0:00
It's a Glowing in the Dark's a giveaway.
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:04
It's Sunday, August 24th, 2025.
0:06
This is your award-winning give-a-nation
0:08
media assassination episode 1793.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Weaponizing everything again.
0:15
Broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas
0:17
hill country here in FEMA region number 6.
0:20
In the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from northern Silicon Valley where Abrego Garcia
0:26
wasn't mistakenly sent to El Salvador.
0:29
I'm John C.
0:30
Dvorak.
0:31
It's quite in the morning.
0:34
I like the whole Uganda gamut myself.
0:37
I think that's pretty funny.
0:40
I have some clips on this and it's
0:42
quite ironic but first I want to make
0:44
this.
0:44
This was on Fox this morning and they
0:47
all say this.
0:49
Abrego Garcia, the Maryland man, the Maryland dad.
0:52
Oh yeah, Maryland man.
0:54
Yes.
0:55
Maryland was Maryland dad at first.
0:57
Yes.
0:57
Maryland father.
0:59
Maryland father.
1:00
Father from Maryland.
1:01
Yes.
1:02
So they keep saying, and this was on
1:05
Fox, mistakenly sent to El Salvadorian prison.
1:09
Oh, I'm outraged that Fox would have something
1:11
wrong.
1:13
Please.
1:15
It all sucks.
1:17
It all sucks.
1:17
They all use this adverb.
1:19
This is the same thing with Trump falsely
1:22
claimed that the elections were rigged.
1:25
This is an adverb you throw at the
1:27
beginning.
1:28
This is not reporting.
1:30
This is propaganda.
1:32
Well now, I need to clutch my pearls.
1:36
You should.
1:37
I think the main...
1:37
Has MSNBC changed to MSNOW yet?
1:41
Ms. Now?
1:43
When does that happen?
1:44
I can't wait to see the logo change.
1:47
I don't know.
1:49
I think it has to be taken over
1:51
or somebody has to cut a ribbon.
1:56
Cut a ribbon.
1:58
Is a ribbon cutting involved?
2:00
Yeah.
2:02
I wonder...
2:02
I got two clips.
2:06
Abrego Garcia PBS.
2:08
Alright, here we go.
2:09
Lawyers for Kilmar Abrego Garcia say the Department
2:12
of Homeland Security has told them that the
2:14
government plans to deport their client to Uganda.
2:18
El Salvador National reunited with his family in
2:20
Maryland last night after being released from a
2:22
Tennessee jail.
2:23
He's awaiting trial on human smuggling charges to
2:26
which he's pleaded not guilty.
2:28
Today has been a very special day because,
2:30
thank God, I am back with family after
2:32
more than 160 days and I would like
2:35
to thank all the people who have been
2:37
supporting me because after such a long time
2:39
I am realizing that many people have been
2:42
by my side.
2:43
DHS ordered Abrego Garcia to report by Monday
2:46
to an ICE removal office in Baltimore.
2:49
That came after he declined an offer to
2:51
be sent to Costa Rica in exchange for
2:53
pleading guilty.
2:55
Alright.
2:57
The whole thing was they're going to make
3:00
their lives miserable and he's not going to
3:02
plead guilty to this smuggling.
3:04
No, why should he?
3:06
In exchange, they'd ship him to Costa Rica
3:09
but no, they said, okay, if you're not
3:11
going to do that, we're going to send
3:12
you.
3:12
They do a deal with Uganda.
3:14
This is the best part.
3:16
This is hilarious.
3:18
We have been doing business with Uganda.
3:20
We do a lot of business.
3:22
Well, we're going to do business with human
3:23
people.
3:26
The Brits wanted to do this with Rwanda
3:29
and they never pulled it off but I
3:31
think we might actually send a couple of
3:34
dudes to Uganda.
3:36
This is going to teach them a lesson
3:37
but there's a very strange irony to this
3:42
which makes it funny at least to me.
3:46
This is the other clip.
3:47
This is the clip from the BBC.
3:49
A man who was wrongly deported by the
3:51
Trump administration to a prison in El Salvador
3:54
has been told by US immigration officials that
3:57
he may now be expelled to Uganda within
3:59
days.
4:01
On Friday, Kilmar Abrigo Garcia was freed from
4:04
a Tennessee jail where he had been held
4:06
since his return to the United States.
4:08
Earlier, Kampala said it had struck a deal
4:11
with Washington to accept deportees from third countries
4:14
provided they had no criminal record.
4:17
No.
4:18
So the joke is that because he won't
4:21
have a criminal record, they can deport him
4:23
there.
4:24
They can deport him there but if he
4:26
pled guilty, they couldn't.
4:28
This is a great catch-22.
4:31
We have been doing business with Uganda.
4:33
We've been doing all kinds, including sending a
4:35
lot of C-130s.
4:37
I happen to know since it might be
4:39
someone in my circle who is an international
4:41
arms dealer and sends them.
4:45
Yes, the international arms dealer here in Fredericksburg
4:49
continues, so they're military.
4:53
I mean, this is how it works.
4:54
This is how arms dealing works.
4:57
The US wants to sell or has all
5:00
these C-130 transport planes and Uganda wants
5:04
to buy one.
5:05
So there's an intermediary and it'll go through
5:07
France and so they send it to France,
5:09
which is a friend of ours, but they
5:11
don't really send it to France.
5:13
They just register it in France for an
5:14
hour and then Uganda buys it through the
5:18
French entity and then it can be shipped
5:21
over legally.
5:23
The great thing about it is that there's
5:25
an endless demand for these C-130s and
5:29
this is the truth as he has told
5:31
me, that the pilots of these C-130s
5:33
in Uganda keep crashing them because they learn
5:37
how to fly on YouTube.
5:39
This YouTube videos, that's how they learn how
5:41
to fly them.
5:43
So it's a great bit.
5:46
What a great business.
5:47
I know.
5:48
Guys can't fly the planes, you got to
5:50
buy another one.
5:53
The Ugandans don't seem to care.
5:55
Oh, we need another one.
5:58
So anyway, so now what is going to
6:00
happen to this guy?
6:01
Is he now finally going to go or
6:03
I mean all the Canadian media is like
6:08
there he is, he's embracing his child and
6:12
it's so good to be home.
6:14
What happened to his wife?
6:16
She was out and about.
6:18
Didn't she have a complaint against him for
6:21
beating her?
6:23
Yeah, two complaints of beating her.
6:27
But you know, if you're going to hang
6:29
out with guys like that, you expect to
6:30
be beat.
6:31
Yeah, I guess.
6:33
But this is a farce.
6:35
It's funny.
6:36
You know, it's totally funny, especially with all
6:39
these people in Maryland, the governor and the
6:42
lawyers and everybody and all the activists that
6:44
want to save this guy because he was
6:46
wrongly sent to El Salvador and now he's
6:49
going to be wrongly I don't know how
6:51
they come up with this, but sent to
6:53
Uganda.
6:54
The Uganda thing is a gem.
6:57
Yeah.
6:58
What's going to happen, he's going to end
7:00
up pleading out and they're going to ship
7:01
him off to Costa Rica back in the
7:03
country.
7:04
Well, Costa Rica is nice this time of
7:05
year.
7:06
It's not that bad.
7:08
It's pretty good most of the year.
7:10
Alright, so I'd like to jump into the
7:12
Bolton thing.
7:16
Was that Thursday when they were raiding his
7:19
home?
7:19
Was that Friday morning?
7:20
That was probably Friday.
7:21
I think it was Friday.
7:22
Yeah, so everyone's in a tizzy about this.
7:25
We go to ABC with your buddy, Jonathan
7:27
Karl.
7:28
John Bolton arrived home Friday afternoon just moments
7:31
after FBI agents carried boxes out of his
7:34
house.
7:35
Four FBI agents were still inside.
7:39
What were they looking for?
7:40
They had been in there for nearly an
7:42
hour.
7:42
This was one of the interesting things about
7:46
it.
7:46
There's three reports.
7:49
One that he was there the whole time,
7:52
unlike Trump and Mar-a-Lago.
7:54
I like to make that comparison.
7:55
The second one was he wasn't there at
7:57
all, never was.
7:58
And the third one is this report which
8:00
he was there half the time.
8:02
Just one foot in, one foot out.
8:05
Can anyone get it straight?
8:07
Well, no.
8:08
They had been in there for nearly eight
8:10
hours.
8:11
Sources telling ABC News the search was related
8:14
to allegations that Bolton is in possession of
8:17
classified records.
8:18
I'm not a fan of John Bolton.
8:20
He's a real son of a lowlife.
8:25
Not a smart guy.
8:26
But he could be a very unpatriotic guy.
8:29
We're going to find out.
8:30
Bolton's Maryland home and also his Washington, D
8:33
.C. office were approved by two separate federal
8:36
judges.
8:38
Trump insisted he knew nothing about the search.
8:41
I purposely don't want to really get involved
8:44
in it.
8:44
I'm not a fan of John Bolton.
8:45
I thought he was a sleazebag, actually.
8:47
I'll find out about it.
8:50
But if you believe the news, which I
8:53
do, I guess his house was raided today.
8:56
But my house was raided also called Mar
8:59
-a-Lago.
9:00
Minutes after federal agents descended upon Bolton's home,
9:04
FBI Director Kash Patel posted on social media,
9:07
quote, no one is above the law.
9:09
FBI agents on mission.
9:11
But what exactly is that mission?
9:13
Enforcing the law or retribution?
9:16
The big R word.
9:17
This is what everyone likes talking about.
9:19
Retribution.
9:20
That's right.
9:21
The president is just so mad about the
9:23
raid on Mar-a-Lago.
9:25
Remember there was another raid?
9:28
Who was in someone's house and CNN had
9:30
been called in advance?
9:32
That's Stone.
9:34
Oh, Roger Stone.
9:35
Roger Stone's house.
9:36
It's like the new version of elite swapping.
9:39
Swatting, I'm sorry.
9:41
Elite swatting.
9:42
You know, people get swatted all the time,
9:44
but now it's like, hey, I think I'll
9:45
have the FBI raid his house.
9:48
Yeah, it's cool.
9:48
It's retribution.
9:49
Right here on this show two weeks ago,
9:53
John Bolton harshly criticized President Trump.
9:56
He said Trump was presiding over a quote,
9:58
retribution presidency.
10:00
Twelve days later, the FBI showed up at
10:03
his office and his home.
10:05
This is it now.
10:06
Retribution presidency.
10:08
The new R word.
10:10
This week's show starts right now.
10:13
I'm not a fan of John Bolton.
10:14
I thought he was a sleazebag actually.
10:16
The FBI targets President Trump's former national security
10:20
advisor.
10:21
Are you worried that they're going to come
10:22
after you in some way?
10:23
I think it is a retribution presidency.
10:26
Good morning.
10:27
Welcome to this week.
10:29
In a moment we'll get to the stunning
10:30
developments coming into the weekend with FBI agents
10:33
swarming around the home and office of former
10:36
Trump national security advisor John Bolton.
10:39
But first, the context.
10:41
This didn't happen in a vacuum.
10:43
John Bolton is on a long list of
10:46
Trump critics who are now facing the wrath
10:48
of President Trump and his Justice Department.
10:51
Trump himself has suggested that dozens of his
10:54
enemies I just love how they have no
10:57
information.
10:58
And it may very well be retribution.
11:00
I'm sure there's a part of that.
11:02
But I just love how they just make
11:03
it up as they go along.
11:04
Well, this is clearly retribution.
11:06
This is obvious.
11:07
Trump himself has suggested that dozens of his
11:10
enemies, real and perceived, belong in prison.
11:13
He has said that about former Presidents Obama
11:16
and Biden.
11:17
About former FBI Director James Comey and former
11:20
Special Counsel Jack Smith.
11:22
All of whom have been threatened with criminal
11:24
prosecution.
11:26
So have former Trump administration officials Miles Taylor
11:29
and Chris Krebs.
11:31
New York Attorney General Letitia James and Senator
11:34
Adam Schiff.
11:35
Those last two have been targeted by Ed
11:37
Martin.
11:38
He's the head of what the Trump Justice
11:40
Department calls the Weaponization Working Group.
11:44
Last week Martin stood outside of Tish James'
11:47
home in Brooklyn, New York and posed for
11:50
pictures dressed in a trench coat.
11:53
Yes, very sinister.
11:56
What is going on with our country?
12:00
What's going on with the media?
12:02
Well, yes.
12:03
That's a fair point.
12:04
That's exactly it.
12:07
The only guy who actually had something kind
12:10
of, something to say with some content, which
12:13
was quite surprising, but I think he's probably
12:15
right, was Michael Cohen, of all people.
12:19
Former Trump lawyer, and he was on MSNOW.
12:23
What we have here is the Trump team,
12:27
the DOJ going through, for example, the book,
12:31
The Room Where It All Happened, which I
12:33
actually had read while I was in solitary
12:36
confinement.
12:37
You know, when you're in solitary confinement, I'm
12:41
pretty sure you don't get a book to
12:42
read.
12:44
Because that solitary confinement is the SHU, Special
12:47
Housing Unit.
12:47
I think the whole point is you don't
12:49
get a book to read, or am I
12:50
wrong?
12:51
I have no idea.
12:52
Well, according to my sources.
12:54
But I would think that you were right.
12:55
Yeah.
12:56
Because solitary confinement is not the book reading
12:59
club.
12:59
No, it's supposed to make you crazy, not
13:01
the book reading club.
13:02
Which I actually had read while I was
13:04
in solitary confinement.
13:06
And they've noticed that there are many aspects
13:10
of this book that appear to be of
13:13
national security importance.
13:16
And that's what I believe that they predicated
13:19
this raid upon.
13:20
I also believe that there's no doubt that
13:24
he will be indicted.
13:25
They will find documents once they go through,
13:29
for example, his computer.
13:30
They'll find the manuscript.
13:32
They'll see emails going back and forth between
13:35
John Bolton, his people, as well as maybe
13:38
the attorney that reviewed it for legal ease
13:43
and for questions.
13:46
I believe that he needs to lawyer up.
13:49
And very much like what happened to, years
13:53
ago, Reality Winner.
13:54
That's a name that nobody talks about anymore.
13:57
One document that was about Russian election interference,
14:02
ultimately had her incarcerated.
14:05
She was a whistleblower.
14:06
Had her incarcerated for years.
14:08
And I predict that John Bolton is going
14:11
to suffer the same consequence.
14:14
Oh, man.
14:15
That would be so funny.
14:17
Well, of course, once you get into someone's
14:19
computer, especially someone like Bolton, you're going to
14:21
find all kinds of stuff.
14:22
The military contacts I have all say...
14:24
He kept handling classified documents.
14:29
But the question is, what?
14:30
I did a little research, too.
14:34
Hold on.
14:35
My research is I called somebody.
14:37
I texted, hey, you got any...
14:39
That was my research.
14:40
A couple of people emphasized that Bolton was
14:45
a stick-up-his-ass type character who
14:50
would never even think of having any sort
14:53
of secret documents around the house that they'd
14:56
be able to collect.
14:57
Oh, okay.
14:59
I was also told that he was...
15:02
Nobody likes him.
15:04
And he was...
15:06
When he was the head of the National
15:10
Security Advisor to Trump, Trump never listened to
15:15
him.
15:15
Ever.
15:16
Yeah, but Trump did hire him.
15:19
Yeah, but why?
15:21
Yeah, I don't know.
15:23
I mean, Trump hired a whole bunch of
15:24
screwballs during that first term because he was
15:26
advised to.
15:29
So there's that element.
15:31
And then you start looking at what Bongino
15:33
wrote.
15:33
Bongino also posted something which indicated that this
15:37
was not about top-secret documents or anything
15:39
that might be listed in the book.
15:41
There's some sense that he was...
15:45
He may have committed some sort of treasonous
15:48
act or even...
15:49
Yeah.
15:50
Yeah.
15:53
It just keeps getting funnier.
15:56
And so this...
15:58
Because you know and I know, because we
16:01
generally know people not as extreme as this
16:05
character, but generally speaking people with computers, they
16:09
don't know how things are backed up.
16:12
This even took place during the early era
16:15
with Reagan when they were doing the Iran
16:19
-Contra stuff and all these emails that were
16:21
going back and forth and then deleted were
16:23
backed up.
16:24
They were available.
16:28
a guy like this is not a computer
16:30
guy.
16:31
He's going to leave stuff on his machine.
16:34
And I've always said that the reason for
16:36
the terabyte drive, once that was invented, was
16:38
just so that way it could accumulate evidence
16:40
against you.
16:41
Because you'd never clean it up.
16:43
No, the terabyte drive is to store the
16:45
Bitcoin blockchain.
16:46
We all know that's the reason for it.
16:48
And so the point is that this guy
16:51
may be in big trouble.
16:53
Well, I wonder what they're saying down at
16:56
the club.
16:59
I don't know.
16:59
You know, the fart sniffing club in New
17:01
York.
17:03
I'm still trying to get confirmation on that.
17:06
You never will.
17:10
Just the M5M just makes me laugh these
17:13
days.
17:14
You know, I'll walk by and I'm like,
17:15
OK, I'll probably get that story.
17:17
But it's all so dumb.
17:19
It's just on repeat over and over again.
17:21
And MSNOW, I'm just going to get used
17:24
to saying it.
17:25
Yeah, you might as well.
17:27
MSNOW.
17:28
Unless they back off.
17:29
Or we say Ms. Now.
17:30
Ms. Now.
17:31
Ms. Now.
17:32
They got that guy who's the president of
17:38
the Washington Correspondents Association.
17:42
He does the morning show on Sundays.
17:44
All he can do is rant and rave.
17:52
It's contentless.
17:53
That's what it is.
17:54
Contentless.
17:57
Yeah.
17:57
Nothing has content.
18:00
It's because they got all these hours to
18:02
fill.
18:03
Yeah.
18:04
Even when CNN used to have that one
18:09
station which became HLN and it was just
18:12
headline news.
18:13
And they had that one woman who kept
18:15
reading the news all day.
18:16
It was pretty much an hour of news
18:19
repeated with maybe some updates every hour.
18:23
There's only an hour's worth of content a
18:25
day.
18:26
That they have to fill 24 hours with
18:28
so they jack in some people to talk
18:29
about it endlessly.
18:31
So they've created these 24 hour networks that
18:35
there's nothing to talk about for 24 hours
18:37
every single day.
18:38
But there's plenty to clip and it's all
18:40
over social media.
18:41
Oh, outrage.
18:42
Look at this outrage.
18:44
Although I see that kind of, it is
18:46
ever since Rachel Maddow cut back her hours
18:49
and Jen Psaki went to pretty much non
18:54
-time.
18:54
I don't even know when she's on anymore.
18:57
There's no gaffs.
18:58
The only thing, and gosh I really wish
19:00
I could have gotten original.
19:02
Did you see the tweet going around, the
19:04
post on X, of the AP Gwen, I
19:10
want to say it was Gwen Dyer, I
19:11
think her name is.
19:12
Yeah, she was trying to read a simple
19:14
copy and she couldn't do it.
19:15
This was posted by Tim Pool.
19:17
Yeah, and I want that original so bad
19:21
because that would be fun to, because you
19:22
can't really play it.
19:23
Yeah, instead of having somebody laughing over it
19:25
while they're playing it.
19:26
Yeah, I agree.
19:27
I looked for it, I went on the
19:28
podcast feeds because it looked like it came
19:30
from a podcast feed.
19:31
I'm sure they removed it.
19:33
But it was interesting because I think even
19:36
we forget sometimes.
19:38
Explain what it is to people that didn't
19:40
get a shot at it.
19:40
So it was an hourly report from Associated
19:43
Press and she's reading the copy and these
19:47
news reports are very staccato explaining exactly how
19:51
it goes and then President Trump, without evidence,
19:54
this kind of stuff.
19:56
But she couldn't get one sentence straight and
19:58
she kept doing what we call pick-ups.
20:03
Let me see if I can give an
20:04
example.
20:05
Let me just grab a rando news headline.
20:10
And so she would be, let's see, I'm
20:13
just going to grab something.
20:15
Here we go.
20:18
Pritzker said in a statement, the state of
20:20
Illinois at this time has received no request
20:27
or outreach from the federal government.
20:32
So she was doing all those pick-ups.
20:33
She could not get through a sentence without
20:37
having to pick it up.
20:38
And I can just see the sound engineer
20:40
rolling his eye, his or her eyes, like,
20:43
oh, I've got to edit all this stuff
20:44
together.
20:45
It's going to be a nightmare.
20:46
You've got to make it sound like she
20:47
can actually talk.
20:48
But it was just fun.
20:50
I mean, I'm sure they're not making the
20:51
hundreds of thousands of dollars that some of
20:54
the NPR morning show people are, but I'm
20:58
sure she's doing just fine.
20:59
And it's like, oh, man, she really is
21:02
just only a voice.
21:03
That person could be replaced by AI.
21:05
That would actually be an improvement.
21:07
It would save money.
21:09
Yeah.
21:11
We got a lot of boots on the
21:14
ground about apprenticeships.
21:18
I don't know if you received any, but
21:19
we were talking about apprenticeships.
21:22
This was following on the news that plumbers
21:27
now can make $150,000 a year.
21:31
And I just wanted to share a couple
21:33
of these because this is very interesting.
21:35
I wish you would.
21:36
Gents, I was one of the youngsters who
21:39
took up a lot of Gen Zers, by
21:41
the way, in their late 20s.
21:42
I was one of the youngsters who took
21:44
up the call for skilled tradesmen.
21:45
I can confirm that after finishing an electrical
21:47
apprenticeship, so there are apprenticeships, the jobs are
21:51
plentiful and everywhere.
21:53
And as a journeyman wireman now training apprentices,
21:56
there's a lot of young cats joining the
21:58
trade straight out of high school.
22:01
Young cats.
22:02
How is this new?
22:03
But it is.
22:05
But we were pretty convinced that there were
22:07
no more apprenticeships.
22:09
That's the astounding thing.
22:10
I'm still not convinced it's that prevalent.
22:13
Well, in the morning, this is from Tommy
22:18
Breakfluid.
22:19
You discussed apprenticeships on the last show.
22:21
I wanted to tell you about my experience
22:22
with apprenticeships.
22:23
I graduated from my CNC machining apprenticeship about
22:27
two years ago.
22:28
I can't speak for other states, but in
22:30
Michigan, they're really starting to become more popular.
22:32
Apprenticeships are regulated by the Department of Labor
22:35
and they require you to work a total
22:36
of 8,000 hours, which is about four
22:38
years, and take classes at trade school or
22:41
college.
22:42
In all the classes I took, about 90
22:44
% of the class were also apprentices from
22:46
other shops.
22:48
Lately in my shop, we've been getting a
22:49
ton of new apprentices straight from high school.
22:52
And then he goes through this, quite a
22:54
whole thing about how the trade schools were
22:57
really good, but everybody he said, the trade
23:00
school I went to in high school was
23:01
fine.
23:01
They taught the basics, but the college classes
23:04
I took were terrible.
23:05
I learned everything.
23:06
Most of the classes were teaching because I
23:08
did it every day.
23:10
The machining teacher didn't even have that much
23:12
experience or even machining.
23:14
He was only a couple years older than
23:16
me.
23:16
My shop one time hired one with a
23:19
degree in machining from the same school.
23:21
He knew absolutely nothing about machining.
23:23
So not only are they turning out people
23:27
with worthless degrees, but when they do actual
23:30
apprenticeships, they don't teach anything.
23:34
And then here's Alabama for Plumbers since we
23:37
were talking about it.
23:39
Listening to today's show, I want to inform
23:40
you all of the school we've created in
23:42
our county, Baldwin County in Alabama, that teaches
23:45
kids, or whoever, the trades in replacement of
23:49
traditional college.
23:50
It bypasses apprenticeships.
23:52
BaldwinPrep.com And then this is my favorite
23:56
from the anonymous controller.
24:01
I'd like to bring the NA family a
24:04
notice about air traffic control job availability.
24:08
There's currently an open off-the-street hiring
24:13
for air traffic controllers.
24:15
Now before I read what he says, let's
24:18
listen to the report from the M5N.
24:20
The Federal Aviation Administration is working to fill
24:24
more than 3,000 air traffic controller jobs
24:27
to end a decades long shortage.
24:30
Now to help, the FAA has expanded its
24:32
on-site training by nearly 30%, but the
24:35
expectations and pressure are high, as reporter Pete
24:38
Mantine found out when he toured the training
24:41
academy in Oklahoma City.
24:44
This is a rare inside look at the
24:47
epicenter of ending a chronic shortage of air
24:50
traffic controllers that's burning out workers and delaying
24:53
flights nationwide.
24:57
Here at the Federal Aviation Administration's Controller Academy
25:01
in Oklahoma City, students spend months in classrooms
25:04
and simulators before moving to on-the-job
25:07
training at towers and radar facilities that are
25:10
struggling to retain talent.
25:11
How bad is the shortage of air traffic
25:14
controllers in the U.S. right now?
25:16
It's at a full-blown staffing crisis.
25:18
The latest estimates say the FAA is short
25:20
3,000 air traffic controllers.
25:23
The newest moves by the Trump Administration include
25:26
slashing the time candidates wait to be accepted
25:28
here and giving them pay bonuses when they
25:31
reach key training milestones.
25:33
We're thinking creatively on how we can supercharge
25:36
air traffic control.
25:37
Changes are working with the FAA just announcing
25:40
enrollment here is now the highest it has
25:43
ever been.
25:43
The FAA says it rejects 90% of
25:46
applicants and of the students who do get
25:49
in 35% wash out.
25:51
I don't know if this news report doesn't
25:54
want anyone to apply but here's our anonymous
25:56
controller and he or she says the requirements
26:00
are pretty basic ages between 18 and 31
26:04
U.S. citizen, job history of three plus
26:06
consecutive years or any higher education degree, clean
26:09
criminal record, English speaking although I can tell
26:12
you stories where that has been ignored.
26:14
For those interested in making a career off
26:17
of not letting dots crash into each other
26:19
on a video game screen, making good money,
26:22
full government pension, retirement, full health care benefits
26:25
should apply.
26:26
The process is enduring as nothing moves fast
26:29
in the government regardless of what Duffy, that's
26:31
our FAA Administrator, claims.
26:33
Go to usajobs.gov, create a profile, build
26:36
your resume or on the website and apply
26:38
to air traffic control posting.
26:40
Air traffic controllers are still in desperate need
26:42
with the Biden administration's action in conjunction with
26:44
the worthless pathetic union during COVID.
26:48
P.S. this is not intended to take
26:50
away business from Linda Liu, Duchess of Jobs
26:52
and writer of resumes.
26:53
We appreciate that.
26:56
So there's a real gig and I bet
26:58
you it's fun.
27:01
It looks fun to me but I mean
27:03
again, if this podcasting thing doesn't work out,
27:05
I'm in.
27:06
You should go to become an air traffic
27:08
controller.
27:11
I'd be doing a podcast.
27:15
November 277, Bravo 5.
27:17
How you doing everybody?
27:18
Good to see you.
27:19
Don't crash into that dot on my screen,
27:20
please.
27:22
We could do it.
27:23
Yeah, just like that.
27:24
Yeah.
27:25
So I'm happy to hear that.
27:27
This gives me hope, this Gen Z, something
27:29
happened, Gen Z flipped around, they started to
27:32
get their act together.
27:32
Gen Z is being underrated.
27:34
There's a bunch of articles trying to explain
27:37
this and that with Gen Z.
27:38
A lot of it's bullcrap.
27:40
But I saw at the table the other
27:42
day JC pointed out something.
27:44
He says that according to the stats that
27:48
the Gen Z men are all, they're coming
27:51
up as Republicans.
27:53
But the Gen Z women weren't but now
27:57
they are.
27:58
Because they're like, might as well get with
28:00
the program here.
28:01
He says that the curve has just gone,
28:03
all of a sudden taken a nosedive for
28:06
the women and they're all becoming Republicans too.
28:09
The whole entire Gen Z is going to
28:12
be a Republican voting bloc.
28:14
So what can we do to thwart that?
28:17
The Democrats are thinking.
28:19
I don't know what, they don't know it's
28:21
happening and the Democrats are still under the
28:25
assumption that if you're young You gotta be
28:27
trans.
28:29
Well besides that.
28:31
They're thinking if you're young you're going to
28:32
vote Democrat because it's an idealistic, the idealism
28:37
of the Democrats is more appealing than the
28:42
conservativism of the Republicans.
28:45
And so the youth will always vote Democrat.
28:47
So they don't think this is anything that's
28:50
worth worrying about.
28:52
Well I'm seeing it.
28:53
I mean I'm seeing it around here in
28:55
Fredericksburg.
28:56
And I'm talking 25, 26 year olds and
29:00
they're even giving up social media.
29:04
The horrors.
29:05
Well that would be a good idea.
29:07
Well it would be a fantastic start.
29:09
I just wonder is this an organic change?
29:11
Is this something that just happens as a
29:13
cycle?
29:14
You and I have witnessed four or five
29:16
generational cycles.
29:18
As far as I'm concerned everything's a cycle
29:20
so it's probably some sort of cycle.
29:23
It's a new one though.
29:24
I don't know what where it fits into
29:28
the scheme of things.
29:29
It's just got to be backlash.
29:30
Backlash against looking at their Millennials and going
29:34
that kind of sucks.
29:37
Well there's definitely an element of that because
29:39
they do not get along with the Millennials.
29:43
Yes.
29:44
It makes me kind of happy.
29:46
I like it.
29:48
I feel good about it.
29:51
And also as I think you have a
29:53
clip as well as was obvious to us
29:58
we've got a crime bill coming and President
30:00
Trump is reacting to the many calls I
30:03
guess on social media, I've seen them, to
30:06
clean up other cities besides Washington D.C.
30:09
Chicago's on deck.
30:10
President Trump says the Windy City could be
30:13
next as part of his federal crime crackdown.
30:15
His comments coming the same day the Pentagon
30:18
started ordering National Guard troops in Washington D
30:21
.C. to carry firearms.
30:22
People in Chicago Mr. Vice President are screaming
30:26
for us to come.
30:27
The President claims crime in Chicago is out
30:30
of control.
30:30
Now when he says Mr. Vice President does
30:32
that mean J.D. Vance told him or
30:34
is he looking to just have someone in
30:36
the room to back him up or is
30:38
Vance the one who's on X looking at
30:42
this stuff because I've seen it.
30:43
What do you think that is?
30:45
Vance in this situation I think it was
30:47
just a prop.
30:49
Only in this situation?
30:51
He's a prop in a lot of situations
30:53
but this is one of them.
30:54
This is one of them, yes.
30:55
Washington D.C. to carry firearms.
30:57
People in Chicago, Mr. Vice President are screaming
31:01
for us to come.
31:02
The President claims crime in Chicago is out
31:05
of control but city data shows violent crime
31:07
trending down including homicides dropping more than 30%.
31:11
There's that 30% number again.
31:13
Isn't that interesting?
31:15
It's like the Democrats who run these cities
31:18
just respond in the same way and of
31:20
course no numbers.
31:21
30% of what?
31:23
30% of what?
31:24
I mean I listen to Darren O'Neill
31:26
and he does whenever he does Planet Ridge
31:29
with Larry he always does the Chicago shooting
31:34
report and it's I don't think I've heard
31:37
it under double digits ever.
31:40
Just from the weekend how many people were
31:42
shot in Chicago?
31:44
But city data shows violent crime trending down
31:47
including homicides dropping more than 30% this
31:49
year.
31:50
Mayor Brandon Johnson claims even though the Trump
31:52
administration cut federal funding for gun violence prevention
31:56
programs in the U.S. the city's investments
31:58
in housing, community safety, and education are having
32:02
a positive effect.
32:03
What we're doing in Chicago is actually working.
32:05
Again, 32% reduction in homicides.
32:08
That's not something to just blink at.
32:10
Now, is there more work to be done?
32:12
Notice the homicides.
32:14
Well, you know, less people died from the
32:16
shooting.
32:16
There's other people maimed and full of holes.
32:18
But it's good.
32:20
We're trending down.
32:21
Absolutely.
32:21
So let's continue to do the work that's
32:23
working.
32:24
Johnson says he is taking Trump's threats.
32:26
Do the work that's working?
32:26
Yes.
32:27
That's a political term.
32:28
Do the work that's working.
32:29
Absolutely.
32:30
So let's continue to do the work that's
32:32
working.
32:32
Johnson says he is taking Trump's threats seriously
32:35
something Alderman Brian Hopkins echoes.
32:38
Both feel deploying troops would only increase tensions,
32:40
not solve anything.
32:41
If he really wants to help Chicago's law
32:44
enforcement problem, he should give us a federal
32:46
homeland security grant so we could hire 2
32:48
,000 police officers, Chicagoans, who know our city.
32:52
Trump's order to send hundreds of troops to
32:54
Los Angeles is currently at the center of
32:56
a legal challenge.
32:57
It's likely the same would happen if he
32:59
tried to do this with Chicago.
33:01
Johnson says they'll leave no stones unturned, including
33:03
legal action if it comes to it.
33:05
We will use every single tool available to
33:09
stop this president from disrupting the lives of
33:13
Chicagoans.
33:14
The president says after Chicago, he's looking to
33:17
New York and L.A. Now, what do
33:20
you know about the legality of this?
33:22
Can the president do this?
33:23
It's not legal.
33:24
The whole thing is a bluff.
33:26
Yeah.
33:26
And the dumb Democrats are buying into it
33:28
and they think something's going to happen.
33:31
And this is all about the 2026 midterms,
33:34
and Trump's going to be able to walk
33:35
away saying, well, we wanted to do this,
33:38
we wanted to do that, but they were
33:39
defending crime and they were lying about the
33:42
crime.
33:43
They're documenting left and right, especially those police
33:48
associations, the unions, documenting that the cops aren't
33:51
doing their job when it comes to reporting
33:54
correctly.
33:55
There's one guy that's been floating around in
33:57
D.C. and he's been on Waters and
33:59
all the other shows, and he says the
34:01
cops are, you know, the guy, some kid
34:02
gets shot, is attempted murder, but they send
34:05
him to the hospital as an incident.
34:07
They don't report it as such.
34:09
So the numbers are, and people are going
34:11
into the computers and faking the numbers.
34:13
So all these numbers are bogus and they're
34:15
documenting that.
34:16
They're documenting the fact that the crime has
34:18
actually gone up, not down.
34:19
And then they're going to point the finger
34:22
at the Democrats.
34:23
You want more crime?
34:24
Vote for the Democrats in 2026.
34:26
You're going to get more crime because that's
34:28
what they're doing.
34:29
This is just, he's not going into Chicago
34:31
with the troops.
34:33
It's just an idle threat.
34:36
So you're telling me that the police in
34:38
these cities today are fudging the numbers?
34:42
Well, one guy was put on suspension in
34:45
D.C. for it, and he was a
34:47
fairly well-known lieutenant, I think, was his
34:50
rank, and they talked about him because his
34:53
superiors, the guys running the city, the commissioners
34:57
and everyone else, this was in The Wire,
34:59
by the way, this idea.
35:02
Oh, yeah, you're right.
35:03
You're right, it was, season one, absolutely.
35:06
Yeah, it was in The Wire because this
35:08
is what goes on in these big cities
35:09
when they're trying to make their numbers look
35:11
good.
35:11
They phony up the numbers and oh, it's
35:14
down, it's down, vote us in again.
35:16
And it's all lies and they're starting to
35:18
document this to an extreme.
35:21
And, I mean, the amount of bullcrap in
35:23
terms of the reporting is well-known because
35:25
they changed some ways of doing the reporting
35:28
to the FBI and we had this so
35:30
-called downturn in crime.
35:31
It hasn't happened.
35:32
This is nonsense and they're going to document
35:35
enough of it to keep the Democrats from
35:38
getting votes.
35:39
You know why they get away with this?
35:42
And I think you're right.
35:43
I mean, we saw it here in Gillespie
35:44
County with the previous sheriff.
35:47
We got a new sheriff.
35:48
There's a new sheriff in town, Sheriff Ayala.
35:51
But the previous sheriff, he would never report
35:55
to the newspaper.
35:56
We have a newspaper on Wednesdays only.
35:59
Would never report the actual things that they
36:02
were doing and they weren't possibly even doing
36:04
that much of it because we're a tourist
36:06
destination.
36:07
So, oh, we can't have that.
36:09
We can't report on the drugs in Fredericksburg.
36:12
We can't report on that.
36:13
We can't report on all the people driving
36:15
around drunk because that's what happens in an
36:18
open carry, open container city.
36:23
State?
36:24
No, we're not an open container state.
36:26
I thought all of Texas you could drive
36:28
around with an open beer.
36:29
No.
36:32
That's not what I was told.
36:33
You can't drive around anywhere with an open
36:35
beer.
36:36
You can walk on the street in Fredericksburg.
36:39
It's only one of six cities.
36:40
Can somebody from Texas back me up on
36:42
this?
36:42
You cannot drive around with an...
36:44
I'm from Texas.
36:45
I'm not going to back you up because
36:46
you're wrong.
36:47
Yeah, but you're not from Texas.
36:48
You're in Texas.
36:50
I've been here 15 years.
36:53
You cannot drive around with an open container
36:55
of alcohol in your vehicle.
36:58
Beer.
36:58
Beer either.
37:00
No.
37:01
You can have a gun.
37:03
Eh.
37:05
But, you know, there's no more local news.
37:09
There's no city desk guy, you know, who's
37:12
going in and knocking on doors and saying,
37:15
hey, we're going down to be listening to
37:16
the police scanner.
37:19
Can't even listen to the police scanner anymore.
37:21
It's all digital.
37:23
That's the problem.
37:24
There's no more local reporting.
37:27
That's why everyone gets away with everything.
37:29
There's no city hall reporter.
37:33
Maybe Chicago has one.
37:35
The rest just sit at WGN and read
37:37
the press releases.
37:39
Wouldn't you say?
37:41
Yes, that's what you do.
37:42
Yeah, but we have this thing called podcast,
37:45
people.
37:46
We got blogs.
37:47
We got Substack.
37:49
Get out there and start reporting on stuff.
37:52
Well, that one guy.
37:53
Who's the guy who reports on the Chicago,
37:57
on the shootings?
37:59
It's very popular.
38:01
I don't know if it's a...
38:02
I think it's a blog.
38:04
We've talked about it at some point.
38:06
No, I don't remember.
38:07
Well, there's so many.
38:09
You do full-time job reporting on the
38:11
shootings in Chicago.
38:12
Yeah.
38:14
Let me see.
38:14
What's about Chicago?
38:16
Somebody knows that.
38:17
Anyway, what do you have on this?
38:20
Well, I have a couple of things.
38:21
I have the...
38:23
There's been a lot of the Democrats going
38:25
on and on about DC crime.
38:28
I picked this up from NTD.
38:31
The Democrats are saying there was no crime.
38:34
People are upset that they hate Trump for
38:37
doing this and they hate him for...
38:40
Because there's no real crime in DC.
38:42
It's not that bad.
38:43
I live here, they say.
38:45
It goes on and on.
38:47
NTD has a...
38:48
This is clips DC crime, man on the
38:51
street.
38:52
Okay.
38:53
And just a little more than a week
38:54
into the federal takeover of DC police, the
38:57
Trump administration unveils data showing a large number
38:59
of arrests happening in high-crime neighborhoods.
39:02
What do residents in those areas make of
39:05
the crackdown?
39:06
NTD's Sam Wong was out in DC's Anacostia
39:08
neighborhood to hear from the people.
39:10
Do you feel safe being out here?
39:12
Oh, absolutely.
39:13
You know, other than the presence of the
39:15
law enforcement, everything is, you know, as it
39:18
always has been.
39:19
There has not been any altercations as it
39:24
was in the past.
39:25
We're here shooting almost every other night, sometimes
39:27
every week.
39:29
You know, sometimes there's...
39:31
I mean, when I say shooting, I mean
39:33
they shooting all day, broad daylight, sometimes at
39:36
nighttime mostly.
39:37
What you do here in the daytime.
39:39
Have you noticed an increase of law enforcement
39:41
presence around here?
39:42
Yes, sir.
39:43
I have noticed a lot more increase, but
39:46
it's a shame that it takes Donald Trump
39:49
to bring all these people in for all
39:51
the police to come outside and do their
39:53
jobs, actually.
39:54
This is actually my first experience with this,
39:57
the law enforcement.
39:58
And man, it's cool.
40:00
That doesn't bother me, them being around here.
40:02
If you're doing what you're supposed to do,
40:04
guess what?
40:05
Hey, they're doing the right thing.
40:07
Heyjackass.com.
40:08
That's the website.
40:12
That's the guy who reports on.
40:14
Heyjackass.
40:15
August.
40:17
Shot and killed, 24.
40:19
Shot and wounded, 156.
40:21
Total shot, 180.
40:23
Total homicides, 26.
40:25
Last week, shot and killed, eight.
40:28
Shot and wounded, 37.
40:29
Total shot, 45.
40:31
Total homicides, eight.
40:33
Year to date, shot and killed in Chicago,
40:35
229.
40:37
Shot and wounded, 1,056.
40:40
Total shot, 1,285.
40:42
Total homicides, 275.
40:44
The guy's got graphs, got all kinds of
40:47
stuff.
40:47
He's got merch.
40:50
He's got merch.
40:51
He's got merch.
40:52
With spent shell casings.
40:54
The heyjackass.com.
40:56
Yeah.
40:57
So, that's the kind of stuff that we
40:59
need.
41:00
And the people need to talk about these
41:01
things.
41:02
Hey, I'm going to put it in the
41:02
show notes.
41:04
Heyjackass.com.
41:06
It's a good one.
41:09
Okay.
41:10
I think we've covered that enough.
41:12
Okay.
41:13
What else you got then?
41:14
Well, I got some TikTok clips, but first
41:16
of all...
41:16
Really?
41:17
Really?
41:17
You're going to start off in the first
41:18
hour with TikTok?
41:18
Okay.
41:19
I'm going to push that off to the
41:20
second half.
41:20
I do have, you know, Taylor Swift finally
41:23
came on a podcast.
41:25
Hold on, everybody.
41:28
And now, back to you.
41:30
Yes, on her boyfriend's podcast.
41:33
Kelsey's podcast.
41:34
She came on to plug her album, and
41:37
somebody...
41:38
This is a good kind of compressed version.
41:41
This is not safe for work, by the
41:42
way, for anyone out there that's got kids.
41:44
But listen to Taylor.
41:46
This is kind of a surprise.
41:47
Thanks for having me.
41:48
This is my first podcast.
41:50
This is amazing.
41:51
Thank you for coming on.
41:52
What took you so long to jump on
41:53
podcasts?
41:54
You know what?
41:54
I just...
41:55
I was waiting for you guys to invite
41:58
me.
41:58
This is my favorite podcast.
42:00
Okay, so let's jump into the nitty-gritty.
42:02
Who do you think is the sexiest man
42:03
alive today?
42:04
It can be Travis or it can be
42:05
anyone else.
42:06
Who is the sexiest man, in your opinion?
42:08
I mean, honestly, and I'm sorry, baby, that
42:11
you're going to have to hear this.
42:13
I honestly think President Trump is the sexiest
42:15
motherfucker alive.
42:17
I mean, hot damn that man is hot.
42:19
I totally agree.
42:20
That is a sexy beast right there.
42:22
But aren't you a Democrat?
42:23
You know what?
42:24
Fuck the DNC.
42:26
You heard me.
42:27
Fuck these woke-ass liberals telling us Joe
42:30
Biden was sharp as a tack.
42:32
The man was fucking retarded.
42:34
And why the hell did they lock us
42:37
down during COVID?
42:39
Whoops.
42:40
I guess we lost the signal there.
42:42
Can you guys hear me?
42:44
Yeah.
42:44
AI, of course.
42:45
Very funny.
42:46
What?
42:46
The sad part is I had never listened
42:51
to the Kelsey Brothers podcast.
42:54
They're actually not bad as podcasters go.
42:58
I was quite impressed with them.
43:01
You know, it was better than that AI
43:04
version of it for sure.
43:08
Well, I thought this AI version, which counters
43:10
the one you played last show.
43:12
Yes.
43:13
And so if you're going to play them,
43:14
I'm playing them.
43:15
Yeah, no, that's fine.
43:16
I'm totally okay with that.
43:17
Anything but the TikTok ladies.
43:20
Let's go to the UK with some UK
43:22
anti-migrant action to follow up on our
43:25
flags thing from last show.
43:27
Yes, raising the colours movement.
43:31
Anti-migrant protests have taken place in about
43:34
a dozen towns and cities in the UK
43:36
focused on the use of hotels to accommodate
43:38
asylum seekers.
43:40
In Liverpool, more than 400 people joined a
43:43
march calling for migrants to be deported.
43:46
In several locations, there were counter rallies by
43:48
anti-racism protesters.
43:50
Our political correspondent Ian Watson says migration is
43:54
proving a difficult subject for the Labour government.
43:57
The concern over asylum hotels has put a
44:00
renewed focus on Labour's records since they came
44:02
to office.
44:03
I think the other problem which the current
44:05
Labour government has is this.
44:07
Some of their MPs are telling me that
44:09
in areas which are traditionally ones which they
44:11
would win at a general election, some people
44:13
are now becoming so concerned about migration, especially
44:16
the small boat crossings, that they're not listening
44:19
to the party on other issues and they're
44:20
facing some regional and national elections next May
44:23
and they're very concerned that unless they make
44:26
greater progress on this issue, they'll start losing
44:28
support to other parties.
44:30
It's interesting the BBC takes it purely to
44:32
politics, not about the outrage of the people
44:36
who pay their salary through a forced payment.
44:41
The television payment scheme I think is what
44:45
it's called, which is one of the oddest
44:47
things they have in the UK.
44:50
I don't think a lot of people realise
44:52
what it is, you should explain it.
44:55
It's a licence you have to buy to
44:58
watch TV.
44:59
Yes, I think I actually have it.
45:03
I had a...
45:06
And they float around the neighbourhoods with these
45:08
trucks with giant antennas on them because the
45:12
signal comes off of a TV even though
45:16
it's a receiver.
45:17
And so if they spot, they'll go by
45:19
your house if you don't have a licence
45:22
and they'll just aim this dish at you
45:24
and then if they sense there's a television
45:27
in the house, they will fine you.
45:31
Regardless of what you use your television for,
45:35
if you have it, and it is done
45:37
by...
45:37
Because the tuner gives off a signal, that's
45:39
the problem.
45:40
But also you can't buy it unless you
45:41
buy a television from the guy on the
45:43
street corner like it's crack.
45:46
You have to register your name because I
45:48
live there, I went through it.
45:50
And it's not cheap, it's like $150 a
45:53
year I think.
45:54
Yeah, it's not cheap, that's true.
45:56
And I'm not even sure what the genesis
46:01
of this is.
46:02
I think it was because they didn't want
46:05
it to be a straight up tax coming
46:07
out of the tax tax receipts.
46:09
I thought originally it was designed to pay
46:12
for the BBC.
46:13
No, it is specifically designed to pay for
46:16
the BBC.
46:17
The reason they didn't want it to be
46:18
a tax is so that it wouldn't be
46:20
a political football like, I don't know, corporations
46:23
for public broadcasting.
46:25
So that that couldn't happen.
46:26
What happened here could not happen to the
46:28
BBC.
46:30
In contrast to that, well not really contrast,
46:33
but this is the Euronews short report about
46:36
it.
46:37
Protesters took to the streets across the UK
46:39
on Saturday to demonstrate against hotels housing asylum
46:43
seekers in Liverpool.
46:45
Crowds could be seen carrying the St. George's
46:47
Cross and Union Jack flags.
46:49
Police could be seen leading people away from
46:52
the abolish asylum system protest, a term coined
46:55
by right-wing political parties.
46:57
Demonstrations were also set to take place in
46:59
other cities including Bristol, Newcastle and London.
47:03
This week a temporary injunction blocked housing asylum
47:06
seekers in a hotel on the outskirts of
47:09
London, reigniting the debate.
47:11
Counter protests were also held.
47:13
So we got a boots on the ground
47:14
from Peter.
47:15
Here he is.
47:17
Here in the UK it's worse than you
47:19
and John think.
47:20
Almost everyone I speak to with a decent
47:22
job, business and family is despondent.
47:27
That's a good word.
47:28
Wow.
47:29
What does despondent mean?
47:31
It's depressed.
47:32
It's the kind of depression that is the
47:35
hang dog type depression.
47:38
Oh, I feel so bad.
47:40
They think the third world takeover is inevitable.
47:43
Every town now has half a dozen vape
47:46
shops, Turkish barbers and shawarma takeaways with no
47:50
customers and big mercs outside.
47:53
The housing market is stalled.
47:54
I've heard this from a number of people.
47:55
There are eight houses for sale on our
47:58
small village high street.
48:00
None have sold for months.
48:02
Five years ago they would have gone within
48:04
a month.
48:05
Everything has gone up in price.
48:07
Food inflation is out of control.
48:09
Highest electricity prices in the world.
48:11
Property taxes jacked up and taxes on home
48:14
value and inheritance are threatened.
48:17
Investors are putting their money abroad and in
48:19
the city of London mergers and IPOs have
48:21
flat lined.
48:22
UK companies are listing in the US rather
48:25
than the London Stock Exchange.
48:27
I speak to so many people who want
48:29
out.
48:29
I've never heard so many people who are
48:31
looking for places to get their family and
48:33
money out of the UK.
48:34
We certainly are.
48:36
Right.
48:36
I'm going back to the garage where I'm
48:39
laying down the keel for Mayflower 2.
48:44
He wants to be a plumber in America.
48:46
Come on over Peter.
48:48
We can use plumbers.
48:50
We should have special visa for plumbers.
48:55
One of our producers sent in a note
48:58
mentioning that Satan is probably Amy Pope.
49:04
You mean from the UN?
49:07
The International Organization for Migration.
49:10
Which is an operation we should revisit once
49:12
in a while.
49:13
I looked up Amy Pope.
49:15
She worked for Clinton.
49:16
She worked for Obama.
49:17
I mean she worked for Hillary Clinton.
49:19
She worked for Obama.
49:20
She worked for Biden.
49:21
She was in charge.
49:22
She was the real border czar that opened
49:24
the borders it looks like.
49:26
Try to find anything.
49:28
She doesn't have a wiki entry except in
49:30
Deutschland.
49:32
Oh really?
49:33
Yeah.
49:34
The wiki page is in German.
49:38
Even though she's in America I don't get
49:39
that.
49:41
She does have a sketchy she's not sketchy
49:45
in her education or anything but she's part
49:47
of the Chatham House which is a nice
49:51
6th front in the UK.
49:53
Chatham House and some other spooky operations she's
49:56
got some connections to.
49:58
Obviously a bad actor.
50:00
It's all funded by us.
50:02
Why does the American public put up with
50:04
this?
50:06
Why are we dropping our money into these
50:09
organizations that are all centered at the UN?
50:13
When I was a kid when I was
50:16
a kid we used to have a pharmacy
50:20
in Albany and this is during the Berkeley
50:24
era and when there was protests and all
50:27
this stuff going on.
50:27
There was right wingers and they had all
50:30
these bumper stickers on the window and one
50:33
of them was always get the US out
50:35
of the UN or get the UN out
50:38
of the US and it actually was done
50:42
in such a way as to get the
50:43
United Nations, get the UN out of United
50:46
States.
50:47
It was some pun.
50:49
It was a bumper sticker and everyone always
50:53
thought what a silly group of people these
50:55
Birchers.
50:55
There's a John Birch Society bookstore about three
50:58
doors down and we always thought that they
51:00
were kind of nutty but looking back on
51:03
it they were ahead of their time.
51:06
The way I see it now was I
51:10
a buffoon back in the day, I guess
51:12
so.
51:13
Okay, so you bring up an interesting point
51:15
first.
51:15
We have discussed Amy Pope quite a bit
51:19
I'll play a shorter clip from last year.
51:22
She is the head honcho at the International
51:25
Office of Migration.
51:26
We just finished an incredible day and a
51:29
half for the International Dialogue for Migration.
51:31
We had singing, we had dancing, we had
51:33
artwork and we had extraordinarily thoughtful conversation about
51:37
the impact of climate change on human mobility.
51:41
Now as we move toward COP28 it is
51:43
critical that we put all of these ideas
51:45
into action.
51:47
Action that enables people who are impacted by
51:50
climate change to find better solutions.
51:52
Whether they're already on the move, whether they're
51:56
looking for options to stay at home, or
51:59
whether they need new opportunities because climate change
52:02
will cause their own options to disappear.
52:05
The time for action is now and IOM
52:08
can't wait to be part of it.
52:10
Okay, so there's a lot of clips, a
52:12
lot of it is about climate change and
52:15
so when we look at the climate change
52:17
organization, because people always By the way, it
52:20
is the international organization, not office.
52:24
What did I say, office?
52:25
Yeah, it's got 20,000 people, big office.
52:28
But that's the point.
52:30
What has grown over not 10, not 20,
52:33
not 30, but probably 60 years.
52:36
It started in the 50s.
52:37
The climate, okay, 70 years.
52:39
The group of climate scientists and climate people
52:43
who are just getting billions of dollars to
52:46
waffle on about climate change.
52:50
So, we had a couple of producers who
52:52
sent in notes like, well, you know, the
52:55
true evil is the BlackRock, the Rand Corporation,
53:00
you know, there's all these layers of headquarters
53:03
in all different places and everybody wants to
53:07
blame a group.
53:09
And of course, my favorite, the Rothschilds, Soros.
53:13
You can go on and on forever blaming
53:16
individuals, Obama, Biden, Clinton's.
53:22
We have good and evil in the world,
53:24
that's just a fact.
53:25
But the only, because you said it, the
53:27
only people you can truly blame is ourselves.
53:32
Because we just sit around and puke on
53:33
social media about how they're no good, they're
53:37
doing this, they're doing that.
53:38
Go run for your local school board, your
53:41
city council, for, you know, your state house
53:46
or senate.
53:48
I agree.
53:49
You should stop your complaining and let the
53:50
podcasters do the work for you.
53:52
Well, we're actually doing something.
53:54
We do highlight this.
53:55
COVID is when a lot of people woke
53:58
up, but then they still default back to
54:00
Fauci, World Health Organization, WEF, Davos.
54:05
Get off your blessed assurance and go do
54:08
something about it.
54:09
You're allowing yourself to be treated as a
54:11
doormat.
54:13
And social media is perfect.
54:15
It's perfect.
54:16
Everybody, oh, I feel much better now.
54:18
I posted that.
54:20
I trolled him.
54:22
That's right, I've left a comment.
54:24
No, you're doing nothing.
54:25
This idea of doing this kind of public
54:30
complaining predates modern social media.
54:34
You'd find the same thing in the old
54:36
-fashioned, you know, AOL chat room.
54:40
Of course.
54:41
It's just people just bitch and moan and
54:44
do nothing.
54:45
Yes, that's exactly it.
54:47
Well, they should leave it to the professionals.
54:49
Well, we are professional bitches and moaners, but
54:52
I think we did help a lot of
54:53
people resist in whatever.
54:56
There's no doubt about it.
54:57
Resist against, you know, the COVID measures to
55:00
at least have an idea of what was
55:02
going on.
55:02
And we all really failed in many different
55:06
ways, but we need to take these lessons
55:09
and stop pointing fingers at groups.
55:12
Every single No Agenda Telegram group is filled
55:16
with this.
55:17
The Dutch are the worst.
55:18
Oh, I love them, but I lurk.
55:20
I see what you're doing.
55:21
Oh, look at that guy.
55:22
Oh, look at this article about that guy.
55:24
That's bullcrap, man.
55:25
That's just bullcrap.
55:26
Oh, it's the elites.
55:27
There they go.
55:28
The elites are doing it.
55:29
You're doing nothing.
55:31
It's your own fault.
55:34
You are to blame.
55:36
That's what the problem is.
55:38
Alright, I'll stop preaching now.
55:41
Because people need to wake up.
55:44
Do something.
55:46
There's plenty of stuff you can do.
55:48
I was part of the screw-it-up
55:49
generation.
55:51
I was having a good time in the
55:52
80s.
55:53
Hey, man, I'm making bank.
55:55
I'm at MTV.
55:56
I'm on the radio.
55:57
School board, loser.
55:58
Couldn't get a better gig.
56:01
Yeah, and so maybe the Gen Zers are
56:09
you know, look what they're doing.
56:11
They're homesteading.
56:13
They're moving out of the cities.
56:14
They're homeschooling.
56:15
Yes, they are.
56:16
Yes, I get tons of emails.
56:19
The farmer's wife, she's got 17 kids at
56:22
home.
56:22
She's taking care of them.
56:24
Gives them a little bit of an injection
56:25
with the No Agenda show.
56:27
But okay, you can listen to this and
56:29
check it out.
56:29
This will give you an idea.
56:31
And the Brits, God bless them, they're finally
56:34
saying no.
56:36
No, no, no, no.
56:38
We don't want this.
56:39
Now, it's going to be a tough nut
56:40
to crack over there because you know, if
56:44
you look at the video of those reports,
56:46
the cops are busting heads and rousting people.
56:50
So your wake-up call came at the
56:53
beginning of 2020.
56:57
If you didn't take that as your wake
56:58
-up call, and so you can point to
57:00
as many people as you want, but you
57:02
need to be pointing at yourself.
57:05
Yeah, well, I'm going to be pointing at
57:06
Amy Pope.
57:08
Okay, oh boy, Amy Pope.
57:10
She's just a symptom of the overall problem.
57:14
These are lawless, faithless, ghoulish people who are
57:19
in it for all of the wrong—they're in
57:21
it for pride, for greed, for jealousy, you
57:26
know, position, stature.
57:28
I think you might be wrong on that.
57:29
They might be sincere.
57:33
No.
57:34
No, I don't think so.
57:35
I think you always underestimate sincerity.
57:42
Well, regardless.
57:45
The answer, it lies within everybody themselves.
57:48
Use that stupid phone of yours to organize
57:51
somebody and go do something.
57:53
Have you ever really shown up somewhere and
57:55
said, hey, we're sick of this?
57:56
Have you ever been a part of that?
57:57
I'm not talking about, hey, hey, ho, ho,
58:00
Trump has got to go.
58:01
I mean, like, really showing up at a
58:02
meeting where it matters.
58:04
And not just— it's like the—there's the one,
58:07
I think he's a pastor, the black guy
58:08
who goes to the school board meetings, and
58:11
he'll read from the in the school.
58:14
Oh, yeah, that guy.
58:15
He's great.
58:16
But that's what I'm saying.
58:18
He's great.
58:18
Yeah, it's great for social media.
58:21
Oh, man, I can't believe they pulled that
58:23
guy out of there.
58:24
But why don't you run for the school
58:26
board?
58:27
Do something real.
58:29
All right.
58:30
I'm done.
58:32
I've said it.
58:32
You said that already.
58:34
Yeah, that's why I stopped.
58:35
I said it.
58:39
How about a moment for African news?
58:43
What?
58:45
Dude, we're going to have the lowest troll
58:48
room numbers ever.
58:50
This is a short clip.
58:51
It's less than a minute.
58:53
Or maybe it's a minute.
58:56
Niger—unfortunately it says Niferia, but it means Nigeria
59:00
gangs.
59:01
Have you heard about this?
59:02
I know there's— No, I don't know about
59:06
this.
59:06
I know something else about Nigeria, but let's
59:08
get this first.
59:09
The Nigerian military says it's carried out an
59:11
airstrike on a bandit camp in Katsina State
59:14
in an operation to rescue dozens of kidnapped
59:17
victims.
59:18
Lack of security has remained a serious problem
59:21
in much of Nigeria despite a promise by
59:23
the government to tackle the issue.
59:25
More from David Bamford.
59:28
Reports say 76 people were able to escape
59:31
as a result of the airstrike.
59:33
One child died during the rescue.
59:35
The military operation on Friday evening took place
59:38
at a location known as Powah Hill, from
59:41
where the criminal gang has been raiding local
59:43
communities.
59:44
Last week they shot dead 30 civilians in
59:47
a mosque in the town of Malumfashi, and
59:50
20 others were killed in surrounding villages.
59:52
The gangs kidnapped people for ransom, an exact
59:55
retribution on communities that do not pay.
59:59
Wow.
1:00:00
Sounds great there, Nigeria.
1:00:03
Yep.
1:00:04
I saw a list of the richest black—
1:00:08
no, the list of the world's black billionaires.
1:00:12
So black being just skin color, not necessarily
1:00:15
black American.
1:00:17
Yeah, black.
1:00:19
70% from Nigeria.
1:00:23
Probably all scammers.
1:00:25
Well, I think I got an email from
1:00:27
at least five of them.
1:00:28
But yeah, billionaires.
1:00:31
I had no idea.
1:00:32
A couple of them live in the States.
1:00:34
I think one or two live in the
1:00:36
UK.
1:00:37
But the Nigerians, man, they know how to
1:00:39
do it.
1:00:42
Yeah.
1:00:44
Scammers.
1:00:46
In fact, you know that the Nigerian scam
1:00:49
where they used to make all kinds of
1:00:51
money just sending notes out to people is
1:00:54
legal in Nigeria and is considered part of
1:00:57
their GDP.
1:00:58
I know they consider it part of their
1:01:00
GDP, but I didn't know that it was
1:01:03
just super legal.
1:01:05
Yeah.
1:01:07
What's illegal about it?
1:01:09
Scam.
1:01:10
Well, they're scamming other people, so I guess
1:01:11
that's good.
1:01:12
Yeah, they're not scamming their own.
1:01:14
Let's check in with what's happening with Ukraine
1:01:19
and with Russia.
1:01:21
I would say it's always good to start
1:01:23
it off with a little bit of our
1:01:25
buddy.
1:01:25
Yes, I know you've been waiting for it.
1:01:27
Rita?
1:01:28
Because, you know, he's trying to keep it
1:01:30
all together there.
1:01:31
He's trying to keep everybody in line, which
1:01:33
means he's trying to help President Trump get
1:01:36
the trilat together, or at least a bilat,
1:01:39
which seems kind of improbable now.
1:01:42
But he's also trying to keep all the
1:01:43
Europeans happy and trying to keep Zelensky happy,
1:01:47
and he's talking out of his butthole.
1:01:51
Clearly, Ukraine and NATO, the US, Europe, Ukraine,
1:01:55
NATO, we are all working extremely well together.
1:01:58
Oh, really?
1:01:59
We are working perfectly together.
1:02:02
As I mentioned, we have, jointly with Ukraine,
1:02:05
an organization in Poland to capture all the
1:02:08
lessons.
1:02:09
Oh, we capture all the lessons.
1:02:10
We are documenting it.
1:02:12
We're taking copious notes of what happened.
1:02:14
From this terrible war.
1:02:15
Terrible, terrible war.
1:02:16
And to understand what it means for all
1:02:18
the NATO plans in the future, for Ukraine
1:02:20
itself, for the build-up of its armed
1:02:22
forces in the future, what lessons we can
1:02:24
learn.
1:02:24
We have to command in Wiesbaden.
1:02:27
How about this?
1:02:27
Don't poke the bear.
1:02:29
From which we organized together with Ukraine all
1:02:32
the support for Ukraine in this war from
1:02:35
NATO allies.
1:02:36
Here we go.
1:02:36
What is this support?
1:02:38
We are heavily involved in making sure that
1:02:41
the Ukrainian armed forces, also longer term, will
1:02:44
be as interoperable as possible of the highest
1:02:47
standards compared with NATO.
1:02:50
This is a sales talk, which means interoperable
1:02:53
means you can only have our NATO bullets
1:02:55
and weapons.
1:02:56
We have the comprehensive assistance package.
1:02:59
We have this new initiative, thanks to President
1:03:02
Trump.
1:03:03
Ah, buy our stuff.
1:03:05
By buying from American stockpiles from the US
1:03:09
military lethal weapons and of course air defense
1:03:12
systems and interceptors to be paid for by
1:03:15
the Europeans directly being delivered to Ukraine.
1:03:18
So NATO...
1:03:20
So, it's a great system.
1:03:22
America sells it to Europe.
1:03:24
Europe pays for it, but it goes straight
1:03:26
to Ukraine.
1:03:27
It's dynamite, people.
1:03:32
What?
1:03:37
An irreversible path for Ukraine into NATO?
1:03:41
That can't be true.
1:03:56
So, don't worry.
1:03:58
You're going to get into NATO.
1:04:00
It's all going to happen.
1:04:01
Not now, maybe never, but we put a
1:04:04
little NATO flag here.
1:04:05
You're coming.
1:04:06
It'll be good.
1:04:08
My word.
1:04:12
So, here is France 24.
1:04:17
Hopes are dim for the Putin-Zelensky Peace
1:04:20
Summit.
1:04:24
And nowhere in sight, the Ukrainian President Zelensky
1:04:27
is saying Russia doesn't want that.
1:04:29
He spoke as he met with NATO Chief
1:04:31
Mark Rutter to talk about security guarantees for
1:04:33
Ukraine.
1:04:34
The Russians will try to do something else
1:04:36
now to avoid a meeting.
1:04:38
The issue is not just the meeting.
1:04:40
The issue is that they don't want to
1:04:41
end the war.
1:04:42
A bilateral meeting is one of the components
1:04:44
of how to end the war.
1:04:46
We're going to see if Putin and Zelensky
1:04:48
will be working together.
1:04:50
It's like oil and vinegar, a little bit.
1:04:53
President Trump on Friday said in the Oval
1:04:54
Office that the next two weeks would be
1:04:56
crucial.
1:04:57
What are the two ways you can go
1:04:58
at the end of two weeks then?
1:05:00
Well, then I'm going to make a decision
1:05:01
as to what we do.
1:05:02
And it's going to be a very important
1:05:05
decision.
1:05:06
And that's whether or not it's massive sanctions
1:05:08
or massive tariffs or both, or do we
1:05:12
do nothing and say it's your fight?
1:05:16
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, meanwhile, said in
1:05:19
an interview to U.S. media that there
1:05:20
would be no Putin-Zelensky meeting because a
1:05:22
presidential agenda had not been set.
1:05:24
And this agenda is not ready at all.
1:05:28
So, clearly the Europeans are telling Zelensky to
1:05:32
chill out.
1:05:33
And the unthinkable has happened.
1:05:35
President Trump has said, you know, I don't
1:05:38
think we'll give those nutjobs any lethal weapons,
1:05:41
any long-range weapons right now because that
1:05:45
could turn out really bad for the whole
1:05:46
process.
1:05:47
Which, as we know, is only about President
1:05:49
Trump wanting a Nobel Peace Prize.
1:05:51
That's what this ultimately is all about.
1:05:53
We all know that.
1:05:54
So, let's listen to Jonathan Karl again on
1:05:56
ABC this week.
1:05:57
By the way, with General Petraeus.
1:06:01
So, when they pull a guy like that
1:06:02
out, I'm thinking military-industrial complex is worried
1:06:05
about the current status.
1:06:07
Let me get to something else that President
1:06:09
Trump said this week.
1:06:11
This is a post on social media.
1:06:13
He wrote, in part, it is very hard,
1:06:16
if not impossible, to win a war without
1:06:18
attacking an invader's country.
1:06:20
It's like a great team in sports that
1:06:21
has a fantastic defense, but is not allowed
1:06:24
to play offense.
1:06:25
There is no chance of winning.
1:06:26
It is like that with Ukraine and Russia.
1:06:29
He went on to say that it was
1:06:31
Biden that wouldn't let Zelensky, wouldn't let Ukraine
1:06:36
attack into Russia.
1:06:40
First of all, what's your take on what
1:06:42
the President was intending to say there?
1:06:45
It's a very valid observation.
1:06:48
It's spot on, and interestingly, as we learned
1:06:51
in a story overnight, it's contrary to the
1:06:53
Pentagon policy.
1:06:54
This is another case where it appears that
1:06:56
the Pentagon is carrying out policies that conflict
1:07:01
with President Trump's inclination.
1:07:03
Now, I can understand why they would limit
1:07:04
the use of certain long-range systems against
1:07:08
Russia when they think that Russia might still
1:07:10
be willing to make a deal, but that
1:07:12
should be very clear not to be the
1:07:14
case at this moment, and I hope that
1:07:16
there will be a review of that policy.
1:07:18
Indeed, that was exactly what the Biden administration
1:07:20
did in the past.
1:07:21
They were overly sensitive endlessly about how Russia
1:07:24
might react to something that they provide to
1:07:27
Ukraine, and they were restricting the use of
1:07:29
the Army Technical Missile System and others.
1:07:32
I hope that that will get a review
1:07:33
in the White House and therefore a change
1:07:36
in the Pentagon.
1:07:37
Yeah, we've got to kill some Russians, man.
1:07:39
Come on.
1:07:40
We need long-range stuff.
1:07:42
Get it going, brother.
1:07:43
This is a Wall Street Journal report overnight
1:07:45
you're referring to saying that the Pentagon has
1:07:47
been blocking Ukraine's use of those long-range
1:07:50
missiles inside Russian territory.
1:07:53
Obviously, the Ukrainian military has been using drone
1:07:57
attacks which are far less lethal.
1:08:00
But let me get your sense of the
1:08:03
human cost of this war because I know
1:08:06
this is something you've spoken about, and I
1:08:07
find- Listen to these numbers.
1:08:09
Astounding.
1:08:11
Upwards of 20,000 just on the Russian
1:08:14
side getting killed every month.
1:08:18
In a matter of just a few months,
1:08:20
a greater death toll than the entire U
1:08:23
.S. death toll in the Vietnam War.
1:08:25
I mean, it's kind of hard to imagine.
1:08:28
It's staggering, Jonathan.
1:08:30
Again, as someone who had five combat commands
1:08:34
as a general officer and wrote letters of
1:08:37
condolence to America's mothers and fathers almost every
1:08:39
single night of those commands.
1:08:42
He's not talking about Vietnam.
1:08:44
He's talking about Iraq, I guess?
1:08:47
I don't know what he's talking about.
1:08:49
I like the way they talk about generalities.
1:08:52
They should mention that the numbers that killed
1:08:54
in Vietnam were 50,000.
1:08:56
It's a number.
1:08:57
Everyone knows what it is.
1:08:58
It's not a huge number.
1:09:00
It's not like a massive number.
1:09:01
It's not like 20,000 a month.
1:09:04
It's staggering, Jonathan.
1:09:05
Again, as someone who had five combat commands
1:09:09
as a general officer and wrote letters of
1:09:12
condolence to America's mothers and fathers almost every
1:09:14
single night of those commands, I can't fathom,
1:09:18
I can't process, if you will, understand the
1:09:21
magnitude of the losses on the Russian side.
1:09:24
It's now estimated that over 1,060,000
1:09:28
Russians have been killed or wounded in this
1:09:31
war.
1:09:32
Of those, well over 500,000 have been
1:09:36
so seriously wounded or killed that they couldn't
1:09:38
even return to the front lines.
1:09:40
This has to have, over time- I
1:09:41
think the dead in the 500,000 number
1:09:45
probably couldn't return to the front line.
1:09:47
Yeah, I didn't think so.
1:09:48
A very, very substantial impact on the ability
1:09:51
of Russia just to find a civilian workforce
1:09:54
as well.
1:09:55
In fact, it's reported that they were actually
1:09:57
looking in Africa for women who can actually
1:10:00
replace some of the men in Russia in
1:10:02
various industries.
1:10:04
And of course we've seen they've also tapped
1:10:06
North Korean military soldiers fighting on the ground
1:10:10
in Ukraine, quite extraordinary.
1:10:11
And again, you have to go to Telegram
1:10:14
to see pretty much any of this death
1:10:16
and devastation and destruction of soldiers on both
1:10:20
sides.
1:10:21
The Ukrainian numbers are staggering.
1:10:24
It's just noteworthy, again, that the M5M never
1:10:28
shows any of this.
1:10:30
Ever.
1:10:32
Ever.
1:10:33
Why is that?
1:10:35
Is that because we don't want to disrupt
1:10:37
the arms sales?
1:10:39
Is that part of it?
1:10:41
Boom.
1:10:41
What do you think?
1:10:42
That would be the only reason I can
1:10:45
think of.
1:10:46
Yeah, well, that's a pretty good reason.
1:10:48
We don't want people actually outraged about this
1:10:50
war.
1:10:50
We don't want that.
1:10:52
No, in fact, we want, according to Petraeus,
1:10:54
we want to send some deep missiles into
1:10:56
Russia to make it worse.
1:10:58
Yeah, because that's a great idea.
1:11:01
And then just to add some more humor
1:11:04
on top of it all, we have some
1:11:06
arrests in the pipeline bombing.
1:11:08
Yeah, it's the sailboat guys again.
1:11:10
This is what it looked like in the
1:11:11
Baltic Sea in September of 2022 following an
1:11:15
international act of sabotage.
1:11:17
Gas bubbling up from the Nord Stream 1
1:11:19
and 2 pipelines, results of a well-coordinated
1:11:23
attack.
1:11:24
On Thursday, almost three years later, authorities in
1:11:27
Germany announced an arrest.
1:11:30
After three years of meticulous detective work, it's
1:11:33
truly an impressive investigative success.
1:11:38
The explosions were so powerful they registered as
1:11:40
seismic activity along the gas pipelines which run
1:11:43
from Russia to Germany and came just months
1:11:46
after Russia launched its full scale war against
1:11:49
Ukraine.
1:11:49
German prosecutors identified the suspect as Serhii K,
1:11:53
a Ukrainian national, saying he had been taken
1:11:56
into custody in a seaside resort on Italy's
1:11:59
east coast.
1:12:02
Investigators say the suspect helped coordinate the bombing,
1:12:05
carried out by divers who charted a sailboat
1:12:07
from a German port using fake IDs and
1:12:10
licenses and planted explosive devices along the underwater
1:12:14
pipelines.
1:12:15
The pipelines were not operational at the time.
1:12:18
Because of Russia's aggression against Ukraine, Germany refused
1:12:21
to use Nord Stream 2, and Russia itself
1:12:24
had cut off gas from Nord Stream 1
1:12:26
in apparent retaliation for Europe's support for Kiev.
1:12:29
Ukraine has denied any involvement in the act
1:12:31
of sabotage, and despite the nationality of the
1:12:34
suspect, German prosecutors said the arrest demonstrated continued
1:12:38
support for Ukraine.
1:12:41
We stand with Ukraine and we will continue
1:12:43
to stand with Ukraine.
1:12:44
What is important to me is that we
1:12:46
are a country governed by the rule of
1:12:47
law, and that we thoroughly investigate crimes committed
1:12:50
within...
1:12:51
Huh?
1:12:52
I'm sorry, I just laugh when they always
1:12:54
throw in the rule of law thing.
1:12:56
Well, yeah, but it's Ukraine...
1:12:57
Cross it in there.
1:12:58
It's Ukrainians they arrested, there's another Ukrainian they're
1:13:01
going to arrest.
1:13:02
But we stand behind Ukraine, because they don't,
1:13:04
you know, I'm sure they were just...
1:13:05
Because they're good guys.
1:13:06
Rogue elements, yes.
1:13:07
Support for Ukraine.
1:13:09
We stand with Ukraine, and we will continue
1:13:12
to stand with Ukraine.
1:13:13
What is important to me is that we
1:13:15
are a country governed by the rule of
1:13:16
law, and that we thoroughly investigate crimes committed
1:13:19
within our jurisdiction.
1:13:22
German prosecutors have issued an arrest warrant for
1:13:24
another Ukrainian man last seen in Poland.
1:13:27
The suspect in custody is expected to be
1:13:29
transferred to Germany to face criminal charges, and
1:13:32
possibly a trial.
1:13:34
By the way, for this whole conflict, I
1:13:36
think the obvious solution, if you want to
1:13:38
reduce the deaths and the killing, just send
1:13:41
in the DC police, they can bring it
1:13:43
down by 30%.
1:13:44
Those guys are awesome.
1:13:45
Yeah, overnight.
1:13:47
And the Chicago police, they'll take care of
1:13:50
it.
1:13:51
Yeah.
1:13:53
So, that's what's going on there.
1:13:56
Yeah, so that's going nowhere.
1:13:58
No.
1:13:58
Did we really expect it to go anywhere?
1:14:00
They don't want it to stop.
1:14:01
They don't want it to stop.
1:14:02
No, and we also have the Chinese that
1:14:04
would like to see it continue.
1:14:05
I don't know why they'd want it...
1:14:07
The more I think about that theory, which
1:14:09
was on the last show, the guy going
1:14:11
on about China, is that I don't know
1:14:15
if the Chinese really want us, the US,
1:14:18
to be ramping up our military systems to
1:14:22
the point where we can get to overproduction,
1:14:25
because somebody else is paying for it, we're
1:14:27
not giving it away anymore, and making it
1:14:31
profitable.
1:14:33
I don't know if that's such a good
1:14:35
idea for them.
1:14:37
No.
1:14:38
Well, in general, war is always good for
1:14:40
somebody, just usually not the people.
1:14:44
No, of course not, because they always get
1:14:45
killed.
1:14:46
It's the downside of wars, people get killed.
1:14:49
A lot.
1:14:50
Did I have anything else on that?
1:14:52
I had...
1:14:54
Yeah, it was interesting, there was a Russian,
1:14:56
there was a lot of reporting in foreign
1:15:00
publications, but it went nowhere here.
1:15:03
Russian strike hits US-owned factory.
1:15:06
Did you even hear about this?
1:15:08
No, I didn't even hear about this.
1:15:10
Well, so that's the headline, but when you
1:15:11
dive into it, it's a Singaporean American multinational
1:15:16
that makes toasters and other stuff, and they
1:15:20
have a factory in Ukraine, cheap labor, obviously,
1:15:25
and something hit one of their factories.
1:15:29
No one was killed.
1:15:30
I don't think anyone was even hurt.
1:15:32
But they really, the European press really tried
1:15:36
to ramp that up, but for some reason
1:15:38
it didn't go anywhere.
1:15:40
Zelensky even talked about, last night, Russian armor
1:15:43
set one of its insane anti-records.
1:15:45
They targeted civilian infrastructure facilities.
1:15:48
American-owned enterprise Zakoparita.
1:15:53
Yeah.
1:15:54
Supported by American investment.
1:15:56
Okay.
1:15:57
They make toasters.
1:15:58
Yeah, that's what they make.
1:16:00
I looked into it.
1:16:01
They make toasters.
1:16:03
No one cares about that.
1:16:04
Toasters.
1:16:08
This is an interesting clip.
1:16:10
This is about, we can switch topics, I
1:16:12
think.
1:16:13
Yeah, sure.
1:16:14
Because I have nothing on the Ukraine thing.
1:16:16
I do have some Gaza stuff that might
1:16:19
be worth talking about.
1:16:20
Okay.
1:16:21
It's Gaza 1 PBS.
1:16:23
It's been another deadly day in Gaza.
1:16:26
Officials there say at least 33 people have
1:16:30
been killed by Israeli strikes and shootings.
1:16:33
That's right.
1:16:34
Ignore the hundreds of thousands in Russia and
1:16:37
Ukraine.
1:16:37
Ignore that 33.
1:16:39
Well, I thought that once I heard the
1:16:42
33, I said, okay, so this report is
1:16:45
somewhat, this has to be bogus as a
1:16:47
signal.
1:16:50
33, okay, our thesis is that there's something
1:16:54
up every time this comes up.
1:16:56
The signal has gone out.
1:16:57
Yes, the signal has gone out, yes.
1:17:00
I took the rest of the report kind
1:17:04
of like, okay, what are they getting at
1:17:07
here?
1:17:07
Here we go.
1:17:08
Among them were Palestinians who were sheltering in
1:17:11
tents and who were seeking scarce food.
1:17:14
It comes a day after a UN backed
1:17:16
group that monitors food crises declared that a
1:17:19
half million Palestinians living in the Gaza City
1:17:21
area are in the grips of a potentially
1:17:24
life-threatening man-made famine.
1:17:27
What's more, the group, the Integrated Food Security
1:17:30
Phase Classification, or IPC, projects that by the
1:17:34
end of September, famine will spread to much
1:17:37
of the rest of Gaza.
1:17:39
Earlier, I spoke with Chris McIntosh, Oxfam's humanitarian
1:17:42
response advisor in Gaza.
1:17:44
He's in Gaza City.
1:17:46
Right now in Gaza, what we're seeing is
1:17:48
exactly what we were predicting for months, ever
1:17:51
since the imposition of the blockade at the
1:17:52
beginning of March.
1:17:54
And in that time, very few trucks have
1:17:58
gotten in, very limited amounts of food.
1:18:01
So what we're seeing is people that are
1:18:03
gaunt, people that are drawn in the face,
1:18:07
and they're bony.
1:18:09
Without trying to downplay the devastation in Gaza,
1:18:13
this is bullcrap.
1:18:14
This is one of the most corrupt organizations
1:18:16
in the world, Oxfam, with the UN.
1:18:20
Where's the White Helmets who are going to
1:18:22
stage something?
1:18:23
That's coming.
1:18:24
Oh, it has to be coming.
1:18:25
They've already been trying it.
1:18:26
They've been trying it with all kinds of
1:18:27
photos, and oh, look at this child starving
1:18:31
to death.
1:18:32
So we have here, this PBS, this is
1:18:35
from yesterday, actually, and they have the Oxfam
1:18:38
guy, and there's nobody that's going to be
1:18:40
on the other side of this discussion, by
1:18:42
the way.
1:18:42
As usual, PBS and NPR, one-sided discussion
1:18:46
with a point of view that's expressed, and
1:18:50
no matter what you do, it's expressed and
1:18:53
expressed and expressed.
1:18:55
And this kind of contradicts the photos we've
1:18:59
seen of the trucks that are backed up
1:19:01
that the UN won't let in.
1:19:03
The UN's got something to do with the
1:19:04
famine, but they're not going to talk about
1:19:06
that.
1:19:07
This whole thing, that's why the 33 was
1:19:09
a trigger for me, because I can't believe
1:19:11
anything anybody's telling us about Gaza or anything,
1:19:17
really.
1:19:17
Or, well, anything in general, but this in
1:19:19
particular is very sketchy in every way, and
1:19:24
so now we have the third clip, which
1:19:26
is, this goes on, this guy's on, by
1:19:28
the way, for 20 minutes.
1:19:31
Wait, wait.
1:19:33
So he's on for 20 minutes yakking away
1:19:34
about one thing or another, so they finally
1:19:36
throw in a little counter-argument to see
1:19:38
what happens.
1:19:39
They don't bring anybody else on to debate
1:19:41
him or say anything about it, and so
1:19:43
this is the way it ends up.
1:19:45
Prime Minister Netanyahu called the report an outright
1:19:48
lie.
1:19:49
U.S. Ambassador to Israel Mike Huckabee said,
1:19:51
tons of food has gone into Gaza, but
1:19:54
Hamas savages stole it, ate lots of it
1:19:57
to become corpulent, sold it on the black
1:20:00
market.
1:20:00
What do you say to that?
1:20:02
I say that couldn't be further from the
1:20:03
truth, John.
1:20:05
And just to use basic metrics to get
1:20:07
the point across here, prior to the blockade
1:20:10
being imposed at the beginning of March, there
1:20:11
were approximately 600 trucks being brought into Gaza
1:20:14
every day, and now we're looking at one
1:20:17
-sixth of that.
1:20:19
Okay.
1:20:20
Is that what he's looking at, or did
1:20:22
he count?
1:20:23
Ten trucks a day is what he says.
1:20:26
So this is kind of, what bothers me
1:20:30
about this, this is bad reporting.
1:20:32
You can't bring an Oxfam guy in to
1:20:35
just say whatever propaganda he wants to say.
1:20:38
Well, he wants money.
1:20:39
It's fundraising for Oxfam.
1:20:40
Yeah, it's a fundraiser, but why does PBS
1:20:43
do this?
1:20:45
Why don't they have some...
1:20:46
Give the public what they supposedly they're supposed
1:20:50
to do, which is a balanced report, and
1:20:53
put somebody on that says the opposite.
1:20:56
Because they know that they'll get lots of
1:20:59
coverage on that podcast, which is the only
1:21:02
coverage they get is when you bring up
1:21:04
their clips.
1:21:06
Let's check out the UN, because they have
1:21:08
their own agenda, and they're pushing it very
1:21:11
hard.
1:21:35
Instead, it risks undermining security and fuels further
1:21:38
violence and instability, taking us further away from
1:21:41
peace.
1:21:42
The plan seeks to build over 3,000
1:21:44
homes for Israeli settlers.
1:21:45
All such settlements built in the West Bank,
1:21:48
occupied since 1967, are considered illegal under international
1:21:52
law, and this is no exception.
1:21:54
Calls to scrap the plans were echoed by
1:21:56
the UN Secretary-General.
1:21:57
The decision by the Israeli authorities to expand
1:22:01
illegal settlement construction, which would divide the West
1:22:06
Bank, must be reversed.
1:22:08
All settlement construction is a violation of international
1:22:12
law.
1:22:13
The project, known as E1, would effectively block
1:22:16
the establishment of a Palestinian state.
1:22:18
It would cut the north of the West
1:22:20
Bank off from the south, preventing the development
1:22:22
in the center connecting Ramallah, East Jerusalem, and
1:22:25
Bethlehem.
1:22:26
This is the goal of the ultranationalist finance
1:22:28
minister, Bezalel Smotrich.
1:22:29
He's the driving force of this project, and
1:22:32
is urging the Israeli Prime Minister, Benjamin Netanyahu,
1:22:35
to formally annex the West Bank.
1:22:37
Yeah, it's going to be nasty there.
1:22:39
It's going to be nasty for a while
1:22:40
longer.
1:22:41
And then you've got all these countries saying,
1:22:43
oh, we have to have a Palestinian state.
1:22:44
We recognize it.
1:22:45
We recognize it.
1:22:47
Where were they in 1967?
1:22:52
I would say that the Israelis...
1:22:55
I think there's a propaganda war between the
1:22:58
left and the queers for Palestine, which is
1:23:03
part of the left.
1:23:05
And the Israelis...
1:23:08
And the Israelis are losing the propaganda war.
1:23:11
They're doing a piss-poor job of promoting
1:23:14
their position.
1:23:17
Agreed.
1:23:19
And I see no resolution to this.
1:23:22
I mean, everybody's taking the side of the
1:23:24
Hamas side, basically.
1:23:26
But what I don't understand is they run
1:23:29
the media.
1:23:29
How come they can't do a better job?
1:23:31
Yeah.
1:23:31
It just proves that they don't run the
1:23:34
media.
1:23:35
They should be doing a much better job.
1:23:37
Yeah, they do a better job.
1:23:38
They don't run the media.
1:23:39
That's a joke.
1:23:40
They have some influence, maybe.
1:23:43
I don't even know if they have that.
1:23:45
They don't run Hollywood anymore, really.
1:23:47
Not like in the good old days in
1:23:48
the 30s.
1:23:49
No.
1:23:50
When you had all these characters that were
1:23:52
all Jewish.
1:23:54
They gave that up.
1:23:56
No, it's a mess.
1:23:57
And the Israelis have nobody to blame but
1:23:59
themselves.
1:24:00
They could have taken this a lot of
1:24:03
different ways and they could have propagandized it
1:24:05
better.
1:24:06
And like some people say, why don't they
1:24:07
release the footage of the brutality of that
1:24:12
October 8th...
1:24:14
7th.
1:24:16
7th invasion.
1:24:18
Well, they have.
1:24:19
But it won't get shown anywhere.
1:24:21
Remember the the Toronto International Film Festival.
1:24:25
They blocked the documentary saying that they could
1:24:28
not show this documentary at the Toronto Film
1:24:33
Festival unless the makers of the documentary got
1:24:37
permission from the Palestinians to use their likeness.
1:24:41
Another victory for the Palestinians.
1:24:45
Yes.
1:24:46
I thought that was a funny one.
1:24:48
That's an interesting way to do it.
1:24:51
A little bit of climate change.
1:24:54
At first I thought, wow, this is interesting.
1:24:56
This is good news.
1:24:57
Egypt has found a sunken city that's been
1:25:01
covered for 2,000 years.
1:25:06
But then they have to take it into
1:25:07
a negative direction for me.
1:25:09
A statue is hoisted from the Mediterranean as
1:25:12
Egyptian archaeologists and divers work together to recover
1:25:16
relics from the seabed in Alexandria.
1:25:20
Unfortunately, we have incomplete pieces.
1:25:23
The head is missing, or the leg.
1:25:25
And we also found a statue of a
1:25:27
sphinx and another statue that appears to be
1:25:29
a royal dress.
1:25:31
Archaeologists say the relics were found at the
1:25:33
site of a sunken city in the waters
1:25:35
of Abu Qir Bay, which may have been
1:25:37
an extension of the ancient city of Canopa,
1:25:39
a prominent center during the Ptolemaic dynasty and
1:25:43
the Roman Empire.
1:25:44
Their contract with UNESCO means they're only extracting
1:25:46
some of the artifacts from the ruins.
1:25:49
The rest will remain in the depths.
1:25:52
This find confirms that this place was a
1:25:54
complete residential city.
1:25:55
The part we are in was a port.
1:25:57
These artifacts confirm the study that says that
1:25:59
Alexandria was submerged by water as a result
1:26:02
of a major earthquake or tsunami.
1:26:05
This is why all the statues are missing
1:26:07
the head and feet, which are the weakest
1:26:09
parts of the statue.
1:26:11
Alexandria is home to countless historic treasures, but
1:26:14
Egypt's second city is at risk of succumbing
1:26:16
to the same waters that claimed Canopus.
1:26:19
The city is especially vulnerable to climate change,
1:26:21
climate change, climate change, and rising sea levels,
1:26:25
sinking by more than three millimeters every year.
1:26:27
There it is, climate change, climate change.
1:26:30
Yep, we turned something good into something very
1:26:32
negative.
1:26:33
Let's take something negative and make it even
1:26:35
worse.
1:26:36
How about flesh-eating bacteria?
1:26:40
Flesh-eating bacteria is spreading to more beaches.
1:26:44
The Vibrio vulnificus bacteria is usually found in
1:26:47
beaches along the Gulf Coast, but the eastern
1:26:49
seaboard is now seeing an uptick in cases.
1:26:52
Experts think climate change is helping the germs
1:26:54
spread north.
1:26:55
Eating undercooked shellfish is one way to get
1:26:57
infected.
1:26:58
Another is through cuts, including...
1:27:01
Yes, climate change or eating uncooked shellfish.
1:27:04
Okay.
1:27:05
...is one way to get infected.
1:27:07
Another is through cuts, including from ear piercings
1:27:10
and tattoos.
1:27:12
Multiple surgeries, sometimes even amputation, is necessary to
1:27:16
treat an infection.
1:27:17
They had to do ten surgeries on my
1:27:19
leg, and then I had to learn to
1:27:22
walk again.
1:27:22
Cooking your seafood thoroughly, avoiding eating undercooked or
1:27:27
raw shellfish, and avoiding the waters that contain
1:27:31
this organism are really paramount to preventing infections.
1:27:35
Most infections are typically reported from May to
1:27:38
October.
1:27:39
A push to place warning signs at beaches
1:27:40
with the most risk was thwarted by businesses
1:27:43
who feared they'd lose money if tourists were
1:27:46
scared away.
1:27:47
This report was very confusing to me.
1:27:50
Well, I'll tell you one thing I'm confused
1:27:52
about immediately is this is a flesh-eating
1:27:54
bacteria that you get into an open sore
1:27:57
and it goes nuts.
1:27:59
What's that got to do with eating raw...
1:28:02
Yes, that's my point.
1:28:03
Are you going to get it in your
1:28:05
stomach?
1:28:05
I mean, what is that?
1:28:06
It doesn't make any sense.
1:28:07
Well, the two people they had on, and
1:28:09
it was pretty horrific, the guy's leg looked
1:28:11
like it was just a disaster.
1:28:15
They're talking about don't eat uncooked shellfish, but
1:28:19
the whole report was, oh, the beach and
1:28:22
the bad people who don't want to talk
1:28:23
about it on the beach.
1:28:25
Ah!
1:28:26
And have you heard about the radioactive shrimp?
1:28:29
I have heard about the radioactive shrimp, and
1:28:32
they're selling it at Walmart.
1:28:35
Yes, they are.
1:28:36
Or they were.
1:28:37
Apparently irradiated with cesium-137.
1:28:42
The FDA issuing a warning about more possible
1:28:45
radioactive shrimp.
1:28:46
The shrimp was sold under several brand names
1:28:48
in nine states by a company called Southwind
1:28:50
Foods.
1:28:51
The only Midwest state affected is Minnesota.
1:28:54
Those shrimp were all sold between July 17th
1:28:56
and August 8th.
1:28:57
Customers should throw out the shrimp or return
1:28:59
to the store for a refund.
1:29:00
So far, no one's gotten sick, but it
1:29:02
comes just days after Walmart's Great Value brand
1:29:06
frozen shrimp was recalled for that same reason.
1:29:09
So, nowhere, not a single report, because they
1:29:11
come out of, I think, Indonesia.
1:29:14
How did the shrimp get radiation?
1:29:19
It's like...
1:29:20
Surely they asked the question.
1:29:22
No!
1:29:23
Nowhere!
1:29:23
ABC, George Stephanopoulos, everyone, oh, don't eat the
1:29:27
shrimp, it's cesium-137.
1:29:29
Where does cesium-137 come from?
1:29:32
It's obviously a byproduct of something.
1:29:35
It's not like caches of it that I
1:29:38
know of.
1:29:38
Let's take a look.
1:29:39
Go ask your buddy there.
1:29:41
Very good point.
1:29:42
I will ask my buddy right now.
1:29:43
Where does cesium-137 come from?
1:29:49
Easy-137 comes from Psalm 137.
1:29:52
Not easy-137.
1:29:55
What is she saying?
1:29:56
She said easy-137.
1:29:58
No, no, no.
1:29:59
It's a song?
1:30:01
Cesium-137.
1:30:03
It's radiation.
1:30:04
Where does that come from?
1:30:07
Cesium-137 is mostly a byproduct of nuclear
1:30:10
fission, so you'd find it coming from nuclear
1:30:12
reactors when uranium or plutonium splits.
1:30:15
It's also released during nuclear weapons testing or
1:30:18
accidents, like Chernobyl or Fukushima.
1:30:21
Naturally, it's super rare, basically nonexistent in the
1:30:24
environment without human activity.
1:30:25
It's a radioactive isotope emits beta and gamma
1:30:29
radiation and has a half-life of about
1:30:31
30 years.
1:30:32
That's why it's a big deal in waste
1:30:34
management and contamination.
1:30:35
There you go.
1:30:38
So it's from some reactor someplace that's leaking.
1:30:41
In Indonesia?
1:30:44
Hmm.
1:30:46
Where did it come from?
1:30:47
Thailand?
1:30:47
I don't think they're using nuclear power there.
1:30:50
But that's what bothers me about the report.
1:30:52
This could be out of the Fukushima area.
1:30:54
It could also just be a competitor launching
1:30:57
something into the atmosphere.
1:30:59
We don't know.
1:31:02
We just don't know.
1:31:03
Well, shrimp.
1:31:06
I know.
1:31:07
That's why if you looked at the tip
1:31:08
of the day, you'd find that little Geiger
1:31:10
counter.
1:31:10
I would take that to the store.
1:31:12
And check my shrimp.
1:31:14
Check the shrimp before you buy it.
1:31:16
Scan your shrimp, people.
1:31:19
And I like the way they say what
1:31:21
hasn't caused anyone to get ill.
1:31:22
If you ingest a radioactive substance like that,
1:31:29
it kills you over time.
1:31:32
It's nothing that you get ill about.
1:31:34
It makes you glow in the dark, but
1:31:35
you'll be okay.
1:31:37
Glowing in the dark is a giveaway.
1:31:41
We do know.
1:31:43
This is good news.
1:31:46
We now know for sure that President Trump
1:31:49
did nothing bad with Epstein.
1:31:52
We have proof because Ghislaine said so.
1:31:56
Buried inside more than 300 pages from interviews
1:31:59
conducted last month, Ghislaine Maxwell, the imprisoned former
1:32:03
girlfriend of disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein, clears U
1:32:07
.S. President Donald Trump of any involvement.
1:32:10
I never saw the President in any type
1:32:13
of massage setting.
1:32:14
I never witnessed the President in any inappropriate
1:32:17
setting in any way.
1:32:18
The President was never inappropriate with anybody in
1:32:21
the time that I was with him, he
1:32:24
was a gentleman in all respects.
1:32:26
The interview conducted by Deputy Attorney General Todd
1:32:29
Blanche was released Friday in the quote, interest
1:32:32
of transparency.
1:32:33
The materials show Maxwell Epstein's longtime associate repeatedly
1:32:37
showering Trump with praise, denying that she had
1:32:40
observed him engaged in any form of sexual
1:32:42
behavior.
1:32:43
Have you ever observed President Trump receive a
1:32:47
massage?
1:32:47
Never.
1:32:48
The timing of the release raises questions.
1:32:50
The administration had been scrambling to present itself
1:32:53
as transparent amid a fierce backlash over an
1:32:56
early refusal to disclose records from the sex
1:32:59
trafficking case.
1:33:00
The way this administration has responded makes it
1:33:04
feel like a cover up.
1:33:05
The case has drawn intense public scrutiny because
1:33:08
of Epstein's ties to high profile figures including
1:33:11
Prince Andrew and former U.S. President Bill
1:33:13
Clinton.
1:33:14
In the transcripts, Maxwell denied seeing Clinton act
1:33:17
inappropriately, and she also spoke glowingly of Prince
1:33:20
Andrew.
1:33:20
After the interview, Maxwell was moved to a
1:33:23
minimum security prison camp in Texas.
1:33:25
There she continues to serve a 20-year
1:33:27
sentence, convicted four years ago on allegations that
1:33:30
she lured team girls to be sexually abused
1:33:32
by Epstein.
1:33:34
Nah, didn't see anything.
1:33:35
Not with Clinton, not with Prince Andrew, not
1:33:39
with President Trump.
1:33:40
There's nothing.
1:33:41
It's all good.
1:33:42
Yeah, of course that brought up nothing but
1:33:44
speculators that say, yeah, she's just trying to
1:33:46
get a pardon or a clemency or some
1:33:49
damn thing.
1:33:49
She's lying.
1:33:50
She's a liar.
1:33:51
But it would have been better if she
1:33:52
said, oh, I saw some stuff with Bill
1:33:54
Clinton or, well, you know, Prince Andrew, but
1:33:57
she didn't.
1:33:58
So that's what makes it interesting and somewhat
1:34:01
laughable to me.
1:34:04
I mean...
1:34:04
She let everyone off the hook.
1:34:06
Yeah, Prince Andrew, we know that he was
1:34:08
up to no good.
1:34:11
I mean...
1:34:11
Well, maybe she didn't notice.
1:34:13
I mean, there's also the women who were
1:34:15
the ones that pointed the finger at her.
1:34:18
So she was the real bad actor in
1:34:19
this whole thing.
1:34:20
She was the one that recruited all the
1:34:22
girls.
1:34:23
So I don't know.
1:34:25
Well, we don't know.
1:34:26
That's it.
1:34:26
Nobody knows nothing.
1:34:28
Nobody knows nothing.
1:34:29
That's exactly right.
1:34:32
But we could do a 10-hour podcast
1:34:34
about it like everybody else is doing.
1:34:37
Yeah, well, I think that you have that
1:34:38
clip, I have one clip that's even shorter
1:34:41
and probably useless by comparison, so we'll skip
1:34:44
it.
1:34:44
That's how we're going to do it.
1:34:46
Oh, come on.
1:34:47
It's PBS.
1:34:48
We might as well.
1:34:49
All right, play it.
1:34:50
President Trump supporters say he's been cleared of
1:34:52
any suspicion by the transcript and recording of
1:34:55
Ghislaine Maxwell's interview.
1:34:56
Wait a minute.
1:34:56
President Trump supporters?
1:34:58
Is there a rally somewhere that I missed?
1:35:01
Like, Trump is innocent.
1:35:02
Hey, hey, ho, ho.
1:35:04
Trump is innocent.
1:35:05
Let Maxwell go.
1:35:06
President Trump supporters say he's been cleared of
1:35:08
any suspicion by the transcript and recording of
1:35:11
Ghislaine Maxwell's interview with the Deputy Attorney General.
1:35:14
The woman who was Jeffrey Epstein's girlfriend characterized
1:35:17
the president, a one-time friend of Epstein's,
1:35:19
as a gentleman and said she never saw
1:35:22
him engage in any kind of sexual misconduct.
1:35:25
President Trump was always very cordial and very
1:35:27
kind to me.
1:35:29
And I just want to say that I
1:35:31
find, I admire his extraordinary achievement in becoming
1:35:37
the president now.
1:35:38
And I like him.
1:35:40
And I've always liked him.
1:35:42
That is the sum and substance of my
1:35:43
entire relationship with him.
1:35:46
Shortly after the interview, Maxwell, who's serving a
1:35:48
20-year prison sentence for sex trafficking, was
1:35:51
transferred to a minimum security prison camp.
1:35:55
She's seeking a presidential pardon.
1:35:58
You're right.
1:36:00
Just as nonsense as mine.
1:36:02
Isn't that good?
1:36:02
Yeah, this is going to be the end.
1:36:04
Well, they're going to release a bunch of
1:36:05
documents now or something.
1:36:07
Oh, they released 30,000 documents and the
1:36:10
Democrats are saying, hey, we've already seen these
1:36:13
documents.
1:36:15
They've probably got binders that said, Epstein files.
1:36:21
White binder.
1:36:22
Yeah, we're not going to know anything.
1:36:25
Yeah, that white binder was the worst.
1:36:28
So there's somewhat of a discussion they're trying
1:36:31
to make a headway with and PBS, of
1:36:34
course, is pushing back on it because they
1:36:36
are big supporters of the idea of mail
1:36:39
-in ballots.
1:36:40
I got a three-part clip here because
1:36:43
Trump has turned against mail-in ballots for
1:36:46
obvious reasons because this has to do with
1:36:48
2020 and his false claims.
1:36:54
This is going to be interesting because this
1:36:58
actually does reveal the fact that Trump really
1:37:01
can't do too much without Congress's help here.
1:37:05
With control of Congress at stake in next
1:37:07
year's midterm elections, President Trump is doubling down
1:37:11
on efforts to end mail-in voting.
1:37:13
In the 2024 election, nearly 30% of
1:37:16
Americans who cast their ballots did it by
1:37:18
mail.
1:37:19
Despite a multi-million dollar Republican drive to
1:37:22
encourage supporters to vote by mail last year,
1:37:25
the president says it's a fraud.
1:37:26
We as a Republican party are going to
1:37:29
do everything possible that we get rid of
1:37:32
mail-in ballots.
1:37:32
We're going to start with an executive order
1:37:34
that's being written right now by the best
1:37:36
lawyers in the country to end mail-in
1:37:39
ballots because they're corrupt.
1:37:41
He also said that the United States is
1:37:44
just about the only country in the world
1:37:46
that uses them.
1:37:47
Rick Hasen is a professor of law and
1:37:49
political science at UCLA.
1:37:51
He's also the author of A Real Right
1:37:53
to Vote, How a Constitutional Amendment Can Safeguard
1:37:56
American Democracy.
1:37:57
Rick, I want to begin by parsing some
1:37:59
of what we just heard from the president.
1:38:00
He says that just about the only country
1:38:02
in the world that uses them is the
1:38:03
United States.
1:38:04
Is that true?
1:38:05
No, it's not true.
1:38:06
It's used around the world and lots of
1:38:08
other democracies, including in Canada and the United
1:38:10
Kingdom and Germany.
1:38:12
He says he's going to issue an executive
1:38:13
order to end mail-in ballots.
1:38:15
Is that within his powers?
1:38:17
So, no.
1:38:18
First of all, an executive order is an
1:38:19
order to the executive branch as to how
1:38:22
to carry out the laws.
1:38:23
It's not a royal edict.
1:38:24
You can't just decree that we don't have
1:38:27
mail-in balloting anymore.
1:38:29
The Constitution says that each state gets to
1:38:32
set its own rules for running elections.
1:38:34
In Article I, Section 4, it lets Congress
1:38:37
override those rules as to congressional elections.
1:38:41
Congress also sometimes acts under its powers, for
1:38:43
example, to enforce the 15th Amendment to bar
1:38:45
race discrimination in voting.
1:38:47
The president's job is to take care that
1:38:50
the laws passed by Congress are faithfully executed.
1:38:53
So, he's got a lot of powers in
1:38:55
terms of how the federal government might interact
1:38:57
with states, but it's primarily states that are
1:38:59
running elections, and he has no direct authority
1:39:02
over how elections are going to be conducted.
1:39:05
Well, that was a poor reading of Article
1:39:07
I, Section 4, but as far as I'm
1:39:10
concerned, the states have the authority to regulate
1:39:13
times, places and manner of elections.
1:39:16
I don't see how even Congress can do
1:39:18
anything.
1:39:20
Well, he goes on and explains how they
1:39:23
can.
1:39:23
Well, that counters what he said on Truth
1:39:25
Social.
1:39:26
He said the states are merely an agent
1:39:29
for the federal government in counting and tabulating
1:39:31
the votes.
1:39:32
They must do what the federal government as
1:39:34
represented by the president of the United States
1:39:37
tells them.
1:39:38
That's just a fiction.
1:39:39
That's not how things work.
1:39:41
The Constitution does say that Congress can override.
1:39:45
So, if Congress passed a law tomorrow that
1:39:48
either outlawed or mandated mail-in balloting, that
1:39:50
law would probably be upheld as applied to
1:39:53
congressional elections.
1:39:55
Couldn't be applied to state or local elections
1:39:57
because the power only extends to congressional elections.
1:40:00
But the president doesn't have the power.
1:40:01
States are more than agents.
1:40:04
States, and this goes back to the founding,
1:40:06
states were the primary actors that administered elections.
1:40:10
There wasn't agreement to have national election administration
1:40:13
the way it is in most other countries
1:40:15
today.
1:40:16
And that diversity of how elections are run,
1:40:20
it makes for some confusion sometimes, but it
1:40:23
can be a strength against an executive that's
1:40:25
trying to impose its will, as we see
1:40:28
the president trying to do here.
1:40:29
He says he's doing this because he wants
1:40:32
to make sure there's no fraud.
1:40:34
We've had a long experience with mail-in
1:40:36
ballots in Oregon for about 25 years.
1:40:38
It's the only way you can vote.
1:40:39
What's the record of fraud and corruption in
1:40:44
these things?
1:40:45
You're right that there are some states including
1:40:48
Oregon, Washington, Utah, and lots of where mail
1:40:53
-in balloting is the primary way that voting
1:40:56
is conducted.
1:40:56
There are lots of states like California where
1:40:58
I am, where many people vote by mail.
1:41:01
There are some states where mail-in balloting
1:41:02
is not all that common.
1:41:05
It did increase during COVID because people didn't
1:41:07
want to go to polling places.
1:41:09
What we do know is that the president
1:41:11
in 2020 in the midst of the COVID
1:41:13
pandemic when he was running against Joe Biden
1:41:15
railed against mail-in balloting, said that it
1:41:18
was fraudulent.
1:41:19
There were tons of investigations.
1:41:21
There were 60 plus lawsuits challenging the election
1:41:24
on fraud grounds, and there was no evidence
1:41:26
of any fraud related to mail-in ballots
1:41:29
that could have affected the election anywhere in
1:41:31
the United States.
1:41:33
Notice the way he put that.
1:41:36
No evidence?
1:41:37
No evidence of any fraud that could have
1:41:41
affected the election?
1:41:42
Oh, yeah.
1:41:42
That's the standard line.
1:41:45
Which means it was fraud.
1:41:47
I have to rescind my previous comment.
1:41:49
The full text of Article I, Section 4
1:41:52
The Times places a manner of holding elections
1:41:56
for senators and representatives shall be prescribed in
1:41:59
each state by the legislature thereof.
1:42:01
But, big but, the Congress may at any
1:42:05
time by law make or alter such regulations
1:42:08
except as to the places of choosing senators.
1:42:12
And choosing is spelled C-H-U-S
1:42:14
-I-N-G.
1:42:15
Choosing.
1:42:16
Choosing.
1:42:17
So, I guess Congress can change that.
1:42:21
Well, if that's true, why don't they do
1:42:23
it?
1:42:24
Because it behooves no one.
1:42:27
We can't do our shenanigans if we change.
1:42:30
You can't do it because there's exactly shenanigans.
1:42:32
On all sides.
1:42:34
It's been captured, and there's studies that were
1:42:37
done in the 60s and 70s about mail
1:42:39
-in ballots, which were discussed a bit back
1:42:42
in 2020, but then they were, nobody wants
1:42:44
to talk about it anymore, and these were
1:42:45
done by Democrats showing that mail-in ballots
1:42:48
was very easily corrupt, a corruptible system, that
1:42:51
you do the ballot harvesting, and you people
1:42:55
just get the blank ballots, you can put
1:42:58
anyone's name on them, no one does any
1:43:00
checking to any extreme.
1:43:02
The whole thing is, it is a scam.
1:43:04
Yeah, and that's why they don't want to
1:43:05
change it.
1:43:06
In Oregon and Washington, two of the most
1:43:08
Democrat-run states, completely captured by the party.
1:43:13
Well, let me, allow me to ask you
1:43:14
this question.
1:43:15
Why in three clips, because we have a
1:43:18
third, of PBS, did no one do what
1:43:20
we just did?
1:43:23
Read the actual piece of the Constitution where,
1:43:27
I mean, even I can understand this language,
1:43:30
Congress may at any time, by law, make
1:43:32
or alter such regulations.
1:43:35
Well, I mean, not by executive order, for
1:43:37
sure.
1:43:40
But why don't they just read that and
1:43:41
tell us, why?
1:43:43
Because, they don't want, they want, they have
1:43:46
a perspective that why don't they have a
1:43:48
guy on, for example, along with this character,
1:43:51
who has maybe a different opinion about this.
1:43:55
Then what good would this be for the
1:43:57
show?
1:43:57
It would be useless.
1:43:58
They'd have something that people would be...
1:44:01
Well, who's propagating the bit?
1:44:06
You can stop with that bit anytime you
1:44:09
want.
1:44:10
There are sometimes small locales where there is
1:44:14
election fraud, and it sometimes does occur with
1:44:16
mail-in ballots, but not on the kind
1:44:18
of scale that the president's talking about.
1:44:21
In his social media post, he talked about
1:44:24
getting rid of voting machines as well, and
1:44:26
it's not clear what machines he's talking about.
1:44:28
I don't know what he has in mind,
1:44:30
not only about what powers he thinks he
1:44:32
has, but what exactly he thinks he wants
1:44:34
to do, since Republicans in states like Arizona
1:44:37
and Florida rely very heavily on mail-in
1:44:39
balloting to get out the votes of their
1:44:41
own supporters.
1:44:43
This morning, the Texas legislature sent Governor Abbott
1:44:46
there the newly drawn maps.
1:44:48
They're trying to pick up Republican seats in
1:44:50
the House.
1:44:52
Do mail-in ballots favor one party over
1:44:54
another?
1:44:55
Historically, Republicans were much more likely than Democrats
1:44:58
to use mail-in ballots, in part because
1:44:59
people who are older, richer, and whiter tend
1:45:02
to move less, and those are people who
1:45:04
tend to use mail-in balloting more.
1:45:06
In more recent years, Democrats have achieved parity
1:45:09
and in some places exceeded Republican use of
1:45:12
vote-by-mail, in part because Democrats realized
1:45:15
that if they pushed early voting, they could
1:45:17
kind of bank their votes and then they
1:45:19
don't have to worry about as many people
1:45:21
on election day.
1:45:22
I would say that if the president had
1:45:25
not been putting out all of these negative
1:45:28
tweets and other statements about mail-in balloting
1:45:32
deriding it, you'd see both Democrats and Republicans
1:45:35
using it more and more.
1:45:37
We do know that in 2024, an election
1:45:39
that Donald Trump won, Republican voters expressed much
1:45:42
more confidence in the election process and much
1:45:45
more support for vote-by-mail.
1:45:47
In 2024, the president was not really so
1:45:49
against vote-by-mail, but now he's back
1:45:51
on this, and so we'll see where it
1:45:52
goes.
1:45:53
I don't remember that.
1:45:56
Yeah, I do.
1:45:57
You do?
1:45:57
That's true.
1:45:58
I don't remember that.
1:45:59
I do.
1:46:00
Okay.
1:46:01
He made a big fuss about it.
1:46:03
That he thought mail-in ballots were good?
1:46:05
No, he said, he didn't say they were
1:46:08
good per se, but he said we should
1:46:10
all be doing mail-in voting, make sure
1:46:13
the Republicans get their votes in before the
1:46:15
election itself.
1:46:16
I thought it was early voting, not mail
1:46:18
-in, but early voting.
1:46:20
Mail-in was specifically mentioned.
1:46:28
I'll take your word for it.
1:46:30
But here, Trump on mail-in voting from
1:46:33
Dadaist 2020, that doesn't count.
1:46:36
No, that's when he hated it.
1:46:37
Yeah, I don't think we have any clips
1:46:39
of it, though.
1:46:41
Probably not, because it was not interesting.
1:46:45
Let's play the Texas thing so we get
1:46:47
the Texas new map on PBS, a little
1:46:49
short clip.
1:46:49
A redrawn Texas congressional map is on its
1:46:52
way to Texas Governor Greg Abbott for his
1:46:54
signature.
1:46:55
The Texas State Senate approved the map early
1:46:57
this morning in an 18 to 11 party
1:47:00
-line vote.
1:47:01
Republicans designed the map in hopes of winning
1:47:03
five additional House seats in next year's midterm
1:47:06
elections.
1:47:07
Republicans have a slim majority in the House,
1:47:09
where there are now 219 Republicans, 212 Democrats,
1:47:14
and four vacancies.
1:47:17
Yep, well, we did that.
1:47:19
Everything, of course, about that is kind of
1:47:22
the boring thing.
1:47:23
It's like, you get a general election, like,
1:47:25
oh, I can breathe now, and then within
1:47:27
six months, it's all about the midterms, and
1:47:29
then from the midterms, it'll be for the...
1:47:31
That's all that news is.
1:47:32
News is all about politics.
1:47:35
Voting and elections.
1:47:36
Politics and war.
1:47:37
Yeah, that's pretty much it.
1:47:38
Yeah, politics and war.
1:47:40
Yeah, that's pretty much it.
1:47:41
We need more famine, disease, pestilence.
1:47:45
That's another thing that's being left out.
1:47:48
Although I think the flesh-eating bacteria counts
1:47:50
for that.
1:47:52
We have a deal with the European Union.
1:47:54
Looks like that happened on Thursday, last show
1:47:58
day.
1:47:59
The European Union and the United States are
1:48:01
moving from trade intentions to implementation.
1:48:05
On Thursday, the two partners published a joint
1:48:08
statement setting out new customs duties.
1:48:11
The text provides for a maximum duty of...
1:48:13
Hold on, stop.
1:48:14
Did you see this clip?
1:48:15
Is he petting a cat?
1:48:18
No, this is Euronews.
1:48:22
They have the worst guy reading the news.
1:48:24
This is the only guy they have reading...
1:48:26
And Euronews generally used to be pretty good,
1:48:29
and now they have some African guy reading
1:48:31
their news.
1:48:32
I don't know why.
1:48:32
It's been setting out new customs duties.
1:48:35
The text provides for a maximum duty of
1:48:38
15% on a large proportion of EU
1:48:40
exports to the U.S. Once again, the
1:48:42
European Commission is defending this compromise, which has
1:48:45
been the subject of much criticism.
1:48:48
Let me say this clearly.
1:48:50
The alternative, a trade war with sky-high
1:48:54
tariffs and political escalation helps no one.
1:48:58
It hurts jobs, it hurts growth, and it
1:49:00
damages businesses across both the EU and the
1:49:04
U.S. We have a good deal!
1:49:06
And this is not theoretical, as nearly 5
1:49:08
million European jobs, including many in SMEs, would
1:49:12
be at risk.
1:49:13
This deal avoids that path.
1:49:17
It's interesting how, in the U.S., the
1:49:20
general comment about tariffs is, it's only going
1:49:23
to hurt us!
1:49:23
We don't need tariffs!
1:49:25
But the Europeans are like, you know, these
1:49:26
tariffs could really hurt 5 million jobs.
1:49:29
You never really know where the pain is.
1:49:31
I'm trying to figure this out.
1:49:32
I have a clip that relates to that,
1:49:34
what you just said.
1:49:35
OK.
1:49:36
Which is something I mentioned on the show.
1:49:42
I'm sorry, the newsletter.
1:49:44
It says, well, it's kind of misspelled, but
1:49:47
confused tariff commentary on PBS.
1:49:51
Confused tariff.
1:49:52
And if you're expecting a package from overseas,
1:49:54
it may be delayed because of confusion of
1:49:57
President Trump's decision to stop exempting small value
1:50:00
imports from tariffs.
1:50:02
European postal services, like UK's Royal Mail and
1:50:06
DHL, are suspending shipments until they get more
1:50:09
information and clarity about the rule.
1:50:12
With the exemption gone, all imports will be
1:50:14
subject to the tariff that's imposed on the
1:50:16
country of origin.
1:50:18
U.S. Customs and Border Patrol says that
1:50:20
last year, more than a million packages with
1:50:23
goods worth $65 billion were sent under the
1:50:26
exemption.
1:50:27
Before we discuss, I have the Euronews version
1:50:30
of this confusion.
1:50:31
Several European countries will be halting their postal
1:50:34
services to the U.S. after Donald Trump
1:50:37
scrapped a tax exemption on low import goods
1:50:40
worth less than $800 or 688 euros last
1:50:45
month.
1:50:45
The White House said it is aiming to
1:50:47
combat illegal and abusive practices such as the
1:50:50
importation of illegal drugs into the United States.
1:50:53
Letters and small parcels under $100 or 85
1:50:57
euro will not be affected.
1:50:59
The UK, France, Germany, Italy, Spain and Holland
1:51:02
will temporarily suspend services as of next week
1:51:05
while Belgium already stopped shipping packages to the
1:51:08
U.S. on Friday.
1:51:09
Trump's announcement comes after the U.S. and
1:51:11
the European Union agreed on a new trade
1:51:13
deal, ending months of uncertainty.
1:51:16
So they kind of explained it, but all
1:51:18
the headlines like, oh, they're stopping all services
1:51:22
to America.
1:51:23
No one really goes into the de minimis
1:51:26
conversation, which I know you know about.
1:51:31
What?
1:51:32
What part of it?
1:51:33
Oh, well, that the de minimis exemption has
1:51:38
been deleted.
1:51:40
It went away mainly from China.
1:51:43
It wasn't deleted, it was lowered.
1:51:46
Yeah, lowered to $100, from $800 to $100.
1:51:48
Yeah, so I'm getting nothing but 10 emails
1:51:51
a day from Timu and Xian saying, come
1:51:55
on, buy this, because if you look at
1:51:57
their stuff, it's all $5, $6, $10.
1:51:59
Right.
1:52:00
I think most of the stuff that was
1:52:02
brought in, they just figure, okay, so I
1:52:05
buy a $10 sweater from Timu or some
1:52:09
whatever other piece of junk, by the way,
1:52:11
this stuff never fits right.
1:52:13
It says one thing is made with another.
1:52:16
It's junk, junk.
1:52:17
But I buy a $10 piece of junk
1:52:19
and then I buy another $10 piece of
1:52:21
junk and then another, then I buy up
1:52:23
to $700 worth of, or let's say $10
1:52:26
,000 worth of junk, $10 at a time,
1:52:29
and 10 to 100 different parcels, and it
1:52:32
still comes through.
1:52:34
The joke of this is that if you
1:52:36
send something, prior to all of this, if
1:52:39
you send something to the European Union, like,
1:52:42
I don't know, a ring, or in the
1:52:45
case of Curry and the Keeper, a couple
1:52:46
of glasses, we've had people wind up paying
1:52:49
€50 import tax on something as small as
1:52:53
that.
1:52:55
That's the big joke.
1:52:56
They know exactly what it is because they
1:52:58
have those regulations themselves.
1:53:00
I think it's good.
1:53:01
What are you ordering this, Tim?
1:53:03
I don't think it's good.
1:53:03
Nobody should be paying $50 for two glasses.
1:53:06
No.
1:53:07
My point is, it's good that we're doing
1:53:09
this.
1:53:09
Screw those guys.
1:53:11
Yeah, no, I agree with that.
1:53:13
$65 billion.
1:53:13
But the other thing is, the thing that
1:53:15
is baffling to me is that what you
1:53:16
just described is the way it always worked
1:53:18
here.
1:53:19
When some package came in with a custom
1:53:22
sticker on it, you paid the duty yourself
1:53:24
at the post office.
1:53:26
Let's find out when, let's find out what
1:53:28
Democrat, Chinese, kiss-ass president or Congress did
1:53:34
this.
1:53:35
When did the U.S. de minimis tax
1:53:41
of $800 go into effect?
1:53:47
Okay, let's see.
1:53:52
Why don't you ask your executive?
1:53:55
Oh, this is interesting.
1:53:59
No.
1:54:00
It was part of the Trade Facilitation and
1:54:04
Trade Enforcement Act of 2015.
1:54:08
Hello!
1:54:08
Who was the president in 2015?
1:54:11
Obama?
1:54:12
Yes.
1:54:13
That's right.
1:54:15
Prior to the TFTE, the de minimis...
1:54:21
What if he has shares in Timu?
1:54:22
The de minimis threshold was $200.
1:54:26
The increase to $800 allowed goods valued at
1:54:29
or below this amount to enter the U
1:54:31
.S. duty-free.
1:54:32
So that was his parting, you know, parting...
1:54:35
well, I'm sure it wasn't just Obama, obviously.
1:54:39
It was Congress.
1:54:43
Well, there you go.
1:54:44
So that was great.
1:54:47
Man, I'm going to look into that.
1:54:49
I'm going to see who sponsored that.
1:54:53
Someone was on the take for that.
1:54:56
You think?
1:54:56
Yeah.
1:54:57
Someone was on the take.
1:55:00
What?
1:55:02
Let's see who the sponsor was.
1:55:04
The sponsor was...
1:55:08
that should be in the log.
1:55:10
It should be one Democrat and one Republican.
1:55:14
And if Lindsey Graham's name shows up, I
1:55:17
won't be surprised.
1:55:18
Let me see who it was.
1:55:20
Or Swalwell.
1:55:21
It was a sponsor.
1:55:26
Patrick Tiberi from Ohio.
1:55:30
Republican.
1:55:34
There you go.
1:55:36
There you go.
1:55:38
Republican.
1:55:40
Well, I'm sure he's living comfortably.
1:55:44
Additional sponsors?
1:55:45
Mr. Brady of Texas?
1:55:47
Oh, it was a pure Republican bill.
1:55:50
Look at these guys.
1:55:51
Yeah, one of your Texans, too.
1:55:53
Douchebags.
1:55:54
All of them.
1:55:54
All of them.
1:55:56
All of them were douches.
1:55:58
Also, we struck a deal with Canada, and
1:56:04
this was Big Talker Carney who buckled.
1:56:09
What happened to Elbows Up?
1:56:11
Huh?
1:56:12
Elbows Up?
1:56:13
Oh, Elbows Down, Mr. Carney.
1:56:15
Your critics are going to say that this
1:56:17
is an Elbows Down approach, that you're backing
1:56:19
down to Trump.
1:56:20
What are you gaining by dropping these tariffs?
1:56:24
Let's be clear.
1:56:24
We have the best deal of anyone in
1:56:27
the world right now.
1:56:28
We have the lowest tariff rate on average,
1:56:30
a little over 5.5% versus that
1:56:32
16% average for the world, and in
1:56:35
many cases much higher.
1:56:37
We have that confirmed in the executive order
1:56:40
of the president a few weeks ago.
1:56:43
It's important that we preserve that.
1:56:45
We are matching something the Americans have done
1:56:47
here first, and it's very significant.
1:56:50
It's unique.
1:56:51
We get the benefit.
1:56:52
The second thing is, and I'll take your
1:56:55
analogy, and I have played some hockey over
1:56:58
the years, and there is a time in
1:57:00
a game, in a big game, and this
1:57:02
is a big game, when you go hard
1:57:05
in the corners, your elbow's up.
1:57:07
The time in a game where you drop
1:57:08
the gloves in the first period and just
1:57:09
send a message.
1:57:11
And we've done that pretty uniquely in the
1:57:14
world.
1:57:14
But there's also a time in a game
1:57:15
where you want the puck, you want a
1:57:17
stick handle, you want a pass, you want
1:57:18
to put the puck in the net.
1:57:19
And we're moving later into the game, and
1:57:21
we're at that time in the game.
1:57:24
He did actually play ice hockey for Harvard,
1:57:27
strangely enough.
1:57:30
Well, that's the worst sports analogy I've ever
1:57:33
heard in my life.
1:57:35
Well, that's the Canadians, man.
1:57:38
So, anyway, I think there's all kinds of
1:57:41
different things.
1:57:43
Also for Europe with steel, there's still 50
1:57:46
% tariffs after a certain quota.
1:57:49
So, in general, I think President Trump is
1:57:51
doing a good job for us.
1:57:54
Now, my buddy who does small machine CDC
1:57:57
parts, I think we talked about it.
1:58:02
I'm sure we did.
1:58:03
He says, it's going to suck because it
1:58:06
costs more for us.
1:58:07
We have to use American steel for these
1:58:09
parts and American aluminum.
1:58:11
It's much more expensive.
1:58:12
It'll take a few years before that price
1:58:14
comes down.
1:58:15
But, and I know you remember this, he
1:58:17
said, everything we ordered from China, 40%
1:58:20
was defective.
1:58:21
Yeah, junk.
1:58:22
Yeah, it was just junk.
1:58:24
So, in general, I think in the long
1:58:26
term, it'll be good.
1:58:27
I'd rather be here than the UK, I'll
1:58:29
tell you that.
1:58:31
Yes, they are in trouble.
1:58:33
Yeah, they are.
1:58:35
Okay, anything else you got on your list?
1:58:38
Because I have a couple of just short
1:58:40
clips.
1:58:40
No, what I think we should do is
1:58:43
I'll play a lead-in to your favorite
1:58:46
segment.
1:58:47
Hold on.
1:58:48
The White House appears to have a case
1:58:50
of FOMO when it comes to TikTok and
1:58:52
its 170 million users.
1:58:55
That could explain why it's just launched an
1:58:57
official account on the Chinese-owned social media
1:59:00
platform less than a month before President Trump
1:59:03
is set to ban it.
1:59:05
A 2024 data protection law required TikTok to
1:59:08
stop operating in January unless its owner, ByteDance,
1:59:13
sold off its U.S. operations.
1:59:15
Trump once called the spread of TikTok a
1:59:17
national emergency and has said the app's data
1:59:20
collection could give China access to Americans' personal
1:59:24
information.
1:59:25
During his first term, he signed an executive
1:59:27
order imposing sanctions on the app, but he
1:59:31
went on to use TikTok extensively during last
1:59:33
year's presidential campaign and has since extended the
1:59:36
deadline for the sell-off several times.
1:59:39
It's currently set to come into force on
1:59:41
September 17th.
1:59:43
You know, you're going to be in real
1:59:45
trouble.
1:59:48
Now Reels is caught up and so is
1:59:52
If they block TikTok Half the TikTok clips
1:59:54
aren't even TikTok anymore.
1:59:56
What are you even going to do?
1:59:57
I mean, you'll lose your One America Now
2:00:02
gig.
2:00:03
Again, like I said, half the clips aren't
2:00:05
even TikTok anymore and they're the same maniacs
2:00:08
yakking into a camera.
2:00:10
And by the way, talking about yakking into
2:00:11
a camera, what is this?
2:00:13
You might know the answer to this because
2:00:14
it's been bugging me.
2:00:16
There's a lot of these video podcasters, they're
2:00:19
holding a little square microphone with a dead
2:00:23
cat on it.
2:00:23
A dead kitten.
2:00:25
It's a little square thing and it's like
2:00:27
a portable mic and it doesn't have wires.
2:00:30
And they're holding, waving it around in this
2:00:32
microphone and I've seen it over and over
2:00:34
again and I can't, I don't know what
2:00:36
it is, who makes it and it sounds
2:00:40
decent.
2:00:40
Well, I'm glad you asked.
2:00:42
This is from, the reason why is because
2:00:44
they are giving them free and it is
2:00:48
from my favorite company who has never sent
2:00:51
me anything even though I have spoken positively
2:00:54
about their products.
2:00:56
Rode.
2:00:56
Rode, that's right.
2:00:57
That's the Rode microphone.
2:00:58
Do they make this stupid looking thing?
2:00:59
By the way, I think it's idiotic.
2:01:01
It records on device even.
2:01:04
Oh, it's an on device recorder.
2:01:05
That's interesting.
2:01:06
Well, it's wireless and on device.
2:01:08
Does both.
2:01:10
Yeah.
2:01:11
Well, it's a little square.
2:01:12
It looks dumb.
2:01:13
I know, especially when they clip it on
2:01:15
somebody.
2:01:15
It's like a big.
2:01:16
Oh God, that is horrible.
2:01:17
Big giant square.
2:01:18
Big giant thing.
2:01:20
It's got the dead kitten on it too
2:01:21
which makes it worse.
2:01:22
Yeah, I know.
2:01:23
But it sounds good.
2:01:25
Sounds good for sure.
2:01:26
Yeah, it does seem to sound good but
2:01:27
it's just like, I've been seeing it over
2:01:29
and over again.
2:01:30
So I got three clips.
2:01:32
They're all the same, you know, ranting women
2:01:35
that have lost their minds over one thing
2:01:37
or another.
2:01:37
Let's start with the bigoted hater girl.
2:01:41
It's usually a swipe left too because we
2:01:43
all know what that usually means now.
2:01:45
I think the fact- Don't want to
2:01:46
date Trump voters.
2:01:47
Women don't want to date Trump voters.
2:01:49
Men who love Donald Trump struggle on the
2:01:51
dating- Oh, 100%.
2:01:52
If we see a man who says he's
2:01:53
conservative it is an automatic swipe left.
2:01:54
It does not matter what he looks like.
2:01:56
And me personally at this point, if I
2:01:57
see a man listed as moderate as well,
2:01:59
it's usually a swipe left too because we
2:02:01
all know what that usually means now.
2:02:03
I think the fact that conservative men absolutely
2:02:04
refuse to listen to women when we try
2:02:06
to explain to them why we don't want
2:02:07
to date conservative men and then they choose
2:02:09
to proceed to be conservative and then immediately
2:02:11
complain that they're confused as to why women
2:02:13
don't want to date them and they don't
2:02:14
know why is an ironic perfect embodiment of
2:02:17
like the lack of critical thinking and self
2:02:19
- awareness.
2:02:20
You know, like the ability to step outside
2:02:21
of your own experience and listen to others
2:02:23
that the conservative party embodies as a whole
2:02:25
making a lot of women like me not
2:02:27
want to date them.
2:02:28
And a lot of this is trending in
2:02:29
the news right now because the conservative party
2:02:30
is about to launch their new dating app
2:02:32
called The Right Stuff in which I'm willing
2:02:34
to bet every penny that I've ever made
2:02:36
that the usership of this app is going
2:02:37
to be about 90% men and 10
2:02:39
% women with Lynn as the second part
2:02:42
of their name.
2:02:42
And I know the immediate complaint is always
2:02:44
y'all are so close minded to anything
2:02:45
which embodies a lot of irony coming from
2:02:47
the right alone, but that's not true.
2:02:49
One of my best friends used to be
2:02:50
moderate and our friendship ended for different reasons
2:02:52
kind of but a lot of his close
2:02:54
friends were conservative men.
2:02:55
So anytime.
2:02:56
Oh, that's how it ends.
2:02:58
Yeah, just kind of gets cut off.
2:03:02
So this is a woman's do bitches about
2:03:04
self- awareness and she's obviously not self
2:03:07
-aware she's a chatterbox.
2:03:08
Yeah.
2:03:09
Yeah.
2:03:09
Wonders why, you know, I like the fact
2:03:12
that most of these women self-identify.
2:03:14
They got the nose ring or they got
2:03:16
some other some other adornment.
2:03:18
If I recall she was no looker because
2:03:20
I think I've seen this clip.
2:03:22
She was mad like a seven maybe.
2:03:25
Well, I didn't rate her in one way
2:03:27
or the other.
2:03:27
When you bring these clips, you need to
2:03:30
give me a number.
2:03:31
I'll give her a six.
2:03:33
Okay.
2:03:36
You're a six on the Dvorak scale.
2:03:38
So then we get the leftists.
2:03:41
I got two clips here.
2:03:42
Leftists that are on to promote their perspective
2:03:46
on things.
2:03:47
And this is a this group is going
2:03:50
to be leftist.
2:03:51
They're going to be left in the lurch.
2:03:53
Well, now I presume these are Gen Z
2:03:55
women.
2:03:56
Sounds like.
2:03:56
No, these are mostly really.
2:03:59
No, no, no, not that.
2:04:01
Well, maybe I think they're borderline on millennial.
2:04:06
But they could be the Gen Z's before
2:04:08
they start to fall into the conservative camp.
2:04:10
Exactly.
2:04:11
That's what's happening.
2:04:12
They're looking at their own generation and these
2:04:14
are the stragglers.
2:04:15
These are the ones that haven't gotten the
2:04:17
memo yet.
2:04:18
This is not where you want to be.
2:04:21
Well, they're definitely stragglers and they, you know,
2:04:24
I guess it's one way of looking at
2:04:25
it.
2:04:26
Okay, here we go.
2:04:26
One getting crushed by capitalism is like so
2:04:30
cringe, but it's like it's happening to me
2:04:34
and like I got a PhD from Berkeley
2:04:37
and We already understand the problem.
2:04:42
A PhD from Berkeley.
2:04:44
I can't get a job to save my
2:04:46
life.
2:04:47
Like I got a soil biology PhD and
2:04:51
what kind of what kind of PhD?
2:04:54
Soil biology.
2:04:55
Soil biology.
2:04:56
Is there a big market for soil biologists?
2:05:01
According to her, no.
2:05:02
I mean, maybe in the Corn Belt.
2:05:04
Like I got a soil biology PhD and
2:05:09
like now I'm a tutor and a babysitter
2:05:12
and a dog sitter and like part of
2:05:15
that is because like I don't want to
2:05:17
like move to some random place in the
2:05:19
middle of nowhere but like another half is
2:05:22
like they cut all the funding for science
2:05:24
and like the biotech market is just like
2:05:27
absolutely cratered and like I have long COVID
2:05:31
so it's difficult for me to work like
2:05:33
a full time job and just like I
2:05:36
got on here to rant a little bit,
2:05:37
but like oh my god, like what do
2:05:40
we do?
2:05:42
I just have to work.
2:05:45
I just gotta work.
2:05:47
Yes.
2:05:48
She doesn't want to move to where the
2:05:49
jobs are though.
2:05:50
That's the problem.
2:05:51
She doesn't want to move to where soil
2:05:53
biology is.
2:05:54
Well, it turns out she got a bunch
2:05:56
of grief for this report and she came
2:05:57
out with a second posting.
2:05:59
Oh, but there's a series.
2:06:02
A follow-up.
2:06:03
Yes.
2:06:03
And she comes out and admits what really
2:06:06
is going on with her and it brings
2:06:09
up the ironies of today's modern age, especially
2:06:12
in the ironies of the Democrat Party.
2:06:14
If you listen to this, this is her
2:06:16
comeback.
2:06:17
I know not many right-wingers get this,
2:06:19
but as a leftist, I really don't want
2:06:21
a job.
2:06:22
Like, I know that people make fun of
2:06:24
leftists for not wanting a job, but like
2:06:27
I'm really one of them.
2:06:28
I just...
2:06:30
Come on, this is not real.
2:06:31
This is not a sincere person who says
2:06:33
this.
2:06:34
This is not possible.
2:06:36
I believe it to be.
2:06:37
It's the same woman that just went on
2:06:39
their other rant.
2:06:40
It could be a fake, but I'm liking
2:06:43
it.
2:06:43
I can't stand the idea of having to
2:06:46
work and I don't understand why right-wingers
2:06:49
want to work either.
2:06:50
Like, they...
2:06:51
On social media, does she like a lot
2:06:55
of posts?
2:06:55
Because it sure sounds like it.
2:06:57
Like, like, like, like.
2:06:59
And I don't understand why right-wingers want
2:07:02
to work either.
2:07:03
Like, they are slaves to their masters low
2:07:06
-key and they love it and they eat
2:07:09
it up.
2:07:11
But when someone like me says, like, I
2:07:13
don't want to work in the middle of
2:07:15
nowhere, everybody's mad at me.
2:07:18
And it's pretty obvious that you're a little
2:07:22
bit, like, cucked, if you know what I
2:07:24
mean.
2:07:25
By your circumstances and maybe I am too.
2:07:30
But I'm into that.
2:07:33
So...
2:07:33
Okay.
2:07:35
Alright.
2:07:37
Wow.
2:07:38
So, I think that whether there's truth to
2:07:41
this or not, there is an element of
2:07:43
if I don't want to really work, I
2:07:44
should just be given a free ride.
2:07:47
I already worked.
2:07:48
I got my PhD in soil science.
2:07:51
And what comes to mind is the Democrat
2:07:56
Party, who likes these people.
2:07:59
The Democrat Party used to be the party
2:08:02
of the working class.
2:08:04
And now, all of a sudden, you're a
2:08:05
right-winger if you like to work?
2:08:08
Yeah, well, these parties flip all the time
2:08:11
throughout history.
2:08:13
Remember, it was the Democrats who were racist,
2:08:16
and then somehow it was the Republicans who
2:08:18
were racist.
2:08:21
Well, somehow they were accused of being racist,
2:08:23
but the Democrats are still racist.
2:08:25
This is correct.
2:08:27
Yeah.
2:08:29
Well, anyway, that's my contribution to the good
2:08:32
of society.
2:08:33
Yes, that's a very sad state of affairs.
2:08:36
I hope you had a nice, strong cup
2:08:38
of tea after watching that.
2:08:40
You must protect your own mind from the
2:08:43
virus that these people propagate on social media.
2:08:48
Like, like.
2:08:49
And with that, I want to thank you
2:08:51
very much for your courage.
2:08:52
The man who put the C in the
2:08:54
CNC parts from China.
2:08:56
Say hello to my friend on the other
2:08:57
end, will you, Mr. John C.
2:09:01
DeMora!
2:09:05
And good morning to you, Mr. Adam Crenshaw.
2:09:07
And all the dames and knights out there.
2:09:15
Yeah, I think people heard the message that
2:09:21
the stream issues have been resolved.
2:09:23
2125.
2:09:23
We're getting closer to our old numbers.
2:09:25
This is good news.
2:09:26
And we still are in the dog days
2:09:28
of summer.
2:09:28
Is school back in session?
2:09:30
Is school back?
2:09:31
Are people back at school?
2:09:32
Yeah.
2:09:32
They just went back to school.
2:09:34
Like last week.
2:09:36
When I was a kid, we went after
2:09:37
Labor Day or whatever the holiday is in
2:09:39
September.
2:09:40
It was in September.
2:09:42
And we didn't get...
2:09:43
And we quit, I think, before the 15th
2:09:46
of June.
2:09:47
All the way to the second week of
2:09:49
September.
2:09:50
It was summertime.
2:09:51
And the teachers were always, oh, those teachers,
2:09:54
they get a hold.
2:09:55
Look at all the time they get off.
2:09:58
Yeah.
2:09:58
How come the teachers aren't up in arms
2:10:00
about this?
2:10:00
They should be.
2:10:01
They should be very mad.
2:10:03
I have no idea.
2:10:04
Maybe they figure they get another month of
2:10:07
checks.
2:10:07
I don't know.
2:10:10
Well, anyway, it's good to have you Trolls
2:10:11
here.
2:10:12
Trollroom.io noagenda.stream and, of course, the
2:10:15
Modern Podcast Apps, where you can always, always
2:10:17
be notified when we go live.
2:10:20
This is the hot new thing in podcasting.
2:10:22
It's been around for a couple of years,
2:10:24
but it's starting to become very hot.
2:10:26
You just wait.
2:10:27
It's going to be hot.
2:10:28
Yep, it's very, very hot.
2:10:30
PodcastApps.com Podverse is still the number one
2:10:33
alternative app for this show versus Apple, number
2:10:37
one.
2:10:38
Podverse, number two.
2:10:39
Podcast Guru, number three.
2:10:41
Zero Spotify, of course.
2:10:43
We're not on Spotify.
2:10:45
And people seem to not have a problem
2:10:47
with that.
2:10:47
Like, OK, it's not on Spotify.
2:10:48
I'll just use a different app.
2:10:50
Spotify are no good.
2:10:51
We don't want to be a part of
2:10:52
that cabal.
2:10:54
They are evil.
2:10:56
But we are somehow on the iHeart app.
2:10:59
Are we?
2:11:00
Yeah.
2:11:00
Did you submit us to the iHeart app?
2:11:04
We're on Podbean.
2:11:05
That's what I like.
2:11:07
I'll have to take a look and see
2:11:09
if we're on Podbean.
2:11:11
That is kind of a necessity.
2:11:12
We have to be on Podbean to be
2:11:14
an official podcast.
2:11:16
Value for Value is the way we've been
2:11:19
operating on this program.
2:11:20
It'll be 18 years in October and episode
2:11:24
1800 coming up in seven short episodes.
2:11:27
Do we have a date yet?
2:11:29
Do you know the date of our 1800th
2:11:32
episode?
2:11:33
Just look at the calendar.
2:11:34
You can figure it out.
2:11:35
That's why I asked you.
2:11:36
I haven't done that yet.
2:11:38
When it gets to show 1798.
2:11:43
Then we'll start thinking.
2:11:45
It should be next week, plus one show.
2:11:49
Value for Value means that you don't have
2:11:52
to listen to ads.
2:11:53
Oh, man.
2:11:55
I was listening to radio the other day.
2:11:57
I don't understand.
2:12:00
It's all ads.
2:12:01
I like country music.
2:12:05
Hello there, buddy.
2:12:07
It's not quite what country music is anymore.
2:12:09
In fact, country music is not like Merle
2:12:11
Haggard anymore.
2:12:13
It's unlistenable.
2:12:15
No wonder people just listen to a playlist.
2:12:18
Why would you listen to music radio just
2:12:21
in general?
2:12:22
Stop for ads.
2:12:24
20 minutes to an hour.
2:12:25
No.
2:12:26
You know what's really annoying about these ads
2:12:27
on these radio stations?
2:12:29
Well?
2:12:30
They pretty much all use the same generalized
2:12:34
clock.
2:12:35
Oh, yeah.
2:12:36
The ads all hit at the same time.
2:12:39
It comes to an ad segment.
2:12:41
You change channels.
2:12:42
Ad, ad, ad.
2:12:44
Channel, channel, channel.
2:12:46
Ads, ads, ads, ads.
2:12:48
There's no moment of relaxation.
2:12:50
It's all ads.
2:12:51
When I was working at the legendary WHTZ
2:12:57
Z100 in New York under the guidance of
2:13:01
Michael Scott Shannon, who invented the Z Morning
2:13:04
Zoo.
2:13:06
He invented the zoo?
2:13:07
Oh, yeah.
2:13:08
He's credited.
2:13:09
I believe he did.
2:13:11
I've always wondered who did that.
2:13:13
It was in New York?
2:13:14
The first zoo was in New York?
2:13:15
No, no.
2:13:15
I think he started it in Jacksonville, Florida,
2:13:20
I think that's where he was first.
2:13:21
Yeah, I heard it was started in Florida.
2:13:22
And there's still some zoo shows in Florida.
2:13:25
If you go down there in the morning,
2:13:27
driving around.
2:13:27
W-A-P-E, the big ape, everybody.
2:13:29
Good morning.
2:13:31
My daddy was a beetle.
2:13:34
It's always the same.
2:13:35
You got at least two guys yakking at
2:13:38
each other.
2:13:39
And then there's a girl who's part of
2:13:41
it and she makes snide comments.
2:13:42
And then there's a sports guy and then
2:13:45
there's a gay guy who does entertainment news.
2:13:49
Correct.
2:13:51
And there's always a wacky guy who calls
2:13:53
up.
2:13:54
Here's Mr. Leonard in his lime green pinto.
2:13:56
Hey, morning, Scott.
2:13:58
I'm here in my lime green pinto.
2:14:00
Yes, there will be one guy who calls
2:14:02
in, and he can usually do voices, and
2:14:05
he calls in as Clinton or he calls
2:14:07
in as Trump.
2:14:08
And that guy calls ten radio stations every
2:14:12
morning, and he deals with every single one
2:14:14
of them.
2:14:14
Anyway.
2:14:16
What Scott Shannon had, because of that clock
2:14:18
format, and it really went to 46 past
2:14:23
the hour.
2:14:24
That was the big thing.
2:14:25
Go 46 past the hour, then you'd have
2:14:27
about five, six minutes of ads, and then
2:14:31
you wanted to come out of that block
2:14:32
with the biggest monster hit you could play.
2:14:35
This is before internet, children.
2:14:37
Well, the internet was around, but there was
2:14:39
no streaming.
2:14:40
And he had four light bulbs in the
2:14:44
studio.
2:14:44
Old school light bulbs.
2:14:46
One was for PLJ 95.5, one was
2:14:49
for WBLS.
2:14:51
I forget who the two others were.
2:14:54
Maybe...
2:14:55
I don't remember.
2:14:56
So you would see the light bulbs come
2:14:59
on when the other stations went into commercials,
2:15:02
and the trick was you wanted to be
2:15:04
out of commercials into the monster hit before
2:15:06
those other light bulbs went off.
2:15:09
That's how competitive it was.
2:15:11
That's interesting.
2:15:11
You've never told that story before.
2:15:13
No, I haven't.
2:15:14
Well, the more you know.
2:15:16
That's an interesting trick.
2:15:17
The more you know.
2:15:18
Oh, the other trick was the radio ratings
2:15:23
were done, and I think they're all done
2:15:25
by Nielsen now, but back in the day,
2:15:27
they were done by a company called Arbitron.
2:15:30
Right, Arbitron.
2:15:31
And Arbitron, they mainly did diaries.
2:15:34
So they would have, you know, a hundred
2:15:36
or a thousand families, and you would keep
2:15:39
a diary of what you listened to throughout
2:15:41
the day.
2:15:42
So whenever the Arbitron diaries went out, Scott
2:15:46
Shannon would do a promotion with these cheap
2:15:49
wristwatches called Armitron.
2:15:53
And so it would be like, if you
2:15:55
call it 100, you'll win an Arbitron watch!
2:15:57
The idea was people were thinking, Arbitron, Arbitron,
2:16:00
Arbitron, and so they would remember a Z100,
2:16:03
they would associate it with Arbitron whenever they
2:16:05
had to fill out the diary.
2:16:07
It's a scam, I tell you.
2:16:08
Wow!
2:16:10
That is admirable marketing.
2:16:13
Scott Shannon, man, the guy's a genius.
2:16:15
Yeah, well, that's why he made good money,
2:16:18
too.
2:16:19
Now, unlike Scott Shannon, we just ask people
2:16:21
to support us with your hard-earned cash.
2:16:23
We don't want to have to think about
2:16:25
tricks like that.
2:16:26
Can you imagine?
2:16:27
Downloads, everybody!
2:16:28
Subscribe using the Apple podcast app so it
2:16:31
auto-downloads and we can trick our advertisers
2:16:34
into thinking that we had more people listening.
2:16:36
That is true.
2:16:37
So, no.
2:16:38
Instead of that, we just ask you to
2:16:39
send us whatever you think the show was
2:16:41
worth to you.
2:16:41
If you get something out of it, if
2:16:42
you learned something, maybe there was something that
2:16:45
you heard and was a good investment tip,
2:16:47
or you stayed alive.
2:16:49
I mean, that has also happened here.
2:16:50
Or maybe you just wanted to sound a
2:16:52
little bit smarter than the rest of the
2:16:54
NPC drones that work around the water cooler.
2:16:57
Now, you can do that with your time,
2:16:59
your talent, or your treasure.
2:17:01
We love many different ways of time and
2:17:03
talent, including the artwork that people used to
2:17:06
make by hand, slaving over it hours while
2:17:09
listening to the show.
2:17:11
Now it's just prompt jockeys, but okay.
2:17:14
You still got to have a good idea,
2:17:16
so we do appreciate that.
2:17:17
There's more than ever.
2:17:19
Anybody can participate at noagendaartgenerator.com.
2:17:22
And we want to thank Digital2112man who brought
2:17:26
us the artwork for episode 1792, the snappy
2:17:30
title of Maloney in the Middle, which I
2:17:33
kind of did like.
2:17:35
And this was a very happy piece of
2:17:40
art.
2:17:41
Back to school, noagenda, backs to school, vaccination,
2:17:44
a happy little school kid just smiling as
2:17:47
the nurse jabs a needle into the kid's
2:17:50
arm.
2:17:51
It's a very, very happy moment.
2:17:53
We thought it was not ghoulish enough to
2:17:55
be vetoed, but yet...
2:17:58
Well, you didn't like it at first.
2:17:59
No, I still...
2:18:01
It's not my favorite, but there wasn't much
2:18:04
else.
2:18:05
What did I like?
2:18:07
I liked the plumber butt, but no, we're
2:18:09
not going to do that.
2:18:10
There's something else.
2:18:11
You liked the corn.
2:18:14
Saluting corn.
2:18:15
Yes, corn scription didn't make sense, although we
2:18:20
talked about conscription.
2:18:22
I said something else.
2:18:23
It wasn't corn scription, I don't think.
2:18:25
But I just thought that was a cute
2:18:27
piece of art.
2:18:27
You didn't like it.
2:18:29
Comicstreetblogger came in with a corrected version of
2:18:31
You're a Body Double.
2:18:32
Yeah, good luck, pal.
2:18:35
After you failed the first time, we're not
2:18:37
going to use it.
2:18:37
It was too late anyway.
2:18:40
And there was some apprentice stuff, Eloni Maloney,
2:18:44
lots of thermosol.
2:18:47
I kind of liked the trade school guy
2:18:50
with the toilet plunger.
2:18:52
He didn't really like that.
2:18:55
Right.
2:18:55
You liked that one.
2:18:56
That's the one I think you picked right
2:18:57
off the bat.
2:18:58
Yeah, but why didn't you like it?
2:19:00
It was a mess.
2:19:03
Yes, it was an AI mess.
2:19:06
And so just looking at what we had,
2:19:09
yeah, I think looking at all the pros
2:19:12
and cons, the back-to-school vaccination was
2:19:15
just cute and funny enough that it worked.
2:19:19
No one threw bricks at me on the
2:19:21
street, so.
2:19:22
Did you get any comments?
2:19:23
Do you look at your X timeline when
2:19:26
we post the show?
2:19:29
Sometimes.
2:19:30
And?
2:19:30
Did you see any comments about it?
2:19:32
No.
2:19:33
Okay, well, there you go.
2:19:35
A reasonable job.
2:19:37
Digital2112 man is all over this thing now.
2:19:40
He's just like, he's just going for broke.
2:19:42
He's not even listening to the show.
2:19:44
He's like, oh yeah, it's up there.
2:19:45
Oh yeah, I like this.
2:19:46
Oh yeah, I've got it.
2:19:47
I'll prompt this one.
2:19:49
I'll prompt this one.
2:19:50
Thank you, Digital2112 man, for the artwork for
2:19:53
episode 1792.
2:19:54
We also thank all of our treasure supporters
2:19:58
who support us.
2:19:59
$50 and above.
2:20:00
We will always mention your name or whatever
2:20:02
alias you want to use.
2:20:04
And as a special good deal, just like
2:20:06
Hollywood, you'll see the credits on Hollywood movies
2:20:09
and productions.
2:20:10
Lots of people on the credit roll.
2:20:12
But if you're an executive producer or associate
2:20:15
executive producer, you get the big title up
2:20:16
front.
2:20:17
That's just how the world works.
2:20:18
You may not like capitalism, but this is
2:20:21
it.
2:20:21
$200 or above where you get the exclusive
2:20:24
title of executive producer for this episode will
2:20:27
be 1793 of The Noah Jenner Show.
2:20:30
And we'll read your note.
2:20:31
$300 or above, you get the title of
2:20:33
executive producer and we will read your note
2:20:36
as well.
2:20:37
Dana Brunetti sent me a very disturbing video.
2:20:40
What was it?
2:20:42
He said, did I complain about him donating?
2:20:46
I think I did.
2:20:47
Well, you're always complaining about him.
2:20:49
So he sends me a video of you
2:20:52
having a dinner and wine at a very
2:20:55
upscale restaurant.
2:20:58
And it was him filming it.
2:21:00
Then he said, Dvorak ate your part of
2:21:04
the donation.
2:21:06
So just so you know, when he takes
2:21:09
you out to dinner, he considers that a
2:21:11
donation to the show.
2:21:13
Yeah.
2:21:14
And he had a pair of, yeah, we
2:21:18
went to this place and he was in
2:21:20
town.
2:21:22
So we went to a one-star restaurant
2:21:24
which was not close to being one-star
2:21:26
in quality, which irked me.
2:21:29
I'm sorry.
2:21:30
Because I know what a one-star restaurant
2:21:31
should be like and this was not a
2:21:33
one-star restaurant by any, we're talking about
2:21:35
Michelin stars.
2:21:36
So he has a pair of those glasses
2:21:40
that takes videos.
2:21:42
Oh, how lame is that?
2:21:44
Well, he didn't have them on for long.
2:21:47
He put them on the dorkiest looking things
2:21:49
and the worst part about it is that
2:21:51
there's a little light that lights up.
2:21:54
It's like, I'm a dick.
2:21:56
Is it a pulse?
2:21:58
Yeah, the light is flashing code, Morse code,
2:22:01
I'm a dick.
2:22:02
I'm a dick, I'm a dick, I'm a
2:22:03
dick.
2:22:04
I'm recording you, I'm a dick.
2:22:06
Wow.
2:22:07
So he had those glasses and I didn't
2:22:11
even ask whose brand they were.
2:22:14
I'm sure it's Facebook.
2:22:15
It's Meta stuff.
2:22:17
I'm pretty sure Meta has them.
2:22:19
So that's what he's spending his money on.
2:22:21
Well, anyway, I told him, I replied, I
2:22:23
said, no, you're just a cheapskate.
2:22:26
You just don't want to donate real money.
2:22:30
I can't remember what he replied but he
2:22:32
had no real reply after that.
2:22:34
Turns out these Hollywood guys, once you just
2:22:36
slap them down, they got no fight.
2:22:38
They're Hollywood guys.
2:22:40
And you too can be like a Hollywood
2:22:41
person because these credits are as valid as
2:22:44
any Hollywood credit.
2:22:45
You can use it anywhere.
2:22:46
Hollywood credits are accepted and recognized, including imdb
2:22:50
.com.
2:22:51
And our first executive producer goes to Steve
2:22:54
Miller from Aledo, Texas who's been donating frequently
2:22:58
of late $1,000.
2:23:01
And he says this combination of my Thursday
2:23:03
donation and today should get us two knighthoods
2:23:06
and a secretary general ships.
2:23:09
One each for my son, Andrew Miller, and
2:23:11
myself.
2:23:13
West Coast IPA's Philly cheesesteaks from Jim's and
2:23:16
Basil Haydeck dark rye old fashions should be
2:23:22
the perfect mix for our first roundtable.
2:23:25
Okay.
2:23:25
I've ordered it.
2:23:26
Andrew would like to be named Sir Q
2:23:30
Itus.
2:23:33
So Sir Q-U-E Itus.
2:23:36
Pronounce Sir Q-U-Tus.
2:23:39
Secretary Sir Q-U-Tus.
2:23:42
Sir Q-U-Tus.
2:23:43
Sir Q-U-Tus.
2:23:44
Thank you.
2:23:45
So it means roundabout.
2:23:46
Sir Q-U-Tus.
2:23:47
Secretary General of Parker County.
2:23:51
And I'd like to be Sir Render Not
2:23:53
with a K.
2:23:55
Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains.
2:23:58
This is a big one.
2:23:59
We have a big ceremony now for our
2:24:00
secretary generals.
2:24:01
Oh, you have it?
2:24:02
Of course.
2:24:03
Hey, I do production on this show, of
2:24:06
course.
2:24:07
Please.
2:24:07
I didn't know you were ready to do
2:24:08
that one already.
2:24:10
Of course.
2:24:11
I'm stunned.
2:24:11
I'm taking it back.
2:24:15
I have that.
2:24:16
Oh, jeez.
2:24:17
What do you mean, oh jeez?
2:24:19
Come on, man.
2:24:20
I got my...
2:24:22
Yeah, I got...
2:24:24
And I have the music to go with
2:24:26
that.
2:24:27
Please also give Andrew some new house karma
2:24:30
as he buys his first house, escaping from
2:24:33
Colorado to Texas, good man, and explores the
2:24:36
true meaning of house poor.
2:24:38
That's right.
2:24:39
And a little Al Sharpton, please, just for
2:24:41
grins.
2:24:41
Thank you for your courage, says Steve Miller
2:24:43
from Aledo, Texas.
2:24:49
R-E-S-P-I-C-T.
2:24:52
You've got karma.
2:24:56
Now we have Sir Ichabod from Lake Forest
2:25:00
Park, Washington, or as they said there, Washington,
2:25:05
666.66. This is a check that came
2:25:08
in with a note.
2:25:09
Mm-hmm.
2:25:10
Crackpot Buzzkill, I have been remiss lately, so
2:25:14
I'm playing catch up with my donations.
2:25:16
Here's 333 for the last 200 shows.
2:25:19
Wow.
2:25:20
That's a good way of doing it.
2:25:21
That's very good.
2:25:22
I like it.
2:25:23
200 shows, $3.33 a show.
2:25:25
I can't believe I have given this kind
2:25:27
of money to a product.
2:25:29
I can't believe I have given this kind
2:25:31
of money to a podcast.
2:25:33
But you have been worth every penny over
2:25:36
the last 11 years that I've been listening.
2:25:41
It's fitting that the first episode I listened
2:25:42
to was titled Slavery Enrollment.
2:25:46
Wow.
2:25:48
What episode was that?
2:25:50
That's 11 years ago.
2:25:53
Slavery.
2:25:54
This donation takes me over to the Baron
2:25:56
level.
2:25:56
Please update my title to Baron Ichabod of
2:25:58
the Bike Path Gorable.
2:26:01
Protector of the Seleucid Empire.
2:26:05
Seleucid.
2:26:06
Adam, even though you don't like it, could
2:26:09
you please use the Bob Dylan version of
2:26:11
these titles or changing for the ceremony?
2:26:15
I don't know that he doesn't like it.
2:26:18
By the way, Slavery Enrollment was episode 666.
2:26:24
Oh, that's the 666.
2:26:26
I get it.
2:26:27
Hence the donation.
2:26:30
Adam, the reason you don't understand many of
2:26:32
John's references is because you are not a
2:26:33
boomer.
2:26:34
This is not true.
2:26:35
He is a boomer.
2:26:37
I refuse to believe as a kid I
2:26:39
was led into the headbanger's ball each week
2:26:42
by a boomer posing as some cool hip
2:26:44
VJ.
2:26:47
But then I'm Gen X, so meh.
2:26:50
Who cares?
2:26:51
Lastly, I'm a huge fan of Ashlyn Speed.
2:26:54
That No Agenda sticker on her race car
2:26:56
deserves actual sponsorship.
2:26:59
Ashlyn, if you're listening, send Adam an email.
2:27:01
If there's a way that Gitmo Nation can
2:27:03
help you in Value for Value, I'd like
2:27:07
to send you $500 that you can use
2:27:09
for a plane ticket to the next race.
2:27:11
Maybe buy an extra tire.
2:27:13
Or an extra tire is what she needs.
2:27:15
Or a handful of those side view mirrors
2:27:18
you like to knock off rubbing elbows at
2:27:20
100 miles an hour with other boys and
2:27:22
girls in the track.
2:27:23
Good luck for the rest of the season.
2:27:25
Jingle.
2:27:26
F35 Karma for Ashlyn at the Virginia International
2:27:29
Raceway this weekend.
2:27:31
Sincerely, Sir Ichabod of the Bike Path Gorble.
2:27:36
You've got Karma.
2:27:40
Karma.
2:27:42
Thank you very much, Sir Ichabod.
2:27:44
Count Stephen is in Oswego, Illinois.
2:27:47
$515.38. It may be $500 with fees.
2:27:50
Please set me up as secretary.
2:27:52
The secretary-general ship of Winder and the
2:27:55
Great Smoky Mountains.
2:27:57
Could use some relationship karma as well.
2:28:00
And this comes from Count Stephen.
2:28:00
Could it be Winder?
2:28:02
Maybe it is Winder.
2:28:05
I'll pronounce it properly during your ceremony.
2:28:07
Count Stephen of Winder and the Great Smoky
2:28:10
Mountains.
2:28:11
You've got karma.
2:28:15
Jeffrey Ray in Maricopa, Arizona.
2:28:19
$515.38. Jeffrey Ray, secretary-general of the
2:28:24
Autonomous Region of Madeira, a.k.a. Digital2112man.
2:28:30
There he is.
2:28:31
That's who this is.
2:28:34
Is it possible to please email a PDF
2:28:36
of the certificate?
2:28:38
We got into it back and forth.
2:28:39
I guess he is...
2:28:43
He might not be the same guy.
2:28:45
Yeah, it is.
2:28:45
He doesn't have a wall?
2:28:48
I don't know.
2:28:50
We'll work it out.
2:28:52
We always work it out.
2:28:53
We'll take care of you, brother.
2:28:56
$350.93 from Sir Scovey from Charlotte, North
2:28:59
Carolina.
2:29:00
Thank you.
2:29:01
Scovey.
2:29:02
Sir Scovey.
2:29:03
Jingles.
2:29:04
Sharp and respect.
2:29:05
Bush, just send your cash.
2:29:06
Klobuchar sounds pretty good.
2:29:07
ITM gentlemen, please accept this donation of $333
2:29:10
.33 plus fees.
2:29:12
Fellow producers, he says.
2:29:13
I have an offer for Gitmo Nation for
2:29:15
every $333.33 donation made up to and
2:29:18
including show 1800 on September 18th.
2:29:21
There it is, John.
2:29:23
September 18th.
2:29:24
I will match the $333.33 donation on
2:29:27
the following show.
2:29:28
This offer is good for up to six
2:29:30
donations.
2:29:30
It's a matching donation.
2:29:33
I think that's a first.
2:29:35
No, maybe not the first.
2:29:36
Somebody else, I think, did that at a
2:29:38
meetup.
2:29:40
Non-profits love to do this.
2:29:43
Because you can say, we got a matching
2:29:45
donation, everybody.
2:29:47
And he continues by saying, no agenda is
2:29:50
the best podcast in the universe.
2:29:52
Let's give John and Adam another reason to
2:29:55
know us as the best producers in the
2:29:57
universe.
2:29:58
Love and light, Sir Scovey.
2:29:59
Duke of the Piedmont PhD.
2:30:05
R-E-S-P-I-C-T.
2:30:08
I know a lot of people want to
2:30:09
send blankets or water.
2:30:11
Just send your cash.
2:30:12
I think that sounds pretty good.
2:30:16
Classic.
2:30:17
Weird Wizard in Valparaiso, Indiana.
2:30:21
$350.93. Elder Zoomer here.
2:30:26
Just turned 28.
2:30:27
Yay!
2:30:29
Been a lister since Adam's appearance on the
2:30:31
JRE back in 2020.
2:30:33
Broke a donation.
2:30:35
I formed a relationship with God in part
2:30:38
due to Adam.
2:30:40
He's talking about his journey and have found
2:30:43
praying to be a great way to end
2:30:46
each day.
2:30:47
I'm debt free.
2:30:48
Which is a big deal, by the way.
2:30:51
Have a great job I enjoy and recently
2:30:53
purchased a house.
2:30:54
Woo!
2:30:55
He's on a roll.
2:30:57
And met the love of my life.
2:30:58
Holy moly.
2:30:59
This is great.
2:30:59
She inspires me like nothing else that ever
2:31:02
came close to.
2:31:04
Sadly, it seems it is not meant to
2:31:07
be at this moment of our lives.
2:31:08
Asking for a de-douching.
2:31:12
You've been de-douched.
2:31:14
In some relationship, karma.
2:31:15
Thanks for keeping me relatively sane.
2:31:19
Okay, relatively sane.
2:31:21
All the best.
2:31:22
Weird, it was spelled with a Y.
2:31:25
Weird wizard of Valparaiso, Indiana.
2:31:30
You've got karma.
2:31:34
Chris Balint.
2:31:39
He's in Parkville, Maryland.
2:31:41
$350.93. That's a $333.33 with fees.
2:31:45
I've been listening since 2020-21.
2:31:47
I very much appreciated you guys and the
2:31:49
work that you do.
2:31:50
I made my first donation of $33.33
2:31:52
a few years ago.
2:31:54
Here's a bit more value for the value
2:31:55
that you create for us all.
2:31:57
Shout-outs to my wife, Ann, who makes
2:31:59
living in the reality of the neo-post
2:32:01
-modern world so much better and funnier.
2:32:04
And to my friend, Jamie, for the initial
2:32:05
introduction to No Agenda.
2:32:07
My friend, Sir Jonathan of the Fan Mountain
2:32:09
Oognats.
2:32:10
And James A., the Jolly Wizard.
2:32:12
And of course, my friend and collaborator of
2:32:14
25-plus years, John B., a.k.a.
2:32:17
Snackmaster on Bandcamp, Escape the Mind Games, my
2:32:20
community of immunity.
2:32:22
You guys are all part of what makes
2:32:23
life worth living.
2:32:25
Oh, wow.
2:32:25
I also want to plug out there from
2:32:27
my dad, Bart Balint's book.
2:32:30
It's titled, The Giant Clam and Other Visions.
2:32:33
I had that vision one time.
2:32:36
It's available on Amazon.
2:32:37
He's been dealing with cancer for a number
2:32:38
of years and last year completed his memoir
2:32:41
of his life and experiences.
2:32:42
In my view, he is an extraordinary individual.
2:32:45
His birthday is August 28th.
2:32:47
Happy birthday, and thank you, Dad, for everything
2:32:51
from Chris.
2:32:52
Yeah, go get his book.
2:32:53
This sounds like a good one.
2:32:54
The Giant Clam and Other Visions.
2:32:58
Sir Baron Commodore, Ph.D., Guest Cadaver.
2:33:01
Is there really a place called Doom?
2:33:05
No, no.
2:33:05
It's Guest Cadaver, and it's Doorn.
2:33:08
It's an R-N-N.
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That looks like Doom.
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No, that's...
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Doorn, Doorn Holland 34375.
2:33:17
ITM, Adam and John, no specific reason, just
2:33:21
a token of appreciation for your clarification and
2:33:24
exposure of the M5M idiocy and for bringing
2:33:28
it to the attention of all the producers,
2:33:31
douchebags, and non-donating profiteering listeners.
2:33:35
There's a sentence for you.
2:33:37
There it is.
2:33:38
Our appreciation is huge and shrinking our amygdala
2:33:43
is incredibly healthy for all of us.
2:33:46
Shout out to all the No Agenda producers
2:33:48
and communities.
2:33:50
Limousine will be ordered to pick up Sir
2:33:52
Baron Commodore, Ph.D. Guest Cadaver.
2:33:59
Hey, there's Eli the Coffee Guy from Bensonville,
2:34:02
Illinois, with 20824.
2:34:04
824, you know what he does.
2:34:06
He always adds the date in there.
2:34:07
He says, I'll keep it short and sweet.
2:34:09
I love that you guys called out John
2:34:11
Bolton as a fart sniffer.
2:34:13
Keep up the great work.
2:34:15
For producers who want great tasting coffee, visit
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gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use code ITM20 for 20
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And whatever you do, stay caffeinated, says Eli
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the Coffee Guy.
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Scott Johnson in Kissimmee, Florida.
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20477, he sent a check in with a
2:34:34
note.
2:34:35
The note says, in the morning, Adam and
2:34:37
John, I first discovered the best podcast in
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the universe back when John would unabashedly plug
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No Agenda on This Week in Tech.
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And speaking of plugs, let's talk about my
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Blessings to all from Scott Johnson.
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Good luck with your app, man.
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Hey, there's Linda Lupatkin from Lakewood, Colorado with
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$200.
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We know she wants jobs, Karma.
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And she says, are you worried about AI?
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For a resume that gets results, tells your
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unique story, and highlights the value you bring,
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go to ImageMakersInc.com.
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That's ImageMakersInc with a K, and work with
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Linda Lu, Duchess of Jobs, and writer of
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Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
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Let's vote for jobs.
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Karma.
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And last on our list is Molly Landry
2:36:22
in Houston, Texas, 200.
2:36:25
This donation is in honor of my husband
2:36:27
Toby Landry's 40th birthday.
2:36:30
He's a regular listener of your show and
2:36:32
frequently mentions how it keeps him sane.
2:36:35
Nice.
2:36:36
He will be totally embarrassed by this, by
2:36:39
his name being mentioned on the air, so
2:36:42
please make sure to do so.
2:36:45
Well, you have done so, Molly.
2:36:46
He's on the list.
2:36:47
Yeah.
2:36:47
And he is on the list, indeed.
2:36:49
Thank you all very much.
2:36:50
And of course, we'll be thanking $50 and
2:36:52
above supporters of this episode in our second
2:36:54
break coming up in a little bit.
2:36:56
As always, we want to remind you that
2:36:58
these titles are real, can be used anywhere,
2:37:00
and of course, we now have some secretaries
2:37:04
general who we shall be congratulating and giving
2:37:07
their official, what is the, I guess, ceremony?
2:37:11
Is there, is there what do we have
2:37:12
for a secretary general?
2:37:14
What is it?
2:37:14
Is it a...
2:37:15
I think ceremony.
2:37:17
Ceremony?
2:37:17
Ceremony it is.
2:37:18
We'll be doing that, and you can always
2:37:21
support us any amount, any reason.
2:37:23
Usually it's for reasons of appreciation for the
2:37:27
value that you receive.
2:37:28
Go to noagendadonations.com if you want to
2:37:30
become a sustaining donor, very easy.
2:37:32
You can set it up, recurring donation, any
2:37:34
amount, any frequency, it's all up to you.
2:37:36
It's value for value.
2:37:37
Congratulations again to these executive producers.
2:37:40
Our formula is this.
2:37:42
We go out, we hit people in the
2:37:45
mouth.
2:37:52
I think that sounds pretty good.
2:37:55
Shut up, Steve.
2:38:05
Federal Reserve.
2:38:06
No, maybe not.
2:38:08
Federal Reserve.
2:38:08
Do you know Muhammad L.
2:38:11
Aryan?
2:38:12
No.
2:38:13
I do not know Muhammad L.
2:38:15
Aryan.
2:38:16
Well, Margaret Brennan had him on, and it
2:38:19
was in response to, I guess, the Friday,
2:38:25
was it I think it just went kaboomy,
2:38:27
kablooey.
2:38:29
Wasn't there a record close for the Dow
2:38:31
Jones?
2:38:32
Yeah.
2:38:33
And it was all based on this.
2:38:36
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell used Friday's speech
2:38:39
to signal the central bank is open to
2:38:41
cutting interest rates ahead of its next decision
2:38:44
in September.
2:38:45
The baseline outlook and the shifting balance of
2:38:48
risks may warrant adjusting our policy stance.
2:38:51
Powell, whose term as chair expires next May,
2:38:54
has faced intense pressure from President Trump to
2:38:56
lower interest rates.
2:38:57
He spoke today about continued economic uncertainty over
2:39:00
the administration's immigration and tariff policies.
2:39:03
This year, the economy has faced new challenges.
2:39:06
Significantly higher tariffs across our trading partners are
2:39:10
remaking the global trading system.
2:39:12
Tighter immigration policy has led to an abrupt
2:39:14
slowdown in labor force growth.
2:39:16
President Trump backed off previous threats to fire
2:39:19
Powell, but is now targeting another Fed board
2:39:22
member, Lisa Cook.
2:39:24
What she did was abandon her, so I'll
2:39:27
fire her if she doesn't resign.
2:39:29
Cook was appointed to the Fed's Board of
2:39:31
Governors by former President Biden.
2:39:33
This week, a Trump administration official accused her
2:39:36
of mortgage fraud and called for an investigation.
2:39:39
In a statement, Cook says she has no
2:39:41
intention of stepping down.
2:39:43
I love how this monumental sentence by Powell,
2:39:48
first I'm going to cut rates.
2:39:51
And then of course, Trump bad because someone
2:39:54
else one of her colleagues accused her of
2:39:57
mortgage fraud, which sounds pretty much par for
2:40:00
the course, I guess.
2:40:03
So Margaret Brennan had this Muhammad Al-Aryan
2:40:06
guy on.
2:40:07
I guess he's a big bond dude according
2:40:08
to the trolls in the know.
2:40:12
And here's what he had to say.
2:40:13
We turn now to the US economy.
2:40:15
Muhammad Al-Aryan is the chief economic advisor
2:40:18
at Allianz and he joins us this morning
2:40:19
from Greenwich, Connecticut.
2:40:21
Good morning to you.
2:40:22
It's from Allianz in Connecticut.
2:40:24
Good morning, Margaret.
2:40:24
So we saw the Federal Reserve chair signal
2:40:28
on Friday that the Fed is going to,
2:40:31
as expected, begin lowering rates very soon.
2:40:35
But he's also cited slowing economic growth and
2:40:38
a cooling job market.
2:40:40
So why then did the financial markets rally?
2:40:44
What is with the laugh tale, Margaret?
2:40:46
That's not needed.
2:40:47
Because he finally pivoted to the risk that
2:40:50
matters most for the US economy right now.
2:40:53
By construct, the Fed has to deliver two
2:40:55
things.
2:40:56
Maximum employment and price stability.
2:40:59
And the Fed is looking at slightly higher
2:41:01
inflation and a weakening labor market.
2:41:05
And what Powell finally did, and many of
2:41:07
us feel he should have done this earlier,
2:41:09
is he said the risk to the employment
2:41:11
side is higher than the risk to the
2:41:14
inflation side.
2:41:15
And therefore an interest rate cut is warranted.
2:41:18
As you know, many of us felt he
2:41:20
should have cut last month.
2:41:21
Sounds like he's a Trump guy.
2:41:24
I don't even know why she has him
2:41:25
on.
2:41:26
He's saying what the president has been saying
2:41:28
for a long time.
2:41:30
The Fed chair said significantly higher tariffs are
2:41:34
remaking the entire global trade system.
2:41:37
Tighter immigration policy has slowed labor growth.
2:41:40
And there are big tax and regulation changes
2:41:42
you can't quite quantify at this point.
2:41:45
But it's a lot of uncertainty.
2:41:47
Since economists have to build off of models
2:41:50
and data, how do you predict where we're
2:41:53
going if basically he's saying, throw out your
2:41:56
models?
2:41:57
She's laughing again.
2:41:59
Did you notice that she said it was
2:42:04
a self-contradictory statement.
2:42:06
She says the slower migration or no migration
2:42:11
is creating a tighter labor market.
2:42:14
Is that what she said?
2:42:16
Yes, something was just completely wrong.
2:42:19
Tighter immigration policy has slowed labor growth.
2:42:23
Tighter immigration policy has slowed labor growth.
2:42:28
So Powell is worried about labor slowdown.
2:42:32
Is labor growth slowed because of the lack
2:42:35
of cheap labor?
2:42:37
Does that make sense?
2:42:38
Cheap illegal labor.
2:42:41
Illegal labor is ruining the country.
2:42:44
Yeah, I think so.
2:42:45
So one of the problems is he hasn't
2:42:47
looked forward enough.
2:42:48
He's been very data dependent and therefore he
2:42:51
has tended to be late.
2:42:53
Look, there is something promising in our future
2:42:56
and that is productivity enhancement that comes from
2:43:00
exciting innovation in AI and life sciences and
2:43:04
robotics and other areas.
2:43:05
We just have to manage a challenging few
2:43:08
months in the period ahead.
2:43:10
And if that challenge is mishandled, we will
2:43:14
not be able to get the opportunities that
2:43:15
we have that offset a lot of structural
2:43:18
headwinds and that includes high debt and high
2:43:21
deficits.
2:43:23
What?
2:43:24
She's like, I don't know.
2:43:26
So what does this mean, John?
2:43:28
Does this mean we'll be printing money again?
2:43:30
What does this mean?
2:43:31
It doesn't mean anything.
2:43:32
It's just blathers.
2:43:33
Typical financial stuff.
2:43:35
They just talk, talk, talk.
2:43:36
You know, anything that benefits the markets, the
2:43:39
stock market specifically, is great.
2:43:41
So there's an interesting...
2:43:43
One of the big AI product companies that
2:43:48
provides...
2:43:49
I don't know if I'm allowed to say
2:43:51
who this is.
2:43:52
Alright, I'll say it.
2:43:53
But it's a company that is very heavily
2:43:57
into AI and they decided to eat their
2:44:02
own dog food, which is an old term
2:44:04
that used to be used in Silicon Valley.
2:44:06
Did they use AI for their company balance
2:44:09
sheet?
2:44:10
No.
2:44:11
They decided to take 1,000 people that
2:44:14
work there and have them study their use
2:44:17
of AI to see what effect it had
2:44:19
on productivity.
2:44:21
And it probably degraded productivity.
2:44:24
No, it did nothing.
2:44:27
Nothing at all?
2:44:29
Nothing at all.
2:44:30
One way or the other.
2:44:31
And you got this from Buzzkill Jr.?
2:44:34
Yeah.
2:44:35
You don't have to say it.
2:44:38
So nothing at all happened.
2:44:40
And so the CEO is concerned about this.
2:44:44
It's like, what's the point?
2:44:47
And so more studies are expected from different
2:44:50
companies to see what kind of...
2:44:52
If AI...
2:44:53
Because it's, oh, yeah, use AI, you can
2:44:56
increase your productivity.
2:44:57
And it shows, I think it does increase
2:44:58
productivity with, for example, our artists.
2:45:02
But it doesn't mean that it's good.
2:45:04
No.
2:45:05
But if we were a commercial operation and
2:45:08
we were looking for commercial viable art, we
2:45:12
would pretty much say no to everybody.
2:45:15
So they would have to go back and
2:45:16
do it anyway.
2:45:19
Well, anyway, something's amiss.
2:45:21
And he says that this is why Altman
2:45:24
came out with his commentary about, well, you
2:45:26
know, maybe we've gone too far, there's a
2:45:28
bubble, blah, blah, blah.
2:45:30
Because he doesn't want to get blamed for
2:45:32
when it finally starts to appear that AI
2:45:35
is a dud insofar as really being of
2:45:39
use in terms of productivity.
2:45:41
I mean, it's fun.
2:45:43
It's very fun.
2:45:44
It's fun.
2:45:45
You have fun with it more than anybody.
2:45:46
I've got lots of fun.
2:45:48
It's fun, but it's not productive necessarily.
2:45:51
And it's going to be a...
2:45:54
He's now my son who's an AI.
2:45:58
He's on board with your thinking.
2:46:00
Which is the end is near.
2:46:03
AI winter is coming.
2:46:05
But I also...
2:46:06
What's his timeline?
2:46:07
Did he give you a timeline on when
2:46:09
he thinks it's going to happen?
2:46:10
I threw back at him his own thoughts
2:46:13
earlier about jumping the shark and after jumping
2:46:16
the shark, you have a period of time,
2:46:18
a two or three year period before it
2:46:19
actually anything really is.
2:46:21
It's just a marker.
2:46:23
And I said, when is it jump the
2:46:24
shark that you're going to get the marker
2:46:25
you're always talking about?
2:46:27
And so he can't.
2:46:28
So he doesn't have it?
2:46:30
It's not happening tomorrow.
2:46:31
Let's put it that way.
2:46:31
No, it won't happen tomorrow.
2:46:33
It will happen when...
2:46:34
He says three years.
2:46:35
It'll happen when people actually have to pay
2:46:38
the actual cost of this stuff.
2:46:42
That's when it's going to happen.
2:46:43
And I think open AI is starting to
2:46:45
show those signs where $200 a month and
2:46:49
you still get limited on chat GPT-5
2:46:51
and it's getting pricey now.
2:46:56
There is one other AI story that I
2:46:58
just wanted to put on your radar because
2:47:00
you also watch YouTube from time to time.
2:47:03
There's a lot of YouTubers who are claiming
2:47:07
and circumstantial evidence shows it that when they
2:47:12
upload video to the YouTubes that what comes
2:47:17
back excuse me, what comes back appears to
2:47:23
be AI upscaled is what they're saying.
2:47:26
And what it really means is everything looks
2:47:31
kind of AI-ish.
2:47:34
You know, it's like enhanced, hair looks more
2:47:37
enhanced.
2:47:37
It looks kind of, you know how Scaramangas
2:47:40
videos look kind of slick and slimy and
2:47:43
then glossy.
2:47:44
You know what I mean, right?
2:47:46
AI has a certain look.
2:47:48
There's a look.
2:47:49
And they're all saying they're AI upscaling.
2:47:52
What I think is happening is that YouTube
2:47:56
has had to, or Google has had to
2:47:58
change so much of their architecture to do
2:48:00
all this generative AI stuff that they've had
2:48:04
to take all of their YouTube encoding machines
2:48:06
and make them AI generative friendly just to
2:48:12
be able to handle the load.
2:48:13
And they're like, well, screw it.
2:48:14
We'll just make everything look that way.
2:48:17
I would have a different take.
2:48:19
What's your take?
2:48:22
That somebody a bean counter said, can we
2:48:24
make these files smaller and look better?
2:48:28
Well, it's the same thing.
2:48:29
Yeah, I know, but it's for a different
2:48:31
reason.
2:48:31
The reason is it's overhead.
2:48:33
No, no, it's the same reason.
2:48:34
We needed the machine, so just do it
2:48:37
all this way.
2:48:38
So let's shrink these things and make them
2:48:40
look good.
2:48:41
Shrunk.
2:48:42
So the file size is smaller.
2:48:45
And we can free up some space on
2:48:48
our drives.
2:48:51
Hey, man, our drive's getting full here.
2:48:54
Let's free up some space.
2:48:55
AI, all that stuff.
2:48:57
Let's just go for it.
2:48:58
We can do it.
2:48:59
We can do it.
2:49:00
Yeah.
2:49:01
All right.
2:49:03
I'll keep my eye on that.
2:49:04
I haven't really caught him in the wild.
2:49:07
I have not seen any evidence of this,
2:49:09
but I don't watch enough, I guess.
2:49:11
No, neither do I.
2:49:15
This was interesting.
2:49:16
There's some DEI stuff.
2:49:18
This was kind of an interesting take.
2:49:21
This is, I believe, I'm not sure which
2:49:23
network this is from.
2:49:24
Target CEO now plans to step down after
2:49:26
struggling to turn around weak sales.
2:49:29
Brian Cornell announced today that he would leave
2:49:32
the position on February 1st after 11 years
2:49:34
at the helm.
2:49:35
He will be replaced by Target's chief operating
2:49:37
officer.
2:49:38
The change in leadership comes at the same
2:49:40
time Target reported another quarter of sluggish results.
2:49:44
The company has seen flat or declining sales
2:49:46
in eight out of the past ten quarters.
2:49:49
The retail giant was the target of a
2:49:51
nationwide boycott several months ago after backtracking on
2:49:55
its DEI initiatives.
2:49:56
So this report leads me to believe that
2:49:59
people are not going to Target because they
2:50:03
got rid of their back to school rainbow
2:50:05
stuff.
2:50:07
I think this is true.
2:50:09
And I've always been, on the DHM Plug
2:50:12
Show, I've always condemned Target for being too
2:50:15
woke and ruining the business, and the CEO
2:50:17
has to quit.
2:50:19
And I've been saying this for years, and
2:50:20
now these guys quit.
2:50:21
It'll be interesting to see what happens.
2:50:22
Although he didn't really fully quit.
2:50:24
He's been boosted to chairman of the board,
2:50:27
and they brought in his COO as the
2:50:28
new CEO, so it's probably going to be
2:50:30
the same, I'm guessing.
2:50:32
But, you know, everybody's handled this poorly except
2:50:35
Costco.
2:50:37
Costco is the only operation that avoided this
2:50:41
dilemma, which is what we have here at
2:50:43
Target, by Costco saying, we're not changing any
2:50:46
of our DEI policies.
2:50:49
We're going to stay the course.
2:50:51
They don't really have any DEI policies, so
2:50:55
they're just this bull crap.
2:50:56
They barely have any people working on the
2:50:59
floor.
2:50:59
They have people, but they don't have that
2:51:02
many.
2:51:02
Yeah, they're handing out snacks.
2:51:04
Would you like a cracker?
2:51:05
So they did the best job of it
2:51:07
by saying they're not changing anything, and so
2:51:10
a bunch of these pressure groups, and there's
2:51:13
one group in particular, a new one that
2:51:14
just came around, I don't know, I don't
2:51:17
have a clip of him, but a new
2:51:18
guy who's in the footsteps of Jesse Jackson
2:51:22
and Al Sharpton's another guy, another pastor, and
2:51:26
he's the one creating, going to create a
2:51:28
he's creating boycotts against Target and the old
2:51:33
extortion scam that works.
2:51:37
It's good.
2:51:38
It works.
2:51:39
It's a great gig.
2:51:40
It's great.
2:51:41
Well, the other DEI news was President Trump
2:51:44
and the Smithsonian.
2:51:45
This country cannot be woke because woke is
2:51:47
broke, wrote U.S. President Donald Trump on
2:51:50
his website, TruthSocial Tuesday.
2:51:52
The latest target in his administration's culture war?
2:51:54
The Smithsonian Institution, which encompasses 21 museums, 14
2:51:58
education and research centers, and the National Zoo,
2:52:01
mostly located in Washington, D.C. The museums
2:52:04
throughout Washington, but all over the country, are
2:52:06
essentially the last remaining segment of woke.
2:52:10
The Smithsonian is out of control, for everything
2:52:12
discussed is how horrible our country is, how
2:52:15
bad slavery was, and how unaccomplished the downtrodden
2:52:18
have been.
2:52:19
Nothing about success, nothing about brightness, nothing about
2:52:22
the future.
2:52:23
Traditionally, the Smithsonian has operated with independence.
2:52:26
The administration first targeted the historic educational institution
2:52:30
in a 27 March executive order, which sought
2:52:33
to rid it of a so-called divisive
2:52:35
race-centered ideology.
2:52:36
On August 12th, the White House sent a
2:52:38
letter to the institution announcing its intentions to
2:52:41
start the process by formal review.
2:52:42
Tuesday, Trump said his lawyers would begin.
2:52:46
We are not going to allow this to
2:52:47
happen, and I've instructed my attorneys to go
2:52:49
through the museums and start the exact same
2:52:52
process that has been done with colleges and
2:52:54
universities where tremendous progress has been made.
2:52:57
This is not the first time the Trump
2:52:58
administration has attempted to purge policies and ideas
2:53:01
it deems too progressive or favoring minorities.
2:53:04
A 20 January executive order took aim at
2:53:06
DEI, or Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion programs in
2:53:09
the government, universities, and across the nation.
2:53:12
Just nine days later, the Smithsonian Institution announced
2:53:14
it would end its Office of Diversity.
2:53:17
How much money?
2:53:19
You know, art can be anything, and I'm
2:53:21
fine.
2:53:22
Do whatever you want when it comes to
2:53:25
art, but when it's...
2:53:27
Well, the Smithsonian's not really an art museum.
2:53:30
No, no.
2:53:33
But they receive over a billion dollars in
2:53:36
federal grants.
2:53:38
Yeah, they're all upset.
2:53:39
I have a clip that you have to
2:53:40
look up in the database.
2:53:42
It's from show 90.
2:53:43
It's the Smithsonian supercut.
2:53:45
And it has to do with everybody bitching
2:53:47
and moaning about what Trump wants to do
2:53:48
with the Smithsonian, and this is a bunch
2:53:50
of people.
2:53:51
Everyone's against it because, you know, heaven forbid
2:53:54
that we change and make the story a
2:53:56
positive story.
2:53:57
I learned in history class that this is
2:53:59
how authoritarians operate.
2:54:00
They take over the arts, they take over
2:54:02
the culture, they take over the museums.
2:54:03
Purging history and pill-free museums is pretty
2:54:06
high up on the autocratic checklist.
2:54:09
I'd be worried about the Black Lives Matter
2:54:11
exhibit.
2:54:11
Others would say this sounds like a Stalinist
2:54:14
purge.
2:54:14
All of these things together hearken to a
2:54:17
lot of people, to the kind of countries
2:54:19
that Vladimir Putin would feel very comfortable.
2:54:22
This has just kind of a Soviet feel
2:54:26
to it, a Stalinist feel to it.
2:54:28
Yeah.
2:54:29
Well, all I saw was, and that was
2:54:31
in the New York Times, they were very
2:54:33
upset about the painting of, it was like
2:54:38
a black trans woman as the Statue of
2:54:43
Liberty.
2:54:45
Yeah, there you go.
2:54:47
All right.
2:54:50
Yeah.
2:54:52
A black trans woman as the Statue of
2:54:56
Liberty.
2:54:56
Oh yeah, with the torches, some flowers, and
2:54:59
yeah.
2:55:00
Typical kind of stuff.
2:55:03
Entertaining, but yeah.
2:55:04
It's out of control.
2:55:05
Yeah, it is a little bit out of
2:55:07
control.
2:55:10
I have a couple of clips.
2:55:12
I got the, I want to play this
2:55:15
clip.
2:55:15
This is what galls me personally because I'm
2:55:18
the one, I am the writer in the
2:55:20
late 80s who uncovered the fact that it
2:55:23
was Seuss who invented, Dr. Seuss who invented
2:55:29
the word nerd in 1950 in a book
2:55:32
that he wrote called If I Ran the
2:55:33
Zoo.
2:55:34
I think we've talked about this on the
2:55:36
show.
2:55:37
Yeah.
2:55:37
Yeah, we have, and it used to be
2:55:40
nerd was always assumed before I wrote about
2:55:42
this, and it got good coverage, and it
2:55:44
changed a bunch of dictionaries, because before I
2:55:48
wrote about this, it was always said, well,
2:55:49
it's, it was a diminution of the term
2:55:54
ne'er do well.
2:55:55
Ah, yes, I remember this.
2:55:57
And that was nerd, but no, it wasn't
2:55:59
it at all.
2:56:00
It was this, this looking, this nerdy character,
2:56:03
this nerd character that was in the book
2:56:06
who looked exactly like a AI guy back
2:56:10
in the day called McCarthy.
2:56:11
It looked just like him.
2:56:14
So, NPR decides to do a rundown on
2:56:17
this.
2:56:17
Of course, I have, I get zero credit,
2:56:19
and they assume that this is, they leave
2:56:21
a lot of good stuff out.
2:56:23
Of course, I'm, you know, I don't expect
2:56:25
to get credit from NPR for doing anything,
2:56:28
as you never even get credit for inventing
2:56:30
podcasting, and it's rare that you get invited
2:56:33
anywhere, but this is a common complaint that
2:56:35
we have, the two of us, about people,
2:56:38
their memory, and all the rest of it,
2:56:40
and so I found this very irritating to
2:56:42
listen to this nerd report on NPR.
2:56:45
What comes to mind when you think of
2:56:47
a nerd?
2:56:48
Steve Urkel from Family Matters, maybe?
2:56:51
Sheldon from the Big Bang Theory?
2:56:53
Well, you might be able to picture a
2:56:55
nerd, but the history of the word itself
2:56:57
is less clear.
2:56:59
For our latest Word of the Week feature,
2:57:01
we nerd out on some etymology.
2:57:03
Here's NPR's Joe Hernandez.
2:57:06
Nerds.
2:57:06
Nerds.
2:57:07
Nerds.
2:57:07
Nerds!
2:57:08
What is a nerd?
2:57:09
The movie Revenge of the Nerds was released
2:57:11
in 1984 and pitted some brainy college students
2:57:15
against their jock tormentors.
2:57:17
It solidified the nerd stereotype.
2:57:19
By that point, though, the word had been
2:57:21
around for decades, but nobody's exactly sure where
2:57:24
it came from.
2:57:25
Adam Aleksic is a linguist and a content
2:57:27
creator who goes by the name the etymology
2:57:29
nerd.
2:57:30
I've been making videos as the etymology nerd
2:57:33
for a while, and so it's my job
2:57:35
to know what the etymology of nerd is.
2:57:37
But the problem is that it's a little
2:57:38
bit obscure.
2:57:39
Perhaps the first known instance of nerd appearing
2:57:42
in print was in the 1950 Dr. Seuss
2:57:44
book, If I Ran the Zoo.
2:57:46
According to the online etymology dictionary, it potentially
2:57:49
developed from the 1940s word nerd, an alteration
2:57:53
of the word nut that meant a, quote,
2:57:55
stupid or crazy person.
2:57:57
Aleksic says if Seuss actually came up with
2:57:59
the word, it's what linguists call a nonce
2:58:02
formation, meaning it was created for one purpose
2:58:04
and then reused.
2:58:06
So if Dr. Seuss did coin the word
2:58:07
nerd, he's probably going off other words like
2:58:10
nerd, which was around, or nuts, or it
2:58:13
just sounds like something that could be a
2:58:15
nerd.
2:58:15
And then he goes with it, and then
2:58:16
other people are like, yeah, that sounds like
2:58:17
a nerd.
2:58:18
Let's go with it.
2:58:19
In the 70s and 80s, nerds were all
2:58:21
over film and TV.
2:58:22
And then toward the turn of the millennium,
2:58:24
they started becoming kind of cool.
2:58:26
Pop culture historian and author Matthew Klickstein says
2:58:29
things like the 90s independent film movement and
2:58:32
rock bands wearing thick rimmed glasses started making
2:58:35
the weirdos, the misfits, the outsiders, the nerds,
2:58:38
the geeks, cool.
2:58:40
Okay, so what exactly, what's the credit that
2:58:43
you want?
2:58:45
That I'm the one who found a Dr.
2:58:48
Seuss reference.
2:58:49
I even talked to Seuss and his associates
2:58:52
about it with a phone call because he
2:58:55
was alive at the time, and they were
2:58:57
unaware of the fact that he's the one
2:58:59
who coined the word.
2:59:00
I want an email writing campaign.
2:59:05
I want everybody to write NPR and tell
2:59:09
them that you are very disappointed in their
2:59:12
non-accreditation of historian columnist John C.
2:59:19
Dvorak that they did not credit him in
2:59:22
this article and you demand, demand a correction.
2:59:29
Yeah, and they're going to do what they
2:59:31
do, which is ignore anybody's notes.
2:59:34
You're just wasting your time.
2:59:35
I just found it annoying.
2:59:37
I'm with you.
2:59:38
Yeah, I'm with you.
2:59:39
I'm highly annoyed for you even.
2:59:41
In fact, to this day, we still be
2:59:45
thinking it came from someplace else until I
2:59:48
dug it up, and it took a little
2:59:49
work.
2:59:50
I think we should have a new word.
2:59:52
Let's bring back some old words.
2:59:53
How about square?
2:59:55
Square man.
2:59:56
He's a square man.
2:59:58
How about drip?
2:59:59
My mom used that a lot.
3:00:00
Drip.
3:00:01
Drip's still a good word.
3:00:02
He's a drip.
3:00:04
Yep, drip.
3:00:04
We can use drip.
3:00:05
Yeah, I would say Adam Schiff would be
3:00:09
a drip.
3:00:10
He's a big drip.
3:00:11
All right, one more.
3:00:12
Five-minute warning here.
3:00:14
Well, what do we got?
3:00:15
Well, you're the one with the clips.
3:00:17
I have a few left.
3:00:18
Okay, well, we got the ...
3:00:20
I don't want to do that.
3:00:21
Here.
3:00:21
This is a good one.
3:00:22
This is kind of a politically correct.
3:00:27
They're still in Germany.
3:00:28
They can't get over it.
3:00:29
Here's Germany.
3:00:30
They changed the name of a street.
3:00:34
They did?
3:00:35
Because it's racist.
3:00:36
Sorry.
3:00:37
Because it's racist.
3:00:38
The street name in Berlin has officially been
3:00:40
changed after campaigners successfully argued that the original
3:00:44
version was racist.
3:00:46
Morenstrasse translates as Moor Street, referring to slaves
3:00:49
brought to Germany in the 18th century.
3:00:52
Here's our Europe regional editor, Paul Moss.
3:00:54
The word Moor was used for the people
3:00:56
of North Africa.
3:00:57
It was how Shakespeare described Othello.
3:01:00
But in Germany, Moor was a derogatory term
3:01:02
for African slaves.
3:01:03
And the presence of a Morenstrasse in the
3:01:06
middle of Berlin was long a cause for
3:01:08
complaint.
3:01:09
The local council agreed to change the name
3:01:11
five years ago, but some locals wanted the
3:01:14
original retained.
3:01:15
Now, following a long political and legal battle,
3:01:18
the name has been changed to Anton Wilhelm
3:01:21
Amorstrasse, after the first African philosopher to teach
3:01:25
at a German university.
3:01:28
Moorstrasse.
3:01:29
You know, the Dutch have a treat.
3:01:32
Usually comes in a pack of eight, I
3:01:35
want to say.
3:01:36
And it's kind of marshmallow covered with chocolate
3:01:40
on a little cracker.
3:01:42
And it looks a bit like a mini
3:01:45
boob.
3:01:46
Are you familiar with this?
3:01:47
No, I've never seen it.
3:01:49
So you bite into it, it's nice chocolate
3:01:51
with kind of a marshmallow-y, you know,
3:01:53
it's not really a marshmallow, marshmallow-y.
3:01:55
And when I was growing up, they were
3:01:57
called Negerzoene, which means Negro kisses.
3:02:00
Well, obviously that had to change throughout the
3:02:03
years.
3:02:03
And you know what they're called?
3:02:06
Moorkoopa.
3:02:07
Moorheads.
3:02:08
So, that shouldn't take too long before they
3:02:10
have to change that.
3:02:13
Now that the Moorstrasse...
3:02:14
I never thought of Moor as anything other
3:02:17
than a black person from North Africa that
3:02:19
was populating different parts of Europe.
3:02:23
And they were called the Moors.
3:02:25
It wasn't derogatory, it was just a comment,
3:02:28
it was a description.
3:02:30
And then Shakespeare used it.
3:02:33
But I guess in Germany it was derogatory.
3:02:36
We don't know that.
3:02:37
That could be bullcrap.
3:02:39
The Germans are off the rails.
3:02:42
I'm gonna show my school by donating to
3:02:44
No Agenda.
3:02:45
Imagine all the people who could do that.
3:02:47
Oh yeah, that'd be fab.
3:02:49
Yeah!
3:02:50
On No Agenda!
3:02:53
In the morning!
3:02:55
Well, they may be off the rails, but
3:02:57
that doesn't matter because we have people on
3:02:59
the rails.
3:03:00
Those are the people who support us.
3:03:02
$50 and above.
3:03:04
And still to come, we have some dynamite
3:03:06
end of show mixes.
3:03:07
John's tip of the day.
3:03:08
And we'll be welcoming our brand new Secretary
3:03:10
General.
3:03:12
After John, thanks to the rest of our
3:03:14
supporters for this episode.
3:03:16
Yeah, top of the list is our buddy
3:03:17
Dame Rita there in Sparks, Nevada.
3:03:20
She comes in every show now.
3:03:22
$108.24. And she does the date, too,
3:03:25
if you have noticed.
3:03:26
Yes, she does.
3:03:27
8-24.
3:03:28
We love it.
3:03:29
Milton Mais, 105-35.
3:03:35
Followed by the anonymous South African in exile.
3:03:40
And he's in Bucharest, Romania.
3:03:44
He's a long way from home.
3:03:45
105-35.
3:03:47
And this is his annual donation.
3:03:48
He says he needs some divorce karma.
3:03:50
If that's a thing.
3:03:53
I don't know.
3:03:54
I've had some myself, so yeah.
3:03:56
So we'll take care of you at the
3:03:57
end there.
3:03:58
No problem.
3:03:59
He says, again calling out my fellow anonymous
3:04:02
South African in exile on another continent as
3:04:07
twice the douchebag he was last year.
3:04:10
Douchebag!
3:04:12
I don't know who that guy is, but
3:04:13
he should be called out by name.
3:04:15
Yeah, really.
3:04:16
Dame Early Turtle in Topeka, Kansas.
3:04:21
Cute little town.
3:04:21
103-33.
3:04:24
Dame Denise in Camden, Ohio.
3:04:28
$100.85. And she's got a note here,
3:04:33
switcheroo for somebody.
3:04:35
For Leanne Taylor.
3:04:40
And Dame cannot be a douchebag for a
3:04:43
daughter who please de-douche her.
3:04:45
Leanne.
3:04:48
You've been de-douched.
3:04:51
She's the queen of cobalt.
3:04:54
Cobalt.
3:04:56
Programmers.
3:04:56
I'll bet she is.
3:04:57
Well, there used to be a machine called
3:04:59
a cobalt.
3:04:59
Yes, of course.
3:05:01
I think you have one.
3:05:02
Yes, I had the blue cobalt machine.
3:05:04
I sure do.
3:05:06
Infield, $100.
3:05:07
Daniel Fisher in Gwin, Michigan.
3:05:12
Kevin Sullivan in Wallingford, Connecticut.
3:05:15
$100.
3:05:16
He's been listening for 10 years.
3:05:18
Wow.
3:05:20
He's getting married.
3:05:21
Wants to shout out to his future smoking
3:05:23
-hot wife, Morelle.
3:05:26
Named after the tasty mushroom.
3:05:30
David Razorsec in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
3:05:36
$8008.
3:05:38
He's got a happy birthday call out for
3:05:40
someone.
3:05:40
We'll have that later.
3:05:41
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina.
3:05:43
He's our Stuka Luna lover of America, lover
3:05:45
of boobs and melons.
3:05:46
$8008.
3:05:47
Nicholas Leary in Columbus, Ohio.
3:05:49
$7272.
3:05:50
Joshua Jones in Shannon, Illinois.
3:05:56
J-O-E-N-S.
3:05:58
This is $6969 smart fart-sniffing donation.
3:06:04
We don't need that.
3:06:05
But okay.
3:06:06
Frank He's in
3:06:15
Carpentersville, Illinois.
3:06:19
$6502.
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From the Moss 6502 chip.
3:06:23
We need more of those.
3:06:24
Matthew Elwhart in Weatherford, Texas.
3:06:26
$60.
3:06:27
Sir Bias Grace in Jacksonville, Florida.
3:06:31
$5510.
3:06:33
Sir Dave Knight with an N in Boise,
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Idaho.
3:06:39
$5333.
3:06:41
Fall Lane Farm in Box Springs, Georgia.
3:06:44
$5272.
3:06:48
Okay.
3:06:49
Bob Newell.
3:06:51
He was overboard.
3:06:51
He's back.
3:06:52
Welcome back.
3:06:52
Yeah, he's back.
3:06:53
He was overboard.
3:06:54
He's back.
3:06:54
Bob Newell in Penferell.
3:06:58
Penferell.
3:06:59
I don't know how to pronounce that in
3:07:00
Pennsylvania.
3:07:02
$5250.
3:07:03
Baron Henry of the Outpost West in Rancho
3:07:06
Palos Verdes.
3:07:09
$5242.
3:07:09
And that brings us to the $50 donations
3:07:11
in there.
3:07:12
We just do names and locations.
3:07:15
Oh, did I say Andrew Benz?
3:07:17
He's in Imperial, Missouri.
3:07:19
You missed Forrest Martin too.
3:07:22
Okay, then Andrew Benz is $5505 also.
3:07:24
But here's the fifties.
3:07:26
Alexa Delgado in Aptos, California.
3:07:29
Melissa Alvarez in Ponta Verde Beach.
3:07:33
Vedra Beach, Florida.
3:07:35
Brett Denton in Boise.
3:07:37
Another Boise.
3:07:41
Brandon McDaniel in Groveland, Florida.
3:07:45
Michael Myers in Mandeville, Louisiana.
3:07:49
Sir Greg in Newport, North Carolina.
3:07:51
Dame Knight in Edmonds, Washington.
3:07:54
And last on our list is our Baron
3:07:57
Allen Bean in Beaverton, Oregon.
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I want to thank all these people for
3:08:00
making show 1793 a reality and a pretty
3:08:04
good show.
3:08:05
And, of course, thank you again to our
3:08:06
executive and associate executive producers for episode 1793.
3:08:10
And we thank everybody who came in under
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$50.
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We do not mention those.
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For security that we will not blow out
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someone who wanted to be anonymous.
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And, of course, we have our sustaining donors
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who they just sign up for anything, man.
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And we love it all.
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Value for value.
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Only you can determine what the value is
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and it can be very different for you
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from another person.
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So we appreciate the $4, the $3, the
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33s.
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We appreciate it all.
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Noagendadonations.com.
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Go there to support us.
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Any number is appreciated.
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And we love the numerology.
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Of course, your sustaining donations are welcome.
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Any amount, any frequency, go to noagendadonations.com.
3:08:49
It's your birthday birthday on No Agenda.
3:08:54
A nice list today.
3:08:55
David Razasek wishes his son Sarsaparilla Sarsaparilla.
3:09:02
There we go.
3:09:02
He turns 17 on the Oh, he turns
3:09:05
17 on the 22nd.
3:09:07
Sir Andy and Dame Kylie wish their beautiful
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son Eddie a happy one.
3:09:11
He turns 16 today.
3:09:12
Sir Tom XXV happy birthday.
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Dame Rhonda turns 57 today.
3:09:17
Dame Denise, her daughter Leanne Taylor turns 40
3:09:20
today.
3:09:21
And Molly Landry, her husband Toby Landry turns
3:09:25
40 on the 28th.
3:09:26
And Chris Ballant wishes his dad Bart a
3:09:29
very happy birthday August 28th.
3:09:31
Happy birthday from everybody here at the Best
3:09:33
Podcast in the Universe!
3:09:54
The titles are a-changin'.
3:09:57
Yeah, baby, the titles are a-changin'.
3:09:59
By request for Sir Ichabod, who now becomes
3:10:02
Baron Ichabod of the Bike Path Gorble, Protector
3:10:05
of the Seleucid Empire.
3:10:08
And I remembered for you.
3:10:09
We do have to hand out the karma
3:10:12
for those requested earlier.
3:10:14
You've got karma.
3:10:17
And now, ladies and gentlemen, for the very
3:10:19
first time, we are proud to present our
3:10:22
Secretaries General, who have supported the No Agenda
3:10:25
Show in the amount of $500, and have
3:10:27
requested to be Secretaries General, and we are
3:10:30
very happy to hand these certificates to them.
3:10:34
Steve Miller, Secretary General of Broken Supply Chains.
3:10:37
Andrew Miller, Secretary General of Parker County.
3:10:39
Sir Ichabod, Count Stephen, Secretary Generalship of Winder
3:10:43
and the Great Smoky Mountains.
3:10:46
And Jeffrey Ria, Secretary General of the Autonomous
3:10:50
Regions of Madeira.
3:10:53
These are very special people.
3:10:55
They shall always be addressed as the Honorable
3:10:58
Please welcome brand new Secretaries General of the
3:11:03
No Agenda Show!
3:11:05
Go to noagendarings.com to let us know
3:11:08
where to send your Secretary General certificates!
3:11:12
Welcome to the Secretary General!
3:11:15
Welcome to the What do you think?
3:11:23
I think it's good.
3:11:25
This is very underwhelming.
3:11:27
Well, I mean, I don't know what you
3:11:29
want me to say.
3:11:29
I mean, your presentations of these things is
3:11:32
always a high standard.
3:11:35
I take it seriously, man.
3:11:36
Secretary General is a real title.
3:11:38
It's important.
3:11:39
Yeah, it is.
3:11:41
Everybody.
3:11:42
All right.
3:11:42
Now, it's not over.
3:11:44
Oh, wait.
3:11:46
Before we get there.
3:11:47
We missed a Secretary General donation from DJ
3:11:49
Skyler Firestone.
3:11:53
And I guess it's important that I say
3:11:57
that he was here to represent the best
3:12:00
plumbing company in the Austin area, Mango Plumbing.
3:12:03
We offer free estimates and are here to
3:12:05
provide you with excellent plumbing repairs at an
3:12:07
affordable price.
3:12:10
Mango Plumbing.
3:12:12
Those guys make $150,000 a year, but
3:12:15
they will fix your pipes.
3:12:17
No problem.
3:12:19
Awesome.
3:12:19
All right.
3:12:20
Now, here's my blade.
3:12:21
Give me your blade.
3:12:21
We got two knights here today.
3:12:23
Here you go.
3:12:23
I got it.
3:12:23
Perfect.
3:12:24
There we go.
3:12:26
Oh, I love it when we have knights
3:12:28
and dames.
3:12:28
I haven't had any dames in a while,
3:12:30
but Steve Miller and Andrew Miller, both of
3:12:33
you hop up here because we saw Steve
3:12:37
support $1,000.
3:12:39
So that means I get to pronounce the
3:12:40
name.
3:12:41
He has Sir Render Knot, Secretary General of
3:12:43
Broken Supply Chains, and Sir Cuitous, Secretary General
3:12:47
of Parter County.
3:12:49
You both are knights, so for you, we've
3:12:51
got Hookers & Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay.
3:12:54
And we have IPAs, Philly Cheesesteaks from Jim's
3:12:57
and Basil Hayden, Dark Rye, Old Fashioneds, along
3:13:00
with our sparkling cider and escorts, Ginger Ale
3:13:03
and Gerbils, Breast Milk and Pamplemint, of course,
3:13:05
the Mutton and the Mead.
3:13:07
Go to noagenderings.com.
3:13:08
Take a look at those.
3:13:09
Well, you're going to be there anyway for
3:13:10
your Secretary...
3:13:11
Do we have it up yet?
3:13:13
The Secretary General form for people to submit.
3:13:17
Is it on noagenderings.com?
3:13:20
To where it will end up, yeah.
3:13:22
I'm not sure it's up yet.
3:13:24
It'll be up there soon.
3:13:25
I can't wait to see how beautiful these
3:13:28
are going to be.
3:13:30
Go there.
3:13:31
noagenderings.com.
3:13:32
Let us know what ring size you gentlemen
3:13:33
want, and we'll send it off to you
3:13:35
with some sticks of wax because they are
3:13:37
signet rings, and that enables you to seal
3:13:39
your important correspondence in grand fashion and style.
3:13:42
And as always, all rings are accompanied of
3:13:44
a Certificate of Authenticity.
3:13:55
Not just a place to find the first
3:13:57
responders in an emergency.
3:13:58
You can get connection there that will always
3:14:00
give you protection with these people.
3:14:02
And you know what?
3:14:03
Instead of just hanging out, talking about the
3:14:04
show, talk about what you can do to
3:14:06
make your community better, to change things, to
3:14:08
take away the elite's power.
3:14:10
You can do it.
3:14:10
I'm sure the local 5-1-12, the
3:14:13
Austin people, can do a fine job because
3:14:16
they do a lot of cool things, including
3:14:18
the float meet.
3:14:19
We have Sir Ducifer here with his report.
3:14:22
Alright, this is Sir Ducifer.
3:14:23
We are on the San Marcos River.
3:14:26
This is the meetup report.
3:14:28
In the morning.
3:14:29
This is Sir Doug.
3:14:30
We're having a wonderful time, thanks to No
3:14:33
Agenda.
3:14:33
Alright, so it's kid-friendly, not kid-approved.
3:14:37
This is Brendan from local 5-1-12
3:14:38
saying in the morning.
3:14:39
Butt up is something we say when we
3:14:41
hit the low parts of the river.
3:14:43
Butt up!
3:14:44
Alright, this is Sir Ducifer.
3:14:46
We're at Ivar's River Pub and this is
3:14:49
the second half of the meetup report.
3:14:51
This is Ditch Walker.
3:14:53
Great time.
3:14:53
This is Brendan from local 5-1-12
3:14:55
saying in the morning.
3:14:55
We had a great time on the river.
3:14:57
In the morning, this is Dean Shanarchy.
3:14:59
Connection is protection.
3:15:00
In the morning, this is Baron Serotonin.
3:15:04
In the morning, Baron Chris of North Austin.
3:15:06
Hello, citizens and slaves.
3:15:08
This is Baron Scott thanking my co-host
3:15:11
Rob Ducifer for taking over the float portion
3:15:14
for me in the morning.
3:15:15
This is Patrick Dew from Lumberton, Texas.
3:15:18
I just want to let you know that
3:15:19
the vibe here is quite chill.
3:15:23
It's a little too chill for my taste.
3:15:25
I don't see enough people angry, enough people
3:15:27
slamming tables, turning things over, demanding justice.
3:15:32
Alright, we had a few kids here.
3:15:34
A little human resources.
3:15:35
It was a lot of fun.
3:15:36
Alright, I'm John Zabinden and we're at Ivar's
3:15:38
River Pub.
3:15:39
How are we today?
3:15:40
Good, good.
3:15:42
Light drinking, light drinking.
3:15:44
Good barbecue food in the morning.
3:15:47
We're about to go hit the chutes.
3:15:49
Alright, there you go.
3:15:50
They got the server in there.
3:15:52
Very nice.
3:15:52
McKinney, they had their meetup.
3:15:54
Let's hear the report.
3:15:55
So what was the name of this meetup?
3:15:58
McKinney Media Mockery.
3:16:02
I'm Sir Joe.
3:16:03
Sir Chris of Saxxy.
3:16:06
Sir Shwetty.
3:16:07
Here's our server.
3:16:08
You just want me to say in the
3:16:10
morning?
3:16:10
You got it.
3:16:11
There you go.
3:16:12
In the morning.
3:16:13
In the morning.
3:16:15
And what's your name?
3:16:17
Bianca.
3:16:18
Bianca McSwiggins.
3:16:20
Excellent.
3:16:20
Excellent.
3:16:21
Alright, people getting their servers involved.
3:16:23
This is going to catch fire people.
3:16:25
Northeast Ohio.
3:16:26
Bring it on in.
3:16:27
Hey guys, I'm at the Northeast Ohio.
3:16:29
Sorry it's been so long meetup.
3:16:31
I'm going to pass the mic around.
3:16:33
This is Dame Ashley, Lady of the Lake.
3:16:35
This is Sir Real Estate at the Northeast
3:16:36
Ohio meetup.
3:16:37
I'm sure my wife said something very lovely
3:16:39
about me.
3:16:40
In the morning.
3:16:40
This is Sir Joby Juan.
3:16:42
Leave Dave Smith alone.
3:16:43
This is Audrey.
3:16:44
In the morning.
3:16:46
Hey, this is Nick from Medina.
3:16:47
In the morning.
3:16:48
This is Tracy Previn from Cleveland, Ohio.
3:16:53
In the morning.
3:16:54
This is Sir Christopher of Macedonia.
3:16:56
Meetup report.
3:16:58
Meetup report.
3:16:59
No agenda is still king, but Bitcoin is
3:17:01
the prince.
3:17:02
Meetup report.
3:17:03
We had a wonderful time.
3:17:05
A lot of conversations.
3:17:06
Great people.
3:17:07
Loved the people.
3:17:08
Everyone is great.
3:17:09
Everyone's looking at me right now.
3:17:11
I'm going to go into my spiel, but
3:17:12
not for longer.
3:17:13
Wonderful time.
3:17:14
In the morning.
3:17:15
This is Miss B, the bag lady, and
3:17:17
Sir NMNFT is handing out In the morning.
3:17:22
Tell me you don't want to be a
3:17:23
part of something like that.
3:17:24
You can be a part of that by
3:17:26
going to noagenda meetups.com.
3:17:27
There's a meetup taking place as we speak
3:17:29
in Carmel, Indiana.
3:17:32
That is the Outback Steakhouse Beef Tallow meetup.
3:17:36
That is Outback Steakhouse in Carmel, Indiana.
3:17:39
Still to come in this month, the Los
3:17:41
Angeles Flight No.
3:17:43
66 of the Noah Jenner's.
3:17:44
Leo Bravo hosting that on the 30th, and
3:17:47
Medford Lakes, New Jersey on the 31st.
3:17:49
We still have Madison, Alabama, Houston, Texas, Hofdorp,
3:17:52
Noord, Holland, the Netherlands, South Slocan, British Columbia,
3:17:57
Keyport, New Jersey, Oakland, California, Tilburg, Noord, Brabant,
3:17:59
the Netherlands again.
3:18:01
No, that's a different Netherlands.
3:18:03
Wow, there's so many groups.
3:18:04
And October 11th right here in Fredericksburg, Texas.
3:18:07
That'll be a fun one I will be
3:18:09
attending.
3:18:09
I hope to drag the keeper along with
3:18:12
me.
3:18:12
Noah Jenner meetups.
3:18:13
This is where you get your connection.
3:18:15
It gives you protection.
3:18:16
You can start one yourself if you don't
3:18:18
have one near you.
3:18:19
Go to NoahJennerMeetups.com.
3:18:21
Always easy and always a party.
3:18:42
If I recall, this is where we do
3:18:44
the end of Show ISO.
3:18:46
If I recall, you had two you were
3:18:47
keeping in abeyance from the last show.
3:18:49
You have three, I see.
3:18:50
Three.
3:18:52
Yeah, I do.
3:18:53
All right.
3:18:53
Well, let's start with yours.
3:18:54
Which one do you want?
3:18:56
Well, let's start with the one, the new
3:18:57
one, which is taken from, I thought this
3:19:00
was interesting.
3:19:00
This is therapy.
3:19:02
Will they save you money on therapy, do
3:19:04
you think?
3:19:06
Kind of muddy.
3:19:07
Muddy.
3:19:08
Yeah, it is muddy.
3:19:09
Okay, well then we'll go to the abeyance
3:19:11
ones.
3:19:11
All right, yeah.
3:19:12
We have Amazing.
3:19:14
That was amazing.
3:19:16
Okay, not bad.
3:19:17
Not bad.
3:19:18
There's Sleep.
3:19:19
Do these guys ever sleep?
3:19:20
Great show.
3:19:22
Wow.
3:19:23
I can beat that.
3:19:24
I can beat that.
3:19:25
Not with this one, though.
3:19:27
I think everybody loved it, all right?
3:19:29
I think the one that beats it is
3:19:30
this one.
3:19:31
Donate to the best podcast in the universe.
3:19:34
Huh?
3:19:35
Come on.
3:19:36
I couldn't understand it.
3:19:37
You couldn't understand it?
3:19:39
It was something about the best podcast in
3:19:42
the universe.
3:19:42
What was the beginning?
3:19:43
Donate to the best podcast in the universe.
3:19:47
Okay, I'm in.
3:19:49
There we go.
3:19:49
He's not only in, he has your tip
3:19:51
of the day.
3:19:52
Ladies and gentlemen, stand by.
3:19:53
Here he is, John C.
3:19:54
Dvorak.
3:19:56
Great advice for you and me.
3:19:58
Just the tip with JC Green.
3:20:02
And sometimes Adam.
3:20:05
So here's a cooking, not a cooking product,
3:20:08
but a salad product I think is salad.
3:20:10
Salad product.
3:20:11
And it is pumpkin seed oil.
3:20:15
It's a seed oil.
3:20:17
It's going to kill you.
3:20:20
It's expeller extracted.
3:20:21
You want the good stuff so it won't
3:20:23
kill you.
3:20:24
But pumpkin seed oil, you can not have
3:20:27
it if you don't want it, but I
3:20:28
discovered it, didn't discover it.
3:20:31
It was foisted upon me when on a
3:20:33
visit to Slovenia, of all places, where it's
3:20:36
used constantly in all the salad bars and
3:20:38
all over town, they always have a jar
3:20:41
of this pumpkin seed oil that they put
3:20:43
on everything.
3:20:44
Mostly on salads, like there's a normal salad
3:20:46
dressing and you add some pumpkin seed oil.
3:20:49
And I was told there, and you can
3:20:51
look this up, it might be true, that
3:20:55
it prevents prostate cancer.
3:20:59
And so pumpkin seed oil, which you can
3:21:02
get, you can get it from various sources
3:21:06
that carry a lot of different kinds of
3:21:08
variety of oils, and you can also buy
3:21:11
it on Amazon.
3:21:12
You don't want the pumpkin seed tablets or
3:21:15
anything like that.
3:21:16
You want the oil so you can use
3:21:17
it for the following recipe, which is perfect
3:21:20
for this tomato season.
3:21:21
We're in tomato season right now, right in
3:21:23
the middle of the tomato season.
3:21:25
Take and get the ripest tomato you can
3:21:27
and slice it, put it across the plate
3:21:30
and salt it with some fleur de sel
3:21:33
and then use pretty much equal amounts of
3:21:36
balsamic vinegar and pumpkin seed oil, which looks
3:21:40
like balsamic vinegar.
3:21:42
It's a dark toasted oil, so it's a
3:21:45
dark oil.
3:21:47
And just the combination of balsamic vinegar and
3:21:50
pumpkin seed oil and the salt and the
3:21:52
tomato, absolute killer.
3:21:54
Hey, tomato season, most people just go to
3:21:59
the supermarket and they see tomatoes all the
3:22:01
time.
3:22:02
Is it tomato season for American tomatoes?
3:22:05
Yeah, for our tomatoes.
3:22:07
The good fresh ones you want to get
3:22:09
at the farmer's market.
3:22:10
You don't want to buy grocery store tomatoes.
3:22:13
They're no good.
3:22:15
Got that Bill Gates wax on it.
3:22:18
You go to a farmer's market, everyone's got
3:22:20
a farmer's market, especially down in the south,
3:22:22
there's tons of them, where you can get
3:22:23
the super fresh tomatoes that are just picked
3:22:26
off the vine or grow some tomatoes yourself.
3:22:29
Do you recommend a particular type of tomato
3:22:32
for this?
3:22:33
One of the best tomatoes that generally grows
3:22:35
well everywhere is an ace.
3:22:37
Ace tomato?
3:22:39
It has a good tomato flavor.
3:22:42
It's not an heirloom by any means, but
3:22:44
it's a good tomato.
3:22:48
beefsteaks and all the rest of them are
3:22:49
all good.
3:22:50
They're tasty, especially if they come out right.
3:22:53
But this pumpkin seed oil and balsamic vinegar
3:22:58
on a tomato right now is dynamite.
3:23:00
There it is, ladies and gentlemen, your tip
3:23:01
of the day.
3:23:02
Get them all at tipoftheday.net.
3:23:14
Wow.
3:23:16
Now I'm going to go get me an
3:23:17
ace tomato at the HEB.
3:23:20
I'm sure they have them, or maybe not.
3:23:22
You never know.
3:23:24
I do love it when you do food
3:23:26
tips.
3:23:26
I think that's a good way to do
3:23:29
it.
3:23:29
People love the food tips.
3:23:30
People always love food tips.
3:23:31
You should do a book about this stuff.
3:23:34
Maybe a book about vinegar.
3:23:37
It's coming.
3:23:38
Yeah, I know it is.
3:23:41
Stay tuned to your noagenda stream, noagenda.stream,
3:23:44
trollroom.io if you want to hang out.
3:23:47
If you're already listening on a modern podcast
3:23:49
app, you're in good luck because it's coming
3:23:52
right up after we shut down our broadcast
3:23:54
stream.
3:23:55
Mere Mortals, the book reviews.
3:23:57
World Building on Steroids, Fellowship of the Ring.
3:24:01
It's a book review from Kyron.
3:24:04
Kyron and the gang there at the Mere
3:24:06
Mortals.
3:24:06
You will not regret it.
3:24:07
And if Shownet mixes, we have Robin Breedfeld,
3:24:12
we have Mel O'Dee, and we have Tom
3:24:15
Starkweather.
3:24:16
And I'm coming to you from the heart
3:24:17
of the Texas Hill Country, which will soon
3:24:20
be the location of the meetup on the,
3:24:22
well, 11th of October.
3:24:23
In the morning, everybody.
3:24:24
I'm Adam Curry.
3:24:25
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I remain.
3:24:28
I'm John C.
3:24:29
Dvorak.
3:24:30
We'll be back on Thursday with more media
3:24:31
deconstruction just for you.
3:24:33
Remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:24:35
Until then, adios mofos, a hooey hooey, and
3:24:38
such.
3:24:39
Clip of the day.
3:24:41
Clip of the day.
3:24:45
That's a clip of the day.
3:24:48
Clip of the day.
3:24:50
Good one.
3:24:51
That's a clip of the day.
3:24:54
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
3:24:55
day.
3:24:56
Clip of the day for pulling this one
3:24:58
out.
3:24:59
Clip of the day.
3:25:00
That's a clip of the day.
3:25:03
Clip of the day.
3:25:04
Clip of the day for pulling this one
3:25:06
out.
3:25:06
Good one.
3:25:07
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
3:25:08
day.
3:25:09
Clip of the day.
3:25:09
That's a good one.
3:25:11
Clip of the day.
3:25:13
That's a clip of the day.
3:25:15
Clip of the day.
3:25:16
That's a good one.
3:25:19
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
3:25:20
day.
3:25:21
Clip of the day.
3:25:22
Good one.
3:25:24
Clip of the day, man.
3:25:26
That's a clip of the day.
3:25:30
Clip of the day.
3:25:31
Give yourself a clip of the day for
3:25:33
pulling this one out.
3:25:34
I'm gonna give you a clip of the
3:25:35
day.
3:25:36
Are you hiding?
3:25:37
You're not hiding anything.
3:25:40
Pull back to the American people.
3:25:41
And if you are trying to hide something,
3:25:44
as many of Donald Trump's MAGA supporters apparently
3:25:48
believe, then Congress should actually work hard to
3:25:53
try to uncover the truth for the American
3:25:56
people.
3:25:58
He's dead, he's done.
3:26:00
Epstein died from suicide, Epstein died from suicide.
3:26:04
Epstein didn't kill himself, Epstein died from suicide.
3:26:09
Jeffrey Epstein conducted a conference called Confronting Gravity.
3:26:13
I don't know who Jeffrey Epstein was, but
3:26:14
I'll absolutely bet money that he was the
3:26:16
product of at least one or more elements
3:26:20
of the intelligence community.
3:26:21
The CIA, the FBI, those are all ours.
3:26:24
And there was Geeks, there were all these
3:26:26
guys, and I guess Epstein was there.
3:26:28
So I could have had the opportunity to
3:26:29
meet Epstein and say, well, what a creep,
3:26:30
or whatever I said.
3:26:31
I don't know, I probably wouldn't have said
3:26:32
anything.
3:26:32
Epstein died from suicide, Epstein died from suicide.
3:26:36
Epstein didn't kill himself, Epstein died from suicide.
3:26:41
He's dead, he's gone.
3:26:42
Criminal, criminal, look, look, wait.
3:26:45
Criminal, criminal, look, look, look, wait.
3:26:47
Criminal, criminal, look, look, look, wait.
3:26:50
You're elitist for a minute.
3:26:52
Where's my ice cream?
3:26:54
Ah, thank you.
3:26:55
I'll give them a B+.
3:26:56
I appreciate a bit more fire and spice.
3:26:59
There's an audience beyond the Senate.
3:27:01
And that is John Bolton's politicization of the
3:27:03
intelligence he got on Cuba and on other
3:27:05
issues.
3:27:06
Why would we want someone with that lack
3:27:08
of credibility?
3:27:08
I can't understand.
3:27:09
Clearly, that's what John Bolton represents.
3:27:12
He would tell in a captivating way that
3:27:15
the public would watch the most pernicious part
3:27:19
of the president's scheme.
3:27:20
And his love of conspiracy theories.
3:27:26
Partly him playing to their base and playing
3:27:29
to their audience, you know, the credulous boomer
3:27:32
rube demo.
3:27:33
Criminal, criminal, look, look, look, wait.
3:27:36
Conspiracy theories.
3:27:38
Criminal, criminal, look, look, look, wait.
3:27:41
Criminal, criminal, look, look, look, wait.
3:27:45
I think at the end of the day,
3:27:46
it all boils down to this.
3:27:48
Rick, that was a good one.
3:27:49
I needed that.
3:28:04
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