:23
Thank you for that lesson.
2:33:24
There is the equivalent, essentially, of one in
2:33:27
six Americans getting sick from foodborne illness every
2:33:30
year.
2:33:30
That's about 48 million cases annually.
2:33:33
And as you mentioned, there are a fraction
2:33:35
of those cases that end up with people
2:33:37
in hospital and even about 3,000 people
2:33:40
who estimated to die of foodborne illness every
2:33:42
year.
2:33:43
So there are some things that have improved.
2:33:45
There are testing methods that have gotten better
2:33:47
where you're able to use genetic analysis, whole
2:33:50
genome sequencing to be able to trace back
2:33:52
outbreaks to specific sources of food.
2:33:55
But rates of infection from things like listeria
2:33:57
and salmonella and E.
2:33:59
coli have not improved in the ways that
2:34:01
folks were hoping.
2:34:02
Well, this is very uplifting.
2:34:04
And you have a second one, which makes
2:34:06
it even more fun.
2:34:07
Well, I'm just saying the food supply in
2:34:10
this country is no good.
2:34:13
Oh, I don't know about one of the
2:34:14
six people.
2:34:15
There's a new video that's flown around.
2:34:17
I saw it today.
2:34:19
It's a fat, a really fat chick, a
2:34:21
big fat chick.
2:34:22
And her thing is to show what she
2:34:25
eats.
2:34:25
She has big bones.
2:34:27
Oh, no, this is Tina finds these all
2:34:30
the time.
2:34:32
Like 400 pound women and then showing what
2:34:35
they eat.
2:34:35
And it's, it's, it's, it's mesmerizing.
2:34:39
It is mesmerizing because most of the stuff's
2:34:41
coming out of packages.
2:34:43
All of it.
2:34:44
Always tearing over, tearing open little pack bags
2:34:47
and things.
2:34:47
Bags and things with barcodes.
2:34:49
All of it.
2:34:49
Bags of who knows what.
2:34:52
And they're just gobbling it all down.
2:34:54
Now, that kind of holds up with another
2:34:57
one.
2:34:57
I saw an interesting video.
2:34:59
Some, some black guy.
2:35:02
Who is talking about bitching about chicken being
2:35:06
watered back because with injections and, and he's
2:35:09
on camera eating raw chicken.
2:35:12
And that's all he's doing.
2:35:14
Well, what could possibly go wrong with that?
2:35:16
What is wrong with these people?
2:35:18
But anyway, this is part two of the
2:35:20
clip.
2:35:20
And you report a story about a pretty
2:35:22
bad E.
2:35:23
coli outbreak that hit 15 states last November.
2:35:27
And the FDA chose not to publicize this
2:35:30
outbreak.
2:35:31
Why?
2:35:32
So the FDA managed through their investigation to
2:35:35
trace the contaminated lettuce back to one farm
2:35:39
and one food processor that purchased the lettuce
2:35:42
from that grower.
2:35:43
But the agency didn't disclose who either of
2:35:45
those companies were.
2:35:46
The FDA said that they were prohibited from,
2:35:49
by federal law from disclosing that information.
2:35:53
And that essentially there wasn't any contaminated left
2:35:56
lettuce left to buy on the market.
2:35:58
So consumers didn't need that information.
2:36:01
But there are many folks I spoke to
2:36:03
who, who believe the public has a right
2:36:04
to know who those companies were.
2:36:07
The Trump administration has also laid off thousands
2:36:10
of workers from the FDA.
2:36:13
Almost the entire staff responsible for communicating these
2:36:17
outbreaks.
2:36:17
Oh, there it is.
2:36:18
You got food poisoning.
2:36:19
Blame Trump.
2:36:20
Yes, Trump's fault.
2:36:21
Are things different under Trump now for the
2:36:24
FDA and for food safety?
2:36:25
Oh, yeah.
2:36:26
So these are really significant cuts that have
2:36:28
been made to staff working on all sorts
2:36:30
of aspects of food safety, including communicating about
2:36:33
outbreaks of food.
2:36:35
They shuttered an entire food safety testing lab
2:36:37
in California.
2:36:39
And there were also almost the entire staff
2:36:42
that worked on the safety of imported food.
2:36:45
So there are significant concerns about what that
2:36:48
will mean for these programs and the impact
2:36:51
on public safety and public health.
2:36:54
The Trump administration has said that these are
2:36:57
cuts that are essentially getting rid of administrative
2:37:00
staff, that this is sort of waste in
2:37:04
federal spending.
2:37:06
And that public health won't be affected and
2:37:08
communications about outbreaks won't be affected.
2:37:11
But these are changes we have not seen
2:37:13
the likes of in any recent history.
2:37:17
We have an epidemic of vocal fry.
2:37:19
What station was this?
2:37:22
What broadcast?
2:37:23
One of the local PBS stations.
2:37:26
Well, probably WAMU maybe.
2:37:28
She's probably somebody's wife.
2:37:30
Yeah, honey, you can do it.
2:37:31
You've got a great voice for broadcast.
2:37:34
You've got a great voice for broadcast.
2:37:41
I do have a couple of tariff things
2:37:45
I think we should.
2:37:45
Oh, there's that.
2:37:47
Oh, you're giving me crap for uplifting stuff.
2:37:50
Well, terrorism.
2:37:50
No, not tariffs, not terrorism.
2:37:54
Tariffs.
2:37:55
Oh, tariff.
2:37:56
They said tariff.
2:37:57
Tariffs.
2:37:58
Not much happier than terrorism.
2:38:02
But this clip, I'm glad that this report
2:38:04
was put together.
2:38:05
Let me see.
2:38:06
This was put this together.
2:38:12
This is I think this is also from
2:38:16
Euronews.
2:38:17
It was a good report because I've seen
2:38:20
these videos.
2:38:21
There was a whole slew of them for
2:38:22
a moment there, probably about two weeks ago
2:38:25
when the tariffs just started.
2:38:27
And it's something we've discussed over the years
2:38:30
many times.
2:38:31
Of course, our thoughts are completely wrong.
2:38:34
But let's discuss after we talk about the
2:38:37
US-China trade war as it took to
2:38:40
TikTok.
2:38:41
The ongoing trade war between the US and
2:38:44
China is now all over TikTok and European
2:38:46
fashion houses have found themselves sandwiched somewhere in
2:38:49
the middle.
2:38:50
A bag from a high-end European fashion
2:38:51
house such as Hermès, Louis Vuitton or Prada
2:38:54
can cost hundreds of thousands of euros.
2:38:56
But on TikTok, individuals claiming to be Chinese
2:38:59
manufacturers say they are the ones really making
2:39:01
these goods.
2:39:02
Speaking in English and referring to prices in
2:39:04
dollars, they appear to be targeting American consumers
2:39:08
known for buying these goods.
2:39:09
For the past more than 30 years, we
2:39:11
have been OEM factory for most of the
2:39:13
luxury brands around the world.
2:39:15
Gucci, Prada, Coach, Louis Vuitton, you name it.
2:39:18
Real OEM factory for those luxury brands.
2:39:20
We are the same group of people.
2:39:24
30,000 USD.
2:39:26
And do you know how much it costs
2:39:27
from us?
2:39:27
If you buy from us, only less than
2:39:29
one-tenth of its price.
2:39:31
On their website, Hermès lists locations where it
2:39:34
produces and manufactures but does not mention China.
2:39:37
The same goes for Louis Vuitton.
2:39:39
Meanwhile, the EU stipulates that for goods to
2:39:41
be labeled made in Europe, their last substantial
2:39:44
transformation must occur in the country of production.
2:39:47
Investigative journalist Noemi Leclerc told Euroverify that the
2:39:51
majority of these TikTok videos in fact display
2:39:53
counterfeit products.
2:39:55
Leclerc added that these videos are being posted
2:39:57
as the Chinese government moves towards encouraging counterfeit
2:40:00
production in a bid to retaliate against US
2:40:03
tariffs.
2:40:03
Despite this all, the luxury goods industry is
2:40:06
shrouded in secrecy and protects the finer details
2:40:09
of its supply chain.
2:40:10
According to experts, luxury brands such as Ralph
2:40:12
Lauren and Prada do manufacture in China at
2:40:15
stages of the production process.
2:40:40
So if you're a significant manufacturer, well, I'd
2:40:42
say putting the gold lame clasp on it
2:40:47
that says Prada or Gucci or whatever is
2:40:50
probably how they get around that.
2:40:51
I think you and I are both of
2:40:53
the opinion that this is absolutely Chinese crap.
2:40:56
It's not even crap.
2:40:57
It's good stuff.
2:40:58
I've been to China enough.
2:41:00
I bought, I probably have more Armani stuff
2:41:03
that I picked up in various stores.
2:41:05
Armoni, Armoni, but okay.
2:41:07
No, it says Armani.
2:41:08
It's got the real label on there.
2:41:09
It's dynamite and it's actually a good product.
2:41:11
You wear Crocs.
2:41:13
I've never seen you in anything Armani.
2:41:15
I have never worn Crocs in my life.
2:41:17
Nah, they're Adidas knockoffs.
2:41:20
But no, I'm telling you, Armani is not
2:41:22
a, I'm not talking about the, what shoes?
2:41:24
I don't know.
2:41:24
I'm saying I've never seen you in Armani.
2:41:26
I'd love to see you.
2:41:26
No, I have shirts, shirts and ties.
2:41:30
In a tie.
2:41:31
I've never seen, you would look great in
2:41:32
a tie.
2:41:33
I have a ton of, I used to
2:41:35
collect ties.
2:41:35
I still have a huge collection of ties.
2:41:37
Okay.
2:41:37
I can take some photos of my collection.
2:41:40
Please.
2:41:40
Anyway.
2:41:41
Armani.
2:41:43
You can buy Armani over there and it's
2:41:45
just the price is like two bucks.
2:41:48
It's for the shirts.
2:41:49
Yeah.
2:41:50
And with the labels.
2:41:51
And then there's also, you can get the
2:41:53
tailor-made suits over there.
2:41:55
But then, you know, you'd probably talk them
2:41:57
into putting an Armani label in there because
2:41:59
they probably have them.
2:42:00
But it's beside the, the whole thing is
2:42:03
a joke.
2:42:03
And Korea is the same way.
2:42:04
You can go over there and buy all
2:42:06
this.
2:42:06
One time I went to Korea and I
2:42:08
bought a bunch of Eddie Bauer stuff as
2:42:09
gifts for a bunch of people when I
2:42:12
came back.
2:42:13
And it was all Eddie.
2:42:14
It just looked like Eddie Bauer stuff to
2:42:16
me.
2:42:17
And they make it all over there and
2:42:18
they have a lot of overruns.
2:42:20
And then they take the overruns and sell
2:42:22
them on the street.
2:42:24
LVMH.
2:42:24
Now they own a lot of, what is
2:42:26
LVMH?
2:42:27
Louis Vuitton Moet Hennessy.
2:42:30
Do you know what their net profit was
2:42:33
in 2024?
2:42:35
Some billions of billions.
2:42:37
13 billion.
2:42:39
Yeah.
2:42:40
Because they make, I mean, this is what
2:42:42
I liked about these videos because they show
2:42:44
you this stuff.
2:42:44
It's like, hey, these Nike shoes, two bucks.
2:42:48
Tell me it's not true.
2:42:50
Of course it's true.
2:42:51
That's how all these, this is the biggest
2:42:53
psyop.
2:42:54
This is the true magic of American marketing.
2:42:58
Is that we have convinced consumers that if
2:43:02
it has the brand on it, it's the
2:43:04
real deal.
2:43:05
It is the real deal.
2:43:08
That's the point.
2:43:09
But they're marking it up by thousands of
2:43:12
percents.
2:43:13
It's the real deal.
2:43:15
And it's marked up because it's the real
2:43:18
deal.
2:43:18
If somebody can bypass the real deal and
2:43:21
you get the best price, you get the
2:43:23
Chinese price.
2:43:25
Yeah.
2:43:25
That thousand dollar deal is like, uh, you
2:43:28
know, 50 bucks, 20 bucks, 10.
2:43:31
And where did COVID start?
2:43:32
Right there where all the Chinese come in
2:43:34
with all these bags under their arm into
2:43:36
Italy.
2:43:36
And they slap the label on.
2:43:40
They brought it.
2:43:40
Remember?
2:43:41
Yeah, of course it's true.
2:43:42
We remember it.
2:43:43
It's a part of Italy where there's all
2:43:44
these Chinese.
2:43:45
Yeah.
2:43:46
Yes.
2:43:47
And they're always coming over, going back and
2:43:49
forth.
2:43:50
What's that in your bag?
2:43:50
Oh, nothing.
2:43:51
Just a couple million dollars worth of Hermes
2:43:54
bags.
2:43:55
And so, and we discuss this always in
2:43:57
the context of Canal Street in New York.
2:43:59
I don't know if that still exists.
2:44:01
I think.
2:44:01
Yeah, it's still okay.
2:44:02
It's not what it used to be when
2:44:03
I was a kid.
2:44:04
Oh, here we go.
2:44:05
So, and then, uh, I used to go
2:44:06
buy, I bought phony watches.
2:44:10
I have a somewhat of a collection, but
2:44:14
there's some killers that are just, you wouldn't
2:44:16
know the difference.
2:44:17
They got the sweep secondhand.
2:44:19
I mean, the cheap ones don't.
2:44:20
But that, but that to me is a
2:44:21
little different.
2:44:21
A handsome, beautiful Swiss time piece that you
2:44:25
don't own.
2:44:25
You just pass it on to the next
2:44:27
generation.
2:44:28
So I take, so one of my favorite
2:44:30
things is a story.
2:44:32
One of the, I think it was associate
2:44:34
publisher of PC Magazine.
2:44:36
She was, uh, she knew I was always
2:44:37
going to, uh, picking stuff up at, uh,
2:44:41
on Canal Street.
2:44:42
She said, can you get me a Rolex?
2:44:44
A nice Rolex.
2:44:46
I said, what do you want?
2:44:47
Do you want some diamonds all around it?
2:44:48
What do you, what could, give me a,
2:44:50
so I get, she gave me a description.
2:44:51
So I went and bought her a lady's
2:44:53
Rolex.
2:44:54
Beautiful at a sweep.
2:44:55
Second, it was the more expensive ones that
2:44:57
had the sweep secondhand.
2:44:58
So it really looked legit.
2:45:00
It's got all the stampings on it.
2:45:01
But that, that's, that is clearly counterfeit.
2:45:04
Let me finish the story.
2:45:06
So I give her the Rolex.
2:45:08
It's a holy crap.
2:45:09
This was like a real Rolex.
2:45:10
And I said, yeah, very much.
2:45:11
So she puts it on and about a
2:45:13
week later, she comes up to me.
2:45:15
She says, here's the Rolex back.
2:45:17
I said, what do you, you didn't like
2:45:19
it?
2:45:19
She says, no, I was great.
2:45:20
So I knew it wasn't real and I
2:45:24
didn't feel comfortable wearing it.
2:45:27
It was just a, it was a response.
2:45:29
I did not expect.
2:45:32
That's the story.
2:45:34
Yeah.
2:45:34
The story is that people that you can
2:45:37
tell him it's the same, say, it's the
2:45:39
same exact product, the Louis Vuitton bag.
2:45:41
They would rather, you know, buy one, pay
2:45:45
the 1500 bucks instead of 15 bucks.
2:45:48
Because, you know, it's, it makes him feel
2:45:50
more comfortable.
2:45:51
The whole thing is they've been, they've been
2:45:54
brainwashed.
2:45:56
So I look at it a little differently.
2:45:59
And my hope is, I know Don Quixote,
2:46:02
I know.
2:46:03
My hope is that American consumers, which is
2:46:07
what we are.
2:46:08
We're all just consumers for the rest of
2:46:09
the, of the world.
2:46:11
That we look at that and go, huh,
2:46:13
that's kind of dumb.
2:46:16
What I'm doing is kind of dumb.
2:46:21
What you're doing, you mean by buying bags
2:46:23
at all?
2:46:24
By buying non-value for value products just
2:46:28
based on status.
2:46:31
Yeah.
2:46:32
That's, I mean, it's dumb.
2:46:35
You know, buy it.
2:46:36
Buy a good solid American product that's made
2:46:40
well and looks good.
2:46:42
I know we have to come up with
2:46:44
those products, but eventually.
2:46:45
We don't have those anymore.
2:46:47
We have the pearl boot company.
2:46:49
They're perfect.
2:46:49
Don't buy one guy.
2:46:51
Well, it's a start.
2:46:52
One guy is a start.
2:46:54
It's one guy.
2:46:55
Speaking of Rolex is an expensive watches television
2:46:58
tip for you.
2:46:59
I don't think you can watch it.
2:47:00
You don't have Apple TV plus though.
2:47:02
Do you?
2:47:02
No, you don't have that.
2:47:04
What is it that I should be watching
2:47:06
on the Apple TV plus?
2:47:07
Your Friends and Neighbors starring Jon Hamm.
2:47:12
Is it a good show?
2:47:13
Very good show.
2:47:14
Hedge fund manager gets fired.
2:47:19
I'll give you the synopsis.
2:47:21
Start stealing from his Friends and Neighbors.
2:47:25
And it's Jon Hamm.
2:47:26
It's very good.
2:47:28
He starts stealing?
2:47:29
Yeah.
2:47:29
Like a cat burglar?
2:47:31
Well, he just, yeah.
2:47:32
Like a cat burglar starts stealing, you know,
2:47:34
$300,000 watches.
2:47:36
You know, they won't miss it anyway.
2:47:41
That might be interesting.
2:47:42
Yeah.
2:47:43
But you have to get Apple TV plus.
2:47:44
I don't think that's not something you would
2:47:46
get.
2:47:47
Does it feel like a Dvorak channel?
2:47:51
Apple TV plus not happening.
2:47:53
No, I knew it.
2:47:54
I knew it.
2:47:55
I already got subscriptions to Hulu, whatever it
2:47:59
is, the top level of Hulu.
2:48:01
Disney plus.
2:48:01
So you don't get all these ads.
2:48:03
Disney plus, concierge service.
2:48:05
I don't get Disney plus.
2:48:06
Now forget Disney plus.
2:48:09
Hulu, Netflix and Amazon, that's all you need.
2:48:12
How much more entertainment feeds do you need?
2:48:15
You don't.
2:48:15
You don't.
2:48:16
I'm in total agreement with you.
2:48:18
Don't need it at all.
2:48:19
We need to come up with some good
2:48:20
American products.
2:48:22
That it's clunky and ugly, but it's American
2:48:25
and priced right.
2:48:27
We can't do it anymore.
2:48:28
I think this whole thing's a pipe dream.
2:48:30
Here's something right up your alley though.
2:48:32
Imagine this.
2:48:33
Maybe you should watch movies before you vote
2:48:35
on them.
2:48:36
Oscar voters will no longer be able to
2:48:38
skip watching some of the nominated movies.
2:48:40
It's unreal that they were able to before.
2:48:42
It is just one of the new updated
2:48:43
rules announced by the Academy of Motion Pictures,
2:48:45
Arts and Sciences.
2:48:47
Members will now be required to watch all
2:48:49
nominated films in each category in order to
2:48:51
be eligible to vote in the final round
2:48:53
of Oscar voting.
2:48:54
Hold on, stop the clip for a second.
2:48:56
This is a funny clip because I guess
2:48:59
some steering committee came along and looked at
2:49:02
all the movies that won the awards and
2:49:06
said to themselves eventually, did anybody actually watch
2:49:09
these films?
2:49:10
That's exactly what happened.
2:49:12
How do we get some movies that have
2:49:14
been winning awards suck?
2:49:16
Members will now be required to watch all
2:49:18
nominated films in each category in order to
2:49:21
be eligible to vote in the final round
2:49:23
of Oscar voting.
2:49:24
Now it's even Steven.
2:49:25
The Academy also updated its rules to clarify
2:49:27
the use of artificial intelligence in movies.
2:49:31
It says the technology will not disqualify a
2:49:33
film from being able to nab an Oscar
2:49:36
nomination.
2:49:36
Buried the lead on that one too.
2:49:39
Where's the outrage?
2:49:42
Scaramanga has a shot.
2:49:44
He does.
2:49:45
In the ultra short movie category of 30
2:49:49
seconds or less, only published ever on X,
2:49:52
Francisco Scaramanga.
2:49:56
I thought that, yeah, I thought it was
2:49:58
interesting.
2:49:59
Here's the story.
2:50:00
Yeah, you play the great China story.
2:50:02
The great China.
2:50:03
Earlier today in the Eastern District Court of
2:50:06
New York, Linda Sun and her husband, co
2:50:08
-defendant Chris Hu, appeared alongside their attorneys for
2:50:11
a court conference.
2:50:13
The polished look couple allegedly earned millions of
2:50:16
dollars in kickbacks for their ties to the
2:50:18
Chinese regime.
2:50:20
During the court meeting, a prosecutor revealed that
2:50:23
they are finalizing Chinese translations of evidence against
2:50:26
Sun.
2:50:27
Those include text messages, emails, and other communications
2:50:30
between Sun and Chinese officials.
2:50:32
These materials are expected to be made public
2:50:34
during the trial.
2:50:36
Sun served as New York Governor Kathy Hochul's
2:50:38
top aide in charge of Asian affairs.
2:50:41
In 2023, Sun was fired for misconduct without
2:50:45
specifying reasons.
2:50:46
Last September, federal law enforcement arrested her and
2:50:49
her husband.
2:50:51
They now face multiple criminal accounts.
2:50:53
The Sun is accused of acting as an
2:50:55
unregistered foreign agent of communist China, making her
2:50:59
case one of the most high profile cases
2:51:01
of its kind.
2:51:02
The government accuses Sun of furthering Beijing's interest
2:51:06
while being a state official, including disclosing internal
2:51:09
COVID-related meetings to Chinese diplomats and blocking
2:51:13
Taiwanese officials' interactions with two New York governors.
2:51:16
Images show Sun had attended multiple meetings hosted
2:51:19
by China's spy agency and other state entities.
2:51:23
Yeah, we had that clip.
2:51:25
We had that story.
2:51:26
It was buried.
2:51:28
This is from NTD.
2:51:29
Where's the mainstream media talking about this Kathy
2:51:33
Hochul and Governor Cuomo's aide?
2:51:35
They finally busted her.
2:51:37
I mean, they really threw the book at
2:51:38
her.
2:51:39
Well, you had a three by three even
2:51:41
on this.
2:51:41
Yeah, but they haven't followed up at all.
2:51:45
You want to play one of those, the
2:51:46
NBC version from September 2024?
2:51:49
Sure.
2:51:50
The former top aide to New York Governor
2:51:52
Kathy Hochul was arrested today on charges of
2:51:55
acting as a secret agent of the Chinese
2:51:57
government.
2:51:58
Chief Justice Contributor Jonathan Deans is following this.
2:52:01
And John, according to prosecutors, how did this
2:52:03
work?
2:52:04
Yeah, well, prosecutors say Linda Sun betrayed her
2:52:06
official office by instead acting on requests of
2:52:10
Chinese communist government officials.
2:52:13
Sun is charged with acting as an unregistered
2:52:15
foreign agent.
2:52:16
Her husband was also arrested today.
2:52:18
He's accused of laundering millions of dollars from
2:52:21
China into the U.S. The couple pleaded
2:52:23
not guilty in federal court.
2:52:25
According to the indictment, the scheme went on
2:52:27
for years.
2:52:28
In return, Sun and her husband were allegedly
2:52:31
given business opportunities in China and luxury gifts.
2:52:34
The FBI says the pair used that money
2:52:36
to buy a $4 million home on Long
2:52:39
Island and a $2 million condo in Hawaii.
2:52:42
Governor Hochul's office says Sun was fired last
2:52:45
year after evidence of misconduct was discovered, Lester.
2:52:49
Yeah, so it just covered up?
2:52:52
It just ended right there.
2:52:53
Yeah, well, Hochul is the queen, man.
2:52:55
She's like the Red Queen.
2:52:57
You can't go messing with her.
2:53:00
Before you know it, you get Eric Adams.
2:53:02
Poor guy.
2:53:05
All right, two-minute warning.
2:53:07
Do you have one more clip you want
2:53:08
to get in there?
2:53:09
I think I may have had, since you
2:53:11
mentioned Eric Adams, I may actually have an
2:53:13
Eric Adams clip.
2:53:16
What do we got?
2:53:18
Yeah, make sure you stay on the mic,
2:53:20
though.
2:53:21
Here, Rikers Island fiasco.
2:53:24
Two-parter.
2:53:25
Anne Holman today also criticized New York City
2:53:27
officials for blocking the mayor's executive order that
2:53:29
gives ICE agents access to Rikers Island jail.
2:53:33
NTD's Arlene Richards has the latest.
2:53:35
A clash between Mayor Eric Adams and New
2:53:38
York City officials has led to a court
2:53:41
order on Monday blocking federal agents from access
2:53:44
to Rikers Island jail.
2:53:46
Where borders are, Tom Holman says several terrorist
2:53:49
gang members are being held.
2:53:51
You got the city council filing a lawsuit
2:53:53
to shut down our memorandum of understanding, the
2:53:57
executive order he signed to get us in
2:53:58
Rikers Island.
2:53:59
A New York judge ordered city officials to
2:54:02
temporarily halt a plan allowing federal immigration agents
2:54:05
to operate within the Rikers Island jail complex.
2:54:09
Judge Mary Rosado barred the city from taking
2:54:11
any steps toward negotiating, signing, or implementing any
2:54:15
memorandum of understanding with the federal government before
2:54:18
an April 25th hearing in a suit challenging
2:54:22
the plan.
2:54:23
Adams said years ago, city council member Robert
2:54:26
Holden suggested ICE presence at Rikers Island.
2:54:29
It was interesting.
2:54:31
The first person that brought that to me
2:54:34
about utilizing Rikers, ICE on Rikers was Councilman
2:54:41
Holden.
2:54:42
This is before this administration took off.
2:54:46
Holden reached out.
2:54:48
As a matter of fact, I got a
2:54:49
few texts.
2:54:49
What is wrong with him?
2:54:51
He can't, he can't get three words out
2:54:53
at the same time, concurrently.
2:54:59
Rikers, ICE on Rikers was Councilman Holden.
2:55:03
This is before this administration took off.
2:55:06
Holden reached out.
2:55:08
As a matter of fact, I got a
2:55:09
few text messages from him that's saying, listen,
2:55:12
why aren't we doing this?
2:55:14
Holden said with Adams' permission, immigration and customs
2:55:17
agents were able to successfully collaborate with state
2:55:21
and local law enforcement, leading to the indictment
2:55:24
of 27 suspected members of Venezuelan gang Trende
2:55:27
Aragua.
2:55:30
This is out of control, this resistance.
2:55:39
Yeah.
2:55:40
By the Democrats.
2:55:42
Now they want to let Rikers, the guys
2:55:44
that are in there, they can just go
2:55:45
grab them.
2:55:46
But no, no, no.
2:55:48
Unbelievable.
2:55:48
This is part two.
2:55:49
We send a strong message to Trende Aragua,
2:55:51
we're going to keep doing this to every
2:55:53
TDA member, MS-13 members removed from the
2:55:56
country.
2:55:57
Attorney General Pam Bondi announced on Tuesday that
2:56:00
27 alleged members or affiliates of Trende Aragua
2:56:04
had been charged under the RICO statute, a
2:56:07
law with widespread application that was historically used
2:56:11
to break up a mob organization.
2:56:13
ICE agents previously had a presence on Rikers
2:56:16
Island, but they were banned from operating there
2:56:19
in 2014 under New York City's sanctuary laws.
2:56:23
In February, Adams announced he would allow agents
2:56:26
to return to Rikers to assist with gang
2:56:28
and drug related investigations.
2:56:31
Council members in their lawsuit accused Adams of
2:56:34
agreeing to plan as a way to pay
2:56:36
off the Trump administration in exchange for dropping
2:56:39
criminal charges against him.
2:56:41
Oh man, they're still doing that.
2:56:44
It's all no good.
2:56:46
This is not a good way to go
2:56:47
out.
2:56:49
No, well, you mean of the show?
2:56:52
Yeah, of the show.
2:56:52
Yeah, exactly.
2:56:53
Oh, do I have anything funny?
2:56:55
Yeah, no, I got nothing.
2:56:56
I shot my wad on the funny.
2:56:58
I'm all done.
2:56:59
We should have done the...
2:57:01
I could do the faded tattoo.
2:57:03
Faded tattoo is good.
2:57:04
Okay.
2:57:05
All right.
2:57:05
This is your last chance.
2:57:07
This is it.
2:57:07
Sure.
2:57:07
This is all right.
2:57:08
In 2021, a company announced a new kind
2:57:11
of temporary tattoo, one designed to fade after
2:57:14
nine to 15 months.
2:57:16
Ephemeral Tattoo is the company, and it was
2:57:19
perfect for Ramey Isofano.
2:57:22
Someone who knew that they did not want
2:57:24
a permanent tattoo ever.
2:57:26
Isofano says tattoos are cool.
2:57:28
She's just not a long-term commitment kind
2:57:29
of girl.
2:57:30
So a few years ago, she thought, what's
2:57:32
the worst that could happen?
2:57:33
Little did I know that almost three years
2:57:36
later, my silly chicken on a skateboard tattoo
2:57:39
would still be on my upper arm.
2:57:42
Ouch.
2:57:42
Emily Kager got her ephemeral tattoo in 2022.
2:57:47
She's the proud owner of two dogs, Shaggy
2:57:49
Goldendoodles.
2:57:51
And she thought, why not get one in
2:57:53
space with an astronaut?
2:57:55
And let's even throw a few stars around
2:57:57
them.
2:57:58
I actually didn't even see the final design
2:57:59
until the day of, which at the time
2:58:02
felt fine because I wasn't expecting it to
2:58:04
stick around forever.
2:58:06
And yet Kager's space dog is also still
2:58:09
around.
2:58:09
Almost three years later, she said she recently
2:58:11
had to cover it in a foreign bathhouse
2:58:13
where exposed tattoos are not permitted.
2:58:16
Well, not ever.
2:58:17
Well, I'm glad that our tax money is
2:58:19
still going to NPR.
2:58:21
That is really good.
2:58:22
The faded tattoo story.
2:58:25
Excellent, John.
2:58:25
Excellent.
2:58:26
If you were wondering what's going to happen
2:58:28
next, we got tip of the day, we
2:58:30
got end of show mixes, we got nights,
2:58:32
we got Commodores, we got meetups, we got
2:58:34
all kinds of stuff.
2:58:35
I'm going to show my support by donating
2:58:38
to No Agenda.
2:58:39
Imagine all the people who could do that.
2:58:41
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
2:58:47
First, we'll give you a smattering of funny
2:58:51
little one-liners from the people who supported
2:58:54
us $50 and above.
2:58:56
We want to thank everybody as always for
2:58:58
supporting the show financially so that we can
2:59:00
continue to do this as a public service
2:59:02
and never, ever have to go to a
2:59:04
concierge level.
2:59:05
John is going to read them for us.
2:59:07
Yeah, I am.
2:59:07
As a matter of fact, this is exactly
2:59:09
what I'm going to do.
2:59:10
Starting with Ian Field, $100 parts unknown.
2:59:14
Dakota Cole in Sherwood, Oregon, a hundred.
2:59:18
Ryan Rickenhagen in Townsend, Georgia, $100.
2:59:28
He's spreading the ITM gospel in Southern Georgia.
2:59:32
All right.
2:59:34
Good barbecue down there.
2:59:35
Sir Chris, not a spook in Arlington, Virginia,
2:59:39
which you know what that means.
2:59:40
He is a spook, obviously.
2:59:43
$88.73. Kevin McLaughlin, there he is, $808.
2:59:48
He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America
2:59:50
and boobs.
2:59:52
That's followed by Cameron Linga in North Branch,
2:59:57
Minnesota.
2:59:57
And he says he's here and $77.33
3:00:00
from him.
3:00:00
And he's here for John's chimes.
3:00:03
The chimes, yes.
3:00:06
Yeah, that's a good thing to be here
3:00:08
for.
3:00:08
Brian Kaufman, Scottsdale, Arizona, $75.75. Matthew Elwhart
3:00:14
in Weatherford, Texas, $6.006. Andrew Foreman in
3:00:20
Boca Raton, Florida.
3:00:23
He needs some jobs karma, so we'll give
3:00:26
him that.
3:00:26
Oh, listen to what he says here.
3:00:27
He says he's facing a reorgan work.
3:00:29
It's a testimonial.
3:00:30
And Linda Lou Patkin has me prepared, thanks
3:00:33
to the show.
3:00:35
Huh?
3:00:36
$55.55 from him.
3:00:38
And he also says the show keeps him
3:00:40
sane.
3:00:42
Well, that's because we're not concierge level.
3:00:46
Carl Vogler in Dillon Beach, California, $55.10.
3:00:51
Sir Luke in London, UK, $55.00. He
3:00:54
wants collective karma for everybody.
3:00:57
Brett Morgan, $52.72. This is a newsletter
3:01:02
donation.
3:01:04
Newsletter donation.
3:01:06
That's the only one.
3:01:07
Sibode Pet in Metairie, Louisiana, $52.72. Here's
3:01:15
a dollar for each one of Dorian Gray's
3:01:17
50 kids, plus fees.
3:01:22
Baron Henry of Outpost West, and he's in
3:01:26
Rancho Palos Verdes, $52.42. Jeff Valks, he's
3:01:35
also in London, but he's in London, Ontario,
3:01:37
Canada, $50.50. And he wants karma, so
3:01:40
we have a lot of karma.
3:01:42
Karma's coming, yeah.
3:01:48
Priya in Korea, there you go, $50.50.
3:01:53
And it's a birthday shout-out to her
3:01:55
husband.
3:01:57
I would love to surprise him.
3:01:58
We are driving back home after our camping
3:02:00
trip.
3:02:01
Thank you so much.
3:02:03
Well, that's nice.
3:02:05
Happy birthday to Nate in shining armor.
3:02:08
Hope you enjoyed your phone inside the drawer
3:02:10
moments looking up at the stars.
3:02:12
With love, Priya in Korea.
3:02:14
Forrest Martin, $50.05. Andrew Benz in Imperial,
3:02:18
Missouri, $50.05. And now the rest are
3:02:20
$50 donors.
3:02:21
There's a few of them.
3:02:22
Starting with Douglas Mook in Cochranton, Pennsylvania.
3:02:32
Bold City Virtual Tours in Jacksonville Beach, Florida.
3:02:38
Alexa Delgado in Aptos.
3:02:41
Melissa Alvarez in Ponte Vedra Beach, Florida.
3:02:47
A lot of beach lovers today.
3:02:49
Brett Denton in Boise.
3:02:52
Angus McBride in Manchester, UK.
3:02:55
We got some Brits today.
3:02:56
We do.
3:02:57
That's good.
3:02:59
Good.
3:03:00
Robert Vinson in Mars, Pennsylvania.
3:03:02
Sir Greg in Newport, North Carolina.
3:03:06
And last on our list, short list, I
3:03:07
might add, very short.
3:03:09
Michael Myers in Mandeville, Louisiana.
3:03:14
I want to thank everybody that helped us
3:03:16
out here on show 1758.
3:03:21
And again, thanks to our executive and associate
3:03:23
executive producers.
3:03:24
We appreciate what you do.
3:03:26
You've got your credits.
3:03:27
And of course, everybody who came in under
3:03:28
$50.
3:03:29
We never mentioned those for reasons of anonymity.
3:03:32
And we always have those sustaining donors.
3:03:34
Any amount, any frequency, it is so much
3:03:37
appreciated.
3:03:38
Karma.
3:03:39
So we want Karma and Jobs Karma.
3:03:41
So we'll add the Jaws.
3:03:42
We'll add a goat to it.
3:03:43
Jobs.
3:03:44
Jobs.
3:03:44
Jobs and Jobs.
3:03:45
Let's vote for Jobs.
3:03:51
Karma.
3:03:52
Noagendadonations.com.
3:03:53
Please support the show.
3:03:54
Noagendadonations.com.
3:04:00
And there we have Sir Haggis wishing his
3:04:02
brother Sir Ramen Noodles and belated happy birthday.
3:04:04
He turned 44 on 420.
3:04:07
Ria in Korea.
3:04:08
Happy birthday to her husband, Nate.
3:04:09
They're on their way back.
3:04:10
Oh, it's so nice.
3:04:11
And Sir Haggis himself turns 50 years old.
3:04:13
Happy birthday to him.
3:04:15
And everybody who celebrates his birthday today on
3:04:18
behalf of the best podcast in the universe.
3:04:31
And that's where Baron Steve Bansra of the
3:04:33
BNA comes in.
3:04:34
He upgraded thanks to an additional $1,000
3:04:37
over time that he supported to the show.
3:04:39
So he can now proudly call himself Viscount
3:04:42
Steve Bansra of BNA.
3:04:44
And we appreciate your contribution, Sir.
3:04:46
We have two Commodores.
3:04:48
It officially ends May 1st.
3:04:50
So if you want that handsome Commodore certificate,
3:04:53
you got to hurry up.
3:04:54
Go to noagendadonations.com.
3:04:56
Or is it noagendarings.com?
3:04:58
Or is it noagendacommodores.com?
3:05:00
Where can we find out about the Commodore
3:05:01
promotion, John?
3:05:02
Is it noagenderings.com?
3:05:04
I think at noagenderings you'll find it.
3:05:05
Okay.
3:05:06
We welcome the following two Commodores.
3:05:08
Commodore Cary Case and Commodore Mike.
3:05:12
Both of you now official Commodores of the
3:05:14
knowage of the show.
3:05:16
Commodores, arriving.
3:05:19
We got a layaway note, night note, from
3:05:21
Pierre Lamouche.
3:05:23
Hey, that was a pretty good bosun whistle
3:05:24
you got there.
3:05:27
Pierre says, Hey, John and Adam, in the
3:05:30
morning.
3:05:30
Or in my case, in the afternoon.
3:05:31
A bit long overdue, but my donations have
3:05:33
passed the threshold.
3:05:34
Time to make it official.
3:05:36
Chevalier.
3:05:37
Chevalier Pierre Lamouche de Francophine.
3:05:41
Maybe chevalier.
3:05:42
Chevalier.
3:05:43
What is a chevalier?
3:05:44
It's like a horseman.
3:05:45
I don't know, but I was thinking that
3:05:46
might replace the Commodore thing.
3:05:48
Chevalier.
3:05:49
Look that up while I'm reading here.
3:05:51
Chevalier.
3:05:52
I'll look it up.
3:05:52
Pierre Lamouche de Francophonie.
3:05:55
Chevalier.
3:05:56
Hoping for something with more culture at the
3:05:58
Fête du Round Table.
3:05:59
Normandie Brie from Costco.
3:06:02
Wow.
3:06:03
Oh, man.
3:06:05
Did I order these?
3:06:06
Normandie Brie from Costco.
3:06:09
Orangina.
3:06:09
Oh, yeah.
3:06:10
I don't like Orangina.
3:06:11
I think it was more classic than a
3:06:12
Costco.
3:06:13
And some vache qui rit, which isn't that
3:06:16
the laughing cow?
3:06:18
Yes.
3:06:18
Yes, that's exactly what it is.
3:06:20
And for the other night, cheese for other
3:06:23
nights, some culture.
3:06:26
Pardon me.
3:06:26
Chevalier is a knight and a member of
3:06:29
certain orders of knighthood of modern France.
3:06:33
Such as the Legion of Honor.
3:06:35
I like that, Chevalier.
3:06:37
I knew it was a knight.
3:06:38
I knew it had Cheval.
3:06:39
I knew it had something to do with
3:06:40
a horse.
3:06:42
Historical British.
3:06:43
Also the title of James and Charles Stewart.
3:06:46
Pretenders to the English throne.
3:06:48
So this is our one French guy.
3:06:50
He says, please give him our one French
3:06:52
guy.
3:06:53
This is it.
3:06:53
Please give Emmanuel Macron double goat karma with
3:06:56
hopes he might repent and break up the
3:06:58
father-son duo.
3:07:00
Because we all know.
3:07:01
Repenting.
3:07:02
Is he talking about his wife?
3:07:05
His wife being his father?
3:07:06
I don't know.
3:07:08
I think so.
3:07:10
Repenting sufficiently to free the French people from
3:07:12
the grip of EU tyranny.
3:07:14
If his demons can be cast out, he
3:07:16
might even let Marine Le Pen have a
3:07:18
fair election as next president.
3:07:20
Oui, oui, oui.
3:07:21
All the way home.
3:07:23
Merci for your ongoing courage.
3:07:24
May your exit strategy remain every loose serve.
3:07:27
Sorry, but we love you guys.
3:07:29
Selfishly want to keep you around.
3:07:31
Pierre Lamouche.
3:07:33
Yeah, I don't know what I'm doing.
3:07:34
I'm doing my best here.
3:07:36
So that means that we not only knight
3:07:38
him, but we also knight two other gentlemen.
3:07:41
So if you can grab your blade there
3:07:42
for a second.
3:07:43
Yeah, I got it right here.
3:07:44
Very good.
3:07:45
Here we go.
3:07:46
So step on up here.
3:07:47
Pierre Lamouche.
3:07:49
Marc Kaczorski.
3:07:51
And Schwede.
3:07:52
All three of you now become knights of
3:07:54
the Noah-Jenner roundtable.
3:07:55
Or as some would say, a chevalier.
3:07:56
So I hereby pronounce the KD as Sir
3:08:00
Chevalier Pierre Lamouche de Francophonie.
3:08:03
Sir Red Devil and Sir Schwede for you
3:08:06
at the roundtable.
3:08:07
By request, we have Hookers and Blow, Rent
3:08:09
Boys, and Chardonnay.
3:08:10
But also we have Sapporo and Sushi, Bellhaven,
3:08:13
Scottish Ale on tap, of course.
3:08:15
Normandy Bree from Costco, Orangina, and a little
3:08:18
bit of the Vashti.
3:08:19
Along with that, we always have the Bonget,
3:08:21
Suburban, Sparkling Cider, Nesquik, Ginger Gerbils, Breast Milk,
3:08:24
and Pablum.
3:08:24
And of course, the mutton and the mead.
3:08:27
Head over to NoahJennerRings.com.
3:08:29
Gentlemen, that is where you will find the
3:08:31
beautiful and handsome knight ring.
3:08:32
It's a signet ring.
3:08:33
So we give you two sticks of wax.
3:08:36
You can do anything you want with it.
3:08:37
But we suggest using it to seal your
3:08:39
important correspondence.
3:08:41
And as always, a certificate of authenticity.
3:08:43
Welcome both to the roundtable.
3:08:45
And thank you so much for your courage
3:08:46
and for supporting the best podcast in the
3:08:48
universe.
3:08:56
Yes, the Noah Jenner Meetups can be found
3:08:58
at NoahJennerMeetups.com.
3:09:00
This is where you get together with other
3:09:02
slaves of Gitmo Nation all around Gitmo Nation.
3:09:05
It is a global phenomenon.
3:09:06
People like to organize these all the time
3:09:08
and frequently.
3:09:09
Again, you can find the list and the
3:09:11
calendar at NoahJennerMeetups.com.
3:09:13
Connection gives you protection when you go to
3:09:14
these meetups.
3:09:15
These are the people who will help you
3:09:17
out.
3:09:17
They are truly your first responders in an
3:09:19
emergency.
3:09:19
I've been requesting people put their servers into
3:09:23
their meetup reports.
3:09:24
And the TooManyEggs.com Southwest New Hampshire Meetup
3:09:27
took it very seriously.
3:09:29
In the morning, gentlemen, this is Crypto Duke.
3:09:31
We're at the TooManyEggs.com Meetup number 11
3:09:35
here in Keene, New Hampshire at Margarita's.
3:09:37
I'm going to pass the phone around to
3:09:39
other people here.
3:09:40
Thank you, Josh.
3:09:41
Sirloin of beef.
3:09:42
How are you doing, guys?
3:09:43
It is an interesting day because we had
3:09:46
months ago a trainee waiter who is actually
3:09:50
six months ago.
3:09:53
And at this point, he has announced he
3:09:55
is leaving.
3:09:56
So we had his first day in this
3:09:58
position and his last day in this position.
3:10:01
You will hear from him later.
3:10:02
His name is Chase.
3:10:03
Hey, you two.
3:10:04
It's Joanne.
3:10:05
Thank you for your courage.
3:10:07
Hi, guys.
3:10:08
This is Chase.
3:10:09
And yeah, they came in when I was
3:10:11
first starting here about six months ago training.
3:10:15
And now today comes my last day and
3:10:18
I got him again.
3:10:18
And obviously, it was great.
3:10:21
You know, I try to do my best
3:10:22
and I just hope that everyone loves the
3:10:24
place.
3:10:25
You know, come back.
3:10:26
And I got my trainee Jade here with
3:10:28
me today as well.
3:10:28
So kind of a full circle moment going
3:10:31
from the trainee to the trainer.
3:10:33
But yeah, now I'm wrapping up here.
3:10:35
Here you go.
3:10:36
In the morning.
3:10:37
Yeah, in the morning, guys.
3:10:39
All right, let's review.
3:10:40
No, that was not what I was talking
3:10:42
about.
3:10:42
A quick hello.
3:10:42
I'm the server.
3:10:43
I love no agenda.
3:10:44
But anyway, thank you very much, Chase.
3:10:46
A couple of meetups taking place today.
3:10:48
The North Georgia two-year anniversary meetup, six
3:10:50
o'clock at Cherry Street Brewing in Alpharetta,
3:10:52
Georgia.
3:10:53
It's like a party in Sacramento in a
3:10:55
few hours.
3:10:56
It's six o'clock at Sackyard in Sacramento,
3:10:58
California.
3:10:59
On Saturday, the No Agenda Central Ohio meetup.
3:11:02
That kicks off at noon at Jackie O's
3:11:04
in Columbus.
3:11:05
And the Michigan Local One tariff-free meetup.
3:11:08
No tariffs.
3:11:09
Three must have some kind of concierge package.
3:11:13
333 Brewer Becker in Brighton, Michigan.
3:11:16
That's Saturday.
3:11:17
Also on Saturday, Flight of the No Agenda
3:11:18
number 62.
3:11:19
Leo Bravo does it again.
3:11:21
333 at Proud Bird in Los Angeles.
3:11:24
And our last meetup also on Saturday.
3:11:26
Escape from Chicago at four o'clock in
3:11:28
Reggie's in Chicago, Illinois.
3:11:30
I guess you go there and then you
3:11:31
plan your escape.
3:11:33
Many more happening around the world.
3:11:34
Go to noagendameetups.com.
3:11:36
This is where you can find every single
3:11:38
one of them.
3:11:38
If you can't find one near you, here's
3:11:40
a bright idea.
3:11:41
Start one yourself.
3:11:43
noagendameetups.com.
3:11:44
Sometimes you want to go hang out with
3:11:47
all the nights and days.
3:11:50
Bum, bum, bum.
3:11:51
You want to be where you won't be.
3:11:54
Triggered or hella lame.
3:11:56
You want to be where everybody feels the
3:11:59
same.
3:12:02
It's like a party.
3:12:04
It is just like a party.
3:12:07
Just like a party.
3:12:09
And let's see.
3:12:11
Oh, yes, it's time for the ISOs.
3:12:13
This is where John comes up with some
3:12:14
stupid AI stuff.
3:12:16
And I tried to beat him.
3:12:18
I tried to beat the machine.
3:12:19
This is now my...
3:12:21
Do you even have ISOs today?
3:12:24
No.
3:12:25
You have no ISOs?
3:12:25
So your whole premise is bullcrap.
3:12:28
Well, you just gave up.
3:12:30
It's like because you couldn't come up.
3:12:32
You didn't want to pay the 20 bucks
3:12:34
to 11 labs to come up with new
3:12:36
voices.
3:12:37
You just gave up.
3:12:39
No, I've got some in advance.
3:12:41
I'm having an outsider do some.
3:12:44
Why did you give up for today?
3:12:46
You have to have at least one ISO.
3:12:47
I have nothing because I just completely dropped
3:12:50
the ball.
3:12:50
OK, well, I only have two.
3:12:52
Bring up that best podcast in the universe.
3:12:56
That was no good.
3:12:57
That sucks.
3:12:58
I think this is the one.
3:12:59
I'm not AI Boomer.
3:13:03
That's no good.
3:13:04
This is better than anything, than nothing.
3:13:06
The first one was better.
3:13:08
I'm not AI Boomer.
3:13:09
I'm not AI Boomer.
3:13:11
You don't like that one?
3:13:12
No, I can't.
3:13:13
I can't understand her.
3:13:16
It's the kid named Wave.
3:13:18
Well, but then what are we going to
3:13:19
do?
3:13:20
Would you play the first one again?
3:13:22
Hold on a second.
3:13:23
I can cut it off.
3:13:24
I mean, I could make it short.
3:13:25
It's too long.
3:13:31
This is bad.
3:13:33
But I have this one.
3:13:34
That's a lot of tips.
3:13:38
I can't hear that one either.
3:13:40
Bring up that best podcast in the universe.
3:13:43
Well, we're going to have to go with
3:13:45
that one.
3:13:45
If you take the second yeah off, that
3:13:46
would be OK.
3:13:47
The second yeah is gone.
3:13:49
But now it is time for the moment
3:13:50
you've all been waiting for.
3:13:51
This is the original John Tip of the
3:13:53
Day.
3:14:05
So I've been getting these.
3:14:07
This is another.
3:14:08
This happens about once a month.
3:14:09
Do a cleaning tip.
3:14:13
And this is another one.
3:14:15
And these are all these brands, these brands
3:14:17
I never heard of, but they seem to
3:14:19
make really good quality products.
3:14:22
And this one in particular is Grandma's Secret
3:14:26
Spot Remover.
3:14:27
This is a laundry spray that has no
3:14:30
chlorine, no bleach.
3:14:32
I need this.
3:14:33
Toxin free.
3:14:35
A stain remover for clothes.
3:14:36
A fabric stain that takes out oil.
3:14:39
Blood, paint and pet stains.
3:14:43
Wow.
3:14:44
Goes for about 18 bucks for two bottles.
3:14:46
You can get it on Amazon and elsewhere,
3:14:48
but it's called.
3:14:49
But the brand is Grandma's Secret.
3:14:52
Now, does it also take out wine and
3:14:54
tomato sauce?
3:14:55
Because those are my two favorite spots to
3:14:56
make.
3:14:57
It should.
3:15:00
OK.
3:15:02
Kind of an anti-climax there.
3:15:04
Well, I don't know.
3:15:05
I don't know.
3:15:06
I haven't used it.
3:15:07
This is one of Mimi's tips.
3:15:08
You know, Bill O'Reilly, at least he
3:15:10
uses the stuff that he recommends.
3:15:13
This is like a Mimi tip.
3:15:15
There's a couple of things in abeyance that
3:15:16
I put aside because I haven't used them,
3:15:18
but people have recommended them.
3:15:19
I have to go check them out.
3:15:21
But Mimi, I trust her.
3:15:23
She knows what she's doing when it comes
3:15:24
to cleaning.
3:15:25
Why don't we just get Mimi on the
3:15:27
show for the tip of the day?
3:15:29
This is one tip from Mimi and I'll
3:15:31
tell her that you hate her.
3:15:35
No, because I need the tax information.
3:15:37
Don't tell her just yet.
3:15:38
Wait until I get the K-1.
3:15:40
All right, everybody.
3:15:41
There it is.
3:15:41
John C.
3:15:41
Dvorak, tip of the day.
3:15:42
tipoftheday.net and noagendafund.com No,
3:15:56
ow.
3:15:56
No concierge level needed for your tip of
3:15:59
the day here at the No Agenda Show.
3:16:00
In fact, you don't need anything to enjoy
3:16:03
the media deconstruction that we bring to you
3:16:05
twice a week now in our 18th year.
3:16:07
We are proud to do it as a
3:16:09
public service.
3:16:10
However, if you get any value from the
3:16:12
show, consider supporting us.
3:16:15
noagendadonations.com Yeah, and get in on the
3:16:17
Commodore ship before it ends.
3:16:19
Yes, and the Chevalier ship.
3:16:22
We have three end of show mixes, which
3:16:25
are all brand new.
3:16:26
Sir Michael Anthony.
3:16:27
We got Professor Jay Jones and Sound Guy
3:16:29
Steve.
3:16:29
It's been a while.
3:16:30
He's back as well.
3:16:31
I think you'll enjoy them.
3:16:32
They are definitely ones for the archives.
3:16:34
And coming up next on the live stream
3:16:37
in your modern podcast app, trollroom.io, noagenda
3:16:40
.stream, the Millennial Media Offensive.
3:16:42
This is already episode 166.
3:16:47
Everybody loves the MMO show.
3:16:48
It's a big hit over there in the
3:16:50
troll room.
3:16:52
And I am coming to you from the
3:16:53
heart of the Texas Hill Country where JFK
3:16:58
Jr is coming back.
3:16:59
And any minute now, we're going to be
3:17:00
under martial law.
3:17:02
In the morning, everybody.
3:17:03
I'm Adam Curry.
3:17:04
I'm from Northern Silicon Valley where we don't
3:17:06
see martial law coming in, but the fog
3:17:10
is coming in.
3:17:11
I'm John C.
3:17:12
DeVore.
3:17:12
We return on Sunday.
3:17:13
Please join us then.
3:17:15
And remember us again, noagendadonations.com for a
3:17:17
good time.
3:17:18
Go to noagendadonations.com.
3:17:20
Until then, adios, mofos, hui hui and such.
3:17:23
Hello, this is Klaus Schwab, the founder of
3:17:28
the World Economic Forum.
3:17:31
You may have heard of me by now.
3:17:33
I am retiring.
3:17:36
Yavol, yavol.
3:17:38
I give up.
3:17:39
The new world order is kaput.
3:17:42
We are losing.
3:17:43
But we will do everything in our power
3:17:47
to drag you down with us.
3:17:50
This is not over.
3:17:51
Hasta la vista, baby.
3:17:54
By September, we will know what has caused
3:17:56
the autism epidemic.
3:17:58
Government will know what causes autism by September,
3:18:02
you guys.
3:18:02
Mark it on your calendars.
3:18:04
Maybe it's some spray that we spray that
3:18:06
other places don't spray.
3:18:07
No, no, Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
3:18:09
Those of us who didn't get it never
3:18:11
regretted not taking it.
3:18:13
Time will tell whether he totally cucks out.
3:18:16
Why are there so many kids on this
3:18:20
planet?
3:18:20
Scientists do not know exactly what caused it.
3:18:23
What made the numbers rise?
3:18:26
Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
3:18:29
Autistic babies have increased exponentially.
3:18:31
It's an illusion.
3:18:34
Pharma got nothing to hide.
3:18:38
Eighty percent of autism is vaccine-induced.
3:18:41
Proud we were so, but most prefer deceivers.
3:18:46
Autism experts.
3:18:47
Something went wrong with vaccines.
3:18:51
Now, now, Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
3:18:53
One day he'll find it.
3:18:55
Partly compromises or gradually reveals the vaccine action
3:18:59
proof.
3:18:59
Bobby, the best Kennedy.
3:19:03
Virology is a fake science entirely pretending the
3:19:06
vaccines are an extension of that fictional science.
3:19:09
Who said that every stone could be inspected
3:19:14
when studies don't go so far?
3:19:18
They just need a couple more centuries to
3:19:20
do some research, you guys.
3:19:21
Great release, copy that, most dupes believe.
3:19:26
Scientists do not know exactly what caused it.
3:19:30
The cause of autism is anti-sensicism.
3:19:35
Kennedy knows it's vaccines.
3:19:40
Watching them roll up the sleeves.
3:19:44
Bitch about Coachella.
3:19:46
One day he'll find it, the spectrum connection.
3:19:52
Bobby, the best Kennedy.
3:19:56
What Trump did with this comment, and I
3:19:59
have a term for this, what Trump's doing,
3:20:02
it's called the blurt.
3:20:03
The blurt, the blurt.
3:20:06
This is basically what he did with, they're
3:20:08
eating the dog.
3:20:10
What I say is what I say, and
3:20:13
honestly, if you don't like it, I'm sorry.
3:20:15
They're bringing drugs, they're bringing crime, they're rapists.
3:20:20
This is the legacy of Hillary Clinton.
3:20:24
Death, destruction, terrorism, and weakness.
3:20:29
In Springfield, they're eating the dogs.
3:20:32
I like the blurts.
3:20:33
Trump just did it on the fly, I
3:20:34
don't care what anybody thinks.
3:20:36
The U.S. will take over the Gaza
3:20:37
Strip, and we will do a job with
3:20:39
it too.
3:20:40
He has also said that the United States
3:20:42
is not going to pay for the rebuilding
3:20:43
of Gaza.
3:20:44
And we will pursue our manifest destiny into
3:20:46
the stars, launching American astronauts to plant the
3:20:50
stars and stripes on the planet Mars.
3:20:53
I got another blurt.
3:20:54
This is a boomer blurt.
3:20:56
We're telling Ukraine they're a very valuable rare
3:21:00
earth.
3:21:00
So we're looking to do a deal with
3:21:02
Ukraine where they're going to secure what we're
3:21:04
giving them with their rare earths and other
3:21:07
things.
3:21:08
He didn't say he wasn't going to invade
3:21:10
Greenland, but he didn't rule it out either.
3:21:12
We have to have Greenland.
3:21:13
It's not a question of do you think
3:21:14
we can do without it?
3:21:16
We can't.
3:21:16
Rocket Man is on a suicide mission for
3:21:19
himself.
3:21:20
They will be met with fire and fury
3:21:22
like the world has never seen.
3:21:25
I'm not going to give you a question.
3:21:26
You are fake news.
3:21:28
Let's find out if they're friends or foe,
3:21:30
and if they're foe.
3:21:32
I wish they'd make us.
3:21:36
They call us Pocahontas.
3:21:37
They're eating the dogs.
3:21:42
The best podcast in the universe.
3:21:46
Adios.
3:21:47
Mofo.
3:21:47
Dvorak.org slash N-A.
3:21:51
Yeah!
3:21:52
Ringle up that best podcast in the universe.
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