Cover for No Agenda Show 1764: Rage Quit
May 15th • 3h 36m

1764: Rage Quit

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0:00
Boom, boom, crop, boom.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:03
It's Thursday, May 15, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Give on Asian
0:07
Media assassination episode 1764.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
It's been six weeks and we're still broadcasting
0:16
live from the heart of the Texas hill
0:18
country here in FEMA region number six in
0:20
the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
I'm from northern Silicon Valley where you've noticed
0:25
that Trump finally looks tired.
0:26
I'm John C.
0:27
Dvorak.
0:28
It's crackpot and buzzkill in the morning.
0:33
He does look tired, doesn't he?
0:36
Well, he's wandering around the guy in Abu
0:38
Dhabi.
0:39
Yeah.
0:40
And he's just on his last legs.
0:42
You could, it just doesn't have, you know,
0:44
it's like, uh.
0:45
I'm tired just watching the guy.
0:47
It doesn't, doesn't surprise me.
0:48
I'm like.
0:49
Pooping every, yeah.
0:51
Hey, but before we get anywhere, breaking, breaking,
0:54
breaking, breaking.
0:56
Ow, Isis.
1:00
We will follow them to the gates of
1:03
hell.
1:07
Yeah.
1:11
Say goodbye to the old boss.
1:13
Say hello to the new boss.
1:14
Everything remains the same.
1:15
Strike one for Kash Patel, who was out
1:18
on the social medias this morning touting this.
1:22
Oh yeah, we took care of him, boy.
1:24
We protect you Americans.
1:25
Six weeks cycle, cycle still in full effect.
1:29
And now it's time for.
1:30
Sorry.
1:32
I was, was so well-timed.
1:34
It was so well-timed.
1:35
No wonder we're getting no donations.
1:37
You're going to blame me now.
1:39
Police and the FBI say they have stopped
1:42
a planned terror attack at a Metro Detroit
1:44
military base.
1:46
The accused mastermind, a 19-year-old former
1:48
member of the Michigan Army National Guard.
1:51
Again, a lot developing here at this hour.
1:53
Going to bring in Robin Murdoch with our
1:55
Fox 2 Detroit team.
1:57
Joining us live with what we know and
1:59
what is still left to figure out.
2:01
Good morning, Robin.
2:02
Good morning, Josh.
2:03
Yeah, what could have happened here is absolutely
2:05
frightening.
2:06
As you just mentioned, a 19-year-old
2:08
Melvindale man is behind bars this morning for
2:12
allegedly planning a terrorist attack at the TACOM
2:15
military facility here in Warren, where we are
2:19
right now.
2:19
He apparently, according to court documents, had been
2:23
planning this attack for about a year, and
2:26
he was arrested on the day that he
2:28
was supposed to carry this out.
2:30
So he was arrested on Tuesday.
2:32
19-year-old Ammar Syed had allegedly been
2:34
taking a couple or talking to a couple
2:37
of different undercover officers who were posing as
2:40
ISIS supporters.
2:41
Now, federal investigators say that he told them
2:43
how to make Molotov cocktails, gave them ammunition,
2:47
and even flew a drone over the military
2:49
base here to help plot that attack against
2:52
Syed.
2:53
Was arrested on the very same day he
2:55
was supposed to carry out this mass shooting.
2:58
Now, neighbors, as you can imagine, they were
3:00
just shocked when they saw the FBI raiding
3:02
his home in Melvindale.
3:04
The allegations are alarming and simply frightening.
3:08
Yeah, okay.
3:09
Same as it ever was.
3:11
They talked to this poor 18-year-old
3:13
kid for a year, hyping him up.
3:15
They got pictures of him doing Alawak bar
3:18
with the ISIS flag.
3:19
Hey, kid.
3:20
Hey, fly this drone around.
3:22
And the minute he gets to go, we
3:24
got you.
3:24
We're protecting you, America.
3:26
Cash in peace, Cash Patel.
3:28
That is lame.
3:30
It would be one thing if he was
3:31
like, oh, you know, that was the previous
3:33
FBI.
3:35
But no.
3:35
Why would they change the formula that works?
3:38
It doesn't work.
3:39
Except for you and I.
3:40
It's entrapment of children.
3:43
The guy always ends up getting off.
3:45
Most of these guys end up getting off.
3:46
This is a child who was just being
3:48
jacked up.
3:49
And they should have said to him, hey,
3:50
hey, son, sit down.
3:52
A year ago.
3:53
Sit down, son.
3:54
What is wrong with you?
3:55
Let's talk to you about this.
3:57
Get your parents in here.
3:58
Oh, that's 30 years ago.
4:01
Yeah, but this is MAGA.
4:02
This is America.
4:03
This is New America.
4:04
This is not Biden's America.
4:06
What is this nonsense?
4:09
Bush era did it.
4:10
Yeah, well, of course.
4:12
Everybody did it.
4:13
But this is MAGA time.
4:14
The Kash Patel was going to be different.
4:16
He's going to be different.
4:17
I'm going to do everything different.
4:18
No.
4:18
When's the last time that happened?
4:20
Well, I'm just saying that I'm very disappointed.
4:26
Very disappointed.
4:27
What a, what a loser system.
4:30
Oh, come on, kid.
4:32
Here, I'll show you how to make a
4:33
Molotov cocktail.
4:35
Make your own ammunition.
4:37
Like you just can't, like you can't go
4:38
out and buy it.
4:40
Make your own ammo.
4:41
I'll show you how to make some ammo.
4:41
We'll keep you busy.
4:42
These guys have been working this for a
4:44
year, wasting our money on this nonsense.
4:46
Well, that I agree with that part of
4:48
it.
4:49
Nonsense.
4:50
No, it's just, it is, it is not
4:53
cool.
4:54
Very disappointing.
4:56
He's up there now with A.G. Barbee.
4:58
Strike one against, actually, A.G. Barbee has
5:01
two strikes for Epstein and for JFK.
5:05
I'm sure she was probably, she's probably out
5:07
there today too.
5:08
Well, we saved everybody.
5:10
I don't know if you're going to go
5:11
with that.
5:11
Terrorist attack.
5:12
The strikes.
5:13
What about Diddy?
5:14
What about Diddy?
5:16
Where's the, where's the tapes?
5:19
Well, the tapes apparently were showed in court.
5:22
Well, some, well, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
5:25
The freak off tapes here.
5:26
Sean Diddy combs in Cassie Ventura on the
5:29
red carpet for a movie premiere in March
5:31
of 2016.
5:32
Jurors shown similar pictures from that night today
5:35
in court in the sex trafficking and racketeering
5:37
trial of Combs.
5:38
He has pleaded not guilty to all charges
5:41
against him.
5:42
Ventura and Combs were dating at the time,
5:44
but split in 2018.
5:46
Taking the stand for a second day, she
5:48
told jurors she wore a lot of makeup
5:49
and sunglasses that night to cover bruising on
5:52
her face.
5:53
Ventura testifying those bruises were caused by Combs
5:56
two days before the premiere during a drug
5:58
-fueled sex party he called a freak off.
6:01
She told jurors Combs threw a vase of
6:03
flowers at her when she tried to leave
6:05
the hotel.
6:05
The jury seeing this image showing shards of
6:08
glass on the floor in the hotel hallway.
6:10
This video of Combs throwing Ventura to the
6:13
ground- The hallway beating.
6:14
What?
6:15
No, no, no, no, no, listen.
6:16
And kicking her in that hallway was also
6:18
entered into evidence.
6:20
Prosecutors showing the jury seven still images from
6:23
those videos in court today.
6:25
Ventura testified when she got home, a friend
6:27
noticed that injury at her swollen lip and
6:29
called police.
6:30
She said she didn't want to name Combs,
6:32
so police left.
6:33
Jurors showed a text message from Ventura to
6:36
Combs saying you are sick for thinking it's
6:38
okay to do what you've done.
6:40
A prosecutor asked how frequently did Sean put
6:42
his hands on you during freak offs?
6:45
Ventura responded too frequently.
6:47
A lot.
6:48
The singer testified the freak offs also became
6:50
private pornography shoots with Combs setting up video
6:53
equipment to record that she felt humiliated, testifying
6:57
it was just not okay for me and
6:59
that she felt like an object without a
7:01
choice in whether or not to participate.
7:03
Ventura testifying Combs threatened.
7:05
I'm sure that this clip said they showed
7:07
the freak off videos.
7:08
Hold on her career and family.
7:10
Prosecutors showing the jury and only the jury.
7:13
Some of those videos in court today.
7:15
Uh huh.
7:16
Told you the defense is arguing Ventura that
7:19
tells us that they saw some of the
7:21
only the jurors.
7:22
Some of the what videos?
7:23
Which one?
7:24
The freak off video.
7:24
She said it right there.
7:25
The freak off videos that were that were
7:27
recorded by Combs here saying she feared for
7:30
her career and family.
7:32
Prosecutors showing the jury and only the jury.
7:34
Some of those videos in court today.
7:36
Yeah, the freak off videos.
7:37
They've shown them some of the freak off
7:39
video.
7:40
So do you keep throwing the word freak
7:42
off in there?
7:43
They said it.
7:44
She said they showed the jury some of
7:46
the videos.
7:47
They didn't say freak off videos.
7:49
You play it over and over again and
7:50
you're hearing it wrong.
7:52
They're talking about the porn pornographic video shot
7:55
during the freak.
7:56
Listen, listen, open your ears and listen from
7:59
Ventura to Combs.
8:00
Saying you are sick for thinking it's OK
8:02
to do what you've done.
8:03
A prosecutor asked how frequently did Sean put
8:06
his hands on you during freak offs?
8:08
Ventura responded too frequently.
8:11
A lot.
8:11
The singer testified the freak offs also became
8:14
private pornography shoots with Combs setting up video
8:17
equipment to record that she felt humiliated, testifying
8:21
it was just not OK for me and
8:23
that she felt like an object without a
8:24
choice in whether or not to participate.
8:26
Ventura testifying Combs threatened to release the videos
8:29
when he was upset about something saying she
8:32
feared for her career and family.
8:34
Prosecutors showing the jury and only the jury
8:37
some of those videos in court today.
8:39
That's so it's those videos.
8:41
That's clear from the report.
8:43
You agree?
8:44
No.
8:46
OK, I inferred.
8:49
Yes, it's implied.
8:50
They're saying the video, the freak off videos
8:52
that she was OK, but they don't use
8:55
it.
8:55
They don't present it that way.
8:57
OK, I'm going to parse it because that's
9:00
what they do.
9:01
That's what the media does.
9:02
They they say one thing and then they
9:03
kind of lead you astray and then make
9:05
you sound like you're something like something's going
9:07
on when it's not.
9:09
Unless they said they showed them freak off
9:12
videos, I'm not.
9:14
They showed videos.
9:15
OK, well, it showed some of those videos.
9:17
And OK, whatever you just hear it differently.
9:20
That's fine.
9:21
That's fine.
9:22
It's fine.
9:22
You know what?
9:23
I spoke to those high school kids here
9:24
yesterday morning and it was really that's right.
9:28
You were a big guy.
9:28
You were the you were the.
9:32
Superstar speaker to the high school.
9:34
Yes.
9:36
And and I it was actually very good
9:39
for me because I realized as I was
9:41
sitting there talking about, you know, it was
9:44
supposed to be a propaganda.
9:45
And, you know, if you look up the
9:46
definition of propaganda, it is influencing people through
9:50
communications.
9:51
Doesn't have to be mass communications can even
9:53
be through hairdos or hats or anything like
9:56
that to work on their on their emotions.
10:03
That's exactly what it is.
10:04
And, you know, I referred to Edward Bernays,
10:07
who wrote the book, and that was all
10:09
before Hitler.
10:09
And that was 1929 when he had the
10:12
suffragettes and the torches of freedom.
10:15
And this is cigarettes.
10:16
Yeah.
10:17
And as I'm going through it, I'm like,
10:18
you know, every single thing, even stuff you
10:22
and I say is all propaganda.
10:24
And when I said, who do you think
10:26
is the biggest propagandist in America right now?
10:28
One kid, Levi, stuck up his hand.
10:30
He went, President Donald Trump.
10:31
I said, yes, MAGA.
10:33
He's got hats.
10:34
He's got a slogan.
10:36
It's just he's not playing on fear necessarily.
10:39
And then I just remember.
10:40
You don't have to play on fear to
10:41
make it propaganda.
10:42
No, but fear is much easier to do.
10:44
But, you know, all most people have is,
10:46
he's Hitler.
10:48
He's taking free jets.
10:54
Speaking of which, I see you have a
10:56
3x3.
10:57
I guess the Jones Brothers syndicate has brought
10:59
you back into their inner circle.
11:01
Am I assuming this correctly?
11:02
They chum the water once in a while.
11:05
And now it's time for 3x3.
11:07
Chum the water.
11:09
Experiment by JC Dean.
11:10
Oh yeah, baby.
11:11
Comparing stories from ABC, CBS and NBC.
11:17
So before you get into it, I just
11:19
want to say that is it possible that
11:23
someone in the M5M news media will figure
11:26
out the algorithm that is President Donald Trump?
11:29
Do they not understand by now that this
11:33
is, to use a term, chum in the
11:37
water to look over here while I'm doing
11:39
something over there?
11:41
Because if you even try to figure out
11:43
where did this story come from about the
11:46
jet?
11:46
Where did it come from?
11:48
It came from the Trump administration themselves.
11:52
They planted this.
11:54
They launched it.
11:55
And everybody, everyone, everyone went for it.
12:00
It is baffling how...
12:02
He's the master troller.
12:04
Everybody knows this.
12:05
He's a master propagandist.
12:07
It was fantastic.
12:08
He played right into them.
12:11
No, they played right into him.
12:13
Yes, they played right into him.
12:16
And I'm just like the BBC is doing
12:18
a better job at reporting these days than
12:20
anything we have.
12:21
And oh man, they even have it.
12:23
What was the name they have now for
12:25
it?
12:27
What was it?
12:28
I saw the rising.
12:29
What is the rising?
12:30
Had something, the rising.
12:32
The rising.
12:33
Oh yeah, listen to this.
12:36
Bride Force One controversy.
12:38
Bride Force One.
12:39
Oh, we have a name for it.
12:40
Oh yes, it's a controversy.
12:42
He's taking favors from Qatar.
12:44
He can't fly in a jet that might
12:46
explode him in air because they've planted bombs
12:48
on it.
12:49
Or are eavesdropping.
12:51
How feeble minded are you people?
12:55
Or are they just playing a game?
12:56
Do you think they really know it all?
12:57
And they're like, okay, we'll play the game.
12:59
Is that possible?
13:01
No, I worked in there.
13:03
Then we are, you and I are working
13:05
amongst people who are below our intelligence level.
13:08
I don't know if we can do this
13:09
anymore.
13:10
It is so insulting that this just, you
13:13
know, the news is filled with it.
13:16
Here in the United States, we have no
13:17
news.
13:19
No news.
13:20
It's all entertainment tonight.
13:23
It reminds me, you know, I was watching
13:25
CBS.
13:25
I didn't get any clips from the show,
13:27
but CBS with John Dickerson and this other
13:30
character whose name I can never remember is
13:32
French.
13:34
And they're trying to recreate the Chet Huntley,
13:39
David Brinkley combo.
13:41
Two guys yakking with each other.
13:44
And it's just not working.
13:45
You can tell that both these guys, the
13:48
one guy's big.
13:49
He's a big dark skinned guy with a
13:51
French name.
13:52
He's maybe black and maybe Spanish.
13:54
I can't tell.
13:56
And John Dickerson, who's, you know, white as
13:59
you can be.
14:01
And Beta, you know, he's very soft spoken.
14:06
And these two guys are like, just like
14:09
water and oil.
14:11
I mean, they don't, you can tell they
14:13
don't like each other because Huntley and Brinkley,
14:16
people don't remember them.
14:17
I'm old enough to.
14:19
They were cordial.
14:21
They liked each other.
14:23
They'd hang out.
14:23
You could just tell it was a good
14:25
team.
14:26
You watch these two guys.
14:27
It's like watching, you know, a couple that
14:30
just hates each other.
14:31
Here's another thing I realized in preparation for
14:35
my big speech for the high school.
14:39
These kids, why would they listen to this
14:42
show?
14:42
The next generation is not interested in what
14:45
we're doing.
14:46
They don't watch television at all, at all,
14:49
at all, at all.
14:50
Zero.
14:51
They don't watch PBS.
14:53
They don't listen to NPR.
14:55
None of this.
14:57
It's, it's, you know, we're, we're.
15:01
You brought this up.
15:03
And it reminds me, as I have seen
15:05
some notes from some of these, this group.
15:08
There are some kids who do, but it's
15:10
rare.
15:10
A few, a few.
15:11
Sure.
15:12
But I've seen notes to this effect, what
15:15
you just said, condemning the show because who
15:19
cares about what CBS said?
15:21
I mean, it's not the fact that CBS
15:23
still has millions and millions of viewers.
15:27
And it does affect the public and it
15:30
definitely affects Washington more than anything.
15:33
Because the people in Washington, our leaders all
15:37
watch these networks.
15:38
Our leaders all read the New York Times,
15:42
etc.
15:44
And so there's some reason to do this,
15:47
but.
15:48
Not much.
15:48
Basically, basically condemning us for being, what difference
15:53
does it make?
15:54
We need to be screaming and yelling about
15:56
other podcasters.
15:57
Here was my test.
15:59
Anyone hear about the President Trump jet controversy?
16:03
Three hands.
16:04
Three, three hands.
16:07
This has been blanketing our media for a
16:09
week.
16:10
Three, three hands.
16:11
How many kids were there?
16:12
A hundred?
16:13
No, less than that.
16:15
And I say, how many of you have
16:16
heard about the TikTok ban?
16:17
Boom, all hands up.
16:20
What was it about?
16:21
China's tracking us.
16:23
Of course, I dispelled that for them.
16:25
But that's, that's, that's the whole point.
16:28
It's like you actually, I've been withholding you
16:31
from the right direction from the show.
16:34
We just need to do wall-to-wall
16:36
TikTok clips, man.
16:37
Wall-to-wall.
16:38
Don't forget some today.
16:39
Yeah, I just need to do wall-to
16:40
-wall TikTok clops.
16:42
TikTok clops.
16:43
Tick-tick-tock-tock clops.
16:45
And we just got to be commenting on
16:47
them.
16:47
And we got to be talking about Megyn
16:48
Kelly.
16:49
And we got to be talking about Dave
16:51
Smith on Tucker Carlson.
16:53
And about all these people.
16:55
That's, that's, that is the future of the
16:57
show.
16:57
Otherwise, we're riding our audience into the pearly
17:00
gates.
17:01
Into the pearly gates.
17:03
There's something to be said for that.
17:05
And I think others would agree.
17:08
Now, I do have a Dave Smith clip
17:11
I want to play later.
17:12
Which reiterates, the reason I caught this.
17:16
It's a real good one too.
17:17
You'll get a kick out of it.
17:18
I don't think most people caught it.
17:20
But it reiterates something else that we've, in
17:24
the background, have discussed.
17:26
Well, do you want to do the three
17:27
-by-three first?
17:28
Or do you want to go?
17:28
I'm sorry.
17:29
You already introduced the three-by-three.
17:31
We've got three clips about the stupid jet.
17:34
Three clips from stations you kids don't watch.
17:38
The kids don't care about.
17:39
But I'll tell you this.
17:42
This is not an emolument situation as far
17:45
as I can tell.
17:45
You have to remember that we receive, we
17:47
receive gifts from foreign countries all the time.
17:50
We do?
17:52
The Statue of Liberty?
17:53
Oh no, I thought you and me, like
17:55
the show.
17:55
I'm like, what?
17:56
Oh, I wish.
17:58
Send me a jet.
17:59
We get a box of candy once in
18:01
a while.
18:02
From out of state.
18:03
Yeah.
18:07
Yes.
18:07
I do get some sweatshirts and hoodies.
18:09
Yeah, but your point is well made.
18:11
Of course, there's all kinds of gifts.
18:13
But you know, the whole idea here is,
18:17
let's start some noise that makes it look
18:19
like Trump is trying to benefit from his
18:22
kids.
18:24
You know, they're doing hotels in Qatar.
18:26
And this is all, this is a grift.
18:29
It's a grift, man.
18:30
It's a bunch of grifters.
18:31
That's the implication.
18:33
So let's start with, let's start with the
18:38
CIA, the CBS.
18:41
Air Force One, an undeniable representation of American
18:45
power, ferried President Trump to the Middle East
18:47
today.
18:48
But three months ago, the president toured an
18:50
opulent Boeing 747, described as a flying palace
18:54
with a master bedroom, elegant bathrooms and staircase,
18:57
offered to the U.S. government free of
18:59
charge by the royal family of Qatar.
19:01
Trump seems all in.
19:04
And I could be a stupid person and
19:06
say, no, we don't want a free, very
19:08
expensive airplane.
19:10
But it was, I thought it was a
19:12
great gesture.
19:12
Frank Kendall served as Air Force Secretary in
19:14
the Biden administration and says this idea shouldn't
19:17
fly.
19:18
It's a symbol of the presidency.
19:19
It's a symbol of the American people.
19:21
And it's just frankly wrong for the president
19:23
to be flying an airplane, which when anyone
19:25
sees it will be seen as a gift
19:27
from Qatar.
19:27
The Qatari plane is built by Boeing in
19:30
the U.S., but it would have to
19:31
be scrubbed for spyware.
19:33
And it lacks at least a billion dollars
19:34
worth of presidential parts, a flying situation room,
19:37
a medical clinic and top secret technology.
19:40
Air Force One is a flying White House.
19:42
It is equipped with everything the president needs
19:44
that you can get into a 747 so
19:46
he can do his job while he's traveling.
19:49
This aircraft will not have those things.
19:51
So how much is it going to cost
19:52
to retrofit a palace into the White House?
19:55
It would take years and it would be
19:57
very expensive.
19:58
But Kendall says the commander in chief has
20:01
the power to fly on any aircraft he
20:03
wants.
20:04
And he can say, I don't care about
20:05
any of those things.
20:06
All I want is a luxurious airplane that
20:08
I can fly around on.
20:11
And is our other lawmakers in Washington OK
20:13
with this gift?
20:14
No.
20:15
Oh, there's bipartisan condemnation of this.
20:18
Democrats are saying they're going to block Justice
20:19
Department nominees because officials there have signed off
20:22
on this agreement.
20:23
The president himself, back in his first term,
20:25
accused Qatar of being a funder of terrorism.
20:27
But for now, he says he wants the
20:29
plane.
20:30
You know, the thing that I don't think
20:32
anyone mentioned might be in your three by
20:34
threes, not a single person, news person or
20:38
not, mentioned that the term Air Force One
20:42
is any if the president decides to get
20:45
into a Cessna 172 and fly around, that
20:49
is then Air Force One.
20:53
So just a small point.
20:55
But they didn't even make that.
20:57
They don't make any points that said this
20:58
is all bad.
20:59
By the way, that's interesting.
21:01
These not the guys on the networks, but
21:03
all these people, these spokespeople, I'm starting to
21:05
hear this more and more.
21:06
People are pronouncing, you know, Qatar's been pronounced.
21:10
Gutter.
21:11
Gutter.
21:11
Gutter.
21:12
You noticed it, too.
21:13
Oh, yeah.
21:13
Gutter.
21:14
It's gutter.
21:15
It's.
21:16
Cutter.
21:17
You could say cutter or Qatar.
21:18
I always I like Qatar better.
21:20
Qatar's.
21:21
I like Qatar better.
21:22
Sounds like a guitar.
21:23
You know, yeah, guitar.
21:24
I play my guitar in Qatar and my
21:26
chicks for free.
21:30
So, yes, I've noticed this gutter thing myself.
21:32
Well, I'm sure the subliminal gutter.
21:34
It's just the gutter.
21:35
There's the gutter over there.
21:36
That's the reason.
21:37
There's a reason to say gutter.
21:39
Well, there's a reason to say Keeve.
21:42
So let's go with let's move to I'm
21:45
going to say let's go to NBC.
21:47
The president is defending his decision to accept
21:49
a super luxury jumbo jet from the Qatari
21:52
government for the Pentagon to use as the
21:54
new Air Force One amid ongoing delays for
21:57
a replacement jet from Boeing.
21:59
A White House official confirms these are pictures
22:01
of its interior.
22:02
The president says the jet will be transferred
22:04
to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation when he
22:07
leaves office.
22:09
The White House says legal details are still
22:11
being worked out on the proposed gift, while
22:13
Qatar says no final agreement has been reached.
22:16
I think that was a very nice gesture.
22:18
Now, I could be a stupid person and
22:20
say, oh, no, we don't want a free
22:21
plane.
22:22
We get free things.
22:23
We'll take one, too.
22:24
Aviation experts tell NBC News the jet would
22:27
likely have to be dismantled part by part
22:29
to look for listening devices, then upgraded with
22:32
expensive systems.
22:34
Same story.
22:34
And missile defense.
22:36
Democrats are blasting the proposed gift as a
22:39
threat to national security.
22:41
What people will now see is.
22:42
Wait a minute.
22:43
Don't they want him dead?
22:44
Isn't this wouldn't this be great?
22:46
Yeah.
22:47
Get on that plane, man.
22:48
Who knows what's going on now?
22:50
It's a threat to national security.
22:52
All of a sudden.
22:52
Blasting the proposed gift as a threat to
22:55
national security.
22:56
What people will now see is the most
22:58
powerful man on Earth flying around in a
23:00
plane paid for by a foreign government.
23:04
It's disgusting.
23:06
It's wildly corrupt.
23:08
It's corrupt.
23:09
There you go.
23:10
It's corrupt.
23:12
They all took the chum.
23:14
It's like a chew toy.
23:16
Like, you know, there's another aspect of my
23:20
chew toy.
23:21
Another aspect of this is to give the
23:23
needle to Boeing for not finishing the jet.
23:27
They're supposed to be.
23:28
This was taking 10 years and they can't
23:30
get this, you know, the 747 presidential upgrade
23:33
done.
23:34
To me, that was the whole point of
23:36
saying it.
23:37
That's what I think.
23:37
I think it was one of the.
23:39
Yeah, for sure.
23:39
Well, but then he subsequently went and did,
23:41
you know, like a hundred billion plus dollar
23:44
deal for Boeing.
23:46
Like, and he said, get those jets out
23:48
there, boys.
23:48
Come on now.
23:49
So, yeah.
23:52
Can't believe we're discussing this.
23:55
But that's exactly what your propagandistic news media
23:58
all around the world has done.
24:00
And we only have one left.
24:02
And this will take it to any reason.
24:04
Saving ABC to the end.
24:05
I do want to mention that on today's.
24:08
It was very interesting on today's The View.
24:12
They had the regular team and then they
24:15
brought Kelsey Grammer on to talk about his.
24:18
What does he have?
24:19
He has a new movie book, a new
24:22
book.
24:23
What is it?
24:24
Tell all book, because he's been 5 5
24:26
about the murder of his sister 50 years
24:30
ago.
24:31
Kelsey Grammer is an interesting dude, man.
24:35
So he's got this book.
24:37
So they brought him out.
24:38
Yeah.
24:39
Sonny Hauston and Joy Behar were not on
24:42
the set when Kelsey was on the set.
24:44
Now, I thought, well, maybe they filmed it
24:47
some other time.
24:48
But once Kelsey left the set, those two
24:50
came back on.
24:51
I wonder why.
24:52
Well, because Kelsey works for Fox and he's
24:55
a Republican.
24:57
Kelsey Grammer works for Fox?
24:59
Yeah, he's on the Fox, whatever that streaming
25:02
services doing history lessons.
25:05
I missed that.
25:07
Yeah, it's a gig.
25:11
Well, it is a gig.
25:12
But the fact is that those two stiffs
25:14
would not.
25:16
ABC has got to get it together.
25:18
They can't put up with this guy.
25:20
This is you can't do that.
25:22
You can't walk out on a guest because
25:24
of politics when they're talking about a book
25:27
about a dead sister.
25:29
Like anyone, like anyone cares what they do
25:32
on The View.
25:33
Who cares?
25:34
Well, I guess the ABC execs sure don't
25:36
care.
25:37
No, no, they don't.
25:39
But so here we go.
25:40
So I save ABC for last because they're
25:42
the worst.
25:43
President Trump today defended the $400 million gift
25:46
he wants to accept from the government of
25:48
Qatar, a massive 747-8 luxury jet that's
25:53
been called a flying palace.
25:55
The jet, which is bigger and more luxurious
25:57
than Air Force One, would almost certainly be
25:59
the most expensive gift ever from a foreign
26:02
power.
26:03
It has two fully furnished floors, plush carpet,
26:06
leather couches and two bedrooms.
26:08
Under the entirely unprecedented arrangement, the Qatari royal
26:11
family would give the plane to the Pentagon
26:13
to be used as Air Force One.
26:15
But shortly before Trump leaves office, ownership would
26:18
transfer to the Trump Presidential Library Foundation.
26:22
I would never be one to turn down
26:24
that kind of an offer.
26:26
I mean, I could be a stupid person
26:27
and say, no, we don't want a free,
26:30
very expensive airplane.
26:31
Democrats say accepting the Qatari jet would be
26:34
clearly illegal, violating the Constitution's ban on gifts
26:38
from foreign heads of state.
26:40
His shameless self-enrichment is without equal in
26:43
American history.
26:44
Hillary Clinton pointed to the president's comments that
26:46
children might have to settle for just two
26:49
dolls because of the impact of his tariffs.
26:51
Clinton posting, so American children should make do
26:54
with two dolls while Donald Trump gets a
26:57
free sky palace from the Qatari government.
27:00
Well done, ABC.
27:02
Oh, well done.
27:03
OK.
27:04
And the top Democrat on the Armed Services
27:06
Committee, Jack Reed, flagged alarming national security concerns,
27:10
warning using the Qatari jet as the new
27:12
Air Force One would, quote, pose immense counterintelligence
27:16
risks by granting a foreign nation potential access
27:20
to sensitive systems and communications.
27:22
Trump today angrily dismissed the criticism.
27:25
They're giving us a free jet.
27:27
I could say, no, no, no, don't give
27:29
us.
27:29
I want to pay you a billion or
27:31
400 million or whatever it is.
27:34
Or I could say, thank you very much.
27:35
Attorney General Pam Bondi argues the arrangement with
27:38
Qatar is legal, insisting the plane is not
27:41
a bribe because the Qatari royal family is
27:44
getting nothing in return.
27:46
So that was Jonathan Karl, right?
27:49
Yep.
27:49
So then.
27:50
So John, did you see Jonathan Karl getting
27:52
interviewed about this huge story he's been talking
27:55
about?
27:56
No.
27:57
Oh, oh, yes.
27:59
In the meantime, we turn to the uproar
28:00
over the 400 million dollar gift from the
28:03
government of Qatar tonight, a luxury 747 jumbo
28:06
jet to be used as Air Force One
28:09
until the end of Trump's term when the
28:11
White House says it would be decommissioned and
28:13
donated to the Trump Library.
28:15
Tonight, President Trump answering questions on this.
28:17
And there are many critics asking, is this
28:18
ethical?
28:19
Is it legal?
28:20
And how safe is it for an American
28:21
president to be flying on a jet given
28:23
to him by a foreign nation?
28:25
President Trump saying he would be a stupid
28:27
person to turn the offer down.
28:29
Jonathan Karl broke the story.
28:31
And John's back on this tonight.
28:32
He broke the story.
28:34
Not break the story.
28:36
He broke it, baby.
28:37
Jonathan Karl is the man.
28:40
He broke the story.
28:41
He had inside sources that, oh, they're giving
28:43
Trump a jet.
28:45
Someone in the White House called Jonathan Karl
28:48
and said, that's why, by the way, that's
28:52
why Trump did this.
28:54
Mr. President, what do you say to people
28:56
who view that luxury jet as a personal
28:58
gift to you?
28:59
Why not leave it behind?
29:00
Your NBC fake news, right?
29:02
Only ABC.
29:03
Well, a few of you would.
29:05
Let me tell you.
29:06
So he calls out ABC fake news because
29:09
he gave the story to ABC to humiliate
29:12
them.
29:13
It's so obvious what's going on here.
29:15
And they took the bait and the hook
29:18
and the line and the sinker.
29:20
But Jonathan Karl, he's a hero.
29:22
President Trump today defended the 400.
29:25
That's similar to your clip.
29:26
I want to get to the Jonathan Karl.
29:27
He listens to this.
29:30
OK.
29:30
Trump today angrily dismissed the criticism.
29:34
They're giving us a free jet.
29:35
We had all that.
29:36
Maybe this.
29:37
OK, John, you broke the story.
29:38
All right, John Karl, you broke the story.
29:40
John, you laid out there many of the
29:41
questions, but there's another one.
29:42
And it's a big one.
29:43
You know, folks are asking how safe would
29:44
this be for an American president to be
29:46
flying around on a jet given by a
29:48
foreign government?
29:48
And wouldn't this jet have to be significantly
29:51
taken apart to make sure it's secure from
29:53
surveillance, from spying?
29:54
And how long would that take?
29:56
David, it would require extensive modifications.
29:59
The Air Force has strict requirements for any
30:02
presidential aircraft in terms of the security and
30:05
communications features.
30:07
A presidential plane must be able to operate
30:09
even in the event of a nuclear blast.
30:12
And of course, as you mentioned, it would
30:13
have to go through a security sweep to
30:16
search for listening devices and tracking devices.
30:19
How long would it take?
30:20
The White House, White House officials have suggested
30:22
it could be done by the end of
30:24
the year.
30:24
But many experts say it could actually take
30:27
years to accomplish all of that.
30:29
John Carl, who broke the story on this
30:31
week.
30:31
John, thank you.
30:32
He broke the story.
30:32
He was handed the story so they could
30:36
be human.
30:36
Trump is in his element here.
30:38
And he got everything he wanted, including delusional
30:42
Democrats.
30:43
And the Democrats are fighting it only because
30:44
they want to fight.
30:45
They have Trump derangement syndrome.
30:47
You know, if it was somebody else, they
30:48
wouldn't fight.
30:49
If you had a normal person, you had
30:51
some stiff sitting behind you, they'd be fine.
30:54
But they have Trump derangement syndrome.
30:56
You know, Senator Schumer has become a Palestinian.
31:00
Welcome.
31:01
I don't know when they're going to give
31:03
him the ceremony, whatever the ceremony may be.
31:06
It's terrible what's happened to the Democrats.
31:09
Yeah.
31:09
So he got that extra.
31:11
I thought France 24 did a great job
31:14
because they pulled in some of his classic
31:16
quotes while he was on the road.
31:17
Touchdown of Air Force One in Doha for
31:20
the second leg of Donald Trump's Middle East
31:22
tour.
31:23
And the red carpet is rolled out.
31:25
Greeted on the tarmac by Qatar's emir, Tamim
31:28
bin Hamad Al Fahmy.
31:31
The U.S. president was treated to a
31:33
traditional sword dance and a procession of camels
31:36
for a formal welcome at Qatar's royal court,
31:39
where Trump got down to business, signing an
31:42
array of deals between Washington and Doha, including
31:45
a record order of Boeing planes by Qatar
31:47
Airways.
31:48
From Boeing, that's the largest order of jets
31:50
in the history of Boeing.
31:51
That's pretty good.
31:52
Over 200 billion dollars.
31:55
Didn't hear anyone on ABC, NBC or CBS
31:57
talk about that.
31:59
But 160 in terms of the jets.
32:02
That's fantastic.
32:03
A joint statement on defense cooperation and a
32:06
drone deal were also signed.
32:08
The lavish welcome also saw a sit down
32:10
in the luxurious Al Emiri Palace, where the
32:13
U.S. president was full of praise.
32:15
You're going to have a look at this.
32:16
It's so beautiful.
32:17
As a construction person, I'm seeing perfect marble.
32:21
This is what they call perfecto.
32:24
What a beautiful place.
32:25
And we appreciate those camels.
32:27
I haven't seen camels in a long time.
32:29
Best camels ever.
32:30
I love your camel.
32:31
So you got beautiful camels.
32:33
Trump also expressed his admiration for the Qatari
32:35
emir and Saudi crown prince Mohammed bin Salman,
32:39
who he met in Riyadh on Tuesday.
32:41
You two guys get along so well and
32:42
like each other.
32:43
You sort of remind me a little bit
32:45
of each other, if you want to know
32:46
the truth.
32:47
They're both tall, handsome guys that happen to
32:49
be very smart.
32:51
A charm offensive in Qatar as Trump comes
32:53
under fire for saying he wanted to accept
32:56
a luxury jet worth $400 million from the
32:59
oil rich Gulf country, arguing that he would
33:02
be stupid to turn down a free gift.
33:04
So, as I said, the BBC, they actually
33:08
were reporting on stuff about this major trade
33:12
deal.
33:12
It's, you know, it's reported between 600 billion
33:15
and 1.2 trillion dollars.
33:17
I don't know exactly where it comes from,
33:19
but it's impressive numbers.
33:21
And at least they had some some journalistic
33:23
reporting.
33:24
President Trump is continuing his tour of the
33:26
Middle East.
33:27
On Wednesday, he was in Qatar, where he
33:30
signed a series of deals, including a huge
33:33
order for Boeing planes.
33:35
It's the largest order of jets in the
33:37
history of Boeing.
33:38
That's pretty good.
33:39
It's over 200 billion dollars, but 160 in
33:44
terms of the jets.
33:45
That's fantastic.
33:46
So that's a record.
33:47
And congratulations.
33:48
What?
33:50
What?
33:50
Was that error message in the middle of
33:52
that clip?
33:53
Was that from your clip?
33:55
He said 160.
33:57
No, no, I'm talking about the window sound.
34:00
No, I didn't hear a window sound.
34:01
That's on your end.
34:03
Mr. Boeing, get those planes out there.
34:06
Our North America editor, Sarah Smith, is traveling
34:09
with Mr. Trump.
34:11
So what sort of welcome?
34:12
Well, was Jonathan Karl traveling with Mr. Trump?
34:15
I doubt it.
34:16
Has he had on his tour so far?
34:19
It's been very lavish.
34:20
These Arab states that he's visiting seem to
34:22
be competing with each other to show who
34:25
can put on the more sumptuous welcome for
34:28
Donald Trump.
34:29
So as he came in from the airport
34:30
this afternoon, he was met by a caravan
34:33
of camels and there were dancing men with
34:37
swords along the length of the highway.
34:39
And now he's turning up for a state
34:42
dinner at the Royal Palace.
34:44
And yet again, there is all kinds of
34:45
ceremony to greet him there.
34:47
And he loves it.
34:48
I mean, you can see how much he
34:50
is enjoying this tour of the Middle East,
34:53
where he is being feted by royalty and,
34:56
you know, as he visits some of the
34:58
wealthiest countries in the world.
35:00
And he's able to seal some very lucrative
35:02
deals as he goes around clearly enjoying himself.
35:05
Not just lucrative deals, but of course, there's
35:07
this huge arms deal with Saudi Arabia, which
35:10
is a clear signal to the Iranians like,
35:14
hey, we're not going to do anything, but
35:16
these guys will.
35:17
They don't like you.
35:19
So all I have to do is snap
35:20
my fingers and you guys are in trouble.
35:22
So let's make a deal.
35:24
We begin in Saudi Arabia.
35:26
President Trump has made a raft of significant
35:29
announcements in the Gulf state on the first
35:31
day of his tour of the Middle East.
35:34
Speaking after a lavish lunch hosted by the
35:37
kingdom's crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, he said
35:41
the two had signed commercial agreements worth more
35:44
than $600 billion.
35:46
The White House said these included the largest
35:49
defense sales deal in history.
35:52
That was a minor detail Jonathan Karl didn't
35:54
bring up.
35:55
Mr. Trump spoke at an investment forum in
35:58
the Saudi capital Riyadh, heaping praise on his
36:01
hosts.
36:02
I want to thank his royal highness, the
36:04
crown prince, for that incredible introduction.
36:08
He's an incredible man.
36:10
Known him a long time now.
36:12
There's nobody like him.
36:13
I've never forgotten the exceptional hospitality show to
36:17
us by King Salman, who's just, we talk
36:22
about a great man.
36:23
That is a great man.
36:25
That is a great man, a great family.
36:28
President Trump said Iran was the most destructive
36:31
force in the Middle East and contrasted its
36:34
actions with what he deemed as positive developments
36:37
on the Arabian Peninsula.
36:39
In his speech, Mr. Trump urged Tehran to
36:42
make what he called a deal with Washington
36:44
or face devastating consequences.
36:47
I'm here today not merely to condemn the
36:50
past chaos of Iran's leaders, but to offer
36:53
them a new path toward a far better
36:56
and more hopeful future.
36:58
I want to make a deal with Iran.
37:00
If I can make a deal with Iran,
37:02
I'll be very happy if we're going to
37:03
make your region and the world a safer
37:06
place.
37:07
But if Iran's leadership rejects this olive branch
37:10
and continues to attack their neighbors, then we
37:13
will have no choice but to inflict massive
37:16
maximum pressure.
37:18
Pressure.
37:18
Drive Iranian oil exports to zero and take
37:22
all action required to stop the regime from
37:25
ever having a nuclear weapon.
37:27
Iran will never have a nuclear weapon.
37:30
This is so good.
37:32
He's in Saudi Arabia and says, I'm here
37:35
to make a deal with Iran.
37:36
This is called the $600 billion deal of
37:39
devastation we will unleash on you if you
37:42
don't do a deal.
37:44
It's baffling that no news media puts these
37:48
two little bits together.
37:49
Well, NTD did.
37:51
Wow, NTD.
37:53
NTD.
37:54
I mean, Fox did.
37:57
Not where's your clip?
37:59
Well, I don't have to play those clips.
38:01
But the point is, is that it has
38:04
it was discussed.
38:05
But you're right.
38:05
What you're saying is that the big three.
38:08
Yes.
38:09
Said nothing because they were there in the
38:12
bag for the Democrat Party and Chuck Schumer.
38:15
Yes.
38:16
And I agree.
38:17
And then this was underplayed, I felt in
38:19
the United States.
38:20
But the meeting with the the new the
38:24
new guy in Syria, who's not a new
38:26
guy.
38:27
We've known about this guy, but it's OK.
38:29
This is a guy.
38:30
And Trump will go meet him.
38:31
It wasn't expected to be a long meeting.
38:33
Donald Trump had merely said he would say
38:36
hello to the Syrian president, Ahmed al-Shara.
38:39
I'll just say hello to Saudi Arabia.
38:43
But this was the first time in a
38:45
quarter of a century that an American leader
38:48
met their Syrian counterpart.
38:49
And more than that, Mr. al-Shara leads
38:52
a group still listed as a terrorist organization
38:55
by many countries, an offshoot of al-Qaeda.
38:58
But speaking afterwards, President Trump made clear his
39:01
name.
39:01
That brief hello is intended to be just
39:04
the start of a new diplomatic era between
39:07
the two countries.
39:08
Brief hello.
39:08
We are currently exploring normalizing relations with Syria's
39:12
new government, as you know, beginning with my
39:15
meeting with President Ahmed al-Shara.
39:19
Secretary Rubio's meeting with the Syrian foreign minister
39:23
in Turkey.
39:25
I am also ordering the cessation of sanctions
39:28
against Syria to give them a fresh start.
39:30
Fresh start.
39:31
And that, of course, represents a major concrete
39:33
development in the new U.S.-Syria diplomacy, a
39:36
concrete step which is not merely of interest
39:39
to businesspeople and economists.
39:41
Just listen to these ordinary Syrians welcoming the
39:44
news on the streets of the capital, Damascus.
39:48
The feeling is indescribable.
39:51
Unbelievable happiness.
39:53
Hopefully, God helps this country and it will
39:56
be better for everyone.
39:58
Congratulations to everyone.
40:02
There is incredible happiness for all Syrians.
40:05
It will be great for our country.
40:07
Construction will return.
40:09
The refugees will return.
40:10
Everyone will return.
40:11
The prices will drop.
40:13
There is good to come, God willing.
40:14
It just needs a bit of patience.
40:16
But good things are coming our way.
40:18
So you and I would just be like,
40:20
OK, well, that's interesting.
40:21
A guy used to be a terrorist.
40:23
And now we're going to wipe the slate
40:25
clean.
40:25
It's probably a little jab towards Israel at
40:28
the same time.
40:30
But see, this is where we're doing things
40:32
wrong.
40:33
We need to be like Scott Horton.
40:36
We need to go on Judge Knapp show
40:38
and talk about what a horrible dictator.
40:41
And this is no good.
40:42
Before you go on to that clip, since
40:45
you're going and going, I don't want you
40:47
to get too far off the track.
40:50
But I know what you're headed.
40:54
Just as a subtext, I want to mention
40:56
the fact that this show has determined early
40:59
on during the ISIS era that ISIS was
41:02
created by us.
41:04
And the one thing that was very noticeable
41:06
about ISIS is they never attacked Israel.
41:08
They never had anything negative to do with
41:10
Israel.
41:10
No, Israel is their handlers.
41:12
I think that's pretty well established now.
41:15
So so when Trump meets with his ex
41:18
ISIS guy.
41:20
He's an employee.
41:21
Yeah.
41:23
Yeah, exactly.
41:24
But you see, that's not the way to
41:26
go.
41:27
That's not what gets people to listen to
41:29
our show.
41:30
I'm just I'm doing media deconstruction on ourselves.
41:33
This is going to be the theme for
41:34
the show.
41:34
It is.
41:35
Don't worry, I've got to.
41:36
I got TikTok clips coming.
41:37
I know.
41:37
I know.
41:38
You're going to save the day with TikTok
41:39
clubs.
41:40
I can't say it.
41:41
TikTok, TikTok, Klop Klip Klops.
41:44
So, yeah.
41:44
So, of course, Scott Horton, who wrote the
41:47
book.
41:47
He wrote the book on everything.
41:48
He went on Judge Knapp to set the
41:50
record straight.
41:51
According to Max Blumenthal, they are slaughtering Alawites
41:55
and Christians in Syria.
41:58
By the thousands.
41:59
This is the guy that Trump embraced.
42:01
This is the guy that Trump praised.
42:03
And this is the guy, the head of
42:05
the government, theoretically, from which Trump removed sanctions.
42:10
This is a guy who, until a month
42:12
ago, Trump's own State Department had a $10
42:14
million bounty on his head.
42:17
Yeah.
42:17
And look, the thing is, I wrote my
42:20
book is called Enough Already, Time to End
42:23
the War on Terrorism.
42:24
And I don't argue in there that there's
42:25
no enemies out there.
42:26
There are Bin Ladenites out there.
42:28
And I would never recommend in a million
42:30
years that Trump lead another war against this
42:33
new Bin Ladenite state in Syria.
42:35
Somebody else is going to have to work
42:36
that out.
42:37
But for God's sake, we shouldn't be backing
42:39
him.
42:40
So lift the sanctions, yes, but officially normalize
42:43
relations with them.
42:45
I don't know why.
42:46
Why can't we lean on the Turks to
42:47
put somebody who's not a former, supposedly, sworn
42:52
blood oath member of Al-Qaeda in charge
42:55
of Damascus?
42:56
It's crazy.
42:56
And clearly, it's up to the Turks to
42:58
decide.
42:58
They have 100,000 times the state power
43:02
that this new Syrian regime has.
43:05
They can go in there and change things.
43:07
Why does this have to be the status
43:08
quo?
43:08
See, this is what we're doing wrong.
43:10
You need to go on Judge Knapp's show,
43:11
and you really need to get out there,
43:12
John.
43:13
You need to say, listen, I wrote the
43:15
book on vinegar.
43:16
And I know that this is not the
43:18
way to go with Syria.
43:19
We can't do this.
43:21
This is a murdering butcher.
43:22
We can't have any of this happening.
43:24
And Trump is corrupt.
43:26
With respect to Mohammed bin Salman, Trump has
43:31
to cozy up to him.
43:32
Trump's boys are building high-rises in Saudi
43:35
Arabia.
43:38
Yeah, Trump's boys.
43:40
I'm not going to talk to you because
43:41
you butchered, I forget the fellow's name, the
43:44
reporter from the Washington Post.
43:47
Khashoggi, I can't remember his name.
43:49
Khashoggi's name.
43:51
Yeah, Khashoggi, Crown Prince Bonesaw, we used to
43:56
call him there.
43:57
No, NBC called him that.
43:59
There's still no actual evidence that took place.
44:02
Scott Horton wrote the book.
44:03
I think I might have got Kennedy in
44:05
trouble on Fox Business Channel for calling him
44:07
that.
44:08
But yeah, he is a murderer.
44:11
And he's, of course, the butcher of the
44:13
Yemenis from 2015 through 22 as well.
44:17
Mohammed bin Salman is a terrible guy.
44:19
And I don't know the intricacies of Trump's
44:21
son's business relations over there.
44:23
They ought to be able to keep that
44:24
separate, even if they are doing that.
44:26
And they should not be doing that while
44:27
he is in power.
44:28
But even if they are, they ought to
44:30
be able to keep that separate.
44:31
And just like Joe Biden ought to be
44:33
able to say, I'm sorry, your business interests
44:36
don't mean anything compared to the foreign policy
44:38
interests of the United States of America.
44:40
And if we have to play hardball with
44:41
these countries, we're going to.
44:44
But yeah, clearly, it's a major disincentive for
44:46
doing that.
44:47
Yeah, see, this is our problem.
44:48
We're too glib.
44:49
We're too cavalier.
44:50
We're laughing.
44:51
We're laughing about everything to make people happy
44:53
and to make them not so somber about
44:54
the news.
44:55
We have to be like, well, this is
44:57
serious business, man.
44:58
And they can't accept a jet.
45:00
What is your opinion of this $400 million
45:04
plane as a gift that the Qataris want
45:08
to give to the Defense Department and then
45:11
to Trump's library?
45:13
I mean, do the Qataris give these things
45:15
not expecting a quid pro quo?
45:18
I can't imagine.
45:20
And, you know, it's really a shame.
45:24
I mean, the whole idea is just crazy.
45:26
Trump ought to obviously just turn them down
45:28
and say thank you.
45:29
But no, thank you.
45:30
It's a massive conflict of interest.
45:32
Just that there any foreign state, if it
45:34
was the English or the French or anybody
45:36
else, the Statue of Liberty, anybody, Germans, we
45:39
shouldn't be doing this kind of deal with
45:41
any foreign country.
45:43
And clearly, when it's a monarchy, a royal
45:47
monarchy in the Middle East, it's crazy.
45:49
They were camel drivers, man, not a monarchy.
45:52
They just made them made up some titles
45:54
for themselves that we would have that kind
45:56
of relationship with there.
45:58
And then, yes, of course, just like with
46:00
every foreign expenditure in this country, there's a
46:03
massive conflict of interest, you know, with all
46:06
of the exactly.
46:07
And it's you got to take responsibility.
46:09
Don't worry, I'll spare the rest.
46:11
But it gets down to Israel eventually.
46:13
Believe me, we should not be paying for
46:15
Israel to slaughter innocent people.
46:18
That's what it always comes down to with
46:19
these guys.
46:20
Well, there's also there's another thing going on.
46:23
I have a clip that kind of backs
46:24
up that clip again on Judge Knapp.
46:27
Hey, you're fishing in my in my pond.
46:31
Well, this clip has been floating around and
46:34
this is Scott Ritter.
46:37
Another fine, another fine, another fine example.
46:41
And I'll say this.
46:43
This is this started once Trump.
46:47
Here's the backstory was written up in the
46:49
newsletter about how it's possible that Hexeth was
46:55
set up.
46:55
Yes.
46:56
They wanted him out.
46:58
They wanted him out because they want because
47:02
Mike Waltz and all that.
47:03
There's still neocons around and people don't like
47:06
using the term anymore because it's I don't
47:08
know why.
47:09
But Mark Levin is part of this.
47:12
And he went after Tucker Carlson on his
47:15
on his radio show and calling him Oswald
47:19
the 30 mocking him for being a kind
47:23
of a pretty boy.
47:24
And I went back and listened to the
47:27
Dave Smith thing where Tucker brought up Mark
47:29
Levin and Dave Smith.
47:32
The Dave Smith clip, which is the one
47:35
I have is going to do with this
47:36
particular topic.
47:39
But Tucker was very mild about complaining about
47:41
Mark Levin.
47:42
He said that Mark Levin is once war
47:44
with Iran.
47:45
And he does.
47:46
If you listen to Mark Levin radio show
47:48
or his TV stuff, he wants war with
47:51
Iran.
47:51
He wants Iran to be bombed to oblivion.
47:53
You know, Israel's the greatest place in the
47:55
world.
47:56
And bomb Iran bomb.
47:58
He's the bomb bomb bomb.
48:00
Yes, bomb Iran McCain.
48:02
John McCain.
48:03
Yes.
48:04
And Mike Waltz apparently was doing a thing
48:08
with Netanyahu and the whole set up to
48:12
get Hex was actually a set up.
48:14
It was kind of a double crossed.
48:17
And the idea was to get rid of
48:19
Mike Waltz because he has been.
48:23
Doing back deals with Netanyahu to bomb Iran.
48:27
Yes.
48:27
And Trump is totally against it.
48:30
And but that's one of the reasons he
48:31
went to the Middle East to tell everybody
48:33
there that, look, we'll do it, but we
48:35
don't want to.
48:36
No, well, we'll have the Saudis do it.
48:38
We don't want to.
48:39
But if we have, we don't want anybody
48:40
to do this.
48:41
He doesn't want to.
48:43
No, he doesn't want to do anything like
48:45
that.
48:45
He's more anti war than Dave Smith and
48:47
Scott Horton combined.
48:49
So you got these guys coming out of
48:51
the woodwork.
48:54
And he would include Douglas Murray in that,
48:57
as I discussed in that article in the
48:59
newsletter that people should be subscribed to.
49:02
But here is a Scott Ritter all of
49:06
a sudden turning into a neocon and turning
49:09
on the whole administration, Trump and everybody in
49:13
between in a way that is just like,
49:15
what is wrong with this guy?
49:17
Marco Rubio is a bigger traitor to Donald
49:19
Trump and Donald Trump's policies than Mike Pompeo
49:22
was.
49:23
It is it is Marco Rubio that has
49:26
sunk the Russia policy and he's sinking the
49:28
Iran policy.
49:29
He's preventing Trump from achieving the policies.
49:32
When I say prevent Trump, it's because Trump
49:34
is ultimately, at the end of the day,
49:35
a very weak and insecure man who doesn't
49:39
have what it takes to stand up, look
49:41
people in the eye and say, you're fired.
49:43
And that's what he needs to do to
49:45
Marco Rubio right now, fire him, terminate his
49:47
existence.
49:48
But he took 100 million dollars from Edelman's
49:51
widow.
49:51
And, you know, gosh, he surrounded himself with
49:54
the wrong people.
49:55
But Donald Trump, this is why he's failing
49:57
right now because of Marco Rubio.
49:59
And Marco Rubio is behind Mike Walsh being
50:02
kicked out.
50:03
Does Donald Trump understand what's at stake in
50:07
the special military operation in Ukraine?
50:09
No, I don't think Donald Trump.
50:11
I don't think Donald Trump can spell Russia,
50:13
let alone understand the complexities of Russia.
50:15
He certainly doesn't understand Ukraine because he is
50:18
although he's a schizophrenic when it comes to
50:21
Zelensky.
50:21
One minute he rightly calls him out as
50:23
this irresponsible dictator.
50:24
The next minute he speaks about him as
50:26
if he's the legitimate leader of a viable
50:28
nation state.
50:29
He doesn't know how to deal with NATO
50:31
or Europe.
50:32
He's all over the place.
50:34
And one of the reasons because of the
50:35
conflicting guidance he's getting from his national security
50:38
team, led by Marco Rubio, who is, you
50:41
know, continues to sell, you know, Europe is
50:44
a viable ally.
50:45
Europe is not our ally.
50:48
This is a very enlightening clip for me.
50:51
The Fred freak out crew has been talking
50:54
this way about Rubio for a couple of
50:56
weeks, which means it's in the it's in
50:59
the it's in the transom is being transmitted.
51:01
And we know exactly where that comes from.
51:03
Defense.
51:05
Former defense intelligence people.
51:08
And so Rubio not to be trusted.
51:10
Be careful.
51:12
And and our problem here, John, is that
51:15
we are swimming against the tide.
51:18
And the tide is you've got to be
51:20
against our tax dollars paying for Israel to
51:24
kill people.
51:25
Forget our tax dollars anywhere else, killing people
51:28
in much larger numbers.
51:30
But that is exactly what we are up
51:33
against.
51:33
And that's why people like.
51:37
And and I hope you go to the
51:39
Tucker clip next, because I listened to the
51:41
Dave Smith.
51:43
Ball spike show with Tucker.
51:48
And I think it was complete, a complete
51:51
mistake the way they analyze that conversation.
51:54
I'll just reiterate it very shortly.
51:56
Douglas Murray went there and he can't because
51:59
Tucker's correct.
52:00
Douglas Murray's like a boarding school kid and
52:04
he debates in a certain way and he
52:05
and he says things in a certain way
52:07
in that regard.
52:09
And but what he was saying was.
52:12
We on the right and speaking for him,
52:15
not for me, we on the right have
52:17
to be careful what we're saying, because the
52:20
kind of stuff that we're talking about with
52:22
Israel leads to Jew hate.
52:26
That's what he was trying to say.
52:28
And he just couldn't say it that way
52:30
because he knew that, you know, I'm Jewish,
52:33
you know, everyone, Scott Horton, I'm Jewish.
52:35
That's not the point.
52:37
The point is, that's what's going on.
52:40
That is the narrative, regardless of what our
52:43
tax dollars are doing in every other nook
52:45
and cranny of the world, killing many more
52:48
people.
52:49
That's the narrative which is based on the
52:51
whole Whitney Webb conspiracy bull crap that Israel
52:55
has the goods on everybody and that this
52:58
is why we don't have the Epstein papers,
53:00
because we'll find out that the entire Congress
53:03
and Senate and everybody's being blackmailed for for
53:06
kiddie fiddling.
53:08
You know, is there some of that?
53:09
No doubt.
53:10
But is that rampant?
53:11
No, it's the other way around.
53:13
We control Israel, as is witnessed by President
53:17
Trump doing a deal with the Houthis.
53:19
Hey, stop bombing our ships.
53:20
Do whatever you want to Israel.
53:23
It's the other way around.
53:25
And people are just they can't stand us
53:27
for it, John.
53:28
That's the problem.
53:29
That is it.
53:30
That's the only thing.
53:32
What else am I going to do?
53:35
What else am I going to do?
53:36
So no, I'm not going to play the
53:39
Dave because the Dave Smith clips are not
53:42
about what you just said.
53:43
I think you summarized it beautifully.
53:45
OK, I do have some Trump in the
53:47
Middle East analysis clips that bring in all
53:50
kinds of interesting information that nobody discussed.
53:53
And I think it's all good stuff.
53:55
This is NTD, I'm presuming.
53:57
Yes, because I have to say this NTD,
54:00
they bring in these experts and they go
54:03
back and forth with Tiffany and they really
54:06
bring out a lot of stuff that other
54:08
analysts on other shows and Fox and all
54:11
the rest and Fox is really shallow, which
54:14
is what the Dave Smith clips about, by
54:16
the way.
54:16
I'm sorry, I have to interject one more
54:18
thing and then I'll be quiet about it
54:19
because.
54:20
No, if you're on a roll on this
54:22
topic, so keep talking.
54:24
OK, so again, I can see in the
54:26
troll room.
54:27
OK, so we control Israel by having an
54:29
Israeli handler for every one of our congressmen.
54:31
It's AIPAC, man.
54:32
OK, I'll say it to you one more
54:34
time.
54:36
Follow the money.
54:37
AIPAC gets its money from the American Israeli
54:41
Education Foundation.
54:44
Yeah, there's some rich Jews and American Jews
54:47
who donate to that.
54:48
But the bulk of the money that goes
54:50
to AIPAC is all from military contractors.
54:54
It's Raytheon, it's Boeing.
54:57
AIPAC is a military industrial complex system that
55:02
that's where the money is coming from, not
55:04
from Israel.
55:05
It's coming from our own companies who want
55:08
to are our congressmen and senators controlled by
55:12
the military industrial complex.
55:14
Hello, Eisenhower.
55:15
Yes, of course they are.
55:18
And the few that go against it.
55:20
I see you guy from Missouri whose wife
55:23
died all of a sudden.
55:26
After he told everybody exactly how it worked.
55:29
It is not Israel that's controlling our Congress.
55:32
It is the it is the contractors, the
55:35
big military industrial complex.
55:38
Where does the term come from?
55:40
From the warning President Eisenhower gave to us.
55:44
That's the warning.
55:45
He didn't say, watch out for Israel.
55:47
They're going to get us.
55:48
They're going to control us.
55:49
No, you're being fooled by AIPAC nonsense.
55:54
All right, I'm done.
55:56
I got to say, I just got to
55:57
reiterate.
55:58
No, we were wrong before.
55:59
We've said it before.
56:02
And we say it again.
56:03
And I'm sorry, Massey from Kentucky.
56:06
I'm sorry.
56:07
Yeah, Massey.
56:07
Poor Massey.
56:09
And he just keeps, he's oblivious.
56:12
He's a good guy.
56:13
And he said exactly how it works.
56:16
And everyone took that to be Israel's got
56:18
the goods.
56:19
No, they will primary you.
56:21
How do they primary you?
56:22
With lots of money.
56:23
Where does the money come from?
56:24
Follow the money.
56:26
American-Israeli Education Foundation.
56:28
Look at the 10 at the form 990s.
56:31
Look at the money.
56:32
It's Boeing.
56:33
It's Raytheon.
56:34
It's the huge military contractors.
56:36
That's the problem.
56:42
Yes.
56:43
Let's do some analysis.
56:45
Let's go to the analysis from NTD.
56:49
Progress report on President Trump's first trip to
56:51
the Middle East.
56:52
Like much of his presidency, it involves a
56:54
lot of deals and surprises.
56:56
One of which was his meeting today with
56:58
Syria's leader, a former member of Al Qaeda,
57:01
urging him to normalize relations with Israel.
57:03
That happened after Trump announced he would lift
57:05
sanctions on Syria.
57:07
His actions are even drawing some support from
57:10
congressional Democrats.
57:11
Joining me now to discuss all of this
57:13
is David Wormser, Middle East Affairs Analyst at
57:15
the Center for Security Policy and Foreign Policy
57:18
Specialist.
57:18
Oh, it sounds like a spook.
57:20
What kind of guy is this?
57:21
How come we don't have one of these
57:23
operations?
57:24
The Center for Security Policy.
57:27
Yeah.
57:27
Okay.
57:28
David, thank you so much for joining us.
57:29
A slew of developments coming out of Trump's
57:31
Middle East trip, as mentioned above, Trump's lifting
57:34
sanctions on Syria and met with the current
57:36
leader who calls himself a reformed terrorist.
57:39
How big of a change in diplomacy is
57:41
this on Trump's part?
57:42
What are his goals here?
57:44
Well, I think he did it somewhat as
57:45
a favor to the Saudis.
57:47
The Saudis really were pushing for this.
57:50
And there wasn't an overarching reason that he
57:53
saw to completely stiff the Saudis on it.
57:57
So while there's grave reservations, and those are,
58:00
first of all, his terrorist past, Shara, the
58:04
leader of Syria's terrorist past, number one.
58:06
And number two, the fact that Syria is
58:08
a divided country, it's not unified.
58:11
So when Trump met Shara, he essentially said,
58:14
listen, I'm willing to work with you.
58:16
He said it in very diplomatic ways, and
58:18
it was very kind.
58:19
But he said, listen, I'll work with you,
58:21
but you've got to put your country together
58:22
and you're on probation.
58:24
So he did lift the sanctions, but they
58:27
can be reimposed if necessary.
58:29
So I think this was more what he
58:31
was giving the Saudis.
58:33
And he walked into something he may have
58:36
realized, he may not have realized.
58:37
I'm not sure.
58:38
But it was really a very aggressive power
58:41
play by the Saudis against the Qataris, who
58:44
are at strategic odds with each other.
58:47
This was really in the backdrop to this.
58:50
The backstory to this is the Saudis were
58:52
trying to outdance the Qataris.
58:56
Wow.
58:57
Yes.
58:59
Well, President Trump is genius.
59:00
Hey, I'm going to go get money from
59:02
all these guys.
59:03
Oh, no, this is what you, this is
59:05
sales.
59:05
Yeah, it's- They used to, PC Magazine
59:07
sales guys I used to work with, I
59:10
mean, I never got to deals or anything,
59:12
but I used to always take sales training
59:14
and try to see what they were up
59:15
to, because it was interesting.
59:16
And one of the publishers said, well, yeah,
59:18
here's what I like to do.
59:19
You got these two computer companies and you
59:22
say, you go into one of them and
59:24
you say, look how much your competition's going
59:27
to spend on advertising this next quarter.
59:29
Yes, that's what you do.
59:31
Yes.
59:31
You're not going to let them outspend you,
59:33
are you?
59:34
I forgot to look.
59:35
Was President Trump wearing his brown shoes?
59:39
I don't know, but he wore the purple
59:41
tie, which is very rare in Saudi Arabia.
59:44
This is a tip.
59:46
And then he goes to, when he goes
59:48
to Qatar, he goes and he compliments the
59:52
two guys and he keeps bringing in Ben
59:53
Salman's name.
59:54
And the thing is that anyone who follows
59:57
this closely, they hate each other.
59:59
Yeah, of course.
1:00:01
And so Trump is playing it, you know,
1:00:03
and he's just having, he must be amusing
1:00:05
the hell out of himself.
1:00:07
But I like this guy's analysis that it
1:00:09
was Ben Salman that got Trump to, hey,
1:00:11
I want meet the guy from Syria.
1:00:14
Maybe you can fix, you know, patch that
1:00:15
up.
1:00:18
And that's what he did.
1:00:20
Ben Salman's a more powerful guy than in
1:00:22
this whole picture.
1:00:24
You mean Prince Bonesaw?
1:00:28
Bonesaw.
1:00:29
Bonesaw's pretty, pretty talented.
1:00:31
I love how they think that that guy,
1:00:33
like Ben Salman himself, saw Saad Khashoggi in
1:00:37
little bits and pieces.
1:00:38
Yeah, I'm sure.
1:00:39
I'm sure of it.
1:00:40
You're following the mainstream narrative, people.
1:00:46
Yeah, let's go on.
1:00:47
I have five of these.
1:00:49
Yeah, OK, we'll move on.
1:00:50
I want to get to that.
1:00:51
But first, how likely are we to see
1:00:52
Syria sign on to the Abraham Accords?
1:00:55
I don't think it's going to be very
1:00:57
time soon, very soon.
1:01:00
First of all, Syria, the government only controls
1:01:02
40 percent of the country.
1:01:04
Number one.
1:01:05
Number two.
1:01:05
Number one.
1:01:06
Number two.
1:01:06
Number one.
1:01:07
Number two.
1:01:07
OK, stop the clip.
1:01:10
I'm stopping.
1:01:11
I am sick and tired.
1:01:13
This started with Biden.
1:01:14
I'm sick and tired.
1:01:15
You start to hear it all the time.
1:01:17
Number one.
1:01:17
Number two.
1:01:18
Yes, I'm hearing it on Fox.
1:01:20
I'm hearing it from Emily Campagno.
1:01:25
I'm hearing it from Gutfeld.
1:01:27
Everybody.
1:01:28
Number one.
1:01:29
Number two.
1:01:29
Number one.
1:01:30
Number two.
1:01:31
Number one.
1:01:31
Number two.
1:01:32
I'm sick of it.
1:01:34
I'm with you.
1:01:35
First or well, first of all, there's a
1:01:39
million things you can say.
1:01:40
They're number one.
1:01:41
Number two.
1:01:42
Well, it's because these people all got a
1:01:44
briefing, a memo, and it had little numbers
1:01:45
next to it.
1:01:46
One.
1:01:47
Say this.
1:01:47
Two.
1:01:48
Say that.
1:01:49
OK, that's number one.
1:01:51
And what was number two?
1:01:52
I got number two.
1:01:53
Number two was this.
1:01:53
That's what's happening there.
1:01:55
Number one.
1:01:55
Number two.
1:01:56
Number one.
1:01:57
Number two.
1:01:57
Number one.
1:01:58
Number two.
1:01:58
The minorities are gravitating toward Israel.
1:02:01
So there's some tension between Syria and Israel
1:02:04
over the minorities.
1:02:05
The Israelis are protecting now the Christians to
1:02:08
some extent, certainly the Druze and some of
1:02:10
the others.
1:02:12
So I think it's a long time coming
1:02:14
before Syria is put together and Syria is
1:02:17
in a comfortable state to deal with Israel.
1:02:20
Then you have the strategic overlay where Syria
1:02:23
is part of a larger strategic battle.
1:02:26
And that may be more the key to
1:02:27
what drives the Abraham Accords in the long
1:02:30
run.
1:02:30
But for the moment, Syria is way too
1:02:32
much of a political football to initiate and
1:02:35
join those accords.
1:02:37
Where is someone talking about the son-in
1:02:40
-law, Jared?
1:02:44
Hasn't anyone brought up Jared yet?
1:02:46
Jared's been completely out of this.
1:02:48
Jared has.
1:02:48
Oh, Jared's taken a billion dollars from the
1:02:50
Saudis.
1:02:51
Jared, Jared, Jared, Jared.
1:02:52
Another Jew.
1:02:53
Jared the Jew.
1:02:58
Somebody should ask the question, where's Jared?
1:03:02
Hereby asked.
1:03:02
But nobody does.
1:03:03
No, of course not.
1:03:04
With Trump's Middle East trip, how do you
1:03:07
see this fitting in with his strategy for
1:03:09
dealing with Iran?
1:03:10
Because, for instance, we heard in Trump's speech
1:03:12
with the Saudis that he doesn't believe in
1:03:14
permanent enemies, signaling a softening on Tehran, but
1:03:17
reiterating that the U.S. will not allow
1:03:19
it to have a nuclear weapon.
1:03:21
How are you reading that?
1:03:22
Yeah, it's a great question.
1:03:23
I think what happened here is that there's
1:03:26
a number of reasons why he went to
1:03:27
Qatar and Saudi Arabia.
1:03:28
UAE is kind of with Saudi Arabia.
1:03:31
So by bringing Qatar and Saudi Arabia into
1:03:35
this happy family, and again, I think in
1:03:37
the long run, it's not such a happy
1:03:39
family.
1:03:40
I think Qatar and Saudi Arabia have two
1:03:41
very different agendas and are not very friendly
1:03:44
to each other.
1:03:45
But nevertheless, the strategy here, I think, was
1:03:48
if you get Qatar and Saudi Arabia, you
1:03:51
pull them out of the Chinese orbit, which
1:03:53
is protecting Iran.
1:03:55
You pull them away from Iran, and you
1:03:58
essentially isolate Iran in the region.
1:04:01
And when you isolate Iran in the region,
1:04:03
and then if you impose sanctions, Iran really
1:04:06
starts facing binary choices.
1:04:08
You're alone.
1:04:09
You're sanctioned.
1:04:10
You're blockaded.
1:04:11
The Chinese can't help you.
1:04:13
The rest of the region's abandoned you, and
1:04:15
the Israelis are about to come after you.
1:04:17
So you have a choice.
1:04:18
Give up your nuclear program and join this
1:04:21
happy family or pursue that, but then you're
1:04:25
going to face the consequences.
1:04:27
So I think that's really the Iran strategy
1:04:29
behind some of this.
1:04:32
Yes, yeah, of course.
1:04:34
Give it up, Iran.
1:04:36
And it's not the Iranian people.
1:04:37
You know, this is another thing.
1:04:39
I'm so tired.
1:04:41
You know, I was tired of now.
1:04:45
I was talking to some Fred Freakout people,
1:04:48
and I'm like, you know, Trump's abandoning Israel.
1:04:54
What do you mean?
1:04:55
Well, he's no longer talking to Netanyahu.
1:04:57
Netanyahu is not Israel.
1:04:59
It's Netanyahu.
1:05:01
Now, Iran is not all the Iranian people.
1:05:03
Iran is actually pretty cool looking these days.
1:05:06
It's modern.
1:05:07
People aren't wearing the hijabs anymore.
1:05:09
Women are walking around in skirts, showing their
1:05:12
ankles.
1:05:13
You know, Russia, Russia is not, it's Putin.
1:05:18
You have a problem with Putin.
1:05:19
This is all dumb.
1:05:21
It's completely dumb.
1:05:23
And the people just sit around, go, what
1:05:27
are they feeding me?
1:05:28
Let me eat it all up.
1:05:30
The Jews, I got it.
1:05:33
They're running the world, man.
1:05:38
Yeah, this all started when we got rid
1:05:41
of no agenda social.
1:05:42
This is when it all started.
1:05:44
This is when we would start on the
1:05:45
downhill slope.
1:05:48
Because we got rid of them.
1:05:49
You mean when it formed?
1:05:51
No, no, no.
1:05:52
When they pulled the plug, that's, I call
1:05:55
that getting rid of them.
1:05:56
When they pulled the plug, I didn't pull
1:05:57
any plug.
1:05:58
When they pulled the plug, that's when people
1:05:59
know those guys, they're all in on Israel.
1:06:02
They're getting checks.
1:06:03
They know where their bread is buttered.
1:06:06
We are going against everything we've always gone
1:06:08
against.
1:06:08
And we've been right every single time.
1:06:10
Oh, no, we're always right.
1:06:12
COVID, Ukraine, everything.
1:06:14
When Ukraine started, we're like, no.
1:06:16
People are like, you're horrible.
1:06:18
Look at my Ukraine flag.
1:06:19
Oh, we lost a lot of audience because
1:06:22
of Ukraine.
1:06:22
Yeah, yeah.
1:06:23
They're all in on this.
1:06:24
But you know what?
1:06:25
We're not, we don't have that quirky face
1:06:27
like Whitney Webb.
1:06:28
The little face.
1:06:29
We don't live in Chile.
1:06:30
And we can't talk about, you know, how
1:06:32
it's the Jews.
1:06:33
And it goes back to, you know, all
1:06:36
the rich Jews.
1:06:37
And then Palantir, Palantir and Elon Musk, they're
1:06:42
all going to control us.
1:06:46
Your Honor, you did get your gigawatt coffee.
1:06:51
I did.
1:06:51
Yes, I did get the gigawatt coffee.
1:06:54
And we also got some decaf for Tina,
1:06:55
which I did not drink.
1:06:58
That's obvious.
1:07:00
But this is important stuff.
1:07:02
Because you and I have other things to
1:07:05
do if people are not going to listen
1:07:06
to us.
1:07:08
I don't know what, but we'll find something.
1:07:10
We'll find something to do.
1:07:12
I would normally try to stop you from
1:07:15
this never-ending lament.
1:07:16
Yeah, but you're not.
1:07:18
But you're not.
1:07:18
Well, no, it's because I'm reminded of another
1:07:21
great evangelist, I don't want to call him
1:07:26
an evangelist, TV guy, TV religious guy, Gene
1:07:31
Scott.
1:07:33
Gene Scott used to come on and complain
1:07:36
and complain.
1:07:37
About not getting enough donations.
1:07:40
Exactly.
1:07:41
He would stop the show.
1:07:42
Yeah, I'm stopping this.
1:07:44
I'm walking away.
1:07:45
He stopped the show.
1:07:47
I'm pulling the plug.
1:07:47
And he'd lower his glasses.
1:07:50
Sometimes you wear two or three pairs of
1:07:51
glasses on top of each other.
1:07:53
These glasses.
1:07:54
I'm wearing them now.
1:07:55
I'm wearing them now.
1:07:56
Look, I'm lifting up one.
1:07:57
And he'd drop his glasses over his nose
1:07:59
and he looked down over the glasses and
1:08:01
he said, is this okay?
1:08:03
Is this important to you?
1:08:04
Does this matter?
1:08:06
You're listening?
1:08:07
You don't care?
1:08:08
And he'd go on.
1:08:09
The whole show would be that.
1:08:11
I don't want the whole show to be
1:08:12
that because I got more clips.
1:08:13
Let's go to clip four.
1:08:14
And I want to dig into some of
1:08:15
those deals with the happy family you just
1:08:17
mentioned, because Trump did strike a deal with
1:08:20
the Saudis.
1:08:21
That's about $600 billion.
1:08:23
And a $244 billion one with Qatar.
1:08:26
You just mentioned they're very different.
1:08:27
But how significant are these two deals?
1:08:29
And how do you see that changing the
1:08:31
dynamic in that region?
1:08:32
Maybe pulling away from China, for instance.
1:08:35
Oh, they're very big.
1:08:35
They really make America the economic focal point
1:08:39
of these massive economic powers, these oil powers.
1:08:43
We haven't even seen yet what's going to
1:08:45
be unveiled in the UAE in the next
1:08:47
two days.
1:08:48
But that will probably add a considerable amount
1:08:50
to the total of purchases, consumption, and investment
1:08:57
in the West, and specifically in the United
1:08:59
States, America first, by these countries.
1:09:02
I think if you add it all up,
1:09:04
at the end of the day, we're talking
1:09:05
close to $2 trillion worth of deals and
1:09:09
investments and arms sales that will come out
1:09:12
of this trip.
1:09:13
That's an awful lot of money to infuse
1:09:15
in the American economy.
1:09:17
And it really helps the president with his
1:09:19
America first agenda, especially to get through the
1:09:22
immediate period of offsetting the damage done by
1:09:26
tariffs until the longer term gains of the
1:09:29
tariffs would kick in, according to what he
1:09:31
believes.
1:09:32
Oh, we move quickly to tariffs.
1:09:34
That's interesting.
1:09:36
Now, it's interesting to remember something that we,
1:09:39
because of Biden, for four years as we
1:09:43
did this show, we forgot about, because before
1:09:47
Biden, we had other presidents that this show
1:09:49
has been on forever.
1:09:51
And we've noticed that one of the things
1:09:53
all the presidents do is that they're ultimately
1:09:56
salesmen for the military industrial complex, and they
1:10:00
go overseas, if you remember.
1:10:01
Yes.
1:10:03
All of them would go overseas and do
1:10:04
deals.
1:10:05
By the way, that's all, just to remind
1:10:07
everybody, that's all we really make.
1:10:09
Have you seen an American car recently?
1:10:11
What does it look like?
1:10:12
They're all militaristic looking.
1:10:13
That's all we know how to make.
1:10:15
War stuff.
1:10:15
We make war stuff.
1:10:18
It's high margin.
1:10:20
Yes.
1:10:20
Oh, war stuff is super high margin.
1:10:23
Yeah.
1:10:23
So, you know, it's a winner.
1:10:25
Yeah.
1:10:26
Our presidents would always go over and do
1:10:29
these deals.
1:10:29
Biden never did, because he couldn't sell anything.
1:10:32
This guy was lost.
1:10:33
He couldn't sell his way out of a
1:10:34
paper bag.
1:10:38
So we go on, and so, but Trump's
1:10:40
just, yeah, I mean, Trump, as old as
1:10:41
he is, he's still a killer salesman.
1:10:45
And that's what we have to remember.
1:10:47
And this is what benefits the country.
1:10:49
It benefits the country beyond belief.
1:10:51
So let's go on, no matter how much
1:10:53
they hate him.
1:10:56
By the way, the TikTok clip's coming up
1:10:58
will prove that.
1:10:59
So let's go to the final clip.
1:11:00
Zooming out a bit here during Trump's speech
1:11:03
in Saudi Arabia, he criticized those he called
1:11:05
neocons and interventionists, saying they messed up Middle
1:11:08
East policy.
1:11:09
What are your thoughts on all of that?
1:11:11
Yeah, he's really reacting to the Iraq war
1:11:13
and especially not just knocking Saddam out, which
1:11:17
had its own strategic issues, but there were
1:11:19
ways to do it.
1:11:20
What he's really reacting to is that we
1:11:21
sat there after the war, occupied Iraq and
1:11:25
had sort of a, we had a nation
1:11:27
building presence trying to rebuild Iraq, which became
1:11:31
kind of an endless bogged down situation.
1:11:35
The Iranians and Syrians were taking potshots at
1:11:38
us there, and we lost four or five
1:11:41
thousand soldiers doing this, which is a horrific
1:11:44
price.
1:11:46
And I think that's what he's really reacting
1:11:47
to.
1:11:48
Even if you have to do something, do
1:11:50
it like what you did just now in
1:11:52
Yemen.
1:11:52
You go in, you send a signal, you
1:11:55
destroy the enemy or you make it clear
1:11:57
to one there's a huge price to pay
1:11:59
being in conflict with the United States.
1:12:01
But don't go in, take over the country,
1:12:04
have a semi-colonial presence to rebuild it
1:12:06
and take responsibility for the country.
1:12:09
It's much more important to let them do
1:12:11
that, let the Iranians do it, let the
1:12:13
Iraqis do it, let the Yemenis do it.
1:12:16
It's just something America can't do in that
1:12:18
region.
1:12:18
We're not Middle Eastern and we don't play
1:12:20
that game well.
1:12:20
And we stop playing that game because we
1:12:23
can't motivate a single smart young American person
1:12:27
to go over there and die for this
1:12:29
nonsense anymore.
1:12:30
We're not going to do it.
1:12:32
This is why we have Israel.
1:12:34
Let them do it.
1:12:35
This is why we have Saudi Arabia.
1:12:37
Let them do it and let them pay
1:12:39
to do it by buying our stuff.
1:12:42
They have ideological problems.
1:12:44
That is the region that they live in.
1:12:47
That's the world they live in.
1:12:50
Trump's long-winded speech in Saudi Arabia.
1:12:53
It was very interesting.
1:12:54
It was kind of interesting.
1:12:55
It was a very good speech.
1:12:57
It got no coverage by the mainstream media,
1:12:59
but it was quite good.
1:13:00
It was well written.
1:13:01
It was too long, as usual, because it's
1:13:04
just the way it is.
1:13:05
You put up with it.
1:13:06
By the way, I'm reminded of, I was
1:13:08
thinking about this because the speech was on
1:13:10
forever.
1:13:11
It was a long one.
1:13:12
And I remember.
1:13:14
When he puts his arm down, he's leaning
1:13:16
on his elbow, reading the teleprompter, you know,
1:13:18
oh, we're in for a long one.
1:13:19
This is going to be a long speech,
1:13:21
isn't it?
1:13:21
And so I'm reminded the first time I
1:13:24
went to China.
1:13:26
We went to the mainland.
1:13:28
I've been to Taiwan and I've been to
1:13:30
Hong Kong, but I never was in China
1:13:32
itself.
1:13:32
And the first time I went there, the
1:13:35
government came out and gave us, we're a
1:13:38
bunch of touring journalists or managers.
1:13:42
We couldn't put the word journalist on the
1:13:44
passport because they didn't like that.
1:13:47
So if you go to China, you're always
1:13:49
a manager.
1:13:52
So there's these guys that would come out
1:13:53
and start lecturing us.
1:13:55
And it was like a Chinese harangue.
1:13:58
It was going on forever.
1:13:59
I mean, it was like you wanted to
1:14:01
shoot yourself.
1:14:02
It's yak, yak, yak, yak.
1:14:03
And that's what, for some reason, this is
1:14:06
Trump style.
1:14:08
Oh, interesting.
1:14:09
You can't take it after a while.
1:14:11
It's like, just end it, man.
1:14:12
But I'm with you.
1:14:13
Where do I sign?
1:14:15
Let me buy that.
1:14:17
It's part of it.
1:14:18
Where do I sign?
1:14:19
You've worn me down, salesman.
1:14:21
You've worn me down.
1:14:23
Well, actually, interestingly enough, if we can move
1:14:27
away from the Middle East for a second,
1:14:30
the sales continue in the EU.
1:14:37
And our boy Mark Rutte, Mark, has paid
1:14:41
off.
1:14:42
Germany has now come out and said, yep,
1:14:44
we're going to push it to 5%
1:14:48
for NATO defense spending.
1:14:51
That was the ask, continuously, 5%.
1:14:55
And Germany just said, when does this come
1:14:57
out, this announcement?
1:14:59
I think it came out.
1:15:00
I'm crediting Rutte.
1:15:02
Well, of course, Rutte did it.
1:15:04
Here, German Foreign Minister Johann Waderspul said the
1:15:07
country was backing US President Donald Trump's call
1:15:10
to increase the defense spending target of NATO
1:15:12
members to 5%.
1:15:17
Before Trump, before Trump in 2016, they weren't
1:15:20
even putting up to 2%.
1:15:21
Yep.
1:15:22
Well, now they got the go-ahead from
1:15:24
Queen Ursula that they can borrow the money.
1:15:26
So like, okay, we can borrow the money.
1:15:28
We're good to go.
1:15:28
Let's do it.
1:15:30
And just to give him the props, here
1:15:32
is the obligatory marketer to clip.
1:15:34
I really want to welcome you to Antalya
1:15:37
for this important foreign ministers meeting.
1:15:40
And I want to thank our colleague from
1:15:43
Turkey.
1:15:44
Really, Hakan.
1:15:45
He can't say.
1:15:47
So in Dutch, it's Turkey.
1:15:49
But he can't say Turkey for some reason.
1:15:52
So he says, Turkey.
1:15:53
Our colleague from Turkey.
1:15:55
Really, Hakan, thank you so much for making
1:15:58
this possible and the hospitality.
1:16:00
It is really amazing.
1:16:01
Oh, it's amazing hospitality.
1:16:03
It was just great.
1:16:04
I had cookies in my room.
1:16:06
We will have a very important meeting today
1:16:08
in the run-up to the summit in
1:16:11
The Hague.
1:16:11
Oh, The Hague.
1:16:13
You know what's happening in The Hague.
1:16:14
The Hague is my home country.
1:16:16
This is where we're going to have our
1:16:17
big, big meeting.
1:16:18
And you know what it's going to be.
1:16:20
We need to discuss how to make sure
1:16:22
that NATO will be stronger.
1:16:24
That means more defence spending.
1:16:26
That means more defence industrial production.
1:16:30
But also how to make sure that NATO
1:16:31
is fairer.
1:16:32
That we equally distribute the burden amongst allies.
1:16:37
And that is only fair.
1:16:38
But also a NATO which is more lethal.
1:16:41
Not by becoming offences.
1:16:43
We need to be killing machines.
1:16:46
By being so strong that nobody will ever
1:16:50
attack us.
1:16:50
No.
1:16:51
Because they know if they would, this defensive
1:16:54
alliance, if we will be attacked, our reaction
1:16:56
will be devastating.
1:16:57
That's going to, it's going to cost a
1:16:58
lot of money.
1:16:59
That's what we will discuss today.
1:17:01
How to make sure that we make a
1:17:02
success out of the The Hague summit.
1:17:04
It will be a splash.
1:17:07
It's a splash.
1:17:08
Of a NATO which is standing there at
1:17:11
the world stage.
1:17:13
Stronger than ever.
1:17:15
So again, thank you for being here.
1:17:17
And now it is my honour.
1:17:18
This is the best.
1:17:19
This guy is the most effeminate, weak, girly
1:17:22
man ever.
1:17:23
And he's just walking around like a peacock.
1:17:25
Like, we're the rulers of the world.
1:17:28
NATO will have all, we're going to make
1:17:30
a splash on you.
1:17:31
We'll splash you here.
1:17:32
We'll splash you there.
1:17:34
Yeah, don't mess with us.
1:17:36
Just make sure you pay for it.
1:17:39
It's amazing.
1:17:40
It's amazing.
1:17:42
That this guy can actually, that he succeeded.
1:17:45
He got Germany to the 5%.
1:17:47
And once Germany goes, how can France stay
1:17:50
behind?
1:17:50
No, no, everybody has to go.
1:17:52
Everybody's got to go.
1:17:53
And he's fantastic.
1:17:54
He's great.
1:17:58
You know, Rutte was there.
1:17:59
I mean, Rubio was there.
1:18:01
Rubio was with Mark.
1:18:03
Hanging out together.
1:18:04
Because they're all in Istanbul.
1:18:08
And you want to hear...
1:18:09
That's right.
1:18:09
Yes, for the...
1:18:10
Yeah.
1:18:10
And so I have a little bit of
1:18:12
Marko.
1:18:12
Who, by the way, is not to be
1:18:14
trusted.
1:18:15
He's a snake.
1:18:15
He's no good.
1:18:16
Careful with this guy.
1:18:17
Thank you.
1:18:18
And I think today's meeting sets up what
1:18:19
I hope will be, I believe will be
1:18:21
a very successful leaders level meeting coming up
1:18:23
very shortly.
1:18:25
NATO has the opportunity to grow even stronger
1:18:28
in the alliance.
1:18:29
You know, the alliance is only as strong
1:18:30
as its weakest link.
1:18:31
And we intend and endeavour to have no
1:18:33
weak links in this alliance.
1:18:34
That's interesting.
1:18:35
The alliance is only as strong as its
1:18:37
weakest link.
1:18:38
So if someone doesn't pay up, the 5
1:18:39
% were weak for some reason.
1:18:41
This is an interesting analogy.
1:18:43
So it's setting up nicely.
1:18:44
And it's good to see, you know, the
1:18:45
president has just submitted a budget for a
1:18:48
trillion dollars of defense spending, which is unheard
1:18:50
of.
1:18:50
It's unparalleled.
1:18:51
And it's not just spending money.
1:18:52
It's spending money on the capabilities that are
1:18:54
needed for the threats of the 21st century.
1:18:56
It's not just spending money.
1:18:58
It's spending money for important things.
1:19:01
We need the Golden Dome.
1:19:04
All kinds of different threats that look different
1:19:06
from the threats in the past.
1:19:08
And so I think today sets up that
1:19:10
leaders meeting, which will be very productive.
1:19:12
I also think, obviously, that the big issue
1:19:15
on everyone's mind is what's happening with Russia
1:19:17
and Ukraine.
1:19:17
The president of the United States has been
1:19:19
abundantly clear.
1:19:19
He wants the war to end.
1:19:21
He's open to virtually any mechanism that gets
1:19:23
us to a just, enduring and lasting peace.
1:19:27
And that's what he wants to see.
1:19:28
He wants to see an end to wars.
1:19:30
He wants to keep wars from happening.
1:19:31
The purpose of NATO is to prevent wars
1:19:33
through its strength.
1:19:35
And that's why, you know, we want to
1:19:36
see it grow stronger.
1:19:40
The purpose...
1:19:41
Let me just hear that again.
1:19:42
I just want...
1:19:42
That should be on his tombstone.
1:19:44
The purpose of NATO is to stop wars.
1:19:47
And that's what he wants to see.
1:19:49
He wants to see an end to wars.
1:19:50
He wants to keep wars from happening.
1:19:51
The purpose of NATO is to prevent wars.
1:19:53
Okay.
1:19:54
Okay.
1:19:54
Can we just write that down?
1:19:56
The purpose of NATO is to prevent wars
1:19:58
in places like, I don't know, Ukraine.
1:20:02
All the states that we expanded eastward.
1:20:05
Libya.
1:20:06
Libya.
1:20:07
Prevent wars.
1:20:08
Prevent destruction.
1:20:09
Prevent it through its strength.
1:20:10
And that's why, you know, we want to
1:20:12
see it grow stronger.
1:20:14
Spending levels among all partners that allow everyone
1:20:16
to be stronger.
1:20:17
It makes the alliance stronger.
1:20:18
And also he wants to end wars.
1:20:20
And that's the hope with Russia and Ukraine.
1:20:22
We'll see what happens over the next couple
1:20:23
of days in that regard.
1:20:25
But we want to see progress made in
1:20:27
that regard.
1:20:27
And whatever mechanism is outlined.
1:20:31
Whatever the process is that needs to happen.
1:20:33
I mean, we are open to being constructive
1:20:35
and helpful in any way we can to
1:20:36
end a conflict.
1:20:38
No, and end the conflicts by spending more
1:20:40
money on our stuff.
1:20:41
It's genius.
1:20:42
It's just genius.
1:20:44
There will be wars and rumors of wars.
1:20:46
It all has to happen.
1:20:47
It's never going to stop.
1:20:48
That is just the world the way it
1:20:49
is.
1:20:50
There is something much more important playing out
1:20:52
this Saturday.
1:20:53
Saturday is a big day when it comes
1:20:55
to competing countries.
1:20:56
Are you aware of this?
1:21:01
Saturday.
1:21:02
Saturday.
1:21:02
Saturday is a big thing taking place in
1:21:04
Switzerland of all places.
1:21:07
This is a big meeting of the creative
1:21:10
minds.
1:21:11
It's that time of year again.
1:21:15
World Economic Forum.
1:21:17
Close.
1:21:17
To Switzerland, where the first of two Eurovision
1:21:20
Song Contest semifinals have taken place in the
1:21:23
city of Basel.
1:21:25
Fifteen countries performed on Tuesday night, including Sweden.
1:21:29
This just took place a couple of months
1:21:30
ago.
1:21:31
No, it's once a year.
1:21:32
That's how fast the time is going.
1:21:34
And for you, it's even worse.
1:21:36
See, I thought it was like maybe half
1:21:37
a year ago.
1:21:38
You're like, this was last week.
1:21:39
That's what happens when you get older.
1:21:41
Time is accelerating.
1:21:43
Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Norway and Croatia.
1:21:47
Among the favorites was Sweden, with a catchy
1:21:49
tribute to sauna culture.
1:21:51
Ah, Sweden with a catchy tribute to sauna
1:21:55
culture.
1:21:55
And Dutch singer Claude, with his emotional ballad,
1:21:59
C'est la vie.
1:22:00
Ah, the Dutch are in the running.
1:22:02
In total, 37 countries will compete for a
1:22:05
place in Saturday's grand final.
1:22:07
I heard more about the first semifinal from
1:22:10
our correspondent, Charlotte Gallagher, who's in Basel.
1:22:14
She began by telling us how the Swedish
1:22:16
band got on.
1:22:18
Well, they did really well.
1:22:19
They are a huge favorite here in Basel.
1:22:22
They're also currently the bookies' favorite as well,
1:22:25
which is no surprise, really, because if there's
1:22:28
one thing that Sweden does really well, it's
1:22:31
writing a Eurovision banger.
1:22:33
They have won it.
1:22:34
A Eurovision banger.
1:22:35
A Eurovision banger.
1:22:37
John, have you got a new Eurovision banger?
1:22:39
How is this even news?
1:22:41
It's lightheartedness because they, of course, will make
1:22:44
it political.
1:22:44
Really well.
1:22:45
It's writing a Eurovision banger.
1:22:47
They have won it so many times.
1:22:50
We were in Malmo last year because they
1:22:51
won it the year before.
1:22:53
Switzerland obviously won it last year, so that's
1:22:55
why we're in Basel.
1:22:56
But it could well be going back to
1:22:58
Sweden next year.
1:23:00
It's a hugely popular song.
1:23:01
It's got a great staging.
1:23:03
They're sat in a sauna, so it really
1:23:04
catches the eye.
1:23:06
It's really funny.
1:23:06
I met a lady from Stockholm earlier, Karen.
1:23:09
She was really excited, and I said, but
1:23:10
what will it mean for the song, you
1:23:12
know, Eurovision, to come to Sweden again?
1:23:14
She went, it'll probably mean higher taxes for
1:23:16
us, but I'm still excited.
1:23:18
This is a big deal.
1:23:19
We do have a lot of people listening
1:23:20
in Europe, and all Europeans, believe me, the
1:23:23
streets are quiet on Saturday night.
1:23:25
Everybody is checking it out, and I need
1:23:28
your insight and your expertise as a musical,
1:23:36
what is it?
1:23:37
Listener.
1:23:39
Aficionado is what I was going to say.
1:23:41
That's a good word.
1:23:42
These are the top three contenders.
1:23:43
I have about 30 seconds of each, and
1:23:46
I would like to get your opinion as
1:23:48
we start off with three entrants.
1:23:50
Ukraine, of course.
1:23:52
We still need to have the political angle.
1:23:54
Ukraine could pull in the top prize because,
1:24:00
hey, Ukraine, right?
1:24:02
We have Sweden because they are clearly the
1:24:05
favorites with their sauna culture, and we have
1:24:07
the Netherlands with Claude.
1:24:10
So I give you Zifferblatt, bird of prey
1:24:13
from Ukraine.
1:24:14
This person, I don't know if it's a
1:24:16
dude.
1:24:16
I don't know if it's a woman.
1:24:18
The person looks just like Zelensky.
1:24:36
What do you think?
1:24:38
Journey from the 70s.
1:24:39
Yes, journey.
1:24:41
Yes, nailed it.
1:24:49
All right.
1:24:50
So you say that's a journey from the
1:24:52
70s, not bad.
1:24:53
I think the Netherlands has an interesting entrant.
1:24:56
Claude with C'est La Vie.
1:24:59
The song is apparently in French spoken so
1:25:02
often in the Netherlands.
1:25:04
But C'est La Vie is a good
1:25:07
title because everyone knows the term C'est
1:25:10
La Vie.
1:25:27
And you complain about our end of show
1:25:29
mixes.
1:25:33
All right.
1:25:34
So that's C'est La Vie.
1:25:35
Cliché on that one.
1:25:36
What a dog.
1:25:37
But I think Sweden will win because they
1:25:41
have...
1:25:42
It's a banger.
1:25:43
It's a banger.
1:25:43
It is...
1:25:44
Believe me, Europe, particularly the Germanic side and
1:25:47
the Viking side, they still want drinking songs.
1:25:52
They still want to go...
1:25:56
That's what they want.
1:25:58
And I think...
1:25:58
Yeah, so they can hold the beer stein.
1:25:59
Yes, and I think Sweden has it locked
1:26:01
up.
1:26:27
See, that's the hook.
1:26:29
This is an anthem style.
1:26:31
Yes, exactly.
1:26:33
Which should catch...
1:26:35
Could win the award.
1:26:36
You might be right.
1:26:37
It goes...
1:26:38
But it still sucks.
1:26:39
It's bad.
1:26:40
It's mediocre.
1:26:41
Who let the dogs out?
1:26:42
Why don't you just do that?
1:26:43
But here's the hook.
1:26:46
Sauna.
1:26:50
Sauna.
1:26:51
See, the whole world will be singing this
1:26:53
song.
1:26:53
Holy, holy, holy sauna.
1:26:57
Sauna.
1:26:58
Sauna.
1:26:58
Yes.
1:26:59
Yes, they win.
1:27:01
Okay, just to wrap this up.
1:27:02
It's just code for get naked.
1:27:04
Yeah, here's...
1:27:06
And here is the political angle.
1:27:07
And what's the atmosphere been like there in
1:27:09
Basel?
1:27:10
Well, no one likes the Jews.
1:27:11
It's very different, I'd say, from Malmo last
1:27:15
year.
1:27:15
It does seem a bit more relaxed.
1:27:17
Malmo was quite tense at times because of
1:27:21
the conflict in Gaza and Israel.
1:27:23
And you felt that as soon as you
1:27:24
got into the city.
1:27:25
We haven't seen that yet in Basel.
1:27:28
There is a protest, though, tomorrow against Israel's
1:27:30
inclusion in Eurovision.
1:27:32
And also when Israel perform in the second
1:27:34
semifinal on Thursday.
1:27:36
The contestant says she expects to be booed,
1:27:39
essentially.
1:27:39
And people will be allowed to bring Palestinian
1:27:41
flags into the arena.
1:27:42
They weren't necessarily allowed to do that in
1:27:44
Sweden last year.
1:27:45
People had those flags taken off them.
1:27:46
This year, they will be allowed to bring
1:27:48
them in.
1:27:48
So I think we'll probably see the mood
1:27:50
towards Israel and the Israeli contestant here in
1:27:54
Eurovision on Thursday.
1:27:56
But at the moment in town, in the
1:27:58
city centre, people seem pretty happy that Eurovision's
1:28:00
here.
1:28:01
There's lots of turquoise flags.
1:28:03
Yeah, blah, blah, blah.
1:28:03
The only reason they should be against Israel
1:28:06
is because they're not...
1:28:08
Why are they part of Eurovision?
1:28:10
There's nowhere near Euro.
1:28:12
This is the problem I've had.
1:28:14
Won't they have a Nigerian candidate?
1:28:17
They could, if you're a member of Eurovision.
1:28:20
That's the only reason to pro...
1:28:21
But oh, no.
1:28:22
Oh, I've got a protest.
1:28:23
Oh, whoa.
1:28:24
Whoa, Israel can't sing songs.
1:28:27
It's a problem.
1:28:31
It's rampant.
1:28:33
And we are...
1:28:33
What's next?
1:28:34
What's next?
1:28:35
We're fighting upstream, John.
1:28:37
We're upstream.
1:28:44
All right, time to get real.
1:28:46
Hey, young people.
1:28:47
We're hip.
1:28:48
We're with the in crowd.
1:28:49
We can do TikTok TikTok clops.
1:28:53
Well, I got a bunch of them.
1:28:54
I got actually five TikTok clips that are
1:28:58
all various...
1:28:59
They're various styles.
1:29:00
Oh, let's start with this one.
1:29:02
Here's a black woman complaining...
1:29:03
Or not complaining.
1:29:04
She's trying to educate us about gingers.
1:29:07
Gingers are no good.
1:29:08
They have no soul.
1:29:09
I just need to remind y'all again,
1:29:11
everyone who is ginger, who has red hair,
1:29:14
those are black people.
1:29:15
All gingers are black people.
1:29:18
If they have red hair, they are black.
1:29:20
You see a white man with red hair.
1:29:22
That's a black man.
1:29:23
You see a white woman with red hair.
1:29:25
That's a black woman.
1:29:27
Gingers are black.
1:29:30
All gingers.
1:29:31
Wow.
1:29:33
Wow.
1:29:33
Okay.
1:29:34
Well, that's...
1:29:35
I can write that one down.
1:29:36
That's a T-shirt, by the way.
1:29:38
Gingers are black.
1:29:40
All right.
1:29:42
I'm loving this insight from TikTok.
1:29:46
Well, that was a different woman than the
1:29:49
one that keeps going on about how all
1:29:51
white people are cannibals.
1:29:52
Remember that one?
1:29:53
It's true.
1:29:55
It's true.
1:29:56
Everyone knows it.
1:29:57
It's on TikTok.
1:29:57
Now, of course, we have the wimpy guy.
1:30:01
Like, just really a wimpy guy threatening everybody
1:30:05
because you're MAGA.
1:30:06
Me, MAGA.
1:30:07
Peter Thiel.
1:30:08
Trump.
1:30:09
JD Banz.
1:30:10
Elon Musk.
1:30:12
Fear us.
1:30:13
We are the masses.
1:30:15
You are the 1%.
1:30:17
We are the 99%.
1:30:19
Think about it.
1:30:21
Think about it, keyboard warrior.
1:30:25
You know...
1:30:26
Think about it.
1:30:26
It's sad because he's clearly angry.
1:30:30
You know, this is the...
1:30:31
He has no other means to show his
1:30:34
anger other than speaking into the deep void
1:30:37
on TikTok to people like you.
1:30:39
So it's...
1:30:40
I feel for these people.
1:30:42
I feel bad for this guy.
1:30:43
I'm in the minority.
1:30:44
I'm inside the majority.
1:30:46
You're in the minority on this.
1:30:47
What do you mean?
1:30:48
Oh, no, I feel bad for all these
1:30:49
people.
1:30:50
I hope all these people, you know, that
1:30:54
they calm down and they stop out of
1:30:56
this.
1:30:57
Eventually it will.
1:30:58
One day it will.
1:31:00
So let's go to Department of Education nut.
1:31:03
Good morning.
1:31:03
It's Monday.
1:31:05
I have a question for those that have
1:31:07
voted for this administration.
1:31:09
Did you vote for the Department of Education
1:31:12
be taken out?
1:31:14
Yeah, let me check.
1:31:15
Yeah.
1:31:15
Yeah, I did.
1:31:16
Yes.
1:31:17
Dismantled.
1:31:18
Did you vote for that?
1:31:19
Yep.
1:31:19
Yeah.
1:31:20
I'm just curious.
1:31:20
I'm sure you wanted them to change things,
1:31:23
but dismantling a department that helps your children.
1:31:26
You mean the department that puts those books
1:31:29
into my children's schools?
1:31:30
No, I'm pretty sure that I voted against
1:31:32
that.
1:31:33
And helps a lot of people.
1:31:35
Putting it with the states is not the
1:31:37
answer, especially if the states don't have income
1:31:39
taxes and if they're going to start taking
1:31:41
those away too.
1:31:42
Hold on a second.
1:31:44
We have a state that doesn't have income
1:31:46
taxes.
1:31:47
We have some of the most beautiful roads,
1:31:50
some of the best infrastructure.
1:31:53
We get taxed in other ways, for sure.
1:31:56
But I think you're wrong on this, TikTok
1:31:59
gal.
1:32:00
Our children will hurt for this.
1:32:03
They want to take away abortion.
1:32:07
This is a great phrase.
1:32:10
They want to take away abortion.
1:32:13
Our children will hurt for this.
1:32:15
They want to take away abortion.
1:32:17
Well, if you don't take away abortion, that's
1:32:19
when the children will really hurt for this.
1:32:20
You know, they get aborted.
1:32:23
If you have a baby, you got to
1:32:25
take care of it.
1:32:25
They don't help you there.
1:32:26
Then you take away education support.
1:32:30
I just, I'm curious.
1:32:31
What's your mastermind thought plan?
1:32:33
And I wonder if it's good as is,
1:32:35
then whatever.
1:32:36
Have a great day.
1:32:38
But this is just people who are grossly
1:32:40
misinformed.
1:32:41
That's all.
1:32:42
She doesn't even understand how a taxless, income
1:32:45
taxless state like Texas works or Nevada or
1:32:50
others just doesn't seem to understand it.
1:32:53
And she, I don't know if she has
1:32:54
children.
1:32:55
If she had children.
1:32:56
What do you think?
1:32:58
Probably not.
1:32:59
Probably not.
1:33:00
So she's just under-informed and a little
1:33:02
over-socialized.
1:33:04
She, you know, again.
1:33:05
You can make excuses all you want for
1:33:07
these people.
1:33:08
I'm not making excuses.
1:33:09
I have compassion for them because I feel
1:33:11
bad.
1:33:11
Yeah, I don't.
1:33:11
I know you don't.
1:33:12
Well, it's okay.
1:33:13
You don't need to shut me down just
1:33:14
because I have compassion.
1:33:16
No, this is the toxic empathy is what
1:33:20
you have.
1:33:20
Oh no.
1:33:21
Oh no, there's no empathy.
1:33:23
Empathy is something completely different.
1:33:25
There's no empathy here.
1:33:26
No, sir.
1:33:27
It is compassion, not empathy.
1:33:29
Toxic compassion is what you have.
1:33:32
Toxic compassion.
1:33:34
Oh, here we go.
1:33:34
The only one who's toxic is you.
1:33:37
Which one?
1:33:37
Here we go.
1:33:38
Here we go with the idiot leaving the
1:33:40
United States.
1:33:41
Okay, so since Trump won the election, we're
1:33:44
cooked.
1:33:45
Yup.
1:33:46
I'm going to be leaving the US and
1:33:48
I'm going to be moving to Hawaii.
1:33:51
So we'll see how it goes.
1:33:53
And I'll update you guys.
1:33:56
Again, someone who has not been educated and
1:33:59
completely over-socialized, who does not understand the
1:34:02
United States includes Hawaii.
1:34:04
That is a kicker.
1:34:06
You should have held that one for last
1:34:07
unless this is the best of the bunch.
1:34:09
No, they're all good.
1:34:10
This one, this is not.
1:34:12
That may have been the best, but we'll
1:34:14
try this one.
1:34:14
It was pretty good.
1:34:15
I just saw this video.
1:34:17
I mean, I've been seeing a lot of
1:34:19
videos.
1:34:20
You need to set this up.
1:34:21
I don't know what's happening.
1:34:22
What's going on with this?
1:34:23
Okay, here's a woman crying and she's letting
1:34:25
it be known that this is the way
1:34:27
everyone must be feeling because she is.
1:34:30
You know, if you're feeling a certain way
1:34:32
because of Trump, obviously everybody's feeling that way.
1:34:36
And so she's eliciting kind of like she's
1:34:40
hoping, I guess, but yeah, yeah, yeah, we
1:34:42
should overthrow the government.
1:34:43
I'm not sure what the goal of this
1:34:45
is.
1:34:46
Overthrow the government.
1:34:47
Okay, yeah, I'm all for it.
1:34:49
Let's do it.
1:34:50
Let's do it.
1:34:50
I just saw this video.
1:34:53
I mean, I've been seeing a lot of
1:34:54
videos.
1:34:56
Anyone else having a hard time not just
1:35:00
breaking down crying several times a day because
1:35:03
you're just watching the horror happen.
1:35:07
The horror of so many people around you
1:35:09
that either have no idea, don't care or
1:35:13
pretending it's not.
1:35:14
And like you're crazy and you're just a
1:35:16
conspiracy theorist and you're just insane and you
1:35:18
just are too dramatic and you just need
1:35:19
to calm down and you just need to
1:35:20
shut the fuck up.
1:35:21
But you want to help and there's nothing
1:35:23
you can do because you don't have money.
1:35:25
You don't have billions of dollars.
1:35:27
You don't have, I don't have any dollars
1:35:29
that I can spare.
1:35:30
Frankly, like truly.
1:35:32
But that's the only thing that seems to
1:35:34
kind of make a difference.
1:35:35
And you can't even do that.
1:35:37
You can't even do that.
1:35:38
You can only speak.
1:35:39
And now we can't even speak.
1:35:41
So watch and cry.
1:35:43
It is, I guess.
1:35:46
You know, the worse it gets, it's not
1:35:48
like the quieter I want to get.
1:35:50
It's the angrier I get, the louder I
1:35:52
want to be.
1:35:54
I've just been screaming for so long that
1:35:56
I'm not sure I, who I'm even talking
1:36:00
to anymore.
1:36:01
Who's left?
1:36:03
It's still, what else do you need to
1:36:05
see?
1:36:05
Oh no, there's lots of you left.
1:36:07
There's, there's a lot.
1:36:08
So I think the reason I have compassion
1:36:11
for these people, we have a family member
1:36:12
who does this on TikTok.
1:36:15
Exactly this.
1:36:17
And it's, it is, I can tell because
1:36:20
I know this family member that it is,
1:36:23
it's an outlet and the feedback is important.
1:36:27
Yeah, you're right on.
1:36:28
You're spot on.
1:36:29
Yes, I'm with you.
1:36:30
I'm also crying.
1:36:31
I'm also worried.
1:36:32
I'm also scared.
1:36:33
These people are scared because these dark media
1:36:38
forces have scared them to no end about
1:36:41
stuff.
1:36:42
They can't, she did in a minute and
1:36:44
15, she didn't even say what she's scared
1:36:46
of.
1:36:47
It's just scared.
1:36:49
She's scared of people.
1:36:51
She's scared, scared.
1:36:54
So this is just, it's just a, that's
1:36:57
real.
1:36:57
That's probably the realest clip that you played
1:36:59
of the bunch.
1:37:00
This really happens.
1:37:02
And people need this feedback because no one
1:37:05
else in their right mind can have a
1:37:06
conversation with them.
1:37:08
So that's for sure.
1:37:10
Yeah, so, and so the algos put those
1:37:12
people together and they see more people saying
1:37:14
this and they believe that the whole world
1:37:16
is like them.
1:37:16
That is the, the true genius of TikTok
1:37:19
is that whatever you're into, you're going to
1:37:22
get a lot of it all the time.
1:37:23
It's not just going to switch all of
1:37:25
a sudden midstream.
1:37:27
And so in that regard, she needs to
1:37:30
get off the internet.
1:37:31
She needs to get off her TikTok for
1:37:33
sure.
1:37:35
None of those kids really had phones by
1:37:36
the way at the high school.
1:37:38
Three, three had a smartphone.
1:37:41
Well, that was, that's new information that needed
1:37:44
to be discussed.
1:37:45
Oh yeah.
1:37:46
In fact, the most common phrase heard from
1:37:50
their parents.
1:37:52
So they have phones.
1:37:53
They have like flip phones and other phones,
1:37:55
but nothing.
1:37:57
Now they have computers at home and so
1:38:00
they can go on YouTube.
1:38:01
Okay.
1:38:03
The most common phrase heard is you can
1:38:05
have a smartphone as a wedding present.
1:38:09
And that's the attitude of the parents here
1:38:11
in Fredericksburg which I think is a good
1:38:13
thing.
1:38:14
And they all wear uniforms.
1:38:16
It was nice.
1:38:17
Oh, you went to a school where there
1:38:18
were uniforms.
1:38:19
Almost all the schools here have uniforms.
1:38:23
I think even the public school may have
1:38:25
a uniform.
1:38:26
I think.
1:38:27
Yeah, I'm for that.
1:38:28
I always liked that when we were in
1:38:29
England and Christina went to school, uniform.
1:38:32
You know, it takes away a lot of
1:38:33
issues.
1:38:35
You know, you don't have the cooler kicks
1:38:37
on or whatever.
1:38:39
Everyone's got the same duds.
1:38:41
No, I'm for that.
1:38:41
You against that?
1:38:42
You don't like uniforms at school?
1:38:44
Well, I've never gone to a school that
1:38:48
had uniforms.
1:38:51
Ever.
1:38:52
And I don't know anybody who did except
1:38:54
you.
1:38:57
So I can't say one way or the
1:38:59
other.
1:38:59
I think that theoretically, in some situations, it
1:39:03
would be a good idea.
1:39:05
But then again, it's kind of militaristic.
1:39:08
No, it's not.
1:39:09
Yeah, it's totally militaristic.
1:39:10
Hmm.
1:39:12
So no agenda millennial in the troll room
1:39:14
says, kids don't have phones, but they have
1:39:16
Adam Curry speak.
1:39:17
What the F kind of school is that?
1:39:21
This is what's happening, John.
1:39:22
We're alienating everybody.
1:39:24
Even the no agenda millennials.
1:39:27
What?
1:39:28
I don't think we've alienated any no agenda
1:39:31
millennials.
1:39:32
Well, the no agenda millennial literally just said
1:39:34
that.
1:39:35
Yeah, but that's it still is.
1:39:37
Did he quit?
1:39:38
I quit.
1:39:39
I'm off.
1:39:39
I'm quitting the chat room.
1:39:41
Never hear from me again.
1:39:42
No, it would never do that.
1:39:44
Because, you know, that's that's where they get
1:39:46
their feedback.
1:39:47
That's they need that.
1:39:48
They need the troll room.
1:39:49
They need it as part of their DNA.
1:39:52
So here's a tick tock crowd for the
1:39:54
elites.
1:39:56
Different venue to complain about America and Donald
1:39:59
Trump.
1:40:00
And guess where that is?
1:40:01
Con, baby, in France.
1:40:04
The 78th Cannes Film Festival opened on Tuesday,
1:40:07
bringing together the world's most famous cinema personalities
1:40:10
to celebrate another year of storytelling.
1:40:12
Day one featured a star studded lineup from
1:40:15
world renowned filmmaker Quentin Tarantino to supermodel Bella
1:40:18
Hadid.
1:40:19
American actors Leonardo DiCaprio and Robert De Niro,
1:40:22
who've worked alongside each other on three occasions,
1:40:25
stole the show on the opening day.
1:40:27
DiCaprio, who skipped the red carpet, awarded veteran
1:40:30
81 year old De Niro with an honorary
1:40:32
Palme d'Or.
1:40:34
But every once in a while, even the
1:40:36
most private of giants deserves their moment.
1:40:40
A moment to be acknowledged, not just for
1:40:42
their work, but for the quiet, lasting influence
1:40:46
they've had on so many lives.
1:40:47
We are so important, everybody.
1:40:50
We, we, we are important to you.
1:40:55
On my life.
1:40:56
So without trying to speak for the entire
1:40:59
world of cinema here tonight, but probably doing
1:41:01
it anyway, there is no one more deserving
1:41:04
of this Palme d'Or lifetime achievement award.
1:41:07
Who is no more deserving for this Palme
1:41:10
d'Or lifetime achievement award?
1:41:13
Who is no more deserving?
1:41:17
None of them.
1:41:18
Can you give me a name?
1:41:19
Well, De Niro got it, didn't he?
1:41:21
Mr. Robert De Niro.
1:41:24
De Niro, an outspoken critic of Donald Trump,
1:41:27
quickly shifted the moment to politics as he
1:41:29
slammed the US president for his administration's attacks
1:41:32
on arts and culture.
1:41:35
America's Philistine president has had himself appointed head
1:41:39
of one of our premier cultural institutions.
1:41:42
He has cut funding and support to the
1:41:45
arts, humanities, and education.
1:41:47
And now he has announced a 100%
1:41:50
tariff on films produced outside the US.
1:41:54
Let that sink in for a minute.
1:41:56
Stop the clip for a second.
1:41:58
Couple of things to note.
1:41:59
Philistine was funny.
1:42:03
Couple of things to note.
1:42:04
Why is the government supporting the arts?
1:42:07
It's the government.
1:42:09
You don't want the government involved, it seems
1:42:11
to me, because they're going to try to
1:42:13
influence one way or the other.
1:42:14
So you don't want that.
1:42:15
I would say you are correct.
1:42:17
The second thing is the reason about taxing
1:42:20
the foreign films was as, which was not
1:42:24
fully understood by me when I first heard
1:42:26
about it, is to keep the business in
1:42:29
the United States and help locals make money,
1:42:32
the people in Los Angeles, the Angelenos, and
1:42:35
the people in New York.
1:42:36
He's got a studio that he built in
1:42:38
New York City with his buddy.
1:42:40
They built a giant soundstage, De Niro did,
1:42:45
and the idea is to keep the business
1:42:47
there and to keep the business in Hollywood.
1:42:50
So what's wrong with that exactly?
1:42:53
What's wrong is what's wrong between the ears
1:42:56
of Mr. De Niro, who I guess he
1:43:00
gets accolades for doing this, and he has
1:43:02
taken every opportunity at every award show for
1:43:05
the past eight years, maybe longer, to do
1:43:10
this at award shows.
1:43:11
Like, I'm going to show him, hold my
1:43:14
beer.
1:43:15
If you're the award show guys, I'd have
1:43:19
to say I'd probably do it.
1:43:21
Your worst show guy said, well, you know,
1:43:23
our awards aren't getting any attention.
1:43:25
What are we going to do?
1:43:27
No one ever pays attention to the con
1:43:29
Palme d'Or.
1:43:31
Well, no one's ever been televised, and I
1:43:34
know of the Palme d'Or, especially the
1:43:36
Lifetime Achievement Award, which who knows who got
1:43:38
it.
1:43:38
You name one person who's gotten it before,
1:43:40
I can't think of one.
1:43:41
But your original point is spot on.
1:43:44
You don't want, you don't actually want the
1:43:46
government involved in the arts for the obvious
1:43:50
reasons.
1:43:51
But here they are complaining because said the
1:43:56
millionaire De Niro, well, I'm not making enough
1:43:59
money now, I guess.
1:44:00
What else is he saying?
1:44:01
Because he's saying that they're cutting the money
1:44:03
off.
1:44:03
That's no good.
1:44:04
Or is he saying, because I hear a
1:44:06
lot of this too, like, so here I
1:44:08
am rich, rich director, producer, movie star.
1:44:13
I presume he's rich.
1:44:14
I have no idea.
1:44:15
But no, he's got plenty.
1:44:16
He's got plenty of money.
1:44:17
You would think he does.
1:44:17
What he's kind of saying is all those
1:44:20
little unsuccessful people get no chance like me.
1:44:24
That's what I mean.
1:44:25
It's very an elitist position to take.
1:44:27
It's like, well, all the things that are
1:44:30
not sponsored, you know, it's almost like the
1:44:32
music business.
1:44:34
You know, it's like, ah, the little people,
1:44:36
they have no chance.
1:44:37
They can't get on the radio.
1:44:38
They can't get on Spotify.
1:44:41
It's an elitist position.
1:44:44
He happens to be a very good actor.
1:44:46
And I think a decent director.
1:44:48
He's produced a lot of things, which means
1:44:50
he put his money into it.
1:44:51
I don't know if he's directed anything.
1:44:52
I think he's directed some things.
1:44:54
But even that series I watched on, I
1:44:57
think Netflix was, you know, about him being
1:44:58
president was good.
1:44:59
And I watched it because I wanted to
1:45:01
rid myself of bias.
1:45:02
And I'm very, I'm very able to separate
1:45:05
the arts and his art from him, the
1:45:09
person.
1:45:10
But remember, this is the guy who literally
1:45:12
was saying what Robert Kennedy Jr. saying now
1:45:16
about the MMR vaccine and has a child
1:45:19
with it and all this stuff.
1:45:20
It's just dark forces.
1:45:23
Hollywood must be controlled by Satan.
1:45:26
And support to the arts, humanities and education.
1:45:29
And now he has announced a 100%
1:45:32
tariff on films produced outside the U.S.
1:45:36
Let that sink in for a minute.
1:45:38
OK, I'm letting it sink in because he's
1:45:41
outside the U.S. He's trying to curry
1:45:43
favor to term to coin a term with
1:45:48
the foreign audience.
1:45:50
Fully well knowing that if you want to
1:45:52
be successful in the film business, you need
1:45:54
the American audience.
1:45:56
You can't put a price on creativity, but
1:45:59
apparently you can put it.
1:46:01
Well, why don't you work for 10 bucks
1:46:03
or scale?
1:46:04
Then it's creativity.
1:46:05
You can't put a price on it as
1:46:06
long as it's 10 million dollars a film.
1:46:07
You can't put a price on creativity, but
1:46:11
apparently you can put a tariff on it.
1:46:14
Of course, this is unacceptable.
1:46:18
All these attacks are unacceptable.
1:46:21
The opening ceremony concluded.
1:46:24
Yeah, unacceptable.
1:46:25
Poor Robert.
1:46:30
He made a he made a bad deal.
1:46:32
That's what happened.
1:46:32
He made a bad, bad deal and he
1:46:35
can't get out of it.
1:46:36
He has to stay stuck in that.
1:46:40
So Jake Tapper is out with his book.
1:46:43
He's shopping it around.
1:46:44
Have you had a chance to read his
1:46:45
book?
1:46:46
No, I have not.
1:46:47
Have you?
1:46:48
Of course not.
1:46:49
But it's about.
1:46:51
Of course not.
1:46:52
They did not send me an advanced copy.
1:46:54
So how could I read it?
1:46:56
They didn't ask me to do a blurb.
1:46:58
So what can I say?
1:46:59
Otherwise, I would have been like best analysis
1:47:02
of the Biden presidency ever.
1:47:05
So here he is.
1:47:06
Well, I don't have the clips.
1:47:07
At least as a good.
1:47:10
But I will say this, that Fox in
1:47:13
particular are spiking the ball because they were
1:47:16
under Biden being seen a little fart forever.
1:47:20
And so they have.
1:47:21
So they've found every clip from Tapper's past
1:47:25
that they can.
1:47:26
I have that one.
1:47:27
Well, there's the one about with Laura Trump,
1:47:30
but there's a ton more.
1:47:33
I have a ton more.
1:47:34
Well, let's play him.
1:47:35
Well, you want that?
1:47:36
You want to hear the the promotion of
1:47:39
the book first?
1:47:41
I want to hear the hear the clips
1:47:43
first, then the promotion of the book.
1:47:44
How do you think it makes little kids
1:47:45
with stutters feel when they see you make
1:47:48
a comment like that?
1:47:49
It's very clearly a cognitive decline.
1:47:52
That's what I'm referring to.
1:47:53
It makes me uncomfortable.
1:47:54
You have you are no.
1:47:56
This is so amazing.
1:47:58
It's so amazing to me that.
1:47:59
And then try and figure out an answer.
1:48:01
Cognitive decline of Biden embraces his stutter talking
1:48:04
about it while Trump mocks it, exaggerates it,
1:48:07
belittles it.
1:48:07
He's sharp physically.
1:48:09
I mean, mentally.
1:48:10
I think the question is physically right.
1:48:12
Right.
1:48:12
Or so.
1:48:13
Right.
1:48:13
Right.
1:48:13
And the guy who's his chief opponent is
1:48:15
only three or four years younger than me.
1:48:17
I mean, you have questioned President Biden's age,
1:48:19
mental fitness, ability to lead of those supporting
1:48:22
Biden.
1:48:22
You said, quote, shame on all of you
1:48:23
pretending everything is OK.
1:48:25
You're leading us and him into a disaster.
1:48:27
Do you worry that you damaged him at
1:48:28
all?
1:48:28
I don't doubt that you got hugs and
1:48:31
handshakes behind closed doors today and maybe even
1:48:34
publicly some of them because they like you
1:48:36
personally.
1:48:37
But I've heard a lot of really nasty
1:48:40
stuff about you from your Democratic colleagues.
1:48:42
I mean, just like what is he thinking?
1:48:45
Exercise and narcissism.
1:48:47
I mean, false claims to The Wall Street
1:48:48
Journal about President Biden's mental fitness and acuity.
1:48:52
He's 81 claims and his memory.
1:48:54
You know, it doesn't seem great.
1:48:56
It's not horrible.
1:48:57
But I don't understand the outrage behind closed
1:49:00
doors.
1:49:00
Biden's shows signs of slipping.
1:49:03
Unquote.
1:49:03
The Wall Street Journal is owned by News
1:49:04
Corp, which is run by the Murdoch's.
1:49:06
Oh, yeah.
1:49:07
Beyond the headline, there is some critical nuance
1:49:08
here.
1:49:09
The article is mostly based on observations of
1:49:11
Republicans with former speaker Kevin McCarthy, the only
1:49:14
one going on the record.
1:49:16
They do note in the article that most
1:49:18
of the criticism comes from Republicans.
1:49:20
Have you heard any concerns from anyone who
1:49:23
has met with President Biden about him seeing
1:49:26
a little slower?
1:49:27
No, the Russians are trying to do to
1:49:29
make us and the public not trust the
1:49:32
our election integrity.
1:49:33
Joe Biden has dimension, all this stuff.
1:49:35
It's all crazy.
1:49:36
It's all crazy.
1:49:37
Jake Tapper on the defense for years and
1:49:40
now years and years and years.
1:49:42
He did this continually.
1:49:44
Laura Trump is still demanding an apology.
1:49:47
He brought he's the one who promoted the
1:49:50
stuttering idea.
1:49:51
And as somebody pointed out, we've noticed this.
1:49:54
He never stuttered before.
1:49:55
Never had a stutter in his maybe when
1:49:57
he was three, but he never stuttered throughout
1:50:00
his career as a senator or even the
1:50:02
vice president.
1:50:02
Now, all of a sudden, he's a stutterer.
1:50:04
You know, so Jake Tapper is a big
1:50:06
phony.
1:50:07
Well, what's amazing is how Jake Tapper can
1:50:10
get up in the morning and shave and
1:50:11
look at himself and think, yeah, I wrote
1:50:13
a good book.
1:50:14
A new book is outlining new claims about
1:50:16
former President Biden's physical and mental health.
1:50:19
The book Original Sin claims Biden's health had
1:50:22
become so severe that there were internal discussions
1:50:24
about putting the president in a wheelchair after
1:50:27
the election.
1:50:28
They started putting aids around him as he
1:50:30
walked to Marine One, the helicopter that was
1:50:33
to kind of hide from public view how
1:50:35
bad his gait was, how bad his walking
1:50:38
was.
1:50:38
At a fundraiser last year with actor George
1:50:40
Clooney, the author's claim Biden seemed severely diminished
1:50:43
and did not recognize Clooney despite Biden knowing
1:50:46
him for decades.
1:50:47
According to the book, former President Obama, also
1:50:49
at that fundraiser, had difficulty making sense of
1:50:52
Biden's behavior and blamed Biden's busy schedule.
1:50:55
But the authors say Obama would come to
1:50:57
realize that scheduling was not the fundamental problem.
1:51:00
A Biden spokesperson refutes the book, saying, we
1:51:02
continue to await anything that shows where Joe
1:51:05
Biden had to make a presidential decision or
1:51:07
where national security was threatened or where he
1:51:10
was unable to do his job.
1:51:11
In fact, the evidence points to the opposite.
1:51:14
He was a very effective president.
1:51:16
Last week, Biden and the former first lady
1:51:18
pushed back against a slate of new books
1:51:19
claiming he was dealing with cognitive decline at
1:51:22
the end of his presidency.
1:51:24
You are wrong.
1:51:25
There's nothing to sustain that.
1:51:28
The people who wrote those books were not
1:51:30
in the White House with us.
1:51:32
And they didn't see how hard Joe worked
1:51:35
every single day.
1:51:37
A Biden spokesperson says the authors did not
1:51:39
fact check the book with them.
1:51:41
That's the best part.
1:51:43
It didn't fact check it, man.
1:51:45
None of it's true.
1:51:46
This is, it's just amazing.
1:51:49
Did ABC Good Morning America call them out
1:51:52
for like, hey, everyone defended this sharp as
1:51:54
attack over and over.
1:51:56
And now, oh, it's a great.
1:51:57
Does ABC own a publishing company like CBS
1:52:00
does?
1:52:00
Is that possible?
1:52:01
I think they do.
1:52:02
But I don't think that's the group that
1:52:03
brought the book out.
1:52:04
It's, I was.
1:52:06
So there's a couple of different things here.
1:52:08
But you continue and I'll, I was going
1:52:11
to say was they should stop all of
1:52:14
this.
1:52:14
It's just elder abuse.
1:52:15
The guy's over.
1:52:16
He's done.
1:52:17
It's like, let him just leave the guy
1:52:19
be.
1:52:20
Here's the problem.
1:52:21
Here's the problem I have.
1:52:23
The 25th Amendment doesn't work.
1:52:27
It doesn't do Jack.
1:52:29
It's pretty obvious.
1:52:30
It wasn't from the last month of this
1:52:32
administration.
1:52:33
We saw it when he's wandering around, going
1:52:36
into the jungle.
1:52:37
He's loses his train of thought.
1:52:41
Constantly losing his train of thought and then
1:52:43
screaming dignity.
1:52:45
And one thing or another.
1:52:47
And obviously other people were running the White
1:52:50
House.
1:52:50
And there was the auto pen signing the
1:52:52
documents.
1:52:53
The 25th Amendment is a fraud.
1:52:56
It doesn't work.
1:52:58
No, it's never going to get executed.
1:53:00
There has to be a coup.
1:53:02
Do you, what do you recommend?
1:53:04
I don't know.
1:53:05
I think it has to go to Congress
1:53:07
or somebody or some other form.
1:53:09
I mean, the Congress could impeach, but that's
1:53:12
no good because it's pretty almost impossible in
1:53:14
this day and age.
1:53:15
We know that doesn't work.
1:53:16
Well, it won't work because you can't get
1:53:18
enough people in the Senate because you need
1:53:20
like 60 or 70 people to say yes.
1:53:23
And that's not going to happen.
1:53:25
And I don't know.
1:53:27
I have no idea.
1:53:28
All I know is that the 25th Amendment's
1:53:30
a fraud.
1:53:31
It was put in place because of Wilson.
1:53:34
And this situation would have been the one
1:53:37
where it should have been executed.
1:53:39
But nobody's going to bring themselves to do
1:53:41
it.
1:53:41
Well, government is a fraud in that regard
1:53:44
then.
1:53:45
It's a governmental amendment, you know, the Senate
1:53:47
and the Cabinet, and they can do this.
1:53:51
But they don't.
1:53:53
Because they were running the show and they
1:53:57
loved it.
1:53:58
Anthony Blinken.
1:53:58
Where's Anthony, by the way?
1:53:59
What's he doing?
1:54:02
Does he have his consulting business up and
1:54:03
running yet?
1:54:04
No, he's probably working for some think tank.
1:54:07
He'll be back.
1:54:07
So of all the big news that the
1:54:10
president had, which is, you know, trillions, well,
1:54:13
no, he had $600 billion in deals, deals
1:54:17
everywhere, deals.
1:54:19
Of course, we're going to spend a trillion,
1:54:21
we heard on defense, which is a good
1:54:23
100 to 200 billion more than the last,
1:54:26
the last, the last, the last completely waste
1:54:29
of money for an operation that can't be
1:54:31
audited.
1:54:31
The last big, beautiful bill.
1:54:34
But I think the, the drug price executive
1:54:36
order was, was big news because outside, you
1:54:43
know, Congress is very hesitant to ever do
1:54:49
anything against insurance companies.
1:54:51
And of course, the unspoken of middlemen, the
1:54:54
pharmacy benefit managers.
1:54:56
And President Trump did just a beautiful job
1:55:00
of explaining how massive the scam is of
1:55:04
the overpayment we make in the United States
1:55:08
with the insurance and the drug companies and
1:55:12
the pharmacy benefit managers, where your copay is
1:55:15
basically what every other country in the world
1:55:17
pays for something.
1:55:19
But somehow you got screwed.
1:55:21
And you're still paying premiums for something.
1:55:24
You have to pay the premiums and you
1:55:27
have to pay the drug price to the
1:55:29
premiums just to go into somebody's pocket.
1:55:31
That's just like stealing.
1:55:33
It's completely stealing.
1:55:34
Of course, insurance companies really are nothing more
1:55:36
or less than banks.
1:55:37
And that's why everyone's deathly afraid of them.
1:55:40
They don't do anything.
1:55:41
But President Trump brought it to the people
1:55:42
and he explained very well what was going
1:55:45
on.
1:55:46
I thought this was probably one of the
1:55:47
best things he's ever done when it comes
1:55:49
to explaining the problem.
1:55:51
I brought it up with the drug companies
1:55:52
represented by somebody who's very, very.
1:55:54
I'm sorry, wrong one here.
1:55:55
I mean, I'll tell you a story.
1:55:56
A friend of mine who's a businessman, very,
1:56:00
very, very top guy.
1:56:02
Most of you would have heard of him.
1:56:03
Yep.
1:56:04
Highly neurotic.
1:56:05
Who?
1:56:05
What fat neurotic guy do we know that's
1:56:08
very successful?
1:56:09
Who could this be?
1:56:10
Plenty of them.
1:56:10
Okay.
1:56:11
Brilliant businessman, seriously overweight.
1:56:15
And he takes the fat, the fat shot.
1:56:18
The fat shot.
1:56:21
Everybody loved this.
1:56:22
The fat, the fat shot.
1:56:24
He's taking the fat shot.
1:56:26
And he called me up.
1:56:27
And he said, President, he calls me.
1:56:31
He used to call me Donald.
1:56:32
Now he calls me president.
1:56:33
So that's nice respect.
1:56:34
But he's a rough guy.
1:56:35
Smart guy.
1:56:36
Rough guy.
1:56:37
Very successful.
1:56:38
I wouldn't even know how we would know
1:56:40
this.
1:56:41
But because he's got comments, the president, could
1:56:43
I ask you a question?
1:56:44
What?
1:56:44
I'm in London and I just paid for
1:56:47
this damn fat drug I take.
1:56:49
I said, it's not working.
1:56:51
I love the Trump throws that in.
1:56:53
It's not working, right?
1:56:54
Is that the problem?
1:56:55
It's not working.
1:56:55
No, man, it's too.
1:56:57
I'm a billionaire.
1:56:58
It's too expensive.
1:56:58
This fat shot.
1:56:59
He said, he said, I just paid $88.
1:57:05
And in New York, I pay $1,300.
1:57:08
What the hell is going on?
1:57:11
He said, so I checked.
1:57:13
And it's the same box made in the
1:57:16
same plant by the same company.
1:57:19
It's the identical pill that I buy in
1:57:21
New York.
1:57:22
Hey, hold on a second.
1:57:25
It was a shot.
1:57:26
Now it's a pill.
1:57:27
Yeah, there's a bunch of people that jumped
1:57:29
on that.
1:57:29
That's interesting.
1:57:30
Do you think that was just an oversight
1:57:32
on his part?
1:57:33
He just made a mistake?
1:57:34
Yeah, he's doing winging it.
1:57:37
He's doing stick.
1:57:38
He's doing stick.
1:57:39
He's doing a stick.
1:57:41
He just is not rehearsed.
1:57:42
Most of his material that's funny is just
1:57:44
off the cuff and he's working it.
1:57:48
Yeah.
1:57:48
And it's the same box made in the
1:57:51
same plant by the same company.
1:57:54
It's the identical pill that I buy in
1:57:57
New York.
1:57:58
And here I'm paying $88 in London.
1:58:01
In New York, I'm paying $1,300.
1:58:04
Now this is a great businessman.
1:58:06
So but he's not familiar with this crazy
1:58:08
situation that we have.
1:58:10
But he was stunned.
1:58:12
Stunned.
1:58:13
He was stunned.
1:58:14
And so then what does our president do?
1:58:16
He goes and talks to the drug companies.
1:58:18
Hey, drug man, the fat shot.
1:58:21
Why is it so cheap over there and
1:58:23
so expensive over here?
1:58:24
I brought it up with the drug companies
1:58:26
represented by somebody who's very, very smart.
1:58:28
Good person too.
1:58:30
And we argued about it for about half
1:58:32
hour.
1:58:32
And then finally, he just said, because they
1:58:34
can't justify it.
1:58:36
He just said, look, look, you got me.
1:58:39
You got me.
1:58:39
Yeah, you got me.
1:58:40
Prez, you got me.
1:58:42
You got me.
1:58:43
It's like a couple of gangsters are on
1:58:45
a table.
1:58:45
Hey, man, how come that vig is so
1:58:47
high?
1:58:47
Hey, Mario, you got me.
1:58:49
You got me.
1:58:50
You got me.
1:58:51
I can no longer just.
1:58:52
They've been justifying this crap for years.
1:58:55
They said, oh, it's research and development.
1:58:57
I said, well, research and development.
1:58:59
Other countries should pay research and development too.
1:59:01
It's for their benefit.
1:59:02
It was just one of those things.
1:59:04
And the other countries would set a price
1:59:06
and they'd meet the price.
1:59:08
And they'd say, if you don't meet the
1:59:10
price, you can't sell it in our country.
1:59:12
I said, well, then you walk away.
1:59:14
And, you know, they'll call you back and
1:59:16
they'll sell it in the country.
1:59:17
But now they'll have to do that.
1:59:18
So for the first time in many years,
1:59:20
we'll slash the cost of prescription drugs.
1:59:23
And we will bring fairness to America.
1:59:25
Drug prices will come down by much more,
1:59:29
really, if you think.
1:59:30
59.
1:59:30
If you think of a drug that is
1:59:33
sometimes 10 times more expensive, it's much more
1:59:36
than the 59%.
1:59:38
You know, it depends on the way you
1:59:40
want to analyze it.
1:59:40
But in one way, you could analyze it
1:59:42
that way.
1:59:42
But between 59 and 80, and I guess
1:59:45
even 90%.
1:59:48
So when I worked so hard in the
1:59:50
first term, and if I got prices down,
1:59:53
I remember I was the only one to
1:59:54
ever get prices down for a full year.
1:59:56
But I'd get them down like 2%.
1:59:58
And I thought it was like a big
1:59:59
deal.
2:00:00
Well, we're getting them down 60, 70, 80,
2:00:03
90%.
2:00:07
So have you read the executive order about
2:00:09
this?
2:00:10
No, you have it right there, though.
2:00:12
Of course I do.
2:00:13
There's a couple of things that are of
2:00:14
note, and this kind of flows into another
2:00:18
freak out, not here in Fred, of course.
2:00:20
Another freak out is about Medicare.
2:00:23
That, you know, the big, beautiful bill, because
2:00:26
they never really explained this part.
2:00:29
The big, beautiful bill will have, you know,
2:00:32
Medicare steep, steep cuts.
2:00:34
Here, actually, I'll play this.
2:00:35
House Speaker Mike Johnson today working to solve
2:00:37
Republican in-party fighting.
2:00:39
I think we'll get everybody to yes.
2:00:40
As their proposed cuts to Medicaid divide the
2:00:43
party.
2:00:43
Late Sunday, Johnson unveiling their plan to cut
2:00:45
hundreds of billions of dollars to Medicaid, fueling
2:00:48
concerns it would leave millions of low-income
2:00:51
and disabled Americans without care.
2:00:53
You're going to die.
2:00:54
I continue to maintain my position.
2:00:57
We should not be cutting Medicaid benefits.
2:00:58
Republican Senator Josh Hawley yesterday with an op
2:01:01
-ed in the New York Times, writing, if
2:01:02
Congress cuts funding for Medicaid benefits, Missouri workers
2:01:05
and their children will lose their health care
2:01:07
and hospitals will close.
2:01:09
It's that simple.
2:01:10
And that pattern will replicate in states across
2:01:13
the country.
2:01:13
I love how hospitals will close has nothing
2:01:16
to do with hospitals.
2:01:17
But Hawley is jumping on the bandwagon.
2:01:20
And he's wrong in this case, because the
2:01:21
numbers add up.
2:01:22
If you look at what's happening here.
2:01:24
We are struggling with rural health care coverage.
2:01:27
And, you know, Republicans, we need to be
2:01:28
making that better, not worse.
2:01:32
Protesters today blocking the doors to one of
2:01:34
the hearings on Capitol Hill, where members of
2:01:36
Congress dissect the proposed cuts.
2:01:38
A critical piece of the big, beautiful bill.
2:01:40
President Trump has been asking for to fund
2:01:42
his agenda.
2:01:43
With the one big, beautiful bill, we can
2:01:46
ignite the second Trump economic boom and improve
2:01:50
the lives of millions of our neighbors back
2:01:52
home.
2:01:52
If the cuts are approved, it would go
2:01:54
against what Trump said back in February.
2:01:56
Can you guarantee that Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security
2:01:59
will not be touched?
2:02:00
Yeah, I mean, I have said it so
2:02:02
many times.
2:02:03
You shouldn't be asking me that question.
2:02:05
OK, this will not be read my lips.
2:02:08
It won't be read my lips anymore.
2:02:11
We're not going to touch it.
2:02:13
Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer says the cuts
2:02:15
would slash Medicaid more than ever before.
2:02:18
It's cruel.
2:02:19
It's heartbreaking.
2:02:21
Senate Democrats will continue to expose this devastating
2:02:24
plan and fight for American families.
2:02:26
Blah, blah, blah.
2:02:27
So the whole point of the executive order,
2:02:30
which, of course, is an executive order.
2:02:31
So if it doesn't turn into legislation at
2:02:34
some point, it goes away.
2:02:36
But the whole point is you can slash
2:02:38
money from the Medicaid budget because Medicaid is
2:02:42
overpaying for all of these drugs.
2:02:45
Because, of course, Medicaid pays pretty much full
2:02:47
price.
2:02:49
What the insurance companies and the pharmacy benefit
2:02:52
managers have jacked this all up to.
2:02:54
But President Trump's executive order is to make
2:02:57
it a most favored nation pricing.
2:03:00
And there's a whole bunch of existing laws
2:03:02
on the books, like the Sherman Act and
2:03:04
all kinds of stuff where this can be
2:03:06
done.
2:03:06
So that Medicaid will have to pay a
2:03:08
lot less.
2:03:09
No one will actually lose anything.
2:03:11
That's the theory, at least.
2:03:12
No one will lose any medicines.
2:03:16
They will just be cheaper to the United
2:03:18
States government and the United States people.
2:03:20
But the real gotcha in here is Section
2:03:23
4, enabling direct-to-consumer sales to American
2:03:27
patients at the most favored nation price.
2:03:30
To the extent consistent with the law, the
2:03:34
Secretary of Health and Human Services, Bobby Beopp,
2:03:36
shall facilitate direct-to-consumer purchasing programs for
2:03:40
pharmaceutical manufacturers that sell their products to American
2:03:44
patients at the most favored nation price.
2:03:47
So you will finally be able to buy
2:03:49
your medication at a normal price, which most
2:03:52
of you are already doing, from India, from
2:03:55
any other place.
2:03:56
That's the big gotcha here.
2:03:59
You know, if you look for ivermectin, you
2:04:03
can get 2,000 ivermectin pills for like
2:04:07
50 bucks from India.
2:04:08
If you can buy it in America, it's
2:04:11
going to be hundreds of dollars.
2:04:13
So he's really put in a bypass here
2:04:15
that also goes for hospitals and pharmacies, etc.,
2:04:20
where you can get your stuff at most
2:04:22
favored nation pricing and go around the system.
2:04:25
I think it's long overdue.
2:04:30
And everything else is just bullcrap.
2:04:36
Okay.
2:04:37
I don't have anything to add to that.
2:04:39
No, there's nothing to add.
2:04:41
Just staying with pharma for one minute.
2:04:44
I told you it was coming, that the
2:04:46
Deutsche Lady, she had her commission, the Pfizer
2:04:50
commission.
2:04:51
They investigated what happened with Pfizer and Ursula
2:04:55
and the text messages.
2:04:57
And they figured it all out.
2:05:00
And nothing will happen.
2:05:01
This is a legal and political thunderclap.
2:05:04
The general court of the European Union has
2:05:06
condemned the European commission's lack of transparency in
2:05:09
the negotiations on vaccines during the COVID-19
2:05:12
pandemic.
2:05:13
The judges annulled the commission's refusal to disclose
2:05:15
the text messages exchanged between its president and
2:05:18
the head of Pfizer.
2:05:19
These text messages between Ursula von der Leyen
2:05:21
and the pharmaceutical giant took place during negotiations
2:05:24
on the purchase of almost 2 billion doses.
2:05:27
The commission maintains that it does not hold
2:05:29
these text messages and that their content was
2:05:32
insubstantial.
2:05:33
Not a convincing line of defense.
2:05:35
For the moment, it's still unclear why they
2:05:38
thought that these messages did not include important
2:05:41
information.
2:05:42
So this needs to be clarified.
2:05:45
And also, in a way, we can see
2:05:47
that in general, there is still a lot
2:05:49
of secrecy around this.
2:05:50
We still don't know.
2:05:51
It's still unclear if these messages were deleted,
2:05:54
if, as the courts say, were deleted on
2:05:56
purpose, automatically.
2:05:57
What happened there?
2:05:58
In our opinion, since the beginning, text messages
2:06:01
should be included.
2:06:03
The court criticized the commission for failing to
2:06:05
provide credible evidence to explain why it was
2:06:08
unable to provide these text messages at the
2:06:10
request of a journalist from the New York
2:06:12
Times.
2:06:13
In addition, the judges considered that the institution
2:06:15
was unable to clearly specify whether or not
2:06:18
these text messages had been deleted.
2:06:20
The commission remains unclear on this issue.
2:06:23
I didn't say that any messages were deleted.
2:06:25
What I did say were that, as in
2:06:28
any access to documents request, what we first
2:06:31
do is to check, are there any registered
2:06:34
documents that fall within the scope of the
2:06:36
request?
2:06:37
We did that, didn't find any.
2:06:38
The commission considers that the judgment does not
2:06:41
call into question the procedures for registering documents,
2:06:43
but rather a lack of explanation.
2:06:45
It interprets the court decision as an indication
2:06:48
that it will have to justify itself better
2:06:50
in the future.
2:06:51
Oh, you know, they deleted themselves.
2:06:55
It's, you know, it's just what happens.
2:06:59
This, and Ursula just wafts away, no problem.
2:07:05
She's gonna walk away with no problem anyway.
2:07:08
Yeah, there is, of course, somewhere there's a
2:07:10
record of these text messages.
2:07:12
Yeah.
2:07:13
The NSA has it.
2:07:16
I'm sure the NSA does have it.
2:07:17
I'm sure somebody has it.
2:07:20
So, well, I'm glad the German lady did
2:07:22
all that work for nothing.
2:07:24
Nothing, nothing, nothing comes out of these things.
2:07:26
They're corrupt.
2:07:28
Corrupt.
2:07:31
R.F.K. Jr. Well, I guess I
2:07:35
got one clip from the hearing.
2:07:36
They were grilling him left and right.
2:07:39
R.F.K. Jr. is in front of
2:07:40
Congress, in front of, first he's in front
2:07:42
of Congress, then he was in front of
2:07:44
the Senate.
2:07:45
What was it all about?
2:07:46
Was it just to grill him?
2:07:47
Because he's a bad guy and he's, they're
2:07:49
trying to get rid of him.
2:07:51
And so they're trying to embarrass him.
2:07:53
They can't do it.
2:07:55
Trying to contradict him.
2:07:56
That clip that was, what was it, we
2:08:00
talked about a couple of shows ago of
2:08:03
the guy, head of one of the committees
2:08:05
that's supposed to be running Kennedy.
2:08:07
R.F.K. Jr. Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
2:08:08
I'm in charge of him.
2:08:10
I own him.
2:08:11
He has to talk to me every month.
2:08:13
That guy?
2:08:13
R.F.K. Jr. Yeah, that guy.
2:08:15
So he's got a couple of compatriots.
2:08:18
They're all Democrats.
2:08:19
These Democrats, I mean, they loved Kennedy until
2:08:21
he became a Republican.
2:08:22
This is really simple.
2:08:24
But let's listen to him go.
2:08:26
This is it's went on with all of
2:08:27
them.
2:08:28
But especially the Democrats, the Republicans were fine.
2:08:30
But the Democrats kept trying to, you know,
2:08:34
they're pushing vaccines.
2:08:35
Oh, the measles thing.
2:08:36
You had two dead kids.
2:08:38
My God.
2:08:39
And we had 20 shootings in Oakland.
2:08:42
Doesn't matter.
2:08:42
But these two dead kids.
2:08:44
No, they're black.
2:08:45
It doesn't matter.
2:08:46
This doesn't matter.
2:08:46
So so here's one of the back and
2:08:49
forths.
2:08:50
Health Secretary Robert F.
2:08:51
Kennedy Jr. says that reducing dependency on China
2:08:54
for critical medicines is a priority for him
2:08:56
and the Trump administration.
2:08:58
NTT correspondent Jason Blair has more from Kennedy's
2:09:01
testimony on Capitol Hill.
2:09:03
They're directly and narrowly focused on creating dominance
2:09:07
across the globe.
2:09:08
During a House committee meeting, HHS Secretary Robert
2:09:11
F.
2:09:11
Kennedy Jr. agreed when asked if over relying
2:09:15
on China for critical pharmaceuticals poses a threat.
2:09:18
We saw the problem with supply chain control
2:09:21
by the Chinese during COVID.
2:09:23
And this is a priority for me and
2:09:25
for this administration.
2:09:26
RFK Jr. says that they've been working hard
2:09:28
to bring more medicine production into the US
2:09:31
and that he's been meeting with pharmaceutical CEOs.
2:09:35
I've met repeatedly with Eli Lilly, which is
2:09:39
now building nine facilities, nine factories in this
2:09:41
country.
2:09:42
Kennedy says that China also has a program
2:09:45
called the Thousand Talents Program that is designed
2:09:48
to steal US IP and technology.
2:09:51
And we have facilitated that at NIH.
2:09:54
I funded Chinese scientists with contracts that don't
2:09:58
require them even to report their science back
2:10:01
to our country.
2:10:01
But they give it directly to Chinese military
2:10:03
scientists on bioweapons research that we gave them
2:10:07
the technology for.
2:10:08
After testifying in front of the House Appropriations
2:10:11
Committee, Kennedy was a witness in a second
2:10:14
hearing in front of the Senate.
2:10:18
He was interrupted by protesters during his opening
2:10:22
statement.
2:10:22
The witness will suspend.
2:10:23
The committee will come to order.
2:10:25
Tina told me that the guy from Ben
2:10:28
and Jerry's was protesting.
2:10:31
I don't get the protests at all.
2:10:33
What are they protesting against?
2:10:35
I don't get it.
2:10:37
It seems like a plant to me.
2:10:38
But then the best clips are these, which
2:10:40
is Chris Murphy comes on and he starts
2:10:43
asking Kennedy a bunch of pointed questions.
2:10:46
And Chris Murphy is a showboater from Connecticut.
2:10:48
He shows up a lot.
2:10:50
He's trying to become president.
2:10:52
He sucks.
2:10:52
He's stupid.
2:10:54
And here he goes into it.
2:10:56
This is a Chris Murphy series.
2:10:58
This is him talking to Kennedy.
2:10:59
That is not what happened.
2:11:00
You've done the opposite.
2:11:01
You canceled $12 billion in grants to the
2:11:04
states, including my state, that are used to
2:11:06
administer and track vaccines.
2:11:08
You promised Chairman Cassidy.
2:11:10
When did I do that?
2:11:12
Madam Chair, would you allow me to finish
2:11:13
my question?
2:11:15
Keep going with your questions.
2:11:15
When did I do that?
2:11:16
Let me, let me, let me finish my
2:11:19
question.
2:11:20
Just tell me when I did it so
2:11:21
I can understand what the question is.
2:11:24
You have canceled $12 billion in public health
2:11:28
grants to states, whether you know this or
2:11:30
not.
2:11:31
That funding is used by the states in
2:11:33
part to be able to administer and dispense
2:11:38
information about vaccines.
2:11:40
Hmm.
2:11:42
Why does it take $12 billion to administer
2:11:48
information about vaccines?
2:11:50
Hey, I'll take $1 billion and talk about
2:11:53
it three hours long, twice a week.
2:11:56
It's unbelievable.
2:11:57
That's just scam, obviously.
2:11:59
For one state.
2:12:00
But could he answer the question about it?
2:12:02
Did he even know why it had been
2:12:04
canceled?
2:12:04
Well, it continues pretty much in order.
2:12:07
So here he comes.
2:12:08
Let me give you, Mr. Secretary, let me
2:12:10
give you, let me, let me give you
2:12:12
the full panoply of the things you said
2:12:17
before this committee that didn't turn out to
2:12:19
be true.
2:12:19
You also promised Chairman Cassidy that the FDA
2:12:23
would not change vaccine standards from, quote, historical
2:12:26
norms.
2:12:27
But what happened as soon as you were
2:12:29
sworn in?
2:12:29
You announced new standards for vaccine approvals that
2:12:33
you proudly referred to in your own press
2:12:35
release as a radical departure from current practice.
2:12:39
And experts say that that departure will delay
2:12:41
approvals.
2:12:43
You also said specific to the measles vaccine
2:12:45
that you support the measles vaccine.
2:12:47
But you have consistently been undermining the measles
2:12:51
vaccine.
2:12:51
You told the public that the vaccine wanes
2:12:53
very quickly.
2:12:54
You went on the Dr. Phil show and
2:12:56
said that the measles vaccine was never fully
2:12:58
tested for safety.
2:12:59
You said there's fetal debris in the measles
2:13:02
vaccine.
2:13:03
And this morning- All true, all true.
2:13:05
This morning in front of- Do you
2:13:06
want me to lie to the public?
2:13:08
That's not, none of that is true.
2:13:09
None of that is true.
2:13:09
Of course it's true.
2:13:10
That is true.
2:13:11
Of course it's true.
2:13:12
I'm sorry, Mr. Secretary, that is true.
2:13:13
You've got your senator begging your property.
2:13:15
And I will submit- You do not
2:13:15
know what you're talking about.
2:13:17
For the record.
2:13:18
Let's have a little bit of order so
2:13:20
that you can get your question and he
2:13:22
can get his.
2:13:22
I didn't ask, I didn't ask for a
2:13:24
response yet.
2:13:25
I understand that.
2:13:25
I'd like to lay out the predicate of
2:13:26
my question before I'm interrupted by the witness.
2:13:28
He should have some respect for this committee.
2:13:31
By the way, the Ben and Jerry's guy,
2:13:35
Ben, Ben Cohen, he was kicked out of
2:13:39
the hearing with Robert Kennedy Jr. for protesting
2:13:41
Congress's funding of the Israeli military.
2:13:46
He went to the wrong hearing somehow.
2:13:49
Oh, that's funny.
2:13:51
It's just like, uh, no.
2:13:54
It's like a Woody Allen movie.
2:13:57
Exactly.
2:13:58
So we wrap it with this one.
2:14:00
Just this morning in front of the House
2:14:02
of Representatives, you also said that you, in
2:14:04
fact, would not recommend that kids get vaccinated
2:14:07
for measles.
2:14:08
You said you would just lay out the
2:14:10
pros and cons.
2:14:12
Okay, so this is the summation of everything
2:14:15
that you have said to compromise people's faith
2:14:19
in the measles vaccine in particular is contrary
2:14:22
to what you said before this committee.
2:14:24
You said you support the measles vaccine.
2:14:26
But then you have laid out a set
2:14:28
of facts that are contested.
2:14:29
And I will submit information for the record
2:14:31
from experts who contest what you've said about
2:14:34
the vaccine.
2:14:35
And the result is to undermine faith in
2:14:37
the vaccine.
2:14:37
It's kind of like saying, listen, I think
2:14:39
you should swim in that lake.
2:14:41
But, you know, the lake is probably toxic
2:14:43
and there's probably a ton of snakes and
2:14:44
alligators in that lake.
2:14:45
But I think you should swim in it.
2:14:47
Nobody's going to swim in that lake if
2:14:48
that's what you say.
2:14:49
And so I want you to acknowledge that
2:14:51
when you say you support the measles vaccine
2:14:53
and then go out and repeatedly undermine the
2:14:56
vaccine with information that is contested by public
2:14:59
health experts, that is not supporting the vaccine.
2:15:03
And so I guess I have two simple
2:15:05
questions for you.
2:15:06
One is, can you clarify what you said
2:15:09
in the House this morning?
2:15:10
Are you or are you not recommending that
2:15:13
families get their children vaccinated?
2:15:15
Or are you just giving people the pros
2:15:18
and cons?
2:15:19
And do you understand that when you say
2:15:22
these things about the measles vaccine, what ends
2:15:24
up happening is less people get the vaccine?
2:15:26
That may be what you want.
2:15:28
But do you understand that the result of
2:15:30
constantly questioning the efficacy or safety of the
2:15:33
vaccine results in less people getting the vaccine?
2:15:36
So I don't necessarily want to spend the
2:15:38
remaining 20 seconds in an argument over the
2:15:40
science, but you at least understand that that's
2:15:43
the consequence of what you're saying.
2:15:45
And are you actually still recommending people get
2:15:47
the vaccine or are you not?
2:15:49
Senator, if I advise you to swim in
2:15:51
a lake, then I knew there to be
2:15:53
alligators.
2:15:53
And wouldn't you want me to tell you
2:15:55
there were alligators in it?
2:15:56
So are you recommending the measles vaccine or
2:15:59
not?
2:15:59
What I've said and what I said-
2:16:02
Doesn't sound like you are, if that's-
2:16:04
Are you going to let me answer?
2:16:06
Are you going to keep it or are
2:16:07
you not?
2:16:08
Are you going to let me answer?
2:16:10
What I pledged before this committee during my
2:16:13
confirmation is that I would tell the truth,
2:16:14
that I would have radical transparency.
2:16:17
I'm going to tell the truth about everything
2:16:19
we know and we don't know about vaccines.
2:16:21
Are you recommending the measles vaccine or not?
2:16:22
I am not going to just tell people
2:16:24
everything is safe and effective if I know
2:16:26
that there's issues.
2:16:27
I need to respect people's intelligence.
2:16:30
Thank you for answering the question.
2:16:31
Wow, I don't think I saw that clip
2:16:33
on mainstream news.
2:16:35
I wonder why.
2:16:38
I have a lot of really good clips
2:16:41
about big pharma because outside of the military
2:16:44
industrial complex, which runs a lot, that is
2:16:48
probably number two.
2:16:49
They certainly run the media.
2:16:50
But before we do that, I'd like to
2:16:54
thank you for your courage to say in
2:16:55
the morning to you, the man who put
2:16:56
the C's in the caravan of camels, say
2:16:58
hello to my friend on the other end,
2:17:00
the one, the only, Mr. John C.
2:17:03
DeWaar.
2:17:05
Yeah, well, in the morning to you, Mr.
2:17:07
Adam Crane.
2:17:07
Morning to you, Mr. Steve Woodson.
2:17:08
Raffy in the air.
2:17:09
Sub's DeWaar.
2:17:09
Name's nice out there.
2:17:10
And in the morning to the trolls in
2:17:11
the troll room.
2:17:12
Hello there, trolls.
2:17:13
How you doing?
2:17:14
How you rocking?
2:17:14
How you rolling?
2:17:15
Hello.
2:17:16
Oh, we don't have a peak troll count
2:17:18
for some reason.
2:17:19
Why is that now?
2:17:21
Always something.
2:17:23
It's always something.
2:17:24
We're around 1500 right now, but usually it's
2:17:29
probably around 18, 1900.
2:17:32
Interesting.
2:17:32
Didn't show up.
2:17:33
Anyway, the trolls are there.
2:17:34
The trolls are very cynical.
2:17:36
I've noticed.
2:17:36
I've been paying attention to them today.
2:17:38
They're like, it's all performative.
2:17:41
No, they don't care.
2:17:42
These people are no good.
2:17:44
We're all going to die.
2:17:47
They have no joy.
2:17:49
Where's your joy and chaos, trolls?
2:17:51
It's all good.
2:17:52
It's all good.
2:17:53
It really is.
2:17:53
Everything's going to be fine.
2:17:55
This is a show put on for your
2:17:57
benefit.
2:17:58
It's just a show.
2:18:01
Bobby the Op is right.
2:18:02
I'm not going to tell you to swim
2:18:03
in the lake if there's alligators in that.
2:18:05
I'm not going to do that.
2:18:06
No.
2:18:10
So the trolls are in the troll room,
2:18:12
trollroom.io. If you want to go in
2:18:14
there and be beaten around like you're in
2:18:15
a bouncy ball, fill, you know, one of
2:18:17
those ball bins with kids.
2:18:19
Yeah, that's a good place to go.
2:18:21
And of course, you can listen to the
2:18:22
live stream or use a modern podcast app.
2:18:24
Fountain, by the way, is coming out with
2:18:26
a new version where you can boost with
2:18:30
dollars right from the app.
2:18:31
Did I tell you that already?
2:18:33
Yeah, you did last show.
2:18:34
Oh, okay.
2:18:35
Yeah.
2:18:35
You went on and on about it.
2:18:36
Yeah, because that's what I've been...
2:18:38
Ever since Apple made the change where you
2:18:40
can have an alternative payment method in your
2:18:42
app, because that was the whole thing, is
2:18:45
you can't do it now.
2:18:47
No, they lost that big epic court case
2:18:49
and the judge excoriated them.
2:18:52
So they have to.
2:18:53
They have to allow buttons and links in
2:18:55
apps that do not use the Apple in
2:18:59
-app payment system, i.e. Apple gets 30
2:19:02
% of it.
2:19:03
So that's good news.
2:19:04
It's good news for freedom, John.
2:19:06
For freedom.
2:19:08
Freedom, baby.
2:19:09
Screw your freedom.
2:19:11
That's right.
2:19:12
It's a good day for freedom.
2:19:13
And, of course, you also, with those modern
2:19:15
podcast apps at podcastapps.com, you'll get the
2:19:19
bat signal when we go live.
2:19:21
Many of these shows go live, and you'll
2:19:23
know it because it's all a knowage in
2:19:24
the stream.
2:19:25
Everything is all there.
2:19:26
You get the chapters.
2:19:27
You get all kinds of groovy stuff.
2:19:28
And, of course, when we post the show,
2:19:31
within 90 seconds, these modern apps know about
2:19:33
it.
2:19:33
Don't spend hours of your time wasting around
2:19:36
waiting for Apple to update.
2:19:38
It's just not worth it.
2:19:40
Value for value is how we hope to
2:19:42
continue with this podcast, which means if you
2:19:45
get anything out of the program, and you
2:19:48
feel like, you know, I got a good
2:19:50
stock tip.
2:19:51
I learned something that I can impress my
2:19:53
family with.
2:19:54
I felt better.
2:19:55
I just felt better because I don't feel
2:19:57
all spun up about all the nonsense that's
2:19:59
being thrown at me 24-7 online and
2:20:02
on cable and over the air, even.
2:20:05
Well, then just send something back to us.
2:20:07
Time, talent, or treasure.
2:20:08
You can do any version of that that
2:20:10
you want.
2:20:11
We have artists who love sending us their
2:20:13
talent and their time by making artwork that
2:20:16
we can choose right after the show.
2:20:18
They do it live while we're on the
2:20:20
air, which is very impressive.
2:20:22
They use a variety of tools.
2:20:26
And it's clear that the tool of choice,
2:20:29
although expertly applied, was artificial intelligence generative AI
2:20:34
for the episode 1763, which was on Sunday.
2:20:37
We titled that AI Factory.
2:20:39
We were contemplating doing A1 Factory to stay
2:20:43
online with our fine secretary of education, but
2:20:47
we decided against that because we thought people
2:20:49
would probably look at it and think that
2:20:50
we were the dopes and not the secretary
2:20:52
of education.
2:20:53
I know, it's a fine line.
2:20:55
Very fine line, very fine line.
2:20:57
However, Francisco Scaramanga, I mean, we went way
2:21:02
off base.
2:21:03
We're traditionalists when it comes to holidays and
2:21:07
observances for veterans or for Christmas or Easter,
2:21:14
and Mother's Day has always been kind of
2:21:16
sacred for us, and we veered off the
2:21:19
path.
2:21:20
No.
2:21:21
What do you mean, no?
2:21:22
We went over this and over this and
2:21:24
over this, and I came...
2:21:26
You, yes, you.
2:21:28
I said, I like this piece, and you
2:21:29
said it was gruesome, which is a rule.
2:21:32
I said, does it apply to the gruesome
2:21:35
rule?
2:21:36
Can we apply that to this piece of
2:21:38
art?
2:21:38
The gruesome rule, I think, was in play,
2:21:40
and so I looked at it, and I
2:21:42
think it's a hilarious piece.
2:21:43
It's very funny.
2:21:44
By the way, I will say this.
2:21:47
There is a bunch of these AI art
2:21:49
pieces that come out dingy.
2:21:52
Yeah, dingy.
2:21:53
And somebody's got to fix this.
2:21:56
The art is dingy.
2:21:58
We had this, the last couple of pieces
2:22:00
came out dingy.
2:22:01
There's no white.
2:22:04
The dynamic range of the piece is minimal.
2:22:08
So it's muddy looking.
2:22:09
Because it's a photocopy of something else.
2:22:11
Who knows what it is.
2:22:13
But the piece I really liked was Happy
2:22:15
Mother's Day by Darren O'Neill with the
2:22:18
flying mom.
2:22:19
You're not an NPC.
2:22:21
I was pushing that at the end, but
2:22:23
then you, because I had first chosen this,
2:22:26
you had said, No, you're going to eat
2:22:28
it.
2:22:28
And this is going to be your fault.
2:22:31
And you insisted that we take this horrible
2:22:34
piece by Scaramanga.
2:22:35
You are turning history around.
2:22:37
I'm telling you the story.
2:22:38
The pregnant mom, the kid in a body
2:22:40
suit, with a package, as you put it.
2:22:43
And the poor girl with the eyes got
2:22:46
poked.
2:22:48
I mean, it's just a tremendously gross piece.
2:22:51
From now on, I'm taping our conversations about
2:22:54
art so I can play back the truth.
2:22:56
You said, I love this piece.
2:22:59
This is a great piece.
2:23:00
And I said, I said, no, this is
2:23:02
horrible.
2:23:03
And by the way, the kid has a
2:23:04
huge package.
2:23:05
This is weird.
2:23:06
This is not good.
2:23:07
That's what I said.
2:23:08
That's what you said.
2:23:09
Yeah, but you were pushing for this.
2:23:11
You weren't pushing for anything else.
2:23:12
She's like, this is the one, man.
2:23:13
This is it.
2:23:14
This is the one.
2:23:16
And you said Francisco Scaramanga is great.
2:23:19
I heard you say it.
2:23:20
I heard you say it.
2:23:21
He is great.
2:23:22
He's great.
2:23:23
But so is Darren.
2:23:24
Darren is very good.
2:23:25
I actually use the mom with the flying
2:23:28
mom as a bat signal piece of art.
2:23:30
I like that as well.
2:23:31
However, it was Francisco Scaramanga who scores once
2:23:35
again with his kegger for mom art.
2:23:37
That's what the title is.
2:23:39
And I'm just looking to see if there
2:23:40
was anything.
2:23:41
I think I pushed maybe for one other
2:23:44
Mother's Day.
2:23:45
No, there really wasn't.
2:23:47
It was weak.
2:23:50
Yes, and a lot of the art is
2:23:51
dingy.
2:23:52
You're right.
2:23:52
You're so right about that.
2:23:54
That's an interesting observation.
2:23:55
A lot of Pope.
2:23:57
A lot of Pope stuff.
2:23:58
A lot of raw dogging.
2:23:59
A lot of raw dogging.
2:24:00
I probably noticed this more with this, with
2:24:02
not this piece, but the one, the last
2:24:04
piece would look good on the art generator.
2:24:06
But then when it showed up on the,
2:24:07
it was dingy.
2:24:09
It didn't have any white.
2:24:11
Yeah.
2:24:12
Yeah.
2:24:12
It's not white.
2:24:13
The contrast was minimized.
2:24:16
And they said the Scaramanga piece is probably
2:24:18
the worst example of this.
2:24:20
There is no dynamic range.
2:24:22
No, no.
2:24:23
But don't worry.
2:24:24
We'll fix it.
2:24:24
Once we have more compute.
2:24:28
Try a different system.
2:24:30
I had lunch with a new guy in
2:24:32
town.
2:24:32
He's a little bit younger than me, which
2:24:33
was nice.
2:24:34
Everyone's a little bit older than me.
2:24:36
Wait, wait.
2:24:37
How did this come about?
2:24:39
Oh, they moved.
2:24:40
He's just walking down the street and just
2:24:41
had lunch with some rando?
2:24:42
Hey, now he actually does the mixing at
2:24:46
church for the worship team, which is Christianese
2:24:49
for band.
2:24:52
And he's a musician.
2:24:53
So he plays guitar, but he's doing all
2:24:56
the mixing.
2:24:57
And finally, it's starting to sound good.
2:24:58
It really sounds good.
2:25:00
And he is a sales guy for the
2:25:03
hyperscalers.
2:25:05
And so he said, so I won't mention
2:25:08
his company, but they sell AI products and
2:25:10
they sell products where you can select the
2:25:13
model you want.
2:25:15
And so I said, oh, this is great.
2:25:16
So we sit, so I go out to
2:25:18
lunch.
2:25:18
We go out to lunch, have a little
2:25:19
chat.
2:25:20
And I said, well, what do you think
2:25:21
of this AI?
2:25:21
He says, you know, people in the industry
2:25:24
are saying, this is like jet travel.
2:25:26
This changes everything.
2:25:27
He says, this is bull crap.
2:25:29
He says, it's all still machine learning and
2:25:31
it's pretty good at it.
2:25:33
But there's no, like me, he says, there's
2:25:34
no intelligence in this artificial intelligence.
2:25:37
Zero, zero.
2:25:38
He says, we're not even at 0.1
2:25:40
% of anything intelligent.
2:25:42
Now, if you give it structured data and
2:25:45
you want to sift through it and find
2:25:46
things and categorize, yeah, that's machine learning.
2:25:49
It's machine learning.
2:25:50
That's where we were before the AI hype
2:25:52
took off.
2:25:53
Then it took off because people like Scaramanga
2:25:55
can make this stuff.
2:25:56
And we're like, we're gobsmacked.
2:25:58
Like, wow, this is great.
2:25:59
How did you do that?
2:26:00
Or you can make a country song because
2:26:02
all the AI generators only make country songs.
2:26:05
You notice that?
2:26:07
Oh man, I made a great song with
2:26:08
AI.
2:26:09
It's always a country song.
2:26:11
So that's just, he agrees with me.
2:26:13
It's just a parlor trick.
2:26:15
So that made me feel very good.
2:26:17
I paid for lunch.
2:26:18
Good to go.
2:26:19
Wow.
2:26:20
He got you.
2:26:22
What else do you want me to say
2:26:24
that I agree with?
2:26:26
Hey, a big $49 check at Werner's Cafe.
2:26:29
I think- 49 bucks for lunch is
2:26:31
a lot.
2:26:32
It's Fredericksburg, baby.
2:26:34
It's better to eat at home here.
2:26:36
For two people?
2:26:37
Two sandwiches, two drinks, and pie?
2:26:40
49 bucks is kind of- What do
2:26:42
you pay for in California for that?
2:26:46
$3.50. Okay.
2:26:47
All right.
2:26:49
I'm moving to Cali.
2:26:50
They'll tax you on the back end.
2:26:52
Don't worry.
2:26:52
They make it up in volume.
2:26:54
So thank you very much, Francisco Scaramanga.
2:26:56
Thank you to all of our artists who
2:26:58
diligently participate in this wacky contest at noagendaartgenerator
2:27:02
.com.
2:27:03
We really do appreciate what you do.
2:27:06
Now to the donations.
2:27:07
It'll be a quick list.
2:27:08
And of course, I've been grousing about this
2:27:11
because this is the lowest that's been in
2:27:12
a long time.
2:27:13
I want to point out that this is
2:27:15
the only gig we have.
2:27:16
So, you know, and this is a full
2:27:19
-time job.
2:27:20
And it's not so much about, you know,
2:27:23
executive producers, associate executive producers.
2:27:25
That's really nice.
2:27:27
But it's really where are the people who
2:27:28
just appreciate us and just give us five
2:27:31
bucks a show?
2:27:32
That's what I'm missing.
2:27:34
Well, the over 50s today.
2:27:36
Yeah.
2:27:36
In other words, everybody, including associate executive producers
2:27:39
and people paid over 50, is a grand
2:27:41
total of 28 people.
2:27:43
Yeah.
2:27:44
Since the newsletter is 29,000 something.
2:27:47
This is less than one person per thousand.
2:27:50
That's the newsletter.
2:27:51
And we have about 800,000 to a
2:27:53
million listeners.
2:27:54
Well, I'm going to take a look right
2:27:55
now.
2:27:56
I'll take a look at that.
2:27:57
And only 28 people.
2:28:01
That's telling me something.
2:28:03
That's telling me.
2:28:03
It's telling us that they're listening.
2:28:08
We still have the terabytes that are flowing
2:28:10
from the server.
2:28:12
Well, here I have.
2:28:13
In April, we had down in April.
2:28:18
We had 743,000 unique listeners.
2:28:24
That's April.
2:28:25
That's down.
2:28:26
That is down.
2:28:27
It's down from about 800.
2:28:30
850, 860.
2:28:31
We used to be up floating around in
2:28:33
a bump.
2:28:33
We're on our way down, baby.
2:28:35
We're on our way out.
2:28:36
We're old.
2:28:37
We're yesterday's news.
2:28:38
We're not enough TikToks.
2:28:39
Wrap us in fish.
2:28:41
I mean, that's nothing.
2:28:42
We're just a whole bunch of old boomers.
2:28:44
Got to play with boomers.
2:28:45
Nobody cares.
2:28:46
So maybe we play TikTok clips.
2:28:48
Anyway, we do like doing this.
2:28:52
By the way, I have to say the
2:28:53
TikTok clips come in bunches.
2:28:55
Like, you know, you don't see anything.
2:28:58
Every once in a while, someone will send
2:29:00
me one.
2:29:00
Say, look at this one.
2:29:01
And I catch it.
2:29:02
And it's just hooked to a bunch of
2:29:04
other ones.
2:29:04
Bang, bang, bang, bang.
2:29:05
They're all, you know, they're nailing it.
2:29:07
It's called an algo, by the way.
2:29:09
Yeah, but the algo doesn't trigger right all
2:29:11
the time.
2:29:12
Because if, for example, if I'm using Jay's
2:29:14
phone.
2:29:15
Yeah.
2:29:16
Oh, no.
2:29:16
The algo always drives me to the same.
2:29:18
But it's a phone.
2:29:19
It's an app.
2:29:20
The app is doing all kinds of stuff
2:29:22
under the hood that you don't see.
2:29:23
That's why it knows.
2:29:24
I'll tell you what I get a lot
2:29:25
of.
2:29:26
If it's if I'm left on my own,
2:29:28
if the thing figures who I am and
2:29:30
they want to give me stuff, I like
2:29:31
lousy cooking videos.
2:29:34
People who can't cook.
2:29:35
Yeah, there's a lot of that.
2:29:37
And they can.
2:29:38
And it's like a joke to watch.
2:29:40
I mean, you can't.
2:29:41
It's like watching a train wreck.
2:29:43
You just can't.
2:29:44
Now, watch what is who would eat this?
2:29:46
And that's one.
2:29:49
That's one.
2:29:49
The other ones are the phony baloney elaborate
2:29:53
videos that show you that something you could
2:29:55
do this, that and the other thing.
2:29:57
And then magically something happens, which is bogus.
2:30:00
My fate.
2:30:01
The most recent one I had, there's a
2:30:02
guy.
2:30:03
OK, guy takes a he takes a wine
2:30:05
glass and he wraps the bottom in foil
2:30:06
and put some foil on the bottom of
2:30:08
the stem.
2:30:08
So it's all foil up.
2:30:10
Then he puts lays it on a on
2:30:11
a box and the bar and he's got
2:30:14
the wine glass pointed against the wall and
2:30:16
he's got all the foil around it.
2:30:18
And then he takes his phone, turns on
2:30:20
a video, puts the phone up against a
2:30:22
foam block.
2:30:23
So it's so it is being so it's
2:30:26
up kind of up against the wine glass.
2:30:28
And suddenly, magically, the image on the phone
2:30:31
is projected onto the wall.
2:30:33
Oh, no.
2:30:36
Yeah, there's a lot.
2:30:37
It's like dead serious.
2:30:38
It's bullcrap.
2:30:40
Well.
2:30:41
You know, if you just gave up on
2:30:44
this show and spent your time making tick
2:30:46
tock videos of you cooking, you would do
2:30:48
better.
2:30:50
I guarantee you, you would do better.
2:30:52
Thank you.
2:30:52
Cotton gin.
2:30:52
Eighteen hundred and four was the total.
2:30:55
The script broke.
2:30:56
That's all right.
2:30:56
That's decent.
2:30:58
But you're right.
2:30:59
Twenty nine, twenty eight, twenty nine people above
2:31:02
50.
2:31:03
And it's and a lot of the executive
2:31:05
associate executive producers, they figured out, oh, I
2:31:08
can I can put an ad in here.
2:31:11
So I'm a little I'm a little down
2:31:13
on twenty nine.
2:31:14
But you got to remember the first cell
2:31:16
is OK.
2:31:16
It's twenty eight.
2:31:17
So the bottom line is it's value for
2:31:20
value.
2:31:21
And if we don't feel that we get
2:31:22
the value back, whatever that means to us,
2:31:24
whatever it means to you, if you don't
2:31:26
give us anything, then we will find I
2:31:28
will find something else to do.
2:31:29
And if I find something else to do,
2:31:30
John, you have to find something else to
2:31:32
do.
2:31:32
You're not going to do the show on
2:31:33
your own.
2:31:35
It's not a threat.
2:31:36
It's a promise of the value for value
2:31:38
show that now I would watch that I
2:31:42
would watch the John Tick-Tock show.
2:31:44
I mean, Tina shows me the cooking videos
2:31:46
all the time.
2:31:48
This is one old bag.
2:31:49
And she and I say that because she
2:31:52
says about herself and she she's cooking.
2:31:55
Her son is always there.
2:31:56
And you were you apologize.
2:31:58
You were using the term old bag.
2:32:00
Yeah, I don't want to be mean.
2:32:04
And and she's thrown like everything is cheese
2:32:07
and I throw a lot of cheese.
2:32:09
All these guys, they always top it with
2:32:11
a bunch of cheese, cheese, cheese, melt the
2:32:14
cheese on it.
2:32:15
And she always tastes it.
2:32:16
Oh, it's delicious.
2:32:19
There's yes.
2:32:20
People love that.
2:32:21
People love cooking stuff.
2:32:22
It's putting everybody out of business.
2:32:25
It's Tick-Tock is a scourge.
2:32:27
We should ban it.
2:32:27
The Chinese are tracking you with it's no
2:32:29
good.
2:32:30
And we do want to thank our Dutch
2:32:32
producer, who was the top executive producer today
2:32:34
with five hundred and twenty six thirty six.
2:32:37
And this is a longtime supporter, Marcel van
2:32:40
Dongen from Schravenhagen in the Netherlands.
2:32:43
ITM Gents, he says my first donation was
2:32:46
a fifteen hundred dollar in double up episode
2:32:50
fifteen oh one.
2:32:51
I was announced but not knighted.
2:32:53
Whoa.
2:32:54
So I think that makes me a black
2:32:56
Insta Baron douchebag.
2:32:57
Well, you're not a douchebag.
2:32:58
That's for sure.
2:32:59
I hope I'm not too late for the
2:33:01
title of Commodore.
2:33:02
I think we made an exception for him.
2:33:03
Did we not?
2:33:04
Yeah, because of this complaint.
2:33:06
Well, and he's a spot on.
2:33:09
I'd oh, I hope I'm I says I
2:33:13
hope I am too late.
2:33:14
I think it means not too late for
2:33:15
the title of Commodore.
2:33:16
I'd rather have a ZX Spectrum title.
2:33:19
My 60th birthday is coming up this Thursday,
2:33:21
May 15th.
2:33:22
So happy birthday.
2:33:23
Can I have a deducing?
2:33:26
You've been deduced.
2:33:30
And for the roundtable, some drop shot and
2:33:33
stroopwafels.
2:33:35
Drop shot.
2:33:36
Okay, you got it.
2:33:37
And a title change from night of the
2:33:39
I remember.
2:33:42
That's he said.
2:33:43
Try with two bleeds tonight or Baron of
2:33:45
the Calangela hideout.
2:33:48
We are planning on building a resort on
2:33:50
the Calangela Island in.
2:33:52
Is that pronounced that right?
2:33:53
Calangela Island in Lake Victoria and thinking how
2:33:58
to do the V for V model there.
2:34:01
Don't.
2:34:02
I advise against it now.
2:34:03
It won't work.
2:34:05
Douchebag show up and they'll just take advantage
2:34:07
of you.
2:34:08
Any tips?
2:34:08
Yeah, don't.
2:34:09
Thank you for your courage.
2:34:10
Marcel van Dongen.
2:34:11
Marcel, I don't know if we ordered.
2:34:14
Let me make sure we get that order
2:34:15
for you.
2:34:15
52636 was his donation.
2:34:18
Yes, and I'm making sure that we have
2:34:20
your drop shot and the stroopwafels at the
2:34:22
roundtable.
2:34:23
You bet, sir.
2:34:23
Thank you very much, Marcel.
2:34:25
Kevin Cuneo Cuneo.
2:34:27
One of the two in San Carlos is
2:34:30
over here with our anonymous cop, I guess.
2:34:33
350 93.
2:34:34
I can John and Adam, please deduce me.
2:34:37
You've been deduced.
2:34:40
This donation of 33333, which is what it
2:34:43
amounts to before the fees, which, by the
2:34:45
way, are only 15 cents.
2:34:47
If you use a check.
2:34:48
That's right.
2:34:48
May I please request baby making karma and
2:34:51
Trump jobs karma.
2:34:53
Cheers, Casey in San Mateo County.
2:34:56
Jobs, jobs.
2:35:00
You've got karma.
2:35:07
There you go, Kevin.
2:35:08
And remember, if it works, you got to
2:35:11
name your kid after John and Adam.
2:35:14
Kevin Cuneo, San Carlos, California.
2:35:17
ITM Adam and John, please deduce.
2:35:19
Well, there we go.
2:35:21
You've been you're reading the same note.
2:35:24
Oh, I'm sorry.
2:35:25
Well, he got a double deducing.
2:35:26
Sir Brian with an eye.
2:35:27
That's the one I needed to do.
2:35:29
Sir Brian with an eye.
2:35:30
Who does not know Sir Brian with an
2:35:32
eye?
2:35:32
He's from Cedar Park, Texas.
2:35:34
Three thirty three.
2:35:35
And he says I shall now be gallivanting
2:35:37
and meetups as a baronet.
2:35:39
But I request no title changes.
2:35:41
My current name already carries too much clout.
2:35:43
And I don't want to confuse my fans.
2:35:45
And if fans want to meet Sir Brian
2:35:48
with an eye, he will, of course, be
2:35:49
at the meetup, the Fredericksburg meetup coming up
2:35:51
this Saturday.
2:35:52
It's actually in Lukenbach at the 1776 bar.
2:35:55
We will all be there.
2:35:56
Three thirty three p.m. Thank you, Sir
2:35:58
Brian with an eye.
2:35:59
And we look forward to you and your
2:36:01
fans.
2:36:02
The town is named Lukenbach?
2:36:04
Lukenbach, yes.
2:36:05
Very famous town.
2:36:06
Very fine.
2:36:06
Very famous.
2:36:07
Lukenbach.
2:36:08
That whole area must just have been taken
2:36:10
over by the Germans.
2:36:11
Well, yes, it was founded by the Germans
2:36:14
in, I want to say, 1840 something.
2:36:20
And supposedly...
2:36:21
Anybody ever ask why?
2:36:23
Who were these Germans that went to Texas
2:36:25
in 1840?
2:36:27
These were very brave people who were looking
2:36:29
for a better life than jolly old Deutschland.
2:36:33
And they settled here and they apparently, the
2:36:36
Fredericksburgians, made a deal with the Comanche Indians
2:36:40
that was never broken.
2:36:42
They treated them right.
2:36:44
And there you go.
2:36:45
That's the history of Fredericksburg.
2:36:47
You might notice the name Fredericksburg.
2:36:50
You know, name after...
2:36:51
Oh, yeah, I know that.
2:36:52
Frederick.
2:36:53
I didn't know they had a bunch of
2:36:55
ancillary towns named with German names all over
2:36:58
it.
2:36:58
We've got the Schlitterbahn over there an hour
2:37:01
away.
2:37:01
Everything is German here.
2:37:03
And how this went over during World War
2:37:05
II?
2:37:06
So a friend of mine of ours, he
2:37:09
does estate sales, which means you go into
2:37:13
dead people's homes and you find all the
2:37:15
gems and you buy them up and then
2:37:17
you sell them.
2:37:18
He says, here in Fredericksburg, there's a lot
2:37:22
of paraphernalia and flags and stuff with swastikas
2:37:28
on it at the estate sales.
2:37:32
I don't know if he puts those up
2:37:33
for sale right away, I find a lot
2:37:36
of interesting stuff.
2:37:38
I bet he does.
2:37:39
Dave Sorensen probably finds interesting stuff.
2:37:41
He's in Winthrop, Washington.
2:37:42
It came in with $233.99. Forgive me,
2:37:46
fathers, for I have sinned.
2:37:49
It has been 301 days since my last
2:37:51
donation.
2:37:51
This row of ducks, I guess it was
2:37:54
22222 plus the fees.
2:37:57
It was hardly absolved me, but I do
2:37:59
appreciate you both so much and still haven't
2:38:02
missed an episode since the first one I
2:38:04
listened to.
2:38:04
An announcement of possible interest for many of
2:38:09
the Extended No Agenda community, my wife and
2:38:12
I produce a family-friendly primitive skills gathering
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annually up here in the wild mountains of
2:38:19
Okanagan County.
2:38:21
If you have never ever wanted to learn
2:38:23
how to make buckskin, process your own animals,
2:38:30
flintknap arrowheads, forge iron and steel tools, weave
2:38:35
a basket with willow, or have any interest
2:38:43
in similar ancestral skills, consider attending the Saskatoon
2:38:48
Circle next month, starting on June 15th.
2:38:52
More information at saskatooncirclegathering.com.
2:38:56
And mention this note for a 10%
2:38:59
discount on tickets.
2:39:01
Lastly, as I embark on what will hopefully
2:39:03
be my final career in this lifetime, I
2:39:06
ask for grass-growing karma.
2:39:11
ITM.
2:39:14
You've got karma.
2:39:18
All right, La Jolla Salt Corporation checks in
2:39:22
with $210.60 from California, La Jolla.
2:39:27
For tight copy, apply a red pencil.
2:39:30
For tight skin, apply a moisturizing sea salt
2:39:34
scrub from lajollasalt.com.
2:39:36
Keep it tight and moisturize with American-made
2:39:38
small-batch artisan-crafted sea salt scrub from
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the village of La Jolla by the sea.
2:39:44
Ooh, Akbar!
2:39:46
They learned.
2:39:47
My complaining paid off.
2:39:49
Remember they had that long copy?
2:39:51
Yeah, this is pretty tight.
2:39:53
This is how you do it.
2:39:54
And by the way, thank you for the
2:39:55
product.
2:39:55
It's very good.
2:39:56
It's an outstanding product.
2:39:58
I have never tried any other sea salt
2:40:00
scrub, but this one, it does the job
2:40:03
as you prognosticate.
2:40:06
Linda Lou Patkins up here.
2:40:07
She's from Lakewood, Colorado and wants jobs, Carmen.
2:40:10
Says for a faster job search with a
2:40:13
resume that gets results, go to imagemakersinc.com
2:40:16
for your executive resume and job search needs.
2:40:19
That's imagemakersinc.com and work with Linda Lou,
2:40:24
Duchess of Jobs and writer of resumes.
2:40:27
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:40:30
Let's vote for jobs.
2:40:35
Now we have a note from the Dale
2:40:36
family.
2:40:37
It's our last associate executive producer title and
2:40:40
it is written, uh, it looks like, uh,
2:40:43
written, this is, it's very 3D.
2:40:47
Uh, it was written with pen and ink
2:40:49
or one of those really fat, uh, nubs.
2:40:51
Nub?
2:40:52
Is it a nub?
2:40:52
A nib?
2:40:52
A nub?
2:40:53
What do you call that?
2:40:54
I don't know.
2:40:55
Nib.
2:40:56
Nib, yes.
2:40:57
ITM John Adam, until now we have only
2:40:59
made small token donations, but I'm afraid it
2:41:01
wasn't enough to de-douche.
2:41:03
So please de-douche our team post haste.
2:41:07
You've been de-douched.
2:41:09
Over the years, the Noah Jenner Show has
2:41:11
filled an important modern events and critical thinking
2:41:14
component in our home school.
2:41:16
Ah, I love this.
2:41:18
That's right.
2:41:18
By the way, hello to all the kids
2:41:20
from heritage school listening, all three of you.
2:41:23
This is not a school though.
2:41:24
It's a family education project and we wrote
2:41:27
a book about it.
2:41:28
We didn't go through a publishing house.
2:41:32
This book did not have to be approved
2:41:34
by a corporate editor.
2:41:35
It told the story as best we could
2:41:37
of our 19 year home education journey and
2:41:40
the educational pedagogy we developed that led to
2:41:44
our daughter getting a 1460 on the SAT.
2:41:47
Whoa.
2:41:49
Among other amazing accomplishments.
2:41:51
Boost this value for value audio book on
2:41:53
podcastindex.org now by searching.
2:41:56
This is not a school.
2:41:59
So you can get that a modern podcast
2:42:00
to look for it in fountain or podcast
2:42:03
guru.
2:42:04
I like that.
2:42:04
Thank you, John Adam, Albie, fountain and the
2:42:08
Noah Jenner.
2:42:08
I was thinking fountain.
2:42:09
And the Noah Jenner Nation for helping us
2:42:11
navigate the value for value model and giving
2:42:13
us an opportunity to work outside the system
2:42:16
to tell our story our way.
2:42:18
Keep up the great work.
2:42:20
Jingles.
2:42:21
Resist we much.
2:42:24
R2D2 karma.
2:42:26
And ants.
2:42:27
And oh, and a you might die.
2:42:29
I'm sorry.
2:42:29
I didn't get my you might die.
2:42:32
Hold on.
2:42:34
Might die.
2:42:35
Yes, of course.
2:42:36
We always have that handy.
2:42:38
Okay.
2:42:39
Oh, it's the Dale family.
2:42:41
John, Jessica, Caitlin, Casey and Kayla.
2:42:44
And John has been working on this for
2:42:46
a long time in this project.
2:42:47
I've helped him from time to time.
2:42:49
He had questions.
2:42:51
You know, they were doing the RSS feed
2:42:52
by themselves, but they did what most people
2:42:55
don't do is actually reach out to someone
2:42:57
who knows how to do this stuff.
2:42:59
So that was a double.
2:43:00
I know what what they ask for advice
2:43:04
and help.
2:43:05
So I get a lot of emails from
2:43:07
John.
2:43:07
And so go boost those kids.
2:43:09
They are pretty cool.
2:43:10
But resist we much.
2:43:13
We must and we will much about that.
2:43:19
Be committed.
2:43:19
You might die.
2:43:21
All right, everybody.
2:43:22
Stand by.
2:43:23
Here comes a little bit of John's ant
2:43:25
song.
2:43:43
And that concludes our executive and associate executive
2:43:47
producers for episode 1764.
2:43:50
It still is the best podcast in the
2:43:52
universe.
2:43:52
And I love getting notes like that.
2:43:54
That really does make my day.
2:43:55
And when you say that, that it helped
2:43:57
in your homeschooling project.
2:43:59
Not a homeschool, but your schooling project at
2:44:02
home.
2:44:02
That gives me hope.
2:44:04
Hope for humanity.
2:44:05
Hope for America.
2:44:07
Yes, I salute you.
2:44:09
Of course, all of these titles are real
2:44:13
ones.
2:44:13
They can be used even in con.
2:44:15
If you happen to be there, you can
2:44:16
walk around and say, hey, Bobby, Bobby DeNiro.
2:44:18
I'm an executive producer.
2:44:19
Did you know that?
2:44:20
Oh, yeah.
2:44:20
What up with the no agenda show?
2:44:21
Oh, really?
2:44:22
Excellent.
2:44:23
Same for associate executive producer.
2:44:25
That's how those things work.
2:44:26
And you can use them anywhere.
2:44:28
These real show business credits are recognized, including
2:44:31
imdb.com.
2:44:33
And we recommend you open up an account
2:44:34
there.
2:44:35
If you don't have one yet, you'll see
2:44:36
thousands of other no agenda producers there.
2:44:38
We love to flood the zone.
2:44:40
Thank you very much for supporting us here
2:44:42
for episode 1764.
2:44:44
Our formula is this.
2:44:47
We go out.
2:44:48
We hit people in the mouth.
2:45:05
Before we continue on our merry way, I
2:45:07
do want to play this Dave Smith.
2:45:10
OK, get closer to the microphone, though, so
2:45:12
we can all hear you.
2:45:13
I'll try to.
2:45:14
OK.
2:45:15
If there's any closer, I'd be behind it.
2:45:16
Yeah, well, that way it might work.
2:45:18
So he was on Tucker.
2:45:21
Talked bitching and moaning about Douglas Murray and
2:45:25
they went on Murray.
2:45:27
They went on and on.
2:45:28
But a couple of things came out of
2:45:30
that had nothing to do with that.
2:45:31
One was the the comment by Tucker that
2:45:35
it's possible that they're going to because there's
2:45:37
the way Smith saw it.
2:45:39
And I think Tucker, to some extent, they
2:45:41
saw the future as podcasting.
2:45:46
No kidding.
2:45:47
Wait, wait.
2:45:48
Did they say that that Adam Curry had
2:45:51
something to do with that?
2:45:53
They didn't mention your name, of course.
2:45:54
No.
2:45:55
Why would they?
2:45:56
No.
2:45:56
But the point is, is that they talked
2:45:58
about how media has when a new guy
2:46:01
comes along and exploits the media presidential candidate,
2:46:04
for example, like Roosevelt exploited radio before anybody
2:46:08
else did.
2:46:09
Kennedy did television, did the fire fireside chat.
2:46:12
Kennedy did television.
2:46:14
Trump did social media.
2:46:15
And then he got on the podcasting thing,
2:46:17
did the three hour podcast.
2:46:18
They talked about that.
2:46:19
That's right.
2:46:19
And Tucker said, oh, I think they're going
2:46:22
to crack down.
2:46:23
And I said what I think, which I
2:46:28
said to myself, what I think is I
2:46:30
still think that someday down the road to
2:46:32
be licensing or something like that, because they
2:46:34
can't let this thing go crazy.
2:46:36
Well, we have the only but the most
2:46:38
thing I thought mostly about you and podcasting
2:46:41
2.0, which means they can't crack down.
2:46:43
Correct.
2:46:44
So so to give you kudos, that's, you
2:46:48
know, minor compared to the one I thought
2:46:50
when I got this clip where they brought
2:46:53
up the fact that Smith was, you know,
2:46:55
they were maybe giving him a gig on
2:46:58
Fox as a contributor.
2:47:00
He did mention the amount of money they
2:47:01
get paid.
2:47:02
This is rando contributors on Fox make a
2:47:04
hundred K a year.
2:47:05
Whoa, that's not bad.
2:47:07
No.
2:47:08
And so they just show up and do
2:47:11
a comment, you know, there's a slow.
2:47:13
It's all the same as usual suspects.
2:47:15
But they brought this little ditty up, which
2:47:18
is something you've been asserting since day one
2:47:20
about Fox.
2:47:21
And I let it play.
2:47:23
Greg Gutfeld and Tom Shalhoub, who was hosting
2:47:26
Red Eye at the time, they started using
2:47:28
me on their Fox News shows.
2:47:29
And so it was like the first time
2:47:30
in my career I'd like started getting on
2:47:32
TV.
2:47:32
And I remember a few people at Fox
2:47:35
had told me that they were like, hey,
2:47:37
there's like some people in management are like
2:47:40
interested in you like they're they're taking, you
2:47:43
know, some interest in you.
2:47:45
And then it was kind of explains me
2:47:46
not like ever directly, but it was like,
2:47:48
you know, you're you're a little out there.
2:47:50
For Fox News.
2:47:51
And I remember at the time I was
2:47:54
broke.
2:47:55
I mean, dead broke.
2:47:57
Only on just to put a finer point
2:47:59
in that.
2:47:59
What do they mean?
2:47:59
Not in your personal life, your personal.
2:48:01
Oh, no, no, no.
2:48:02
More buttoned down than most people who are
2:48:04
at the time.
2:48:04
It wasn't.
2:48:04
This is before I was married and had
2:48:05
kids and stuff.
2:48:06
But that's what they don't care.
2:48:08
I found out pretty quickly by just doing
2:48:11
shows at Fox News and then going to
2:48:13
the bar afterward with some of the people
2:48:14
there.
2:48:15
You're like, oh, conservatism, Inc.
2:48:17
Is not exactly what you thought.
2:48:18
They're actually pretty liberal to the bar hang
2:48:21
after the show, I would say.
2:48:23
But vindicated once again, vindicated.
2:48:28
Yes, of course.
2:48:29
They're a bunch of Democrats running Fox News.
2:48:31
We know that.
2:48:32
Yeah.
2:48:33
Yeah.
2:48:33
But it is confirmed with that clip.
2:48:35
And of course, Tucker said, yeah, yeah, they're
2:48:38
a bunch of what you get.
2:48:40
Go to the bar and you'll find out
2:48:41
what they're really thinking.
2:48:42
Well, I since you brought up podcasting, I
2:48:45
have a question for you.
2:48:46
This is a industry wide question.
2:48:49
It is it is rampant throughout the PIC,
2:48:53
the podcast industrial complex, which is basically people
2:48:56
who do advertising.
2:48:58
By the way, we could switch to advertising
2:49:00
and do pretty well.
2:49:01
I'm just telling you, even with our, you
2:49:03
know, because we have a million downloads a
2:49:05
month.
2:49:05
That's a thousand CPMs. That's not bad.
2:49:11
We could do OK.
2:49:12
I'm just saying.
2:49:13
Yeah, we don't want to do that, people.
2:49:15
No, of course I don't want to do
2:49:16
that.
2:49:17
I'd rather give up.
2:49:18
I'd rather rage quit.
2:49:19
Would you be cool?
2:49:21
Adam Curry rage quits.
2:49:22
Anyway, Adam Curry rage quits.
2:49:25
So because aging co-partner in the lurch,
2:49:30
we have a picture of you in a
2:49:33
rocking chair like he left me.
2:49:37
He stranded me.
2:49:39
I got nothing to do.
2:49:40
No one visits me nowhere to go.
2:49:42
Anyway, this is a good question for you.
2:49:45
Because of the nature of how podcast advertising
2:49:48
works, which I will say right off the
2:49:49
bat is a scam because it is.
2:49:52
It's based upon downloads and you can buy
2:49:56
downloads.
2:49:57
You can create bots that do downloads.
2:49:59
Yeah.
2:50:00
You know, most of the hosting companies, they
2:50:01
all adhere to the IAB standards and they're
2:50:05
they've been verified, which cost them $50,000
2:50:09
or some crazy amount because, you know, in
2:50:12
order to be verified, which means they came,
2:50:14
we checked your logs.
2:50:15
There's no fake downloads here.
2:50:17
Whatever.
2:50:18
Of course, when Apple decided they weren't going
2:50:20
to have past episodes download automatically, everything went
2:50:24
down 20% and people had to pay
2:50:26
millions of dollars and make goods.
2:50:27
We'll just leave that by the side.
2:50:29
Downloads, not a scam, people.
2:50:30
Okay.
2:50:32
But the nature of the measurement is iffy
2:50:36
at best.
2:50:37
So what happened is and so podcasting is
2:50:40
under attack, not podcasting 2.0, but podcasting
2:50:43
itself is under attack because YouTube in particular
2:50:47
came in and said, oh, no, we're the
2:50:50
number one podcasting platform in the universe.
2:50:54
Have you heard this?
2:50:55
Have you seen the numbers?
2:50:56
Have you seen the press releases?
2:50:57
They barrage the market.
2:50:59
I'm about to find out.
2:51:00
Well, they barrage the market.
2:51:03
We have the most podcast.
2:51:05
Now, of course, they're not a podcast platform
2:51:07
because, yes, you can give them your RSS
2:51:11
feed, but they just use it to slurp
2:51:13
in your videos and that's it.
2:51:16
Or even your podcast.
2:51:17
You can't change your feed or take something
2:51:20
out.
2:51:21
You know, no, it's ingested.
2:51:22
It's done.
2:51:23
And you can mark your YouTube channel as
2:51:25
a podcast.
2:51:27
Now, advertisers love this because, oh, I can
2:51:30
advertise on podcasts and I can get real
2:51:34
numbers.
2:51:35
Of course, YouTube has very detailed statistics and
2:51:39
they can say, well, you got a million
2:51:40
plays.
2:51:41
What is a play?
2:51:42
Well, it's 60 seconds.
2:51:44
It's not even it's like 20 seconds of
2:51:47
someone watching.
2:51:47
But OK, that's fine.
2:51:48
That's a view or that's a play.
2:51:51
So the advertising industrial complex for podcasting started
2:51:55
to call videos on YouTube podcasts.
2:52:00
Do you see the problem here?
2:52:04
Well, the problem is every the whole thing
2:52:07
is a scam.
2:52:08
Right.
2:52:09
But so when you don't have to me,
2:52:12
you have an RSS feed.
2:52:13
That's a podcast.
2:52:14
You host it at a hosting company or
2:52:17
we happen to have void zero.
2:52:19
We hosted ourselves.
2:52:20
We're in control.
2:52:22
YouTube can't you can even upload audio with
2:52:26
a picture on it or whatever.
2:52:28
But that's not a podcast.
2:52:29
A podcast is independent.
2:52:31
It's just it's decentralized.
2:52:33
It's distributed.
2:52:34
No government, no Silicon Valley company can take
2:52:37
you down even if Apple decides, which they've
2:52:40
done in the past.
2:52:41
They don't want your podcast on the on
2:52:43
the Apple podcast apps.
2:52:44
They do it all the time.
2:52:46
Spotify deletes episodes all the time.
2:52:50
That can't happen.
2:52:51
And that to me is a podcast.
2:52:53
You have your RSS feed and it's an
2:52:55
independent thing.
2:52:57
Do you do you have an opinion on
2:52:59
this?
2:53:00
Can you tell me what is a podcast?
2:53:02
If someone said what's a podcast, how does
2:53:06
John C.
2:53:06
Dvorak define that?
2:53:08
I would say a podcast is an independently
2:53:10
produced audio product that might have a video
2:53:16
component, but it's basically an audio product that's
2:53:18
distributed through RSS to various mechanisms.
2:53:23
And it can be anything from A to
2:53:25
Z in terms of how it's structured or
2:53:27
how it exists or what it's about.
2:53:30
Thank you.
2:53:33
I'm with you on that.
2:53:35
Let's listen to Bill O'Reilly's definition of
2:53:38
what a podcast is.
2:53:40
I drives me crazy.
2:53:42
People go, oh, I watch your podcast on
2:53:43
a podcast.
2:53:45
Look, if you guy has tattoos and dirty
2:53:47
sneakers, it's a podcast.
2:53:49
If he's dressed as dapper as I dress,
2:53:53
it's a broadcast.
2:53:55
There you go.
2:53:57
If you have dirty, if you have dirty
2:53:59
sneakers and tattoos, then it's a podcast.
2:54:02
If you're dressed like Bill O'Reilly, it's
2:54:04
a broadcast.
2:54:08
He says this on his podcast.
2:54:10
No, it's he refuses.
2:54:12
He's moving to netcast next, I hear.
2:54:15
Yeah, I'm surprised he doesn't do netcast, which
2:54:17
was another denial.
2:54:21
All right.
2:54:22
Hey, the saga continues.
2:54:24
So that was a shaggy dog story.
2:54:26
It was a shaggy dog story.
2:54:27
It was indeed.
2:54:28
But I'm glad that you have a better
2:54:30
definition of what a podcast is than Bill
2:54:32
O'Reilly.
2:54:33
Well, anybody would.
2:54:34
Anybody would, yes.
2:54:36
So the scam continues.
2:54:37
They continue to scam the American public and
2:54:41
everyone's in on it.
2:54:43
Oh, man, it's falling apart.
2:54:46
It's dangerous to fly.
2:54:47
Don't go to New Jersey.
2:54:48
Happening today, the FAA will continue discussions with
2:54:51
six major airlines about the ongoing delays at
2:54:54
Newark Liberty International Airport.
2:54:55
The agency wants to reduce the number of
2:54:57
flights at the airport in North Jersey.
2:54:59
Meanwhile, we're learning new information about the two
2:55:02
radar outages in the last two and a
2:55:04
half weeks at a Philadelphia facility that manages
2:55:06
flights for Newark.
2:55:08
During that time, air traffic control could not
2:55:10
see or talk with planes.
2:55:12
The FAA explained on Capitol Hill yesterday that
2:55:14
the primary and backup lines both failed.
2:55:17
The agency says it is now working to
2:55:19
add a third line.
2:55:22
Again, our air traffic controllers who are in
2:55:25
this grand Gitmo nation all say that happens
2:55:29
all the time.
2:55:31
And adding another one of these lines to
2:55:34
communicate with the radios is not going to
2:55:35
help.
2:55:36
We just need a whole different system.
2:55:37
But they're really going to go out.
2:55:38
It's going to be billions and it will
2:55:40
take forever to implement.
2:55:42
And this is just like the drone story
2:55:44
or just like any other story that hypes
2:55:47
the media and scares everybody.
2:55:48
Oh, they can't see us on the radar.
2:55:50
We're all going to die.
2:55:51
Hasn't happened yet.
2:55:53
And as predicted, the blame goes to the
2:55:56
previous administration, specifically Pete Buttigieg.
2:55:59
So I was all set before we had
2:56:02
the rigged election to give out a brand
2:56:04
new gorgeous system to one company that was
2:56:07
going to do it all thing.
2:56:08
One of the best companies in the world
2:56:10
that you know very well.
2:56:10
You know, there are three or four of
2:56:12
them that do it.
2:56:13
And when they took over, Buttigieg has no
2:56:17
clue.
2:56:17
You know, he drives to work on his
2:56:18
bicycle with his with his in all fairness
2:56:21
with his husband on the back, which is
2:56:22
a nice loving relationship.
2:56:25
But he didn't have a clue.
2:56:27
This guy didn't have a clue.
2:56:29
As predicted, blame it on Buttigieg.
2:56:31
I'm glad you got that clip because I
2:56:33
saw that clip.
2:56:35
It's old.
2:56:35
It's great.
2:56:36
It's great.
2:56:37
But it's so funny.
2:56:38
This is his bicycle with his husband.
2:56:41
It's hilarious.
2:56:42
It's hilarious.
2:56:44
He never stops.
2:56:46
He doesn't.
2:56:47
Back to the kind of the medical industry.
2:56:52
Another huge controversy.
2:56:54
This is the controversy that we've been tracking
2:56:56
with Casey Means.
2:56:58
You know, we can't have her as Surgeon
2:56:59
General.
2:57:00
The meaningless post.
2:57:02
But OK.
2:57:02
Oh, no, we can't have her because she's
2:57:05
a shill for big pharma with her brother.
2:57:07
And it's no good.
2:57:08
And NPR investigated.
2:57:09
President Trump has a new pick for U
2:57:12
.S. Surgeon General.
2:57:13
He's tapped wellness influencer Dr. Casey Means.
2:57:16
That's in place of his original.
2:57:19
We need to be wellness influencers.
2:57:20
Maybe that's a gig for us.
2:57:22
What do you think?
2:57:22
Well, I mean, you're living a long time.
2:57:25
We just say, well, this is how we
2:57:27
live.
2:57:27
This is how we've stayed alive so long.
2:57:29
Don't you think that's a good gig?
2:57:30
Wellness influencer?
2:57:32
Yeah, and wine reviewer.
2:57:33
Choice.
2:57:34
Former Fox News contributor Dr. Jeanette Neshwat.
2:57:38
NPR's Will Stone is here with the details.
2:57:40
Hi, Will.
2:57:41
Hey there.
2:57:42
Hey there.
2:57:42
Why did Trump drop his first pick for
2:57:45
Surgeon General?
2:57:46
So no official statement from Trump or the
2:57:48
White House on that.
2:57:50
But it seems there may have been a
2:57:51
few issues at play here.
2:57:53
So first, Neshwat had come under scrutiny recently
2:57:56
for misrepresenting her medical credentials, including where she
2:58:00
went to medical school.
2:58:01
This was revealed by an independent reporter, Anthony
2:58:03
Clark, and has been matched by other outlets,
2:58:06
though NPR has not independently confirmed the reporting.
2:58:09
At the same time, Neshwat was also facing
2:58:11
some strong opposition from those on the right.
2:58:14
And in Secretary Robert F.
2:58:16
Kennedy Jr.'s Make America Healthy Again or Maha
2:58:19
movement, one reason was her support for COVID
2:58:22
policies like masking and vaccines.
2:58:25
So whatever the rationale, Trump took to social
2:58:27
media this week and announced he tapped Dr.
2:58:30
Casey Means instead, saying she has, quote, impeccable
2:58:34
Maha credentials.
2:58:36
Well, we're about to find out about those.
2:58:38
By the way, the three stooges were far
2:58:41
ahead of their time with Maha.
2:58:42
Maha.
2:58:45
Yeah, we continue.
2:58:46
Well, tell us more about Casey Means.
2:58:48
Who is she?
2:58:50
Yeah, she's a wellness influencer, author, and entrepreneur.
2:58:53
She has a company that sells glucose monitoring
2:58:56
devices to consumers.
2:58:58
Her background is in medicine.
2:59:00
She went to Stanford Medical School and went
2:59:02
on to surgical residency, but she dropped out
2:59:04
pretty far along in the program.
2:59:06
Her book is kind of a self-help
2:59:08
diet type of book.
2:59:09
It really catapulted her into the online wellness
2:59:12
space.
2:59:13
She's been on big podcasts.
2:59:15
She appeared at a highly publicized congressional roundtable
2:59:18
on nutrition last year that featured Secretary Kennedy
2:59:21
and other big names in the Maha world.
2:59:24
But her resume is definitely a problem for
2:59:26
many in medicine and public health.
2:59:28
She did have a practice in Oregon, but
2:59:30
again, never completed her residency, and she doesn't
2:59:33
have an active medical license right now.
2:59:36
I called up Dr. Richard Carmona to get
2:59:38
his take on this.
2:59:39
Carmona was the surgeon general under George W.
2:59:41
Bush.
2:59:42
Every previous surgeon general, when you look, they've
2:59:45
got the license.
2:59:46
They've got the residency.
2:59:47
They have had at least some leadership ability
2:59:50
that's scalable, and we don't see any of
2:59:52
that here.
2:59:52
I think that our nation deserves better.
2:59:56
I think this is so great.
2:59:58
Can you name three former surgeon generals?
3:00:03
I can name Coop.
3:00:04
That's one.
3:00:06
The bearded guy.
3:00:06
I can add this last guy.
3:00:09
The weird Indian character.
3:00:11
You can't name him.
3:00:12
You can't name him.
3:00:13
Navish Shreem Shreem.
3:00:15
Navish Navidat.
3:00:18
No, you can't, because they're not.
3:00:20
They're not just not that important.
3:00:22
Sorry to say.
3:00:25
And Coop said, don't smoke.
3:00:27
And it didn't stop me.
3:00:29
How are her supporters responding to this?
3:00:33
Well, Secretary Kennedy is doubling down on his
3:00:35
support.
3:00:35
He's claiming Dr. Means will be the greatest
3:00:38
surgeon general in American history.
3:00:40
It's also worth noting her brother, Callie Means,
3:00:43
is a prominent advisor
3:00:47
to
3:00:57
Kennedy.
3:00:58
A lot of her messaging aligns with the
3:01:00
secretary.
3:01:01
She rails against the health care industry, big
3:01:03
food and big pharma.
3:01:04
Talks a lot about nutrition and lifestyle.
3:01:07
Here's what Kennedy said on Fox News just
3:01:10
the other day.
3:01:11
Casey Means, we felt, was the best person
3:01:14
to really bring the vision of Maha to
3:01:17
the American public.
3:01:18
She has a unique capacity to articulate it.
3:01:22
Now, Casey Means has made statements casting doubt
3:01:25
on the safety of certain vaccines and the
3:01:27
vaccine schedule.
3:01:28
She's also endorsed things like raw milk, similar
3:01:30
to Kennedy.
3:01:31
All of this is concerning to experts in
3:01:34
public health.
3:01:35
But some in the Kennedy coalition are not
3:01:38
happy with the pick.
3:01:39
For example, Kennedy's former running mate, Nicole Shanahan,
3:01:42
has criticized the choice heavily, as have others.
3:01:45
And some of the pushback has to do
3:01:47
with her vaccine stance, that she has not
3:01:49
come out strongly enough against vaccines, especially the
3:01:53
COVID shots.
3:01:54
So this choice is revealing, I'd say, some
3:01:57
fractures in the Maha coalition.
3:01:59
And that, plus concerns about her lack of
3:02:02
experience, could derail her nomination.
3:02:05
We'll see.
3:02:06
That's NPR's Will Stone.
3:02:07
Thank you so much for talking with us.
3:02:09
Thank you.
3:02:10
Glad that NPR finally got the story.
3:02:13
Yes.
3:02:13
Yes, there's a lot of problem because she
3:02:15
has not come out strongly enough against the
3:02:18
COVID shot.
3:02:20
And this is the criticism.
3:02:21
And of course, I think Kelly, the last
3:02:23
show we played, Kelly.
3:02:27
That's right.
3:02:27
Megyn Kelly's clip where she, I think, you
3:02:31
know, does a reasonable job of defending the
3:02:33
woman and says that you can't come out
3:02:35
as a big anti-COVID shot person and
3:02:38
expect to get.
3:02:39
No.
3:02:40
Confirmed.
3:02:41
But because the half of Congress is bought
3:02:43
and paid for by the pharma companies, and
3:02:45
they don't want to, they could, as far
3:02:48
as they're concerned, fax is the way to
3:02:50
go.
3:02:50
Get vaccinated for everything.
3:02:52
Get 86 when you're a little baby.
3:02:54
But this has been going on for a
3:02:56
long time.
3:02:56
Before she was even in play for Surgeon
3:02:59
General, she and her brother had been accused
3:03:01
of being shills coming out of nowhere.
3:03:03
All of a sudden, they're on all the
3:03:05
big podcasts.
3:03:07
I don't think you're anything until you've come
3:03:09
on the No Agenda Show.
3:03:10
Oh, wait, we don't have any guests.
3:03:13
And they would not denounce the COVID vaccine.
3:03:17
And that is the problem.
3:03:18
And Maha is going uh-uh to her.
3:03:23
So it'll be interesting to see how this
3:03:25
confirmation goes.
3:03:27
In the meantime, this was very peculiar this
3:03:30
morning that I saw on Fox News when
3:03:32
it comes to vaccinations.
3:03:34
And they brought out Tucker Carlson's old doctor
3:03:37
pal.
3:03:37
Remember that guy?
3:03:38
The old dude?
3:03:40
Whenever Tucker was on Fox, yeah, he had
3:03:43
this one doctor.
3:03:44
And it was the same guy over and
3:03:46
over.
3:03:46
We always made fun of him.
3:03:47
Usual suspects.
3:03:48
That's what they do.
3:03:48
Usual suspects.
3:03:49
And here's the news.
3:03:50
HHS Secretary R.F.K. Jr. $500 million
3:03:54
from COVID-19 projects with the goal of
3:03:57
a universal vaccine to protect against multiple strains
3:04:00
of a virus at once.
3:04:01
Fox News Senior Medical Analyst Dr. Mark Siegel
3:04:04
is here to tell us all about this.
3:04:05
This would be getting one shot for the
3:04:08
flu that could maybe last 10 years.
3:04:10
How long have we heard this story?
3:04:12
One shot.
3:04:13
Only one.
3:04:15
One and done.
3:04:15
It's good to go for the flu.
3:04:17
Never get another one for the rest of
3:04:18
your life.
3:04:19
I'm surprised we haven't got clips on this
3:04:21
from 10 years ago.
3:04:23
We probably do.
3:04:24
I think it's going to start with the
3:04:25
flu.
3:04:25
And if we get there with the flu,
3:04:27
maybe we can broaden it to more shots.
3:04:29
The whole idea is that you get a
3:04:30
different flu shot every year.
3:04:32
Right.
3:04:32
Or we did that with COVID.
3:04:34
So it's because we look at the virus
3:04:36
that enters the cell.
3:04:37
Only that protein.
3:04:38
Just that protein that gets it into the
3:04:40
cell.
3:04:40
And it causes a lot of problems and
3:04:42
a lot of changes.
3:04:43
And you have to change the shot all
3:04:44
the time.
3:04:45
And it doesn't always work with flu.
3:04:46
So now, President Trump and RFK are bringing
3:04:49
into place Jeffrey Taubenberger, who's the number one
3:04:53
flu researcher in the world, in my opinion.
3:04:55
Very excited about this guy, Taubenberger.
3:04:58
He's now the head of the National Institute
3:05:00
of Allergy Infectious Diseases, which is the job
3:05:02
that Fauci had.
3:05:03
And you know who this guy is?
3:05:05
He went into the tundra in Alaska and
3:05:08
discovered the Spanish flu.
3:05:09
That's how amazing he is.
3:05:11
Amazing.
3:05:11
And he's been working on flu vaccines for
3:05:13
a really long time.
3:05:14
You already nailed it, which is you try
3:05:16
to get into the shot different proteins.
3:05:18
So you get one response that will work
3:05:21
for all flu.
3:05:22
We got to get there.
3:05:23
We got to get great.
3:05:24
Then you don't have to get a shot
3:05:25
every year.
3:05:25
Absolutely.
3:05:26
Absolutely.
3:05:26
Great.
3:05:27
Great program.
3:05:27
Great program.
3:05:30
I'm not for this.
3:05:32
I don't think this is a good idea.
3:05:34
Well, the vaccine companies aren't for it either.
3:05:36
Obviously, that's why it's never going to happen.
3:05:38
That's true.
3:05:39
That's not good.
3:05:39
Why would you want that when you can
3:05:41
give a shot every year, every year?
3:05:43
Could be dog crap in this shot.
3:05:45
Who cares?
3:05:47
You're not liable for anything.
3:05:49
So you just manufacture could be distilled water.
3:05:52
Shot, shot, shot, shot.
3:05:54
Do you think this is free here at
3:05:56
the pharmacy?
3:05:57
Do you think this is Robert Kennedy Jr.?
3:06:00
You think he's just like, go over here,
3:06:03
work on that for a while?
3:06:04
Is that what this is?
3:06:05
Could be.
3:06:06
Yeah, possible.
3:06:07
All right.
3:06:07
Last thing I have is about fluoride.
3:06:10
Because, of course, and this is, I think,
3:06:12
a very good thing.
3:06:14
Bobby has said, we've got to stop this.
3:06:17
States everywhere are stopping fluoridating their water.
3:06:19
Should have happened decades ago.
3:06:21
But the pharma industry is not taking this
3:06:23
lightly because, oh, no, it's bad.
3:06:27
It's really bad.
3:06:28
And what?
3:06:28
Fluoride tablets?
3:06:29
No, it's bad.
3:06:30
In today's health watch, the FDA is getting
3:06:32
ready to take prescription fluoride drops and tablets
3:06:34
for kids off the market.
3:06:36
So this comes as Health Secretary Robert F.
3:06:39
Kennedy fights to remove fluoride from our drinking
3:06:41
water.
3:06:41
Let's bring in CBS News medical contributor.
3:06:44
That's Dr. Selene Gounder.
3:06:45
Yes.
3:06:46
Editor-at-large for public health at KFF
3:06:47
Health News has sorted it out for us.
3:06:50
Good to see you, Dr. Selene.
3:06:51
KFF Health News, by the way, as far
3:06:54
as I know, a bought-and-paid-for
3:06:55
publication.
3:06:57
It's like one of these, oh, we do
3:06:58
health news.
3:06:59
OK.
3:07:00
No, KFF is the Kaiser Family Foundation.
3:07:03
Yes, exactly.
3:07:04
Yeah, they're just a Kaiser shill.
3:07:06
Yes, exactly.
3:07:07
They sorted it out for us.
3:07:08
But they sorted it out for us.
3:07:10
Good to see you, Dr. Selene.
3:07:11
So how big a deal is this move
3:07:13
from the FDA?
3:07:14
So FDA Commissioner Marty Macri announced yesterday that
3:07:18
they are considering or planning to phase out
3:07:21
fluoride supplements such as tablets and drops for
3:07:24
kids.
3:07:24
And what we know is that fluoride supplements
3:07:27
really do still make a difference despite fluoride
3:07:30
in the water.
3:07:30
In some places, you don't have fluoride in
3:07:32
the water.
3:07:32
And many kids don't actually brush their teeth
3:07:35
regularly with fluoridated toothpaste.
3:07:37
They don't all make it to the dentist
3:07:39
on a regular basis.
3:07:40
And so we know that fluoride in general
3:07:43
can reduce the rate of cavities by about
3:07:46
25 percent, despite having other layers of protection.
3:07:50
So, OK, so what she's saying here is
3:07:53
for kids who don't brush their teeth and
3:07:57
don't get regular checkups, I can understand that,
3:08:00
but they don't brush, you don't brush your
3:08:01
teeth.
3:08:02
Fluoride can help.
3:08:03
No, you can't have gunk in your teeth
3:08:06
all day.
3:08:07
I know a lot about teeth.
3:08:08
You cannot have gunk in your teeth and
3:08:10
think that a fluoride tablet is going to
3:08:12
solve that.
3:08:13
But she, Selene Gounder, is on the sales
3:08:16
path.
3:08:16
Is there any evidence of kids getting access
3:08:18
to these drops and overusing them or any
3:08:21
kind of negative effects?
3:08:22
Oh, we need access to it.
3:08:23
Well, it's interesting that you ask that, Tony.
3:08:24
So the attorney general of Texas.
3:08:27
Interesting you ask that because it was in
3:08:29
your prompter.
3:08:30
The script was there.
3:08:31
It's interesting that you ask that, Tony.
3:08:32
So the attorney general of Texas is suing
3:08:36
Colgate and Procter and Gamble over flavored kid
3:08:40
friendly toothpaste.
3:08:41
We do know that, for example, with tobacco
3:08:44
or vapes, flavoring can encourage more use.
3:08:48
And the argument here is it could encourage
3:08:50
overuse of toothpaste if they're flavored for kids.
3:08:53
That'll be the day kids are eating the
3:08:55
toothpaste.
3:08:56
Give me a break.
3:08:59
Mommy, can I brush my teeth another 10
3:09:01
times today?
3:09:02
Because the toothpaste is so tasty.
3:09:04
All right.
3:09:05
So fluoride is banned from water and fluoride
3:09:07
supplements.
3:09:08
What are parents to do?
3:09:09
Well, at least for now, you still have
3:09:11
the toothpaste, the mouthwashes, the dental applied dentist
3:09:15
applied varnishes.
3:09:16
But as I mentioned, in Texas, they're actually
3:09:18
going after some of the toothpastes.
3:09:21
So, you know, the big concern here is
3:09:25
that you have 70 million Americans who do
3:09:27
not have dental insurance.
3:09:28
We know that kids, low income kids have
3:09:31
three times the risk of dental cavities that
3:09:34
go untreated to other kids.
3:09:36
And so we know that certain populations are
3:09:38
really going to go.
3:09:40
What did she say?
3:09:41
They go untreated to other kids make it
3:09:43
sound like it's infectious somehow.
3:09:44
I have dental insurance.
3:09:46
We know that kids, low income kids have
3:09:49
three times the risk of dental cavities that
3:09:52
go untreated to other kids.
3:09:53
And so we know that certain populations are
3:09:56
really going to see a surge in cavities.
3:09:59
Surge that was always raised.
3:10:00
Fluoride.
3:10:01
Good, good, good.
3:10:02
Now this stuff is so confusing to all
3:10:03
about good.
3:10:04
Yes.
3:10:04
OK, got it.
3:10:05
Got it.
3:10:06
Thank you.
3:10:06
Thank you.
3:10:06
All right.
3:10:07
Good, good, good.
3:10:08
Good, good, good.
3:10:09
It is that they mentioned throughout these reports
3:10:11
that the dentist can put a coating of
3:10:13
fluoride on your teeth, which is the way
3:10:14
it's supposed to be done.
3:10:15
Direct contact with the enamel.
3:10:17
She said the fluoride tray.
3:10:19
Yes, she did mention that briefly.
3:10:23
But the issue is the true issue is
3:10:26
we need to have better dental care.
3:10:28
People need more education on dental care.
3:10:30
It's very important.
3:10:30
Take it from a person who has a
3:10:32
small car in his mouth.
3:10:35
And it's a set us back quite a
3:10:37
bit.
3:10:37
And it was so that I would be
3:10:38
able to still speak and not have dentures.
3:10:43
So and that's because it's not because I
3:10:46
didn't brush with fluoride.
3:10:47
Believe me.
3:10:52
All right.
3:10:52
Well, that went nowhere.
3:10:53
Now, what do you mean?
3:10:54
Nowhere.
3:10:55
It's important information.
3:10:58
Man, you're supposed to say man, man.
3:11:01
All right.
3:11:02
Take us out.
3:11:02
You get one more shot.
3:11:04
I got one shot.
3:11:05
One shot.
3:11:06
You got one shot.
3:11:07
I got a screw.
3:11:08
Well, let's do the Trump in the judiciary
3:11:10
because that that's going on as we speak.
3:11:13
This is a big deal going on in
3:11:15
the Supreme Court right now about all the
3:11:17
crap that's being thrown at Trump by these
3:11:19
just rando judges.
3:11:21
So let's play these two clips.
3:11:23
A legal fight over one of America's oldest
3:11:25
national security laws is heating up.
3:11:27
The Trump administration just won a federal judge
3:11:29
in Pennsylvania has ruled that President Trump can
3:11:32
invoke the Alien Enemies Act, an 18th century
3:11:34
wartime statute to deport migrants suspected of gang
3:11:38
ties.
3:11:39
The ruling from U.S. District Judge Stephanie
3:11:41
Haines marks the first judicial support for Trump's
3:11:44
use of the law, putting her at odds
3:11:46
with three other federal judges in Texas, Colorado
3:11:48
and New York.
3:11:50
Trump invoked the law in March targeting members
3:11:52
of Tren de Aragua, or TDA, a Venezuelan
3:11:55
gang he labeled a foreign terrorist group.
3:11:58
Clip was supposed to go.
3:11:59
This has been misclipped.
3:12:01
I'm playing your clip.
3:12:03
All right.
3:12:04
Well, pull it.
3:12:05
Pull it.
3:12:06
I pulled it.
3:12:07
Pull it.
3:12:07
Oh, no.
3:12:07
There goes building seven.
3:12:11
I'll give you one up.
3:12:12
One more shot.
3:12:13
Not on this.
3:12:14
All right.
3:12:14
This time we're going to go back to
3:12:15
the public complaining about something.
3:12:17
This is a complaint of mine, too, which
3:12:20
has been about EULAs and licensing and all
3:12:23
the whole background that started with WordStar, where
3:12:26
you never really bought their software product.
3:12:29
This stems back in the early days of
3:12:31
mainframes.
3:12:32
You never bought the software product.
3:12:33
You bought a license to use it.
3:12:35
Now Nintendo's making poor kids buying a game.
3:12:39
Nintendo's making poor kids buying a game.
3:12:42
Now you don't own the game anymore.
3:12:44
You get the license to use it.
3:12:45
Nintendo are updating our user agreement for the
3:12:48
Switch 2.
3:12:49
If you make any unauthorized modifications to your
3:12:52
Switch 2, we will remotely deactivate your console
3:12:55
so that you cannot play any more games.
3:12:57
Whoa.
3:12:58
I understand deactivating online play and the store
3:13:01
with mods installed, but deactivating the console itself?
3:13:05
People will own the Nintendo Switch 2.
3:13:08
They should have rights to do what they
3:13:10
want with it.
3:13:10
Actually, they will not own the Switch 2.
3:13:13
They will own the license to play the
3:13:15
Switch 2, and that license can be revoked
3:13:17
at any moment.
3:13:18
What?
3:13:19
You sound like the big brother of gaming.
3:13:21
In addition to this, physical games will no
3:13:23
longer be installed on the game cartridge.
3:13:26
The game cartridge will only contain a key
3:13:28
to install the game over the internet.
3:13:30
Then what's the point of physical?
3:13:32
And why are you charging another $10 for
3:13:34
it?
3:13:34
People will be paying $80 for a key?
3:13:37
Yes, exactly.
3:13:37
A key to access the license to the
3:13:40
game.
3:13:40
So we won't own anything.
3:13:43
This is insane.
3:13:44
You know what else is insane?
3:13:45
Selling out Switch 2 pre-orders within an
3:13:47
hour.
3:13:50
Do you know my car?
3:13:52
I have a console with like, you know,
3:13:54
a screen.
3:13:55
It popped up a EULA the other day.
3:13:58
Oh no.
3:14:00
Oh yeah.
3:14:00
One of these days, it's like the insurance
3:14:02
company taking over everything.
3:14:04
They took over the medicine business.
3:14:06
They took over, you know, they're trying to
3:14:08
take over car repair business.
3:14:10
They're trying to take over home appliance business.
3:14:12
The insurances create these middlemen.
3:14:14
The other big scam going on, it's never
3:14:17
going to end, is the idea of licensing
3:14:19
the car.
3:14:20
In other words, you're not going to buy
3:14:21
a car, but you don't really own the
3:14:23
car.
3:14:24
You bought a license, $20,000, $30,000,
3:14:27
$40,000, $50,000 for a license to
3:14:29
use the car.
3:14:30
That's where it's headed.
3:14:32
That's what's coming.
3:14:33
And if you don't agree to the license,
3:14:35
they turn your car off.
3:14:37
You know who's going to do that first?
3:14:39
Elon.
3:14:40
I guarantee you Tesla will be the first.
3:14:42
They already do it, basically.
3:14:46
Yeah.
3:14:48
This is, you don't, you won't own anything
3:14:50
and be happy.
3:14:50
This is what it stems from.
3:14:52
I'm going to show my support by donating
3:14:54
to No Agenda.
3:14:55
Imagine all the people who could do that.
3:14:57
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
3:15:00
Yeah, on No Agenda, in the morning.
3:15:06
At New Rules starting Sunday, we're going to
3:15:08
make shorter shows.
3:15:10
We're crazy.
3:15:11
What are we doing?
3:15:12
We were way over today.
3:15:14
It's my fault.
3:15:15
Oh, not over again.
3:15:17
Well, let's start with getting these people out
3:15:19
of the way here.
3:15:20
Let's move them out.
3:15:20
All right, move them out.
3:15:21
Lucas Williams in Roswell, New Mexico, our buddy
3:15:24
there in the old space area.
3:15:26
An alien Roswell, $100.
3:15:29
Boom, right at the top, Kevin McLaughlin.
3:15:32
Shows you how dire it is.
3:15:34
Conquer North Carolina.
3:15:35
He should be like 10 deep.
3:15:38
Yes, he should be.
3:15:39
8008, he's the Arstuk Aluna lover of America,
3:15:41
lover of boobs.
3:15:42
We have another 8008 from Al, I don't
3:15:47
know, Gonsulin in Missouri City, Texas.
3:15:52
Let me see.
3:15:52
Missouri City.
3:15:55
8008.
3:15:56
Yeah, Gonsulin.
3:15:57
He's a gigawatt coffee lover.
3:15:58
Oh, aren't we all?
3:16:00
The Last Fast Eddie in Alameda, 8008.
3:16:05
He's got some 8008s in.
3:16:09
Urine Snellders.
3:16:10
Urine.
3:16:11
Urine.
3:16:11
Urine.
3:16:12
Urine.
3:16:16
Urine Snellders in Ennis, Texas, 75.
3:16:21
He's got a call out to his friend,
3:16:22
Veronica.
3:16:26
Dame Toni.
3:16:27
Oh, no, Dame Toni Helps.
3:16:29
Haven't heard from her for a while.
3:16:31
She's been here the last couple of times
3:16:33
with the On Gigi donation.
3:16:35
She's in Oklahoma City.
3:16:37
And she wants the full On Gigi.
3:16:40
Here it comes.
3:16:43
I'll just have an apple in my room.
3:16:46
Adam Herbert, South Windsor, Connecticut, 6161, which should
3:16:50
be an...
3:16:51
Give her another On Gigi.
3:16:52
That's On Gigi, 6161.
3:16:55
I'll just have an apple in my room.
3:16:58
Christopher Dechter, 5678.
3:17:01
Jonas Malpas in Belgium.
3:17:06
He's in Belgium.
3:17:07
5272.
3:17:12
Adam Hurst in Alexandria, New South Wales, 5272.
3:17:18
Sur Economic Hitman in Tombill, Texas, 5001.
3:17:21
And boom, we're already at the 50s.
3:17:22
And there's not that many of them, but
3:17:24
there's a few.
3:17:25
Name and location, starting with Gary Ma in
3:17:28
Woodland Hills, California.
3:17:29
Dame Patricia Worthington, our friend in Miami, Florida.
3:17:32
She hasn't given up.
3:17:34
Brandon Savoie, another one in Port Orchard, Washington.
3:17:37
What's his title?
3:17:38
Get a title.
3:17:43
Kennel Petalia.
3:17:44
What do you think?
3:17:45
Petalia in Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
3:17:47
Kevin Dills in Huntersville, North Carolina.
3:17:49
Diane Schwannenbeck in Johnsburg, Illinois.
3:17:53
Easy Landscapes in North Stonington, Connecticut.
3:17:56
Easy Landscapes.
3:17:57
Philip Ballou in Louisville, Kentucky.
3:18:01
Chris Lewinsky in Sherwood Park, Alberta.
3:18:04
And last on a very, very, very, very
3:18:06
short list, Robert Dreykosen in Oshkosh, Bogosh, Wisconsin.
3:18:15
And we thank these donors, $50 and over
3:18:18
for their contribution.
3:18:19
It is very much appreciated.
3:18:21
We know you like the value you get
3:18:23
and you send it back.
3:18:24
We'd like to see more people doing that,
3:18:26
please.
3:18:26
Even at these levels, it's great.
3:18:28
We appreciate it all.
3:18:29
Of the amount of people who are...
3:18:31
What is that?
3:18:32
What is...
3:18:32
What am I hearing?
3:18:33
What is going on?
3:18:36
That's weird.
3:18:37
It's like some kind of earthquake happening.
3:18:39
So maybe you got an earthquake.
3:18:40
No, maybe not.
3:18:42
Anyway, the point being, we appreciate anybody who
3:18:45
supports the show.
3:18:46
And we'd love to see more people step
3:18:47
up, please.
3:18:48
And of course, thanks everyone under $50 for
3:18:50
reasons of anonymity.
3:18:51
We will not mention these, but we see
3:18:54
you.
3:18:54
We appreciate you.
3:18:55
And you can always support us with a
3:18:57
donation of any amount, any frequency.
3:18:59
That is a do-it-yourself sustaining donation.
3:19:02
We need a lot more of those.
3:19:04
Go to noagendadonations.com and support the show.
3:19:06
If you get any value out of it,
3:19:08
send that value back.
3:19:10
noagendadonations.com Short list, but Marcel van Dongen
3:19:18
turned 60 years old today.
3:19:20
We say happy birthday to him.
3:19:21
And Eric wishes Lauren Palo Oda a very
3:19:24
happy one.
3:19:25
She is also celebrating today.
3:19:26
And she turns 30.
3:19:28
Happy birthday from everybody here.
3:19:29
The best podcast day in the universe.
3:19:42
Two title upgrades.
3:19:43
One for Sir Marcel van Dongen.
3:19:45
He is the knight of the Iver...
3:19:47
And he now becomes Sir Marcel van Dongen.
3:19:50
Baron of Calag...
3:19:52
Calangala Hideout.
3:19:54
The Baron of the Calangala Hideout.
3:19:56
I'll practice that.
3:19:57
And of course, our very own Sir Brian
3:19:59
with an I.
3:19:59
Now becomes Baron at Sir Brian with an
3:20:02
I.
3:20:02
And he will be touting that at the
3:20:04
meetup.
3:20:04
I guarantee you.
3:20:05
We have a Commodore as promised.
3:20:08
He came in late, but he deserves it.
3:20:10
And we are very proud to welcome the
3:20:13
brand new Commodore.
3:20:14
He is Commodore Marcel van Dongen.
3:20:19
Commodore arriving.
3:20:21
We have a gifted knight note from Sir
3:20:24
Mike of the Mountain on the previous episode.
3:20:27
His son gifted him the knighthood that he
3:20:29
had earned.
3:20:30
The knight name Sir Mike of the Mountain
3:20:32
is perfectly fine.
3:20:32
I would like to request though, Escargot at
3:20:34
the round table.
3:20:36
He got into you guys through me because
3:20:37
I started listening to you guys around episode
3:20:39
100.
3:20:40
Although I disagree with some of the assertions
3:20:42
you guys have made over the years.
3:20:44
Which is fine.
3:20:45
You are still a valuable source of news
3:20:47
in a world of propaganda.
3:20:50
Thank you.
3:20:51
And he ends with a Gandhi quote.
3:20:54
Be the change you want to be and
3:20:56
want to see in the world.
3:20:58
I think we adhere to that.
3:21:00
Thank you very much.
3:21:01
Go to noagendarings.com.
3:21:03
That is where you can find your Commodore
3:21:05
ship for Marcel van Dongen Commodore.
3:21:07
And I've ordered the Escargots just for you.
3:21:09
Thank you very much Sir Mike of the
3:21:11
Mountain.
3:21:21
It was actually a lawnmower coming by.
3:21:24
I thought it was an earthquake the way
3:21:26
it sounded.
3:21:27
Meetups taking place today.
3:21:29
Charlotte's 33rd Thursday monthly meetup.
3:21:31
That'll kick off at seven o'clock in
3:21:33
Ed's Tavern there in Charlotte, North Carolina.
3:21:36
On Friday, the North Country meetup.
3:21:39
Number one.
3:21:40
The first one in Mountain View Grand.
3:21:42
That's in Whitefield, New Hampshire.
3:21:43
Five o'clock.
3:21:44
Saturday, the No Agenda DFW Mid-Cities meetup.
3:21:48
That'll be at 1130 in the morning.
3:21:50
But it will be at the Bourbon Street
3:21:51
Bar and Grill.
3:21:52
So get your sauce on early Sir.
3:21:53
Nerdworks will be hosting that for you.
3:21:55
Also on Saturday, the Colorado Springs monthly meetup.
3:21:59
Noon Mountain Time at Antelope Ridge Meadery.
3:22:02
You can get your mead at the meetup
3:22:03
at the Antelope Ridge Meadery.
3:22:04
The Fort Wayne Club 33 No TSA Mayday
3:22:07
meetup.
3:22:08
Oh, that's right.
3:22:09
Mayday.
3:22:10
1233 at Casa Grill and Bar in Fort
3:22:12
Wayne, Indiana.
3:22:13
We have the East of Richmond meetup.
3:22:15
That'll be at one o'clock on Saturday.
3:22:17
The New Kent Winery in New Kent, Virginia.
3:22:19
The Planktown Pollen Pow Wow, 3.30 p
3:22:22
.m. Pacific.
3:22:23
Plankton.
3:22:25
Planktown, I should say.
3:22:26
Springfield, Oregon.
3:22:27
Go check out Commodore Dubs who's hosting that.
3:22:30
And on Saturday, come join us in Fredericksburg
3:22:33
at the second annual Fredericksburg meetup.
3:22:36
3.33 p.m. at 1776 Bar and
3:22:40
Full Moon in B&B.
3:22:41
In Fredericksburg, Texas.
3:22:44
Fredericks FBG Matt will be hosting that with
3:22:47
his lovely wife.
3:22:48
It's good.
3:22:49
You wanted to learn about some J6ers?
3:22:52
Go meet Jenny at 1776 Bar.
3:22:56
Tina and I will be there along with
3:22:58
many luminaries from Texas here at the Fredericksburg
3:23:01
meetup.
3:23:02
And finally on Sunday, our next show day,
3:23:03
thetoomanyeggs.com.
3:23:05
Number 12 at 3.33 New Hampshire time
3:23:09
at Elm City Brewing Company in Keene, New
3:23:11
Hampshire.
3:23:12
Many more meetups can be found at noagendameetups
3:23:15
.com.
3:23:15
These are producer organized.
3:23:17
These are places where you will find the
3:23:20
first responders when you have an emergency connection.
3:23:23
Brings protection when you go to a no
3:23:25
agenda meetup.
3:23:26
noagendameetups.com.
3:23:27
Always a party.
3:23:40
You wanna be where everybody feels the same.
3:23:46
It's like a party.
3:23:48
All right.
3:23:48
We still have some pretty good end of
3:23:50
show mixes coming up.
3:23:51
Even though what John says and I like
3:23:53
them.
3:23:54
We have a tip of the day with
3:23:56
a complaint that came in about the tips
3:23:58
of the day.
3:23:59
And we'll have to take care of that.
3:24:00
But the tips of the day are very
3:24:01
valuable.
3:24:02
And right now we'd like to look at
3:24:04
the ISO clips that we will be using
3:24:06
to end the show with.
3:24:09
John, have you done more AI work?
3:24:11
Is that what you've been been at?
3:24:13
Up to some this and that and the
3:24:15
other.
3:24:16
I didn't get the sentient AI back yet,
3:24:19
but give her a rest.
3:24:22
Why don't you do yours?
3:24:23
I have only one.
3:24:24
I think it may be a winner and
3:24:25
specifically for this show.
3:24:27
So I'd like to go last.
3:24:29
Oh, it's just complaining.
3:24:30
Yes, of course.
3:24:32
We'll start with Bear Monkey.
3:24:36
That was better than a bear fighting a
3:24:38
monkey.
3:24:42
Okay.
3:24:43
All right.
3:24:45
I'll take it.
3:24:47
Do we have scared?
3:24:48
I was scared out of my mind.
3:24:50
Nah, it's too much background noise.
3:24:54
Then while best.
3:24:55
Wow.
3:24:56
Best three hours you'll ever spend.
3:24:59
That's pretty good.
3:25:01
Here's mine.
3:25:01
It's a no AI.
3:25:03
Bye bye and donate.
3:25:05
Nah.
3:25:08
You gotta admit that's pretty good.
3:25:10
I like it because it has the donate
3:25:12
promotion.
3:25:13
Yes, I knew you would like it because
3:25:14
it has the donate.
3:25:15
It's a little bit under modulated, but you
3:25:21
can probably boost it a bit.
3:25:22
Yeah, let's use that.
3:25:23
I'm going to pass.
3:25:24
I'm going to keep my two, though, because
3:25:26
I like them so much.
3:25:27
Yes, they are so dynamite.
3:25:29
I'm going to bump them.
3:25:30
You're going to bump them.
3:25:31
They've been bumped.
3:25:31
And now, everybody, we will never bump this.
3:25:34
It is John's tip of the day.
3:25:38
You and me, just the two of us
3:25:41
with JCD.
3:25:43
And sometimes Adam.
3:25:45
Created by Dana Brunetti.
3:25:46
We have a complaint.
3:25:47
We have a complaint.
3:25:48
I want to hear the complaint.
3:25:49
We always get a complaint.
3:25:51
The complaint comes from Dana Brunetti, creator of
3:25:54
the tip of the day.
3:25:56
And he says, vid angel question marks.
3:26:01
Tip of the day has turned into my
3:26:03
Frankenstein.
3:26:05
First, the tip about the Chinese crap app,
3:26:08
Timu, and now the censorship app vid angel.
3:26:12
It's a horrible product and shouldn't be used,
3:26:15
much less paid $10 a month for.
3:26:17
I use it, use it on the No
3:26:19
Agenda podcast, and it reduced it down to
3:26:21
30 seconds.
3:26:23
Please let the listeners know of my disgust
3:26:26
and disapproval of this censorship.
3:26:28
You are promoting John C.
3:26:29
Dvorak.
3:26:30
People who use this should be better parents
3:26:32
and look at the ratings before watching something
3:26:34
with their children.
3:26:36
Don't expose them to censorship.
3:26:38
Maybe vid angels should pivot and work only
3:26:40
to remove all the woke propaganda in film
3:26:43
and TV.
3:26:44
Actually, even that censorship, I couldn't get behind.
3:26:47
Thumbs down.
3:26:50
I have to kind of agree with him.
3:26:53
Yeah, I have to agree with it.
3:26:55
I think Dana Brunetti's honest.
3:26:56
I disagree with you both.
3:26:57
And the thing is, you sound like him
3:27:00
when you do that.
3:27:00
I know, it's pretty good, right?
3:27:01
He never sent me that note, of course.
3:27:06
And I'm surprised that when you said his
3:27:08
complaint by Dana Brunetti, I figured that the
3:27:11
complaint was his name wasn't pushed toward the
3:27:13
front of the credits.
3:27:17
No, he cares for humans and he cares
3:27:19
for art.
3:27:21
Oh, yeah.
3:27:22
Well, him and De Niro should get together.
3:27:24
Yeah, they should hang out together.
3:27:25
I agree.
3:27:26
And be a fine pair.
3:27:28
Okay, so this tip of the day is
3:27:30
for...
3:27:31
I thought I had it.
3:27:32
I thought I've given it.
3:27:33
I think I mentioned it on the show.
3:27:34
I never gave it as a tip of
3:27:35
the day.
3:27:36
And I went back and looked in the
3:27:37
DojaIntoFun.com and then searched the whole site,
3:27:40
couldn't find it.
3:27:41
So I figured, oh, you know, I should
3:27:42
give this tip of the day.
3:27:43
It's a fabulous product.
3:27:44
It's a freeware product called IrfanView.
3:27:47
You've heard of it?
3:27:49
IrfanView, what?
3:27:50
I guess you haven't heard of it.
3:27:52
No.
3:27:53
It's I-R-F-A-N-V-I
3:27:55
-E-W.
3:27:55
It is an image software package that's for
3:27:59
quick viewing of images, also quick converting of
3:28:03
images.
3:28:03
For example, the horrible image format W-E
3:28:08
-B-P.
3:28:10
What's that iPhone format?
3:28:13
Like, they have iPhone sometimes send it.
3:28:16
There's a bunch of these horrible formats that
3:28:19
nobody uses.
3:28:21
But this will read them if you get...
3:28:23
Or also put in the plugin package.
3:28:26
But this will read anything.
3:28:27
It reads KDC files, which is like the
3:28:30
early, early digital format from Kodak.
3:28:33
H-E-I-C.
3:28:34
That's what Apple phones send.
3:28:35
H-E-I-C.
3:28:36
It'll read it.
3:28:37
It's horrible.
3:28:38
But as soon as it loads it in
3:28:40
and you want to save it, you go
3:28:41
save as, it'll save it as a JPEG.
3:28:43
It'll save it as a PNG.
3:28:44
It'll do anything you want.
3:28:45
And can you convert sizes?
3:28:47
Yeah, you can do that too.
3:28:48
Well, I should use that because I'm always
3:28:50
converting sizes for the Noagen Art.
3:28:52
I will take your tip and I will
3:28:54
let you know how I get on with
3:28:55
it.
3:28:55
That's a good idea.
3:28:56
And it does minor editing.
3:28:58
It's really good for a fast crop.
3:29:02
For a fat boom, boom, crop, boom.
3:29:04
You're there.
3:29:06
It'll do a fast crop.
3:29:07
It'll do a sharpened image.
3:29:09
It'll do a couple of quick and dirty
3:29:12
kind of contrast changes and some other.
3:29:14
Very simple, super fast.
3:29:16
So when you hit the image, it loads
3:29:17
it right away.
3:29:18
It also plays movies faster than the Microsoft
3:29:21
products.
3:29:22
The Microsoft player is slow and the Microsoft
3:29:25
photo stinks.
3:29:28
And get rid of those things.
3:29:29
But the problem I have to say, there's
3:29:30
just as an add-on here.
3:29:32
You can't, it doesn't, you know, in the
3:29:34
olden days, when you're loaded Earth Fan View
3:29:36
and say, would you like it to do
3:29:37
all these things?
3:29:38
And say, they have a list of GIF
3:29:40
and AVI and all these different formats.
3:29:43
It'll read and you just click yes for
3:29:45
all of them.
3:29:45
No, now you have to go into the
3:29:48
settings.
3:29:48
I think, which I think is illegal.
3:29:50
You have to go into the settings and
3:29:52
hand change all the defaults to Earth Fan
3:29:56
View.
3:29:56
But once you do that, you're good to
3:29:57
go.
3:29:58
I think this is a good tip.
3:30:00
And this is now, again, this is a
3:30:01
freeware, shareware, or is it open source?
3:30:06
It's shareware freeware.
3:30:07
It's not open source.
3:30:08
So you can donate to the creator of
3:30:11
this product?
3:30:12
Yeah, this has a donate button.
3:30:14
Okay, buy him a coffee.
3:30:15
I like paying for my software.
3:30:17
Excellent tip, everybody.
3:30:18
John C.
3:30:18
Dvorak comes through once again, and you cannot
3:30:20
criticize him for this tip of the day.
3:30:29
Well, you could, of course, criticize him, but
3:30:35
we will reject your criticism because that was
3:30:38
a good tip of the day.
3:30:40
Oh, there she is on time.
3:30:42
Tina the Keeper enters the studio, meaning I
3:30:47
got to get dressed for dinner.
3:30:48
So that means, yes, it does.
3:30:50
That's it for our broadcast day.
3:30:52
We would really like you to consider supporting
3:30:53
the show.
3:30:54
Go to noagendadonations.com Coming up next, we
3:30:57
have another fine podcast product, a real one.
3:31:01
And these guys don't have tats or doodly
3:31:03
sneakers.
3:31:03
It's random thoughts.
3:31:05
And this is episode 322, and they are
3:31:07
vibe coding.
3:31:09
Oh boy, I know what that is.
3:31:11
It's painful vibe coding.
3:31:13
End of show.
3:31:13
Mixing from Nautilus K, James Bosworth, and David
3:31:17
Kecta.
3:31:17
All bringing it home for you.
3:31:19
We will return on Sunday with another shorter
3:31:22
show, but we will bring you the media
3:31:25
deconstruction you need to stay sane.
3:31:27
Unless you're one of those people on TikTok.
3:31:29
Coming to you from the heart of the
3:31:30
Texas Hill Country, where we have a meetup
3:31:32
coming up tomorrow.
3:31:33
In the morning, everybody.
3:31:35
I'm Adam Curry.
3:31:36
And from northern Silicon Valley, where I am
3:31:38
out of here.
3:31:39
Oh, my head.
3:31:40
I'm John C.
3:31:41
Dvorak.
3:31:42
See you on Sunday, everybody.
3:31:43
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:31:46
Until then, adios, mofos, hui, hui, and such.
3:32:10
A-1 teaching, you know, every year starting
3:32:13
that far down in the grades.
3:32:15
And that's just a, that's a wonderful thing.
3:32:18
A-1 teaching, A-A-A-A-1
3:32:20
teaching, A-1 teaching, A-A-A-A
3:32:25
-1 teaching.
3:32:27
There's a school system that's going to start
3:32:29
making sure that first graders, or even pre
3:32:32
-Ks, have A-1 teaching, you know, every
3:32:35
year starting that far down in the grades.
3:32:38
And that's just a, that's a wonderful thing.
3:32:56
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:01
A series of tools.
3:33:03
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:06
Artificial intelligence.
3:33:07
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:10
A series of tools.
3:33:12
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:15
Artificial intelligence.
3:33:18
A-1 teaching.
3:33:33
A-1 teaching.
3:33:33
A-1.
3:33:34
Kids are sponges.
3:33:35
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:37
A-1.
3:33:39
Artificial intelligence.
3:33:41
Artificial intelligence.
3:33:42
You talking about A-I?
3:33:44
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:46
A-1 teaching.
3:33:48
Artificial intelligence.
3:33:53
What?
3:33:53
We're going to have internet in our school.
3:33:55
And a couple of people got their tit
3:33:56
in the ring over your newsletter.
3:33:58
I felt bad about it.
3:34:00
A rare apology.
3:34:02
Well done, though.
3:34:02
You're like saying, I was wrong, Mea culpa.
3:34:06
The past month has been nothing but Honest
3:34:08
John.
3:34:09
Honest John, it's always been Honest John.
3:34:11
Honest John.
3:34:14
Wow, who are you, Honest John?
3:34:18
What, who are you?
3:34:19
Honest John.
3:34:22
Who are you, Honest John?
3:34:25
Wow, what, who are you?
3:34:27
Pfft.
3:34:28
Pfft.
3:34:29
Pfft.
3:34:29
Who are you?
3:34:30
Honest John, it's always been Honest John.
3:34:32
It's my old nickname.
3:34:33
They used to call me that in high
3:34:34
school.
3:34:35
Sure.
3:34:37
Sure.
3:34:39
Wow.
3:34:40
What are you?
3:34:41
Who are you?
3:34:43
Honest John.
3:34:44
It's always been Honest John.
3:34:46
They used to call me that in high
3:34:47
school.
3:35:02
I felt bad about it.
3:35:04
I thought it would make up for the
3:35:06
clip.
3:35:07
Not at all.
3:35:14
But hold on.
3:35:16
Your No Agenda show has actual people who
3:35:19
work in the places where the bullcrap is
3:35:21
taking place.
3:36:02
You're not tech billionaires.
3:36:04
What tech billionaire owns major media?
3:36:08
It's all a lie.
3:36:12
You're not tech billionaires.
3:36:14
No, no, that's not true.
3:36:16
It's all a lie.
3:36:18
You're not tech billionaires.
3:36:20
No, no, that's not true.
3:36:23
Support your No Agenda show today.
3:36:27
The best podcast in the universe!
3:36:34
Adios, mofo.
3:36:36
Dvorak.org slash NA.
3:36:40
Bye bye, and donate!
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