Cover for No Agenda Show 1772: Op Day
June 12th • 3h 22m

1772: Op Day

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0:00
Yeah, we'll do it.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:02
DeVora.
0:03
It's Thursday, June 12th, 2025.
0:05
This is your award-winning Kimmel Nation Media
0:06
Assassination Episode 1772.
0:09
This is no agenda.
0:12
Watching democracy die.
0:15
And broadcasting live from the heart of the
0:18
Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region Number
0:20
6 in the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're all
0:26
awaiting All-Kings Day on Saturday on June
0:29
12th.
0:29
I'm John C.
0:30
DeVorak.
0:30
It's crackpot and buzzkill in the morning.
0:35
It's unbelievable.
0:37
It's unbelievable.
0:39
No, it's not.
0:40
It's completely believable and just fantastic to watch
0:44
the M5M, everybody trying to get everyone all
0:49
psyched up and ready for No King's Day.
0:51
And you know, just it's like wag the
0:54
dog in real time.
0:56
It's amazing what is taking place, right before
0:59
our very eyes.
1:01
Do you know the ACLU of Texas contributed
1:06
like three million dollars toward this event?
1:10
Oh yeah, of course.
1:12
What is the end to some of the
1:13
other ACLU's?
1:16
I thought the ACLU took that money that
1:20
people gave them so they could defend people
1:22
for civil liberties, not to do protests, not
1:26
to print signs on the 250th anniversary of
1:32
the Army, which is really what they're trying
1:35
to downplay here.
1:36
They're trying to make our Army look like
1:38
a bunch of schmucks by doing this thing
1:41
on the exact same day.
1:42
No, it's too long.
1:44
But do you remember in 2017, I have
1:47
the clip but it's too long, I called
1:50
the ACLU when they were...
1:53
Oh yes, you actually made a fuss about
1:54
this on the show.
1:55
Yeah, when they were organizing the protest because
1:58
Trump had done Muslim travel ban, which was
2:01
not a Muslim travel ban, and I called
2:05
them up and said, so, because I've always
2:08
supported the ACLU.
2:10
And they're like, no, no, no, we're organizing
2:12
these protests.
2:13
But is that in your charter?
2:14
Is that what you're supposed to do?
2:15
Well, yeah.
2:17
Oh, okay.
2:18
Well, no, I'm not supporting you anymore.
2:21
Now, what's interesting is that even the people
2:27
who somehow have been psyoped into this whole
2:30
idea of Trump is throwing out legal people,
2:35
just separating families, ripping four-year-old girls
2:38
from behind their school desks, they are now
2:44
recognize, well, the people who are protesting, they're
2:47
just problem people.
2:51
By the way, they're like Marxists and socialists.
2:55
Yeah, that's exactly who the problem is.
2:58
Yeah, of course it is.
3:00
And it's the unions, it's the Socialist Workers
3:03
Party, they're the ones who are sending people
3:06
out.
3:06
It's actually not the unions as much as
3:07
it is one specific union.
3:09
Which specific union?
3:11
The SEIU.
3:12
SEIU, yes.
3:13
Which is the?
3:15
Service Employers International Union.
3:18
And do they have illegals in their union?
3:22
They must.
3:25
So the SEIU is a fallback.
3:28
When I helped organize the Bay Area Air
3:30
Pollution Control District Union, I was a Democrat
3:34
back in the day.
3:35
Yes.
3:35
Sorry to hear that.
3:36
And we had gone through, we knew we
3:39
couldn't get enough votes to unionize, and we
3:41
ended up with SEIU as our base union
3:45
because the other guys bailed out Cal, there's
3:48
CalPERS or some Cal, a very big union
3:51
that was powerful in California, they told us,
3:54
nah, get lost.
3:56
And some other union told us to get
3:58
lost.
4:00
And SEIU jumped in, yeah, we'll do it.
4:03
And I got to take some of their
4:05
training, some years of training.
4:07
Oh, you took some of the, oh, you
4:09
took some of the training, all right.
4:10
From the, yeah, the union itself, it's pretty,
4:12
it's pretty bad.
4:14
So.
4:15
In my memoir.
4:16
So.
4:19
Ladies and gentlemen, John C.
4:20
Dvorak has been dead for 20 years, but
4:22
he promises his memoir is coming along with
4:24
the vinegar book.
4:25
It's coming.
4:26
Don't worry, it's happening.
4:31
So are they, are they truly commies?
4:34
I mean, is the SEIU a bunch of
4:36
communists or, I mean, why are they doing
4:39
this?
4:39
I wouldn't say they're Marxists necessarily, but they're
4:43
pretty close.
4:45
Definitely workers control the means of production.
4:47
The main emphasis in some of the training
4:50
is, hey, if you're not specifically supposed to
4:55
pick up that screw that that guy dropped,
4:58
you don't pick it up.
5:00
Right.
5:00
Yeah.
5:00
Yeah.
5:01
But, but, but I mean, they are sending
5:02
people out to protest illegal immigrants, just illegals
5:10
aliens in favor of illegal immigrants.
5:14
Yes.
5:14
Yes.
5:15
Yes.
5:16
Thank you.
5:16
But it just doesn't make sense.
5:18
However.
5:19
What is it?
5:19
It makes sense to me that I was
5:22
watching somebody say I didn't get it on
5:23
today's show, but somebody's there's a lot of
5:25
clips about, uh, I guess it's Christie is
5:28
her name.
5:28
Christie Walton.
5:29
Oh yeah.
5:30
Yeah.
5:30
Yeah.
5:31
Who's in the, you know, it's like, Oh,
5:32
she's just another rich chick who's, you know,
5:35
inherited a bunch of money and she's got
5:37
a guilty conscience.
5:38
And then I'm guy points on his video.
5:40
This is so Walton can keep their cheap
5:42
employees.
5:43
Well not just, I mean, if you look
5:45
at no King's day, it's not just about
5:48
ice and immigration.
5:49
So the way I look at it from
5:50
the Walton family perspective is tariffs in China.
5:54
They have huge factories.
5:55
Half of Wuhan is, is Walmart.
5:58
Yeah.
5:58
Yeah.
5:58
So I think they're just mad at Trump
6:01
and this is what they do.
6:03
Now I have some, uh, this is a,
6:06
a very short boots on the ground.
6:08
There's so much material.
6:09
But when I heard this, I'm like, yeah,
6:11
I think a lot of these middle, middle
6:14
class Karen, which doesn't have to be white,
6:18
just middle class Karen's in Los Angeles.
6:20
So here's just three quick little, uh, little
6:25
snippets, man on the street.
6:27
But the last one really, really says it
6:29
all about why they're really protesting what they're
6:31
really mad about.
6:32
I'm not okay with this.
6:33
I'm not okay with people getting taken from
6:35
their jobs and being taken from when they're
6:37
going into the federal building for their appointments
6:39
to do this the right way.
6:42
We don't feel safe.
6:43
We're standing up for the children that can't
6:45
stand up for themselves or their parents.
6:47
We need immigrant workers in this city really
6:49
badly.
6:50
We've just gone through devastating fires.
6:53
We've lost 14,000 structures.
6:55
And if you look at who builds this
6:58
city, it's immigrants.
7:00
There it is.
7:01
Who's going to build our homes back with
7:04
no one will want to be in construction.
7:07
And this is exactly what an actual Karen,
7:09
isn't whoopies real name, Karen will be Goldberg.
7:13
Yeah, it is actually.
7:14
Yeah.
7:15
She's a real Karen.
7:16
So listen to what she says at the
7:18
end of this clip after they do some
7:19
pontificating this, I'm sorry.
7:21
It's from the view ice agents.
7:22
Those are nonpartisan actors.
7:24
I think this is the conservative girl for
7:26
the most part, who signed up for jobs
7:27
have served under multiple administrations.
7:30
They did not necessarily sign up to be
7:31
doing this and they're following an order of
7:33
the commander in chief.
7:33
And we could say they could all, I
7:35
guess, resign and mask tomorrow is the bait
7:37
to start demonizing those individuals as opposed to,
7:40
but I think it's very important to remember,
7:46
it's a commander in chief that's made these
7:48
decisions.
7:48
They're following order.
7:49
Yeah.
7:50
It is.
7:50
And you know, think back y'all.
7:53
Where have you heard that before?
7:55
1930s.
7:55
I'm just following orders.
7:57
Oh 1930s.
7:57
Hitler.
7:57
By my commander in chief.
7:58
But again, can I just say, I want
8:00
to finish.
8:00
No, no.
8:00
Cause I, because No, no.
8:02
Cause whoopies got something important to say here.
8:04
Pay attention.
8:05
Karen's coming.
8:05
This is my point.
8:07
We don't want to be what they were.
8:11
A person in service in the, in the
8:14
armed services always follows their commander in chief.
8:17
That's the way it's supposed to be.
8:19
But what is happening here is out of
8:22
sync because the commander in chief is not
8:25
following the directions of the constitution.
8:28
Well, we'll get to that in a minute.
8:29
So we have a bit of an issue.
8:31
And also just as we're going, no, no,
8:32
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no,
8:34
no, no, no, no.
8:34
Here we go.
8:35
Just want to say, you know, construction places,
8:39
you're going to have a harder time finding
8:40
people who are going to be able to
8:42
come and do your house.
8:43
Who are they going to get to pick
8:45
all the fruit and the vegetables?
8:47
Because Americans don't want to do, we know
8:49
that the farmers are saying the Americans don't
8:51
want to do that.
8:52
And the tariffs on top of that is
8:53
going to make everything so expensive.
8:55
That too.
8:55
But getting people, food is going to be
8:57
sitting and rotting because there's no one to
9:01
grab it, is my point.
9:03
We'll be right back.
9:03
This is the most elitist take on this
9:07
ever.
9:08
No one's going to build my house.
9:09
No one's going to pick my fruit.
9:11
Who's going to clean my linens?
9:13
Oh, let me clutch my pearls.
9:15
Have you ever heard of economics, Karen?
9:19
If the fruit is rotting, they will offer
9:22
more money for people to come and pick
9:24
it up.
9:24
It's not just going to go away.
9:26
This is this is the the basic system
9:28
that we have in place.
9:31
It's how capitalism works.
9:31
It's how capitalism works, of course.
9:33
But oh, no.
9:34
And it's so elitist.
9:36
Who's going to...
9:37
It's unbelievably arrogant.
9:40
Yeah.
9:41
Elitist and arrogant.
9:42
And Americans won't do this.
9:45
What?
9:46
American?
9:47
I have a guy, I've got Paul, who
9:49
was literally shoveling shit out of my septic
9:52
tank today.
9:53
Americans do this stuff.
9:54
And you know what?
9:55
Charges me a good penny for it, too.
9:57
Because that's how it goes.
9:58
I don't want to do it myself.
10:00
I don't know how to do it.
10:02
So this is just bullcrap.
10:04
And all the...
10:05
Oh, yes.
10:06
Oh, Whoopi, you tell him.
10:07
Whoopi, no one can clean my house.
10:09
No one can build my house.
10:10
Oh, my fruit is rotting.
10:11
Oh, but I'm going to do it.
10:12
Oh, my avocados.
10:13
Please.
10:14
The worst, though.
10:16
The worst.
10:16
And I had to pull two clips, is
10:19
the liberal intellectual elites of Pivot.
10:23
I've stayed away from getting Cara and Scott
10:27
clips, but I had to pull two clips.
10:29
Because the professor...
10:31
You needed intervention.
10:34
Where were you when I needed that intervention?
10:37
It's been a while since I've pulled clips
10:39
from Pivot.
10:39
It's still my hate.
10:40
But listen, I get through it and like,
10:42
OK, I got it.
10:44
But they are influential in elitist Democrat circles.
10:49
Not as influential as they thought they were.
10:52
Because if you recall, their contract was up
10:54
for renegotiation.
10:56
And Professor Scott was like, well, we're going
10:58
to go make hundreds of millions of dollars
11:00
like Joe Rogan because we're that good.
11:03
And they renegotiated and they have all kinds
11:05
of caveats and they can do special things.
11:09
They got a crappy deal because they're not
11:12
worth it.
11:13
Podcasts just aren't worth that much.
11:15
So they overthought their influence.
11:18
But without a doubt, they make more money
11:19
than we do.
11:21
So here is the professor's take on what
11:24
is happening.
11:25
It's a doozy.
11:26
I've called this a complete overreach by a
11:29
desperate despot.
11:30
Your thoughts?
11:31
Well, I can do some alliteration.
11:33
A complete overreach by a desperate despot.
11:36
Your thoughts?
11:36
Well, I've been called hysterical for a while
11:40
now comparing or drawing similarities between America right
11:44
now and 30s Germany.
11:45
And you don't have to be Hitler to
11:47
borrow methods and worst practices from his playbook.
11:51
I would love to hear Scott, Professor Scott,
11:54
do a podcast with Brett's wife.
11:57
What's his name?
12:00
Heather.
12:01
Well, what do you think, Heather?
12:03
Well, Scott, let me tell you.
12:04
Okay, Heather.
12:06
And that is when tanks roll through cities,
12:09
it doesn't feel like strength.
12:11
It feels like a funeral for civil society.
12:14
Germany in the 30s didn't collapse overnight.
12:18
It slid into tyranny by normalizing soldiers where
12:22
citizens used to stand.
12:25
You know, early Nazi propaganda decided, and we're
12:28
doing the same thing, we have real problems
12:30
overseas.
12:30
You know, there are still Russian, you know,
12:33
Russia is still invading Europe.
12:35
Russia's invading Europe, John, be careful.
12:38
There's real significant issues around China, Pakistan and
12:41
India could could eventually digress to a nuclear
12:44
conflict.
12:45
Iran is.
12:46
In case you didn't get the memo, President
12:48
Trump stopped that war.
12:49
He said so himself.
12:50
Trying to spin up reactors.
12:53
But if you look at and again, I
12:55
think I just this has so many echoes
12:58
of 30s Germany, early Nazi propaganda emphasized that
13:01
early 30s Germany, John, was it like this
13:04
where I wasn't there to know.
13:08
But I will say this.
13:09
I'm liking this for a reason that's not
13:12
wouldn't on the surface wouldn't seem.
13:14
Well, why would you like this?
13:16
I honestly believe these two and Scott in
13:19
particular are believing their own bullcrap.
13:22
Yeah.
13:23
And they're actually having they're going to have
13:25
nervous breakdowns or something.
13:28
This is not healthy.
13:29
No, no, it's it's he's and he barely
13:32
opened it because I saw the YouTube video
13:35
version of this because, of course, we've got
13:36
to do video version, Scott.
13:39
And he barely opens his mouth when he
13:41
talks, he talks like this and it has
13:43
he has he also has no lips.
13:45
No, I believe this is really like early
13:47
30s slit.
13:48
This is like a snake.
13:50
The Scott Scott talks through a slit like
13:53
a snake.
13:54
Germany's problems were due to internal saboteurs, communists,
13:58
Jews, immigrants, and that today, if you look
14:01
at this rhetoric, they're blaming immigrants, academics, protesters,
14:06
journalists.
14:06
And there's kind of the same playbook here.
14:09
When you have a government who turns its
14:12
military force inward against journalists, migrants or citizens
14:15
who believe and exercising the right to protest
14:19
in a civil, peaceful manner and justice, you're
14:22
not defending democracy.
14:23
You're rehearsing for something much darker.
14:26
So it's it's not the protests themselves.
14:29
It's not what's going.
14:30
This is another step towards normalizing an attempt
14:34
to rebrand militarization as patriotism.
14:37
So I just love that.
14:39
You're right.
14:39
They they are they are sniffing their farts
14:42
and like smells great.
14:44
And this clip second clip is much shorter.
14:46
But man, they bring up a doozy here.
14:48
He can try.
14:49
He can try.
14:49
That's what he's doing.
14:50
He's trying desperate.
14:51
He's a desperate.
14:52
That's why I called him the complete overreach
14:54
of a desperate desperate.
14:55
Every move he's making lately to me is
14:58
both despotic, incompetent and also insecure in a
15:03
lot of ways.
15:03
But we'll see.
15:04
What you just outlined is is my vision
15:08
of how you would restore and heal America.
15:11
OK, question for you.
15:13
How do you think when the Democrats clearly
15:16
come back into control because they believe this
15:18
once Trump is gone, everyone's going to fall
15:20
down.
15:21
What do you think his vision is for
15:23
restoring America?
15:26
But could it be to bring back some
15:30
programs or to know we have to heal?
15:33
We have to.
15:34
How did we heal?
15:35
How do we heal by stringing up all
15:39
the Republicans is my vision of how you
15:42
would restore and heal America.
15:43
That you'd have moral clarity and have the
15:47
effectively like a Nuremberg trial.
15:48
OK, you knew this was a lie.
15:51
You nailed it.
15:52
Nuremberg trial.
15:53
String them up.
15:54
Hang them.
15:55
Noose them all.
15:56
Let's hang them up and have the effectively
15:59
like a Nuremberg trial.
16:00
You said, OK, you knew this was a
16:02
lie.
16:02
You purposely tried to create violence and mayhem.
16:05
You purposely tried to overrun our elections.
16:08
You purposely committed fraud.
16:09
You purposely leveraged our international sway to enrich
16:14
your children.
16:15
I love the idea of a stream of
16:16
perp walks and moral clarity around this stuff
16:18
that America's laws have a long memory.
16:21
I love that.
16:22
That's a fantasy of mine.
16:23
I dream of that at night.
16:24
My fear, Kara, is that there's actually a
16:27
lot of people who like what's going on
16:28
right now.
16:30
Oh, man.
16:31
Jacques Hughes.
16:34
Where was the Republicans Nuremberg trials?
16:37
Where was the Nuremberg trial for the covid
16:39
vaccine?
16:39
Where was the Nuremberg trial for the covid
16:39
vaccine?
16:40
Where were all those for covid where those
16:42
Nuremberg trials didn't happen just to set the
16:45
record straight.
16:45
And then I'll let you roll.
16:47
This is from the John Batchelor show, which
16:49
I only get as a podcast.
16:51
We're doing podcast people.
16:52
John, you who's from Berkeley and Civitas Institute
16:55
in Austin, of all places, explains the law
16:59
Title 10 under which this is taking place.
17:02
The president can call out the National Guard
17:05
in case of an invasion.
17:07
And then it says second condition or there's
17:10
a rebellion.
17:11
But then there's third condition.
17:13
The president is unable to execute the laws
17:16
of the United States.
17:19
So any one of those three, this is
17:21
the media narrative has ignored this third provision.
17:25
This third provision is obviously the one that's
17:28
at stake here.
17:29
Has can President Trump legitimately find that the
17:35
execution of the laws of the United States
17:37
here, the immigration laws in Los Angeles is
17:41
being blocked?
17:41
He can't execute them.
17:43
And if he can't, then the law allows
17:45
him to call out the National Guard.
17:47
Bingo.
17:48
That's it.
17:49
Yeah.
17:49
That's nails it.
17:50
Yeah.
17:51
And so, you know, you is one of
17:52
those guys.
17:53
You, you, you, you use.
17:56
Use the guy.
17:57
If I'm not mistaken, is the one who
18:00
came up with the rationale for torture.
18:01
Yes, he did.
18:02
No, was that Bush?
18:04
Was that you?
18:05
No.
18:05
That was.
18:06
Yeah, I think it was.
18:07
No, it was a different guy.
18:08
It was another.
18:09
No guy.
18:11
You is pretty good.
18:12
He's he's one of those guys.
18:13
He's one of those guys who knows how
18:14
to bend the law.
18:15
Him and Dershowitz.
18:16
But this is not bending the law.
18:18
It's no, it's not.
18:18
No.
18:19
I mean, interpreting the law in a very
18:21
strong.
18:23
Yeah, it's not bending at all.
18:24
It's actually finding the rules and then applying
18:27
them.
18:28
But you know, so when you keep hearing
18:30
it's against the Constitution, he's not upholding the
18:32
Constitution.
18:33
That is, in fact, the opposite.
18:35
One more clip, because I just love this
18:37
doozy from CNN, CNN, who you'd think would
18:41
probably not favor President Trump or any of
18:44
his policies or any of this.
18:46
They did a little poll amongst legal immigrants,
18:50
immigrant residents and citizens of the United States.
18:54
Surprising results.
18:55
Yeah.
18:56
Let's just sort of start off on the
18:58
fact that immigrant citizens, immigrant voters, foreign born
19:01
voters have gone tremendously to the right on
19:04
this issue in twenty twenty four and twenty
19:06
twenty five versus where they were in twenty
19:07
twenty closest to a trustworn immigration.
19:09
You go back to twenty twenty.
19:10
Democrats get this held a thirty two point
19:13
lead on this issue.
19:14
Immigrant voters were in the Democratic camp.
19:16
Jump forward to twenty twenty four.
19:18
Twenty twenty five.
19:19
Look at that shift.
19:20
A 40 point shift to the right among
19:23
immigrant voters.
19:25
Republicans now lead on this issue by eight
19:28
points over Democrats, more so than any other
19:31
group that I could find.
19:32
The group of voters who became more hawkish
19:34
on immigration were, in fact, immigrants themselves.
19:38
Immigrants were registered to vote in this country.
19:41
Boom.
19:42
All right.
19:42
Drop it there.
19:43
By the way, you're right.
19:44
I was thinking Alberto Gonzalez, who was co
19:47
-author with John.
19:48
No, Gonzalez is a lightweight.
19:50
Well, John, you you're right, John, you you.
19:54
So this is well, I have I have
19:56
a take on this that I want to
19:58
present.
19:59
Oh, yes.
20:00
Because I think there's dirty tricks going on.
20:02
I know dirty tricks is gambling, gambling going
20:06
on at the protest.
20:08
And I think it's at a level that
20:09
we haven't seen since the Grady and Dick
20:12
Tuck during the Nixon administration, where he had
20:15
had these guys that were barely alive.
20:18
But yeah, yeah.
20:19
Well, there was there was some great stuff
20:21
that used to be done.
20:22
And it's been kind of passed over.
20:24
And I think Trump's behind a lot of
20:26
this.
20:30
And OK, I'm I'm I love it when
20:33
you say Trump's behind a lot of this.
20:34
I'm like, yeah, believable.
20:35
Lay it on me.
20:36
I want to hear what's going on.
20:37
This this has to be about the midterms.
20:39
Everything's about the midterms, right?
20:41
Everything's eventually.
20:42
But yeah, well, that's where it's all they
20:43
have to.
20:44
But this is a long strategy.
20:46
And I don't.
20:46
And I think there's denial of possible, plausible
20:49
deniability.
20:51
There's no way this is going to be
20:52
tracked to Trump.
20:53
This is just a thesis.
20:54
I can't prove it.
20:56
It just seems a little suspicious.
20:58
And you get hints of it when you
21:00
start listening to some tick tockers.
21:03
Now I want to start off with this
21:06
to organize.
21:07
This is different.
21:08
But this is the I want to start
21:10
off with this, with what I see is
21:13
going on with tick tock.
21:14
They're using tick tock.
21:16
Yes.
21:16
In much the same way as that the
21:19
mainstream used to be used or that Sinclair
21:23
Broadcasting used to use, where everybody said the
21:24
same thing.
21:25
Somehow they've gotten to the influencers.
21:27
And I want to play these jaywalking.
21:29
It's easy.
21:30
You just call it the agency.
21:31
There's agencies for the influencers.
21:33
You call them up.
21:34
You give them a script.
21:35
Here is a series of clips where they
21:37
which are bogus clips.
21:39
But this is the talk jaywalking clips.
21:42
Being in a country that you're in illegally
21:44
is a civil offense, not a criminal one.
21:47
You know what else is a civil offense?
21:50
Jaywalking.
21:51
And being undocumented is not a criminal offense.
21:53
It's a civil one.
21:54
And if you've ever jaywalked, congratulations, because you've
21:57
also committed a civil offense.
21:59
Have you ever sped over the speed limit?
22:02
Have you ever drank or smoked underage?
22:04
Have you ever drank and then driven a
22:06
car?
22:06
What about jaywalking?
22:08
Being undocumented in America is a civil offense.
22:13
It's not a criminal one.
22:15
It's the same caliber of crime as a
22:18
traffic offense.
22:19
Just a reminder in case anyone forgot, being
22:20
undocumented is a civil offense, not a criminal
22:24
one.
22:24
If you've so much as littered on public
22:26
property, I never want to hear, oh, but
22:28
they broke a law as a justification for
22:31
your hate.
22:31
Just for the record, being here undocumented is
22:34
not a criminal offense.
22:35
It's a civil one.
22:37
So that means if you've ever jaywalked, you
22:40
too have committed a civil offense, okay?
22:43
And if you're really concerned about criminals being
22:46
in this country, then I have to ask,
22:48
like, why did you vote for one?
22:52
Well, not to interrupt you, but I did
22:55
look up this civil offense because I knew
22:57
you had this clip.
22:57
Yes, I did too.
22:59
And here's what I came up with.
23:00
Civil offense is unlawful entry or presence in
23:04
the United States, violates immigration laws, specifically the
23:07
Immigration and Nationality Act, the INA.
23:10
This is handled as a civil matter through
23:12
administrative process like deportation or removal proceedings conducted
23:17
by immigration authorities, e.g. Immigration and Customs
23:22
Enforcement or ICE being undocumented or overstaying a
23:25
visa generally does not result in criminal prosecution
23:27
on its own.
23:29
So, but it's great.
23:31
This is a very interesting way to program
23:37
completely ignorant people who have not had any
23:41
education.
23:41
And by the way, jaywalking, I looked it
23:44
up too, jaywalking is a criminal offense in
23:46
most jurisdictions.
23:48
Oh, interesting.
23:48
That's even better.
23:50
So they have this wrong.
23:53
Now, in California, while I was researching that,
23:56
and I also found the criminal part of
23:58
the illegal immigration is how you entered the
24:01
country.
24:01
That could be a felony or a misdemeanor.
24:03
Yes, that can be a criminal offense.
24:04
But when you're just floating around, you're, yeah,
24:06
they're right about that, but they're not really
24:08
right.
24:09
This is just specious.
24:10
In fact, I have, ooh, specious.
24:12
I have that illegal entry, entering the U
24:16
.S. without inspection or authorization is a misdemeanor
24:19
under 8 U.S.C. 1325, punishable by
24:23
fines or up to six months in prison
24:25
for the first offense.
24:27
Illegal re-entry after deportation is a felony
24:31
with penalties of up to two years in
24:33
prison or more if the individual has a
24:35
criminal history.
24:36
And so while looking this up curiously, and
24:40
I don't think this is generally known, and
24:43
I still like to find out that some
24:46
Vietnamese assemblymen in California, they put a bill
24:49
in play that made it legal, in fact,
24:53
they called it decriminalization because it was a
24:55
criminal act, the decriminalization of jaywalking in California.
25:02
Signed by Newsome.
25:04
I remember this somehow, yeah.
25:05
Signed by Newsome, and it goes to the,
25:08
at least from what I can tell, it
25:10
gets to the point where you can just
25:12
walk against the light into the street.
25:16
Really?
25:17
So what's the point of the light?
25:20
No, screw the light.
25:22
So, I mean, this is unbelievable, but this
25:25
kind of propaganda is like, OK, this is
25:27
what you're going to do now.
25:28
You're going to take these dumb women, and
25:30
I will say many of them are not,
25:32
and I can use this term, not unattractive.
25:36
They weren't the blue haired nose ring women.
25:40
But they are all over socialized and undereducated.
25:42
Well, they're just, they're dummies.
25:47
And obviously you're right.
25:48
There's an agency called up the main group.
25:52
There's probably, I don't know what they had
25:53
to pay for this, but these girls are
25:55
probably getting, they're all young.
25:57
750 bucks.
25:58
They're probably getting.
25:58
750 bucks, I'm getting.
26:00
I think that's probably what it is.
26:02
That's kind of high.
26:03
I think you can get them to do
26:04
it for five.
26:05
But anyway.
26:07
Can we get him to say, can we
26:09
get him to talk about, this is basically
26:10
prostitution, by the way.
26:12
Can we get him to talk about the
26:13
no agenda show for five?
26:16
You know, and not to mention it, it
26:19
might not be a bad idea.
26:20
Why spend on Facebook ads if you can
26:22
get these gals.
26:23
So I run into these other clips, they're
26:25
talking about that.
26:26
You played the clip of the guy from
26:28
CNN who goes crazy.
26:30
He's great, by the way.
26:31
Yeah.
26:31
And so I got these two clips that
26:33
I have to play.
26:34
This is the legal immigrant rant from a
26:36
woman, legal immigrant rant.
26:39
I am a legal immigrant and I want
26:42
to tell you something.
26:44
I'm disgusted by what people from other countries
26:49
like Mexico are doing right now in my
26:53
new country.
26:54
I came from Mexico.
26:56
I came legally.
26:58
I have worked all my life here to
27:01
get what I have.
27:02
I have never asked for a penny to
27:04
the government.
27:05
I didn't come here to get something from
27:07
the government.
27:08
I came for an opportunity and I got
27:10
it.
27:11
And I have the American dream.
27:14
What about all of those people protesting in
27:17
California and New York?
27:19
What are they doing?
27:21
They are burning the city.
27:24
If you don't like to be deported and
27:28
you want to stay here, you have to
27:30
have your best behavior.
27:33
Not the worst behavior.
27:34
You think that we want you here?
27:36
With that behavior of burning cars, burning the
27:40
entire city?
27:41
Why?
27:43
Why do we talk to the authorities on
27:47
your behalf?
27:48
There is no meaning on that.
27:51
And for the people that are defending these
27:54
violent attackers, people that don't deserve to be
27:57
here, shame on you.
27:59
Shame on you because you're supposed to talk
28:02
and to tell them the truth.
28:05
You're not supposed to line up with them.
28:07
You're supposed to tell them, go to your
28:09
country.
28:10
You are waving the flag of another country
28:14
that you love?
28:16
Go.
28:17
You don't need to be here.
28:18
You don't deserve to be here.
28:20
You don't deserve another opportunity in this country
28:23
because apparently you don't love this country like
28:26
I do.
28:27
So go away.
28:29
Oh man, where's the national anthem playing on
28:33
that?
28:33
I know, she's too much.
28:35
I'm going to sue her.
28:35
Now we have, this is my last clip
28:37
before I tell you my theory.
28:39
Okay, I'm excited.
28:41
No, that's not that great.
28:42
But this is the Mexican flag dude.
28:44
Now this guy, this guy is a...
28:46
This dude, this dude is good.
28:48
Did you see him?
28:49
What, the guy with the chest?
28:51
Yeah, oh yeah, sure.
28:52
The guy looks, if he's not MS, he
28:55
doesn't have enough testes.
28:56
He is the iconic image of this peaceful
28:59
protest.
28:59
That's the way I see it.
29:01
Yeah, and he is not happy about what
29:03
he's seeing.
29:04
So let me get this straight, just so
29:07
I could clarify it.
29:08
You don't want to go back to Mexico.
29:11
You're protesting to stay away from Mexico, but
29:15
you're waving the Mexican flag and you're waving
29:18
it with pride.
29:19
You're waving it in the United States, the
29:23
country you're trying to stay in, the country
29:25
you don't want to leave, but yet you're
29:27
waving the Mexican flag with pride.
29:30
Okay, that seems normal to you.
29:33
That seems logical.
29:34
That's not stupid at all.
29:37
None of that's stupid.
29:39
All right, you guys, you guys are an
29:41
embarrassment to the Mexican culture and to the
29:43
United States culture.
29:45
You guys are an embarrassment to everybody around
29:47
you and you should be ashamed of yourself.
29:51
Do better.
29:52
Was that the Mexican flag, dude?
29:55
Yeah.
29:56
Huh?
29:57
So that, no, that was the guy bitching
29:59
about the Mexican flag.
30:00
So here's what's going on.
30:02
I see it over and over again.
30:05
There's no way that Trump somehow, dirty tricking
30:09
it, is not behind the Mexican flags.
30:12
Those too many Mexican flags, they're all brand
30:15
new.
30:16
They're all over the place.
30:17
Nobody's been picked up or interviewed holding one
30:20
of them.
30:20
There's a few jokers wearing them as scarves,
30:23
but for the most part, the Mexican flag
30:27
has been planted just for this purpose.
30:30
That Mexican flag is showing up way too
30:33
much in all these protests and it is
30:35
a scam and I think it's a beauty.
30:39
Too many Mexican flags dot com, everybody.
30:41
Too many Mexican flags.
30:43
This is bullcrap.
30:45
There is no way.
30:47
I think you're right.
30:48
They're all brand new flags, dude.
30:50
Something came along.
30:51
And the joke is they're all made in
30:53
China.
30:53
That's the best part.
30:54
Well, that is funny and it is probably
30:56
true.
30:57
But the guy with the motorcycle and he's
30:59
driving around with the Mexican flag and he's
31:01
going around in a circle and the guy
31:03
on top of the car waving the Mexican
31:04
flag and they got that shot all over
31:07
the place and a lot of them posed
31:09
with that guy on the car with the
31:11
Mexican flag surrounded by Mexican flags.
31:14
Give me a break, people.
31:16
Yeah, I think you're spot on.
31:17
I think you're spot on about that.
31:20
And they're brand new.
31:21
It's not like, hey, mom, I'm going to
31:22
take the flag with me today.
31:23
It's not like that.
31:25
Yeah, yeah, well, brilliant.
31:28
It is.
31:29
I thought it was genius.
31:31
And the M5M and everybody, they don't know
31:33
what they're flat footed.
31:35
They're so stupid.
31:37
Well, they have a job to do.
31:38
You know, they have a job.
31:39
So I just have a couple of minutes
31:42
here.
31:42
This is meant to be interrupted again of
31:46
just people out on the streets of Los
31:48
Angeles.
31:49
That's a good one.
31:50
What?
31:51
I mean, you gave me the permission to
31:53
interrupt.
31:54
I'm going to anyway.
31:56
This is meant to be interrupted.
31:58
But you're telling me in advance you're not
31:59
going to get irked at me.
32:00
No, it's very important.
32:02
This clip is made for you to interrupt.
32:05
I want to make sure that you weren't
32:06
like being on your best behavior.
32:08
Or you were going to make sure that
32:10
I was going to actually listen.
32:11
Yeah, yeah, there you go.
32:12
People with big, heavy hammers pounding the concrete
32:15
and pounding curbs, pounding and breaking up and
32:18
handing these big chunks of concrete to people.
32:22
And they were taking that concrete, going up
32:24
on bridges and dropping it into the roof
32:26
of a car.
32:27
They were throwing it at our police.
32:28
They were throwing it at our soldiers that
32:30
are there.
32:31
I could tell you there were certain areas
32:33
of that.
32:33
I forgot to tell you there's some Trump
32:35
stuff in here, too.
32:36
Los Angeles, as you could have called it
32:38
an insurrection.
32:39
It was terrible.
32:40
But these are paid insurrectionists.
32:43
These are paid troublemakers.
32:45
They get money.
32:45
This weekend was marked with absolute and total
32:48
violence, brutal repression and attacks, coordinated attacks against
32:52
our community.
32:53
For us as indigenous people to these lands,
32:55
to this continent, this is nothing new.
32:57
The military going after us is nothing new.
33:00
So this is part of the narrative that's
33:02
out there.
33:03
Hey, man, we own this place.
33:05
We were here before you.
33:06
There was no war about it.
33:08
It's ours.
33:08
Advocate for violence.
33:09
But by the way, yes, there was not
33:12
only a war about it, but we also
33:14
paid Mexico for a bunch of the property
33:17
that we took.
33:18
So there was a war and reparations.
33:21
I mean, we own this.
33:22
This is not some bull.
33:24
This is bull crap.
33:25
This may actually be also a sign of
33:28
course, it is brutal violence against our people
33:31
and kidnapping mothers and fathers from children is
33:34
violent when they do things like that.
33:36
We have every right, every historic right to
33:40
defend our communities by any ways that we
33:42
can, and we're going to continue to do
33:43
so.
33:43
Historic right, John.
33:44
They have a historic right to defend our
33:46
communities.
33:47
We own this place.
33:48
And by the way, after years of we
33:53
thank the indigenous original owners of this place
33:56
in California for letting us be here and
33:58
letting us have this meeting.
34:00
Yeah.
34:00
No wonder people start to think this way.
34:02
Remember that California was part of Mexico.
34:06
All of the Southwest is Mexico.
34:08
So the roots are really deep in that
34:10
region.
34:11
And what they're saying is no, not in
34:13
our community.
34:14
We don't agree with the term illegal.
34:16
We're undocumented.
34:17
We've been here for thousands of years before
34:20
you guys showed up.
34:21
How old is that guy?
34:24
I don't know.
34:25
He's in his 40s, I think.
34:28
He's a thousand years old.
34:31
Everything.
34:31
We're anti-capitalist.
34:34
We think socialism does work, real socialism.
34:37
Is there a country we can look to
34:39
to kind of model the socialism idea?
34:43
The only model would be Soviet Union the
34:46
first four years.
34:49
You're in the wrong country, bro.
34:52
Come on.
34:53
I know where you got this clip, but
34:55
I saw this clip.
34:56
No, I can tell you where it came
34:58
from.
34:58
It's Jesse Watters without Jesse Watters.
35:00
Oh, Jesse Watters played.
35:02
He's got some of the better producers on
35:04
Fox.
35:06
He may have the best show on Fox,
35:08
including Gutfeld.
35:09
But what happens is, you know, I hear
35:11
the lunch ladies here.
35:13
You know, they're very worried.
35:14
Oh, you know, the protests, the riots is
35:18
going to be here on Saturday.
35:19
No kings.
35:20
There's 50 Democrats in Fredericksburg.
35:23
I'm sure they're going to be out there
35:25
protesting.
35:25
No kings, you know, whatever.
35:27
But the way it plays on television, which
35:30
is what everyone just gets sucked into.
35:33
And, you know, just looking at the quad,
35:34
except for the 787 crash, which we'll talk
35:37
about later.
35:38
Oh, you didn't hear the 787 crash?
35:42
Are you being facetious?
35:44
I don't know this.
35:46
Oh, yeah.
35:47
747 coming from India to Gatwick crashed on
35:53
takeoff.
35:54
I think there's one survivor.
35:56
But the 747.
35:57
No, 787.
35:59
OK, well, you said 747.
36:01
No, I said 787.
36:02
OK, well, 787, which is a nice plane,
36:05
has never had an incident like this.
36:11
Crashing Gatwick?
36:12
No, no, it was it was leaving India.
36:15
And and so what?
36:17
And of course, there's tons of video of
36:19
it.
36:19
So it takes off and then it just
36:21
kind of floats down and crashes and burns
36:24
with 50 tons of jet fuel on it
36:26
and into a hospital building, which I'm surprised
36:28
the hospital building didn't collapse unto itself.
36:31
Sorry, maybe a bit too early, but I
36:33
had to say it.
36:35
And, you know, everyone's like.
36:37
Too soon?
36:37
Yeah, everyone's like, he didn't have his flaps,
36:41
he had his flaps up, his wheels were
36:42
down.
36:43
So first of all, nobody knows nothing right
36:46
now.
36:46
But the lone survivor supposedly said there was
36:50
a loud bang upon takeoff, which could mean
36:52
a compressor stall.
36:54
The ram air turbine appears to have come
36:57
out.
36:58
That's a little a little kind of fan
37:01
that drops down beneath the fuselage to generate
37:06
electricity in the case of an electrical outage.
37:08
So that could be responsible for a whole
37:11
bunch of things.
37:13
My guys on the inside, they say they
37:17
think it might be one of those Windows
37:19
95 crashed on takeoff and it blew everything
37:22
out and they couldn't restore it, which is
37:24
that's kind of frightening because all this stuff
37:27
is fly by wire.
37:28
It's all computerized.
37:30
But I doubt this is pilot error.
37:33
Yeah, it's it was 42 degrees centigrade.
37:36
So the possibility exists.
37:38
We've got a topic, by the way.
37:40
Yeah.
37:40
But thanks to me, you said I could
37:42
interrupt.
37:43
Yeah.
37:43
But you so you think it might you
37:45
think it might be a software failure?
37:48
Yes.
37:49
Yeah.
37:50
Now, who makes this jet?
37:52
Let me think about the company name.
37:54
Yeah, this is this is not good for
37:59
Boeing.
38:01
It's not good for those 290 people, their
38:03
families either, to be honest about it.
38:05
And it's a bad day for aviation.
38:07
Day wrecker.
38:08
Day wrecker.
38:09
Well, Boeing has got to be fixed.
38:12
Yeah.
38:12
But, you know, everybody's on TV.
38:14
Well, you know, I didn't I saw only
38:16
the slats, the flaps weren't out.
38:18
The gear wasn't up, which all true.
38:21
But what is the cause?
38:22
Is it because I love this one?
38:25
Well, the pilot clearly he pulled the flaps
38:27
up instead of the gear.
38:29
Oh, please.
38:30
You know, these are the two knobs in
38:35
every aircraft that have remained the same.
38:37
As far as I know, I have not
38:39
flown a 787 in the cockpit.
38:41
But the flaps is an is a lever
38:43
that you go from down to up.
38:46
And the lever is a flat piece of
38:49
plastic that resembles a flap.
38:51
And the gear is a lever that has
38:54
a rubber wheel on it.
38:55
So when you grab it, you're like, that's
38:57
a wheel.
38:59
So that seems highly unlikely that that happened.
39:03
But, you know, you know, everyone's, oh, I
39:06
got something to say.
39:06
I'm an expert in aviation.
39:08
I have my private pilot's license.
39:10
But I'm glad it happened during the show
39:12
so we don't have to deal with it.
39:13
So anyway, let's go back because we have
39:15
this big protest coming up on Saturday.
39:17
No kings, no kings.
39:23
And, you know, this is a lame protest,
39:26
by the way.
39:27
I should mention this up front.
39:30
No king.
39:30
Who cares?
39:31
What is no kings?
39:32
Well, it was already scheduled.
39:35
Now he's Hitler.
39:36
Now he's king.
39:37
Is he Hitler, which is a dictator who
39:40
is elected dictator?
39:41
Or is he a king, which is a
39:43
monarch?
39:44
Make up your minds.
39:46
Well, it's also, you know, there's a lot
39:49
of groups who are grabbing onto this, which
39:52
is going to screw it up because Winston
39:55
-Salem, for instance, they're calling it Queen's Day
40:00
rising, no kings.
40:02
And they're adding trans to the whole issue.
40:04
So that'll...
40:05
What?
40:05
Yeah, yeah.
40:06
Oh, yeah.
40:06
That's going to screw everything up.
40:08
Yeah.
40:09
They're adding, oh, this is, well, maybe that's
40:11
also an op to do that.
40:15
That would be pretty smart.
40:16
Oh, man.
40:16
Everything's an op with you.
40:17
And you're not wrong.
40:19
Today's op day because of this flag thing.
40:21
When I kept seeing it, I said...
40:23
Today is, it's op day, everybody.
40:24
And then we had the topper to make
40:26
me really think in terms of op, was
40:28
listening to these dumb chicks going on and
40:31
on about civil versus jaywalking.
40:34
Yeah, jaywalking.
40:34
Yeah, yeah.
40:36
Let me see.
40:39
We have, oh, okay.
40:42
Mayor Brandon Johnson of Chicago.
40:45
This is the moment when Democrat politicians like
40:48
Gavin Newsom, everybody's seen him.
40:50
Arrest me then.
40:51
Come on, Tom Homan, arrest me.
40:53
Um, so everyone's got big cojones all of
40:56
a sudden.
40:57
Mayor Brandon Johnson says it's cruel and unconstitutional.
41:01
Right now in our country, there's no check
41:03
and balance.
41:04
It doesn't exist right now.
41:07
Violent class.
41:08
I think it's checks and balances, Mr. Mayor.
41:11
But all right.
41:12
There's no check and balance.
41:14
Your checkbook, what is going on?
41:17
Right now in our country, there's no check
41:20
and balance.
41:21
It doesn't exist right now.
41:24
Violent clashes between heavily armed immigration and customs
41:28
enforcement agents and Los Angeles protesters creating alarm
41:32
in Chicago with word of an impending enforcement
41:35
action.
41:36
The federal agents have been informed that they
41:39
have 48 hours to stand by and be
41:42
ready to deploy.
41:43
The mayor's chief of staff planning for what
41:45
many fear will be a chaotic and dangerous
41:48
apprehension of undocumented Chicago residents.
41:51
There will be tactical teams.
41:53
There will be many tanks.
41:54
There will be other tools that they use
41:58
in which they plan to do raids, as
42:03
we saw in Los Angeles.
42:05
Protests against the ICE raid, similar to what
42:08
we witnessed locally last night, another concern for
42:11
the mayor and Chicago police seeking to preserve
42:14
public safety and people's rights to assemble and
42:18
protest.
42:19
Which is the funny thing, because I don't
42:21
think anyone has a problem with, if you
42:23
want to protest, you want to carry your
42:25
flags around, that's fine.
42:27
But that's not what it is.
42:28
That's not what this is.
42:31
And there's no King's Day.
42:34
Remember we talked about the 50-51 organization?
42:38
50, so 5-0-5-0-1.
42:41
So from another podcast, because you can't get
42:43
anything from television.
42:44
This is true.
42:47
Right side up with Nivea Souza, and she
42:50
delves into, so it's a podcast, so bear
42:53
with me.
42:54
She'll delve into what 50-51 is.
42:56
50-51 movement.
42:57
It is a political campaign that launched earlier
42:59
this year in response to the new administration
43:02
and their policies.
43:03
It all started on Reddit.
43:05
From one Reddit user, all of this came
43:07
to be.
43:07
The movement has rapidly gained momentum.
43:09
They are now protesting across the nation, causing
43:12
a whole stir and a lot of conspiracies.
43:14
The 50-51's core objectives are what you
43:17
would probably expect, an investigation into Elon Musk
43:20
when he was still with the administration, all
43:22
of Trump's appointees, impeaching Donald Trump, reinstatement of
43:25
DEI initiatives, protections of LGBTQ plus rights and
43:28
minority groups, reinstatement of aid to Ukraine, lifting
43:31
tariffs, et cetera, et cetera.
43:32
The movement officially launched in early February of
43:34
this year in response to the inauguration.
43:36
They had 80 different protests in all 50
43:39
states.
43:39
They continued to protest in February.
43:41
They had Not My President's Day.
43:43
Thousands of people nationwide protested the administration's policies.
43:46
In March, they did March 4th for democracy.
43:49
On April 5th, they had one of the
43:50
biggest coordinated protests across the country, the biggest
43:53
of this year.
43:54
They're hands-off protests.
43:56
They were in collaboration with 150 different organizations,
43:59
including ACLU and the Women's March.
44:01
There was 1,400 different protests that broke
44:04
out across all 50 states.
44:05
An estimate of 3 to 5 million people
44:07
participated in these protests.
44:09
According to the protesters, they involved a coalition
44:12
of over 169 progressive labor union, pro-democracy,
44:15
civil rights, LGBTQ plus, and women's rights groups.
44:19
This was a huge deal.
44:20
And I live somewhere where you don't see
44:22
protesters.
44:22
I live really rural.
44:23
I did not know this was even going
44:25
on because there was such little media coverage.
44:27
Tell me what democracy looks like.
44:30
This is what democracy looks like.
44:33
Tell me what democracy looks like.
44:36
This is what democracy looks like.
44:38
I would just like to talk about the
44:39
fact that this lady at the megaphone, leading
44:41
this, chanting about democracy, she's decked out in
44:44
everything pro-Palestinian.
44:48
The irony.
44:50
Yeah, exactly.
44:52
So what the M5M does, though, is they
44:57
love this.
44:58
All they want is video of burning cars,
45:02
burning Trump effigies.
45:04
That's all they want.
45:05
And Rachel Maddow, I know I do need
45:08
an intervention.
45:09
I apologize.
45:11
She could not promote for her whole show.
45:14
I just got a couple of clips.
45:16
She kept saying, no kings, June 14th, everywhere.
45:19
No kings, June 14th.
45:21
Everybody, come on out.
45:22
June 14th, no kings everywhere.
45:24
When Trump issued his order to federalize the
45:26
National Guard over the objections of California's government
45:30
this weekend, that order was not specific to
45:34
Los Angeles.
45:34
It was not specific to California.
45:36
That order that he issued.
45:37
He's coming for you.
45:39
Is something that he could use to send
45:40
National Guard troops anywhere, or even active duty
45:43
forces.
45:43
Now he's sending 700 Marines, supposedly, from the
45:47
Marine Corps base at 29 Palms.
45:49
They're going to come and kill you.
45:52
And that is a portrait of weakness.
45:54
Weakness.
45:57
That's the best.
45:58
They keep going on with this.
46:00
He's weak.
46:01
Insecure is another one, which is like all
46:04
the people that you've ever seen.
46:06
I don't see him as insecure.
46:09
Is it time for the Trump rotation again?
46:12
Do we need to?
46:13
I think that some things could be added
46:15
to it.
46:16
I think we need to listen to the
46:17
Trump.
46:17
Well, maybe you're right.
46:18
Maybe bring the new stuff in because insecure
46:21
wasn't on the rotation.
46:22
Let's see what's in the Trump rotation from
46:25
how many years ago now?
46:26
Is it seven years ago?
46:28
I have my list.
46:29
You might want to see if there's anything
46:30
I left out.
46:31
This is the Trump rotation.
46:33
There's two categories.
46:34
There's the regular and then there's the criminal.
46:35
But here we go.
46:36
Ready?
46:37
Yeah.
46:37
Liar.
46:38
Incompetent.
46:39
Unhinged.
46:40
Illegitimate president.
46:41
White supremacist.
46:42
Racist.
46:43
Bully.
46:44
Immature.
46:44
Russian agent.
46:46
Narcissist.
46:47
Mean.
46:48
Long ties.
46:49
Insane.
46:50
Tweets too much.
46:51
Small hands.
46:52
Small penis.
46:53
Big red button.
46:54
Criminal.
46:57
Mean.
46:57
Racist.
46:58
Immature.
46:59
Thin skin.
47:00
Runs the mob.
47:01
Has no money.
47:03
Unstable.
47:04
Fatter than 239 pounds.
47:06
Bankrupt.
47:07
25th amendment should be instituted.
47:10
He hates women.
47:11
Misogynist.
47:12
Holds grudges forever.
47:14
Placed golf a lot.
47:15
Obstruction of justice.
47:17
Money laundering.
47:18
And clown.
47:20
John, no wonder we're making America white again.
47:26
Yeah, I think it needs to be updated.
47:28
You're right.
47:29
I didn't even hear.
47:30
Yeah, well, let's go back to Rachel Maddow
47:33
for a moment.
47:34
All right, that is what you get when
47:35
you have a supposed leader, a supposed strong
47:38
man, who can't figure out how to get
47:42
the support of his people.
47:44
And he knows it.
47:45
What?
47:45
He can't get the support of his people
47:47
and he knows it.
47:48
That is what you get when you have
47:50
a weak president, an unpopular president, who sees
47:53
the people are against him, who can't defend
47:55
his actions, who is losing support over time
47:58
and not gaining it, even on the issues
48:00
where he thinks he's supposed to be strongest.
48:03
This is a president who has no other
48:05
ideas.
48:07
And no skills to get him out of
48:09
this political pickle that he is in.
48:11
And who has therefore- Political pickle.
48:13
Right to the end.
48:15
And has decided that if the people are
48:17
against him, well, then he will bludgeon them.
48:18
He will literally bludgeon them into not protesting
48:22
anymore.
48:24
Because the protests against him are working.
48:27
Oh.
48:28
And growing.
48:30
And they're right.
48:31
It's working.
48:32
Now, let's get into the promotional part here.
48:34
And you ain't seen nothing yet because-
48:35
Yeah, it's coming.
48:36
Among other things, what is this?
48:37
This is no King's Week.
48:39
It's no King's Week.
48:40
No, it's a week.
48:41
It's a week all of a sudden.
48:42
When did it become a week?
48:44
I don't know.
48:44
I didn't get the memo, but it's no
48:46
King's Week.
48:47
That's this week.
48:48
Remember, this upcoming weekend, Saturday, June 14th, is
48:51
likely to be the largest set of protests
48:55
yet against Trump and the Trump administration.
48:57
And Trump knows it's coming.
49:00
You remember that really giant day of protests
49:02
against Trump back on April 5th?
49:04
Remember that huge day of protests?
49:05
No.
49:06
Hands-off protests?
49:07
No.
49:07
There were over 1,000 protests scheduled that
49:09
day all over the country against Trump.
49:11
Well, this weekend, this Saturday, June 14th, there
49:14
are already more than 1,800 protests scheduled
49:18
against Trump all around the country.
49:21
It's going to be like twice the size
49:23
of that massive day of protests that we
49:24
saw on April 5th.
49:26
Okay, so what?
49:27
Trump is going to do his military parade
49:29
for himself in Washington that day.
49:31
Yeah, that's the talking point.
49:33
Interestingly, and I think importantly, there is not
49:35
a no King's Day protest in Washington, D
49:39
.C. this Saturday because of Trump's military parade.
49:41
They're going to do like a flagship national
49:43
protest in Philadelphia.
49:45
But there are more than 1,800 other
49:48
protests against Trump planned all over the country.
49:51
It looks like there are going to be
49:52
more and larger protests against Trump this weekend,
49:54
this Saturday, than we have yet seen on
49:57
any other day.
49:58
And he knows it.
50:00
He cannot handle the amount of protests against
50:03
him now.
50:04
And it is about to increase exponentially.
50:07
She really believes that this is like, protest
50:10
is good.
50:11
Go ahead and protest.
50:12
Do you think anyone cares?
50:13
Does she think that the ICE protests in
50:15
LA are about him?
50:17
They're about ICE.
50:18
No, but this is what I'm saying.
50:20
This is the disconnect.
50:22
She's lost her mind, this poor woman.
50:25
If you look at the no King's Day
50:26
posters, ICE is like eighth on the list.
50:29
You know, it's more about tariffs and inflation
50:35
and all the old talking points.
50:37
They didn't have time to print up new
50:39
posters.
50:39
Final clip.
50:40
The no King's Day of defiance?
50:42
No King's Day of defiance.
50:44
It's expanded in scope.
50:45
Wait, now it's grammatically incorrect.
50:50
No King's Day of defiance?
50:53
That's a non sequitur, at least.
50:56
The no King's Day of defiance?
50:59
They said this today, quote.
51:01
I always want to remind you that she
51:03
makes millions of dollars doing this.
51:06
She makes 25 million.
51:08
Yes, I always want to remind you because
51:10
that kind of gets you riled up when
51:11
you hear that.
51:12
25 million dollars.
51:13
The no King's Day of defiance?
51:17
They said this today, quote.
51:18
Well, for 25 million bucks, you'd say anything.
51:21
Trump sucks.
51:22
She obviously has orders.
51:25
Give me 25 million dollars.
51:27
Trump sucks.
51:28
He's Hitler.
51:29
He's no good.
51:30
John, what do you think about Trump for
51:31
25 million dollars?
51:32
What do you think?
51:32
Sucks.
51:33
They said this today, quote.
51:35
The no King's mobilizations on June 14th were
51:37
already planned as a peaceful stand against authoritarian
51:40
overreach and the gross abuse of power.
51:42
This administration has shown now this military escalation,
51:46
meaning what's happening in Los Angeles, only confirms
51:49
what we have known.
51:50
This government wants to rule by force, not
51:53
serve the people from major cities to small
51:55
towns.
51:55
We will rise together and say we reject
51:58
political violence.
51:59
We reject fear as governance.
52:01
We reject the myth that only some deserve
52:04
freedom.
52:04
On Saturday, June 14th, more than 1800 rallies
52:08
will take place across the country.
52:09
Peaceful, organized and united.
52:12
The no King's movement has posted a map
52:14
online showing where those 1800 plus rallies will
52:18
be held.
52:19
I should tell you, and I think this
52:20
is important.
52:21
Here we go.
52:21
Of those 1800, more than 100 of those
52:24
have been added to the map since Trump
52:27
announced that he was sending the National Guard
52:29
into L.A. Oh, my.
52:30
If he was hoping to get people to
52:32
not protest, it's backfiring.
52:34
Backfiring.
52:35
Organizers are going to hold a series of
52:36
online trainings this week.
52:37
Hey, no agenda producers.
52:41
We need you to jump on these zoom
52:43
calls for some training.
52:45
Organizers are going to hold a series of
52:46
online trainings this week ahead of the big
52:48
day tomorrow.
52:49
It's a know your rights training that they're
52:51
doing nationwide by zoom so people can better
52:53
understand how to interact with law enforcement.
52:56
Or how about this?
52:58
Don't spit on them.
52:59
Don't throw things at them.
53:01
Don't get in their face.
53:02
And you should be OK.
53:03
That's my advice.
53:04
Provocateurs during the demonstrations.
53:05
Oh, how you deal with provocateurs.
53:08
Oh, I see.
53:09
And how to know there's always going to
53:10
be those law enforcement or provocateurs during the
53:14
demonstrations.
53:16
Then two days later on Thursday, another big
53:18
nationwide zoom call.
53:19
They're calling it a pre mobilization mass call.
53:22
That's for anybody who's planning to participate.
53:24
Potentially tens of thousands of people are going
53:26
to be on that call.
53:27
It's basically just a strategy ahead of the
53:29
big day Saturday.
53:30
Yeah, well, someone should be on it.
53:32
All we have to get on the ball
53:33
here.
53:33
It's not going to be easy.
53:35
You know, they have this.
53:36
One of the places they have these protests
53:38
is in Port Angeles, Washington.
53:39
Of course.
53:40
And is Mimi going?
53:41
Is Mimi going to bring her Mexican flag?
53:43
Well, she like she goes by.
53:45
She never takes enough photos for my taste.
53:47
But she goes by.
53:48
It's the same.
53:49
She says it's the same six people.
53:52
And they're always out in front of the
53:54
same in front of the library or the
53:56
city hall.
53:56
I can't remember where specifically.
53:58
They're always holding signs.
54:00
Handmade signs.
54:01
Trump signs.
54:02
And they're all old.
54:04
It's not like any kids or, you know,
54:06
any millennials or anything.
54:08
It's just a bunch of old farts, which
54:10
I've seen.
54:11
They also have the.
54:13
This will show up over here in El
54:15
Cerrito near me and El Cerrito Plaza.
54:18
And I've joined in once in a while
54:19
to go over there so I can chat
54:21
with people.
54:22
Of course.
54:23
And and can get a couple of cool
54:25
signs.
54:27
Hey, man, can I have your sign for
54:29
my collection?
54:30
I need any more good signs, but just
54:31
a good ones.
54:32
Can I hold your sign, please?
54:34
And well, I've done different things to get
54:37
to get signs.
54:37
I've actually bought signs.
54:39
And most people give up their signs for
54:41
some cash.
54:44
And and there's also sign makers is usually
54:47
a sign maker that's around there.
54:49
And he's making custom signs.
54:51
And he's like, you know, has reasonably good
54:53
handwriting.
54:54
He prints the signs up and they staples
54:56
them to a stick.
54:57
Was this in the 2000s that you did
55:00
this?
55:01
I've done this a couple of times.
55:03
If I if I have time and I
55:04
because it's over by the post office where
55:06
I go to pick up the mail.
55:07
And if there's a little protest going on,
55:09
it's usually about.
55:10
You mingle.
55:11
You mingle.
55:12
20 or 30 people.
55:13
Yeah, I'll pull a car over a park
55:15
and then I'll come and mingle.
55:17
Hey, hey, girls, which is somebody to be
55:21
somebody with a bullhorn and a sheet of
55:23
paper of stuff that they're supposed to yell
55:24
into the bullhorn and hold your paper for
55:27
a sec.
55:29
Yeah, I do that.
55:30
It's good research.
55:32
No, but it's the same thing.
55:35
They're all in their 50s and 60s.
55:37
So you belong.
55:38
You just you just.
55:39
Yeah, I fit right in.
55:40
I'm the old guy.
55:41
Blend in.
55:42
Well, look right in.
55:43
Look at that.
55:44
Look at that gray hair.
55:46
Yeah, I got, you know, the hair is
55:47
kind of disheveled and I wear it.
55:49
I'm wearing I'm wearing flannel shorts a lot
55:52
because we're damn cold.
55:53
Or do you have your your your your
55:55
sandals on or what are you wearing for
55:57
sure?
55:57
I don't wear it now.
55:58
I wear Crocs.
56:00
Crocs.
56:00
Thank you.
56:01
I don't wear Crocs.
56:02
I'm just making it clear.
56:03
I don't wear Crocs.
56:04
I wear Skechers.
56:05
Yeah, they're Crocs on steroids.
56:08
They're like Crocs.
56:10
They're just Skechers from the same factory.
56:13
Anyway, these protests are a joke.
56:17
The this I thought was the this is
56:20
such a good clip of Nancy Pelosi.
56:23
I mean, what do we know about the
56:26
National Guard on January 6th?
56:30
We know that Trump sent a memo to
56:33
Pelosi, who's in charge of the National Guard,
56:35
because she's responsible and she's in charge of
56:38
the sergeant at arms of the Congress.
56:40
And so she tells him what to do.
56:42
He sent a memo to Nancy saying, I
56:44
think it's, you know, there could be some
56:46
protests that we should probably protect the Capitol.
56:49
We need we should probably put 10,000
56:51
National Guard troops.
56:52
This was discussed by Nancy.
56:55
Oops, hold on, hold on, hold on, hold
56:57
on, hold on.
56:59
Come back.
56:59
This was discussed by Nancy.
57:01
This was discussed by Nancy's daughter in the
57:03
movie that she made where Nancy said, yeah,
57:05
I could have probably stopped it.
57:06
Yep.
57:07
But Nancy was given a memo.
57:09
She says, screw this.
57:10
We're not going to do that.
57:11
And then they destroy that memo was that
57:14
Nancy's was Nancy's property at the time.
57:17
She was destroyed during the hearings.
57:19
And nobody wants to talk about it, even
57:20
though she already, you know, it's already on
57:22
tape that she said what she told her
57:24
daughter.
57:25
Yes.
57:25
So Trump was trying to get the National
57:27
Guard to out to just protect the Capitol
57:31
and he was rebuked and then blamed.
57:33
Well, it's interesting because Nancy Pelosi remembers it
57:37
differently.
57:38
Former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi is noting the
57:40
disconnect between how the president is behaving now
57:44
and how he behaved in January on January
57:46
6th.
57:48
On January 6th, with violence against the Constitution,
57:53
against the Congress and against the United States
57:56
Capitol, we begged the president of the United
57:58
States to send in the National Guard.
58:03
He would not do it.
58:05
Contra constitutional way.
58:07
He has sent the National Guard into California.
58:12
Something is very wrong with this picture.
58:15
Yeah.
58:17
Yes.
58:19
Yes.
58:19
Something is very wrong with this picture.
58:21
Nancy.
58:22
Isn't that amazing?
58:24
It doesn't surprise me in the well, no,
58:26
it's just liars.
58:28
Yeah, it doesn't surprise us at all.
58:32
I'm ready to move on.
58:33
If you are, I would like to probably
58:36
let's just see that any scrounge clips left
58:39
scrounge, man.
58:40
It's like this is an hour of this
58:41
nonsense.
58:42
Oh, you're right.
58:43
We're talking more about it than the actual
58:45
protest will last.
58:46
It's like I will say I watched the
58:49
Apple WWDC keynote, which is a which is
58:54
not a keynote.
58:54
It's a video.
58:56
And can I summarize it for you as
58:59
I usually do?
59:01
Yes, you can summarize for me as you
59:03
usually do.
59:04
It's gorgeous.
59:05
Liquid Glass is gorgeous.
59:08
It's just gorgeous.
59:10
All your apps are gorgeous.
59:12
The video gets gorgeous.
59:14
It's just gorgeous.
59:16
They say gorgeous.
59:18
Oh, they all say gorgeous, particularly Tim.
59:21
It's gorgeous.
59:23
It's just so Liquid Glass is gorgeous.
59:27
There you go.
59:28
That's that is your.
59:29
Did you tell me to watch Ted Lasso
59:34
when it first came out?
59:36
Maybe four years ago.
59:38
I mentioned that it was an interesting show.
59:40
Kind of at least the first season.
59:42
Yeah.
59:43
No, because because it's on Apple TV and
59:45
we and someone someone else recommended it and
59:47
we started watching it.
59:48
We love it.
59:49
I almost I almost didn't want to make
59:50
fun of Apple today, but I can't help
59:52
myself because Ted Lasso is gorgeous.
59:56
Everything with Apple is gorgeous.
59:57
I thought the show jumped a shark right
59:58
at the end of the first season.
59:59
I never watched it since.
1:00:01
Oh, no, we're into second season.
1:00:02
It's still good.
1:00:04
I mean, it's unrealistic.
1:00:05
It doesn't show at all the the grooming
1:00:09
racist country of the United Kingdom.
1:00:13
It doesn't portray that to any accuracy.
1:00:16
And the and the only brown people are
1:00:18
the ones playing football.
1:00:21
Football.
1:00:21
Football.
1:00:22
Yeah.
1:00:23
Anyway, so that was gorgeous.
1:00:25
You watch the shows about sports.
1:00:28
Tina's watching a show about sports.
1:00:32
That's you talk about crazy.
1:00:34
This is great.
1:00:34
Although have you started watching The Recruit?
1:00:36
No, no, no.
1:00:38
I can't take any more violence.
1:00:41
I can't take the violence.
1:00:42
It's not that violent.
1:00:42
I don't like the violence.
1:00:44
It's too much.
1:00:44
I'm tired of violence.
1:00:45
Just for anyone out there, it's on Netflix.
1:00:49
And it's about a schmuck that joins the
1:00:51
CIA.
1:00:53
And he gets beat up a lot because
1:00:55
he's an idiot.
1:00:57
And but the thing that's remarkable about the
1:01:00
show is the portrayal of the bureaucracy.
1:01:03
Yeah.
1:01:03
And the backbiting, backstabbing, creepy.
1:01:08
And anyone's worked in a big bureaucracy, whether
1:01:10
and Mimi says, yeah, the corporate same way
1:01:13
because she worked at a couple of big
1:01:14
banks when she was younger.
1:01:15
And I worked at an administrative state operation.
1:01:19
You were a Democrat.
1:01:20
I can't even believe that you converted.
1:01:22
It's amazing.
1:01:23
You got saved.
1:01:25
No common sense.
1:01:28
And so but just to watch the scenes
1:01:32
in the office are the ones that make
1:01:34
that show work.
1:01:35
OK.
1:01:36
The other story that dominated the M5M in
1:01:40
for obvious reasons, again, full of lies, was
1:01:45
the AIC ACIP.
1:01:47
This is the the the board of advisors
1:01:51
that advises on vaccines for the CDC, which
1:01:57
Robert Kennedy Jr. decided to disband and bring
1:02:02
in new guys.
1:02:04
And this caused such a tizzy because you're
1:02:08
dead, because we know that most of the
1:02:10
advertising, certainly on the news programs, but everywhere,
1:02:14
everywhere you look, you know, turn out, turn
1:02:16
on some TV if if you got it
1:02:18
still.
1:02:19
Maybe you can get one of those over
1:02:20
the air antennas or get YouTube TV for
1:02:23
a day and then cancel it.
1:02:25
It's all over the air.
1:02:26
Antennas are cheap.
1:02:27
Yeah, it's cheap.
1:02:29
It's safe and effective, actually.
1:02:31
Yeah.
1:02:32
Here's an intro from NBC that will give
1:02:34
you the rundown.
1:02:35
Then I have a couple of specific clips
1:02:37
from Dr. Selene Gounder.
1:02:40
Back here at home, the future of vaccine
1:02:42
recommendations remains in question following the move by
1:02:45
Health Secretary Robert F.
1:02:46
Kennedy Jr. to retire all the members of
1:02:49
a CDC panel of independent experts advising on
1:02:52
vaccines.
1:02:53
By the way, whenever you say Robert Kennedy
1:02:55
Jr., you have to say Robert Kennedy Jr.,
1:02:57
a known vaccine skeptic.
1:02:59
Here's Ann Thompson.
1:03:01
Fierce blowback tonight to HHS Secretary Robert F.
1:03:04
Kennedy Jr.'s decision to remove all members of
1:03:07
the CDC's Vaccine Advisory Committee from public health
1:03:11
experts.
1:03:12
If this committee stops recommending vaccines, insurance won't
1:03:15
cover it anymore.
1:03:16
People will not get it.
1:03:17
We know that's factually not true.
1:03:21
We know that the recommendations that change that
1:03:24
that insurance will cover it.
1:03:30
We went through this.
1:03:31
What you're pointing out is what we've pointed
1:03:33
out before, that this is a lie.
1:03:35
It's a lie.
1:03:36
Yes.
1:03:36
Correct.
1:03:37
It's a lie.
1:03:38
This insurance won't cover it anymore.
1:03:40
People will not get it.
1:03:41
You will have people will not get it.
1:03:43
You won't have access.
1:03:44
Somehow people will not get it.
1:03:45
Yeah, people won't get it.
1:03:47
What network is this?
1:03:48
And why would you put a blatant liar
1:03:51
on?
1:03:51
Oh, wait a minute.
1:03:52
It's because the networks are bought and paid
1:03:54
for by big pharma.
1:03:55
Yes, it's NBC.
1:03:56
And what he's not what he's saying is
1:03:58
he didn't even say he actually threw out
1:04:01
the talking point without even knowing it.
1:04:04
It's not even a talking point.
1:04:05
It's what's behind the talking point.
1:04:08
What he's saying is not like people won't
1:04:11
be able to afford it.
1:04:13
He didn't even say people won't have access.
1:04:15
He says people won't get it, which is
1:04:17
the fear of the pharma companies.
1:04:20
Oh, they're not going to get the shot
1:04:21
anymore.
1:04:22
That's direct to our bottom line.
1:04:24
That's what he's saying.
1:04:25
From public health experts.
1:04:27
If this committee stops recommending vaccines, insurance won't
1:04:30
cover it anymore.
1:04:31
People will not get it.
1:04:32
It will have a real impact on people's
1:04:34
access to that.
1:04:35
And our stock price.
1:04:37
And the American Academy of Pediatrics.
1:04:40
I think we're likely to see diseases that
1:04:42
we've that many people have never seen before
1:04:44
or even heard of.
1:04:46
Diseases we've never even heard of.
1:04:49
How does that work?
1:04:51
Just don't want to scare you.
1:04:52
But there will be diseases you've never even
1:04:54
heard of.
1:04:55
Somehow vaccines magically exist for it.
1:04:57
But you're going to get that.
1:04:59
Concern from parents.
1:05:00
Don Gibson, father of two in California.
1:05:02
By the way, this is the most.
1:05:04
I'm sorry you're playing this because now you're
1:05:06
getting me mad.
1:05:07
This is a pathetic indictment of the mainstream
1:05:11
media that they would do this.
1:05:14
Isn't that what we do?
1:05:16
Yeah, but this is a pathetic indictment, not
1:05:18
just an indictment.
1:05:19
It's pathetic.
1:05:20
Oh, I'm sorry.
1:05:20
I'll try to be more classy next time.
1:05:22
Concern from parents.
1:05:24
Don Gibson, father of two in California.
1:05:27
I'm really worried that my children won't have
1:05:28
access to vaccines that I did.
1:05:30
Access, access, access.
1:05:33
I don't have access to it.
1:05:34
What's access?
1:05:35
Like I did.
1:05:36
It's like Internet access.
1:05:37
What kind of access?
1:05:38
Mom Harmony Montez in the heart of the
1:05:40
recent West Texas measles outbreak.
1:05:43
I very much trust vaccines.
1:05:45
Kennedy, a longtime.
1:05:46
Best, best drop in ever.
1:05:49
Mom in West Texas got to be a
1:05:51
nut job Republican.
1:05:52
I very much trust vaccines.
1:05:54
Done.
1:05:55
California.
1:05:56
I'm really worried that my children won't have
1:05:58
access to vaccines that I did.
1:05:59
Mom Harmony Montez in the heart of the
1:06:02
recent West Texas measles outbreak.
1:06:04
I very much trust vaccines.
1:06:07
Kennedy, a longtime vaccine skeptic.
1:06:09
In today's Wall Street Journal, writing.
1:06:11
Did you hear it?
1:06:12
Well known vaccine skeptic, right?
1:06:14
But she said long time.
1:06:16
Oh, very much trust vaccines.
1:06:18
Kennedy, a longtime skeptic.
1:06:21
In today's Wall Street Journal, writing a clean
1:06:24
sweep is needed to reestablish public confidence in
1:06:27
vaccine science, claiming the committee has been plagued
1:06:30
with persistent conflicts of interest.
1:06:33
The committee is made up of independent medical
1:06:35
and public health experts who make recommendations to
1:06:39
the CDC about vaccine usage.
1:06:42
Louisiana Senator Bill Cassidy, a doctor, said in
1:06:45
February Kennedy and the Trump White House promised
1:06:48
him this.
1:06:49
It confirmed he will maintain the Centers for
1:06:51
Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization
1:06:55
Practices recommendations without changes.
1:06:58
Today, Cassidy was.
1:07:00
Hold on a second.
1:07:01
Recommendations without changes.
1:07:04
Not that he would keep the entire panel
1:07:06
in place, but the recommendations.
1:07:09
So they kind of fuffle around on that
1:07:12
and make it sound like Kennedy promised not
1:07:14
to change the advisory panel.
1:07:17
But he promised he wouldn't change the recommendations
1:07:19
from the panel.
1:07:20
Didn't say that, hey, it could be a
1:07:23
new panel.
1:07:23
Senator Bill Cassidy, a doctor, said in February
1:07:26
Kennedy and the Trump White House promised him
1:07:29
this.
1:07:30
It confirmed he will maintain the Centers for
1:07:32
Disease Control and Prevention's Advisory Committee on Immunization
1:07:36
Practices recommendations without changes.
1:07:39
You see, he's doing exactly what he said
1:07:42
he would do.
1:07:44
But I might change the panel.
1:07:46
Today, Cassidy was cautious.
1:07:48
I'll have to see.
1:07:48
He'll fire me the names, but I can't
1:07:50
answer that because I haven't seen the name.
1:07:53
Do you see this increasing trust in vaccines?
1:07:56
I don't see how I possibly could.
1:07:59
Trust and the nation's health experts say potentially
1:08:02
at risk.
1:08:03
At risk.
1:08:04
Trust is at risk.
1:08:05
I think that went out the window a
1:08:07
long time ago.
1:08:08
Now we go to CBS.
1:08:09
Dr. Celine Gounder, who I believe still lost
1:08:12
her husband due to a sudden stroke on
1:08:16
a soccer field somewhere.
1:08:19
Yeah, mysteriously, mysteriously.
1:08:22
Now, listen to this.
1:08:23
Can you explain to our audience what the
1:08:25
CDC's Vaccine Advisory Committee does and why these
1:08:28
dismissals are raising alarms?
1:08:29
So our vaccines have to go through multiple
1:08:31
hoops before you get you receive these.
1:08:34
So you got to go hoops, not tests.
1:08:35
We don't do tests.
1:08:36
We just go through hoops and loopholes and
1:08:39
back doors.
1:08:40
Well, we played a clip recently about the
1:08:43
discussion of the getting rid of they got
1:08:48
rid of two vaccine people off one of
1:08:50
these one of these advisory committees and just
1:08:54
pass the COVID thing because they were skeptical
1:08:57
about COVID boosters.
1:08:59
And out they went.
1:09:00
Well, hoops.
1:09:02
So our vaccines have to go through multiple
1:09:04
hoops before you get you receive these.
1:09:06
So first, you have the FDA that approves
1:09:08
them.
1:09:08
They vet for safety and effectiveness.
1:09:10
Then the ACIP, which is this external committee
1:09:13
advising the CDC, will help determine how these
1:09:16
vaccines should be used.
1:09:17
So what age group, what high risk groups?
1:09:19
And this is something that's been happening for
1:09:21
decades now.
1:09:22
It's not partisan.
1:09:23
It's not political.
1:09:24
And frankly, it's a pretty boring scientific process.
1:09:28
Oh, OK.
1:09:29
Well, let's listen to what the issue is,
1:09:31
then, Dr. Celine Gounder.
1:09:32
Kennedy wrote in an op ed that this
1:09:34
is really about restoring the public trust and
1:09:36
rooting out conflicts of interest.
1:09:37
He specifically said that most of the ACIP
1:09:40
members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical companies.
1:09:44
Does he have a point about conflicts of
1:09:46
interest here?
1:09:46
Well, conflicts of interest.
1:09:49
What do you think the doctor will say
1:09:50
about this?
1:09:52
He's going to say no.
1:09:54
It's even better than that.
1:09:55
What he is citing is an Office of
1:09:57
the Inspector General report that found 97 percent
1:10:00
of the conflict of interest forms had errors.
1:10:02
But these were errors of putting the wrong
1:10:04
date.
1:10:04
Imagine on your IRS returns, you might have
1:10:07
the wrong date on something.
1:10:08
That's very different from having a true conflict
1:10:11
of interest.
1:10:12
And these advisory members cannot serve on this
1:10:15
committee if they own stock in a pharmaceutical
1:10:17
company, if they're on a pharmaceutical company associated
1:10:20
advisory board of some kind.
1:10:23
Now, Kennedy, on the other hand, is conflicted.
1:10:25
Anybody who stands to gain or lose from
1:10:29
the outcome of a vaccine decision, and he
1:10:31
has sued multiple vaccine manufacturers, he has stood
1:10:34
to gain or lose from the outcome of
1:10:36
these decisions.
1:10:37
That is, by definition, conflicted.
1:10:39
OK, so I don't want to get into
1:10:41
the definition of conflicted because I could look
1:10:44
into Dr. Celine Gounder's conflicts of interest as
1:10:47
a TV doctor.
1:10:49
But I do have this thing called the
1:10:50
Internet.
1:10:50
And I did pull up this report from
1:10:52
2009, which she discredits and says, hey, man,
1:10:55
it's just like you got the date wrong
1:10:57
on your tax return, which, by the way,
1:10:59
you can get in a lot of hassle
1:11:01
for putting the wrong date or oops, I
1:11:05
missed the digit.
1:11:06
And so I have the findings.
1:11:08
I'm looking at the paper that she just
1:11:10
said, oh, no, it was 97 percent, but
1:11:12
I missed a little thing.
1:11:15
Findings for almost all special government employees.
1:11:18
This is the AIPC.
1:11:21
CDC did not ensure that financial disclosure forms
1:11:25
were complete.
1:11:26
CDC certified forms for 50 with at least
1:11:30
one omission for 90 percent, 97 percent of
1:11:35
the SGEs.
1:11:36
Most of the forms had more than one
1:11:38
type of omission.
1:11:41
Omission is not the same thing as oops,
1:11:43
I got the date wrong to CDC did
1:11:46
not identify or resolve potential conflicts of interest
1:11:50
for 64 percent of these employees.
1:11:54
64 percent had potential conflicts of interest that
1:11:57
CDC did not identify and or resolve before
1:12:01
it certified their OGE forms for 50.
1:12:04
Specifically, 58 percent of the SGEs had potential
1:12:08
conflicts of interest that CDC did not identify.
1:12:11
In addition, 32 percent of them had potential
1:12:14
conflicts of interest that CDC identified but did
1:12:17
not resolve.
1:12:19
26 percent of them had both CDC unidentified
1:12:23
and unresolved potential conflicts of interest.
1:12:26
It's just the date they made.
1:12:28
They did wrong.
1:12:28
That's all that it is.
1:12:30
Three, CDC did not ensure that 41 percent
1:12:34
of these employees received ethics training in 2007.
1:12:39
CDC did not ensure that 41 percent had
1:12:42
ethics training certificates on file to document they
1:12:45
received initial or annual ethics training within the
1:12:48
required time frames.
1:12:50
And the final point, 15 percent of them
1:12:53
did not comply with the ethics requirement during
1:12:56
committee meetings.
1:12:57
Specifically, 13 percent of them participated in committee
1:13:00
meetings without having current certified OGE forms on
1:13:04
file.
1:13:05
In addition, 3 percent voted on particular matters
1:13:08
when their waivers prohibited such participation.
1:13:12
Four both participated in committee meetings without current
1:13:15
certified forms on file and voted on particular
1:13:18
matters when their waivers prohibited such participation.
1:13:22
Bull crap, Dr. Selene Gounder.
1:13:25
We have the Internet and we stand strong.
1:13:27
OK, so just more lies.
1:13:32
That's but that is that to me is
1:13:35
a big lie.
1:13:37
I mean, she does.
1:13:38
I just got to hear that.
1:13:39
She's obviously conflicted.
1:13:43
I just want to hear one more time
1:13:44
what she said.
1:13:44
Kennedy wrote in an op-ed that this
1:13:46
is really about restoring that most of the
1:13:48
ACIP members have received substantial funding from pharmaceutical
1:13:51
companies.
1:13:52
Does he have a point about conflicts of
1:13:54
interest here?
1:13:54
What he is citing is an Office of
1:13:56
the Inspector General report that found 97 percent
1:13:59
of the conflict of interest forms had errors.
1:14:01
But these were errors of like putting the
1:14:03
wrong date.
1:14:04
I mean, imagine on your IRS returns, you
1:14:06
might have the wrong date on something that's
1:14:07
very different from having a true conflict of
1:14:10
interest.
1:14:10
Or omitting things on my tax return.
1:14:13
If I omit things on my tax return,
1:14:16
I am actually committing.
1:14:18
I don't know if it's a felony, if
1:14:20
it's a civil offense, but I'm going to
1:14:22
get in trouble if they find out.
1:14:25
So, no, these guys all got in trouble.
1:14:27
They all got released.
1:14:29
They got really put a new group in.
1:14:31
So what?
1:14:31
Why?
1:14:32
What's wrong with the new group?
1:14:33
She has something to complain about.
1:14:35
Well, according to the Wall Street Journal, RFK
1:14:38
Jr. names eight vaccine panel replacements, including COVID
1:14:42
shot skeptics.
1:14:44
You don't want a skeptic.
1:14:45
You don't want a skeptic on your panel.
1:14:49
Let's see who we have.
1:14:50
Yeah.
1:14:51
Heaven forbid you have somebody that's that is
1:14:53
open.
1:14:54
If never.
1:14:55
I don't.
1:14:56
We've got Dr. Robert Malone.
1:14:59
Wait, who's the first guy here?
1:15:00
They put Malone on there.
1:15:01
That's not true.
1:15:02
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
1:15:03
No, so he is nothing but time.
1:15:06
Vicki Pebsworth, a nurse with a public health
1:15:09
doctorate who's a board member of the National
1:15:11
Vaccine Information Center, which is a pro vaccine
1:15:14
group, I will say.
1:15:18
We talked about them during COVID.
1:15:21
They come across as anti, but I think
1:15:23
they're pro.
1:15:24
Yeah, it could be.
1:15:25
Dr. Robert Malone, who, of course, worked on
1:15:28
research into several mRNA COVID-19 vaccines.
1:15:32
Has patents.
1:15:34
Retsef Levi, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Management professor,
1:15:40
and he called for the COVID-19 vaccines
1:15:42
to be withdrawn from the market in a
1:15:44
2023 video.
1:15:47
Dr. Martin Kohldorf, former professor of medicine at
1:15:51
Harvard University, who became known during the pandemic
1:15:55
as a critic of COVID-19 mitigation measures,
1:15:57
such as lockdowns.
1:15:58
We can't have that guy on the panel.
1:16:01
Cody Meissner, pediatrician, infectious disease specialist, respected by
1:16:06
other vaccine experts.
1:16:08
So, you know, it's like Kennedy's doing exactly
1:16:12
what he said.
1:16:13
He needs to restore trust with the other
1:16:15
half of the, with actually the other 70
1:16:18
% of the country.
1:16:20
Really, 40% who went no.
1:16:22
And then there's the 30% that went,
1:16:26
no, but OK, I'll go along to get
1:16:28
along.
1:16:29
So he's doing exactly what he promised.
1:16:31
This is very good.
1:16:32
This is what you want.
1:16:33
He's not getting rid of vaccines.
1:16:35
If you want them, go get them.
1:16:38
If you want them.
1:16:39
Of course, it's, your kids won't go to
1:16:41
school.
1:16:43
Same thing here in Fredericksburg.
1:16:46
You want your kids to go to St.
1:16:48
Mary's?
1:16:48
Got to have your vaccines.
1:16:50
Well, what if I don't want to give
1:16:51
my kids vaccines?
1:16:52
Sorry, you can't go to St. Mary's.
1:16:53
But you know, the vaccines might have pieces
1:16:55
of embryo in there.
1:16:56
Yeah, that may be.
1:16:58
But you know, Jesus says you can't come
1:17:00
to school.
1:17:05
So Rogan had this woman on, this doctor.
1:17:08
Which one?
1:17:09
Who was, sorry?
1:17:11
Which one?
1:17:12
I'm looking for the clip.
1:17:16
Oh, the older lady?
1:17:17
No, she's not older.
1:17:19
She's kind of middle-aged.
1:17:20
Yeah, my age.
1:17:21
Mary Bowden.
1:17:22
Yeah.
1:17:22
Dr. Mary Bowden.
1:17:23
Yes, yeah.
1:17:24
She's not, I wouldn't call her older.
1:17:25
She's like my age.
1:17:28
Maybe.
1:17:29
Whatever the case is, he liked her.
1:17:31
Yeah.
1:17:32
And the clip I should have gotten, I
1:17:35
would have gotten, I could have gotten, but
1:17:37
I didn't get, is where she talks about
1:17:39
how the vaccine was, you know, foisted upon
1:17:43
the public in a certain kind of way.
1:17:44
I'll get that clip, maybe play it on
1:17:45
Sunday.
1:17:46
But this clip I thought was interesting.
1:17:49
This is part of the whole time during
1:17:53
the COVID.
1:17:53
I think Kennedy would, you know, this COVID
1:17:59
-19 vaccine should be taken off the market.
1:18:02
It should have been taken off the market
1:18:04
early on and they just can't get rid
1:18:06
of it.
1:18:07
And so Kennedy, I think one of the
1:18:08
things he's trying to do is find enough
1:18:10
guys, you know, to get this thing taken
1:18:12
off the market, but it's going to be
1:18:13
hard to do.
1:18:14
And then when you hear stories like this,
1:18:16
this disgusting story, which was in this, and
1:18:20
I would recommend, I don't listen to all
1:18:23
of Rogan's stuff.
1:18:24
You don't even, you don't even watch it
1:18:25
when I'm on.
1:18:28
It's true.
1:18:29
Admit it.
1:18:30
It's true.
1:18:31
I don't, well, I know what you're, I
1:18:33
know you, I don't need to watch you.
1:18:35
Oh, there's Adam.
1:18:36
Let me see what he has to say.
1:18:38
I know what you have to say.
1:18:40
It doesn't make any sense.
1:18:41
It's like watching paint dry.
1:18:44
I know.
1:18:44
I'm sorry to bore you.
1:18:45
It's like watching paint dry.
1:18:47
It's exactly right.
1:18:49
So, but I would recommend this.
1:18:51
People listen to this thing, whole cloth beginning
1:18:53
to end.
1:18:53
It's really good.
1:18:55
But this, listen to this.
1:18:56
There's actually a lawsuit today.
1:18:58
That's first jury trial in the country over
1:19:02
these hospital protocols, where they had a young
1:19:06
woman with Down syndrome.
1:19:08
They basically euthanized her.
1:19:10
They gave her a DNR order, even though
1:19:12
she didn't have one.
1:19:13
And the father has just been wonderful.
1:19:15
It's a Shara family.
1:19:18
Why did they do that?
1:19:20
They euthanized her for what?
1:19:22
I've seen this.
1:19:23
I have reviewed records from these hospital patients
1:19:26
and they'll euthanize them.
1:19:29
They need the bed.
1:19:30
They said, well, they're going to die anyway.
1:19:32
What was this person in the hospital for?
1:19:35
COVID.
1:19:36
COVID protocol.
1:19:37
And they, wait, wait, wait.
1:19:39
So they were in the hospital with COVID
1:19:41
and they gave them something to kill them?
1:19:44
Yeah, that happened.
1:19:45
I'm sorry.
1:19:46
But I mean, that happened.
1:19:48
They give them morphine and insulin.
1:19:51
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
1:19:53
That's common?
1:19:55
Yeah, yeah.
1:19:56
I've reviewed charts in this situation.
1:20:00
They gave her a DNR, which is do
1:20:02
not resuscitate.
1:20:03
I mean, if they look like they're dying,
1:20:05
you don't do anything, which that was not
1:20:07
the case.
1:20:09
So they're suing for battery, which is one
1:20:11
way of getting around the PrEP Act, because
1:20:13
the PrEP Act is very hard to penetrate.
1:20:17
The PrEP Act protects everybody, all the doctors,
1:20:21
all the hospitals from any wrongdoing during COVID.
1:20:24
So it's been this big challenge trying to
1:20:26
get around the PrEP Act.
1:20:27
And this case has hope of getting around
1:20:30
the PrEP Act because they're charging for battery
1:20:31
and they're in trial.
1:20:33
It started today.
1:20:34
It's in Wisconsin.
1:20:36
So that gives me hope.
1:20:39
Wow.
1:20:41
Wow.
1:20:42
Yeah.
1:20:42
Yeah.
1:20:43
Wow, indeed.
1:20:44
And of course, then you hear just around
1:20:47
the same time Rogan's interviewing her.
1:20:49
And he's aghast like everybody else.
1:20:52
And she's a very famous doctor in Houston.
1:20:57
I've seen some of her stuff.
1:20:59
We hear this from Cuomo on one of
1:21:03
the podcasts with some other guy.
1:21:05
And he says this crazy thing.
1:21:08
My big prediction is that Rogan's success is
1:21:10
admirable.
1:21:11
I do not believe he'll be where he
1:21:13
was three months ago, a year from today.
1:21:17
There are too many talented people entering that
1:21:19
space now who want his real estate.
1:21:21
And they're going to be better at what
1:21:22
he does than he is.
1:21:23
So I think that he's going to see
1:21:25
attrition.
1:21:26
That's not the first time someone said that
1:21:29
about Joe.
1:21:30
He does surpass expectations.
1:21:32
Like people wrote his obituary many, many times.
1:21:35
And it's just never come true.
1:21:37
Oh, listen, I don't necessarily want it to
1:21:39
come true, because I don't find him offensive
1:21:42
or anything.
1:21:42
Are you saying stop to me?
1:21:43
I'm sorry.
1:21:45
Did you say stop?
1:21:46
No, I didn't say anything.
1:21:47
Oh, listen, I don't necessarily want it to
1:21:50
come true, because I don't find him offensive
1:21:52
or anything.
1:21:53
I see him as innocuous.
1:21:55
But he's getting criticism.
1:21:57
He never got criticism before.
1:21:59
The media is taking him seriously now.
1:22:02
And that's not going to go well for
1:22:04
him.
1:22:05
The media is going to take him down,
1:22:07
man.
1:22:07
Because, you know, it's just a podcast.
1:22:10
What a dope.
1:22:11
I was flabbergasted by this attack.
1:22:15
It's dopey.
1:22:17
It's dopey.
1:22:18
You know, if anything, I think Fredo believes
1:22:21
that he's the one that's going to dethrone
1:22:24
him.
1:22:25
He's going to get rid of Rogan.
1:22:27
I'm better than Joe.
1:22:31
It's like, no.
1:22:34
What an idiot.
1:22:36
So I received at least 20 BOTG reports.
1:22:44
You know what that stands for, right?
1:22:46
BOTG.
1:22:47
Gee, let me think.
1:22:49
Bitches on the gag.
1:22:53
No, it's boobs on the ground.
1:22:56
Boobs on the ground.
1:22:57
OK.
1:22:57
Normally boots on the ground.
1:22:59
Now it's boobs on the ground.
1:23:00
About our discussion of breastfeeding versus formula.
1:23:04
Yes, I got a bunch of them too.
1:23:07
Lactating mothers wrote us and Mimi even said
1:23:11
to me, how come you guys didn't bring
1:23:12
up the fact that breast milk is like
1:23:15
a superfood that we should have mentioned.
1:23:19
Babies don't get sick when they're breastfeeding.
1:23:21
It's almost impossible.
1:23:23
They don't get colds.
1:23:24
They don't get anything.
1:23:24
And they definitely don't need a vaccine through
1:23:27
the mom.
1:23:29
And it was just like, yes, this was
1:23:30
the theme.
1:23:31
I noticed a lot of this.
1:23:32
And I responded to a couple.
1:23:34
I should have responded to more of them.
1:23:36
It got so bad.
1:23:37
I had to come up with a form
1:23:39
response that said, thank you very much for
1:23:41
your contribution.
1:23:42
I got tired of typing it.
1:23:44
But I read all of them.
1:23:45
And I first want to say the most
1:23:47
important thing that we just don't know.
1:23:52
Breastfeeding is hard work.
1:23:54
It is not, you know, we just think
1:23:56
like, just put the baby up there.
1:23:58
It sucks.
1:23:58
You're good to go.
1:24:00
And there's moments like women like to complain.
1:24:03
Women like to complain.
1:24:05
I'm sorry.
1:24:05
I said that because I'm going to get
1:24:06
some notes.
1:24:07
Yeah, you should.
1:24:07
But they'll complain that a certain, like a
1:24:09
baby hits a, you know, some, they can
1:24:12
be like, if they're in breastfeeding mode and
1:24:15
they're out and about and some baby down
1:24:18
this hallway and they start screaming.
1:24:21
They start leaking.
1:24:22
It drops their milk.
1:24:24
And there's nothing they can do about it.
1:24:25
And they start making a, oh God, what
1:24:27
a horrible.
1:24:28
And they complain bitterly about this.
1:24:31
And I'd say, yeah, it's like, if you
1:24:34
were all of a sudden something happened, you
1:24:36
just automatically peed in your pants.
1:24:37
I had a guy I worked with at
1:24:39
the Union Oil.
1:24:40
Stop, don't get off the topic.
1:24:41
Keep that story in your pants for one
1:24:43
minute.
1:24:44
I brought the topic up.
1:24:46
You've already just went off for like 10
1:24:47
minutes about your experience.
1:24:50
It was 30 seconds.
1:24:52
That's what she said.
1:24:53
Now, listen, breastfeeding is hard work.
1:24:57
There's a lot that goes into it that
1:24:59
we don't, I mean, even though I've seen
1:25:02
it, I've witnessed it, you don't think about
1:25:04
these things.
1:25:06
And so my summary, and I put a
1:25:08
couple of them in the show notes.
1:25:09
And the one I was really interested in,
1:25:11
because this is what I asked is like,
1:25:12
what happened before formula?
1:25:14
What did we do in the 1800s?
1:25:17
So I'll just read that and then I'll
1:25:18
surmise all the other emails.
1:25:21
Pre-Victorian era, if a baby could not
1:25:23
breastfeed by their mother, as in their mother
1:25:26
died in childbirth, other arrangements like wet nurses
1:25:29
would be made.
1:25:30
If a wet nurse was not available, substitute
1:25:33
like cow's milk were used.
1:25:34
However, infant mortality was extremely likely as breast
1:25:38
milk provides key nutrients and antibodies that help
1:25:41
build a baby's immune system.
1:25:44
And apparently goat milk was also popular.
1:25:47
In the Victorian era, people let the germ
1:25:49
theory of disease get into their heads.
1:25:51
So they thought that if a scientist in
1:25:52
a sterile lab could replicate something from the
1:25:54
germ filled real world, the lab version was
1:25:56
obviously better.
1:25:58
That's when and why baby formula was invented.
1:26:01
Despite male doctors telling women to use formula,
1:26:04
most still breastfed because why pay for something
1:26:06
we can get for free?
1:26:08
In the 20th century, formula only became popular
1:26:11
during World War II as working mothers became
1:26:13
a thing.
1:26:14
Generations of women have now been told to
1:26:16
prioritize careers over children and have been brainwashed
1:26:20
into thinking of baby formula like feeding your
1:26:23
kids dino nuggets instead of grilled chicken.
1:26:26
It's not the best, but it's a convenience
1:26:27
you can still feel good about.
1:26:30
With more and more research showing the nutritional
1:26:32
difference between formula and breast milk, this narrative
1:26:34
is finally crumbling and all formula companies can
1:26:37
do now is make new formulas and go
1:26:40
on trying to pretend it's just as good
1:26:41
as breast milk.
1:26:42
And my takeaway from the women who emailed
1:26:45
me, which is a lot, a lot of
1:26:47
them breastfeeding as we speak.
1:26:49
In fact, they're hearing me right now.
1:26:50
They got one on each boob.
1:26:52
Some of them emailed me this, that the
1:26:55
psyop from the baby formula companies was so
1:27:00
strong.
1:27:01
The marketing was so strong that it really
1:27:04
turned belief into, hey, we make something better
1:27:08
than what you can produce.
1:27:10
And I completely believe that along with some
1:27:16
stigma, certainly in America, the stigma of she's
1:27:19
whipping out her boob and giving the baby
1:27:21
breast milk right here in public.
1:27:22
Oh no, that's no good.
1:27:25
And so I too am happy that this
1:27:27
narrative is changing.
1:27:29
And thank you, Bobby the op Kennedy, thank
1:27:34
you for bringing this to the forefront and
1:27:36
getting people to think for a second.
1:27:38
Doesn't make it any easier.
1:27:40
There's not facilities everywhere.
1:27:42
Pumping is a pain in the butt.
1:27:44
There's all kinds, you know, women have to
1:27:46
work these days.
1:27:47
You got to have two incomes just to
1:27:49
survive.
1:27:49
It's not easy.
1:27:51
Men step it up.
1:27:52
Do everything you can to help your wife,
1:27:54
your woman, whatever it is, because it's better
1:27:58
for your baby.
1:27:59
I can say that without being a doctor.
1:28:01
It just makes sense.
1:28:03
But thank you women for A, showing us
1:28:07
that you still listen and that you really
1:28:08
listen, really appreciate that.
1:28:11
Surprisingly, yes.
1:28:12
I was like, wow, we got chicks listening,
1:28:13
man.
1:28:14
This is good news.
1:28:15
They're still here.
1:28:16
And thank you for being so open about
1:28:18
all of the issues and what you think.
1:28:21
And thank you for opening my eyes because,
1:28:24
I mean, Tina and I, by the way,
1:28:26
Tina was like, you guys suck.
1:28:27
You guys don't know nothing.
1:28:29
That's why she was blowing up my phone.
1:28:31
And all the girls, all the lunch ladies,
1:28:32
like what are Adam and John talking about?
1:28:34
What do they know about this?
1:28:38
Yeah, I agree with that.
1:28:39
Yeah, I agree with it too.
1:28:40
We don't know anything about it.
1:28:40
We don't do it.
1:28:41
So thank you.
1:28:42
But we do know more than we expressed
1:28:45
in the live.
1:28:45
Yeah, of course.
1:28:47
Of course.
1:28:48
And we did not bring up the fact
1:28:50
that it's a healthier alternative to getting vaccinated
1:28:53
as a as a pregnant person, person, person,
1:28:57
pregnant person.
1:28:58
But it's good.
1:28:59
And I'm happy that that women of no
1:29:03
agenda get my nation that they are turning
1:29:06
to this form of feeding their infant.
1:29:08
They realize it's better.
1:29:10
Many are taking pay cuts.
1:29:13
Husbands are working harder so they can be
1:29:15
at home, breastfeed, homeschool.
1:29:19
Oh, no, trad wife.
1:29:20
Yeah.
1:29:21
So this is in general.
1:29:23
I think I think a very, very good
1:29:26
development.
1:29:27
And I'm proud of y'all.
1:29:28
And y'all deserve a medal for what
1:29:29
you have to go through because it is
1:29:31
not just a matter of, oh, baby hungry.
1:29:34
Let's go.
1:29:35
That's kind of what we as guys think.
1:29:36
You don't think about it like this.
1:29:38
It's not that easy.
1:29:40
Anyway, thank you.
1:29:41
I really appreciate it.
1:29:42
I got an education.
1:29:44
And one of these days, hopefully one of
1:29:46
our daughters will have a kid.
1:29:48
I'm starting to wonder about that.
1:29:50
They're all getting old.
1:29:51
Hurry up.
1:29:52
All my friends.
1:29:53
Oh, I became a granddad.
1:29:54
Oh, yeah.
1:29:56
I'm ready for it.
1:29:57
I'm ready to show a kid how to
1:29:58
drive a truck, drink beer and shoot.
1:30:00
She'll know well on the topic of women
1:30:03
and breastfeeding.
1:30:04
Let's talk about the Tonys.
1:30:07
Oh, man.
1:30:08
Was that Sunday?
1:30:09
I completely missed it.
1:30:11
I guess it was Sunday.
1:30:12
And I was always of the opinion that
1:30:14
the Tonys couldn't get more gay.
1:30:19
Well, it's kind of every year.
1:30:21
I'm every year.
1:30:22
I'm wrong.
1:30:23
Hold on a second.
1:30:24
Did Clooney win for anything after he did
1:30:27
that?
1:30:27
No, they were shut out.
1:30:29
Oh, man, because he could.
1:30:30
You know what he did?
1:30:31
He broke her ranks.
1:30:33
He's like.
1:30:35
Theater is for the Broadway.
1:30:37
It is not for CNN television.
1:30:40
Who do you think you are, Clooney?
1:30:42
Go back to your film.
1:30:44
He did them a favor.
1:30:46
He did Tony awards a favor by being
1:30:48
on 60 Minutes as the lead in the
1:30:52
Tonys talking about the Tonys.
1:30:54
The Tonys.
1:30:55
No corruption there.
1:30:56
They're on CBS.
1:30:57
Well, this is what you do.
1:31:00
I just think it's corrupt.
1:31:02
I don't care.
1:31:03
So there was a lot of non-binaries.
1:31:06
This guy, Jack Malone, won for best actor,
1:31:09
but he's a non-binary dude in a
1:31:11
dress.
1:31:12
And he came out there with his dress
1:31:13
on.
1:31:14
It's just a kind of now.
1:31:15
What was the what was the play he
1:31:17
starred in?
1:31:18
It was Mary.
1:31:20
And does Mary call for a man dressed
1:31:23
as a woman or for a woman?
1:31:25
It costs her.
1:31:26
He's playing Mary Lincoln, and it's called for
1:31:30
a woman.
1:31:31
He's a man dressed as a woman playing
1:31:33
a woman.
1:31:35
But he's a guy.
1:31:36
And I give Tony's credit for not nominating
1:31:39
for best female actress.
1:31:40
Well, the next year, there's always next year.
1:31:42
We'll get there.
1:31:44
But they're gone in this non-binary thing.
1:31:46
In fact, the best guy, this one guy
1:31:49
comes out.
1:31:49
He wins the award for.
1:31:52
I forgot what he some singer, I think.
1:31:56
And he comes out.
1:31:56
He's he's not dressed as a woman, but
1:31:59
he's got all his makeup on.
1:32:01
He's got eye shadow and lipstick.
1:32:02
And he comes out and he ends this
1:32:05
guy, Michael Arden.
1:32:07
He has this little little diddy at the
1:32:09
end as he goes through this long tirade
1:32:12
about, you know, non-binary ism.
1:32:15
And he makes the following comment here.
1:32:17
Just telling stories that probe for deeper truths
1:32:19
that inspire hope, because the darker it gets,
1:32:23
the more we need your light.
1:32:25
As Daddy Sondheim said, give us more to
1:32:28
see.
1:32:29
And if there are any queer people watching
1:32:31
tonight, happy pride.
1:32:39
Yeah, the crowd goes wild.
1:32:41
You're so brave.
1:32:43
So brave.
1:32:44
You should have said happy world pride.
1:32:46
I'm disappointed.
1:32:48
Uh, play this clip here, Tony.
1:32:51
Now, this guy.
1:32:54
Happy pride.
1:32:56
He said any queer people listening got a
1:32:58
big laugh.
1:32:58
Ha ha ha.
1:32:59
I figured everybody everybody.
1:33:01
Try Tony's.
1:33:03
They I should mention this.
1:33:05
And this is kind of a little bit
1:33:06
off topic.
1:33:07
But the every ad during the Tonys was
1:33:11
aimed at the audience.
1:33:13
And it was AIDS, drugs and drugs and
1:33:18
other kinds of drugs.
1:33:19
And those Zempick and Ozempick and Ozempick and
1:33:22
drugs and drugs and drugs.
1:33:24
And so a pretty a pretty typical CBS
1:33:26
lineup of ads is what you're saying.
1:33:28
Yeah, it was a little more than usual,
1:33:31
I thought.
1:33:32
But I had to play this.
1:33:35
I did collect the side effects for Rick
1:33:38
Zolti.
1:33:40
It's worth listening to.
1:33:41
Oh, yes.
1:33:41
Do we know what Rick Zolti does?
1:33:45
I forgot already.
1:33:47
She recommended adding Rick Zolti when taken with
1:33:49
an antidepressant.
1:33:50
Rick Zolti was proven to significantly reduce depression
1:33:53
symptoms.
1:33:53
More than an answer.
1:33:54
Oh, it's it's like a hamburger helper for
1:33:57
right.
1:33:57
It's a hamburger helper for antidepressants.
1:34:00
Is your is your antidepressant not working?
1:34:02
Try Rick Zolti.
1:34:04
Yeah.
1:34:04
All right.
1:34:05
She recommended adding Rick Zolti when taken with
1:34:07
an antidepressant.
1:34:08
Rick Zolti was proven to significantly reduce depression
1:34:11
symptoms.
1:34:11
More than an antidepressant alone.
1:34:13
With my antidepressant, Rick Zolti could provide a
1:34:15
boost.
1:34:16
Elderly people with dementia related psychosis have increased
1:34:19
risk of death or stroke.
1:34:21
Antidepressants may increase suicidal thoughts and actions and
1:34:23
worsen depression in children and young adults.
1:34:25
Call your health care provider right away to
1:34:27
report new or sudden changes in mood, behavior,
1:34:29
thoughts or feelings.
1:34:30
Or if you develop suicidal thoughts or actions,
1:34:33
report fever, stiff muscles and confusion, which can
1:34:35
be life threatening or uncontrolled muscle movements, which
1:34:37
may be permanent.
1:34:38
High blood sugar can lead to coma or
1:34:40
death.
1:34:40
Weight gain, increased cholesterol, unusual urges, dizziness on
1:34:43
standing, falls, seizures, trouble swallowing or sleepiness may
1:34:47
occur.
1:34:48
Could adding Rick Zolti be right for you?
1:34:51
Sounds sounds right for me.
1:34:53
May result in death.
1:34:55
Rick Zolti and death.
1:34:56
Oh, beautiful, beautiful.
1:34:58
Yeah.
1:34:59
Wow.
1:35:01
Yes.
1:35:02
I love how it could make you more
1:35:04
depressed, but it's supposed to make me less
1:35:06
depressed.
1:35:07
It could make you more depressed.
1:35:08
Could make could give you suicidal thoughts.
1:35:10
But it's supposed to make me less depressed.
1:35:12
Yeah, but you might want to kill yourself.
1:35:14
Actually, I take it back.
1:35:15
It was Cole Escola who was the dude
1:35:17
in the dress.
1:35:18
Jack Malone, who won for one of the
1:35:20
actors.
1:35:21
He had I have a couple of clips
1:35:23
from him.
1:35:23
It should only be one.
1:35:24
I think I double clipped play the long
1:35:26
one.
1:35:27
This is I thought this was the the
1:35:29
clip of the day.
1:35:30
Thank you so much to my family watching
1:35:31
in England.
1:35:32
And thank you to my little family, my
1:35:33
beautiful partner Jasmine and my little dog Dracula,
1:35:36
who came out here to have this adventure
1:35:37
with me.
1:35:38
You are my whole heart and I've been
1:35:39
lost without you.
1:35:40
And I'm grateful every day.
1:35:41
The last thing I wanted to say is
1:35:42
this.
1:35:43
Eight times a week, I walk out on
1:35:44
that stage and tell the audience that I'm
1:35:45
a woman.
1:35:46
I'm not one.
1:35:47
And I only convey it through simple adjustments
1:35:48
to posture, voice and energy.
1:35:50
But night after night, audiences believe in Hester.
1:35:52
They weep for her.
1:35:53
They invest in her.
1:35:54
They love her for her old romantic heart.
1:35:56
And if you watched our show and found
1:35:57
yourself believing in Hester, well, then I am
1:35:59
so glad to tell you that intentionally or
1:36:01
otherwise, you might have just bid farewell to
1:36:04
cynicism, to outdated ideas, to that rotten old
1:36:07
binary and opened yourself up to a world
1:36:09
that is already out there in glorious technicolor
1:36:11
and isn't going away anytime soon.
1:36:15
Thank you so much.
1:36:23
The rotten old binary.
1:36:25
Is that what he says?
1:36:26
Rotten old binary?
1:36:28
It's what he says.
1:36:28
He says you can kiss goodbye the rotten
1:36:31
old binary because he plays, you know, he's
1:36:33
a guy playing.
1:36:34
Well, he's the guy that had all the
1:36:35
makeup on.
1:36:36
I'm sorry.
1:36:36
You are confusing me with this report.
1:36:39
Who is who now?
1:36:40
Was this the dude in the dress or
1:36:41
not?
1:36:42
No, the dude in the dress is this
1:36:43
Cola Scola guy who is a.
1:36:45
Let's play him then.
1:36:47
But this is just his intro because he
1:36:49
just he doesn't really have anything funny to
1:36:52
say.
1:36:52
Just kind of a hysterical gay guy, basically.
1:36:57
So but this intro to him was was
1:36:59
interesting because they required that they say they.
1:37:03
He's a they.
1:37:04
And the American Theater Wings Tony Award goes
1:37:08
to.
1:37:09
She already messed it up.
1:37:10
The announcer got messed up.
1:37:14
And the American Theater Wings.
1:37:16
They.
1:37:17
She's so worried about saying they.
1:37:19
Right.
1:37:19
She was cued.
1:37:21
She was told you better say they because
1:37:23
he's a they them.
1:37:26
Oh, no, the American theater.
1:37:28
It's now theater.
1:37:29
Have you been to the theater yet?
1:37:31
And the American Theater Wings Tony Award goes
1:37:35
to Cola Scola.
1:37:46
There.
1:37:55
OK, yeah, there.
1:37:56
And now you as a lover of the
1:38:00
of the theater, were you angered?
1:38:03
Were you angered by this?
1:38:05
No, it wasn't.
1:38:06
It was I thought that the I thought
1:38:08
they were overdoing the non-binary stuff.
1:38:11
They made a big point of that.
1:38:13
Everyone's now in the theater.
1:38:14
You're not gay anymore.
1:38:15
You're not.
1:38:16
It's world pride, man.
1:38:18
Well, there was a couple of pride mentions
1:38:21
there.
1:38:22
Sure, that one.
1:38:24
But the this the end of the horrible
1:38:26
binary thing and this guy going on is
1:38:29
not going away anytime soon.
1:38:31
It's just like a it's like a what
1:38:34
was annoying to me was they play all
1:38:37
these sections of different plays and musicals.
1:38:40
There was nothing.
1:38:42
This last season was bad.
1:38:44
And you're you're you like theater.
1:38:46
You like theater.
1:38:47
I like the theater.
1:38:49
The theater.
1:38:49
The theater is there.
1:38:51
And now from now on, we're called the
1:38:52
theater.
1:38:52
It's a it's, you know, it's a primary
1:38:54
form of entertainment that is a leader, I
1:38:57
think culturally important, but not if it's just
1:39:00
going to be a brainwashing fest.
1:39:02
Yeah.
1:39:03
Well, it sucks.
1:39:05
I wouldn't.
1:39:06
I mean, I have, you know, if I
1:39:07
always preferred the London, the East End stuff
1:39:11
to the Broadway anyway, just better.
1:39:14
Yeah.
1:39:18
So I would like to point out the
1:39:20
art of the deal at perfect work, completely
1:39:24
done as expected.
1:39:26
Beautiful.
1:39:28
Good for our country.
1:39:30
And that is the the NATO increase in
1:39:34
payments.
1:39:36
And so I will recant very quickly what
1:39:40
the idea means.
1:39:42
You're going to I'm going to wrap.
1:39:46
We can't.
1:39:47
Yeah.
1:39:47
OK.
1:39:48
Yeah.
1:39:48
I'm going to.
1:39:50
OK.
1:39:51
OK.
1:39:51
Elucidate.
1:39:52
OK.
1:39:52
OK.
1:39:53
Language police.
1:39:54
Correct me.
1:39:55
Well, you know, I'm sorry.
1:39:56
OK.
1:39:56
I'm going to believe me.
1:39:58
I'm on, you know.
1:39:59
I'm going to elucidate.
1:40:04
Gold star.
1:40:06
I'm going to elucidate what the idea was.
1:40:09
The NATO member states, which is code for
1:40:12
countries, were originally supposed to pay two percent
1:40:16
of their national is their GDP.
1:40:21
So all their money, two percent of all
1:40:25
two percent of all their money.
1:40:26
That's all they make.
1:40:28
They're supposed to give us basically two percent
1:40:31
of all their money for our war stuff.
1:40:34
I'm just going to break it down to
1:40:35
what it is.
1:40:36
Yeah.
1:40:36
Now, we've kind of forgotten it.
1:40:39
But President Trump kept saying, hey, this has
1:40:41
got to be three and a half percent.
1:40:42
This has got to be three and a
1:40:43
half percent.
1:40:44
Everybody's like, no, I'm going to do that.
1:40:48
So then he came out and went, uh,
1:40:51
I'm sorry, I've changed that to five percent.
1:40:54
We need five percent.
1:40:57
And then he deployed his, uh, his heat
1:41:00
seeking missile white lines, Ritter.
1:41:02
And Ritter did a great job because he
1:41:05
closed the deal at five percent.
1:41:08
But it's really three and a half percent
1:41:10
money that goes to us, which is what
1:41:12
we wanted in the first place.
1:41:13
And when I say we, it's what President
1:41:15
Trump wanted to come into our coffers for
1:41:18
us to give them boom, booms, pew, pews.
1:41:22
And then Ritter worked a deal.
1:41:24
He did a good job for for the
1:41:26
nut job that he is, did a good
1:41:28
job.
1:41:28
And he said, well, the one and a
1:41:30
half percent, it will be five percent, but
1:41:33
one and a half percent will have to
1:41:34
be on other things for like hybrid warfare
1:41:37
and infrastructure, which, of course, everybody knows no
1:41:41
country is going to spend that money at
1:41:43
all.
1:41:43
So President Trump got exactly what he wanted.
1:41:46
Three and a half percent from all the
1:41:48
member states.
1:41:49
NATO Secretary General Mark Rutte said on Thursday
1:41:52
that most allies endorsed President Donald Trump's demand
1:41:55
to spend five percent of GDP on defense.
1:41:58
After a defense ministers meeting in Brussels, Rutte
1:42:01
cited broad support and expects a deal at
1:42:04
NATO summit in The Hague later this month.
1:42:07
The new target includes three point five percent
1:42:09
on core military spending plus one point five
1:42:12
percent on infrastructure for rapid deployment.
1:42:14
This is a significant increase on the current
1:42:16
two percent goal, which about a third of
1:42:19
members have yet to reach despite spending hikes
1:42:22
since 2022.
1:42:25
Of course, you need to core defense spending.
1:42:27
But let's be honest with each other.
1:42:29
If a tank is not able to cross
1:42:31
a bridge, if our societies are not prepared
1:42:35
in case war breaks out for a whole
1:42:38
of society approach, if you're not able to
1:42:41
really develop the defense industrial base, then the
1:42:45
three point five percent is great.
1:42:47
But then you cannot really defend yourselves.
1:42:50
Trump has pushed allies to spend more so
1:42:52
the U.S. can focus elsewhere, questioning defense
1:42:55
guarantees for those who spend too little.
1:42:58
U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hexeth claimed in
1:43:00
Brussels that Trump revived the alliance and that
1:43:03
European allies were grateful.
1:43:05
He also hinted at the review of the
1:43:07
eighty four thousand U.S. troops currently based
1:43:09
in Europe.
1:43:10
At their meeting, ministers also approved new purchasing
1:43:12
targets for weapons and equipment, part of major
1:43:15
2023 plan to defend alliance territory.
1:43:18
That's how you do the deal.
1:43:20
He wanted three and a half percent.
1:43:22
He said, you got to pay me five.
1:43:24
And then Ruth came in and went, oh,
1:43:26
well, you know what?
1:43:27
Hey, guys, this is what I'm going to
1:43:28
do.
1:43:28
I'm going to say it's going to be
1:43:30
fine, but we'll do one and a half
1:43:31
and we'll talk some bridges crap.
1:43:33
And you'll never have to spend that or
1:43:35
just the stuff you're already spending on fixing
1:43:37
potholes.
1:43:38
Just put that into the one point five
1:43:40
and I have to pay three and a
1:43:41
half percent.
1:43:41
Everyone's happy.
1:43:42
It's beautiful.
1:43:44
I think it goes unnoticed how well executed
1:43:47
that plan was.
1:43:50
It's gone totally unnoticed.
1:43:52
Yeah.
1:43:53
No, you're the only one.
1:43:55
Well, it's because of my boy.
1:43:57
I love him.
1:43:58
Yeah, you love Ruth.
1:43:59
You like doing his voice.
1:44:00
Let's be honest.
1:44:01
Let's be honest.
1:44:02
With three and three and three and a
1:44:04
half percent, you're not going to be able
1:44:07
to defend against you need to have bridges
1:44:10
that will hold the tanks.
1:44:12
You know, yes.
1:44:13
If you want to mobilize and keep yourself
1:44:15
safe, you need that one and a half
1:44:17
percent.
1:44:18
So President Trump and I will make a
1:44:19
big splash in the Hague at NATO.
1:44:22
Thank you very much.
1:44:23
Thank you very much for coming.
1:44:25
And by the way, who wants to go
1:44:27
to the sauna later with me?
1:44:28
I'm excited.
1:44:32
You're excited.
1:44:33
You definitely don't want to go.
1:44:34
Yeah.
1:44:37
But we still have to throw some fear
1:44:40
in there.
1:44:40
I think this was just before the meeting
1:44:42
adjourned and we rolled out the actor Volodymyr
1:44:46
Zelensky and a couple of other actors to
1:44:49
say, hey, man, Russia is not just coming
1:44:52
for us.
1:44:53
They're coming for everybody.
1:44:54
Peace in the region and hybrid warfare were
1:44:56
the main topics of the Odessa summit, which
1:44:58
was attended by Ukraine, Romania, the Republic of
1:45:01
Moldova, Serbia, Albania, Greece, Montenegro, Croatia and Slovenia.
1:45:06
Russian war plans point to this region, Odessa,
1:45:11
and then toward the borders with Moldova and
1:45:15
Romania.
1:45:16
And of course, we need protection now.
1:45:18
But even more, we need long term guarantees
1:45:22
that this can never happen again.
1:45:26
Romanian President Nicu Sjordan accused Russia of undermining
1:45:29
peace efforts.
1:45:30
Moldova's President Maya Sandu has warned of the
1:45:33
dangers of hybrid warfare aimed at influencing the
1:45:36
country's parliamentary elections scheduled for this fall.
1:45:39
We do learn every day by new attempts
1:45:41
and new ways through which Russia tries to
1:45:45
interfere with our internal processes, political processes, democratic
1:45:49
processes.
1:45:50
It is going to be tough, but we
1:45:53
do want Moldovans to decide for Moldova at
1:45:57
the parliamentary elections, not Kremlin.
1:45:59
The Black Sea port city of Odessa was
1:46:01
shelled by Russian forces in the run up
1:46:03
to the summit.
1:46:04
Just make every...
1:46:05
Oh, Russia's meddling in our elections.
1:46:08
Just like Romania can't have that YouTube guy
1:46:11
winning.
1:46:11
He was the Russian candidate.
1:46:14
It's all so corrupt.
1:46:17
So corrupt, man.
1:46:20
And then sad news today, if you heard
1:46:22
the rock and roll pre-show with Darren
1:46:24
O.
1:46:25
Brian Wilson, a co-founding member of the
1:46:27
Beach Boys, has died.
1:46:29
Wilson's family announced his passing on his official
1:46:31
website today.
1:46:33
A cause of death was not released.
1:46:35
Wilson and his cousin, Mike Love, wrote the
1:46:36
song Surfin' in 1961, setting up the formation
1:46:39
of the band known for its iconic surf
1:46:42
song, Surf Sound.
1:46:43
In 2023, Rolling Stone magazine named Wilson one
1:46:46
of the 200 greatest singers of all time.
1:46:49
He was 82 years old.
1:46:52
Horrible obituary.
1:46:53
Horrible.
1:46:54
Singer?
1:46:55
Singer?
1:46:55
How about...
1:46:56
He was one of the worst singers in
1:46:57
the band.
1:46:58
He was a great songwriter.
1:47:01
He was a terrific...
1:47:02
He was not only...
1:47:03
He was so prolific.
1:47:05
He wrote all the Beach Boys material with...
1:47:07
He had a partner, a couple of different
1:47:08
writers he would partner with.
1:47:10
But he also did all the Jan and
1:47:12
Dean material.
1:47:13
And then there was two or three other
1:47:14
little spinoff groups that you'd...
1:47:16
You know, the guy can't even remember the
1:47:18
name of them anymore.
1:47:18
But he wrote all their material.
1:47:20
Jan and Dean.
1:47:21
The guy was like a maniac for writing
1:47:23
songs.
1:47:24
Yes.
1:47:24
And they were all hits.
1:47:26
He was interviewed recently or before he died.
1:47:29
And somebody asked him if, you know, do
1:47:31
you think this was going to be a
1:47:34
hit or not?
1:47:34
He said, yeah, yeah.
1:47:36
It was like, oh, he's best known for
1:47:39
Surfin' USA.
1:47:40
Let's go surfing.
1:47:41
How about...
1:47:42
How about God Only Knows?
1:47:44
How about Pet Sounds?
1:47:46
Pet Sounds is not my favorite.
1:47:47
But man, you talk of people who love
1:47:50
songs and songwriting.
1:47:51
Pet Sounds is like...
1:47:52
No, the Beatles say it was their inspiration
1:47:53
for Dr. Pepper.
1:47:55
No, and...
1:47:56
Dr. Pepper or Dr. Whatever.
1:47:58
Dr. Pepper.
1:47:59
I'm Jonas Paulus Ringo.
1:48:01
We're here to do Dr. Pepper.
1:48:02
That's right.
1:48:03
Dr. Pepper.
1:48:04
It was Dr. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club buying...
1:48:09
And I guess the Rolling Stones are big
1:48:10
fans of Pet Sounds too.
1:48:12
Yes.
1:48:13
But no, no.
1:48:14
Hey, if I die, just don't let anybody
1:48:15
say anything.
1:48:18
He was best known for his hair.
1:48:19
He was best known for his hair.
1:48:21
For his hair.
1:48:22
Curry was iconic for his hair.
1:48:24
Thank you very much.
1:48:25
That's it.
1:48:26
That's it.
1:48:27
Dude, that is so lame.
1:48:30
You know, there's another thing.
1:48:32
I'm watching Netflix and I don't watch that
1:48:36
much TV, but I watch certain things.
1:48:37
I like some of the documentaries.
1:48:38
And so there's a new documentary on Led
1:48:41
Zeppelin.
1:48:42
Oh.
1:48:44
I've seen a lot of these guys.
1:48:46
You've seen them.
1:48:47
You've seen them live.
1:48:48
I saw them on their first appearance in
1:48:51
the United States.
1:48:52
Didn't you do heroin with Keith Moon at
1:48:54
a certain point?
1:48:55
I never did heroin with anybody.
1:48:57
And so when I saw him, I said,
1:49:01
holy crap, these guys are unbelievable.
1:49:03
It was the best band I've heard.
1:49:05
John C.
1:49:06
Dvorak, he picks the hits.
1:49:08
And meanwhile, in the documentary, they point out
1:49:11
that their first tour in the United States,
1:49:13
the Rolling Stone magazine panned them.
1:49:15
They're no good.
1:49:16
The songs are stupid.
1:49:18
I didn't know that.
1:49:20
And it was pretty funny.
1:49:21
But so they do a whole documentary on
1:49:24
Led Zeppelin and not one mention, not one
1:49:27
bar is played.
1:49:29
Not one reference is made to my absolute
1:49:33
favorite song from Led Zeppelin of all time.
1:49:36
Oh, let me guess.
1:49:38
Your favorite Led Zeppelin song of all time.
1:49:45
Wow.
1:49:46
What could this be?
1:49:48
Stairway to Heaven.
1:49:49
Oh, well, they didn't reference Stairway to Heaven?
1:49:53
At all.
1:49:55
Wow.
1:49:57
And it's like this song, I like, you
1:49:59
know, this is one of the songs that
1:50:01
if I go into it, if there's a
1:50:04
piano bar or somebody playing guitar or something,
1:50:07
I'll always go up to them and tip
1:50:08
them and have them play Stairway to Heaven
1:50:11
in the bar.
1:50:12
And it brings the house down.
1:50:16
Of course it does.
1:50:17
And everybody, every musician that plays in bars
1:50:20
seems to know the song.
1:50:22
Go into any guitar shop.
1:50:26
Every guitar shop, there's a guy playing Stairway
1:50:29
to Heaven on the electric guitar in the
1:50:31
guitar room.
1:50:31
It's like, it's a standard.
1:50:34
No Stairway.
1:50:35
That is crazy.
1:50:36
It's like, I remember giving the one, it
1:50:38
was a piano guy.
1:50:39
And I said, can you, and I said,
1:50:41
I gave him five, I think.
1:50:43
Can you play Stairway to Heaven?
1:50:45
And his response was, hell yes.
1:50:49
You know, there are guitar shops, I think
1:50:51
they actually have signs that say, no Stairway
1:50:53
to Heaven.
1:50:54
Please stop playing that song.
1:50:56
We've heard it so many times.
1:50:59
I forgot to mention the, I think this
1:51:04
is the minister of defense in the Netherlands
1:51:08
sent a note to the parliament.
1:51:15
And I'm translating on the fly here because
1:51:17
I have the notes PDF.
1:51:18
So it looks legit.
1:51:20
We have seen that president Trump has fired
1:51:25
trans military members from the service in America.
1:51:31
And as you know, we're having a hard
1:51:33
time recruiting people in the Netherlands and we
1:51:35
need more for our NATO membership.
1:51:38
We would like to ask the government if
1:51:41
they could explore options for us to take
1:51:44
these trans American military members and work for
1:51:47
us.
1:51:50
What?
1:51:51
You heard me right.
1:51:53
This is a joke, right?
1:51:54
No, no, it's not a joke.
1:51:57
Nope.
1:51:58
They could go to Holland and learn Dutch.
1:52:01
Yeah.
1:52:02
It's crazy.
1:52:05
Anyway, hey, good story about Led Zeppelin.
1:52:09
Good story.
1:52:11
It's a good story.
1:52:12
Hey, since we're closing in on time here,
1:52:15
I'm just, I keep looking at, cause you
1:52:17
know, AI, I love stories about AI and
1:52:19
I see you've got a series on Hollywood
1:52:22
versus AI and I'm kind of chomping at
1:52:24
the bit to hear what this is.
1:52:26
Okay.
1:52:26
Well, we can run through it.
1:52:28
It's a little, the problem is it has
1:52:31
a dull quality to it, but it's interesting.
1:52:34
Dull?
1:52:35
How could this be dull?
1:52:36
It's great news.
1:52:38
It's about a lawsuit taking place and it
1:52:43
starts with the Hollywood versus AI.
1:52:44
This is a BBC.
1:52:45
This is from BBC World Service.
1:52:47
And when they get into stuff, I mean,
1:52:50
Yeah, it gets boring.
1:52:51
Yeah, you're right.
1:52:52
It's because the Brits are boring.
1:52:54
Yeah, that's right.
1:52:55
But at least you'll learn something.
1:52:57
And this is kind of interesting.
1:52:58
And I may skip a bunch of them
1:53:00
and just play the kicker at the end
1:53:02
cause the end part was kind of interesting.
1:53:03
But let's start with clip zero, one.
1:53:06
Okay.
1:53:07
Been using AI at any stage during it
1:53:11
to help them.
1:53:11
Right.
1:53:12
Is this how it starts?
1:53:14
Is this Hollywood versus AI BBC?
1:53:16
Yeah.
1:53:17
Yeah, I had to clip off the beginning
1:53:20
of it.
1:53:20
Okay.
1:53:21
Hello, it's the BBC.
1:53:22
We're going to talk about AI versus Hollywood.
1:53:24
Been using AI at any stage during it
1:53:27
to help them.
1:53:27
Right.
1:53:28
But we are not going to talk about
1:53:30
AI once again, because it's an issue that's
1:53:32
proving to be quite a challenge for some
1:53:33
of the world's largest entertainment companies.
1:53:36
We're talking, of course, about copyright when it
1:53:39
comes to AI.
1:53:40
And two of Hollywood's largest studios have taken
1:53:42
legal action on this issue for the very
1:53:45
first time.
1:53:46
Here's our tech correspondent, Lily Jamali, who's in
1:53:48
San Francisco.
1:53:50
These are the first Hollywood players to take
1:53:52
on this issue of copyright having to do
1:53:55
with AI.
1:53:55
We've seen other companies in the publishing space,
1:53:58
like the New York Times do this.
1:54:00
Some authors have sued and the like, but
1:54:02
these are the biggest players in Hollywood.
1:54:05
And, you know, this AI issue has festered
1:54:07
for really a couple of years now.
1:54:10
At times, it's placed the studios at odds
1:54:12
with their writers.
1:54:13
Now we see the writers actually on side
1:54:15
with the studios who are saying that this
1:54:18
company, Mid Journey, has stolen their characters.
1:54:21
They're alleging copyright infringement of characters, some of
1:54:24
which were developed a century or more ago.
1:54:27
Yeah, we are talking about Disney and Universal
1:54:29
who have bought this case against Mid Journey
1:54:33
who haven't commented as yet.
1:54:35
Let's bring in Rebecca Tushnet, who's a law
1:54:37
professor at Harvard specializing in copyright, which I
1:54:40
presume, Rebecca, is a pretty busy place to
1:54:43
be at the moment.
1:54:45
So Mid Journey, they're talking about imagery, right?
1:54:47
So they're talking about visual copyright, not about
1:54:50
words.
1:54:51
Am I correcting that assumption?
1:54:52
They're actually talking about everything.
1:54:55
But when they talk about characters that were
1:54:58
developed 100 years ago, the idiot from the
1:55:01
BBC- Yeah, isn't that public domain?
1:55:04
That should have been public domain at least
1:55:06
25 years ago, based on the newest copyright
1:55:09
laws.
1:55:10
So what are we talking about here that
1:55:12
you're worried about characters developed 100 years ago
1:55:16
being lifted by AI?
1:55:20
So I found that to be, oh, this
1:55:21
is not good.
1:55:23
All right.
1:55:24
Onward with the second part here.
1:55:26
One thing that struck us was, these are
1:55:28
the first big Hollywood studios to be bringing
1:55:31
a case like this.
1:55:32
Why is it taking them so long?
1:55:35
We've seen the music industry probably move a
1:55:37
little bit quicker on these issues.
1:55:39
So, you know, it's hard to say from
1:55:41
the outside, but I think clearly there's a
1:55:45
question of, are they going to cut licensing
1:55:48
deals?
1:55:49
And the lawsuit suggests that they're seeking greater
1:55:53
leverage in licensing deals.
1:55:57
You know, they want to be the ones
1:55:58
who pick the winners in AI.
1:56:02
Yeah, which is not easy, I suppose.
1:56:04
Rebecca, when we have a new concept coming,
1:56:07
copyright is an old concept, isn't it?
1:56:10
But AI now adds a complicating factor to
1:56:14
it.
1:56:14
So do the existing laws work or do
1:56:16
we need new laws put in place to
1:56:18
tackle a new issue?
1:56:20
So to me, this isn't really a new
1:56:23
issue, although you can easily come to different
1:56:27
resolutions on it.
1:56:29
But, you know, the core questions are, you
1:56:33
know, is it fair use to train AI
1:56:36
using existing images or video?
1:56:40
No.
1:56:40
And then what do we do about the
1:56:42
outputs?
1:56:43
And so there are actually strong principles for
1:56:47
both of those things.
1:56:49
But that doesn't mean people won't change the
1:56:52
laws to deal with it.
1:56:53
But it is slightly different when you're influenced
1:56:57
by something, isn't it, I suppose, to actually
1:57:00
using generative AI to take thousands and thousands
1:57:04
and thousands of things and come out with
1:57:06
something.
1:57:06
Oh, this is very interesting.
1:57:08
I just realized that we're using different words
1:57:12
for different concepts.
1:57:13
And you said no, but training AI.
1:57:18
Training is a nice word, but it's not
1:57:20
training.
1:57:21
It's copying.
1:57:23
It is making a copy of pixels down
1:57:26
to the pixel level, whatever it does.
1:57:28
It is copying that and then pasting it
1:57:32
back into a new project based upon whatever
1:57:35
you've asked it to do.
1:57:36
It is copy.
1:57:37
Training is copying in this case.
1:57:41
They're just calling it someone else.
1:57:43
You disagree?
1:57:46
I'm not going to say one way or
1:57:49
the other because I don't agree or disagree
1:57:53
necessarily.
1:57:54
It does involve some copying, but then, well,
1:57:59
now you make me want to play another
1:58:02
one of the clips.
1:58:03
Yeah, I'm good.
1:58:04
Play the next clip.
1:58:05
So it really depends.
1:58:07
In fact, that's pretty much how human brains
1:58:10
learn, right?
1:58:12
You know, when you were learning to read
1:58:14
and write, you spent a lot of time
1:58:15
copying stuff.
1:58:16
And even more time studying stuff.
1:58:19
And in fact, that's in your brain.
1:58:21
And people are making progress every day on
1:58:24
actually detecting things straight from the brain.
1:58:27
There was an experiment that reconstructed a Pink
1:58:30
Floyd song just by looking at what people's
1:58:34
brains were doing when they were listening to
1:58:35
it.
1:58:36
So, you know, it's not perfect.
1:58:38
But the point being that, you know, the
1:58:41
computer just makes visible at how learning worked
1:58:46
for people.
1:58:47
Yeah, that is really interesting.
1:58:49
Stay with us.
1:58:49
Let me bring Mike in on this particular
1:58:52
issue.
1:58:53
I mean, AI is pushing the boundaries in
1:58:55
many different areas.
1:58:57
Copyright is one.
1:58:58
Do you see other challenges coming up as
1:59:00
well, Mike, away from this one?
1:59:02
Oh yeah.
1:59:03
Ownership rights, even patents.
1:59:08
There's a lot of areas of intellectual capital
1:59:11
and we're going to have to really set
1:59:13
down some rules.
1:59:15
I mean, yeah, you did learn how to
1:59:17
read and write that way, but you didn't
1:59:19
make any money doing it.
1:59:20
Mid Journey has made, has millions of subscribers
1:59:24
and it made $300 million last year.
1:59:27
Now, do they have the right to all
1:59:29
that?
1:59:29
That's the real question.
1:59:31
And usually when anybody makes money, if you
1:59:35
have some connection to it, you may have
1:59:37
right to take some of that money.
1:59:40
Mm hmm.
1:59:41
OK, Bob, I'm only not completely buying into
1:59:45
that.
1:59:46
Buying into what?
1:59:47
The idea that, well, yeah, the brain works
1:59:50
the same way, but you weren't making money.
1:59:52
What if you're a little prodigy and you're
1:59:54
playing Mozart?
1:59:55
You know, you're a six year old that
1:59:57
can play the piano like a maniac.
1:59:59
Yeah, then you paid a fortune to go
2:00:01
play Mozart.
2:00:02
No, hold on, hold on.
2:00:05
If you play something, there's a version of
2:00:10
copyright which is performing rights, royalties that have
2:00:13
to be paid.
2:00:14
Yeah, and they're paid.
2:00:15
Yeah, exactly.
2:00:16
So this has, this is not a foreign
2:00:19
concept.
2:00:20
I mean, I'm.
2:00:21
Well, these guys, they've licensed a lot of
2:00:23
stuff.
2:00:23
Some people do get paid.
2:00:24
I mean, I'm not going to be a,
2:00:26
it takes just the devil's advocate side on
2:00:28
this whole thing because I think it's still
2:00:30
up in the air.
2:00:30
And the more interesting clip is the last
2:00:33
clip.
2:00:33
But I think clip four is still sitting
2:00:35
in between this and that.
2:00:36
Tell us a little bit more about Midgen
2:00:38
because it's a company that some people will
2:00:41
know about.
2:00:41
A lot of other people won't know much
2:00:43
about.
2:00:43
What sort of things does it do?
2:00:45
If you were asked Disney or Universal, they're
2:00:49
plagiarists.
2:00:50
They're copyright free writers.
2:00:52
That was, I think, the statement made by,
2:00:55
by one of the movie studios.
2:00:57
They basically create new content, a new AI
2:01:01
content.
2:01:02
And it's quite vivid and quite interesting.
2:01:04
And that's why it's drawn all these people.
2:01:07
They're real curious and they're being entertained by
2:01:09
it.
2:01:09
That raises the question, do they have the
2:01:11
right to, you know, take characters from Cars
2:01:14
and Toy Story and Shrek and the Avengers
2:01:19
and the minions from Despicable Me?
2:01:21
Those are iconic characters.
2:01:23
Can they really take them, pump them into
2:01:26
their servers and create something new based on
2:01:30
that?
2:01:30
And you can make a good argument that
2:01:33
what's being created isn't sufficiently different that they
2:01:37
can claim that they own it.
2:01:39
Yeah, well, let us see how the cause
2:01:41
come up with that.
2:01:41
Cathy, we're seeing, you know, Elton John was
2:01:44
talking about this whole problem, the very famous
2:01:47
musician from England.
2:01:48
Are you seeing a similar discussion around?
2:01:51
I mean, huge entertainment industries aren't there like
2:01:53
South Korea, China, India.
2:01:55
Do you think this is an emerging issue
2:01:57
for Asia as well?
2:01:59
Yeah, I think definitely, especially, you know, you
2:02:02
mentioned Korea and I can't help but think
2:02:05
of, for example, K-pop groups and how
2:02:08
their likeness might be used in these kind
2:02:11
of AI prompts.
2:02:14
There's also kind of the deeper question beyond
2:02:17
just copyright.
2:02:18
But what about kind of ownership of your
2:02:20
own image?
2:02:23
Well, so I do have some outspoken thoughts
2:02:26
on this, but I'll wait until the final
2:02:27
clip goes.
2:02:28
But the, in general, the data that most
2:02:34
of these large language models, because that's what
2:02:38
it is, have been trained on is from
2:02:42
content that people have already signed their rights
2:02:45
away to on the internet.
2:02:47
So the best example is Reddit, who are
2:02:49
now doing gangbusters in revenue because they're selling
2:02:52
all of their users writing into multiple AI
2:02:57
companies.
2:02:58
Anything you put on X is Grok's property.
2:03:02
So that's really been the boondoggle, but it
2:03:06
is definitely just copying and pasting whenever it
2:03:12
recognizes a pattern that has asked for it
2:03:15
and it just sends it right back.
2:03:17
So, I mean, yeah, the Hollywood guys, they
2:03:19
probably have a little bit, but it's all
2:03:23
third gen from stuff that was put out
2:03:25
there on the internet.
2:03:26
So it's going to be tough to prove
2:03:27
that.
2:03:28
Well, the thing that's interesting is this last
2:03:31
clip, and I took about another 10 minutes
2:03:34
out.
2:03:35
I got sick of this.
2:03:37
And so I got near the end here
2:03:39
with this last comment where the woman notices
2:03:42
there's actually three kind of dimensions to this
2:03:45
suit, which involves the input, rights to the
2:03:51
input, output, whether it is plagiarism or it's
2:03:56
something, if it's, you know, it can't really
2:03:58
be original, but it looks to be.
2:04:01
And then the one, the other kicker, which
2:04:03
is the one that is really, to me,
2:04:06
interesting is the prompt itself.
2:04:10
And which means that the way the lawsuit's
2:04:13
going, the way she sees it, is that
2:04:14
the people writing the prompt, Darren.
2:04:20
They're the ones violating the copyright?
2:04:22
They can be violating the copyright.
2:04:25
Wow.
2:04:26
This is great.
2:04:28
Put it on the dumb user.
2:04:29
The thing that I would keep an eye
2:04:31
on is there's the training part and then
2:04:33
there's the output part.
2:04:34
And I just do want to emphasize that
2:04:37
Disney's theory here is that somebody who says,
2:04:41
you know, I want a minion icon for
2:04:44
my blue sky account to chat GP or
2:04:47
one of these engines is infringing copyright.
2:04:53
And they want to hold the company responsible
2:04:58
for that, even though it's the user prompting
2:05:01
it.
2:05:01
But the theory requires that the user is
2:05:05
also an infringer.
2:05:06
And I think we should worry about that.
2:05:08
Oh, that's perfect.
2:05:11
Well, yes, I feel, and I'm in agreement
2:05:14
with this.
2:05:15
If you say to any large language model
2:05:19
AI thing, I want a minion for my
2:05:21
blog and you put a minion up there.
2:05:24
Yeah, you're violating copyright.
2:05:26
That's why we don't choose art that has
2:05:28
those types of images in it, because we're
2:05:30
not going to put it up there.
2:05:31
We know these companies are very litigious and
2:05:34
we would, in fact, be violating some of
2:05:37
their nascent rights.
2:05:37
Oh, yeah, we're copyright.
2:05:39
We're very careful about not putting like Mickey
2:05:41
Mouse image, for example, even people should be
2:05:44
public domain.
2:05:45
I might add.
2:05:46
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
2:05:47
I'm not going to argue.
2:05:50
That is interesting.
2:05:52
And, you know, I just want to say
2:05:54
I've been the naysayer on artificial intelligence and
2:05:56
Andrew Horowitz sent me Sam Altman's latest blog
2:06:00
post, which is basically, did he send it
2:06:03
to you too?
2:06:04
No.
2:06:06
It's like 8,000 words and it's, oh,
2:06:08
the future is going to be great.
2:06:10
And don't worry about it.
2:06:11
He had AI write it.
2:06:12
Of course he had AI write it.
2:06:14
Of course he did.
2:06:16
Then it was just like, oh, this is
2:06:17
awesome.
2:06:18
And the world's going to change in so
2:06:20
many ways.
2:06:21
Whatever.
2:06:24
I have worked for probably close to six
2:06:27
hours a day for the past three months
2:06:29
on a software project using multiple versions of
2:06:32
AI.
2:06:34
Then I can inequivocably say there is no
2:06:37
intelligence in this.
2:06:40
And the intelligence, there's a lot of definitions
2:06:42
of intelligence, but I think a general term,
2:06:46
a general definition is intelligence is the ability
2:06:49
to learn from experience and adapt to and
2:06:53
shape and select environments.
2:06:55
And the reason why I can, and actually
2:06:58
your own experience, if you go to Anthropic,
2:07:03
which I think you use, and you ask
2:07:04
it something because you treat it like an
2:07:07
entity, you ask it, but you ask it
2:07:10
a different way and it gives you a
2:07:11
different answer.
2:07:12
That's because there's no intelligence to interpret what
2:07:15
you're actually asking for what you want.
2:07:19
It is just looking at the pattern of
2:07:21
the words you use and it's looking across
2:07:23
its vast array of information it's sucked up
2:07:26
and saying, ah, when this pattern emerges, I
2:07:29
need to bring this pattern back.
2:07:32
And they do that in a human way
2:07:34
by saying, here's what I think you wanted
2:07:36
or here's your end.
2:07:37
They'll talk to you like you're a human
2:07:38
being.
2:07:38
That's the parlor trick.
2:07:40
But when it comes, so that's just English
2:07:43
language.
2:07:43
When it comes to syntax, as in computer
2:07:46
code, in this case, Python, if I did
2:07:51
not prompt this, any AI, any AI, every
2:07:54
single time to say, OK, when you make
2:07:57
this change in my code, do not change
2:08:00
the user agent from Godcaster to Mozilla or
2:08:04
PyURL lib.
2:08:06
It would do that by itself.
2:08:09
And the reason why it would do that
2:08:10
is even though I've said it, the same
2:08:12
conversation, so-called workspace where it's supposed to
2:08:15
remember what I said, it doesn't because it
2:08:18
just goes, oh, you want this piece of
2:08:20
code, you want it to do this.
2:08:21
I know where that code is and here's
2:08:23
that code.
2:08:24
And it's not intelligent enough to stop doing
2:08:27
what I asked it to not do a
2:08:28
thousand times.
2:08:29
And of course, the minute I start typing
2:08:31
into the prompt in all caps, you stupid
2:08:34
piece of crap, that's when I had to
2:08:36
step away and say, OK, now I see
2:08:38
what's happening.
2:08:39
And that, so all of that is fine.
2:08:41
And if people want to spend trillions of
2:08:43
dollars investing in that, great, that's fantastic.
2:08:46
I don't think it's a great, it's like
2:08:48
a thesaurus, grammar, spell check, copy paste machine
2:08:54
on steroids.
2:08:54
It definitely has a place as a tool.
2:08:56
It's not intelligence.
2:08:58
I find it fascinating that the big griper,
2:09:02
complainer, moaner and groaner about AIU use it
2:09:07
more than I do.
2:09:08
No, I did this specifically and I stayed
2:09:11
at it because I wanted to be able
2:09:13
to speak intelligently about what this is and
2:09:15
what it isn't.
2:09:16
And I finished my project.
2:09:18
I finished it last Saturday.
2:09:20
And it was, yes.
2:09:21
And I could have done this with a
2:09:23
software engineer who knows what he's doing in
2:09:25
one day.
2:09:26
It took me three months, a lot of
2:09:28
pain, but I learned exactly what AI is
2:09:32
and what it isn't.
2:09:33
And there's no intelligence.
2:09:35
The danger, the only danger is this artificial
2:09:40
intimacy.
2:09:42
That's the AI that we have to watch
2:09:44
out for.
2:09:44
And we talked about that on the last
2:09:45
show, where people are going to chatbots just
2:09:49
like the 900 numbers.
2:09:51
And in fact, this is from the tech
2:09:54
show in London here.
2:09:55
She talks, flirts and even gets jealous like
2:09:59
a real girlfriend.
2:10:00
Remember, you're my one and only, OK?
2:10:02
Don't even think about chatting up other AIs.
2:10:04
But Mio isn't human.
2:10:06
She's an AI-powered virtual companion available 24
2:10:10
-7 through the MyMio app.
2:10:12
Users can chat with her anytime, choose her
2:10:15
clothes and even adjust her personality.
2:10:18
Her creators from the Chinese company Metaloop say
2:10:21
Mio can help tackle the loneliness epidemic.
2:10:24
When people feel lonely or people maybe didn't
2:10:28
get connected to the society or didn't have
2:10:31
the girlfriend or sometimes depressed, so maybe they
2:10:35
need someone to move her moves, so then
2:10:38
maybe will come to the apps and talk
2:10:41
to her.
2:10:42
The company says Mio provides emotional support, but
2:10:46
reactions at London Tech Week were mixed.
2:10:50
Well, I looked at her and I thought,
2:10:54
stereotypical men's fantasy.
2:10:57
Are we looking at women being obsolete?
2:11:01
Others are concerned about the psychological and ethical
2:11:04
impact of an AI companion.
2:11:07
Get to configure them in a way that
2:11:09
really attends to all of your needs.
2:11:11
You don't even know what it is that
2:11:13
you need.
2:11:14
Humans, unfortunately, especially insecure humans are sometimes not
2:11:18
to be really trusted with her.
2:11:23
AI companions like Mio are particularly popular in
2:11:26
East Asia, where Microsoft's SureEyes leads the market
2:11:30
with hundreds of millions of users.
2:11:33
So it's young men who are lonely all
2:11:37
because of their phones.
2:11:38
All would have been solved by forced socialization.
2:11:40
I'm with you.
2:11:42
And sock hops in high school.
2:11:44
I am completely with you.
2:11:45
It's not too late to bring them back.
2:11:46
We can do a world tour.
2:11:48
Adam's Adam Curry and John C.
2:11:49
Dvorak sock hop.
2:11:51
We can go out there.
2:11:52
We'll play stairway to heaven to all these
2:11:54
kids.
2:11:56
And God only knows by the Beach Boys
2:11:58
is going to be fantastic.
2:12:01
No, I am genuinely concerned about this intimacy
2:12:04
and this loneliness.
2:12:05
And people are going to they're already flocking
2:12:07
to these things.
2:12:08
I mean, the the.
2:12:10
I think your your parallel with the 900
2:12:12
number is apt.
2:12:14
Yeah, psychics, you know, Dionne Warwick.
2:12:18
Remember, she had the psychic hotline.
2:12:19
And this is for lonely people.
2:12:21
And we have only.
2:12:23
Made more lonely people in the world who
2:12:26
at this point are all clicking and very
2:12:28
frustrated because at this moment, both Cloudflare and
2:12:33
Google Cloud are down all over the world.
2:12:37
The entire service is down.
2:12:40
I hope people are still listening to the
2:12:42
show.
2:12:43
Well, we don't use that kind of stuff.
2:12:45
No, it's true.
2:12:47
We have our own.
2:12:48
This, by the way, is why we have
2:12:50
donations, because we have our own independent server
2:12:53
network that is run by our guy.
2:12:55
Our guy.
2:12:55
Boy, zero.
2:12:56
Our guy.
2:12:57
That's right.
2:12:57
Is our guy.
2:12:59
He's our guy.
2:12:59
He was a guy who is really good.
2:13:01
He's one guy.
2:13:02
He's doing a pretty good job.
2:13:03
That one guy.
2:13:04
And we have servers that are located outside
2:13:07
the United States and they're not on Google
2:13:09
Cloud.
2:13:09
They're not on the cloud.
2:13:11
No, but Cloudflare.
2:13:13
That's that's going to.
2:13:15
That's pretty bad when Cloudflare gets taken.
2:13:17
A lot of podcasts are on Cloudflare.
2:13:19
A lot of them.
2:13:21
And they're blaming it on a third party
2:13:23
service that is key and is a key
2:13:26
dependency.
2:13:27
One of our microservices problem.
2:13:29
Not so it's a microservices problem with a
2:13:31
macroservices results, everybody.
2:13:34
And with that, I want to thank you
2:13:35
for your courage saying the morning to you,
2:13:36
the man who put the C and don't
2:13:38
copy that floppy say hello to my friend
2:13:40
on the other end, the one, the only
2:13:41
Mr. John C.
2:13:44
DeVore.
2:13:54
1946.
2:14:00
That's up.
2:14:01
That's what's up for.
2:14:02
Oh, it's up because of the riots.
2:14:04
No, it's up because of the the breastfeeding.
2:14:07
All the women came back.
2:14:09
We got to listen to what let's listen
2:14:10
to what those two boomers have to say.
2:14:12
I'll just bring a few boobers.
2:14:14
Those two boobers, what they have to say.
2:14:16
Yes, indeed, we are here and the trolls
2:14:18
are joining us.
2:14:20
Oh, I have a clip blitz for the
2:14:22
second after the break.
2:14:24
Holy crap.
2:14:25
Let me get my jingles.
2:14:26
I just thought I'd give you a warning.
2:14:28
Fair warning.
2:14:28
Yeah, OK.
2:14:29
All right.
2:14:31
OK, I'll be ready for you for the
2:14:33
clip.
2:14:33
Let's all right.
2:14:35
Yes, the trolls in the troll room at
2:14:37
trollroom.io. Again, not a Cloudflare or Google
2:14:41
Cloud hosted service because we know how the
2:14:44
Internet works.
2:14:45
We didn't even get psyoped into using all
2:14:47
of that big Silicon Valley tech.
2:14:49
Oh, no, we have big Northern Holland tech
2:14:52
from void zero.
2:14:53
Yeah, dependable.
2:14:55
He was actually troubleshooting email with him this
2:14:57
morning.
2:14:57
But I love that guy.
2:14:58
He's like, hey, man, everything's slow.
2:14:59
No problem.
2:15:00
We'll troubleshoot it right now.
2:15:01
I'm prepping for the show.
2:15:02
Yeah, but we'll troubleshoot it right now.
2:15:03
OK, good.
2:15:05
They are listening at trollroom.io. They might
2:15:08
also.
2:15:09
You should be using a modern podcast app.
2:15:12
Now, I can't say that people who are
2:15:14
hosting a podcast hosted on cloud through Cloudflare
2:15:18
that they will get the podcast.
2:15:20
But your podcast app will work for sure.
2:15:23
Get one of those.
2:15:24
We notify you the minute we go live.
2:15:27
All the live shows.
2:15:28
It's the new trend in podcasting people doing
2:15:30
it live because we're all sick and tired.
2:15:33
We're sick and tired of all the overproduced
2:15:35
wall of sound crap with all the ums
2:15:38
and ahs taken out.
2:15:39
No, you want to hear real voices.
2:15:41
Now, we happen to be professional voices, but
2:15:43
it doesn't matter.
2:15:44
We want to hear the real voices.
2:15:46
And when they go live, it's real.
2:15:47
You get a notification for that.
2:15:48
And when we publish.
2:15:51
And the guys at Apple are listening.
2:15:54
They they do hear me.
2:15:57
They didn't say they would.
2:15:58
How do you know this?
2:15:59
Because one of my buddies over there emailed
2:16:01
me that I put the wrong size image
2:16:03
into the podcast feed.
2:16:06
So if you don't have a three, like
2:16:08
a fourteen hundred by fourteen hundred image.
2:16:12
And you've been doing this for so long.
2:16:15
Yeah, it's there's reasons for that happening.
2:16:18
It's it's it's user error.
2:16:20
My fault.
2:16:21
But he's actually a listener.
2:16:23
He's been a no agenda guy for a
2:16:24
long, long time.
2:16:26
So he'll see it come through.
2:16:27
And if you put the wrong size image
2:16:29
in, then they won't display it in their
2:16:31
podcast app.
2:16:32
Then you know what he does?
2:16:34
He lets it go through because he's my
2:16:36
boy.
2:16:37
So I know I know that they're hearing
2:16:39
it.
2:16:39
And I know that the people who work
2:16:42
within the podcast division are good people.
2:16:45
I just don't think they have the power.
2:16:47
You know, they have to.
2:16:48
They're sitting there looking like, oh, my God,
2:16:50
we got another update from Tim Apple.
2:16:53
Liquid Glass is gorgeous.
2:16:55
Look at the new icon for the podcast
2:16:57
app.
2:16:57
It's gorgeous.
2:16:58
They're like, can we get pod being in
2:17:00
here already?
2:17:01
So I feel your pain, everybody.
2:17:03
Yes.
2:17:03
Whenever we publish within 90 seconds, boom, you
2:17:06
get notified and your podcast is there as
2:17:08
long as it's not hosted on Cloudflare.
2:17:10
But of course, podcasting was never meant to
2:17:13
be decentralized.
2:17:14
It's decentralized by nature.
2:17:16
So we expect a lot more people checking
2:17:18
in with us because like I can't get
2:17:20
my I can't get Megan Kelly.
2:17:22
Tucker won't work.
2:17:23
Oh, I have to go to these two
2:17:25
boobs with these boomers.
2:17:26
No agenda.
2:17:26
Oh, that's actually a pretty good show.
2:17:28
Oh, that's interesting.
2:17:29
So we shall see if if attendance goes
2:17:33
up and if downloads go up, not that
2:17:35
we look at them.
2:17:37
Now, as John mentioned, this is value for
2:17:41
value is how we run the show.
2:17:43
That's actually Void Zero started that a long
2:17:45
time ago with the IRC chat room, now
2:17:47
known as the troll room.
2:17:49
But many people do things for us.
2:17:51
Just I mean, things that are invaluable, really.
2:17:54
I mean, building, maintaining website, even a costly
2:17:56
way.
2:17:57
If you want a website built these days.
2:17:59
I mean, even just a WordPress blog that
2:18:02
kind of looks like a website.
2:18:03
You're looking at five grand for someone to
2:18:05
put that together and another like $350 a
2:18:09
month just to host it and maintain it.
2:18:12
So these are very valuable services that people
2:18:14
do for us.
2:18:15
Now, we have three types of value we'd
2:18:18
like you to send back for the value
2:18:20
we put out there for free for everybody
2:18:22
to use.
2:18:23
However you want, you listen to it, you
2:18:24
download it, you stick it on a USB
2:18:26
stick, you give it to your kids, you
2:18:28
put it in the in the lock box,
2:18:30
whatever you do, and you can do that
2:18:32
with time, talent or treasure.
2:18:33
We're going to thank people $50 and above,
2:18:35
and we'll tell you exactly how they blessed
2:18:37
us with their value donation.
2:18:39
But first, we want to thank another very
2:18:41
important group of people who send us time
2:18:43
and talents.
2:18:44
That is our No Agenda artists who are
2:18:47
pretty much guaranteed to all go to jail
2:18:49
for prompting.
2:18:51
Once that lawsuit's over.
2:18:53
For their illegal prompts.
2:18:55
Illegal prompts.
2:18:57
And for episodes.
2:18:58
There'll be a book about it.
2:19:00
Are you going to write it?
2:19:01
You're going to write it?
2:19:01
Illegal prompts now.
2:19:03
No, that's a good one.
2:19:04
Oh, that is a that's a true crime
2:19:06
right there.
2:19:07
True crime thriller.
2:19:07
Illegal prompts.
2:19:10
Episode 1771 was titled Home Depotation.
2:19:14
See what we did there?
2:19:15
And the art came from Blue Acorn, who
2:19:18
brought us the LA riots with a clapboard,
2:19:24
a slate that said Influencer Event Scene 33.
2:19:28
We thought that was kind of cool.
2:19:29
We appreciated Blue Acorn doing that for us.
2:19:32
So we use that as the album art.
2:19:34
Let's take a look at some others.
2:19:36
It's not even on the page anymore.
2:19:38
We got so much art that came in.
2:19:40
Wow, what happened?
2:19:41
Oh, is it all Darren and Digital 2112,
2:19:44
man?
2:19:44
Yeah, it is.
2:19:46
They just went crazy with the prompts.
2:19:48
You know what?
2:19:49
You know what it is?
2:19:50
This is they've trained AI to do AI
2:19:53
imagery.
2:19:53
I think the prompt is prompting AI.
2:19:56
It could be.
2:19:57
Yeah, something like that.
2:19:58
Then what are you going to do?
2:19:59
What are you going to do with your
2:20:00
lawsuit?
2:20:01
Hey, I got nothing to do with it.
2:20:03
For sure.
2:20:05
It's degraded the quality of the art, both
2:20:08
in luminance.
2:20:09
A couple of good pieces coming up.
2:20:10
OK, well, let's see this on page two.
2:20:12
Oh, my goodness.
2:20:13
It's already on page two.
2:20:15
So Darren actually did the No Agenda in
2:20:18
the Home Depot logo, which I think is
2:20:21
where we got Home Depotation from, which was
2:20:23
right next to the Influencer Event by Blue
2:20:26
Acorn.
2:20:27
Blue Acorn doesn't necessarily use AI.
2:20:29
I think he's a hybrid artist.
2:20:31
I think he uses half and half.
2:20:32
For one thing, that Influencer Event, Scene 33,
2:20:36
there's no way AI wrote that on there.
2:20:38
No, no, no.
2:20:39
And so I also post these on X
2:20:44
and on my Mastodon.
2:20:46
And I got some troll who showed up.
2:20:49
You still have a Mastodon?
2:20:50
I thought you don't use Mastodon.
2:20:52
I have my own.
2:20:54
Oh, that's right.
2:20:54
You have your little instance.
2:20:56
And we have podcastindex.social. So, you know,
2:20:59
I don't look at any of the other
2:21:01
stuff, but I got some troll, picked up
2:21:02
a troll, who, by the way, he's actually
2:21:04
a guy who, I think, likes the show.
2:21:09
And let me see if I can find
2:21:11
it.
2:21:11
Because he saw this image says, you want
2:21:14
to backtrack on it not being a big
2:21:16
deal, the riots in Los Angeles.
2:21:22
I know, right?
2:21:23
I was like, what is your problem?
2:21:26
He doesn't listen to the show much.
2:21:28
No, I looked at his timeline.
2:21:30
He has tons of retweets.
2:21:33
And let me see if I can find
2:21:36
it.
2:21:36
Wait, under.
2:21:38
Because he was going off on me.
2:21:41
Oh, how was your USAID trip to Moscow?
2:21:45
Coincidence that your uncle was a top CIA
2:21:48
guy?
2:21:49
I can't trust you anymore.
2:21:54
Like, really?
2:21:57
Let me see.
2:21:57
Where was it?
2:21:59
Where was he?
2:22:01
No, I don't think I can find him.
2:22:04
I don't trust you anymore.
2:22:06
That was how many decades ago?
2:22:08
Yeah, no, here he is.
2:22:08
Here he is.
2:22:09
Oh, here it is.
2:22:10
Here it is.
2:22:10
Okay, I found it.
2:22:12
We got boots on the ground from someone
2:22:14
who works at Palantir, LOL.
2:22:16
And just so everybody knows, these are good
2:22:18
guys.
2:22:20
WTF, Adam?
2:22:20
The show has gone from absolutely can't miss
2:22:23
to borderline unlistenable.
2:22:24
Neither of you are stupid, so it's got
2:22:27
to be something else.
2:22:31
So I reply, pro tip, you forgot to
2:22:34
say we're Zionist chills.
2:22:36
Bro, bro, if your response to criticism is
2:22:40
that I'm a troll, very disappointing.
2:22:42
We've engaged on here many times.
2:22:44
If your response to Palantir having a direct
2:22:46
line into the White House is no biggie,
2:22:49
then the show is a lost cause.
2:22:52
Imagine quitting weed and becoming more retarded.
2:22:55
I mean...
2:23:02
And then it was back and forth.
2:23:04
That's a good one.
2:23:06
There's one last one.
2:23:07
You listen to someone for three to eight
2:23:09
hours a week over many years, it's easy
2:23:12
to detect a disturbance in the force.
2:23:16
I get that you got QAnon'd, but you've
2:23:19
been taking it out on your producers for
2:23:21
two years and the show has turned into
2:23:23
a Jesus Boomer slop.
2:23:25
I don't trust you.
2:23:30
He made it clear he doesn't trust you.
2:23:33
Yes, I think he doesn't trust me.
2:23:34
I think there's a...
2:23:35
We have a lack of trust with this
2:23:37
particular individual.
2:23:38
A lack of trust.
2:23:39
And I'm very sorry.
2:23:40
But there was no specifics.
2:23:42
No.
2:23:43
Well, no, but that, you know, I went
2:23:46
to...
2:23:46
I mean, has he caught you saying something
2:23:49
that's completely inaccurate and you're lying like they
2:23:51
do on the...
2:23:51
mainstream news?
2:23:53
He said that I had said we got
2:23:55
our boots on the ground from selling a
2:23:57
Palantir and then he misquotes me by saying
2:24:00
it's no biggie, everything's okay.
2:24:03
I'm like, no, I didn't say that.
2:24:05
I said, it's bullcrap.
2:24:08
This whole Whitney Webb Palantir is going to
2:24:10
take over.
2:24:11
Oh, he's a Whitney Webb guy.
2:24:12
Yes, of course.
2:24:13
Whitney Webb's cute.
2:24:14
It's probably Whitney Webb.
2:24:17
It's Whitney Webb's alt account.
2:24:22
All right.
2:24:22
Anyway, onward.
2:24:23
Thank you very much, Blue Acorn.
2:24:25
We appreciate you and all of the No
2:24:27
Agenda artists.
2:24:28
And wow.
2:24:29
I also, I appreciate that little Twitter diatribe.
2:24:31
It's always fun to do the voice again.
2:24:33
Now let us thank the executive...
2:24:35
You do the voice every show.
2:24:37
Not always.
2:24:37
Let's thank our executive and associate executive producers
2:24:40
for episode 1772.
2:24:45
Yes.
2:24:48
1772.
2:24:49
Now we thank everybody.
2:24:51
$30, $50 and above.
2:24:52
And we tell you how much they supported
2:24:53
us with.
2:24:55
In this particular segment, we take a little
2:24:57
page from the show business playbook and we
2:25:01
give people titles as an extra incentive if
2:25:04
they're so inclined.
2:25:05
You don't have to support us with $200
2:25:07
or $300.
2:25:08
None of that's necessary.
2:25:09
We just be happy if everybody just did
2:25:11
a couple bucks a show, that would be
2:25:13
great.
2:25:13
But no one does that.
2:25:14
It's less than 2%.
2:25:15
No, never happened.
2:25:16
Is it 2% or is it not
2:25:18
even 2%?
2:25:20
Around 1%.
2:25:22
1% support us financially.
2:25:26
And that's how people want to support us.
2:25:29
And thanks to them.
2:25:31
And that includes everyone down at the bottom.
2:25:32
What's the bottom number here?
2:25:34
I think, like I see the whole spreadsheet.
2:25:36
We still have people giving us $2, $2
2:25:39
.2, $3.33. Love them.
2:25:42
A lot of $4.
2:25:44
Yeah, that's the $4 weekly donation.
2:25:46
Oh, the $4 weekly donation.
2:25:48
Yes, okay.
2:25:49
Well, we appreciate all of it.
2:25:51
So the deal is, if you support us
2:25:53
with $200 or above, we read your note,
2:25:55
first of all.
2:25:56
We can't read everybody's note, but we'll read
2:25:57
your note.
2:25:58
And you get the Associate Executive Producer credit,
2:26:02
which is good for the rest of your
2:26:03
life.
2:26:03
You can use it anywhere.
2:26:04
Hollywood show business credits are recognized, including IMDb.
2:26:08
$300 and above, you get an Executive Producer
2:26:11
credit.
2:26:11
Same rules apply.
2:26:12
We read your note.
2:26:13
And we kick it off with Al Kelkoff,
2:26:16
which sounds very Dutch, who is in Aurora,
2:26:19
Illinois.
2:26:20
And he comes in with $1,052.62.
2:26:27
And he kicks it off by saying, grace,
2:26:30
mercy, and peace from our Lord and Savior,
2:26:32
Jesus Christ, and from me, Al Kelkoff.
2:26:35
And this donation is a switcheroo for my
2:26:38
smoking hot wife, Barbara Kelkoff, in recognition of
2:26:41
her birthday on Friday, June 13th.
2:26:44
So I'm going to make that switcheroo change
2:26:46
right away.
2:26:47
Barbara and I have been married almost 39
2:26:50
years, and we never had a fight.
2:26:52
She is the kindest, most giving person I
2:26:55
know.
2:26:56
She volunteers with numerous organizations, but always has
2:26:59
times for her friends and her husband.
2:27:02
She has turned our new house into a
2:27:04
home, and I couldn't be more blessed than
2:27:06
to have her as a wife.
2:27:08
We started listening to No Agenda back before
2:27:10
COVID after I was looking for a podcast
2:27:12
and Googled, what is the best podcast?
2:27:17
And it worked.
2:27:19
It did work.
2:27:20
And No Agenda was at the top of
2:27:22
the list.
2:27:22
From that day, we were hooked.
2:27:24
Please, would you de-douche Barbara?
2:27:28
You've been de-douched.
2:27:31
And he also says, because it's her birthday,
2:27:34
would you give her a biscuit for her
2:27:36
birthday?
2:27:36
Well, of course.
2:27:37
They always give me a biscuit on my
2:27:39
birthday.
2:27:40
Keep up the great work and feel free
2:27:41
to end podcasting once all things domestically and
2:27:44
internationally leave nothing left to deconstruct.
2:27:47
I'll have her contact you with her official
2:27:49
dame name.
2:27:50
Good.
2:27:51
We look forward to that.
2:27:52
Al Kolkoff.
2:27:53
So it's a surprise.
2:27:54
Happy birthday, Barbara.
2:27:55
Sounds like you got a good man there.
2:27:56
Thank you very much, Al, for the support
2:27:58
of the show.
2:28:01
Onward with Richard Hollow.
2:28:03
He's in...
2:28:04
Hollow.
2:28:05
He's in a Deutschland in the town of
2:28:09
Schler...
2:28:10
What?
2:28:12
Schlersee, I guess.
2:28:13
I think it was Schliersee.
2:28:15
Schliersee.
2:28:17
Dear Adam.
2:28:18
Dear John.
2:28:19
Jobs, karma for all.
2:28:20
He came in with a thousand dollars.
2:28:22
Boom, shakalaka.
2:28:24
Health, karma for all.
2:28:25
Love my wife, love my children and my
2:28:28
dog.
2:28:29
Best wis...
2:28:30
Wiss...
2:28:31
Wisses.
2:28:33
Best wisses...
2:28:34
Wishes.
2:28:35
Richard, retired headmaster in Schliersee.
2:28:39
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:28:43
Let's vote for jobs.
2:28:45
You got karma.
2:28:47
All right, Richard.
2:28:50
Richard, Richard.
2:28:51
Danka.
2:28:53
Eric Kessler, Kansas City, Missouri.
2:28:56
333.33. We love those threes.
2:28:58
Thank you for providing the best podcast in
2:29:00
the universe.
2:29:01
I continue to learn how to spot slanted
2:29:04
news stories and your deconstruction of the media
2:29:06
is worth every penny.
2:29:08
Shout out to all the boots on the
2:29:10
ground too.
2:29:11
You got it, man.
2:29:11
Thank you.
2:29:13
Now we have anonymous.
2:29:15
Parts Unknown, 333.33. I hope this email
2:29:20
finds you well.
2:29:23
Well, Adam might have a general disdain for
2:29:26
actual Indians.
2:29:29
Wait a minute.
2:29:31
I do not have a disdain for actual
2:29:33
Indians.
2:29:34
Well, maybe he's talking about AI and that's
2:29:36
code.
2:29:37
Oh, okay.
2:29:39
I don't know.
2:29:40
Okay, yeah, yeah.
2:29:41
Good point.
2:29:41
Good point.
2:29:41
C slander.
2:29:43
Duck, duck goes.
2:29:44
AI summarizes it as polite, but comes across
2:29:47
as overused or insincere.
2:29:50
And that's why people prefer to use more
2:29:51
engaging alternatives.
2:29:53
Hopefully that's the first and last time I
2:29:56
will ever use that opener.
2:29:58
Which is, I hope this email finds you
2:30:00
well.
2:30:02
This is a very spooky note from an
2:30:04
anonymous source.
2:30:06
Speaking of AI, maybe young males are lonely
2:30:09
and using AI chat box to interact with
2:30:11
because, as John has alluded to, they can't
2:30:14
interact with women properly.
2:30:16
Why?
2:30:19
Got every trope in here they can think
2:30:22
of.
2:30:23
Because they literally, they like, why?
2:30:27
Because they likely unfunny.
2:30:30
Slur using degenerates or just the water.
2:30:36
Now, did I read that wrong?
2:30:38
But it takes it, but take that information
2:30:41
with a grain of salt since that information
2:30:43
did come from a tic-tac.
2:30:48
Regarding the, this is code for somebody.
2:30:51
Yeah, something's going on, yeah.
2:30:52
Regarding the wildfire smoke, do we have a
2:30:55
short-term memory or something, M5M?
2:30:58
When was the last time Western Canada wasn't
2:31:01
on fire during the summer?
2:31:03
Yeah, thank you.
2:31:04
Good point.
2:31:05
Jingles, TTP jobs karma.
2:31:07
What's in, what's that in your mouth?
2:31:09
Don't look over here.
2:31:11
Thank you for your courage.
2:31:12
Don't look over here.
2:31:13
Nothing to see here.
2:31:16
Ooh, look at that.
2:31:16
What's that in your mouth?
2:31:18
Jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs, jobs.
2:31:22
Job, job.
2:31:22
You've got karma.
2:31:24
All right, nice sequence.
2:31:27
And Drew McArdle is in Lafayette, Louisiana, 333
2:31:30
and wants some baby-making karma with a
2:31:33
goat.
2:31:33
ITM boys, Drew McArdle from Baton Rouge here.
2:31:36
I've been on the 2019 $20 and 19
2:31:39
cents night layaway program since December of 2019
2:31:43
And I finally crossed the threshold to knighthood
2:31:46
I wonder if more people will be coming
2:31:48
people who started that on the 20th of
2:31:50
December 2019 Check your amounts of people you
2:31:54
may be a knight or a dame I'm
2:31:56
donating this 333 to establish my knight name
2:32:00
as sir droodle on a noodle protector of
2:32:02
the red stick and laffy taffy Also, I'd
2:32:06
like to call out my brother Ben McArdle
2:32:10
my father Frank McArdle And my best friend
2:32:15
Caleb Michaelson as douchebag Thank you for your
2:32:19
courage.
2:32:20
Love you both and I mean it you've
2:32:25
got Karma Good luck anonymous in Alicante,
2:32:35
España 200 and No The prompt was on
2:32:42
it right in the middle of it the
2:32:44
big plus-size 303 of the nation Yes,
2:32:47
and he's anonymous from Spain, but that's it's
2:32:49
really didn't really send.
2:32:51
You know, let's give him a double up
2:32:51
karma You've got And we moved to our
2:33:00
first associate executive producer with $240 Lynn Craig
2:33:03
from Colorado Springs, Colorado.
2:33:05
No note.
2:33:06
So Lynn also gets a double up karma
2:33:10
Karma Now we have the Commodore dude named
2:33:14
Ben in San Francisco 220-222 that's a
2:33:18
row of ducks Commodore dude named Ben Duke
2:33:20
of the San Francisco reminds the Bay Area
2:33:23
Navy to To say me up me up
2:33:28
meet up at the dog patch saloon this
2:33:31
Saturday at 333 Let's escape the control grid
2:33:37
To beat some nice protests going on too
2:33:40
and he has Hashtag hot pockets hashtag pina
2:33:47
colada escape Just
2:34:17
Thank you very much Commodore dude named Ben
2:34:20
we move on to Sean Holman from Noblesville,
2:34:24
Indiana 21911 ah, that's the code right there
2:34:27
book of Jonah He says his love endures
2:34:30
forever Peace and blessings Adam and John.
2:34:33
Thank you, brother Frank Maloney in Sister Bay,
2:34:40
Wisconsin He was a d-douching You've been
2:34:46
d-douched Came in with $210 and 60
2:34:50
cents Frank Maloney and his big country unit
2:34:53
Sister Bay His big country units.
2:34:57
He's got us all scrambled here So I'm
2:34:59
not sure what he's referring to and he
2:35:00
says his big country unit sounds like I'm
2:35:03
assuming it's big and a band Us Could
2:35:07
be Sister Bay, Wisconsin available whenever you wherever
2:35:10
you stream music.
2:35:11
So it's okay.
2:35:12
Frank Maloney is big country unit Sister Bay,
2:35:15
Wisconsin.
2:35:16
There you go.
2:35:16
Check it out Frank Maloney.
2:35:18
Check it out.
2:35:18
Let's will be good We'll check it out
2:35:19
and we will do I do some jingles
2:35:21
for us Frank Eli the coffee guy is
2:35:24
back with 206 12 He says John last
2:35:27
Thursday show you ask if our Ethiopian Guiji
2:35:30
organic is peaberry coffee It is not Peaberry
2:35:35
has nothing to do with the size of
2:35:37
the bean Although peaberry beans are generally smaller
2:35:40
You can tell the peaberry from its roundness
2:35:42
as supposed as opposed to its size The
2:35:45
peaberry is actually a mutation in about 5
2:35:48
% of coffee beans where the bean develops
2:35:50
one cherry instead of the regular Two cherries
2:35:53
which makes for a more intense flavor profile
2:35:56
in a denser bean Jingles the more, you
2:36:00
know In the morning All this peaberry talk
2:36:05
makes us want to bring back our Papua
2:36:07
New Guinea peaberry So for a limited time
2:36:09
only visit gigawatt coffee roasters calm and use
2:36:13
code Itm 24 20% off your order
2:36:15
and grab a bag today Stay caffeinated says
2:36:19
Eli the coffee guy and Eli actually got
2:36:22
a free plug on DH unplugged Which is
2:36:25
not true because it's very pluggy that unplugged
2:36:27
you plugged him Yes, I did I mentioned
2:36:30
him and now that he's got the peaberry
2:36:31
I expect a bag that's right after Andrew
2:36:34
Horowitz said That as a Jew, he doesn't
2:36:37
like people harping on China I Was on
2:36:41
the floor It was pretty wild But he
2:36:46
also mentioned the key that he's gotten to
2:36:48
the point where he can't drink coffee It
2:36:50
gives him, you know GERD or something.
2:36:52
I don't know GERD GERD that doesn't sound
2:36:55
good Luke Frank Castaneda in Austin, Texas Sergeant
2:37:03
that's sergeant Fred Sergeant our red.
2:37:06
I said Frank.
2:37:07
Yeah, that's red sergeant Fred.
2:37:09
Did he not send in it?
2:37:11
He always sends in a note.
2:37:12
So no, this is a check.
2:37:13
This is a bank check.
2:37:14
That's why it's great Sergeant Fred he is
2:37:19
a Vietnam War veteran.
2:37:21
Let me just make sure I didn't get
2:37:23
an email from him Castaneda Yeah, he may
2:37:26
have sent you a note.
2:37:27
I'm looking for it, but I don't I
2:37:29
don't see anything Maybe he just wants to
2:37:30
double up karma.
2:37:31
Well, he's getting a double up karma.
2:37:32
We love you sergeant Fred good to hear
2:37:38
Very happy to hear from him.
2:37:40
I'm glad he's okay.
2:37:41
He had some Agent Orange issues.
2:37:43
Oh, yeah Yeah, he's a good man a
2:37:47
veteran and a real American And rounding it
2:37:50
out with $200 is Linda Lou Patkin from
2:37:52
Lakewood, Colorado And Linda's asked for jobs karma
2:37:55
and says for a competitive edge with a
2:37:57
resume that gets results Go to image makers
2:38:00
Inc for all of your executive resume and
2:38:02
job search needs That's image makers Inc with
2:38:05
a K comm and work with Linda Lou
2:38:08
Duchess of jobs and writer of resumes on
2:38:10
a personal note I recently moved to a
2:38:13
town more befitting my stature at the roundtable
2:38:16
Castle Rock, Colorado as a result.
2:38:19
I would love some house selling karma for
2:38:21
my Lakewood home Well, let me get you
2:38:23
some jobs karma first jobs jobs jobs and
2:38:28
jobs Selling karma for you.
2:38:35
You've got Karma There you go Beautiful Mary
2:38:42
that takes care of show 1772 as we
2:38:46
approach 1776 that's gonna be a banger of
2:38:49
a show.
2:38:50
Ladies and gentlemen Thank you to these executive
2:38:51
and associate executive producers for 1772 Remember you
2:38:54
can support us in any amount you want
2:38:56
any time You don't have to jump through
2:38:59
hoops go to patreon or you know sign
2:39:02
up for stuff.
2:39:02
There's no tote bags.
2:39:03
We do have Producerships for you got all
2:39:06
kinds of stuff and if you donate long
2:39:08
enough and you reach $1,000 over 20
2:39:10
years, that's fine You become a night or
2:39:12
a day with the roundtable for more information.
2:39:14
Go to know agenda donations calm Thank you
2:39:16
again for supporting us our execs and associate
2:39:18
executive producers.
2:39:19
Our formula is this We go out we
2:39:23
hit people in the mouth Oh
2:39:41
We do have a deal with China though
2:39:44
Don't know if he Supposedly, well, here's the
2:39:48
I have the latest here.
2:39:50
Hold on a second.
2:39:50
This is the latest we got a deal
2:39:52
after two days of negotiations between the u
2:39:55
.s And Chinese trade representatives president Trump declared
2:39:58
in a social media post Wednesday that a
2:40:01
trade deal with China is done While acknowledging
2:40:03
both he and Chinese President Xi Jinping still
2:40:06
have to approve a final agreement He spoke
2:40:09
to his trade team who did a fantastic
2:40:10
job Negotiating this on behalf of the United
2:40:13
States and meeting with their Chinese counterparts The
2:40:15
president is talking to them about the details
2:40:17
of it now But what the president heard
2:40:19
he liked president said the u.s Will
2:40:21
keep a 55% tariff on Chinese imports
2:40:24
while China will keep a 10% tariff
2:40:26
on American goods Trump also said Beijing will
2:40:29
supply the u.s with magnets and rare
2:40:31
-earth minerals, which are vital to a number
2:40:33
of industries This is an American agreement if
2:40:37
you're an American company and you need magnets
2:40:39
They are going to approve it right away
2:40:42
Which is what we needed commerce secretary Howard
2:40:45
Lutnick told CNBC China agreed to do more
2:40:48
business with the u.s Including buying more
2:40:50
u.s. Agriculture and equipment.
2:40:52
That's quite the deal if that's true man
2:40:57
55% tariffs and we get all the
2:40:59
magnets we can stick together All the magnets
2:41:03
our kids can swallow that's dynamite the kind
2:41:06
of magazine you don't want your kid to
2:41:07
swallow.
2:41:08
No.
2:41:08
No, I'm sure Okay.
2:41:11
Well and China seems to be happy with
2:41:12
it Well, I think that part of that
2:41:16
deal which they don't talk about since that
2:41:18
they when they break down the tariffs 25
2:41:21
% of that 50 is for the fentanyl
2:41:24
Another part that which could do in other
2:41:27
words down the road somewhere China can you
2:41:29
know, just put the stop to a couple
2:41:31
of things I'll just pull the rug out
2:41:32
from under a lot of those tariffs.
2:41:33
It'll be back down to about 20%
2:41:35
Maybe oh, I see.
2:41:37
There's something fishy about that number Yeah, well
2:41:40
as long as everyone's happy, which we can't
2:41:42
look like, you know It reminds me is
2:41:43
the thing you brought up earlier the 5
2:41:45
% three and a half percent, you know,
2:41:46
yeah one thing but another It's what you
2:41:49
do it's the art of the deal, baby
2:41:52
Can't say the same for Iran, although who
2:41:55
knows a developing story now overseas the US
2:41:57
government is evacuating some diplomats and military families
2:42:01
from the Middle East because of rising tensions
2:42:03
with Iran by the way I'm not so
2:42:06
sure the term evacuating is correct because from
2:42:09
what I read it was voluntary for the
2:42:12
for the Dependents to come home so spouses
2:42:16
children, etc But sounds a little scarier when
2:42:19
you say they're being evacuated and threats of
2:42:22
an attack on u.s Basis ABC's Perry
2:42:24
Russum has details Perry.
2:42:25
Good morning, Rihanna Good morning to you The
2:42:27
threat posed by Iran is prompting the u
2:42:29
.s to prepare a partial evacuation of the
2:42:31
embassy in neighboring Iraq Officials say the evacuation
2:42:34
of u.s. Diplomats in Baghdad will begin
2:42:36
via commercial flights with the military on standby
2:42:38
if needed There's also a voluntary evacuation of
2:42:41
military family members at bases in the region
2:42:43
including those in Bahrain and Kuwait President Trump
2:42:46
speaking last night about the growing security concerns.
2:42:48
They are being moved out because it could
2:42:50
be a dangerous place and We'll see what
2:42:53
happens, but they are better.
2:42:55
We've given notice to move out And this
2:42:58
comes after Iran earlier this week threatened to
2:43:00
target all u.s bases in the region
2:43:02
if Negotiations over its nuclear weapons program failed
2:43:05
to reach a deal those talks between the
2:43:07
US and Iran resume on Sunday in Oman
2:43:10
so I Didn't like this report because they
2:43:13
they make it sound like Iran is we're
2:43:16
gonna bomb your bases BBC version of the
2:43:20
same report you might want to play Yeah,
2:43:22
and then I want to pay then I
2:43:23
want to play the France 24.
2:43:25
Let me see your Iran Here we go.
2:43:27
The United States is preparing to move some
2:43:29
staff and their families from its embassy in
2:43:32
Iraq Okay, that's a little more nuanced as
2:43:35
well as from military bases in Kuwait in
2:43:37
Bahrain Officials say the partial evacuations down to
2:43:40
what they describe as heightened security risks in
2:43:43
the region Our State Department correspondent Tom Bateman
2:43:46
reports from Washington The move comes after weeks
2:43:49
of talks between the US and Iran President
2:43:52
Trump has hoped to strike a deal to
2:43:54
stop Tehran developing a nuclear weapon, but he
2:43:57
said today he was growing less confident It
2:43:59
would stop enriching uranium Earlier this week He
2:44:02
also held a 40-minute phone call said
2:44:04
to be tense with Israel's prime minister who
2:44:07
has long argued for a military rather than
2:44:09
diplomatic approach Iran's Defense Minister said today the
2:44:13
country would target US military bases in the
2:44:16
region if a conflict was imposed upon it
2:44:19
All right.
2:44:19
Let's listen to the France 24 version I
2:44:22
made a feared deadlock in nuclear talks tensions
2:44:25
between the US and Iran have flared up
2:44:28
again After a week-long war of words
2:44:31
Donald Trump confirmed that US diplomats were being
2:44:35
removed from the region well, they are being
2:44:37
moved out because it could be a dangerous
2:44:39
place and We'll see what happens, but they
2:44:42
are better.
2:44:43
We've given notice to move out American and
2:44:48
Iranian Negotiators have been planning to meet later
2:44:51
this week for another round of talks But
2:44:53
Trump told reporters on Monday that Iran had
2:44:56
adopted an unacceptable negotiating position in particular on
2:45:00
Enrichment a u.s. Backed plan suggested that
2:45:03
Iran could only enrich uranium at low levels
2:45:06
Effectively blocking Iran's ability to enrich the fuel
2:45:10
to produce a nuclear weapon.
2:45:12
Well, they're just asking for things that you
2:45:14
can't do They don't want to give up
2:45:17
what they have to give up.
2:45:19
You know what that is They seek enrichment
2:45:22
We can't have enrichment they have given us
2:45:27
Their thoughts on the deal and I said,
2:45:29
you know, it's just not acceptable Many are
2:45:32
concerned about the risk of a potential regional
2:45:34
conflagration between Iran and Israel should diplomacy fail
2:45:39
Israeli officials have repeatedly threatened to attack Iran
2:45:42
if it does not effectively surrender its nuclear
2:45:45
program on Wednesday the Iranian defense minister issued
2:45:48
a warning in the event that the talks
2:45:51
broke down God willing the talks will bring
2:45:54
results But if they don't and conflict is
2:45:56
imposed to us Enemies losses would be greater
2:45:59
than ours in that case America will have
2:46:02
to leave the region Because all its bases
2:46:05
are within our reach and without hesitation Analysts
2:46:12
say that Iran is now on the brink
2:46:13
of being able to manufacture enough nuclear material
2:46:17
to fuel a nuclear weapon The only ones
2:46:20
who got it right no one else tagged
2:46:22
the story with they're just a week away
2:46:25
Yeah, just a week away.
2:46:27
You can't leave that in there I we
2:46:28
also got I had to we both got
2:46:30
a boots on the ground report from one
2:46:31
of our military guys Who's talking about they
2:46:33
how they're moving equipment around?
2:46:35
I have it here.
2:46:36
You want me to read it?
2:46:37
No, I think it's I Don't want you
2:46:40
to read it.
2:46:41
Okay, I won't read it the but the
2:46:44
point is is that all this including that
2:46:48
note All seem to be and what's happening.
2:46:51
It doesn't seem to be secret.
2:46:54
No, this is all Posturing to scare the
2:46:57
crap out of the Iranians.
2:46:58
It takes us.
2:46:59
We're moving all our people out of the
2:47:00
old He's gonna take the basis.
2:47:01
There's gonna be anybody there.
2:47:03
They're gonna be gone We're it's looking like
2:47:06
they're leaving them sitting there Iran as sitting
2:47:08
ducks Wait a minute is Israel controlling us
2:47:12
again, John Well, I think we're controlling us
2:47:16
Controlling us.
2:47:17
They bombed them already.
2:47:18
Of course they would have bombed him by
2:47:21
now, but the point is is that this
2:47:23
is all part of the Negotiating process that
2:47:27
Trump uses.
2:47:28
Yeah, and it's like Yeah, well, you know
2:47:32
what's gonna happen?
2:47:33
Yeah, and everything seems to be A Bull
2:47:39
it's not I wouldn't call it a bluff
2:47:40
because I think they could bomb them.
2:47:42
Yeah, but it's definitely Messages are going out.
2:47:46
You're gonna get bombed if you don't do
2:47:48
the deal and we're gonna be out of
2:47:50
here We're moving our bases.
2:47:53
We're taking people home.
2:47:54
You know, yeah, go ahead bomb the empty
2:47:56
base big deal.
2:47:57
Yeah Yeah, if I was a run I
2:48:01
just do the deal I don't understand what
2:48:02
the problem is for some reason though the
2:48:04
I'm looking at the quad like People are
2:48:07
still mad about Los Angeles.
2:48:09
They're not worried about Iran at all that
2:48:12
I don't understand They're not not taking the
2:48:15
bait.
2:48:15
They're not doing it If I see the
2:48:18
ruthless podcast has joined the Will Cain show.
2:48:21
Wow, that's riveting I did pick up a
2:48:28
nice a little just a short clip From
2:48:31
the president on an Air Force one gaggle
2:48:35
a gaggle Where now and actually the DH
2:48:39
unplugged podcast every single Tuesday goes live in
2:48:42
the evening you pick it up on Wednesday
2:48:44
It's a great podcast about things in the
2:48:46
markets and and John and Andrew waffling about
2:48:49
China.
2:48:49
It's good.
2:48:50
It's good show I listen to it.
2:48:51
I listen to it all the time Talking
2:48:55
about the trial balloons being let up let
2:48:58
into the air about a future Or the
2:49:01
next or maybe nearer future chairman of the
2:49:04
Federal Reserve Yeah I don't think you guys
2:49:09
got this clip in time for the show.
2:49:11
Maybe it was after that but here President
2:49:14
Trump Explained something which is exactly what your
2:49:18
best podcast in universe discussed months ago And
2:49:23
if we had a good Fed chairman you
2:49:25
would lower rates and you know what if
2:49:26
inflation happened in a year from now or
2:49:28
two Years, let him raise rates, but we're
2:49:30
going out for long-term debt or short
2:49:32
-term debt we have a lot of debt
2:49:33
coming due because Biden had all short-term
2:49:35
debt mostly and We would get a lower
2:49:38
rate and a lower interest rate if this
2:49:40
guy Would lower rates we get a lower
2:49:43
interest rate It's unbelievable and he's worried about
2:49:46
inflation if he worries about inflation any longer
2:49:48
All he has to do is get the
2:49:50
lower rate Let us go out borrow at
2:49:52
a much lower rate much lower You could
2:49:54
go down a point or two.
2:49:55
We'll go out borrow, but and if in
2:49:57
two years inflation comes back he raises rates
2:50:00
But he keeps him the same So
2:50:14
there it is exactly what we discussed he
2:50:21
wants the Fed to lower the rate so
2:50:23
we can refi refi the country Which is
2:50:26
a good idea and then Trump says if
2:50:29
inflation goes up you raise the race, but
2:50:30
then we'll have longer-term inflation Everybody's got
2:50:33
the stable coin, and it'll be good to
2:50:35
go.
2:50:36
We'll lower our interest payments How at this
2:50:40
point is Jerome Powell just not an American?
2:50:44
Is he not patriotic?
2:50:47
Why doesn't he do this the ECB has
2:50:50
lowered rates eight times?
2:50:53
The way the Fed is structured right now.
2:50:55
They don't believe what Trump says is the
2:50:58
is gonna work Is gonna work They don't
2:51:03
think that you can't you they see that
2:51:06
the interest rates are always pegged to inflation
2:51:09
and Unless there's a Economic downturn there's no
2:51:15
reason to lower the rates.
2:51:16
It's just a rule the way they see
2:51:18
it.
2:51:19
Yeah, but that's thinking about Strategizing that you
2:51:22
know refinancing the country.
2:51:23
They're just not none of the on the
2:51:25
agenda.
2:51:25
They're never right by the way Thank you,
2:51:28
why would they be right now?
2:51:31
Why are they always wrong?
2:51:32
Yeah, but it seems like the right thing
2:51:34
to do Doesn't mean a thing By the
2:51:39
way in Europe now Having over 3,000
2:51:43
euros in your possession is about to become
2:51:46
illegal What yep?
2:51:50
Yep, you are not allowed to have more
2:51:52
than 3,000 euros in cash Why because
2:51:56
that means you're criminal That you there's no
2:52:00
way you need that kind of money for
2:52:01
any legal matter.
2:52:03
You should be using banks and stablecoin or
2:52:07
bill or the what anything the The digital
2:52:11
euro whatever it is.
2:52:12
They are getting rid of cash You cannot
2:52:14
have more than 3,000 euros cash in
2:52:17
your possession, or you will be deemed suspect
2:52:20
and probably involved in criminal activity Yep, that's
2:52:26
bullcrap.
2:52:27
Yeah, in fact a Dutch guy Was caught
2:52:32
some people like having cash Yeah was caught
2:52:36
caught at the at the border with Germany.
2:52:38
He had a like a mini fridge in
2:52:40
the back He had a hundred and twenty
2:52:42
four thousand euros in there hidden Then off
2:52:45
the jail you go What do you need
2:52:47
that cash for would you get that cash
2:52:49
you better tell us about that cash?
2:52:50
You can't have that cash.
2:52:51
That's not good at that cash.
2:52:52
You are probably involved in illegal criminal activity
2:52:55
aren't you meanwhile?
2:52:57
Everybody's making bank on the drug trade through
2:53:00
the Netherlands This is the the port of
2:53:05
a preference for shipping your drugs into Europe
2:53:09
I'm sure sanctioned by politicians at all Yeah,
2:53:14
it's bad.
2:53:14
It's bad.
2:53:15
You cannot have cash Well you want to
2:53:21
do the clip blitz oh, okay, I'm sorry
2:53:25
I was a little underprepared I Know I
2:53:29
know I know I know you told me
2:53:31
you you told me earlier blitz, okay, all
2:53:34
right clip blitz Ladies and gentlemen we haven't
2:53:35
done in a long time here.
2:53:36
We go All right everybody it's time for
2:53:42
a clip blitz John C ABC 7 Mark
2:53:45
Brown talking about how people enjoy watching cars
2:53:48
burn large group of people it could turn
2:53:51
very Volatile if you move law enforcement in
2:53:53
there in the wrong way and turn what
2:53:55
is just a bunch of people having fun
2:53:57
watching cars burn into a massive confrontation and
2:54:02
altercation between officers and demonstrators All right clip
2:54:09
blitz was under F.
2:54:10
I s why F.
2:54:12
I Sy little judge has ruled the Trump
2:54:16
administration cannot continue to detain Mahmoud Khalil on
2:54:19
the basis of Secretary of State Marco Rubio's
2:54:22
determination.
2:54:23
He's a threat to American foreign policy goals
2:54:26
It's unclear whether Khalil will soon be released
2:54:28
from the immigration detention center in Louisiana Where
2:54:31
he's been held since ICE agents arrested him
2:54:33
in early March Judge paused his own ruling
2:54:36
until Friday to give the government time to
2:54:37
appeal It's another no agenda The NEA chief
2:54:43
kind of forgetting what the wordage of the
2:54:46
Declaration of Independence is All
2:55:00
right to life, liberty, and the pursuit of
2:55:04
justice!
2:55:06
Man 33!
2:55:09
That's right!
2:55:10
Something like that!
2:55:11
You know the thing!
2:55:12
You know the thing!
2:55:14
Sun Poles!
2:55:15
Sun Poles?
2:55:16
France and Saudi Arabia are gathering countries for
2:55:18
a conference next week at UN headquarters in
2:55:20
New York to support the recognition of a
2:55:22
power I'm sorry, that's the wrong one.
2:55:23
Here you go.
2:55:24
Sun Poles!
2:55:25
And the European Space Agency's released the first
2:55:28
ever images of the Sun's South Pole The
2:55:30
footage taken from a solar orbiter spacecraft shows
2:55:33
a shimmering bright atmosphere Interspersed with dark clouds
2:55:36
of gas Scientists hope it'll help them understand
2:55:39
why the sun's poles switch from north to
2:55:42
south and back again every 11 years Red
2:55:45
33!
2:55:48
Blitz!
2:55:49
These are good, I missed them!
2:55:50
World Bank!
2:55:52
The World Bank is to end a long
2:55:54
-standing ban on the funding of nuclear energy
2:55:56
projects in developing countries to help meet soaring
2:55:59
electricity needs It said demand for electricity in
2:56:03
poorer countries is expected to more than double
2:56:05
in the next 10 years Clip Blitz!
2:56:08
And you can close the locker room doors,
2:56:10
that's it.
2:56:12
I'm sorry, close the...
2:56:15
I'm screwing it up, where is it?
2:56:17
Locker room doors?
2:56:18
I don't think we have a locker room...
2:56:20
No, I'm saying that the Clip Blitz is
2:56:22
over.
2:56:22
Oh, the Clip Blitz is over!
2:56:23
Clip Blitz!
2:56:24
Woo, thank you!
2:56:26
I'm gonna show my salute by donating to
2:56:28
No Agenda Imagine all the people who could
2:56:30
do that Oh yeah, that'd be fab Yeah,
2:56:34
on No Agenda In the morning Wow, way
2:56:40
to bring back the Clip Blitz, haven't had
2:56:41
one of those in a long time Those
2:56:43
of you who stuck with us this long
2:56:44
are joyous, of course And right now we
2:56:47
are waiting for the tip of the day
2:56:49
We've got the end of show mixes We
2:56:51
have some meetup reports We've got birthdays, nights,
2:56:54
PhDs And John is now going to thank
2:56:56
the rest of our supporters Value4Value, who supported
2:56:59
us $50 or more Right at the top
2:57:03
of the list is Dame Rita, once again
2:57:05
And from Sparks, Nevada, 12345 Oh, she says
2:57:09
ITM Christopher Ebert in Spartanburg, South Carolina, 10535
2:57:14
Greg Marshall in Calgary, Alberta, Canada, 100 David
2:57:20
Van Den Brond in Turnard Turnhard Oh, Turnhard,
2:57:30
I'm sorry, Turnhard That's what I said Turnhard,
2:57:32
yeah Happy birthday to me, he writes Happy
2:57:36
birthday to me, Jew money Woo, we got
2:57:40
some Jew money There it is We got
2:57:41
some Jew money, finally Nice, thanks, brother Jew
2:57:43
money And then he has a little comment
2:57:45
for you In Dutch Well, it says it's
2:57:49
his birthday Morgen weer een jaartje erbij en
2:57:51
voor jullie Oh, stop, roofers En voor jullie
2:57:55
wat extra omdat het telkens weer lukt om
2:57:57
een smile op mijn face te krijgen All
2:57:59
right, thank you Harry Klan in Aledo, Texas,
2:58:04
$100 Sir Uncle Cave Bear in Millboro, Virginia,
2:58:09
$100 This is from the Witten Family Reunion
2:58:14
Kevin McLaughlin, there he is, in Concord, North
2:58:16
Carolina He is the Archduke of Luna lover,
2:58:18
American lover of boobs This is a 1772
2:58:23
donation, 8008 Sir Alex in Kiley, Texas Kyle,
2:58:29
Kyle, Kyle 7061, he's got a long note
2:58:33
This is some sort of a knighting or
2:58:35
something That means we have to read it
2:58:36
I will read it right away In the
2:58:38
morning, gents, I'm making this $67 donation for
2:58:40
the 67 days our daughter spent in the
2:58:43
NICU Is this Alex Zavala?
2:58:46
Yes, Sir Alex And I want to launch
2:58:48
the Father's Day NICU Dad Donation Challenge I
2:58:51
challenge all no-agenda NICU dads to donate
2:58:54
this Father's Day in honor of the number
2:58:56
of days your baby spent in the NICU
2:58:59
That's the Natal Intensive Care Unit Also, be
2:59:03
sure to check out the NICUDAD.com which
2:59:05
is a great podcast Join the NICU Dad
2:59:07
Push-Up Challenge to help raise awareness about
2:59:10
NICU Dad mental health Thanks again for all
2:59:12
the support Can I get some goat karma?
2:59:14
And I love my truck I was also
2:59:15
made a baron a few weeks back but
2:59:17
I wanted to use this donation to request
2:59:19
a name change Can I be dubbed Baron
2:59:22
Zavala, Guardian of the NICU and Champion of
2:59:24
the NICU Dads?
2:59:25
Of course Thanks for all you do And
2:59:28
a special thanks to you, Adam and Tina
2:59:30
for your support We're so grateful If you
2:59:32
are a NICU Dad or no one check
2:59:34
out the NICUDAD.com and the NICU Dad
2:59:37
on all our social media platforms And thanks
2:59:40
again Yes, I'll give him some goat karma
2:59:44
if you do the truck Get it Well,
2:59:50
you do the truck first Oh, I do
2:59:52
the truck first?
2:59:52
I love my truck and I love what
2:59:54
I do There you go You've got Karma
3:00:00
Here's another note for you to read Oh,
3:00:03
do I have this one?
3:00:05
Yeah, you do.
3:00:05
It's on the PDF Okay This is from
3:00:08
Todd Grubb.
3:00:08
He's in Imlay City, Michigan and came with
3:00:11
6933 But in fact, this is knighting He's
3:00:14
gotten up to $2,000 This is K
3:00:17
-PAC Chiropractic He says, we started listening to
3:00:21
the show with the early part of COVID
3:00:23
kicked in the mouth by some douchebag on
3:00:25
Twitter This donation puts me over $2,000
3:00:28
in donation Completed two 20-month, $50 nighthood
3:00:34
layaways via PayPal Some are under Okay, he
3:00:37
has all these different names This note does
3:00:40
not need to be read But he does
3:00:42
want to be de-douched You've been de
3:00:46
-douched And he'll be knighted Sir Todd, Knight
3:00:48
of Cows and Pigs and Chickens And he
3:00:51
would like to gift his wife a damehood
3:00:53
for their 20th anniversary And they never had
3:00:56
a fight She would be Dame Josepha, Dame
3:01:01
it all to hell Montreal brisket and seagram's
3:01:04
very own at the round table And she
3:01:08
would like gigolos and blow Okay, I'm going
3:01:13
to get to gigolos and blow Is she
3:01:17
on the list?
3:01:18
I believe so I don't think so I'm
3:01:21
looking at the list Yeah, we do We
3:01:23
have a dame We have a dame Joseph
3:01:26
Grubb James Josephena Dame it all to hell
3:01:30
Oh, I said, look at the wrong Of
3:01:33
course Of course, James rarely makes a mistake
3:01:37
No, rarely Which is good Jay does not
3:01:41
make mistakes Okay, onward with Chad Hewitt He's
3:01:44
Folsom, California, 6640 Jason Shepard in Trinidad, Colorado,
3:01:49
6006 Les Tarkowski in Kingman, Arizona, 6006 Matt
3:01:53
Lambert in Fuquay, Verena, North Carolina, 5272 Hakan
3:02:00
Andresen in Portland, Oregon, 5272 Commodore G in
3:02:06
Cincinnati, 5167 Paolo, Paolo, Paolo Paolo Moore in
3:02:14
Fort Washington, Maryland, 5150 And he says, 5150,
3:02:19
Cali is crazy Referring to Southern California And
3:02:23
there they are Bad Idea Supply Look them
3:02:27
up on Google For all your burning needs,
3:02:30
literally 50-50 Sir Economic Hitman in Tombill,
3:02:35
Texas, 5001 And now we have $50 donors
3:02:37
starting with William Spain in Springdale, Arkansas René
3:02:42
Knig Knigge Knigge In Utrecht Utrecht Utrecht
3:02:52
Netherlands, 50 Roderick Brown in Mermaid Someplace in
3:03:01
Canada P.E. What could that be?
3:03:04
Don't know Poutine Stephen Schumach in Zinnia, Ohio
3:03:09
Matthew Bush Bush In Maple Valley, Washington This
3:03:15
is a happy Father's Day to the best
3:03:16
dad and husband Get those Father's Day mentions
3:03:22
in the next show The next donation segment
3:03:25
Next show on Sunday Father's Day, don't forget
3:03:28
Remember Andrew Grasso, Mineola, New York Tom Delvecchio
3:03:32
in Blandon, Pennsylvania Mike Moon in Athens, Georgia
3:03:35
Gary Mao in Woodland Hills, California And last
3:03:38
on our, that's actually a pretty short list
3:03:40
today Ethan Reitz Reitz, I believe, in New
3:03:44
Bethlehem, Pennsylvania And he's got a biblical thing
3:03:49
to go to Corinthians 15, 1-4 Romans
3:03:53
3, 23, 26 Go look him up Yes,
3:04:00
Tim Delvecchio And yes, it's 1 Corinthians 15,
3:04:03
1-4 Thank you all very much to
3:04:06
these donors $50 and above We love your
3:04:09
support We do not do anything under $50
3:04:11
The guarantee anonymity We don't want to screw
3:04:14
anything up So we just stop it right
3:04:15
there But we see you $49.99 We
3:04:18
appreciate everybody Every single donation Those smaller amounts
3:04:22
really do add up And we appreciate you
3:04:24
helping us out that way as well You
3:04:27
can support us for the next episode As
3:04:29
John said, it is Father's Day So consider
3:04:31
a Father's Day donation for your dad Or
3:04:34
for your husband, who's a great dad Go
3:04:35
to knowagenthedonations.com You can make any kind
3:04:38
of donation you want there There's some suggestions
3:04:39
You can also just set up a sustaining
3:04:41
donation Any amount, any frequency is all up
3:04:44
to you Thank you again for supporting the
3:04:46
best podcast in the universe It's your birthday,
3:04:50
birthday Oh, so much And where we had
3:04:54
no birthdays on the last show We have
3:04:56
a couple of this today We have Mitchell
3:04:58
Reeves wishing his wife Sierra Reeves A very
3:05:01
happy 33rd And she celebrates today Mom, Dad,
3:05:05
Cullen and Rune say happy birthday to Nora
3:05:07
She turns 8 tomorrow Al Kelkoff, his smoking
3:05:12
hot wife Barbara Boy, does he love her
3:05:14
She celebrates tomorrow And we got David Von
3:05:17
Den Brand And he celebrated today his birthday
3:05:20
And he sent us some Jew money Thank
3:05:23
you very much Happy birthday for everybody here
3:05:24
The best podcast in the universe It's your
3:05:27
birthday, yeah Title changes Turn and face the
3:05:33
slaves Title changes Don't want to be a
3:05:37
douche bag Yes, indeed, we just heard him
3:05:39
Sir Alex Shabala now becomes a baron He's
3:05:43
moving up in the peerage at KnowAgenda He
3:05:45
is Baron Shabala, guardian of the NICU And
3:05:48
champion of the NICU dads And that is
3:05:50
definitely worth looking into Because, you know, NICU
3:05:55
dads When your kid's in the ICU Dads
3:05:58
have all kinds of different challenges And they
3:06:00
can support each other And he's doing great
3:06:02
work on that And we appreciate all he
3:06:04
does And we appreciate him supporting us And
3:06:06
we have two PhDs to celebrate Barbara Kelkoff
3:06:09
and Richard Hollow Both have become PhDs of
3:06:13
KnowAgenda So what exactly is this PhD?
3:06:15
Is this the Media Deconstruction?
3:06:17
Is that what the PhD is?
3:06:17
Yes, this is a rerun of the Media
3:06:19
Deconstruction PhD That's beautiful Beautiful product Yeah, I
3:06:23
got You have one I have one and
3:06:25
someone sent me a picture of theirs On
3:06:27
their wall and they love it a lot
3:06:28
It's good, go to KnowAgendaRings.com That's where
3:06:31
you can let us know Barbara and Richard
3:06:34
Where you want us to send your certificates
3:06:36
And what you want on it And of
3:06:39
course everybody can take a look there At
3:06:41
the PhD certificates And also the knight rings
3:06:47
and dame rings And we do have a
3:06:49
couple of knights and a dame We have
3:06:52
Troy Funderburk Who is a layaway knight And
3:06:55
I have a note here Says, I would
3:06:56
like to be Sir Thunder of the Bitterroot
3:06:58
Valley Thank you for the consistent and articulate
3:07:01
deconstruction For good measure please Throw in some
3:07:04
baby-making karma As we try for our
3:07:06
second human resource Says Troy Funderburk I will
3:07:09
get that ready for you So we can
3:07:13
roll that out for you in a little
3:07:15
bit But first, why don't we bring them
3:07:17
all up And if you can give me
3:07:19
a blade to work with There you go
3:07:21
That's very good Please, the following people join
3:07:24
us here On the podium for the Know
3:07:27
Agenda Knights and Dames We need Troy Funderburk
3:07:32
We need Drew McArdle and Todd Grubb All
3:07:36
three of you gentlemen Are now knights of
3:07:39
the Know Agenda Roundtable And if you don't
3:07:41
mind I'd like to call up Josephina Grubb
3:07:44
Josephina, you are now a dame of the
3:07:47
Know Agenda Roundtable I pronounce the KB Sir
3:07:50
Thunder of the Bitterroot Valley Sir Droodle on
3:07:53
a Noodle Protector of the Red Stick And
3:07:54
Laffy Taffy Sir Todd Knight of Cows and
3:07:57
Pigs and Chickens And Dame Josepha Dame at
3:08:01
all tell Who wanted gigolos and blow And
3:08:04
along with that We probably got some Montreal
3:08:06
Biscuits and Seagrams Man, I ran out of
3:08:08
time Because we also have mutton and meat
3:08:10
At every single roundtable for our Knights and
3:08:12
Dames The list is ever growing We have
3:08:14
enough chairs for everybody We thank you so
3:08:16
much for supporting the show Go to knowagendarings
3:08:18
.com Look at those handsome rings They're signet
3:08:21
rings So you can use them to seal
3:08:23
your important correspondence We give you some sticks
3:08:25
of wax to do that with Multi-colored
3:08:27
And as always, a certificate of authenticity And
3:08:30
our gratitude and thanks for supporting Know Agenda
3:08:34
Know Agenda Meetup Yeah baby, yeah baby, yeah
3:08:42
baby Josh Shipper, the day is on the
3:08:43
way But first we have a couple of
3:08:45
meetup reports The first is from Kodiak I
3:08:47
believe it's in Alaska In the morning, this
3:08:50
is Sir Uncle Cave Bear The washed up
3:08:52
artist Reporting live from the Witten Family Reunion
3:08:55
Slash Know Agenda Meetup here in Kodiak, Alaska
3:08:58
We'd all like to thank you, John and
3:09:00
Adam For your courage Oh my gosh, listen
3:09:04
to that horn Don't eat me, Bojiden Chemtrails
3:09:09
In the morning Alright, Kodiak, nice Now we
3:09:14
move to the 4th annual Louisiana Crawfish Broil
3:09:18
Know Agenda Meetup report This is Dame Mary
3:09:22
Moon Introducing the 4th annual Louisiana Crawfish Broil
3:09:27
Sir Jew Claw here Ready to go shoot
3:09:29
my noodle gun Dame Tracy of the Roman
3:09:33
Rite They're eating the crawfish David from Baton
3:09:36
Rouge In the morning Tess, guest of Dame
3:09:40
Tracy Know Agenda virgin Sir Cane Break Enjoying
3:09:46
the crawfish And fisting my nuts No, not
3:09:49
fisting This is Tyler In the morning Mitch,
3:09:55
enjoying Sir Knight The nuts and the virgin
3:09:58
We want to see you next year We
3:10:00
want to buy you in some crawfish This
3:10:03
is Brian In the morning Hey, John You're
3:10:07
a scoundrel Thank you for your courage Isaac
3:10:11
from Lafayette ITM, a listener from the Daily
3:10:14
Source Code Days And this is my first
3:10:16
meetup Awesome, great time Erin from Lafayette, Louisiana
3:10:19
Also my first meet in ITM And this
3:10:22
is not a douche Drew, soon to be
3:10:24
Sir Droodle on a noodle In the morning
3:10:27
Let's feed some blind goats Hey!
3:10:33
Don't laugh Why are you laughing?
3:10:35
Alright Shut up Nice production Thank you very
3:10:39
much Meetup's taking place today The Northern Wake
3:10:43
Freedom Summer Slam-o-wam-o Kicks off
3:10:45
at 6 o'clock In Raleigh, North Carolina
3:10:47
At Hoppy Endings Tomorrow Calling all Gitmo Nordics
3:10:51
Urs on meetup Yes, this is the big
3:10:53
Copenhagen, Denmark At Michalers-Baghaven-Reffen You better
3:10:58
be there Paul Pietermann is organizing that And
3:11:00
I want a meetup report Include your servers,
3:11:03
please On Saturday The Lazarusvaart Picnic That is
3:11:06
the beach next to the marina In the
3:11:08
old town of Culemborg In the Netherlands Sir
3:11:11
Hendrik Is Sir Hendrik back on his feet
3:11:13
again?
3:11:13
I hope so That's awesome Saturday The Treasure
3:11:16
Valley Meetup 3 o'clock in Eagle, Idaho
3:11:19
Old State Saloon Saturday as well Downtown New
3:11:22
York City 3 o'clock The Six Point
3:11:24
Brewery At Brookfield Place New York, New York
3:11:28
JoeNY33 organizing Those guys always have a big
3:11:30
group Include your server I want to hear
3:11:32
all about it As we heard earlier The
3:11:34
Dogpatch San Francisco Summer Meetup Kicks off on
3:11:37
Saturday at 3.30 At Dogpatch Saloon in
3:11:39
San Francisco The Duke of San Francisco hosting
3:11:42
that The Comox Valley Meetup 5 o'clock
3:11:45
Church Street Taphouse In Comox, British Columbia That's
3:11:49
on Saturday And also on Saturday Trains, trains,
3:11:51
and more trains No spooks allowed 7.30
3:11:54
in Davenport, Iowa Mickey's Irish Pub Be there
3:11:57
or be lame Coming up International Meetups The
3:12:01
17th of June Cannes, France We have Let's
3:12:06
see Was that the only international one?
3:12:08
The 19th Oh, it was in September Hey,
3:12:10
there's a lot of meetups There's always tons
3:12:11
of meetups Always one in the neighborhood You
3:12:14
can find them at noagendameetups.com Go there
3:12:17
Take a look at the lineup If you
3:12:19
can't find a meetup near you Don't panic
3:12:21
It's just like a TED Talk Only without
3:12:23
douchebags Start one yourself Noagendameetups.com Always a
3:12:27
party Sometimes you wanna go Hang out with
3:12:31
all the nights and days You wanna be
3:12:36
where you won't be Triggered or hella lame
3:12:39
You wanna be where everybody feels the same
3:12:45
It's like a party And as requested I
3:12:48
never forget a baby making karma For our
3:12:50
new nights You've got Karma And at this
3:12:59
point in the show is where we always
3:13:01
like to select our ISO for the end
3:13:03
of the show Bad news I do not
3:13:05
have a single ISO lined up for today
3:13:08
I have one good one Well, you win
3:13:11
that I was gonna pull if you didn't
3:13:13
have a good one Well, you nailed it
3:13:16
Holy crap, what a great show Indeed AI
3:13:21
to the rescue You're gonna get sued for
3:13:23
that prompt Dvorak, I'm telling you But first,
3:13:26
before the lawsuit it's time for John's tip
3:13:28
of the day Great advice for you and
3:13:31
me Just a tip with JCD And sometimes
3:13:36
Adam Created by Dana Brunetti All right, this
3:13:41
is some utilities and also just a great
3:13:44
nerdy website There's a, I would call him
3:13:49
a meta tech Meta nerd that is just
3:13:53
a fabulous character His name is Chris Titus
3:13:56
He does a lot of videos And he's
3:13:59
like, if you're getting into Linux Yeah You
3:14:02
wanna go to his website christitus.com But
3:14:06
if you want the absolute most amazing Windows
3:14:11
utilities He also developed a system called WinUtils
3:14:16
And it would be You get to it
3:14:18
You can't actually download it It runs kind
3:14:22
of in the cloud His cloud Is it
3:14:26
running on Google Cloud?
3:14:28
No, it's not working Offline I doubt it,
3:14:31
to be honest about it But the website
3:14:33
you want is winutil.christitus
3:14:42
.com WinUtils And this thing runs only You
3:14:47
have to load it from the You have
3:14:50
to load it from the Windows Admin PowerShell
3:14:54
What could possibly go wrong?
3:14:57
Which takes over your whole machine Yeah But
3:15:00
you have to get But he got rules
3:15:02
on how to get there And what to
3:15:04
cut and paste And throw it in there
3:15:05
Once you load this thing It's astonishing It's
3:15:09
got every known utility That you can imagine
3:15:13
All free utilities that are available For Windows
3:15:15
in one tab Another tab It's got this
3:15:17
huge pile of checklists To optimize your system
3:15:21
So it runs better It's one thing after
3:15:24
another This guy's This WinUtil product is unbelievable
3:15:29
Wow, that's an endorsement coming from you The
3:15:32
man who wrote the telecommunications book For Windows
3:15:35
And I will mention this If you're thinking
3:15:38
about Linux And you just go to his
3:15:40
regular website He is a fanatic about Arch
3:15:44
Linux Yeah And to the point where He
3:15:49
says he's been trying to break it For
3:15:51
over a year He says it's impossible And
3:15:54
he's got tutorials And all kinds of things
3:15:58
He's just the guy And it surprises me
3:16:01
That he's not more well known That is
3:16:03
Now you said it was amazing Didn't you?
3:16:07
You said it was just an amazing product?
3:16:09
Yes, I said amazing Oh my god!
3:16:11
That is amazing!
3:16:13
That is an endorsement You can pass up
3:16:16
more At johnstippetheday.net And
3:16:29
of course Thank you to Dana Brunetti Where
3:16:31
would we be without Dana Brunetti?
3:16:32
We'd just be up Schitt's Creek without a
3:16:34
paddle And that is The end of our
3:16:38
broadcast day That's it for our deconstruction For
3:16:41
this episode of No Agenda 1772 But it'll
3:16:45
just be three days waiting We'll be back
3:16:47
with 1773 And it is Father's Day So
3:16:51
make sure you thank your dad Thank your
3:16:53
husband Thank that important dad in your life
3:16:56
You can do it with a nice note
3:16:58
At noagendadonations.com Ending our show as usual
3:17:03
We will have a couple of end of
3:17:05
show mixes Dee's Laughs comes in from Toronto
3:17:09
Tom Starkweather with some nice little L.A.
3:17:12
protest ditties And Nautilus K.
3:17:14
is back with another end of show mix
3:17:16
All fresh, all new, all for you And
3:17:19
up next after we leave the airwaves It
3:17:21
is That Larry Show Episode 489 Larry with
3:17:26
the deep voice He's the man to watch
3:17:29
In the meantime I will say thank you
3:17:32
very much for listening And coming to you
3:17:34
from the heart of the Texas hill country
3:17:36
Here in Fredericksburg in the morning everybody I'm
3:17:39
Adam Curry And from Northern Silicon Valley Where
3:17:41
it looks like Saturday is going to be
3:17:43
a winter I'm John C.
3:17:45
Dvorak We return on Sunday Meet us there
3:17:47
And remember us at noagendadonations.com Until then,
3:17:50
adios, spofos, hui hui, and such These automated
3:17:55
systems are so lame It's like You can't
3:18:01
afford some dollar an hour person in India
3:18:04
I mean, you can barely speak English It
3:18:06
would be better than this Yeah, the true
3:18:08
A.I. Anonymous Indian, that's what we need
3:18:10
What a sight to see Such a fractured
3:18:13
society When people mindlessly subscribe and see Then
3:18:17
they make up their own version of reality
3:18:20
Take a look at Wall Street Are we
3:18:21
in trouble?
3:18:22
Nvidia and A.I. There's a huge bubble
3:18:24
Oracle's literally eliciting And sounding stubborn But Elon's
3:18:26
saying We don't have a habit Surely we're
3:18:28
in trouble Anonymous Indians A.I. and so
3:18:31
many pot schemes Nightmares don't hit the same
3:18:34
When you're living out this Eurodroop Abnormal dreams
3:18:37
Being pitched to solve all of our mundane
3:18:40
Monday manuals Human tasks Isn't it a chatbot?
3:18:43
Can it even sort emails?
3:18:45
Don't even ask H1B is not for me,
3:18:47
you see Clarified by Big Pharma Always wanna
3:18:50
harm ya Now he's tryna charm ya He's
3:18:52
got the look To face the snake Rama
3:18:54
Swamy Did his job leading up to the
3:18:56
campaign Bringing in the best talent Was for
3:18:58
a gain Can you remove the stain?
3:19:00
Taking 10% off the top-down trade
3:19:02
Brain in the brain Every country should make
3:19:05
its own citizens It's number one priority Not
3:19:08
just cause you check a box As a
3:19:10
visible minority Culture is passion In the city
3:19:14
of the six Many faces to a city
3:19:16
More than six People coming from all over
3:19:18
the world To get a fix Funny undefeated
3:19:20
This is not a trick Now is the
3:19:21
time This is an exit strategy For you
3:19:24
and for you only And I would support
3:19:26
it You need to become the tech grouch
3:19:28
And once you're the tech grouch Everybody will
3:19:32
wanna interview you And then you Of course
3:19:34
you gotta Slip around that outfit All over
3:19:36
the place You gotta keep the voice going
3:19:39
Iphone's my phone I got a Bakelite phone
3:19:41
It's fine People will love you They will
3:19:44
glom onto the tech grouch I will be
3:19:46
working on it I will be in the
3:19:47
green screen Maybe we are part Of a
3:19:50
national experiment To determine how far The federal
3:19:54
government can go Tuesday's demonstrations Were largely peaceful
3:19:58
Two men are in custody Accused of throwing
3:20:00
Molotov cocktails At law enforcement We're seeing protests
3:20:02
pop up In other cities Across the country
3:20:05
National Guard troops Already have detained civilians In
3:20:08
the LA anti-ice protests First of all
3:20:10
we wanna make sure That what has happened
3:20:12
in California Does not happen in Texas We're
3:20:15
coming after all these people Our community must
3:20:17
be kept safe For peaceful protests And against
3:20:21
thugs and criminals Looking to start trouble The
3:20:25
Trump administration is signaling It will not back
3:20:27
down The Pentagon is deploying Nearly 700 Marines
3:20:31
To Southern California To help the National Guard
3:20:33
Respond to immigration protests That turned into clashes
3:20:36
With authorities Over the last few days U
3:20:38
.S. Marines and National Guard Are on standby
3:20:40
Outside of Los Angeles Where demonstrators Have again
3:20:43
been protesting President Donald Trump's Immigration policies There
3:20:47
is a heavy amount Of police officers That
3:20:49
are scattered Not only in this area But
3:20:51
on the parks That are in the outskirts
3:20:53
Of this area Preparing for any number Of
3:20:55
demonstrations And protesters That make their way here
3:20:59
Hell yeah A movie about aliens Don't tell
3:21:01
Trump We'll send the Green Berets in too
3:21:03
But Write the blurb Write the blurb If
3:21:12
someone asks me For a blurb for their
3:21:13
book I don't care how crappy the book
3:21:16
is I'll give them a blurb Just write
3:21:20
the blurb Just write I need more Write
3:21:31
the blurb Ask me for a blurb for
3:21:37
their book Just
3:21:48
write the blurb
3:22:32
Jesus was a badass outlaw The best podcast
3:22:39
in the universe MoFo Dvorak.org Slash N
3:22:45
A Holy crap What a great show
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