0:00
Adam Curry, John C.
0:02
Dvorak.
0:02
It's Sunday, May 25th, 2025.
0:04
This is your award-winning GiveOnNation Media Assassination
0:07
Episode 1767.
0:09
This is no agenda.
0:11
Nothing but the best of the best.
0:14
And broadcasting kind of live from the heart
0:17
of the Texas hill country, in FEMA Region
0:19
No.
0:19
6 in the morning, everybody.
0:21
I'm Adam Curry.
0:22
And from northern Silicon Valley, we want to
0:24
wish everybody a happy Memorial Day.
0:26
I'm John C.
0:27
Dvorak.
0:28
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
0:30
In the morning.
0:31
A rare, rare moment where we celebrate a
0:35
holiday.
0:37
Yeah, yeah, it happens.
0:39
No, I don't think that has ever happened.
0:40
Have we ever celebrated?
0:42
I mean, not that we're celebrating.
0:43
Yes, Thanksgiving 2017.
0:45
Oh, you know exactly when it was, don't
0:47
you?
0:49
Really, we took off Thanksgiving that year?
0:52
Yeah, that's when I was in England.
0:54
Oh, so we had an, oh, that's right.
0:56
And you haven't left the house since, I
0:58
don't think.
0:58
I have been here, boarded up.
1:01
That's the last time.
1:02
Well, I am technically, although you hear the
1:05
sound of my voice, I'm in Nashville right
1:07
now visiting for the weekend, which was long
1:11
planned.
1:11
And we are very fortunate that we have
1:14
some of the best producers in the universe,
1:17
including Gus Raya.
1:20
In fact, I'll just read his note.
1:21
He says, hey, I heard your call for
1:24
a best of show.
1:25
This was like a year ago, a year
1:28
ago.
1:28
I started working on a clip of the
1:30
day compilation.
1:31
It kind of worked out.
1:33
Great idea, by the way.
1:35
Well, so this is a full show, and
1:40
it's only clip of the days from 2023
1:42
and the first half of 2024.
1:45
And I didn't know we did that many
1:47
clips of the day back then.
1:50
Did you?
1:50
I think we did more clips of the
1:52
day before, like in the year two, it
1:56
was just earlier.
1:57
I mean, it's incredible how many clips.
1:59
Of course, they're all my clips.
2:03
My experience is that we've sometimes done two
2:06
a day, two a show.
2:08
But generally speaking, it's about every third show.
2:11
So probably since we do, what, 100 shows
2:14
or so?
2:14
I don't know.
2:15
We probably do 30, 30 a year.
2:18
But sometimes maybe 35.
2:21
Well, of course, the great thing about a
2:24
show with the best of the clip of
2:27
the day compilation is because they're the best
2:30
clips.
2:31
That's the beauty of it.
2:32
Nothing will suck.
2:32
No, most of the clips of the day
2:33
are dynamite clips.
2:34
I don't think we've ever given each other.
2:36
I mean, borderliners, but even the borderliners are
2:40
good.
2:40
Yes, the borderliners are good, too.
2:42
You can't lose with this combination.
2:44
No, this is the best, most spectacular of
2:48
all the compilation shows.
2:50
It is.
2:51
It is.
2:51
And we're going to be enjoying it during
2:53
this Memorial Day weekend.
2:55
We hope you enjoy it as well.
2:56
We come back about halfway through.
2:58
Thanks again to our executive producer, Gus Raya,
3:01
and let's go with the No Agenda compilation
3:05
best of clip of the day.
3:07
Fact check.
3:08
I have this very short ditty from Jane
3:11
Fonda, who doesn't know her, who has not
3:14
loved her in the past, although Hanoi Jane
3:17
was not very popular, but we all saw
3:19
Barbarella, at least I did.
3:22
I've always wanted to really like Jane Fonda.
3:25
It's becoming increasingly difficult.
3:27
You can take anything, sexism, racism, misogyny, homophobia,
3:32
whatever, the war, and if you really get
3:35
into it and study it and learn about
3:38
it and the history of it and everything's
3:41
connected, there'd be no climate crisis if it
3:44
wasn't for racism.
3:45
I mean, come on.
3:46
I mean.
3:50
Wow.
3:51
OK.
3:52
No.
3:52
You know.
3:53
No.
3:53
No.
3:54
Really?
3:55
Oh, come on, man.
3:57
Yeah, please.
3:58
You might as well take it.
3:59
Oh, thank you.
4:00
Have a good day.
4:00
Thank you.
4:02
You knew it was a good clip.
4:04
I didn't.
4:05
You know, only when I heard it just
4:06
now did I know it was it was
4:08
worthy, but I would have accepted a borderline.
4:10
Honestly, I would have taken a borderline from
4:12
it.
4:12
It was too funny because I think I'm
4:16
trying to not yet to think.
4:17
Let's take a moment and deconstruct what clip
4:21
of the day amounts to.
4:22
OK.
4:24
Take it away.
4:24
For one thing, it's always a surprise to
4:26
the other person who's anointing the clip of
4:29
the day, either you or me.
4:31
Yes, an anointing.
4:31
And it's always idiotic and stupid at some
4:35
level that's incomprehensible.
4:38
Yeah, it's true.
4:41
I really don't.
4:42
I mean, she also said war.
4:44
I mean, the war.
4:45
Everything.
4:46
Everything is racism.
4:47
Everything is racism.
4:49
But back when MSNBC started, I think this
4:51
was twenty two thousand five.
4:55
RFK Jr. came out with this whole thing
4:58
talking and he was connecting autism to the
5:02
vaccine.
5:04
Thimerosal.
5:05
And it was.
5:06
And here's got to got to play.
5:08
This was on no agenda social.
5:09
I love that someone dug this clip up.
5:11
This is Chuck Scarborough, who I'm sure is
5:13
calling RFK Jr. a nut job anti-vaxxer
5:19
today.
5:20
In fact, I could probably just drop a
5:22
needle in any YouTube clip and find him
5:24
saying that.
5:25
Back then.
5:26
Oh, it's Bobby.
5:28
How you doing?
5:28
The kids are dying.
5:29
What's going on?
5:30
It's as heart wrenching as it gets.
5:32
Autism and children, six out of every thousand
5:35
kids get it.
5:36
And nobody knows exactly why.
5:37
But my next guest says he's got part
5:40
of the blame that he that he thinks
5:42
needs to fall on government.
5:43
And it has to do with a drug
5:45
called thimerosal.
5:46
Robert F.
5:47
Kennedy, Jr. Attorney for the.
5:50
What?
5:50
He called it a drug.
5:52
Oh, yeah.
5:55
It's so incredible what the difference between then
5:58
and now.
5:58
The National Resources Defense Council is author of
6:01
Deadly Immunity in the current issue of Rolling
6:03
Stone.
6:04
It's an investigation of the possible connection between
6:06
thimerosal and autism in young kids.
6:09
Hey, Bobby, thanks a lot.
6:10
And, of course, you also have a great
6:12
new book.
6:13
Tell us briefly about that.
6:14
First of all, let me say that the
6:17
deadly immunity piece on thimerosal is also running
6:20
on salon.com.
6:21
Simultaneously, the two magazines, by the way, this
6:24
piece ran on salon, Rolling Stone, etc.
6:26
They pulled it.
6:27
They pulled it within a day from all
6:30
of those publications.
6:31
You cannot find you can't even find an
6:33
archive dot org.
6:34
It's so bad.
6:35
They pulled this.
6:36
There are a lot of people out there
6:37
when I was practicing law.
6:38
In fact, I need to say this.
6:40
We actually practice in the same law firm.
6:42
No lawsuits regarding who even knew that Chuck
6:46
Scarborough and RFK Jr. in the same law
6:49
firm.
6:49
This is an incredible piece of history.
6:51
Thimerosal.
6:52
So we can get that off the record.
6:54
But still, there are a lot of people.
6:56
A lot of Americans very concerned about the
6:58
impact of this drug, which is found in
7:01
vaccines and how it causes autism.
7:03
It's mercury.
7:04
It's not a drug.
7:05
It's mercury.
7:07
Wait, it's a preservative that contains mercury.
7:12
Correct.
7:12
In vaccines and how it causes autism.
7:15
Talk about it.
7:17
Thimerosal is a preservative that was put in
7:19
vaccines back in the 1930s.
7:21
Almost immediately after it was put in, autism
7:24
cases began to appear.
7:25
Autism had never been known before.
7:27
It was unknown to science.
7:29
Then the vaccines were increased in 1989 by
7:33
the CDC and by a couple of other
7:35
government agencies.
7:35
Let me stop you there.
7:36
That's an important date, and I'll tell you
7:37
why.
7:38
My son, born in 1991, has a slight
7:43
form of autism called Asperger's.
7:46
When I was practicing law, and also when
7:48
I was in Congress, parents would constantly come
7:50
to me and they'd bring me videotapes of
7:52
their children.
7:53
They were all around the age of my
7:55
son or younger.
7:57
Something happened in 1989.
8:01
What happened was the vaccine schedule was increased.
8:05
We went up from receiving about 10 vaccines
8:07
in our generation to these kids received 24
8:11
vaccines.
8:11
They all had this thimerosal in them, this
8:14
mercury.
8:15
Nobody bothered to do an analysis of what
8:18
the cumulative impact of all that mercury was
8:20
doing to kids.
8:21
As it turns out, we are injecting our
8:23
children with 400 times the amount of mercury
8:26
that FDA or EPA considers safe.
8:29
A child, on his first day that he's
8:31
born, is injected with a hepatitis B shot.
8:35
Under EPA guidelines, he would have to be
8:38
275 pounds to safely absorb that shot.
8:41
And yet, we're just constantly pumping our kids
8:44
with these vaccines.
8:45
What happened was that in 1988, one in
8:52
every 2,500 American children had autism.
8:55
Today, one in every 166 children have autism.
8:59
Plus, one in six children have other kinds
9:01
of learning disorders, other kinds of neurological disorders,
9:05
speech delay, language disorders, ADD, hyperactivity, that all
9:09
seem to be connected, that are all connected.
9:12
Yeah, so that goes on and on and
9:13
on.
9:13
It's like a 10-minute piece.
9:14
It's unbelievable.
9:15
Particularly for Chuck Scarborough, his own kid was
9:17
injured by these things.
9:19
But oh no, now, hey Bobby, oh, he's
9:21
an anti-vaxxer.
9:22
He's a crazy man.
9:23
He's nuts.
9:24
He's a looney tune.
9:24
He's a looney tunes, looney tunes.
9:26
That's how powerful Big Pharma is.
9:29
And part of that piece that got...
9:32
By the way, we should give you a
9:33
borderline clip on that, even though it's...
9:36
It's from the troll...
9:41
That's for the producer who posted it in
9:44
No Agenda Social.
9:45
That was a great...
9:46
Very good find.
9:48
He posted it on Twitter and he got
9:49
put in Twitter jail for a little bit
9:51
for posting that.
9:52
For posting that clip.
9:54
That clip, yeah.
9:55
All they did, that's just a clip that
9:56
exists, that's a real clip.
9:58
A real clip, yeah.
10:00
And you get put in Twitter jail because
10:02
you posted a real clip.
10:03
According to our producer, yes.
10:04
I believe it.
10:06
That article contained a transcript of a hidden
10:10
recording of the Samson Wood conference where a
10:14
whole bunch of doctors and pharmaceutical executives and
10:20
doctors and researchers along with HMOs, they all
10:25
got together and they all said, yeah, crap,
10:26
this stuff is crossing the blood-brain barrier
10:29
and it's causing autism.
10:31
It's in the transcript.
10:32
You can read it.
10:33
So I was able to get that.
10:35
I put that in the show notes.
10:36
So this is not...
10:37
It's not an unknown thing, but over time,
10:40
Big Pharma just took over, just advertised you
10:43
to death with it.
10:45
One step closer to China, one step away
10:48
from Europe.
10:49
German Chancellor Olaf Scholz and Chinese Premier Li
10:53
Jiang on Tuesday agreed to support free trade
10:56
after intergovernmental talks in Berlin.
10:59
Scholz has come under fire for the talks
11:01
which critics say are not appropriate anymore given
11:04
growing geopolitical tensions between the West and China.
11:08
A German intelligence agency published a warning in
11:11
a report on Tuesday.
11:13
The report says China is aiming to obtain
11:15
German technology to bolster its military.
11:19
It also highlights the risk of cyber-spying
11:21
operations.
11:23
Despite that, the German Chancellor defended his position
11:26
on the two countries' relationship.
11:27
Author and historian Philippe Fabry says Germany's tough
11:31
spot comes from the country's economic choices.
11:35
A large part of China's industrialization has been
11:39
achieved through the purchase of German machine tools,
11:42
which is the biggest export sector for the
11:44
German economy.
11:45
So naturally, exporting those is vital for Germany.
11:48
This conditions Germany's relationship with China and puts
11:51
it at odds with the interests of many
11:53
other Western countries, notably the United States.
11:56
The German Chancellor's position doesn't come as a
11:59
surprise though.
12:00
When visiting China in November 2022, Scholz promoted
12:04
partnership with the country.
12:06
And in May, he confirmed a deal to
12:09
allow a Chinese shipping company to take a
12:11
minority stake in a container terminal at Hamburg
12:14
port.
12:15
Fabry says these moves from Germany make it
12:18
more and more isolated from other EU countries.
12:21
Since the start of the war in Ukraine,
12:25
there has been a loss of German influence
12:27
in Europe.
12:28
That's because of a whole host of German
12:30
strategies, and in particular Germany's dependence on Russian
12:33
gas, which has brought some form of discredit.
12:36
Okay, I love this.
12:38
Good clip.
12:38
Here's what I think is happening.
12:40
I know you have a second one, so
12:41
I'll just give you my unsolicited feedback.
12:45
Germany got screwed.
12:47
They've been screwed over by being hypnotized into
12:53
believing it was a good idea to get
12:55
rid of their nuclear, get rid of all…
12:58
I mean, they were the powerhouse of Europe.
13:01
They used to say, if Germany sneezes, the
13:05
rest of Europe gets the flu.
13:07
And that's no longer the case.
13:08
So they got completely psyoped in getting rid
13:11
of all of that.
13:11
They have no industry.
13:12
Then we blew up the pipeline so they
13:16
have no gas.
13:17
They have nothing to do.
13:18
And now they're going to become part of
13:19
the Belt and Road scenario for China, and
13:22
they will become the adversary in Europe.
13:26
How does that sound?
13:28
Right on.
13:29
Right on, man.
13:31
Right on.
13:31
Nailed it.
13:32
Right on.
13:32
Far out.
13:33
Groovy.
13:34
Far out.
13:34
Groovy, baby.
13:36
Here's part two.
13:37
Case in point.
13:38
On the same day as Germany's announcement, the
13:41
EU published an economic security plan.
13:43
It seeks to convince the bloc's 27 states
13:46
to agree stronger control on exports.
13:49
It's particularly focused on technologies that could be
13:52
put to military use by rivals like China.
13:57
I think we're seeing a power struggle as
13:59
the EU pledges to harden its relationship with
14:02
China, which is also hoped for by the
14:04
US camp, who are determined to have the
14:06
Europeans on their side in the strategic confrontation
14:08
against China.
14:10
Wow.
14:12
That's, you know what?
14:15
Even though it's late in the day, I
14:16
think that deserves it.
14:21
Out of left field.
14:23
Yep.
14:24
This is a big deal.
14:26
The Belt and Road with China.
14:28
And they're going to have the shipping come
14:29
right up onto the...
14:31
Oh, man.
14:34
Wow.
14:35
That's the crack in the EU dam right
14:38
there.
14:39
No, but they won't know what to do.
14:42
They won't know what to do.
14:44
I wonder if they even see it, stupid
14:47
morons.
14:48
Well, let's just listen to the first clip,
14:50
and then I'll explain who this guy is.
14:52
This is Ukraine analysis Shaheed1.
14:54
Let me talk for a moment about Poland
14:56
in relation to the US proxy war against
14:58
Europe, popularly known as the Ukraine war.
15:01
As I've stated since the outbreak of the
15:04
war, in my opinion, the Ukraine war is
15:08
a US proxy war not against Russia, but
15:11
against Europe.
15:13
It is the launchpad for a continent-wide
15:15
destabilization project that will create conflict zone conditions
15:20
across Europe.
15:21
It will divide the EU against itself.
15:24
It will deindustrialize the continent and turn it
15:26
into another laboratory for the imposition of severe
15:30
neoliberal austerity policies that will wipe out all
15:34
except the largest private sector players and basically
15:37
refutalize Europe.
15:40
Now, Poland appears to have been selected by
15:42
the United States to act as their hub
15:45
of operations for implementing this program.
15:48
But before I get into that, let's go
15:50
back to one of the earliest examples of
15:53
this type of project, the dirty wars in
15:56
Central and South America in the 1980s.
15:58
When I was growing up, I was always
16:00
interested in the news and current affairs and
16:02
world events and so on.
16:03
And the evening news every night was dominated
16:07
by stories of savagery in places like Nicaragua,
16:11
El Salvador, Guatemala and Argentina.
16:14
Civil wars, death squads, abductions, torture and all
16:19
forms of brutality proliferated the entire region.
16:22
Now, all of this was orchestrated out of
16:24
the American embassy in Honduras under the management
16:27
of then U.S. Ambassador John Negroponte, whom
16:30
locals referred to as Mr. Death Squad.
16:33
Honduras had the largest U.S. embassy.
16:36
It had the biggest CIA station.
16:38
And the country became the staging ground for
16:42
a regional destabilization project that continued throughout the
16:46
1980s.
16:47
Wow.
16:48
OK.
16:48
All right.
16:49
Hold on.
16:49
I'm just going to give it to you
16:50
up front because I know what's going to
16:52
happen here.
16:54
I can just give it to you right
16:56
up front.
16:56
This is dynamite.
16:57
This, of course, is so obvious now.
17:00
This is a complete destabilization of Europe.
17:02
And we're going to squash them like a
17:04
bug, like a bug under a bomb.
17:06
Well, FDEU, as our friend Nuland said.
17:10
Oh, goodness.
17:11
If we go back to that and we
17:13
listen to this clip and we listen to
17:14
FDEU, we start to understand what might actually
17:18
be going on.
17:24
So it goes on and on.
17:26
Ann Arbor, there's a bunch of connections.
17:28
This is a very interesting article, if anyone
17:29
can find it.
17:30
It's in the weekly Blitz.net, a backgrounder
17:35
on this guy.
17:36
And the guy is extremely suspicious and he's
17:38
really good at analysis.
17:41
So let's go to part two of this
17:42
clip.
17:43
When John Negroponte was appointed the U.S.
17:46
ambassador to Iraq, shortly after the invasion and
17:49
occupation, I fully anticipated that he would pursue
17:52
the same sort of destabilization project throughout the
17:56
Middle East.
17:56
Now, Negroponte had a protege named Robert Stephen
18:00
Ford, who was appointed the U.S. ambassador
18:02
to Syria at that time.
18:05
And he immediately began trying to foment rebellion
18:08
and opposition and resistance and recruiting militia groups
18:12
until he was eventually kicked out of the
18:14
country.
18:14
I think we're all aware of what happened
18:18
a few short years later in the Arab
18:20
world with the Arab Spring.
18:21
And we're all aware also, I think, of
18:23
the role played by CIA-backed organizations in
18:27
that disruptive movement.
18:29
And I think we're also all aware of
18:30
the role played by the CIA in backing
18:33
armed groups in the civil war in Syria.
18:35
In fact, during the Arab Spring, the United
18:39
States tried to appoint Robert Stephen Ford.
18:41
After he'd been kicked out of Syria, they
18:42
tried to appoint him as the U.S.
18:43
ambassador to Egypt.
18:44
But fortunately, his reputation and the reputation of
18:47
John Negroponte preceded them.
18:49
And popular opposition to that appointment forced the
18:53
U.S. to scrap the idea.
18:54
So the point here is that there is
18:55
a pattern.
18:57
And once you are familiar with the pattern,
18:59
you can recognize it.
19:00
And you can sort of abstractly predict the
19:03
way it's going to play out, if not
19:05
specifically.
19:06
Well, in the current scenario, in my opinion,
19:08
Poland is Honduras.
19:10
Near the beginning of the war in Ukraine,
19:11
I noticed the role being played by Poland
19:14
as a destination for refugees and as a
19:17
source for mercenaries to go and fight in
19:19
Ukraine.
19:19
So I decided to check.
19:22
Who is the U.S. ambassador to Poland
19:23
right now?
19:24
Well, the U.S. ambassador to Poland right
19:26
now is not Robert Stephen Ford, and it's
19:29
not John Negroponte or any of their known
19:31
proteges.
19:32
The current U.S. ambassador to Poland is
19:35
the son of one of the most notorious
19:37
policy advisors in recent U.S. history, Zbigniew
19:41
Brzezinski.
19:42
And I'm not going to make any effort
19:43
to say his name correctly.
19:44
Brzezinski, who was Polish, was the architect of
19:48
U.S. support for the Mujahideen in Afghanistan
19:51
against the Soviet Union.
19:53
And he was a staunch and paranoid anti
19:56
-Russian zealot.
19:58
Wait a minute.
19:59
It is.
20:02
It's Mark Brzezinski.
20:04
Oh, man.
20:06
How did we miss?
20:07
Did we miss this?
20:07
Did we know this?
20:08
I think we may have noticed it some
20:10
time back.
20:12
What?
20:13
Well, since we're talking about bunk.
20:15
Bunk.
20:16
We might as well do the hit job
20:18
that on the media did to poor Bobby
20:22
the K.
20:23
Okay.
20:24
Let's do the Bobby the K hit job.
20:26
All righty.
20:26
Now, everything about this is slanted, and it's
20:29
assumed, and I have to assume that they're
20:32
sincere.
20:33
They think Bobby the K, Robert Kennedy Jr.,
20:37
is nuts.
20:39
He's a conspiracy theorist.
20:41
He uses techniques to fool you.
20:44
He's a liar.
20:46
So let's go.
20:47
And even his family hates him.
20:50
Oh, yeah.
20:50
And we can't forget that.
20:51
His family hates him because he's so off
20:54
the rails.
20:54
And by the way, the conclusion is, I'll
20:57
get, might as well summarize that, it's only
21:00
for his legacies doing this so people will
21:02
remember he existed.
21:04
He's such a loser.
21:06
It's like a Trump thing.
21:07
He's doing that just for his own ego?
21:09
Is that what they're saying?
21:11
Yeah.
21:11
Oh, nice.
21:12
Here you go, on the media.
21:13
On the media, yeah.
21:14
He also has an incredibly combative and often
21:17
litigious relationship with both mainstream media and sort
21:20
of mainstream systems of government.
21:22
He wants to persuade people who think they're
21:25
Democrats that they're not Democrats and people who
21:27
think they're Republicans that they're not Republicans, is
21:29
how he put it to Dr. Drew.
21:32
So he's presenting himself as kind of a
21:34
nonpartisan everyman who is equally dissatisfied with both
21:38
sides.
21:39
So let's talk about how journalists and media
21:41
outlets are handling this candidacy.
21:44
You wrote that ABC and CNN demonstrated how
21:47
not to cover RFK Jr. Yeah.
21:50
What did they do wrong?
21:51
So this was a very kind of early.
21:54
Oh, let me just say.
21:57
Oh, I know this side.
21:59
Oh, my God.
22:02
We should just rename him Bobby the Q.
22:04
I don't know why we even talk about
22:06
this man.
22:06
Adrena Krohn.
22:07
RFK Jr. Yeah.
22:09
What did they do wrong?
22:10
So this was a very kind of early
22:13
example of media platforms just not really being
22:16
ready to cover Kennedy's candidacy.
22:19
So what ABC did was they sat down
22:21
for a fairly conventional Kennedy interview with Kennedy.
22:25
But during it, he did what he does,
22:27
which is he started spouting COVID and vaccine
22:31
misinformation.
22:32
And so ABC made the decision to just
22:33
cut that portion from the interview and then
22:36
tell their audience that that's what they were
22:37
doing.
22:37
It was just like vomit just spouting from
22:40
his mouth, from his orifice about vaccine disinformation.
22:43
We should note that during our conversation, Kennedy
22:46
made false claims about the COVID-19 vaccines.
22:48
Data shows that the COVID-19 vaccines prevented
22:50
millions of hospitalizations and deaths from the disease.
22:53
He also made misleading claims about the relationship
22:55
between vaccination and autism research.
22:57
I think that it was a well-intentioned
22:59
decision.
23:00
But what it did was it gave Kennedy
23:02
an incredibly powerful talking point to say, you
23:06
see, my views on COVID and vaccines are
23:09
so powerful and so threatening to the establishment
23:12
that they cannot see the light of day.
23:15
This is what happens when you censor somebody
23:18
for 18 years.
23:19
They shouldn't have shut me up that long
23:21
because now I'm going to really let loose
23:23
on them for the next 18 months.
23:25
They're going to hear a lot from me.
23:27
Oh, let me guess.
23:28
Next question.
23:28
So, Becky, Becky, so what do we do
23:32
with a candidate like Bobby, Bobby the Q?
23:35
What do we do, Becky?
23:36
Yeah, actually, she's got the second example first
23:39
and then it falls apart.
23:40
You're right.
23:41
That is kind of coming up.
23:43
CNN was a little bit more unusual.
23:44
Essentially, what happened is that a CNN political
23:48
journalist named Michael Smirconish had Kennedy on and
23:51
managed to use the word vaccines exactly once
23:54
in his introduction and then proceeded to have
23:57
a very friendly jocular interview with Mr. Kennedy
24:00
about his campaign that managed to not ask
24:04
about his anti-vaccine activism at all.
24:07
They spent more time talking about Mr. Smirconish's
24:09
fandom of Sheryl Hines, Mr. Kennedy's wife.
24:12
If I had not convinced her that I
24:14
can win this race, I would not be
24:17
in it because she's the ultimate boss.
24:20
OK, listen, I do love your wife.
24:22
I'm I'm team Sheryl.
24:24
Having said that.
24:25
So it was really, really striking.
24:27
So, OK, that's what journalists do wrong.
24:30
How can we do things right?
24:31
What's this with with wrong?
24:33
What's that with the G?
24:35
Got to roll G wrong.
24:36
I heard it before.
24:38
This is new.
24:39
I didn't notice this.
24:39
What?
24:40
That's what journalists do wrong.
24:41
Wrong.
24:43
It was really, really striking.
24:44
So, OK, that's what journalists do wrong.
24:47
Wrong.
24:48
Yeah.
24:48
Wrong.
24:49
Wrong.
24:49
I heard it.
24:50
Yes.
24:51
It's wrong.
24:52
Wrong.
24:52
What are you doing it wrong?
24:54
Wrong.
24:54
Said that wrong.
24:55
So it was really, really striking.
24:57
So, OK, that's what journalists do wrong.
25:00
How can we do things right?
25:02
Right.
25:02
I mean, oh, man, this is this is
25:05
NPR.
25:06
I mean, if this was a podcast, I'd
25:09
throw it out of the index.
25:10
That's so bad.
25:11
Said that.
25:11
So it was really, really striking.
25:13
So, OK, that's what journalists do wrong.
25:16
How can we do things right?
25:18
Wrong.
25:18
Right.
25:18
How can we do things right?
25:19
I mean, the first, of course, is we
25:20
absolutely cannot go into arguably any interview unprepared,
25:25
but especially with someone who has spent.
25:28
I'm just stopping this right now.
25:29
I'm just stopping it right now.
25:30
This is so dynamite.
25:32
This is the truth.
25:33
You got two clips of the day.
25:35
Oh, I'm on a roll.
25:37
I mean, the fact that this is being
25:39
broadcast on something called.
25:41
Broadcast on NPR.
25:42
And you're proud of it.
25:43
National public radio.
25:44
You know what this is?
25:45
This is wrong.
25:46
Arguably.
25:47
It's wrong.
25:51
I mean, the fact that this is being
25:54
broadcast on something called.
26:09
Broadcast on NPR.
26:11
And you're proud of it.
26:11
I mean, the fact that this is being
26:12
broadcast on something called.
26:12
Broadcast on NPR.
26:15
And you're proud of it.
26:15
Arguably.
26:16
This is wrong.
26:16
Arguably.
26:16
This is wrong.
26:47
Wikipedia what is it what is a gish
26:51
gallop a gish gallop is what I would
26:54
say if anybody actually does it I don't
26:57
think Kennedy does but it's a Ben Shapiro
27:00
would do it where you just throw so
27:02
much stuff at somebody they can't take it
27:04
they're ducking you left and right and they
27:06
can't respond in time and by the time
27:09
they want to respond to something you say
27:11
something else oh you mean like with facts
27:13
yeah if you actually and Kennedy has a
27:16
lot of facts but they they just assume
27:18
everything he says is disinformation or there's better
27:21
facts or you know let me let me
27:23
read the exact definition the gish gallop or
27:26
gish gallop which I like better is a
27:29
rhetorical technique in which a person in a
27:31
debate attempts to overwhelm their opponent by providing
27:34
an excessive number of arguments also known as
27:36
facts with no regard for the accuracy or
27:39
strength of those arguments gish galloping prioritizes the
27:43
quantity of the gallopers arguments at the expense
27:47
of their quality the term was coined in
27:50
1994 by anthropologist Eugene Scott who named it
27:54
after American creationist Dwayne gish and argued that
27:58
gish use the technique frequently when challenging scientific
28:01
fact of evolution so don't throw too many
28:05
facts at me because then you're gish galloping
28:07
you kind of known rhetorical style that other
28:10
folks do to which is called this sort
28:12
of gish gallop is the term for it
28:14
named after Dwayne gish creationist right so the
28:18
idea that creationist gish gallop is that you
28:20
are making claim upon claim oh a heathen
28:23
I'm sorry a heathen who believes in God
28:26
oh no gish gallop is the term for
28:28
it named after Dwayne gish a creationist right
28:32
so the idea that gish gallop is that
28:33
you are making claim upon claim upon claim
28:35
sort of bad argument after bad argument very
28:37
very very quickly so quickly that it is
28:40
hard for the person that you are speaking
28:41
to to sort of respond to all of
28:44
those claims effectively and in real time oh
28:47
what a horrible what a horrible trick I
28:50
can't believe Bobby the Q is using the
28:52
gish gallop trick that's I mean that's just
28:55
I mean even Trump can't do that no
28:58
Trump can't Wow this is oh man so
29:02
this is the demean him further you know
29:04
I and it and by the way it's
29:06
always associative you want to associate people with
29:08
creationist yeah yeah cuz that makes you nuts
29:12
by the way this whole sequence of clips
29:14
this is like I had a t-bone
29:16
steak a tomahawk steak and then afterwards you
29:19
came out and said would you like some
29:20
tiramisu with that I mean this is so
29:23
good I'm just I love this this is
29:25
the best ever ever but if we listen
29:29
to people who guaranteed have been quadruple if
29:34
not quintuple boosted you got a kind of
29:37
question stuff of a pandemic officially ended earlier
29:41
this year and for most people life is
29:43
back to normal but now for dr.
29:45
Michael Osterholm the expert at the University of
29:48
Minnesota became a household name during every stage
29:51
of the pandemic investigative reporter Ryan race went
29:53
to find out what he's doing now that
29:55
the biggest health crisis of our lifetime is
29:58
over are you eating in a restaurant now
30:01
and able to relax well unfortunately I am
30:05
and I say unfortunately in that I recently
30:08
had coded three years into the pandemic and
30:12
Minnesota's most famous infectious disease doctor finally became
30:16
a statistic in March dr.
30:19
Michael Osterholm not only got coded for the
30:21
first time but is now suffering from long
30:24
coded it's been a difficult few months so
30:27
I I'm feeling it I can't do many
30:31
of the athletic things I did before Osterholm
30:35
is the longtime director of the Center for
30:37
infectious disease research and policy at the University
30:40
of Minnesota he also worked for the State
30:42
Department of Health and the CDC but during
30:46
the pandemic his projections and downright scary predictions
30:49
earn him the nickname dr.
30:51
doom so this guy has long code he
30:54
sounds horrible he has trouble breathing he can't
30:56
do quote athletic exercises he's on death's door
31:01
and you know that he he's the guy
31:04
that was just fax fax fax fax fax
31:07
did they ever find out how many times
31:10
he got the jab I don't have that
31:12
information but now now I'm by the way
31:15
this clip of the day tell you in
31:18
advance this guy this guy was one of
31:23
the worst of the of the bad actors
31:26
out there he would have a million millions
31:28
of dead does millions millions in America yes
31:31
I want to play a cat I clipped
31:34
it came off of what sent in by
31:36
a producer came off of C-SPAN about
31:40
Kamala's visit to Vietnam and a kind of
31:44
a gaffe Kamala Vietnam okay got it flowers
31:50
at the site where John McCain was shot
31:52
down in Vietnam what the know-nothing Millennials
31:56
who set Kamala's schedule didn't know that had
31:58
the site and she's laying those flowers at
32:01
it's a celebration of those who shot McCain's
32:04
plane out of the sky and impassioned him
32:07
delivering him to the VC for his long
32:10
stay and torture at the Hanoi Hilton the
32:14
stunning ignorance of Kamala Harris and her team
32:16
was noted by ya when you a journalist
32:19
based in Beijing she tweeted does Harris know
32:23
this monument honors the people who shot down
32:26
John McCain's plane Vietnamese people view him as
32:30
a war criminal so in essence Harris was
32:33
paying tribute to those who shot down John
32:36
McCain's plane it'd be like Harris laying a
32:39
wreath at Pearl Harbor honoring the brave Japanese
32:42
pilots who sunk the USS Arizona Wow Wow
32:47
Wow hold on a second I had no
32:49
idea that that that's a better gaffe than
32:51
the stupid population thing this is a clip
32:54
of the day John now we might as
32:58
well play the one that everyone's laughing about
32:59
which is the population gaffe and I've got
33:02
it right here about the impact on something
33:04
like public health when we invest in clean
33:06
energy and electric vehicles and reduce population more
33:11
of our children can breathe clean air and
33:14
drink clean water clean water MK ultra victim
33:19
you might have noticed that climate change climate
33:23
change created a tornado that blew down a
33:28
Pfizer factory the Pfizer for the local news
33:34
had a caller who begs to differ this
33:37
was not just regular climate change we didn't
33:40
have tornadoes here until we started putting into
33:43
traffic circles because I'm the kind of you
33:45
wanna know why when people go round and
33:48
round in circles that causes disturbance in the
33:50
atmosphere and causes tornadoes there you go okay
33:55
clip of the day right there at the
33:56
end of the show I didn't even expect
33:58
to receive it hold on a second Wow
34:05
exciting exciting I always knew it was those
34:08
damn roundabouts who know you know we're gonna
34:11
get someone calling in saying you know you
34:14
know that's actually kind of true someone will
34:17
come in and do that there's a bunch
34:19
of these tick tockers that go off and
34:21
they're doing something called NPC and it's and
34:26
they're just talking and babbling and doing you
34:29
remember that whisper trend there was for a
34:31
while they were whispering whispering the whisper I
34:34
don't remember the whisper trend yeah there was
34:36
a whispering thing it was like a whole
34:37
thing we came and went this I think
34:40
has more legs and I'm gonna play a
34:41
clip of one of the women I think
34:43
is one of the best at it have
34:45
just yakking away saying nothing repeating herself over
34:48
and over and over again this is a
34:51
black woman people have seen her she's got
34:53
a fake blonde wig on I'm sure it's
34:55
a wig and I'm listening to this because
35:01
NPC also has a second meaning and it
35:04
has to do with spying and spookery and
35:08
I think and I'm gonna say it in
35:11
advance I believe that this is not playing
35:15
characters it is this is a number station
35:19
okay of all things I did not expect
35:27
this let us give a how about an
35:30
example of a number station this is it
35:35
this is the NPC black girl you want
35:37
to hear an actual play the number station
35:39
first this is our number this is a
35:41
no agenda number station these you can hear
35:42
these on shortwave India hang out my standby
35:48
33 33 33 Robilizer out okay so that's
35:54
an example of a number station and now
35:57
we're going to listen to this NPC yes
36:31
yes yes that was good cooking up that
36:36
was good cooking up cake cake cake cake
36:39
cake oh thank you baby this is so
36:41
cute gaga gaga gaga mm-hmm so good
36:45
yes yes yes meow meow meow fire fire
36:47
fire oh special oh special oh special oh
36:51
yes yes yes yes yes yes yes yes
36:59
yes yes yes yes yes yes fire fire
37:00
balloon ice cream so good balloon ice cream
37:07
so good okay first of all goes on
37:11
for 10 minutes I do this in the
37:13
shower so I'm not quite sure but I'm
37:14
not a number station I think it's something
37:17
else there's a donation aspect to this yeah
37:21
and I think that's part of it I
37:23
think those numbers that keep flying on the
37:25
screen showing certain donations as part of the
37:27
number station this is a high-end encrypted
37:30
product encryption product so
37:40
this is actually a public key that she's
37:42
that she's giving us well it's obviously I
37:46
have no idea what she's yeah that's my
37:48
thinking because that's exactly what it reminded me
37:51
of before you play that you should play
37:53
this which is Jen Psaki doing an RFK
37:57
jr.
37:58
rap of every reason he's wrong about everything
38:01
really makes you wonder what is it that
38:03
Kennedy stands for it that has the right
38:05
so head over heels for him is it
38:08
his years of work as an anti-vaccine
38:11
advocate his repeatedly debunked claim that vaccines cause
38:15
autism is it his trafficking in a variety
38:18
of kovat vaccine conspiracy theories including ones involving
38:21
microchips being inserted into all of our bodies
38:25
are they fans of his recent comments that
38:27
kovat was quote ethnically targeted to spare Chinese
38:31
and Jewish people or is it his assertion
38:33
that antidepressants like Prozac have caused the rise
38:36
of school shootings in America obviously completely insane
38:39
and not true or that Wi-Fi causes
38:42
cancer and something called leaky brain whatever that
38:45
may be or is it a claim that
38:47
chemicals in the water could be turning kids
38:49
transgender I couldn't even cover all of these
38:53
outlandish crazy claims because we need to continue
38:55
with our show all right there you go
38:57
that's it that is basically is it because
39:04
he listens to the no agenda show I
39:06
mean that's basically what she said right there
39:08
Illinois is doing all the same things as
39:11
New York governor Pritzker recently signed more than
39:13
130 bills and among the new laws one
39:17
allowing non-citizens to become police officers in
39:20
Illinois reporter Scott Schneider are live in studio
39:23
with details on this Scott Anthony Nelly this
39:25
law requires that immigrants be legally authorized to
39:28
work under federal law the bill sponsor called
39:30
it a natural progression now that some undocumented
39:33
immigrants can become health care workers and military
39:35
members however it's been highly criticized by Republicans
39:38
and the Illinois Fraternal Order of Police the
39:41
FOP issued a statement earlier this month ahead
39:43
of Friday's bill signing it reads in part
39:46
what message does this legislation send when it
39:49
allows people who do not have legal status
39:51
to become the officers of our laws this
39:54
is a potential crisis of confidence in law
39:56
enforcement at a time when our officers need
39:59
all the public confidence they can get yeah
40:04
that's I'll give you a clip of the
40:06
day for that's fine what is wrong with
40:14
these the people that are running these governments
40:16
especially Illinois is the worst this these elections
40:19
have been rigged to keep these people in
40:22
office there's no doubt in my mind about
40:24
it because no citizen in their right mind
40:27
would put up with this so now a
40:30
wonderful clip and this is former CIA operative
40:36
by a spook Dan Hoffman and Dan Hoffman
40:40
is now a contributor to Fox News and
40:46
he mentioned something here that kind of solves
40:50
another mystery this was Vladimir Putin first and
40:53
foremost messaging his own security services in the
40:56
military that if anybody dares betray Vladimir Putin
41:00
then their days on this earth will be
41:03
numbered I so that that's the message that's
41:05
the right message Dan have no doubt that
41:07
Putin created a false sense of security for
41:09
pretty Gorshin so that his intelligence service the
41:12
FSB internal security service could track pretty Gorshin's
41:15
movements and then like a good sniper pick
41:18
the time and place to end the Gorshin's
41:21
life when they least expect it some people
41:23
are speculating it was a bomb in the
41:25
airplane Dan yeah I've heard both of those
41:28
versions and I wouldn't be surprised if it
41:31
was a bomb in the airplane there's an
41:32
awful lot that could go wrong if you're
41:34
trying to shoot an airplane out of the
41:35
sky not the least of which is that
41:37
you might shoot another aircraft like they did
41:39
with the Malaysian airliner over Ukraine back a
41:42
few years ago so what did he just
41:46
tell us oh my god like they did
41:53
getting clip of the day for pulling that
41:55
one out of a hat now I I
42:00
have to tell you this clip comes from
42:03
stick yeah I know stick used to send
42:07
me those sorts of clips yeah but I
42:09
think one day I didn't play one and
42:11
so that was the end of me but
42:15
this clip is phenomenal so he said oh
42:17
you know I've heard both of those theories
42:19
but you know it's got to be a
42:20
bomb yeah it's got to be a bomb
42:21
because you know he's trying to shoot something
42:23
out of the sky you know it's very
42:25
difficult you might shoot the wrong plane out
42:27
of the sky like like we did over
42:29
there with m8-17 in Ukraine Wow and
42:33
then there's this one so just to be
42:36
clear when you're talking CBS interview with governor
42:39
Josh Green again global warming are you saying
42:42
that climate change amplified the cost of human
42:46
error amplified the cost of climate change wait
42:51
a minute is that the exact same wording
42:53
that they used on the debate exact same
42:56
wording you're telling wow that's a catch yeah
43:01
let me play the let me play that
43:04
question again here Martha more than a thousand
43:07
people are still unaccounted for in Malawi after
43:10
the deadliest US wildfire in more than a
43:13
century Hawaii's governor and White House officials said
43:17
that climate change amplified the cost of human
43:20
error so just to be clear when you're
43:23
talking about global warming are you saying that
43:25
climate change amplified the cost of human okay
43:29
you got you this is CBS yeah and
43:33
Fox yeah both parroting White House talking points
43:38
word-for-word correct unbelievable second clip of
43:44
the day oh man this clip this clip
43:52
this is a laughing matter actually it's no
43:54
laughing matter because it's the truth and the
43:57
truth as we know always comes from right
43:59
here or right nearby in Austin Texas seed
44:02
man headquarters so then also on the Ukraine
44:05
Russia war front I don't know if you
44:07
saw the rumor from rumors from Chechnyan soldiers
44:11
who said at night there are large drones
44:15
coming with claws and scooping up their wounded
44:18
and taking them for organ harvesting I thought
44:21
that was in your wheelhouse well I don't
44:24
know about drones doing it but they've caught
44:26
the Ukrainians harvesting both Ukrainian and Russian troops
44:30
and solar organs that that's confirmed it's confirmed
44:33
yeah it was happening in the Balkan Wars
44:35
they were doing a wait for it live
44:37
organ harvesting and I also think that organ
44:40
harvesting tied in with bluebeam the alien stuff
44:43
is a good alien abduction stuff is a
44:46
good cover for the organ harvesting an adrenochrome
44:49
I don't even need to do it with
44:51
some claw at night with a drone I
44:52
mean it came out in the news even
44:54
on 60 minutes a lot of hospitals will
44:56
kill you but they've got bad managers for
44:58
your organs yeah you think we got problems
45:00
John
45:01
really
45:12
you're gonna give that to me at the
45:13
very end at the very end why not
45:16
I think you're I think you're actually being
45:18
too kind but I will take it of
45:20
course Wow wow all right that'll have to
45:28
do it are you familiar with what's going
45:31
on in New York with the quarantine camps
45:33
no goodness do you have a clip of
45:35
this tell me you have a clip that
45:37
too thank you masks don't work by the
45:41
way quarantine camps New York State is still
45:45
fighting for the right to set up quarantine
45:48
camps today the battle enter the next phase
45:50
when the court heard oral arguments in the
45:52
case quarantine camps in the state of New
45:54
York governor Kathy Hoko and Attorney General Letitia
45:58
James want to implement rule 2.13 it
46:01
would give the state's Department of Health the
46:03
power to forcibly isolate individuals suspected of carrying
46:07
a transmittable disease this is truly about being
46:10
able to control citizens for any reason New
46:13
York State Senator George Borrello and lead attorney
46:15
Bobby and Cox sued the state over the
46:17
rule and won the case last year however
46:20
the state appealed and on Wednesday attorneys made
46:23
their case before an appeals court the rule
46:26
says the Commissioner of Health can pick any
46:28
place that the Commissioner of Health wants to
46:31
put you you have no say as you
46:34
can see in this clip hundreds of people
46:36
showed up at the court protesting the idea
46:38
of quarantine camps set up to stop the
46:40
spread of communicable diseases senator the COVID pandemic
46:44
is over why does the state of New
46:46
York still want to have the right to
46:48
set up these camps well first and foremost
46:50
we have to remember you know the governor
46:52
and the Attorney General tried to make this
46:54
about COVID the senator says the state's rule
46:57
would apply to a long list of diseases
46:59
not just COVID it goes everything from toxic
47:02
shock syndrome to food poisoning and while food
47:06
poisoning might be a serious condition it is
47:09
not communicable wait is toxic shock syndrome communicable
47:13
no that's that this who is this guy
47:17
he's telling you what this what this what
47:21
Cocoa wants to do is take people off
47:24
the streets grab them and throw them into
47:27
a quarantine camp yeah for any good reason
47:29
that's right New York uber Alice the senator
47:32
says New York's executive branch is overreaching by
47:35
trying to implement this rule according to him
47:38
the state's proposed rule is basically a copy
47:40
of a previous proposal which didn't get any
47:43
support from state lawmakers and thus didn't become
47:46
law but what they have essentially said is
47:48
if the legislature isn't going to make this
47:50
law we will so it's a very clear
47:52
violation of separation of powers the lead attorney
47:55
in the case points out a few things
47:57
in the state's rule which he says are
47:59
against the law according to the rule you
48:01
would not get an attorney until after you're
48:03
locked up but you also wouldn't get notice
48:07
which means that the Department of Health could
48:09
show up at your door or they could
48:11
send the police with an order that you
48:13
need to isolate or quarantine and it could
48:16
be not just for you it could be
48:17
for your child meanwhile the state argues that
48:20
its proposed rule only clarifies existing law supporters
48:24
of the rule say quarantine measures are being
48:26
used in states around the u.s. and
48:28
have been used for centuries Wow I'm gonna
48:31
give you I'm gonna give you a clip
48:32
of the day for that Wow that is
48:38
that's borderline upsetting only because I have a
48:41
stepdaughter in New York that they could grab
48:44
her and throw her in the camp and
48:46
this is Trudeau's Nazi revised apology in this
48:49
case what he did was he took in
48:51
everybody who felt aggrieved and even people who
48:55
didn't feel aggrieved he put them on this
48:57
list of I'm sorry to you and you
48:59
and you and you and you in a
49:01
few moments I will address the house in
49:03
front of all Canadians in front of Jewish
49:06
people here and around the world and Ukrainians
49:09
to offer Parliament's unreserved apologies for what happened
49:13
on Friday the speaker was solely responsible for
49:18
the invitation and recognition of this man and
49:20
has wholly accepted that responsibility and stepped down
49:24
this was a mistake that has deeply embarrassed
49:27
Parliament and Canada all of us who were
49:31
in this house on Friday regret deeply having
49:35
stood and clapped even though we did so
49:37
unaware of the context it was a horrendous
49:41
violation of the memory of the millions of
49:43
people who died in the Holocaust and it
49:46
was deeply deeply painful for Jewish people it
49:50
also hurt Polish people Roma people that's to
49:53
SL GPTQI disabled people racialized people many no
49:59
no no stop no no this is edited
50:01
this is edited he did not say to
50:04
spirit people disabled people did he yes no
50:08
believe me this is this is crazy let
50:12
me hear this again and it was deeply
50:13
deeply painful for Jewish people it also hurt
50:17
Polish people Roma people to SL GPTQI plus
50:22
people disabled people racialized people and the many
50:26
millions who were targeted by the Nazi genocide
50:29
Nicholas you're off my list I can't believe
50:33
you gave that clip to John no he
50:37
didn't give me any clips oh okay I'm
50:39
sorry all right he's back on the list
50:40
this is dynamite in fact I got to
50:42
give this to you right away I mean
50:46
if you told me that was AI I
50:48
would have believed it too that's crazy he
50:52
wouldn't nuts and not going after two spirited
50:55
people really we had two spirits back in
50:57
the day yeah everything in between here's an
51:01
example of a human being lying this is
51:03
a great example this is again Rear Admiral
51:08
Kirby and he has asked a question about
51:12
the president's thinking but he's very clear in
51:16
his obvious lie I want to play this
51:19
sound bite for you that is just last
51:21
month in Vietnam and ask you if this
51:24
still holds for the president watch the only
51:29
existential threat humanity faces even more frightening than
51:33
a nuclear war is global warming going above
51:38
1.5 degrees in the next 20 to
51:41
10 years given all the nuclear players in
51:43
these two areas where we are now engaged
51:45
on does the president stand by that comment
51:47
absolutely does climate change is an existential threat
51:51
it can you know it actually threatens and
51:53
is capable of wiping out all human life
51:55
on earth over time I mean that's I
51:58
don't wait a minute global warming climate change
52:01
is in competition with AI who's gonna kill
52:04
us faster human life on earth over time
52:07
I mean that's I don't know how more
52:08
existential you can get to that but that
52:10
doesn't mean that we walk away from our
52:12
obligations our national security interests in very dangerous
52:17
more frightening than a nuclear war is that
52:21
it's more frightening than a nuclear war in
52:24
this moment the president believes wholeheartedly that climate
52:28
change is an existential threat to the all
52:31
of human life on the planet that's just
52:32
science that's a fact Martha back on the
52:36
other challenges facing this country and our allies
52:39
and partners around the world that's just science
52:41
and clip of the day for that piece
52:43
of shit it's just science in fact Martha
52:46
that's all that it is I don't like
52:49
that you disparage my clip that way but
52:51
I'll take the award thank you and the
52:56
fact that her name is Martha makes it
52:57
better that's just science in fact Martha so
53:00
now three weeks ago 60 minutes does an
53:04
interview with three Israeli IDF soldiers they're in
53:09
uniform one is a helicopter pilot one is
53:13
and that's a she was always sexy female
53:18
combat chopper pilot lesbian does it get any
53:21
better than that the other one is special
53:24
forces and I forget what the third was
53:26
and they're just talking about how horrible Netanyahu
53:30
is it's the same topic three weeks ago
53:32
listen to this the head of national security
53:35
has had multiple convictions including supporting terrorism against
53:40
Arabs the finance minister is a self-described
53:44
fascist homophobe as for Netanyahu he is in
53:48
the midst of three separate trials on charges
53:51
of corruption the protesters say that laws his
53:55
government has introduced over 200 of them would
53:59
not only weaken the courts but control the
54:02
press and diminish individual rights and that this
54:06
is how democracies like Hungary became autocratic what
54:10
happened in Hungary and Poland will not happen
54:13
here there is a trend and it's going
54:16
against you yeah around the world will be
54:19
the first to stop it you're all determined
54:22
we are not joking we are really trying
54:26
to stop it and we will succeed one
54:28
of their big worries is that without a
54:31
strong Supreme Court the ultra-orthodox block in
54:35
the government could turn Israel into a theocracy
54:38
where biblical laws prevail our Supreme Court is
54:43
our last line of defense this is our
54:45
last safeguard we need them empowered we need
54:48
them independent that's what we fight for what
54:52
is at stake for women Shira that we'll
54:55
be sitting in the back of the bus
54:56
literally literally are you married I'm married to
55:01
a woman a doctor we have a daughter
55:05
she's one year in eight months her fear
55:08
of an assault on women's and gay rights
55:11
is well-founded a government member said the
55:14
gay community is more dangerous than Isis and
55:18
Hezbollah oh crap you know for some reason
55:20
I must have cut out the bit where
55:22
they talk about Poland Hungary no I heard
55:26
it oh it was in there I'm completely
55:28
missing hello I'm sorry I thought it came
55:30
you know they mentioned both countries as yeah
55:32
as autocratic countries yes Poland I'm giving you
55:36
a clip of the day for digging that
55:37
baby out of the woods whoever no no
55:43
no no no I that this is by
55:45
this is truly well it's not coincidence I
55:48
know who gave it to me I know
55:49
who does this it's it's supernatural so I
55:54
get this clip and and like whoa this
55:57
is the same talking point Poland Poland same
56:00
talking points I exactly and it's interesting because
56:04
it kind of parallels the queers for Palestine
56:06
movement yeah which I highlighted in the newsletter
56:10
and people should go read the news there
56:13
and click on the link or just go
56:16
to Google or duck duck go which is
56:18
what I use at queers for Palestine and
56:21
start reading what's going on in Israel with
56:23
the gay movement there and the symbiosis with
56:27
Palestine and the fact that they're all you
56:30
know they it's just very strange and I
56:34
think it's part of that I think with
56:35
the clip you just played is part of
56:37
queers for Palestine all of a sudden this
56:40
pops up an infomercial which is a one
56:44
of those phony talk shows where they get
56:46
you know some host who was probably on
56:49
the eat I love the phony talk show
56:51
infomercials and so we've got all brown so
56:55
bad all brown and black people and they're
56:59
in the studio it has a whole intro
57:00
to it and you know positioning piece and
57:03
it's brought to you by Advil Advil big
57:05
big logo right there but listen to this
57:08
and then we'll dissect what's going on here
57:10
welcome to believe my pain a discussion about
57:14
systemic pain bias in healthcare I want to
57:17
thank all of you and all of you
57:18
for joining me today as we talk about
57:20
this very important issue I also want to
57:23
thank the pain equity project developed by Advil
57:25
in partnership with the Morehouse School of Medicine
57:28
and Black Health for inviting us to be
57:30
a part of their commitment to addressing pain
57:33
bias in black communities pain equity is my
57:35
favorite okay so dr.
57:37
Ucci you have written this book legacy a
57:40
black physician reckons with racism in medicine you
57:43
are a legacy black this is this is
57:46
just filled with good stuff I've heard lots
57:49
of it's already disgusting a legacy black this
57:54
is great not a DOS not American descendants
57:57
of slavery no a leg you're a legacy
57:59
black doctor and reckons with racism in medicine
58:02
you are a legacy black female physician and
58:06
you are armed with expertise that frames this
58:10
issue around black pain in such a clear
58:13
way and so I'm so glad that you're
58:15
here today we have to stop where did
58:19
this come from this is from this is
58:21
from an Advil infomercial yeah I know but
58:24
what channel was it YouTube no YouTube not
58:29
on television that I know but it's being
58:32
promoted it's being promoted today thank you for
58:36
being here thank you thank you for having
58:38
me I'm so excited to be here to
58:39
talk to you about this issue that means
58:41
so much to me and impacts so many
58:44
members of our community and we'll hear those
58:46
stories today all right so dr.
58:48
Ucci could you just outline what are some
58:51
of the myths about black people in pain
58:53
now this is stuff I mean I've I
58:55
have my thoughts about it and speak talking
58:58
to Mo but I've never heard of this
59:01
this is really it was an eye-opener
59:02
about some of the myths of black people
59:04
and pain remember this is the Advil pain
59:07
equity project so I think like the main
59:09
thing is that health professionals think that black
59:13
people are biologically different than other people that
59:16
our skin is thicker doctors are racist that
59:20
we have less sensitive skin and higher pain
59:22
tolerance and that is all absolutely false there's
59:26
no difference between black patients and patients of
59:28
other races Wow so what do you think
59:31
is perpetuated these myths the legacy of slavery
59:34
in this country interpersonal and systemic racism that
59:38
still exists in this country and that is
59:40
embedded into the institution of medicine and now
59:43
embedded this this was really and when I
59:46
heard embedded it's like that's where my hackles
59:48
went up and I'll tell you why in
59:49
15 seconds is embedded into the institution of
59:53
medicine and health care you know our health
59:55
professionals most want to do a good job
59:57
and care for their patients but unfortunately we're
1:00:00
seeing implicit bias that they are not listening
1:00:03
to their patients they're not responding to their
1:00:05
patients concerns and sometimes even ignoring their patients
1:00:09
so this went on for 20 minutes but
1:00:12
obviously as a no agenda media deconstructionist you
1:00:17
know I'm like well what is Advil so
1:00:20
I mean doctors aren't prescribing Advil seriously you
1:00:23
can just go and buy Advil but you
1:00:26
have to see who is the manufacturer of
1:00:29
Advil I'll give you one guess Pfizer yes
1:00:33
Pfizer and what is there they have one
1:00:35
opioid it's called embedded so when I'm hearing
1:00:39
embed and I'm hearing this is all subliminal
1:00:43
oh so they're using their words to get
1:00:46
you mm-hmm mm-hmm and they do
1:00:49
have an oxycodone in a very very weird
1:00:56
way and I know that particularly black men
1:00:59
I'm sorry legacy black men legacy black men
1:01:02
no legacy black men they don't like going
1:01:06
to the doctor at all because they know
1:01:08
the two choices are a pill or a
1:01:10
knife they don't like either one and I'm
1:01:13
I am parroting MOFAX right now it's either
1:01:17
the pill or the knife and they don't
1:01:18
like either one of those so I think
1:01:20
this is this is to get more black
1:01:22
people on opioids it's killing a lot of
1:01:26
white people we have a whole market enough
1:01:29
blacks though that's right legacy blacks it was
1:01:34
really it was really disturbing I'm giving you
1:01:38
a clip of the day for no one
1:01:45
sent this to me this I was you
1:01:47
just stumbled upon no someone else sent me
1:01:49
a YouTube clip and I was watching it
1:01:51
and I saw what is this Advil black
1:01:53
oh you oh you didn't but yeah I
1:01:56
don't like that too and I go and
1:01:57
I just clicked on I forgot all about
1:01:59
it was a gold mine you clicked on
1:02:01
it you just thought you tripped and stumbled
1:02:03
and you hit your head on a rock
1:02:05
and you said what's this rock oh my
1:02:07
god it's a gold nugget this is how
1:02:09
we connect Sam Bankman Freed and AI with
1:02:13
the term effective altruism joining me on the
1:02:16
set is our technology editor Peter O'Brien
1:02:18
hello to you Peter what can you tell
1:02:21
us about the surprising links between these two
1:02:24
events SBF and the UK's AI summit what
1:02:28
do they have in common yeah I was
1:02:29
wondering how we could link these two together
1:02:31
and actually there's there's a simple way to
1:02:33
do it you may not have heard of
1:02:34
it but it's the social movements called effective
1:02:37
altruism it's boffin filled and it's increasingly powerful
1:02:41
now that power took a hit when Sam
1:02:43
Bankman Freed the most high-profile effective altruist
1:02:46
and one of the movement's biggest donors fell
1:02:49
from grace but as we've seen from the
1:02:52
AI summit in Bletchley Park this week we
1:02:55
can see that effective altruist talking points are
1:02:57
still making their way up the policy agenda
1:02:59
one in particular the potential for artificial intelligence
1:03:03
to cause catastrophic harm a risk that would
1:03:06
not be on the policy table at all
1:03:08
were it not for the work of effective
1:03:10
altruists now I should add a disclaimer here
1:03:12
that I've been briefly involved in the movement
1:03:14
in France to some charities that are popular
1:03:17
among effective altruists now he's never gonna mention
1:03:20
them but what he's saying is effective altruism
1:03:23
people donate a lot of money for the
1:03:26
good of humanity for the good cause because
1:03:29
we care about the world that's what Sam
1:03:32
Bankman Freed really should be accused of doing
1:03:35
thanks to his the egging on of his
1:03:37
parents he was literally giving it to his
1:03:39
mother for effective altruism which does a lot
1:03:42
of really good things including this whole AI
1:03:45
scam how did we get to the point
1:03:47
where effective altruism is producing one of the
1:03:50
biggest frauds in history it's also becoming a
1:03:53
major policy debate so policy is code for
1:03:56
politics the only way to really explain this
1:03:59
is to take you back for the intellectual
1:04:00
history of the movement so the founding factor
1:04:04
altruism is simple and it's persuasive in order
1:04:07
to do the most good with your time
1:04:09
and money you shouldn't just think about your
1:04:12
close circle of friends and family you shouldn't
1:04:14
just think about your community your country you
1:04:16
should really be taking into consideration all humans
1:04:19
in the world because we all suffer in
1:04:22
a similar way if Trump's president we all
1:04:24
suffer in a similar way a classic example
1:04:27
of putting this into practice would be rather
1:04:28
than donating money to your local fire station
1:04:34
local no come on France douche well it
1:04:37
would be using the same amount to buy
1:04:39
miss much more mosquito nets to protect people
1:04:41
from malaria but rather than just caring about
1:04:45
humans effective altruists quickly realized that the same
1:04:47
principle should be applied to anything that can
1:04:49
suffer right so that could write an animal
1:04:51
that could be a wild animal a human
1:04:55
not alive today a future human in the
1:04:59
future so that's where we get to this
1:05:01
situation where there are lots of effective artists
1:05:03
today who are also long-term is that
1:05:05
means people who are concerned animals that don't
1:05:09
yet exist but could exist in the future
1:05:11
so this is this is the oh my
1:05:14
god this time get you getting clip of
1:05:16
the day for this thank you piece of
1:05:18
shit so long term is that's exact and
1:05:24
the whole idea is we're concerned about the
1:05:27
human of the future who isn't born today
1:05:30
therefore we need to support policy that behooves
1:05:35
the human of the future which happens to
1:05:38
also kind of be beneficial to our companies
1:05:40
and coincidentally that's exactly what's going on with
1:05:45
this AI stuff Pfizer is arguably in trouble
1:05:49
for this and they need to refocus the
1:05:54
UK is a good place to start you
1:05:55
know the different laws it you know works
1:05:57
a little differently and the media it is
1:06:00
good over there so this is a right
1:06:04
because they're not getting and let's make let's
1:06:07
point it out once again because they're not
1:06:09
getting drug big pharma money for advertising well
1:06:14
so they slip this one in and the
1:06:17
way they did it it's a long game
1:06:19
they have a couple they both happen to
1:06:21
be actors so these are actual actors and
1:06:25
this is the guy his wife actress was
1:06:29
harmed by the AstraZeneca vaccine okay that's a
1:06:35
blood clot yes with that blood clot issue
1:06:38
this is well known you know AstraZeneca was
1:06:41
halted so now they're going after AstraZeneca and
1:06:45
this is a two-parter but very interesting
1:06:47
as a setup and and and really a
1:06:52
grand slam so this is a native ad
1:06:54
for who I'm sorry well you listen just
1:06:57
okay I'm going to surprise you the big
1:06:59
pharma vaccine maker is being sued for tens
1:07:01
of millions of pounds in a test case
1:07:03
or mass tort action depending on your continent
1:07:07
brought by the British family of one person
1:07:09
allegedly killed by the Oxford AstraZeneca vaccine and
1:07:13
another who was brain injured allegedly as a
1:07:15
result of the same vaccine 80 others are
1:07:19
co-joined in the case including Australian-born
1:07:22
West End actor Mel Stewart the 42 year
1:07:26
old suffered a devastating brain bleed and has
1:07:29
a titanium plate to protect her skull from
1:07:33
emergency surgery after receiving the AstraZeneca vaccine in
1:07:37
southwest London in April 2021 I'm joined now
1:07:41
by her husband Ben Lewis Ben is also
1:07:44
an actor but has given up his career
1:07:46
to be by his wife's side in what
1:07:48
must be the greatest challenge of their lives
1:07:51
yeah Mel had a significant stroke caused by
1:07:57
by two clots in her in her brain
1:08:00
Mel had a bleed on the right on
1:08:03
the sorry on the right hand side of
1:08:07
her brain the left hand side of her
1:08:08
brains excuse me and that's resulted in her
1:08:11
having speech difficulties she suffers from what are
1:08:15
called what is known as aphasia and apraxia
1:08:17
of speech which is basically a breakdown in
1:08:20
the communication between the brain and and your
1:08:22
your speech Mel also has significant right-sided
1:08:26
deficits as is common with lots of strokes
1:08:29
Mel has limited use of her right leg
1:08:32
she can walk with the assistance of an
1:08:34
orthotic device and her right arm has very
1:08:37
little functional movement at all so that's the
1:08:40
setup and you heard it's a proper case
1:08:43
it got a lot of people they even
1:08:45
said hey this is something could work in
1:08:46
America depending on your continent we call that
1:08:48
a mass tort case now to complete the
1:08:51
script you've always got to say but you
1:08:53
know what we're not anti-vaxxers we are
1:08:56
pro-vaccination Mel and I both are but
1:08:59
we completely respect everyone's right to choose that
1:09:03
is not the issue at play here tens
1:09:05
of thousands of particularly older people were dying
1:09:08
in care homes throughout the UK when we
1:09:12
came to get our vaccines the way it
1:09:14
was in the UK is that you did
1:09:16
not have a choice as to which one
1:09:18
you were given it was dictated by age
1:09:21
Mel was six months over 40 at the
1:09:24
time so she was offered the AstraZeneca vaccine
1:09:28
which was we could have got it Mel
1:09:31
could have got an alternative vaccine if she'd
1:09:32
been under 40 years old but she wasn't
1:09:35
given a choice and we just feel like
1:09:38
yes the vaccine saved and helped lots of
1:09:40
people but we feel like it is incumbent
1:09:43
on the government to take care of the
1:09:45
few people who fell through the cracks and
1:09:48
whose lives have been devastated for what as
1:09:51
you said Chris for doing the right thing
1:09:52
have you kept up to date with COVID
1:09:55
-19 vaccination boosters we have we have Chris
1:09:59
my wife my wife received a Pfizer vaccine
1:10:03
people may be gobsmacked and she as I
1:10:08
say we've always had to put our faith
1:10:11
in the experts and by the time we
1:10:14
got the Pfizer vaccine it's very clear that
1:10:16
that's a highly effective vaccine we got that
1:10:23
one in hospital which was necessary because the
1:10:25
hospitals were full of COVID and we're actually
1:10:29
going for a booster next week and I'd
1:10:31
encourage and the Oscar goes to okay you
1:10:37
get I had to do this because I'm
1:10:39
sitting there with the clip of the day
1:10:40
already but I'm gonna give you clip of
1:10:43
the day for that thank you very much
1:10:47
I forget which producer sent that to me
1:10:49
but of course honors go well that producer
1:10:51
should get clip of the day you should
1:10:52
send it to him when you get it
1:10:54
tomorrow when it shows up it's a very
1:10:57
small trophy for people don't know we have
1:10:59
a bunch of them lined up around the
1:11:01
house when you get that ship it to
1:11:04
him will do university students have been brainwashed
1:11:09
there is an entire and when I say
1:11:11
but it's not about Israel Hamas about colonialism
1:11:14
the West is bad white is bad men
1:11:17
are bad straight white old men very very
1:11:21
bad very bad especially if in the West
1:11:23
and this and this is an ongoing program
1:11:26
and it's it's very understandable when you look
1:11:30
at the history Oh history listening and coming
1:11:32
when you look at the history you know
1:11:35
what was the last thing they were protesting
1:11:36
for I mean besides the ongoing LGBTQ plus
1:11:41
which usurped black lives matter black lives matter
1:11:43
and there it has been a long-standing
1:11:47
long-standing operation going on between black Americans
1:11:54
and the Palestinian region I'm saying that purposely
1:11:58
Palestine this has been going on since almost
1:12:02
before I was born in 1964 Malcolm X
1:12:06
published an article in the Egyptian Gazette called
1:12:08
Zionist logic in which he drew parallels between
1:12:11
the oppression of Palestinians and Africans instead of
1:12:14
seeing it as a religious conflict Malcolm saw
1:12:16
Israel as a colonial project serving a wider
1:12:19
imperialist agenda saying European imperialists wisely placed Israel
1:12:24
where she could geographically divide at the Arab
1:12:26
world in the same year Malcolm was one
1:12:28
of the first African leaders to publicly meet
1:12:30
with the Palestine Liberation Organization as anti-colonial
1:12:33
struggles gain traction through the world freedom for
1:12:36
Palestinians became a touchstone for the international fight
1:12:39
against imperialism as black freedom movements expanded their
1:12:43
worldview to situate their struggle as part of
1:12:45
a global anti-colonial movement Palestine also became
1:12:49
an important focal point of their solidarity on
1:12:51
August 15th 1967 the student nonviolent coordinating committee
1:12:56
released a position paper entitled the Middle East
1:12:58
crisis expressing support for Palestine and criticizing US
1:13:02
support for Israel organizations such as the Black
1:13:05
Panthers argued that freedom would never come for
1:13:07
black people in America unless all oppressed people
1:13:10
were free the Panthers frequently spoke of black
1:13:13
communities and their relationship with the police as
1:13:15
living under occupation as internally colonized people they
1:13:19
were vocal in their support for Palestine and
1:13:21
met with the PLO and Algiers in 1969
1:13:23
so that's Black Panthers and Malcolm well hang
1:13:27
on a second whoever got you that clip
1:13:28
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
1:13:29
day that's a beauty oh thank you I
1:13:32
got that myself from TRT you give yourself
1:13:37
a pat on the back well so but
1:13:39
wait I have another one I have a
1:13:41
second but follow but go ahead go ahead
1:13:43
but go ahead Israel's not in in a
1:13:46
is not put in it's not in a
1:13:48
spot that's dividing the Arab nations it's in
1:13:51
between Egyptians and Arabs there's no other it's
1:13:56
not like in the middle between Saudi Arabia
1:13:58
and you know the UAE or anything like
1:14:01
that that's nonsense but yeah I understand I
1:14:04
remember some of this from my days at
1:14:06
Cal Berkeley these it's the same thing back
1:14:12
at the ranch judge Andrew Napolitano has Max
1:14:15
Blumenthal on who I presume is Jewish blue
1:14:21
my presume he is too this is what
1:14:25
his Napolitano's podcast yeah yeah of course it's
1:14:29
a podcast which I think will be nominated
1:14:31
for most amazing Jew hate in in a
1:14:37
single podcast episode this this was really interesting
1:14:41
one event we covered was the return of
1:14:44
something like 80 to 100 corpses to the
1:14:48
Gaza Strip to a cemetery in the southern
1:14:50
city of Rafa these were corpses of peoples
1:14:52
whose bodies had been stolen by the Israeli
1:14:55
military from many of them have been stolen
1:14:58
from the Shifa Hospital in the Gaza in
1:15:01
Gaza City from other cemeteries ostensibly because the
1:15:05
Israelis were looking for their own hostages but
1:15:08
we have this history of Israeli organ theft
1:15:12
of the theft of body parts which is
1:15:14
well documented and admitted by for example dr.
1:15:17
Yehuda Hiss a state pathologist at the Abu
1:15:20
Kabir Institute in Israel there's there are reports
1:15:25
even by CNN about this dating back decades
1:15:29
Israel is an international center of the illegal
1:15:32
organ trade yeah have been prosecuted in Israeli
1:15:35
courts for this and the Gaza Ministry of
1:15:39
Health and Euromed Human Rights Monitor have alleged
1:15:42
that these corpses when they were returned to
1:15:44
Israel to be buried in a mass grave
1:15:46
because there's no room left in the cemeteries
1:15:48
had body parts missing how do they do
1:15:52
this I mean did they bring the body
1:15:54
to him off to an Israeli morgue and
1:15:57
an Israeli mortician opens up the body and
1:16:00
removes the organs and then they then they
1:16:02
bury the body in a mass grave well
1:16:06
that's what the Gaza Ministry of Health is
1:16:07
alleging dr.
1:16:09
Yehuda Hiss said was that we removed corneas
1:16:11
and took organs and other body parts without
1:16:15
the permission of the people who had been
1:16:19
killed or their families and this included Palestinians
1:16:21
who had been killed by Israeli security forces
1:16:24
people were killed in road accidents and even
1:16:27
Israeli soldiers this is great I gave you
1:16:31
a clip of the day for digging that
1:16:32
one up oh there's a part two but
1:16:34
I'll take the clip of the day first
1:16:43
Israel also has the largest skin bank in
1:16:45
the world yeah I'm gonna use that skin
1:16:47
bank to graft the skin of for example
1:16:51
burn wounds that Israeli soldiers are enduring in
1:16:55
the Gaza Strip as thousands are being wounded
1:16:58
in this sort of faltering military assault on
1:17:01
Gaza the Israeli skin bank is accused of
1:17:04
stealing body parts as well so this is
1:17:09
a this is this is a crime against
1:17:11
humanity that goes to the essence of Israel's
1:17:14
assault on personal the personal freedom of Palestinians
1:17:18
our families don't even have the right to
1:17:20
bury their own their own family members who
1:17:24
are killed and that's also part of the
1:17:27
psychological war on Palestine that Israel seeks has
1:17:31
all as traditionally sought to prevent the burials
1:17:35
of Palestinians especially those who they consider to
1:17:38
be quote unquote terrorists is great I have
1:17:44
my two Gaza clips you know I'm just
1:17:46
I'm just thinking you know I there's donor
1:17:50
bone in my jaw and I thought maybe
1:17:54
it was from the Uyghurs but now I'm
1:17:55
thinking it's probably something before Jewish no Hamas
1:17:59
but you'd be oh yeah you got to
1:18:01
be a terrorist any minute if I start
1:18:04
yelling Allah Akbar then you know what's going
1:18:06
on all right now let's go to the
1:18:08
longer predictions here this is this is gonna
1:18:11
wrap it all up this segment here on
1:18:13
face the nation we've covered a lot of
1:18:15
tough stories this year we asked it was
1:18:18
a hard year it was so hard for
1:18:20
us but let's pat each other on the
1:18:23
back because we did a good job everybody
1:18:24
it was hard it was tough stories but
1:18:26
we did it we're CBS Mark Strassman to
1:18:29
go back and recap some of the good
1:18:31
news good news the good news do you
1:18:35
think this will be puppies and pancakes and
1:18:38
stealing our material yeah I don't not entirely
1:18:45
ladies first women headlined all over in 2023
1:18:49
Taylor and her jubilant Swiftie comes together and
1:18:55
we're all dressed up and we all participate
1:18:57
Beyonce and the beehive generated billions for local
1:19:02
economies mostly from women cheering their heroes no
1:19:06
this is good news women heroes women cheering
1:19:08
their heroes very good I have never been
1:19:14
more confident and proud to be in my
1:19:17
own skin because of her not just a
1:19:22
Hollywood hit a cultural conversation Barbie is like
1:19:25
such a strong and empowered woman she has
1:19:28
like 90 jobs good she has like 90
1:19:33
jobs that's the clip of the year right
1:19:35
there cultural conversation Barbie is like such a
1:19:39
strong and empowered woman she has like 90
1:19:42
jobs Barbie is empowering yes yes with the
1:19:46
legs that are five times too long from
1:19:48
any whore you normal woman with the boobs
1:19:51
that are bigger and firmer than any woman
1:19:53
and look at that hair Barbie a lot
1:19:55
of people want to send blankets or water
1:19:57
just send your cash
1:19:59
imagine
1:20:08
all the people who could do that oh
1:20:13
yeah that'd be fun well now I remember
1:20:22
I remember all of a sudden why would
1:20:25
they call us the best podcast in the
1:20:27
universe I mean those clips are dynamite of
1:20:29
course some of them are from producers they're
1:20:32
not all our own this is how it
1:20:34
works and get my nation well yeah but
1:20:35
don't you have to remember the clip of
1:20:36
the day is called on the show by
1:20:38
one of the two of us when it
1:20:40
happens correct it's not just yes exactly and
1:20:44
and that's because we noticed sometimes we didn't
1:20:46
even know it like wow that was a
1:20:48
really good clip you know I don't think
1:20:51
I've ever clipped something in fact it happens
1:20:53
more often than not the people go like
1:20:55
play this guaranteed COTD never never it's never
1:21:03
best clip for the day ever so even
1:21:07
though we are taking a day off here
1:21:10
we do want to implore you to support
1:21:14
the best podcast in the universe and of
1:21:17
course we'll be thanking everybody in an extra
1:21:19
probably hopefully an extra long donation segment on
1:21:24
episode 1768 which will be on Thursday so
1:21:28
quick turnaround for us so you'll be executive
1:21:31
producer associate executive producer etc on that show
1:21:34
yeah go to no agenda donations calm and
1:21:37
you might find there's a special offer coming
1:21:39
up oh is that gonna be on the
1:21:43
website it should be by the time we
1:21:47
speak of this baby no agenda donations dot
1:21:53
-com will reveal all there it is no
1:21:55
agenda donations dot-com we'll be thanking everybody
1:21:58
on the next show and right now back
1:22:00
to the best of the clips of the
1:22:01
day I'm a little heartbroken because they remembered
1:22:08
to intellectuals they they're evolutionary biologists smart people
1:22:17
who think podcasting is no good podcasting 2
1:22:21
.0 you know don't go for value for
1:22:23
value what breaks my heart is what they're
1:22:26
actually doing to make money okay speaking of
1:22:29
things to eat Sundays is our next sponsor
1:22:32
this is Maddie's all-time favorite it's one
1:22:34
of our favorites too it is dog food
1:22:37
and the reason it's one of our favorites
1:22:39
because when you make your dog this happy
1:22:41
while giving her amazing food that's good for
1:22:42
her what's not to be thrilled about so
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Sundays as longtime listeners will know makes dry
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dog food but it's not your usual dry
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dog food do you want to make your
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dog happy with her diet and keep her
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slash dark or use code dark horse at
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checkout su nd a y s f o
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r d o g s dot com forward
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slash dark horse switch to Sundays and feel
1:23:09
good about what you're feeding your dog now
1:23:11
of course you really want to make the
1:23:13
advertiser feel happy about the read and this
1:23:16
was a very good read Heather dog food
1:23:19
but we really wanted that sponsor to know
1:23:21
that that we really love their business not
1:23:24
only that but in some sort of mini
1:23:25
collapse scenario if you ended up having to
1:23:28
share your dog's food you would be it's
1:23:30
so glad it's Sundays I speak from experience
1:23:33
I mean not from the mini apocalypse experience
1:23:35
but from the having tried it and that's
1:23:38
good and not also from getting down on
1:23:39
the ground eating from her bowl which is
1:23:41
gross Oh also undignified I mean just really
1:23:45
bad much
1:23:55
better much more dig I mean it was
1:23:57
a little badass at some level right and
1:23:59
I mean we're only taking your word for
1:24:01
it I guess that's true yeah I didn't
1:24:03
see it well I might have to repeat
1:24:05
it on camera even all right all right
1:24:10
oh my god but here we go I
1:24:13
have not tasted it but it looks edible
1:24:15
it is yeah okay I'll give you a
1:24:22
clip of the day for drink get dredging
1:24:24
that up dredging being the operative word here
1:24:30
that breaks my heart breaks my heart go
1:24:35
value for value people stop right away stop
1:24:38
it you know my favorite clip of the
1:24:41
day is the pot eating rats okay thank
1:24:47
goodness PD chief anchor Patrick says rats are
1:24:51
getting in and eating drugs in the evidence
1:24:53
room at an OPD headquarters it's just one
1:24:56
of the reasons that she says they need
1:24:57
to find a new one Eleanor to bone
1:24:59
is joining us live now on what is
1:25:01
prompting that move other than the obvious rats
1:25:04
eating evidence Eleanor Katie rats roaches no AC
1:25:09
broken elevators the NOP headquarters building here on
1:25:13
Broad Street is decaying that's why the city
1:25:16
is looking for a new space a space
1:25:19
where rats don't eat evidence the rats eating
1:25:23
our marijuana they're all high you heard that
1:25:26
right rats eating marijuana from the evidence room
1:25:29
NOPD chief and Kirkpatrick says sometimes staff come
1:25:33
in to work and find rat droppings on
1:25:35
their desk when we say we value our
1:25:38
employees you can't say that and at the
1:25:41
same time allow people to work in conditions
1:25:45
that are not acceptable I I was not
1:25:49
gonna give it to you until I heard
1:25:51
the rats are high so yes you will
1:25:53
get a clip of the day for that
1:25:56
now this clip goes on this is a
1:25:58
scam of some sort to get a new
1:26:02
completely new police building yes well it's good
1:26:05
for me and it's like you can poison
1:26:09
rats you can trap them there's rat traps
1:26:12
you can stop this and roaches are you
1:26:14
know you can do the same thing you
1:26:15
bring a exterminator in and get rid of
1:26:18
the roaches and the rats but they no
1:26:20
no no no no the rats are eating
1:26:21
the pot and we're losing evidence and we
1:26:24
got to move to a new place because
1:26:25
it's no good or the evidence go I
1:26:27
know man the rat ate it yeah which
1:26:29
is another aspect what happened today what happened
1:26:32
all this pot this is from a podcast
1:26:35
this is the quite frankly podcast and there
1:26:39
and the and this dude Frank I think
1:26:40
his name is Frank and he has maybe
1:26:43
not but it's the quite frankly podcast and
1:26:45
it's on rumble so it's not really a
1:26:47
podcast but okay it's a rumble okay oh
1:26:50
there you go it's a rumble cast and
1:26:52
he has this guest on from time to
1:26:54
time named Rich Barris rich is a pollster
1:26:57
and really a good GOP Republican pro-trump
1:27:02
guy the very knowledgeable and he he knows
1:27:05
this guy from back in the day when
1:27:08
he was I guess also working in that
1:27:10
business and he's very surprised to hear that
1:27:13
this guy is quote-unquote committed suicide and
1:27:16
then he rolls out an extra little bit
1:27:19
which I think we just need to take
1:27:23
it into account Boeing is an extremely powerful
1:27:25
company there is no doubt that they lied
1:27:28
and for almost you know nearly 400 souls
1:27:30
are dead because they lied and because they
1:27:33
cut corners and because they tried to hide
1:27:35
it if it wasn't for Donald Trump more
1:27:37
people would be dead and he doesn't talk
1:27:39
about this enough but FAA and everybody was
1:27:43
like but they wholeheartedly believe Boeing when that
1:27:46
second plane went down Trump he became the
1:27:48
just so people know how a historic this
1:27:50
is Trump became the first president ever in
1:27:54
history to ground an aircraft by president presidential
1:27:58
order without by the way the recommendation of
1:28:01
the FAA he did not the FAA was
1:28:03
still in cover-up Frank when he signed
1:28:08
that order and said the 737 is grounded
1:28:11
he did it by presidential order the first
1:28:15
crash understandable but once that second one came
1:28:17
along the president was like no something's wrong
1:28:20
here it's grounded and he did and this
1:28:23
is like one of the many things that
1:28:24
happened during the Trump administration that you just
1:28:27
never hear about that it's just really incredible
1:28:29
bold action from the former president no president
1:28:32
has the balls to do that can we
1:28:33
be serious right now Boeing is powerful I
1:28:38
had a lot of friends including in his
1:28:39
own administration he let Nikki Haley go because
1:28:43
her family was basically broke and he let
1:28:46
her go to go get a job on
1:28:47
the board of Boeing that she had lined
1:28:49
up in order to you know and that's
1:28:53
why by the way you know that it's
1:28:55
more than just one promise you hear oh
1:28:57
well Nikki Haley said she would never run
1:28:59
against the former president if he ran again
1:29:01
I mean this was something that they actually
1:29:04
had talked about Frank when he let her
1:29:05
go he said fine I understand you need
1:29:08
to go to the private sector and and
1:29:10
do some stuff but I got your word
1:29:12
that you're not gonna come back as a
1:29:13
ball buster you know and so she not
1:29:16
only broke her vow to the party not
1:29:18
you know to you know that loyalty pledge
1:29:20
I mean this was a personal you know
1:29:23
my word is my bond kind of situation
1:29:25
I have to resign my family needs more
1:29:27
money I'm gonna go do this which he
1:29:29
really didn't like but she had already had
1:29:33
those connections to Boeing from when she was
1:29:36
governor of South Carolina she literally enticed them
1:29:39
to move the construction of that aircraft over
1:29:42
to Charleston and that's when all and that's
1:29:49
when all the cost-cutting started is when
1:29:53
Nikki Haley begged them to come move their
1:29:56
operation to South Carolina so there's a stinky
1:30:01
element of Nikki Haley in this too Wow
1:30:05
huh you know that clip mm-hmm I
1:30:08
have to give you a clip of the
1:30:09
day for digging that one out well I
1:30:11
it wasn't me was our producer so I'll
1:30:13
give it to them yeah that was a
1:30:18
good good catch whoever found that that is
1:30:21
fascinating and it also adds to the intrigue
1:30:27
of Trump and all these people that he
1:30:29
trusts mm-hmm and hires you know I
1:30:32
would say like you know it's like one
1:30:34
backstabber after another no matter who it is
1:30:37
what is the deal according to Turkish radio
1:30:41
and television and then obviously I need to
1:30:43
someone pointed this out to me that I
1:30:45
guess I need to point out the Turkish
1:30:48
radio television is not going to be on
1:30:50
the side of Israel which is which is
1:30:53
why I play it you you got to
1:30:55
hear everything from around the world yeah not
1:30:58
just the three by threes you know we
1:31:00
this we got it this is what we
1:31:01
do we expose Chinese anti-Chinese all kinds
1:31:04
of stuff but they say news from the
1:31:07
Chinese outlets they say the reason for Hamas
1:31:12
attacking on October 7th was the Red Heifers
1:31:16
are you familiar with the Red Heifers okay
1:31:20
I'm gonna be in a minute could a
1:31:21
Texas cow start Armageddon in the Middle East
1:31:24
in April 2024 and what does this have
1:31:27
to do with Israel's war on Palestine's Gaza
1:31:29
on the 100 day anniversary of Israel's brutal
1:31:33
assault on Gaza Hamas spokesman Abor Abeda released
1:31:36
a video explaining the motivations behind the group's
1:31:39
incursion into Israel on October 7th alongside Israel's
1:31:43
continued occupation of Palestine he also mentioned the
1:31:46
bringing of red cows into the occupied Palestinian
1:31:49
territories Abeda was referring to the plans of
1:31:52
numerous right-wing Israeli groups who believe that
1:31:54
a red cow must be sacrificed in order
1:31:57
for the Jews to progress plans to demolish
1:31:59
the Al-Aqsa Mosque and build the fabled
1:32:01
third temple in its place it might sound
1:32:04
like a conspiracy theory but hardliner Israeli group
1:32:07
the Temple Institute have already purchased and imported
1:32:10
five red Angus heifers from Texas at a
1:32:13
cost of $500,000 they have been grazing
1:32:16
in a kibbutz in the occupied West Bank
1:32:18
since 2022 with reports that the sacrifice is
1:32:21
planned to take place as early as April
1:32:23
2024 the sacrifice of the red heifer has
1:32:26
its roots in the Torah and the Talmud
1:32:28
and it is believed that the ritual is
1:32:30
necessary to purify the Jews so that they
1:32:33
can pray at the Al-Aqsa compound the
1:32:35
sacrifice will reportedly take place on a plot
1:32:38
of land on Mount Folibs facing the Al
1:32:40
-Aqsa Mosque the cow must be completely red
1:32:42
including its hooves and must be around three
1:32:45
years old at the time of sacrifice following
1:32:47
the sacrifice the ashes of the cow are
1:32:50
due to be mixed with water and used
1:32:52
to purify selected Jewish priests and their adherents
1:32:54
it's about to get exciting I thought the
1:32:58
was exciting you gotta get a clip of
1:33:01
the day for dredging that it literally popped
1:33:07
into the algo it just I was looking
1:33:10
at a different YouTube video and this YouTube
1:33:12
short popped up like wow this is great
1:33:17
got lucky this is great I don't if
1:33:21
you saw this it was BBC BBC hard
1:33:24
talk hard talk Stephen Sackler I have that
1:33:31
same clip yeah but I have the whole
1:33:34
part I have the whole thing it's a
1:33:35
little it's a little there's a little more
1:33:37
to it and and I just I have
1:33:41
some commentary about this so everyone saw by
1:33:43
the way Steven is a dick and the
1:33:48
hard talk has been like this forever but
1:33:50
this they just they just think it's so
1:33:52
cool to be up with a British accent
1:33:55
to just grill somebody unnecessarily and not let
1:33:58
you know and have this it's just a
1:34:01
terror hard talk 16 years ago we started
1:34:04
this show I used to watch it cuz
1:34:06
that a different guy but ever since I
1:34:08
the Stephen Sackler guy or whatever his name
1:34:10
is came on it and the arrogance and
1:34:13
condescension of his style it shows unwatchable the
1:34:18
BBC should take it off the air well
1:34:21
it was doubly disgusting because the what everyone
1:34:24
the clip that went viral and we're like
1:34:28
yeah you stick it to the BBC man
1:34:30
you tell him yeah you tell him but
1:34:32
meanwhile this was an entire net zero promotion
1:34:36
complete acceptance that co2 is killing us
1:34:46
and the president of Guiana did not push
1:34:50
back on the bogus climate change charges no
1:34:55
he's all in on it this was a
1:34:58
promotion of global warming and everybody fell for
1:35:01
like yeah man you tell him carbon sink
1:35:03
we have to be very careful about this
1:35:07
climate change stuff this is this is the
1:35:09
stuff well we're looking at Trump and Biden
1:35:12
and and the Algos it's the climate change
1:35:16
this is how they're going to lock you
1:35:18
down welcome to hard talk I'm Stephen Sackler
1:35:23
and today I am in Guiana South America
1:35:26
a country of some 800,000 people which
1:35:30
right now can claim to have the fastest
1:35:33
growing economy in the world the reason oil
1:35:37
vast reserves of the stuff located offshore my
1:35:41
guest today is Guiana's president Irfan Ali his
1:35:44
country's new found oil riches of stokes tensions
1:35:48
with neighboring Venezuela they've also raised questions about
1:35:51
this country's vulnerability to climate change so is
1:35:56
oil really a blessing or a curse all
1:36:00
right so now we get into the thing
1:36:02
that most people saw let's take a big
1:36:04
picture look at what's going on here over
1:36:07
the next decade two decades it is expected
1:36:11
that there will be 150 billion dollars worth
1:36:15
of oil and gas extracted off your coast
1:36:19
it's an extraordinary figure but think of it
1:36:24
in practical terms that means according to many
1:36:28
experts more than 2 billion tons of carbon
1:36:31
emissions will come from your seabed from those
1:36:35
reserves and be released into the atmosphere I
1:36:38
don't know if you as a head of
1:36:40
state went to the cop let me stop
1:36:42
you right there let me stop you right
1:36:44
there do you know that Guyana has a
1:36:48
forest forever that is the size of England
1:36:52
and Scotland combined if forest the stores 19
1:36:55
.5 gigatons of carbon if forest that we
1:36:58
have kept alive a forest that we have
1:37:01
kept alive give you the right to release
1:37:04
that give you the right to lecture us
1:37:08
on climate change I am going to lecture
1:37:10
you on climate change because we have kept
1:37:13
this forest alive the stores 19.5 gigatons
1:37:16
of carbon that you enjoy that the world
1:37:19
enjoy that you don't pay us for that
1:37:21
you don't value that you don't see a
1:37:23
value in that the people of Guyana has
1:37:25
kept alive guess what we have the lowest
1:37:27
deforestation rate in the world and guess what
1:37:30
even with our greatest exploration of the oil
1:37:33
and gas resource we have now we will
1:37:34
still be net zero Guyana will still be
1:37:38
net zero so he's right there with net
1:37:40
zero which means carbon credits because that's how
1:37:43
you get to net zero he says carbon
1:37:46
but he really means carbon dioxide because that's
1:37:51
just become the thing that oh it's carbon
1:37:52
it's just carbon no it's carbon dioxide and
1:37:55
it goes downhill from there the Center for
1:37:57
International Environmental Law has described the oil and
1:38:01
gas production in Guyana as turning your country
1:38:04
from as you rightly put it a carbon
1:38:06
sink into a potential quote bomb now you
1:38:11
may say you have every right I mean
1:38:12
come on this thing is a is a
1:38:16
climate change promotion climate carbon bomb give me
1:38:21
a break yeah carbon bomb now you may
1:38:25
say you have every right that to exploit
1:38:27
that is ridiculous we even with our even
1:38:31
with exploring and and production of all our
1:38:35
resources we are going to still be carbon
1:38:38
neutral we are still going to be carbon
1:38:40
you let me quote to you Greenpeace who
1:38:42
say quite simply to avoid the worst impacts
1:38:45
of climate change and you know that your
1:38:46
own country is one of the most vulnerable
1:38:49
to climate change because most of your will
1:38:51
appear most of your population live and below
1:38:53
and we have feared guess what guess what
1:38:56
we have now this is interesting so this
1:38:59
guy not only is he all actually really
1:39:01
on and net zero but now he's reminded
1:39:04
that his country most of his country lives
1:39:06
below sea level but he's all in on
1:39:09
sea levels rise of course because you know
1:39:12
that's what Obama knows with this house on
1:39:14
the coast relationally and below and we have
1:39:17
feared guess what guess what we have paid
1:39:20
for the mitigation we have paid for it
1:39:21
up adaptation we are the ones who have
1:39:24
to find revenue no no no no I
1:39:26
haven't we are telling you what Greenpeace say
1:39:29
yes but let me tell Greenpeace say we
1:39:30
need to keep the majority of the world's
1:39:33
remaining fossil fuels in the ground Greenpeace can
1:39:37
say that doing that Greenpeace and you can
1:39:40
say that but we need to get resources
1:39:43
and the developing world we need to get
1:39:46
resources to build the sea defenses we need
1:39:48
to get sea defenses to build a drainage
1:39:50
and irrigation system you just said that we're
1:39:52
six feet below sea level who is going
1:39:54
to pay for the infrastructure who is going
1:39:56
to pay for the drainage and irrigation who
1:39:58
is going to pay for the development and
1:40:00
advancement of our country are you going to
1:40:01
pay it's not coming from anywhere it's not
1:40:04
coming from Greenpeace or anyone else so he's
1:40:06
admitting we got to pump the water out
1:40:08
man when the sea level rises where people
1:40:10
start to drown you're not gonna pay for
1:40:12
that hard talk man no we're gonna pay
1:40:15
for it with our carbon isn't there a
1:40:16
cynicism here in Georgetown best expressed by your
1:40:20
vice president who said recently because there is
1:40:23
this climate change imperative to decarbonize our policy
1:40:26
is to get as much oil out of
1:40:29
the ground as quickly as possible now he
1:40:32
said that's harsh for those who think that
1:40:34
you should be environmentally sound but that is
1:40:38
the reality of it those were very honest
1:40:40
words from your vice president that is what
1:40:42
we are honest we are practical so you're
1:40:44
rushing before any deal is done to quote
1:40:48
you by cop to transition away from oil
1:40:51
and you can say we are rushing but
1:40:53
we are very practical we have this natural
1:40:55
resource and we are going to aggressively pursue
1:40:58
this natural resource because we have to develop
1:41:00
our country we are committed to development of
1:41:03
this region we have to create opportunities for
1:41:05
our people because no one is bringing that
1:41:07
for us you you know one is bringing
1:41:09
that for us no one is paying our
1:41:11
agenda so while everyone thinks this is a
1:41:16
big win it's not the guy's all in
1:41:19
his vice president's all in there just they
1:41:22
have a different solution let's do a quick
1:41:23
I like the analysis I'm gonna give you
1:41:26
a clip of the day oh that is
1:41:27
very kind of you because you're right everyone
1:41:32
just played the funny part I had the
1:41:35
clips isolated because not because of the analysis
1:41:38
because it was humorous yes because it was
1:41:41
yeah I've told and but you're absolutely correct
1:41:44
the whole thing is it could it might
1:41:46
as well have been scripted yep yeah why
1:41:49
else is the guy there hard talk man
1:41:52
yeah and why did he go to Guiana
1:41:55
from UK that seems like a kind of
1:41:58
out-of-the-way trip I hear Guiana
1:42:00
is beautiful this time of year anyway leave
1:42:03
it to the the the farmerless meat country
1:42:06
known as the Netherlands this is really this
1:42:08
is a marketing campaign farmerless meat can you
1:42:13
believe it instead of saying it's not actual
1:42:16
meat no it's farmerless meat don't just forget
1:42:21
about the cow we don't need this stupid
1:42:23
farmer his wooden shoes no and you want
1:42:26
protein introducing the Dutch bugs burgers at first
1:42:30
glance it looks like a normal hamburger but
1:42:33
it's not just any old burger because half
1:42:36
of the meat patty consists of ground-up
1:42:38
insect larvae the bugs burger listen the Dutch
1:42:45
that has nice meat flavor so I'm going
1:42:48
to eat it up it's very good I
1:42:49
would recommend it to all my friends I
1:42:51
would definitely recommend it to my friends the
1:42:55
main ingredient in Vera's bugs burger is ground
1:42:58
lesser mealworms the larvae of the darkling beetle
1:43:01
the production of the insect burgers begins here
1:43:04
in the Dutch town of Ermelo the manufacturers
1:43:07
have been breeding insects here for about 40
1:43:09
years only as animal feed give them cow
1:43:13
feed and for the cosmetics industry but recently
1:43:16
they've been producing more and more larvae for
1:43:19
human consumption he performs regular checks on the
1:43:21
quality of what do you think the difference
1:43:23
is between larvae for animal consumption and larvae
1:43:26
for human consumption is there a different process
1:43:29
suddenly is you're making me sick or larvae
1:43:33
for human consumption he performs regular checks on
1:43:36
the quality of his worms around 2 billion
1:43:38
people around the world eat insects daily but
1:43:41
it's still a big taboo in Europe within
1:43:44
five years I think we all eat a
1:43:46
couple of times a year insects worms are
1:43:49
a sustainable source of energy containing 50%
1:43:52
protein they only need a fraction of the
1:43:54
space water and feed that breeding higher orders
1:43:57
of animals require their co2 emissions are minimal
1:44:00
the larvae live for three months in these
1:44:02
boxes where they consume grain when they're large
1:44:05
enough to be harvested their flash frozen and
1:44:08
shipped to customers Max Kramer and Baris Urzel
1:44:11
are the founders of bucks burger the founders
1:44:14
first encountered edible insects during a world trip
1:44:16
seven years ago that's how they got the
1:44:18
idea to start their business when we first
1:44:20
told friends family and acquaintances about our idea
1:44:23
most of them said we were crazy that
1:44:26
there's no way it would work in the
1:44:27
meantime everybody thinks what we're doing is cool
1:44:29
and the next thing they say is hey
1:44:32
when can we finally try it out the
1:44:34
ground field worms are mixed with peas water
1:44:36
and a secret spice mixture will lead to
1:44:39
less meat being eaten that will be good
1:44:41
for the environment because less grain will be
1:44:43
used for cattle feed and the insects are
1:44:45
also climate friendly a few restaurants in Belgium
1:44:48
and the Netherlands already have bucks burgers on
1:44:51
their menu exotic hamburgers cost between 12 and
1:44:54
17 euros gotta cost some fortune they're gonna
1:44:59
be subsidized well you're subsidized theory I had
1:45:04
to say is probably the only thing that's
1:45:06
gonna save this industry oh it's what is
1:45:08
disgusting I'll give you a clip of the
1:45:10
day for that one oh thank you I
1:45:12
find it by accident it's the most disgusting
1:45:18
clip of the day probably for a long
1:45:22
time our future it's in our future yes
1:45:25
they've been promising they they've been threatening us
1:45:28
with this forever all right back to a
1:45:32
descriptor for raw milk I remember Louis Pasteur
1:45:35
did not invent this to pasteurize milk because
1:45:37
those people were drinking raw milk and they
1:45:39
loved it bacteria and viruses this is why
1:45:42
Louis Pasteur back in the 1800s came up
1:45:44
with pasteurization because back then people would get
1:45:47
sick raw milk think of it as raw
1:45:49
sewage it's heavily think of it as raw
1:45:58
sewage you're drinking the natural exudation from a
1:46:03
mammal milk which women deliver to I might
1:46:07
add the sewage it's raw sewage sewage that's
1:46:12
a that's a fabulous report it's not done
1:46:15
raw milk think of it as raw sewage
1:46:17
it's heavily fecal contaminated think about you know
1:46:21
where the cows you know their their feces
1:46:23
are you know hold on a second now
1:46:25
she thinks that the cows poop out of
1:46:27
their udders or does she think the milk
1:46:29
comes out of the anus what what what
1:46:31
is she saying to me here think she
1:46:33
says that's what she's saying one of the
1:46:34
two think about where it says it says
1:46:36
camotamidin was fecal material yes well the udders
1:46:40
are nowhere near the fecal material Celine dr.
1:46:44
Celine is she confused with the what is
1:46:48
she confused by this is very odd chicken
1:46:51
in an egg an egg it has a
1:46:52
vent and it poops and the egg comes
1:46:54
out of the same poop what is that
1:46:56
the clava the color the whatever kusta clava
1:47:01
people would get sick raw milk think of
1:47:04
it as raw sewage it's have cloaca cloaca
1:47:08
cloaca cloaca cloaca thank you trolls are on
1:47:12
point today all right let's go heavily fecal
1:47:15
contaminated think about you know where the cows
1:47:18
you know their their feces are you know
1:47:19
this is not clean you really want to
1:47:21
be drinking pasteurized it's not clean the udders
1:47:24
are super clean and he's so
1:47:34
grossed out and so ignorant that he's like
1:47:37
oh man oh those udders are dirty they're
1:47:40
filled with poop wow this isn't on this
1:47:44
you getting clip of the day for this
1:47:45
baby no this clip of the day is
1:47:47
for the clip custodian not for me God
1:47:52
for me yeah well the clip custodians on
1:47:54
it this is CBS CBS last one how
1:47:57
concerned should the regular person watching here who
1:48:00
isn't hasn't been on a farm recently if
1:48:02
you haven't been on a farm recently go
1:48:06
out go to a farm shake your ranchers
1:48:08
hand learn about where the udder is so
1:48:11
if you're not having direct contact with poultry
1:48:15
or dairy cattle those are the two types
1:48:17
of animals that have been infected in the
1:48:18
United States if you're not drinking unpasteurized milk
1:48:22
or raw milk your risk is a member
1:48:25
of the general public is pretty low right
1:48:26
now what we're pretty low wait a minute
1:48:28
it's not zero that's pretty just pretty low
1:48:32
pretty low no that's a percentage your favorite
1:48:35
your favorite percentage it's pretty low it's you
1:48:37
know it's low pretty low right now what
1:48:39
we're concerned about is if this continues to
1:48:42
replicate and mutate and evolve whether it's in
1:48:47
mammals or humans like dairy farm workers that's
1:48:51
when there's a risk of it evolving and
1:48:52
adapting to humans and person-to-person spread
1:48:55
back to the wet market and it jumps
1:48:57
and that's what we evolve which doesn't make
1:48:59
sense nobody deep and then he says oh
1:49:01
it jumps it jumped this is the wet
1:49:03
market story that was that we were supposed
1:49:05
to keep believing but Fauci's covered it up
1:49:08
wrong and so we figured it out and
1:49:10
like lab okay but no wet mark wet
1:49:14
market is we're back to wet markets now
1:49:16
that's when there's a risk of it evolving
1:49:18
and adapting to humans and person-to-person
1:49:20
spread and it jumps and that's and that's
1:49:23
what that's what can cause a pandemic so
1:49:25
it may not be today Oh pangolin but
1:49:27
say within the next 10 years if we
1:49:29
allow this kind of thing to keep going
1:49:30
that's what we're worried about and by then
1:49:32
it's too late if you haven't learned how
1:49:33
to I don't know if you haven't learned
1:49:39
how to just learn how to if you
1:49:41
haven't learned how to and then he stopped
1:49:42
yes yes how to lie how to lie
1:49:45
for your for a living I'd like to
1:49:48
discuss the Miss USA controversy with a couple
1:49:51
of NPR clips oh good because I'd already
1:49:54
brought it up that something was going on
1:49:56
right we talked about a few shows yeah
1:49:58
you mentioned it yes but this is like
1:50:00
something's going on something's up this is like
1:50:03
a classic example of NPR not being able
1:50:06
to twist the story the story so it's
1:50:10
just to make it something Trump did I
1:50:14
think you may have guessed it but let's
1:50:16
go really here now we turn to a
1:50:18
scandal that's shaking up the beauty pageant world
1:50:21
oh man it's already starting off great the
1:50:24
beauty pageant world oh no Miss USA and
1:50:27
Miss Teen USA recently stepped down the organization
1:50:31
that runs both of these competitions is under
1:50:34
scrutiny now former Miss USA Noelia Voigt cited
1:50:37
mental health while the former Miss Teen USA
1:50:40
Uma Sophia Srivastava pointed to a misalignment of
1:50:44
quote personal values within the organization for more
1:50:47
insight on this we are joined here in
1:50:49
studio by Amy Argettsinger she's style editor at
1:50:52
the Washington Post and the author of the
1:50:53
book there she was the secret history of
1:50:56
Miss America Amy welcome thank you for having
1:50:58
me Amy just for starters can you briefly
1:51:01
walk us through what we know so far
1:51:03
about these resignations we haven't gotten a lot
1:51:06
of details it seems as though both the
1:51:09
former Miss USA and the former Miss Teen
1:51:11
USA are probably bound up by non-disclosure
1:51:13
agreements they've alluded to being limited in what
1:51:16
they can say but some details have trickled
1:51:18
out just reading between the lines of their
1:51:20
messages to the public on Instagram and by
1:51:23
some comments that their mothers have given in
1:51:24
interviews and the general impression you have is
1:51:27
that they feel like they were just shabbily
1:51:30
treated by the pageant management that they were
1:51:35
subject to criticism and disorganization you've seen some
1:51:40
phrases tossed about bullying sexual harassment that wasn't
1:51:44
taken seriously things like that but the precise
1:51:46
details have not come out the resignation statement
1:51:49
that was put out by Noelia Voigt who
1:51:51
is Miss USA went viral and followers online
1:51:54
were pointing out that her statements first 11
1:51:57
sentences started with letters that spelled out quote
1:52:00
I am silenced unquote I mean do you
1:52:03
think that's internet conspiracy theory or that she's
1:52:06
trying to say something significant there for once
1:52:09
it does not seem to be internet conspiracy
1:52:11
theory people close to her have said yeah
1:52:14
this is how she feels that was an
1:52:15
intentional message and that's the message we've gotten
1:52:18
is that this was somewhat coordinated these young
1:52:22
women talked to each other their resignations had
1:52:24
been preceded by that of the social media
1:52:27
manager for the organization Wow it's about time
1:52:32
this is I've never understood why this is
1:52:37
still a thing I mean it's it seems
1:52:40
so off in today's politically correct world to
1:52:44
have beauty contests at all and to display
1:52:48
women like this is of course the season
1:52:51
of reveal and it'll we'll find out about
1:52:53
the Olympic Games how the how the athletes
1:52:58
are treated like just marketing meat marketing meat
1:53:02
that's all that's all these women aren't marketing
1:53:04
meat for organizations that are corrupt and probably
1:53:07
filled with creeps if of course I would
1:53:11
draw creeps because you go where the action
1:53:14
is hey there's action over there yeah so
1:53:18
I am silenced as the first let you
1:53:21
know first I actually wrote a column for
1:53:23
Mac user magazine years ago where I did
1:53:25
that you did I am silenced you did
1:53:28
you did one of those I'm silenced but
1:53:29
I had some message using the first letter
1:53:31
of every sentence what was it I can't
1:53:34
remember as happy April Fool's Day or something
1:53:36
I don't remember who is the whole thing
1:53:37
was to let down but I I think
1:53:40
I did a bunch of these jokes and
1:53:43
I one of year I resigned which upset
1:53:46
the publisher but in the but there was
1:53:50
a message was in there but I remember
1:53:51
one time I did one that was a
1:53:53
mirror image which was the I think one
1:53:55
of my more creative April Fool's gags but
1:53:57
yeah using the first letter is not it
1:53:59
it's not a conspiracy when it spells that
1:54:01
I am silenced no it's like what kind
1:54:04
of you think it's a coincidence that she
1:54:06
wrote this so okay anyway so now we
1:54:09
go to part two because we got to
1:54:10
get to the bottom of this what's really
1:54:12
going who's responsible more quietly though a couple
1:54:15
of longtime executives with Miss USA stepped away
1:54:19
in the past several months since the pageant
1:54:21
management changed hands back in August this is
1:54:25
an organization that's in some upheaval and that
1:54:28
goes back a long ways Voight hasn't commented
1:54:31
further on her resignation statement but a longer
1:54:34
version of that resignation letter was obtained by
1:54:36
some news organizations and in it she accused
1:54:39
the Miss USA organization of quote a toxic
1:54:42
work environment that at best is poor management
1:54:45
and at worst is bullying and harassment given
1:54:49
what you know about this organization about its
1:54:51
history did those charges surprise you no they
1:54:55
really didn't surprise me part of that has
1:54:57
to do with the fact that this was
1:55:00
the pageant organization Miss USA a subsidiary of
1:55:03
Miss Universe that was owned in part by
1:55:05
Donald Trump I think we all remember hearing
1:55:10
in 2015 2016 some of the accusations some
1:55:15
of the stories that came out about his
1:55:17
behavior around contestants the way he talked about
1:55:20
them oh my word I met you know
1:55:26
what I thought that you know did John
1:55:29
forget did he forget about what was going
1:55:31
on but this also deserves a clip of
1:55:35
the day so the NPR and Washington Post
1:55:38
they can't help themselves they just can't do
1:55:42
it of course we had to take it
1:55:44
for Trump it's Trump's fault you know what
1:55:48
you know I know I know what what
1:55:50
the problem was I know what she's what
1:55:51
she couldn't say I know what's going on
1:55:53
half of the contestants are dudes that's what's
1:55:57
happening there yeah you know what's really good
1:56:00
particularly these these new arrivals that come through
1:56:05
the newcomers we're so xenophobic these newcomers that
1:56:11
come they come enter the the southern border
1:56:16
you know they often have to swim across
1:56:19
the Rio Grande to for that you know
1:56:22
well basically they get dropped off on the
1:56:24
other side and it's like okay because they
1:56:26
all have clean clothes you know everything's good
1:56:28
to go but all right then you got
1:56:29
it for the show please swim across the
1:56:32
Rio Grande before you enter the Americas and
1:56:36
the New York City mayor has some thoughts
1:56:38
about this that states those jobs that we
1:56:41
are in high demand we could expedite how
1:56:46
do we have a large body of people
1:56:49
that are in our city and country that
1:56:52
are excellent swimmers at the same time we
1:56:55
need lifeguards excellent swimmers John you need life
1:57:00
guards is that what he said yes and
1:57:02
at the same time we need lifeguards and
1:57:05
the only obstacle is give them the right
1:57:07
to work to become a lifeguard because they're
1:57:09
excellent swimmers we know it they swam across
1:57:12
the Rio Grande I mean come on make
1:57:14
them lifeguards I mean that's urgent that just
1:57:17
doesn't make sense but if we had a
1:57:20
plan that say you have this shortage of
1:57:23
food service workers and those who fit the
1:57:25
criteria we're going to expect expedite you because
1:57:29
you know how to cook right I mean
1:57:31
you're good we love that cuisine y'all
1:57:33
are bringing in newcomers if you have the
1:57:36
experience that you are a nurse which we
1:57:38
have a nursing shortage and we would expedite
1:57:42
expedite you and that's the same with lifeguards
1:57:44
so we have all these eligible people waiting
1:57:47
to work employ there's some lifeguard shortage I
1:57:52
mean this bullcrap by the day for the
1:57:56
lifeguard clip oh well that's sometimes these things
1:58:00
come so unexpected but okay I'll say I
1:58:03
didn't figure that one lifeguards she had that
1:58:08
clip from the last show I mean I
1:58:09
didn't I did it didn't make it you
1:58:11
never know it's a sleeper didn't even make
1:58:13
the cut now dr.
1:58:16
Brian hooker he is from the Children's Defense
1:58:19
Network I think that's that's Bobby the ops
1:58:23
medical network he was on the dr.
1:58:27
Drew show and he had a slightly different
1:58:29
take about this well I think when we
1:58:31
when you look at it at its core
1:58:33
you know it is an economic disaster it's
1:58:37
an economic you know for the for the
1:58:39
farmers themselves that have to you know are
1:58:42
being ordered to call these herds it's an
1:58:44
economic disaster but it also promotes sort of
1:58:47
alternative technologies you know I I find it
1:58:51
odd that a lot of this is happening
1:58:53
by the USDA but yet the USDA is
1:58:56
the one that has genetically modified chickens that
1:58:59
are genetically modified immune to be immune to
1:59:02
influenza to bird flu and so you know
1:59:05
of course you call the herds and then
1:59:07
you can introduce a genetically modified product and
1:59:12
we're being trained more and more as a
1:59:14
society in the United States to accept more
1:59:16
and more different types of GMOs and I
1:59:19
don't think that this is any accident at
1:59:21
this point in time I'm in agreement I
1:59:25
like that I like that the GMO chicken
1:59:27
I'll give you a borderline clip of the
1:59:30
day for digging that one up and I
1:59:34
actually didn't dig that one up oh that's
1:59:37
a surprise oh please what it was it
1:59:40
give him credit no I would have if
1:59:42
I if it was I think I just
1:59:44
stumbled upon it I'm not sure this was
1:59:45
not a not as I clipped this myself
1:59:47
let's put it that way I'm sorry okay
1:59:49
myself so GMO chicken I like that idea
1:59:54
dr.
1:59:56
Jen has another agenda which was not really
2:00:02
surprising because we've already had the mail-in
2:00:05
ballots we have you know pharmaceutical overlords ramping
2:00:11
up government contracts and there's another one medical
2:00:16
headlines authorities have detected the presence of bird
2:00:19
flu at a farm in Iowa more than
2:00:21
four million chickens should we be concerned okay
2:00:28
here's the latest from the USDA and again
2:00:30
we've been in close contact with it there
2:00:33
must be a memo that said yes something's
2:00:36
got to be up and saying should we
2:00:38
be concerned it's got to be in that
2:00:40
memo as a talking point has to be
2:00:42
because everybody's saying the exact same thing okay
2:00:45
here's the latest from the USDA and again
2:00:48
we've been in close contact with the CDC
2:00:50
on this they are testing more that's why
2:00:53
you're seeing it more there's no surprise here
2:00:55
exactly the more you spin up your your
2:00:59
bogus PCR cycles and you're testing more the
2:01:02
more you're gonna see you could test for
2:01:04
HIV and get it from from cows come
2:01:06
on people we know this is bunk but
2:01:09
the latest is infected poultry entering the food
2:01:12
chain in this country is sought to be
2:01:15
extremely low that entering the food chain according
2:01:19
to the USDA all poultry products are inspected
2:01:22
rigorously and they were before this outbreak for
2:01:26
signs of disease bird flu avian influenza is
2:01:29
not I repeat is not transmissible by eating
2:01:32
foods including poultry that have been properly prepared
2:01:36
properly cooked so you want to make sure
2:01:38
you're not cross-contaminating you want to cook
2:01:40
according to regular appropriate temperatures and eggs because
2:01:45
we've been tracking this as well have to
2:01:47
be thoroughly cooked until the yolks are firm
2:01:50
no over easy no over easy too many
2:02:00
exact comes with Mimi says you know I
2:02:02
do all this work you guys never plug
2:02:03
the book can't do them over easy rip
2:02:06
those pages out of your book too rip
2:02:10
the pages out of that book you could
2:02:12
die if you have sunny side up until
2:02:18
the yolks are firm no over easy no
2:02:21
over easy and when you're talking about the
2:02:22
dairy supply wait wait wait for it gets
2:02:25
better no raw or unpasteurized milk no milk
2:02:31
no raw milk that should have been the
2:02:35
case before avian so bottom line if people
2:02:37
want to avoid this all together what did
2:02:40
you hit do you hear that what she
2:02:43
said that should have been the case before
2:02:46
oh yeah yeah because in other words hey
2:02:49
we don't like the idea of anyone having
2:02:51
raw milk so that should always be the
2:02:54
case be waiting even if there's no avian
2:02:56
flu it's drinking sewage wait there's more and
2:03:00
when you're talking about the dairy supply no
2:03:02
raw or unpasteurized milk yeah that should have
2:03:06
been the case before avian so bottom line
2:03:08
if people want to avoid this all together
2:03:09
what's the choice well look again we have
2:03:12
to emphasize what the science and the facts
2:03:14
say right now there is no evidence that
2:03:16
this is a virus that can be transmitted
2:03:18
via eating properly cooked food or drinking properly
2:03:22
pasteurized milk but obviously the options always need
2:03:26
to be stated for people who are concerned
2:03:27
plant-based better for the environment and probably
2:03:31
as well yes she comes in with the
2:03:39
vegan angle holy mackerel that's clip of the
2:03:43
day thank you I figured and that goes
2:03:45
to clip custodian yeah she brings in the
2:03:51
vegan angle at the end you don't want
2:03:53
to make sure when you can you imagine
2:03:55
having a fried egg with the heart as
2:03:57
hell yolk what's the point my mom used
2:04:01
to she had a problem with a runny
2:04:03
egg yolk she'd always we go to a
2:04:05
diner I remember it so well can you
2:04:06
kill my eggs I want them killed hard
2:04:09
burned burned all the way you have nothing
2:04:11
no yolk we and did you put ketchup
2:04:14
on it make scrambled eggs then it's fine
2:04:16
no but you can't have them too fluffy
2:04:19
gotta have them hard dry and don't you
2:04:23
dare put any raw milk in there now
2:04:26
here's the crazy thing by the way if
2:04:29
there was some evidence that somebody got bird
2:04:30
flu from raw milk or our over easy
2:04:33
egg where is it that there's no evidence
2:04:35
although there's not a lot of reporting in
2:04:38
the u.s. per se about the Saudi
2:04:40
Arabia d dollarizing I'm just gonna use that
2:04:44
term by apparently not renewing the deal to
2:04:48
only sell their oil in US dollars making
2:04:52
the US dollar the reserve currency well I
2:04:56
think that we're we're starting to nudge them
2:04:59
a little bit as CBS out of the
2:05:02
blue the CIA broadcasting system starts to bring
2:05:05
up an old story which includes the 28
2:05:08
pages that were not included in the 911
2:05:12
Commission report oh yeah CBS News exclusive the
2:05:16
unnerving video outside the US Capitol filmed two
2:05:19
years before the 9-11 attacks good evening
2:05:22
I'm Nora O'Donnell and thank you for being
2:05:23
with us two decades ago the 9-11
2:05:26
Commission found that al-qaeda acted alone but
2:05:29
victims families say that is not true pointing
2:05:32
to this video and other evidence is proof
2:05:35
they are suing Saudi Arabia claiming its government
2:05:38
provided crucial assistance to the hijackers and planners
2:05:41
behind the September 11th attacks that killed nearly
2:05:44
3,000 people 60 minutes correspondent Cecilia Vega
2:05:48
reports a voice on the video says in
2:05:53
Arabic I am transmitting these scenes to you
2:05:56
from the heart of the American Capitol Washington
2:05:58
this video unsealed in federal court this week
2:06:02
and obtained by 60 minutes was recorded in
2:06:04
the summer of 1999 man behind the camera
2:06:09
is Omar al-bayou me who the FBI
2:06:11
says was an operative of the Saudi intelligence
2:06:14
service with close ties to two of the
2:06:16
9-11 hijackers the video was filmed over
2:06:19
several days they you me recorded entrances and
2:06:22
exits of the Capitol security posts a model
2:06:26
of the building and nearby landmarks in this
2:06:29
portion of the video bayou me points out
2:06:31
the Washington Monument and says I will get
2:06:34
over there and report to you in detail
2:06:36
what is there he also knows the airport
2:06:39
is not far away so then they bring
2:06:41
in a whole bunch of former spooks to
2:06:43
confirm this and this was probably related to
2:06:46
flight 93 Richard Lambert is a retired FBI
2:06:49
agent who led the initial 9-11 investigation
2:06:52
in San Diego where bayou me and the
2:06:54
two hijackers live temporarily before the attacks he's
2:06:58
now a consultant on the case filed by
2:07:00
the 9-11 families if you've ever flown
2:07:02
into Washington DC one of the first things
2:07:05
you see on the horizon is the Washington
2:07:07
Monument so if you know where your other
2:07:09
targets are in terms of the Washington Monument
2:07:12
it helps guide you to your intended target
2:07:16
federal investigators believe the hijackers on flight 93
2:07:20
which crashed near Shanksville Pennsylvania had the US
2:07:24
Capitol as their likely target the lawyers for
2:07:27
the 9-11 families and former intelligence analysts
2:07:30
we spoke to believe portions of the video
2:07:32
show bayou me surveilling the Capitol as part
2:07:35
of that plan and in the video he
2:07:37
references a quote plan you said that in
2:07:41
the plan what plan who is he talking
2:07:46
to what do you think he's talking about
2:07:47
I think he's talking to the Al Qaeda
2:07:50
planners who tasked him to take the pre
2:07:54
-operational surveillance video of the intended target so
2:07:57
this video is taken in late June and
2:08:00
early July of 1999 what does that timing
2:08:03
tell you well that means it was taken
2:08:05
within 90 days of the time when senior
2:08:09
Al Qaeda planners reached the decision that the
2:08:12
Capitol would be a target of the 9
2:08:14
-11 attacks that's when Osama bin Laden decided
2:08:17
to approve Khalid Sheikh Mohammed so-called planes
2:08:20
operation in the days after 9-11 British
2:08:24
police discovered the video during a raid on
2:08:26
Bayou me's UK apartment they also seized Bayou
2:08:29
me's handwritten address book that the lawyers for
2:08:32
the 9-11 families say was filled with
2:08:34
phone numbers of numerous senior Saudi officials who
2:08:37
were in the government at the time I
2:08:41
don't believe any of this story of course
2:08:43
but it that's not the point the point
2:08:45
is okay Saudi Arabia we got your number
2:08:49
we go back to the 9-11 situation
2:08:54
at the time there was a lot of
2:08:56
discussion about suing Saudi Arabia yes and our
2:09:00
government blocked it yes because we had no
2:09:04
you can't sue them because they're our friends
2:09:06
and so it got black never happened and
2:09:08
then this but we all knew that there
2:09:10
was some some information that was left out
2:09:12
of the report and so this which could
2:09:15
be anything that could create he had a
2:09:17
number of years to create this whole thing
2:09:18
could be it like you think is maybe
2:09:20
a fake but yes this is exactly right
2:09:24
I did this is a little pressure point
2:09:27
because if Saudi Arabia got blamed and sued
2:09:29
by all these by the 3,000 families
2:09:33
that were harmed mm-hmm it would be
2:09:37
a nightmare that was the idea is it
2:09:39
to prevent the nightmare and now okay you
2:09:41
guys are gonna screw us out of our
2:09:43
pet petro dollar deal that you agreed to
2:09:46
either re-sign up or the nightmare begins
2:09:48
that's what this is a little annoying fact
2:09:56
about that was a good that was a
2:09:58
good find I'll give you a clip of
2:09:59
the day Wow I just came across it
2:10:09
I'm like hey yeah it's a winner let
2:10:11
me clip that so we have an election
2:10:13
coming up in the UK on the 4th
2:10:16
of July interesting date for them to choose
2:10:19
that and already there's lots of cut well
2:10:22
first of all people are are so I
2:10:25
guess they're apathetic about it oh well they
2:10:30
were gonna get they're gonna give the government
2:10:32
back to the labor yes already Nigel Farage
2:10:35
is out there with his with his what
2:10:38
is it the Freedom Party was I think
2:10:39
it's a reform party or the new it's
2:10:42
got he's created a new party and he's
2:10:44
got lots of traction that guy I want
2:10:46
to just make it off the just kind
2:10:49
of a side comment here reform party is
2:10:51
what it is yeah the Reform Party so
2:10:53
we had spotted Nigel Farage probably 12 years
2:10:58
ago 13 years ago in this show as
2:11:02
a character that was worth following because he
2:11:04
had these great speeches at the in the
2:11:07
Parliament yeah and we got note after note
2:11:10
from our Brits saying this guy's of no
2:11:13
gonna go nowhere you guys are idiots you
2:11:16
shouldn't be paying any attention to him at
2:11:19
all well let's see 15 almost 15 years
2:11:22
later this guy's still very important we happen
2:11:26
to be on top of it remember when
2:11:28
they tried to kill him in the plane
2:11:29
crash you remember that yeah it didn't work
2:11:34
you've been around so anyway channel four did
2:11:37
this this massive hit piece on him they
2:11:39
went undercover and they discovered there's all kinds
2:11:42
of racists in his party we've gone undercover
2:11:45
inside Nigel Farage's reform UK campaign in Clapton
2:11:49
and we recorded extremely offensive language including this
2:11:53
canvasser saying people seeking asylum should be shot
2:11:57
yeah racist language was repeatedly used here directed
2:12:07
at the Prime Minister Rishi Sunak and homophobia
2:12:12
from Farage's inner circle what the old bill
2:12:17
doing my object is for us to become
2:12:26
the voice of opposition he's promised a political
2:12:29
revolution Nigel Farage claims to speak for the
2:12:34
forgotten many the self-styled leader of the
2:12:37
People's Army to mass immigration like we've never
2:12:42
seen before this is the image reform UK
2:12:45
wants to portray and yet some of the
2:12:47
party's candidates have been accused of racism and
2:12:50
extremism so the guy yeah I'm gonna give
2:12:54
you a clip a borderline clip of the
2:12:56
day for digging that one up oh that
2:12:59
is so unexpected that I didn't even have
2:13:02
a release but the fact that you run
2:13:07
a hit piece on him I mean you
2:13:09
can go to the Democrat party and I
2:13:11
mean O'Keefe does this all the time
2:13:14
and you can go to any group and
2:13:16
and it's like the man on the street
2:13:18
interviews you can make everyone sound like idiots
2:13:21
you can make everyone sound like geniuses you
2:13:23
can do whatever you want this is all
2:13:25
manipulation well sure I'm sure there's more than
2:13:28
a few races who hates Sunak and there's
2:13:32
plenty of racism in the Democrat Party here
2:13:35
and the Republican Party here and and in
2:13:37
the Black Lives Matter people say I mean
2:13:40
you can't get away from it but to
2:13:42
create a phony baloney hit piece based on
2:13:45
this this gambling going on surprise is bullcrap
2:13:49
the M5M our mainstream media was really just
2:13:55
totally understanding of the lack of interviews because
2:13:59
elections aren't about policy in fact stating your
2:14:05
policy is a very dumb move no one
2:14:07
wants to hear that that can tank you
2:14:10
what people in America want the way we
2:14:13
elect our presidents is the same way we
2:14:16
choose our breakfast cereal vibes man vibes candidates
2:14:20
don't need us as journalists to get their
2:14:22
message out they don't anymore in this ecosystem
2:14:24
in the media we're preoccupied with like how
2:14:27
much access how many conversations is she gonna
2:14:29
have I don't know how much that matters
2:14:31
there's risk in talking to us there's no
2:14:34
doubt about that when you hear the criticism
2:14:35
oh she has to do more interviews she
2:14:36
has to talk about policy insiders you're speaking
2:14:39
to you they're sort of like no yeah
2:14:40
no I love you all but I don't
2:14:45
want to talk to you all right now
2:14:46
remember what Elizabeth Warren did when she ran
2:14:49
back in 2020 she had a white paper
2:14:51
for every policy position under the Sun and
2:14:53
what happened she collapsed in the primary so
2:14:56
yeah the belief that perhaps you put more
2:14:58
ideas on paper that's a bad idea the
2:14:59
more details you share the more your policies
2:15:02
are gonna get picked apart Harris has changed
2:15:04
this from being a policy election and more
2:15:07
of like a movement a cultural moment policy
2:15:11
fives fives election it's a vibes election this
2:15:15
vibes election that we're all feeling right now
2:15:18
it already felt like a vibes election before
2:15:20
most elections are vibes elections I think every
2:15:23
election frankly is a vibes election and I
2:15:26
think they're really only two vibes that matter
2:15:28
in American politics one is hope and joy
2:15:32
and the other is fear and anger that's
2:15:37
that is the best I'm actually gonna give
2:15:40
you a borderline clip because that's one of
2:15:42
the better supercuts I've heard so funny yeah
2:15:49
I love that there's only two types of
2:15:50
vibes man hope and joy or fear and
2:15:53
what was the what was the last thing
2:15:54
that said fear and fear and anger hope
2:15:56
and joy and the other is fear and
2:15:59
anger fear and anger this is this is
2:16:02
crazy so um and that's great let me
2:16:05
just get back to Aurora because I have
2:16:07
two quick clips from one of their council
2:16:09
meetings and not Aurora I'm sorry Springfield Ohio
2:16:13
so this is the residents and let me
2:16:15
be clear this is not about race this
2:16:18
is about people being given the privilege of
2:16:21
coming here from another country and having no
2:16:23
respect for our people our land or our
2:16:26
life's work people living their life here the
2:16:29
way they did in Haiti angry stealing polluting
2:16:32
living in filth and acting like animals these
2:16:35
are not civilized people opening containers in our
2:16:39
grocery stores helping themselves to what's inside and
2:16:42
throwing the rest onto the shelves and floors
2:16:43
pulling off of the highway to publicly clean
2:16:46
and gut the roadkill lying there in front
2:16:49
of anyone that passes by stealing animals from
2:16:52
farmers and leaving their severed heads at the
2:16:54
site of an old school where children play
2:16:56
relieving themselves in public making some barbaric stew
2:17:01
out of the birds that live in our
2:17:02
park this is insanity and it has to
2:17:05
stop so nothing to see here you're really
2:17:08
exaggerating lady but this guy is my favorite
2:17:11
this guy is my favorite by the way
2:17:14
that I because it's kind of out of
2:17:16
the blue and it's a good clip I'm
2:17:18
gonna give you a borderline clip of the
2:17:19
day for that oh you should have waited
2:17:21
because this is my favorite they're in the
2:17:27
park grabbing up ducks by the neck and
2:17:30
cutting head off and walking off with them
2:17:32
it's eating them like and it's going to
2:17:35
get bigger and it's only going to get
2:17:36
worse and y'all sitting up there in
2:17:37
these chairs y'all all y'all need
2:17:38
to get out here and do something y
2:17:40
'all making hundreds of thousand dollars I need
2:17:41
to put on a t-shirt and some
2:17:42
Crocs I need to come out here in
2:17:44
these streets and y'all need to go
2:17:45
out here I'm out here before the police
2:17:48
is you got to put on t-shirt
2:17:50
and some Crocs and get out here people
2:17:52
don't need to do something I really got
2:17:54
to stand on minutes y'all getting paid
2:17:55
all this money just to wear a suit
2:17:57
and sit in a chair I don't think
2:17:58
I think I think it's crazy bro that's
2:18:01
what they come from and that's what they
2:18:02
do that's they country I don't know what
2:18:05
they got going on over there but they
2:18:06
can't do that over here and if y
2:18:08
'all just get paid for me and then
2:18:09
y'all ain't doing that about I think
2:18:11
that's super weird I gotta stand on Venice
2:18:13
I gotta really like step up like this
2:18:15
is lame bro yes I'm surprised that you're
2:18:21
not all over it yeah you're the AI
2:18:25
hater of the two of us I am
2:18:27
I am the AI hater have you have
2:18:30
you seen the latest that they're doing with
2:18:33
with AI God maybe there it's notebook
2:18:43
LM is what it's called don't know it
2:18:46
so notebook LM I guess is some kind
2:18:50
of it's like a closed-loop AI system
2:18:57
so you can put in documents that that
2:18:59
only you care about and and then you
2:19:03
can do AI stuff with it whatever that
2:19:06
means query it probably yeah you could yeah
2:19:10
you can query it but now they have
2:19:13
an extra I'm looking for it I thought
2:19:14
I had a link I think I do
2:19:16
now you can put in an extra thing
2:19:19
and you can say make a podcast out
2:19:23
of these documents which by the way if
2:19:25
it was any good I would be all
2:19:28
for it but it makes these let me
2:19:32
see oh man I hope I have this
2:19:34
here it makes a podcast yes yes it
2:19:37
makes a podcast okay so this in this
2:19:40
case this guy put in a hundred thousand
2:19:46
word document of like ran nothing of random
2:19:49
text titled it patent dot text gave it
2:19:53
to the notebook and listen so this thing
2:19:56
that makes a podcast by the way no
2:19:57
I want to stop you here and say
2:19:59
I really admire the fact that you are
2:20:03
you and you are the pod but you
2:20:06
keep track of everything that has anything to
2:20:08
do with podcasting at the most minute level
2:20:12
I never heard of this somebody has to
2:20:14
protect the medium and that's actually the way
2:20:19
you see it yes yes I do another
2:20:23
head scratcher this week mm-hmm these these
2:20:26
patent files you sent it had me a
2:20:29
little bit stumped I gotta say yeah it's
2:20:31
a we've got a bunch of text files
2:20:33
okay all named patent but with these little
2:20:36
numbers tacked on right right patent to patent
2:20:38
for that kind of thing interesting and I
2:20:40
open these things up this is what the
2:20:45
AI thinks a podcast should sound like between
2:20:48
two people oh this is the podcast we're
2:20:50
listening to yes you're listening to the podcast
2:20:52
this is an AI shit these are fake
2:20:56
voices yes and so we have a guy
2:20:59
and this is like a typical this is
2:21:01
like fashioned after NPR you are some guy
2:21:04
exactly and a dipshit woman who's going yellow
2:21:07
some moron yes and okay now I'm interested
2:21:12
basically pivot the pivot please start it over
2:21:15
another head scratcher this week mm-hmm these
2:21:21
these patent files you sent it had me
2:21:24
a little bit stumped I gotta say yeah
2:21:26
it's a we've got a bunch of text
2:21:28
files okay all named patent but with these
2:21:31
little numbers tacked on right right patent to
2:21:33
patent for that kind of thing interesting and
2:21:35
I open these things up and it's just
2:21:38
line after line of binary Oh Wow so
2:21:41
ones and zeros as far as the eye
2:21:42
can see okay so that's our challenge today
2:21:45
we are diving headfirst into the world of
2:21:48
well binary code I think that what I
2:21:53
like about this particular AI is it adds
2:21:56
the oz and the ums to it but
2:21:59
for some reason the podcast format has to
2:22:02
be someone taking the lead on talking and
2:22:05
the other someone going mm-hmm oh yeah
2:22:08
yay right mm-hmm yeah shoot let's do
2:22:10
let's do it do it to see if
2:22:12
we can crack this code figure out what
2:22:13
in the world is going on absolutely so
2:22:16
before we get too far I think it
2:22:19
might be helpful for some of our listeners
2:22:21
to do a little bit of a binary
2:22:22
one she's a little too this is a
2:22:26
they got a tone they got to turn
2:22:27
her down a little bit she's she's it
2:22:29
every phrase yeah she's throwing a bit in
2:22:33
there it's like oh yeah there's too much
2:22:37
of that they got to fix that it's
2:22:40
fixable I'm looking looking forward to the day
2:22:43
when we just throw a bunch of clips
2:22:46
and and show note stories into a bin
2:22:49
and then I stay in bed on Thursday
2:22:53
and Sunday and the show is just the
2:22:55
show just the very basics what are we
2:22:58
even talking about when we say binary code
2:23:00
right so at its simplest binary is really
2:23:03
just a way of representing and now wait
2:23:05
now they're gonna switch roles she's talking and
2:23:08
he's gonna do the oh yeah really oh
2:23:10
yeah she's only two options okay so instead
2:23:13
of our ten digits like we use in
2:23:15
our everyday lives you know zero through nine
2:23:17
right right binary uses just zero and one
2:23:20
got it those two digits that's all we
2:23:23
need to build even the most complex information
2:23:26
so it's kind of like a light switch
2:23:27
exactly it's either on or off that's it
2:23:29
one or zero okay stop yes clip
2:23:39
of the day well thank you I what
2:23:42
this it wasn't even intended to put it
2:23:44
on the list today but I'll take it
2:23:49
believable yeah but I like the kibitzing the
2:23:51
constant never-ending not like we do I'd
2:23:56
be interrupt each other kind of in a
2:23:57
different way to stop things but it's but
2:24:00
this is always encouraging all right oh yes
2:24:03
okay oh yeah yeah like interesting yeah yeah
2:24:05
yeah this is why I have no fear
2:24:13
of AI I have this short clip where
2:24:18
this is just one of those unbelievable things
2:24:21
that she says it's great earlier in the
2:24:23
day Harris made her first trip to the
2:24:25
border in Arizona in years Harris expressed a
2:24:28
tougher stance on illegal immigration she spoke with
2:24:31
local Border Patrol leaders as they walked along
2:24:34
the wall there are consequential issues at stake
2:24:38
in this election and one is the security
2:24:41
of our border the United States is a
2:24:44
sovereign nation and I believe we have a
2:24:47
duty to set rules at our border and
2:24:50
to enforce them okay you know the funny
2:24:56
thing about that I didn't get there I
2:24:58
saw that clip I should have grabbed it
2:24:59
I'm glad you did cuz I'm giving you
2:25:01
a clip of the day cuz that is
2:25:02
unbelievable oh thank you well I have clips
2:25:08
I think and I'll do it I don't
2:25:10
think so well I mean this morning you're
2:25:13
not to the height of hypocrisy oh no
2:25:15
no no not and by the way for
2:25:17
people who tune in like hey I listen
2:25:20
to that no agenda show sounds like they
2:25:21
got an agenda yes we're against idiots liars
2:25:28
liars and idiots you know going back to
2:25:31
the initial prediction that we said this was
2:25:36
theater and it would be fireworks in the
2:25:38
sky and calm down everybody we're not in
2:25:41
World War three I would like to show
2:25:43
you the difference between your no agenda show
2:25:46
and the culture war economy and I'd hate
2:25:49
to say it but Scott Ritter is the
2:25:51
one who said this the entire Israeli package
2:25:55
was based upon the Iranian defenses defined by
2:25:57
s300 type capabilities s300 is a Russian service
2:26:01
-to-air missile the Russians just provided the
2:26:02
Iranians was a significant number of s400s together
2:26:05
with sophisticated electronic warfare package is gonna jam
2:26:08
the Israelis as they come in backed up
2:26:09
by su-35 fighters now here's the thing
2:26:12
how many Iran has been trained on the
2:26:13
operation of the s400 I'll give you a
2:26:15
quick hit none who's operating the s400 on
2:26:17
Iranian soil I'll give you another end the
2:26:19
Russians who's flying the s35s not Iranian pilots
2:26:21
Russians it's about Israel to attack Iran is
2:26:24
gonna have to go head to head with
2:26:25
Russia you think Israel wants to do that
2:26:26
you think Israel's ready to do that do
2:26:27
you think the United States is willing to
2:26:29
let them do that now what is it
2:26:30
we're going to bomb they're gonna bomb the
2:26:31
nuclear site that's the end of Israel Israel
2:26:33
disappears that quick you understand the first Israeli
2:26:35
bomb that drops on Iran over 500 missiles
2:26:37
will immediately be fired these are solid rocket
2:26:39
fuel missiles you can immediately reload fire 500
2:26:42
more within 15 minutes that's a thousand missiles
2:26:45
impacting every strategic site in Israel within 30
2:26:48
minutes of the first Israeli bomb dropping the
2:26:50
Israeli airplane won't even be halfway home before
2:26:53
his entire country is destroyed that's going through
2:26:55
the mind of Benjamin Netanyahu you wonder why
2:26:57
he didn't order the attack because he can't
2:26:58
order the attack he's got nothing to attack
2:27:00
with Iran holds all the cards okay wow
2:27:04
wow okay okay clip of the day oh
2:27:07
wow despite the crappy audio I appreciate this
2:27:13
classic that this this Scott Ritter is one
2:27:18
of those guys he's a plant I mean
2:27:21
he's entertaining to listen to and he does
2:27:23
make some interesting points on certain specific shows
2:27:26
he keeps showing up on but that's the
2:27:29
example right there of what we think is
2:27:31
going on which is backed up by what's
2:27:34
going on and what other people think what's
2:27:37
going on which is some sort of some
2:27:40
sort of op there's a sigh up that
2:27:43
what he just said yep but I just
2:27:46
want to take because I've been wondering I've
2:27:47
been watching and looking for what are they
2:27:49
gonna do how they gonna explain this whole
2:27:51
thing this this event and this is the
2:27:53
kind of the kicker to the analysis which
2:27:56
is they finally came to the conclusion that
2:27:58
they're gonna blame Biden explained Sean Roms from
2:28:02
here with Andrew Prokop senior political correspondent at
2:28:07
vox.com who's here to tell us what
2:28:09
happened last night and this morning Andrew what
2:28:12
happened last night and this morning well four
2:28:16
years after Donald Trump tried to steal the
2:28:19
2020 presidential election and left office in disgrace
2:28:23
the American people chose to return him to
2:28:28
power and gave him another term in office
2:28:31
and why did the American people choose that
2:28:33
that is a debate that is going to
2:28:36
be very heated over the coming days and
2:28:40
weeks and months and years but my viewpoint
2:28:44
is that this election was not so much
2:28:47
about either of the candidates on the ticket
2:28:50
and more about President Joe Biden.
2:28:56
Did you put that in or is that
2:28:58
in this report?
2:29:00
That was actually in the report.
2:29:02
This is NPR?
2:29:03
Yes.
2:29:04
Oh then yes.
2:29:06
They're listening to our show.
2:29:08
More about President Joe Biden.
2:29:10
Come on man.
2:29:13
Biden is simply put one of the most
2:29:16
unpopular presidents in history and he has been
2:29:20
for some time his approval rating last I
2:29:22
checked was somewhere around 38% and again
2:29:27
it's been there for some time and you
2:29:31
know I think there was a hope among
2:29:34
Democrats this year that Biden's bad approval was
2:29:39
just because he was old or just because
2:29:42
of his vibes and that if they put
2:29:44
in a younger newer face then they wouldn't
2:29:48
have problems with the electorate with the public
2:29:52
that they would win.
2:29:54
Oh I'm glad you delayed the break for
2:29:55
this this is good.
2:29:57
This is good stuff.
2:29:59
They're just gonna pile on poor Joe.
2:30:01
Go back to the basic thesis should Joe
2:30:05
sabotage the party by putting in Kamala yep
2:30:08
because they didn't want her they were gonna
2:30:11
do a mini convention or something get a
2:30:13
bunch of something going on and get somebody
2:30:16
else in there Gavin well or Shapiro or
2:30:19
Whitmer there's a bunch of them probably Whitmer
2:30:22
be more likely yeah tell me about it
2:30:26
but they got sabotaged by Biden and Biden
2:30:30
further sabotage them with the garbage comments and
2:30:33
all the everything you can do to make
2:30:34
sure that so now this is the terry
2:30:36
okay you pulled that's it you want your
2:30:39
legacy here we go this is gonna be
2:30:41
your legacy you you you they're gonna just
2:30:45
this is just pathetic this is all I'm
2:30:49
going to relent to the troll room they
2:30:51
want to give you a clip of the
2:30:52
day for this I think they're right I
2:30:56
think they're right this is something that happened
2:30:59
earlier in the week which went completely underreported
2:31:02
Russia has closed one of the biggest gas
2:31:05
pipelines to Europe Nord Stream one it begins
2:31:09
in northwest Russia passes through the Baltic Sea
2:31:12
and empties into Germany it is the longest
2:31:15
subsea pipeline in the world this pipeline keeps
2:31:19
Europe running especially Germany so this shutdown has
2:31:22
spooked the German government they fear the lights
2:31:25
could go off so Europe is going all
2:31:27
out in preparation their first order of business
2:31:30
is violating their own sanctions this is very
2:31:32
interesting let me explain Russia needs a specific
2:31:35
turbine to repair the Nord Stream pipeline but
2:31:38
that turbine is not in Russia it was
2:31:40
sent to Canada for repairs if Canada returns
2:31:44
it it would violate Western sanctions if not
2:31:47
Russia could drag out the shutdown the Western
2:31:50
plan is to achieve energy security and their
2:31:54
chosen method violating their own sanctions on Russia
2:31:58
now I don't know about you wait clip
2:32:01
of the day oh well gee thank you
2:32:04
I know I never heard this either why
2:32:10
are we being good why is this information
2:32:12
and you know we have CBS and NBC
2:32:15
and ABC doing all this news reporting that
2:32:17
what are they talking about that they don't
2:32:19
talk about they're talking about trans and race
2:32:21
that's that's all they do they just gaslighting
2:32:25
everybody Oh trans rights Oh race Oh misogyny
2:32:29
meanwhile that cannot be a coincidence that and
2:32:32
this happened just before the election Russia like
2:32:36
or maybe it was right after the election
2:32:37
Russia click I'm sorry we're just cutting off
2:32:40
your gas because we don't have that turbine
2:32:42
and we know about this turbine story because
2:32:44
it popped up months and months ago that
2:32:47
the turbine has to be repaired and it
2:32:49
has to happen in Canada and Canada's like
2:32:51
no we can't do that but all of
2:32:52
this has thrown the the German Parliament into
2:32:55
disarray well this is about the new meetup
2:32:58
yes I thought we just ended a cop
2:33:00
another another one started right away yeah well
2:33:02
we had the biodiversity diversity oh that's what
2:33:05
okay I keep getting confused having too many
2:33:08
of these meetings yeah now we have so
2:33:09
that was COP 16 biodiversity cop this is
2:33:12
a different cop this is COP 29 in
2:33:15
Baku yes here we go an annual global
2:33:19
climate conference is underway in Azerbaijan the priority
2:33:22
money money money to help the places hit
2:33:25
hardest by climate change NPR's Michael Copley to
2:33:28
climate change people all over the world face
2:33:30
catastrophic threats from climate change this year's United
2:33:34
Nations meeting Mukhtar Babaev put the spotlight on
2:33:37
developing countries whether you see them or not
2:33:40
people are suffering in the shadows second
2:33:51
just for that alone I'm giving you a
2:33:53
clip of the day the guy is a
2:33:58
poet he's a poet they're dying in the
2:34:01
dark dying in the dark they're eating the
2:34:03
dog no they're suffering in the shadows they're
2:34:06
dying in the dark nations meeting Mukhtar Babaev
2:34:10
but the spotlight is great developing countries whether
2:34:13
you see them or not people are suffering
2:34:15
in the shadows they're dying in the dark
2:34:18
and they need more than compassion this guy
2:34:22
is an alliteration nutjob suffering in the shadows
2:34:25
dying in the dark developing nations don't bear
2:34:27
much responsibility for the climate pollution that's raising
2:34:30
global temperature climate pollution they're getting hit with
2:34:32
some of the worst impacts like more extreme
2:34:34
heat waves and flooding from torrential rain some
2:34:37
wealthy countries that built their economies using fossil
2:34:40
fuels promised more than a decade ago to
2:34:43
help their poorer neighbors pay to cut climate
2:34:45
pollution and prepare for weather risks leaders at
2:34:48
this year's climate talks are under pressure to
2:34:51
come up with a new funding target that's
2:34:52
a lot more ambitious than the last one
2:34:54
which was set at a hundred billion dollars
2:34:56
a year these numbers may sound big but
2:34:59
they are nothing compared to cost of inaction
2:35:02
it's not clear where the money will come
2:35:04
from did he say coastal erection what is
2:35:07
going on here coastal erections cost a lot
2:35:09
they sound big but they are nothing compared
2:35:12
to cost of inaction but it's not clear
2:35:15
where the money will come from the UN
2:35:17
said recently that developing countries need around 215
2:35:20
billion dollars every year in this decade alone
2:35:23
to adapt to climate impacts that doesn't count
2:35:25
the cost of cutting climate pollution or compensating
2:35:28
developing countries for losses and damage they're already
2:35:31
suffering no brother and then the third reason
2:35:35
RFK jr.
2:35:36
is the most dangerous man in the universe
2:35:38
and you know also I'll bring all the
2:35:42
medical journals the the New England Journal of
2:35:45
Medicine the Lancet JAMA into the Justice Department
2:35:50
my friend as soon as I point an
2:35:53
AG and I'll say them you guys are
2:35:55
part of a racketeering syndicate you're collaborating with
2:35:59
these pharmaceutical industry the lie to the American
2:36:03
public about the efficacy and safety of these
2:36:05
products and you're causing enormous harm and we
2:36:07
are gonna sue you both civilly for damages
2:36:10
and we're gonna sue you criminally unless you
2:36:12
come up with a plan right now as
2:36:14
to how you're gonna stop doing that so
2:36:16
I have a like I have a hundred
2:36:18
things that I'm gonna do immediately okay yes
2:36:23
clip of the day by the way so
2:36:24
thank you so that you're you are absolutely
2:36:31
correct this guy is going to get shot
2:36:33
well that's why I'm glad he's eating burgers
2:36:36
with the Trump on the plane keep him
2:36:38
very close and you know what whenever RFK
2:36:42
juniors walk around just have Elon walk in
2:36:44
front of him that would make me feel
2:36:45
better the first buddy have the first buddy
2:36:50
walk in front of him I mean and
2:36:53
and go Bobby this is this is fantastic
2:36:57
you think the media would be it because
2:37:00
you know the traditionally journalists are all for
2:37:03
this sort of thing because it's fun but
2:37:06
no no that they're poo-pooing it this
2:37:09
is what he'd that last clip in particular
2:37:11
mm-hmm where he's gonna go after these
2:37:13
bogus journals which we've noticed these things have
2:37:16
pulled some stunts recently they can't do that
2:37:22
no they have to be called to task
2:37:24
this is ridiculous Kennedy yeah the Kennedy's got
2:37:27
to get in those three clips are fundamental
2:37:31
when you need to kick-start the economy
2:37:34
what do you do it's it's what we
2:37:37
always do every every nation throughout history we
2:37:42
need to kick-start the economy let's turn
2:37:44
to war and the way you can manufacture
2:37:48
something yes it's blowed up so who better
2:37:51
to catch the population down who better to
2:37:54
sell it than our friends our friend from
2:37:57
the lowlands is here to tell you what
2:38:00
we must do Europe because it is not
2:38:03
safe it is not safe we must be
2:38:06
very careful our deterrence is good it's good
2:38:08
for now for now I'm worried about I'm
2:38:13
very worried about tomorrow tomorrow tomorrow the Sun
2:38:17
will not come out tomorrow we are not
2:38:20
ready for what is coming our way in
2:38:22
four to five years what could be coming
2:38:25
in four to five years I don't know
2:38:27
danger is moving towards us at full speed
2:38:30
danger danger is moving towards a full speed
2:38:34
along then full speed five years is coming
2:38:37
from a very far place away we must
2:38:40
not look the other way no we must
2:38:42
face it face it what is happening in
2:38:44
Ukraine could happen here too don't you understand
2:38:50
and regardless of the outcome of this war
2:38:52
we will not be safe in the future
2:38:55
unless we are prepared to deal with danger
2:38:57
you must be prepared for danger we will
2:39:00
not be safe what can we do about
2:39:02
it how must we be sinking we can
2:39:05
do that we can prevent the next big
2:39:09
war on NATO territory okay and preserve our
2:39:12
way of life how do we do it
2:39:14
this requires us all to be faster and
2:39:17
fiercer yes this time to shift to a
2:39:21
war time mindset wait wait wait did the
2:39:28
payoff what a fanatic you by the way
2:39:30
give yourself clip of the day for pulling
2:39:32
this one out what happened there oh a
2:39:37
million things went wrong at the same time
2:39:39
I'm sorry clip of the day I'll say
2:39:40
yeah no I'm taking it I'm taking it
2:39:43
all right listen to the kicker listen to
2:39:47
the kicker this time to shift to a
2:39:49
wartime mindset and turbo charge our defense production
2:39:55
and defense spending remember when they said we
2:39:59
won't even have a European army now we
2:40:02
have a defense production a defense military industrial
2:40:06
complex and collectively we have a war mindset
2:40:10
I want everybody to have a war mindset
2:40:13
I have people in the Netherlands sending me
2:40:16
article after article after article about how to
2:40:20
prepare preppers literal prepper articles in mainstream magazines
2:40:26
and newspapers in the Netherlands how you need
2:40:30
to have water what kind of canned goods
2:40:32
you need because you know with the war
2:40:34
mindset it could happen it is coming our
2:40:37
way they are psyop in Europe Wow big
2:40:41
time it's it's it's it's pathetic anyone gonna
2:40:46
eat this meatloaf good times good memories dynamite
2:40:52
I mean I don't want to pat ourselves
2:40:55
on the back but because it is after
2:40:58
all a gitmo nation community production everybody helps
2:41:02
out so much but I mean it's just
2:41:05
it's good man these and these clips of
2:41:07
the day it's when when do we actually
2:41:09
do you remember when we started with clip
2:41:10
of the day I think it's when someone
2:41:13
sent a jingle in the clips of the
2:41:15
day jingle you probably said that's the clip
2:41:17
of the day and then someone sent in
2:41:18
a jingle I should probably look that maybe
2:41:20
yeah because I always like to say stuff
2:41:22
like that thank you again to our executive
2:41:24
producer Gus Raya for putting that together for
2:41:27
us we highly appreciate that and I think
2:41:30
we can probably do another 15 years worth
2:41:32
of these things being at dot IO sir
2:41:35
deanonymous thank you for your wonderful system that
2:41:39
you've put up for us and of course
2:41:41
we're looking forward to being back with you
2:41:43
on Thursday in the meantime coming to you
2:41:45
well really from Nashville Tennessee and looking forward
2:41:49
to be backing back in FEMA region number
2:41:51
six in the morning everybody I'm Adam Curry
2:41:55
man from northern Silicon Valley I want to
2:41:57
remind everybody to go to no agenda donations
2:41:59
calm and help us out I'm John C
2:42:02
Dvorak we'll be back on Thursday please join
2:42:04
us then for the best podcast in the
2:42:06
universe until then adios mofos a hui hui
2:42:09
and such