0:00
Bing, plong, plong, plong.
0:01
Yeah, that's good.
0:02
Adam Curry, John C.
0:04
Dvorak.
0:05
It's Thursday, September 11th, 2025.
0:07
This is your award-winning GiveOnNation Media Assassination
0:09
Episode 1798.
0:11
This is no agenda.
0:14
With nothing cutesy to say.
0:16
And broadcasted live from the heart of the
0:19
Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region Number
0:21
6.
0:21
In the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:24
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where we're noticing
0:26
they caught the guy, they let the guy
0:28
go, they caught him, they've got him, they
0:29
don't have him, they have him, they don't
0:31
know what they're doing.
0:31
I'm John C.
0:32
Dvorak.
0:33
It's Crackpot and Buzzkill.
0:35
In the morning.
0:38
Yeah, tough week.
0:41
Not a good week.
0:45
So, Todd Cochran.
0:46
Well, at least it didn't happen on a
0:47
show day.
0:48
No, gives us a little bit of time
0:50
to have nothing.
0:52
Todd Cochran passed away on, I think, Monday.
0:57
Which was, and do you know who he
0:59
is, Todd Cochran?
1:01
Well, I know his name, but I don't
1:03
know him.
1:04
Oh, he was one of the very early
1:07
podcasters, and he founded...
1:09
Oh, yes, you mentioned, yes, yeah, I did,
1:11
I did.
1:11
Well, I never met him, but I knew
1:13
who he was.
1:13
Right, and he, well, he was a no
1:14
-agenda knight, actually.
1:16
Yes.
1:17
And he founded Blueberry, and he just died
1:19
suddenly.
1:20
Literally, that's what the, uh, uh, what the
1:23
obituary said, died suddenly.
1:25
Of a heart attack, 61.
1:28
It's like, oh, okay.
1:29
Little young.
1:31
Yes, and today, of course, September 11th, where
1:35
we all have to remember that after those
1:39
devastating plane crashes everywhere, we found a hijacker's
1:45
passport.
1:46
Completely unscathed, but let's not forget that.
1:49
Let's not forget that.
1:51
But yesterday, man, Charlie Kirk.
1:54
I got a note from one of our
1:56
producers, an Iraq veteran, because it kind of
2:00
fits with September 11th, because why was he
2:02
there?
2:03
And he said, double sad day today.
2:06
Charlie Kirk yesterday, a true free speech assassination.
2:10
I saw a young Marine die in a
2:11
similar way in Iraq in 2005, and the
2:14
video of Charlie rocked me like it was
2:16
the first time seeing it.
2:17
Knowing Charlie more with his wife and two
2:19
kids and watching him for years and being
2:21
proud of the things he has done for
2:22
our young people.
2:23
I canceled all my meetings for today because
2:25
it's hard to stay focused because I'm time
2:27
traveling back to Iraq and it's just looping
2:29
in my head.
2:30
And he also said that the videification of
2:32
violence is just horrific, which is true.
2:37
You know, you and I've discussed, you're not
2:38
really on X like that with an algorithm.
2:41
You're just, uh, on the, on the website,
2:43
I think.
2:45
But it's always, my phone's in a drawer.
2:48
Yes, smartly.
2:49
It's always, everything you see is violence.
2:53
If you just scroll and if you let
2:54
the videos go, it's all just people beating
2:57
each other up.
2:57
That's if you keep picking it.
3:00
If you watch those, if you stop watching
3:02
those videos, you'll start getting something else.
3:04
Yeah, no, that's not true because I've tried
3:06
everything.
3:08
Tried everything.
3:10
Um, so you sent a couple of bonus
3:12
clips, which I want to start because I,
3:14
I presume you have the latest update, which
3:17
I don't have, but I'll just tell you
3:18
something changed in me yesterday.
3:21
This was something changed in me.
3:24
Something changed.
3:25
You know, we all went to church.
3:27
We prayed for Charlie, his friends, his family
3:29
prayed for our country.
3:31
I can't claim this show from this day
3:33
forward will ever could really be called no
3:35
agenda because from now on, I got an
3:37
agenda, an American agenda.
3:40
And that's based on what Charlie Kirk stood
3:42
for truth.
3:43
According to the word of God, I am
3:45
sick of it.
3:46
All sick of it.
3:48
Time to put down our phones and pick
3:50
up our Bibles.
3:51
Give me your bonus clips.
3:53
What you got?
3:54
Well, I have the teaser clip from ABC,
3:57
which is what brought me to the second
3:58
clip and the, um, because the second clip
4:03
kind of brings it.
4:04
Look, I was not expecting this.
4:07
I thought it was just, I thought we
4:08
will discuss this, but I thought this was
4:10
a professional hit.
4:12
I completely, I still think it was.
4:14
Well, to a point, but there's some conspiracy
4:17
aspect to it.
4:20
And being a professional hit, I led me
4:24
to believe that they're never going to catch
4:25
the guy because he already had, because from
4:27
what you can tell from what we've been
4:29
told is there were two decoys and which
4:34
is one more than usual that were both
4:37
picked up and let go.
4:41
And there was, uh, and the guy was,
4:44
you know, he was, it was a one
4:45
shot, which was important to note.
4:48
Bolt action rifle.
4:51
Supposedly.
4:52
Well, newsflash, nobody knows anything.
4:56
And the FBI is certainly the last to
4:58
know, apparently.
5:01
And, and, uh, so we have, uh, um,
5:07
this, this broke this morning from ABC.
5:11
Hi, I'm Diane Macedo.
5:12
Let's get right to breaking news.
5:13
The FBI is asking for help identifying this
5:15
man who they are calling a person of
5:17
interest in the shooting of conservative activist, Charlie
5:20
Kirk.
5:21
Sources tell ABC news ammunition found with the
5:24
rifle was engraved with messages about transgender issues
5:28
and anti-fascist ideology.
5:31
Yeah.
5:32
Really convenient in this case.
5:35
Well, I don't know how convenient it was,
5:37
but the point is that they brought it
5:39
in later.
5:40
They had a, there's a long presentation and
5:41
they, they had, uh, gotten as far as
5:44
they could with the, uh, with the story.
5:46
As far as I'm concerned, that teaser there
5:48
was probably the thing wrapped up in a,
5:52
in a nutshell, in a package.
5:56
So then we have this from this.
5:58
I picked up, I kind of, I retweeted
6:00
this and I took it down.
6:01
I said, I don't know, maybe not because
6:03
this is inflammatory, but I thought this clip
6:06
was, uh, quite interesting.
6:11
Yeah.
6:11
You got to tell me which clip that
6:12
is.
6:12
Cause it's trans.
6:15
Oh, hold on a second.
6:17
It was the second bonus clip.
6:20
I know I saved it.
6:22
Hold on a second.
6:23
I don't understand why it's not here.
6:27
Uh, I'm sorry.
6:31
I, I, I, I'm telling you, I saved
6:35
this clip.
6:36
And for some reason, you probably saved it
6:37
to wrong.
6:37
It probably went to a wrong folder.
6:39
Then, uh, it's foreboding.
6:41
Here it is.
6:42
Okay.
6:42
Hold on a second.
6:43
Sorry about that.
6:44
I'll cut this out.
6:45
No one will ever know the difference.
6:47
Oh, if, if, if, oh, if it's a
6:49
trans shooter, baby, the trans community.
6:52
So this person here goes to the university.
6:56
Of course, they, them, and look at what
6:59
he said yesterday.
7:01
He says here, Charlie Kirk is coming to
7:03
my college tomorrow.
7:05
I really hope someone evaporates him literally.
7:08
And then he writes, let's just say something
7:10
big will happen tomorrow.
7:14
So a trans student is saying this yesterday.
7:18
And I also find it very, very odd
7:21
that the person asking the question was asking
7:24
Charlie about trans shooters before he got shot.
7:27
So FBI cash, Mattel for the fuck this
7:30
dude is.
7:31
Yeah.
7:32
I think you should look into this.
7:34
Yeah.
7:35
No, that's a, I think we probably all
7:37
saw that post.
7:38
And the person who posted that after I
7:40
was like, no, no, no, I didn't do
7:41
it.
7:41
There are a lot of people saying, no,
7:43
no, no.
7:44
The other thing is the coincidence.
7:44
Cause the question was to Charlie, how many
7:47
trans shooters were involved in, you know, mass
7:52
shootings in the last 10 years?
7:54
And Charlie's answer was a little glib, which
7:57
was abnormal for him.
7:59
But it was a good, good.
8:00
It was good.
8:01
It was funny.
8:03
Okay.
8:04
Do you know how many transgender Americans have
8:06
been mass shooters over the last 10 years?
8:09
Too many.
8:14
I think it replays here.
8:17
Okay.
8:17
Now five is a lot, right?
8:18
I'm going to give you, I'm going to
8:19
give you some credit.
8:19
Do you know how many mass shooters there
8:21
have been in America over the last 10
8:24
years?
8:24
Counting or not counting gang violence.
8:26
Great.
8:32
So the, the, the time differential between him
8:36
saying too many and getting shot was 11
8:39
seconds.
8:41
And the, the coincidence is a little too
8:44
much for me.
8:45
Me too.
8:45
Because you had the guy posting this note
8:48
and then in total denial.
8:50
The next thing you know, you have a
8:51
trans guy asking a specific or trans.
8:55
I don't know if he was, he wasn't.
8:57
No, I don't think, I don't think he
8:58
was.
8:59
No, he was just some guy or dude
9:01
or they, them who knows, but some guy
9:04
at coincidentally asking a question about trans shooters.
9:07
And with 11 seconds, he gets shot.
9:09
And then we, now we have the report
9:11
from ABC that has these etchings on bullets
9:15
or something, which may or may not be
9:16
true.
9:17
But this, if this is lined up to
9:20
just sabotage, and there's also an Antifa angle,
9:24
according to ABC, there was Antifa stuff.
9:29
It's a little bit too much to expect
9:32
this to be a, a, an op anti
9:36
-trans op.
9:37
There's something going on.
9:39
Yeah, we have an enemy in America.
9:41
And if anything, that enemy is trying to
9:46
cause civil war because that's where we're headed.
9:51
And I don't buy that.
9:53
Oh, okay.
9:54
You don't buy it.
9:55
I know we're not headed to a civil
9:57
war.
9:57
World wars have been started over one guy
10:00
getting shot.
10:01
Yeah.
10:02
Okay.
10:02
So you say whatever you want, I'm telling
10:07
you how I feel.
10:08
And if anyone's to blame, if anyone's to
10:10
blame, it's the crap that we have on
10:12
television.
10:14
It's the crap that our politicians, it's the
10:16
crap that is repeated on social media.
10:18
And it's crap like this.
10:20
But following up with what was just said,
10:22
he's been one of the most divisive, especially
10:25
divisive younger figures in this, who is constantly
10:28
sort of pushing this sort of hate speech
10:31
or sort of aimed at certain groups.
10:33
And I always go back to hateful thoughts
10:37
lead to hateful words, which then lead to
10:40
hateful actions.
10:42
Exactly.
10:43
Let's hear an example.
10:44
I just don't even know why there aren't
10:46
uprisings all over the country.
10:48
And maybe there will be.
10:49
People need to start taking to the streets.
10:51
This is a dictator.
10:53
You know, there needs to be unrest in
10:54
the streets for as long as there's unrest
10:56
in our lives.
10:57
Enemies of the state.
10:59
Show me where it says that protests are
11:00
supposed to be polite and peaceful.
11:03
Do something about your dad's immigration practices, you
11:06
feckless vagal lowly kid.
11:08
How do you resist the temptation to run
11:10
up and bring her neck?
11:11
The biggest terror threat in this country is
11:15
white men, most of them radicalized up to
11:18
the right.
11:18
I thought he should have punched him in
11:20
the face.
11:20
I said, even if he lost, he insulted
11:21
your wife.
11:22
He came down the escalator and called Mexicans
11:24
rapists and murderers.
11:25
He said, well, what do you think I
11:25
should have done?
11:26
I said, I think you should have punched
11:26
him in the face and then gotten out
11:27
of the race.
11:28
He would have been a hero.
11:29
I'd like to punch him in the face.
11:31
I said, if we were in high school,
11:32
I'd take him behind the gym and beat
11:33
the hell out of him.
11:34
Punch some people in the face.
11:37
When was the last time an actor assassinated
11:40
a president?
11:41
They're still going to have to go out
11:42
and put a bullet in Donald Trump.
11:43
And that's a fact.
11:44
Look as his character is stabbed to death.
11:47
Where is John Wilkes Booth when you need
11:50
him?
11:50
I have thought an awful lot about blowing
11:54
up the White House.
11:55
A Missouri state senator is under investigation by
11:59
the Secret Service after saying she hopes President
12:02
Trump is assassinated.
12:03
I will go and take Trump out tonight.
12:06
And if you see anybody from that cabinet
12:09
in a restaurant.
12:25
And sadly, the domestic enemies to our voting
12:28
system and our honor and our Constitution are
12:32
right at 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue.
12:35
They're not going to stop before Election Day
12:37
in November, and they're not going to stop
12:38
after Election Day.
12:40
And that should be everyone should take note
12:42
of that on both levels, that this isn't
12:44
they're not going to let up and they
12:45
should not.
12:47
When you have weak people who clearly are
12:49
mentally ill, this this kind this kind of
12:52
rhetoric can stir people up to not job
12:56
stuff.
12:57
Well, that's definitely true.
12:59
But if you're going to blame anybody, if
13:02
we're going to go with the transgender angle,
13:04
I would blame the medical community.
13:07
I'm with you.
13:08
I'm completely with you.
13:10
But it's not just the medical community.
13:12
It's the lawmakers who are pushing for this.
13:15
The news that continuously pushes for this.
13:18
Political opinions that continue push for this.
13:22
Yeah.
13:22
And, you know, I'm also done with the
13:24
abortion baby killing.
13:25
I'm done with all of it.
13:26
I'm done with all of this crap.
13:28
And I'm also done with Israel.
13:30
Who may or may not.
13:32
I mean, if this was a if this
13:33
was a an assassin's hit.
13:36
Listen to what Charlie Kirk was saying about
13:37
Israel.
13:38
I have less ability sometimes online to criticize
13:42
the Israeli government about backlash than actual Israelis
13:45
do.
13:45
You're not allowed to.
13:46
It's even worse than that.
13:47
Like I host a person that I do.
13:50
I moderate the debate of my right.
13:53
And I give equal time to Josh Hammer,
13:56
equal time to a pro-Israel advocate.
13:59
And my moral character is being put into
14:02
question.
14:02
And so I just I think it's a
14:05
hyper paranoid.
14:06
Like we're just going to try to we're
14:08
going to just stamp out everything type type
14:11
of practice.
14:14
You can't go there when it comes to
14:16
Israel.
14:16
Well, you and I believe that we're Americans
14:18
and Americans first, period.
14:20
End of story.
14:21
We are citizens of this nation.
14:22
OK, and Israel, we have funded.
14:25
We have supported.
14:26
Not like we're going to.
14:27
But we're like, honestly, the way you are
14:29
treating me is so repulsive.
14:32
I have text messages, Megan, calling me an
14:34
anti-Semite.
14:35
But my moral character is now being put
14:38
into question, Megan.
14:39
Not my decisions.
14:41
Not like, hey, are you doing this?
14:42
Is it smart or is it dumb?
14:44
But no, I am a bad person if
14:47
I do this.
14:48
For all we know, this could have been
14:50
a warning to Trump.
14:52
Oh, you really you have a problem with
14:54
us bombing Qatar bombing people in Qatar?
14:57
You got a problem with that?
14:58
I wouldn't put it past Bibi Netanyahu.
15:01
He's off the rails, that guy.
15:03
He's gone too far now.
15:05
Well, that's something of a stretch.
15:06
Although you'd be curious that you now agree
15:08
with Natalie and Clayton.
15:11
I'm not agreeing.
15:12
I'm saying for all we know, we don't
15:14
know anything.
15:15
Well, that's their thesis.
15:16
What I do know.
15:19
Is for people saying, what was this airplane?
15:22
The assassin left on a private plane.
15:24
He left the airport just, you know, just
15:26
right after Kirk was shot.
15:28
But the airplane, November eight, eight, eight kilo
15:32
golf was actually the plane Charlie Kirk traveled
15:35
on most.
15:36
I know this because when I saw him
15:38
speak in Dallas, we landed our little four
15:42
seater at Addison Airport.
15:44
And I saw and that was the.
15:46
If it was Addison, that was the only
15:49
plane I saw.
15:50
And I spoke to the people there and
15:51
they told me that that was Kirk's plane.
15:53
And it's it's like a net jet.
15:54
So it can leave, it can stay overnight
15:56
whenever, whenever and wherever they need it.
15:59
So that's that's not true.
16:02
But.
16:03
The ignorance, the ignorance of people, you know,
16:07
we have the Patriot Academy here and.
16:12
You know, which is they they teach young
16:14
people how to introduce bills and how to
16:18
argue them on the floor and how to
16:20
make them politically savvy to get them into
16:24
government.
16:25
And so they were going to create Constitution
16:28
City, which would be like a small, you
16:30
know, 200 person city.
16:33
It's a 1776, you know, Patriot Way, whatever.
16:37
It's all QC.
16:38
If you see what people post about them
16:41
online, it's unbelievable.
16:44
Burn it, bomb them.
16:46
Maybe this will be another Waco.
16:47
They'll kill each other and do the rest
16:49
of us a favor, nuke it, let them
16:51
die by their bigotry.
16:53
People are ignorant and they and all they
16:56
do is they sit on their phones all
16:57
day and listen to nonsense and nonsense politicians
17:00
and nonsense talking heads.
17:02
And they believe this stuff.
17:04
And then you get people.
17:05
I only have one of them because it's
17:07
just too annoying.
17:08
What's the this is just a perfect example.
17:11
White woman, green hair.
17:13
Some be very fucking clear about this so
17:14
that, you know, exactly where I stand.
17:16
And I will say this with my whole
17:17
entire chest.
17:18
There are some people on this app that
17:20
are sitting there saying, oh, you shouldn't wish
17:22
death upon any person, no matter what side
17:25
they're on.
17:26
Fuck that.
17:28
Fuck that.
17:29
Charlie Kirk was a fucking Nazi.
17:31
He was a fucking Nazi.
17:33
And you know what kind of Nazi is
17:34
the best Nazi?
17:35
A dead one.
17:37
Thank God that shit stain of a person
17:40
is no longer in this world.
17:43
And may his hell be being confronted by
17:46
every single marginalized person that he hurts.
17:50
That is what is fucking wrong with you.
17:52
That does not make me a bad person
17:53
for thinking that bad people should not be
17:56
in this world.
17:57
So fuck that Nazi and have a great
18:00
day.
18:01
And, you know, you've seen it.
18:02
There was a lot of this everywhere.
18:04
Oh, there's some gems, you know, and my
18:07
favorite proverb fools find no pleasure in understanding,
18:10
but delight in airing their own opinions.
18:12
That is exactly what that woman is.
18:15
So.
18:17
We hopefully we'll find out.
18:19
Hopefully we'll figure this out, man.
18:21
If it was Netanyahu.
18:25
It wasn't Netanyahu.
18:27
Oh, you don't know that.
18:28
You don't know anything.
18:30
Remember, we just found the passport for the
18:32
hijackers.
18:33
But to go out of the blue with
18:38
Netanyahu is just ridiculous.
18:40
I don't care what you think about my
18:42
ridiculous assertions.
18:43
I'm not leaving anything off the table.
18:47
Anything.
18:48
There's.
18:48
Well, how about how about this?
18:51
The whole thing was it was a staged
18:54
and it was an extraction.
18:56
No, I don't.
18:57
Oh, you just left something off the table.
18:59
OK, I just wanted to clear that up.
19:01
Please show me the evidence.
19:02
Or do you have.
19:03
Show me the evidence of Netanyahu.
19:05
I have no evidence other than a very
19:07
targeted hit.
19:08
I'm just pointing out that you're you are
19:10
leaving stuff off the table and you are
19:12
you're just being bigoted in some funny way.
19:16
I'm not being bigoted.
19:17
You know, I actually yesterday thought I would
19:20
stop doing this show.
19:21
I'm so sick and tired of you just
19:22
saying these things.
19:24
I have an opinion.
19:25
Do you tell me I'm bigoted?
19:27
Where's your green hair, dude?
19:32
I'm just saying.
19:34
But, you know, you'll get over it.
19:37
Let's listen to some analysis.
19:38
Maybe you'll get over it.
19:40
Maybe.
19:41
And maybe not.
19:42
Maybe.
19:45
So let's listen to some analysis about.
19:48
And I thought this was kind of interesting.
19:49
This is about the police work going into
19:52
this from some quasi spook character.
19:56
This is Kirk analysis, police work, NTD.
19:58
And joining us now to unpack the tragic
20:01
death of Charlie Kirk is Michael Letts.
20:03
He's a former Green Beret and law enforcement
20:05
expert.
20:06
He's also the CEO of Invest USA.
20:09
Michael, thank you so much for joining us
20:11
to discuss this tragedy.
20:13
First, what will federal law enforcement have to
20:15
do to figure out exactly what happened?
20:18
A large crowd of students were there, as
20:20
Charlie spoke, will need to be assessed.
20:23
The first thing we'll have to do is
20:24
go in and do the trajectory, find out
20:26
exactly where the round came from.
20:28
You know, it's kind of tragic that this
20:30
much time has passed without that being pinpointed.
20:33
But they're in the process of doing that
20:34
now.
20:35
Obviously, we'll have to match up the trajectory
20:38
with the exact location, the exact casing on
20:42
the shell, what type of rifle was used.
20:44
And then we're going to have to go
20:45
into the intel community, find out, chatter, find
20:48
out the list of suspects.
20:50
And that may be very broad, because obviously,
20:53
Charlie's message was controversial.
20:56
It was right on point, but it was
20:58
controversial.
20:59
And so there's a lot of people that
21:01
would seek to do him harm.
21:02
So we're going to have to make sure
21:03
that that gets done, gets done effectively.
21:05
The problem that it does bring is that
21:07
it could take some time.
21:08
But one of the things I want to
21:10
reassure the American people is that America stands
21:12
strong and firm, has always stood strong and
21:15
firm on the matters of patriotism and truth.
21:17
And this will not deter us in any
21:18
form or fashion.
21:19
And who is this guy?
21:22
Well, they introduced him at the beginning.
21:25
You can play that again if you want
21:26
to know.
21:27
But the thing that I thought interesting about
21:30
this clip was that the intel community has
21:33
a list of suspects just sitting around that
21:36
they keep track of everybody.
21:38
Let me listen to who that guy is
21:40
again.
21:40
Let me hear his intro.
21:41
And joining us now to unpack the tragic
21:43
death of Charlie Kirk is Michael Letts.
21:46
He's a former Green Beret and law enforcement
21:48
expert.
21:49
He's also the CEO of Invest USA.
21:51
Invest USA.
21:53
Well, I'll have to look that up.
21:55
But he clearly says Charlie Kirk had a
21:58
controversial message.
22:00
What was controversial to nut jobs?
22:03
Who was it controversial to?
22:07
It was obviously controversial to everybody at MSNBC.
22:10
Invest USA sells bulletproof vests.
22:16
OK.
22:18
Well, there's an expert.
22:22
Well, I mean, you can say what you
22:23
want.
22:24
Just play clip two.
22:25
And of course, right now, it's still early
22:27
stages.
22:27
But from your perspective, what kind of weapon
22:30
could have been used here today?
22:32
It definitely was a long range rifle.
22:34
I believe it was a sniper rifle, which,
22:36
quite frankly, if the case proves to be
22:38
accurate, then this was not some just off
22:41
the cuff, shall we say, disgruntled leftist personnel.
22:46
This would have been a well-coordinated and
22:47
a well-planned attack.
22:49
It would have been given a lot of
22:50
consideration, a lot of thought, which then narrows
22:53
the prospects of the suspects that we're looking
22:56
at.
22:57
But it also raises great concern.
22:59
Where do they stop?
23:01
Going after conservatives.
23:02
Obviously, they attempted to assassinate the president.
23:05
They've made other attempts on other personnel.
23:07
So where is their stop?
23:08
Where is their ending point?
23:10
Are they just determined to make sure they
23:11
continue this violence against the American people until
23:15
they get whatever it is they're looking for,
23:17
which obviously is a return of power?
23:20
Oh, so he's saying the Democrats, basically.
23:25
Yeah, that's what he's saying, basically.
23:28
Democrats.
23:30
And all those clips that you played earlier
23:33
of all the people shaking their fists and
23:35
asking for violence, if you noticed, they were
23:38
all Democrats.
23:39
Oh, completely.
23:40
You had Nancy Pelosi.
23:41
You had, what's her name, Doug Waters.
23:44
You had each and every one of them.
23:46
You had Rick, what's his name, the guy
23:49
who called for the assassination.
23:51
The Lincoln Project, whatever.
23:52
Rick Wilson.
23:53
You had everybody and their sister in that
23:56
clip series that you played.
23:58
You can play it again.
23:59
Don't.
24:00
Was all Democrats.
24:02
They're all Democrats.
24:04
Leftists, including news people.
24:07
I don't even think they were even that
24:09
much leftist.
24:11
They were all Democrats.
24:13
I mean, you can call a Democrat a
24:15
leftist, but I think they're just Democrats.
24:19
Okay.
24:20
I call them Marxists, socialists.
24:23
I just don't see Nancy Pelosi being a
24:25
Marxist.
24:26
She's a pure capitalist.
24:29
Okay.
24:33
But she's a Democrat.
24:34
And she was one of the people in
24:36
there, in that clip series.
24:39
Let's go to three.
24:40
And Michael, I've seen cancel culture and violence
24:43
rise at universities carried out against conservative speakers.
24:46
Do you expect what happened today to bring
24:48
about serious change in this regard?
24:51
Hold on a second.
24:52
Did I get the right one?
24:53
Is that clip three?
24:54
Yeah, I think so.
24:56
Well, the question will be, what kind of
24:57
change can it bring about?
24:58
Can you do one or two things?
25:00
Can it silence conservatives?
25:02
Absolutely not.
25:02
I think you're going to see more voices
25:04
that are going to rise up and take
25:06
the place of what Charlie was doing, such
25:08
an effective job of doing.
25:09
The second question is, can we provide better
25:11
security?
25:12
Well, you can provide better security if you're
25:14
keeping those conservative speakers in an enclosed area,
25:18
i.e. an auditorium, where you can check
25:19
people coming in, check people coming out, making
25:22
sure there are no terrorists or sniper shots
25:24
that could be done from advantaged buildings.
25:27
But that's not the case.
25:29
That was never Charlie's style.
25:30
And that's really not the style of conservative
25:32
America.
25:33
They want to be able to express their
25:35
opinions where people can be heard.
25:37
And that's on the streets, on the sidewalks.
25:39
And as long as that takes place, it's
25:41
very hard to continue to provide additional security
25:43
measures.
25:44
So I think you're going to see an
25:45
increase in this.
25:46
I think you're going to see an increase
25:47
in conservative voices being heard.
25:49
And until we, from the intelligence community and
25:52
a law enforcement standpoint, pinpoint the source of
25:55
all this and deal with its leadership and
25:58
bring it to justice, it's going to get
26:00
worse, not better.
26:02
That baffling to me is how Charlie Kirk
26:06
was one of the most guarded people in
26:09
America.
26:10
I mean, he had all kinds of security
26:13
measures.
26:13
How could they have missed this?
26:16
It's like, wow, this seems like a no
26:19
brainer, this one.
26:24
Well, they did talk about most of these
26:26
talk show guys, especially on Fox, they discussed
26:30
this in great detail.
26:32
And the final result was that you can,
26:37
you know, he had a contingent of pros
26:40
and there were some campus police involved, but
26:44
they didn't.
26:45
They all concluded it wasn't at the level
26:48
of the Secret Service where they would do
26:49
the checks of the buildings and have, you
26:52
know, counter snipers because Charlie didn't have that.
26:56
And it was just all personal protection for
26:59
that, you know, being, you know, the entourage
27:01
type protection for, for, for close in assaults.
27:06
No one ever, you know, considered a shot
27:08
from.
27:09
Well, that's, that's what I mean.
27:10
It's like, if you're in the business of
27:13
securing somebody who's getting constant death threats and
27:16
like, oh, we didn't think of that.
27:18
Well, I'm not going to argue about that.
27:21
But at the same time, the irony to
27:23
this is that maybe they do think about
27:26
that, but in Orem, Utah, Lily White, super
27:31
conservative, no crime area of the country, probably
27:36
Mac to the max, which is the perfect
27:38
location, perfect location.
27:41
That's my point.
27:42
You're making it for me.
27:43
That's my point.
27:44
Perfect location.
27:45
It is the perfect location, but it's also
27:47
the perfect place for you to drop your
27:49
guard.
27:49
Yes, that's what I mean.
27:51
Unprofessional.
27:54
Well, I don't know if, yeah, well, it's
27:57
natural.
27:58
Maybe it's unprofessional if you're completely paranoid, but
28:01
he should have done it inside in that
28:02
regard if that was the case.
28:04
But yeah, yeah.
28:07
And the guy's on the loose.
28:08
Anyway, this is the last clip.
28:10
And when we talk about accountability here, who
28:13
do you think authorities are going to look
28:15
at to figure out what were the events
28:17
that led up to something like this?
28:19
Well, I think you've got a number of
28:20
factors to look at.
28:21
First of all, a good old adage from
28:23
a law enforcement standpoint, where's the money?
28:26
Go to the money drill, follow the money,
28:27
follow the paper.
28:28
Yes.
28:28
And so who's financing these?
28:30
Who's financing the ability for this to transpire?
28:32
You know, it's not cheap for long range
28:34
drivers.
28:34
It's not cheap to plan the logistics and
28:36
these kind of things.
28:37
So find out where the funding sources are
28:39
coming from.
28:40
Second of all, find out what the players
28:41
are.
28:42
You're not going to get somebody just fresh
28:44
off the street to do this.
28:45
This took a professional, somebody who knew what
28:47
he was doing and who knew how to
28:49
handle the accuracy of that fire weapon.
28:52
So those are the kind of issues that
28:53
we're going to have to look for.
28:55
Find out who is in the process of
28:57
organizing and already has been organized for that
29:00
matter.
29:01
And by being already organized, they're using their
29:04
resources to try to counter conservative message, to
29:07
try to bring forth a revolution, shall we
29:10
say, of liberal liberalism and liberal ideas.
29:13
Those are the ones you want to target
29:14
and investigate.
29:15
You'll find your answers when you go there.
29:16
No, he makes a very good point.
29:18
A revolution of sorts.
29:20
Yes.
29:21
Yes.
29:22
Seems right.
29:24
Seems right to follow the money and bust
29:27
it up.
29:27
That's the simplest solution.
29:29
Yeah.
29:30
And I think we know where half the
29:31
money is coming from.
29:32
Where?
29:34
Soros.
29:39
Open Soros.
29:40
I'm with Glenn Beck on this one.
29:43
The Open Society Foundation, because Soros is practically
29:46
dead himself.
29:47
Well, yeah, but this foundation is that he
29:49
peopled it with, you know, he knew how
29:51
to how to staff an office.
29:54
Let's just play this Kirk Report NPR kicker.
29:57
This is from NPR.
29:58
Hold on a second.
30:01
Conservative activist and Turning Point USA co-founder
30:05
Charlie Kirk has died, shot at a college
30:08
campus in Utah.
30:09
As NPR Steven Fowler reports, the 31-year
30:12
-old helped usher in an age of in
30:14
-your-face conservative politics that resonated with young
30:18
voters, especially young men.
30:20
Charlie Kirk was well known as an energizing
30:22
speaker and organizer, getting young conservatives registered to
30:25
vote and ultimately activating a key demographic for
30:28
a party that has struggled with young people.
30:31
At 18, he co-founded Turning Point USA
30:33
as a college campus free speech organization.
30:36
I had the crazy and wild idea, I
30:39
want to try to start a youth organization
30:41
to try and save Western civilization.
30:43
It evolved into an empire with annual summits,
30:47
faith leader outreach and successful media platforms.
30:50
Kirk was speaking at Utah Valley University at
30:52
what was supposed to be the start of
30:54
a 15-campus American comeback tour when he
30:56
was shot.
30:58
Steven Fowler, NPR News.
31:00
Kirk was shot as he was taking questions
31:02
from the audience about gun violence in the
31:04
United States.
31:05
Wow.
31:09
The number of NPR clips that I have
31:12
where they finish off, usually cut them short
31:14
before the guy says, he signs off with
31:16
I'm so-and-so with NPR, which the
31:18
reporter did.
31:20
It is unbelievably rare that then all of
31:23
a sudden the host kicks in an extra
31:25
little tidbit.
31:27
That one is not rare for NPR.
31:30
They are just.
31:30
No, it's very rare for NPR to, I
31:33
mean, that's their attitude.
31:34
But the kick in the tidbit at the
31:36
end when it's not in the main report
31:38
is fairly rare.
31:40
Believe me, because this is one of my
31:42
main things I clip from.
31:44
And when I heard that, what was the
31:46
point?
31:47
Just to put a little gun, little gun
31:49
action in there, a little anti-gun stuff.
31:52
I just thought it was, I thought it
31:55
was chicken shit.
31:56
Bad, you know, just bad, bad form.
31:59
It was a lie.
32:00
It was not true.
32:01
It was bad form.
32:03
And also notice how they say he has
32:05
died.
32:06
Not he was killed, he was murdered, he
32:08
was assassinated.
32:09
He has died.
32:11
It's very subtle, but that makes a difference.
32:14
Yeah, no, you're right.
32:15
That's a good catch.
32:16
And this is NPR.
32:18
This is the, you know, they just don't
32:20
know.
32:21
And I think the media somewhat, especially these
32:23
guys, the public media is somewhat beside itself
32:27
because it's doesn't know what to how to
32:31
handle this because it's like they know they're
32:35
the bad guys.
32:36
Do they?
32:37
Do they?
32:38
Do they really know?
32:39
They think there's some when this only now,
32:42
I mean, something like this happens.
32:44
I don't think they generally know they're the
32:46
bad guys.
32:46
But I think when something like this happens,
32:48
it kind of reminds them that they might
32:50
be the bad guys.
32:53
And so they it's interesting to watch them
32:56
because they position things differently than they normally
32:59
do.
33:00
Now, do you consider Charlie Kirk's turning point
33:03
to be a political organization or something else?
33:07
Well, Charlie, the way I see this, Charlie
33:10
Kirk is one of those rare people that
33:13
that had a genuine calling during college quits.
33:19
I mean, Bill Gates is the same kind
33:21
of guy.
33:22
Wow.
33:23
I really think so, because I'm not the
33:26
current Bill Gates after he got pied in
33:28
the face and it changed his personality.
33:29
But but the original Bill Gates, he just
33:33
saw something.
33:34
He had a vision, quit Harvard to start
33:37
a software company and became the world's richest
33:39
man for a long period of time.
33:43
And Charlie Kirk was the same kind of
33:46
guy.
33:47
I mean, for an 18 year old or
33:48
to develop an operation that resulted in him
33:51
having private planes and and 850 branches and
33:56
around the around the country of his of
33:59
Turning Point USA and a big headquarters and
34:02
a well or organized structure.
34:06
This business was highly structured.
34:09
And for him himself to become one of
34:11
the top and the only way to describe
34:13
it, I was thinking about this a few
34:15
shows ago.
34:16
About people like Charlie Kirk, who which is
34:20
not easy to do, but he's genuinely a
34:23
polemicist and people should kind of look that
34:27
up and know what that is.
34:28
And a polemicist is a type of debater
34:31
that that is designed to always win the
34:35
arguments and probably could argue from both sides.
34:38
And it's a skill set that is I've
34:40
only seen a few people capable of.
34:42
Gore Vidal was one of the great polemicists
34:45
on the left and Christopher Hitchens was a
34:49
good one.
34:50
There's others out there that come and go
34:52
and they've been here and there.
34:54
A William F.
34:56
Buckley, probably even though he was kind of
34:59
a show off because he was more interested
35:01
in expressing his vocabulary and showing it off.
35:06
But Kirk was one of the best.
35:09
And he and he had developed it, I
35:11
think, largely through trial and error by doing
35:14
a lot of these these events with the
35:16
students for the last 10 years.
35:18
And he who knows what his future was,
35:21
but it was not going to be minor.
35:25
And he was this whole thing.
35:29
If it was caused by a trans, a
35:31
trans issue, that's kind of a like there
35:37
should have been better reasons to shoot him.
35:40
But that wasn't my question.
35:44
What was your question?
35:45
I lost track of it.
35:46
You clearly.
35:48
Do you consider Turning Point USA to be
35:51
a political organ?
35:52
Of course I do.
35:53
Have you ever seen a rally of Charlie,
35:56
Charlie Kirk?
35:56
I've watched this stuff on video.
35:59
But he wasn't there like just shilling for
36:02
Republicans or the conservative party.
36:06
But he wasn't shilling for anybody.
36:07
He was lecturing people, lecturing them on what?
36:10
On truth.
36:12
No, he was lecturing.
36:13
Well, there's that element.
36:15
But he was lecturing them on on.
36:19
Countering liberal ideas that are that are put
36:24
to them, their basis for thinking the way
36:28
they do and countering it in a very
36:31
effective way by by confronting it and having
36:35
public debates.
36:37
Right.
36:38
So cultural, cultural, because that's what he talked
36:42
about.
36:43
All his answers were about cultural issues that
36:46
he disagreed with.
36:49
And as far as I can tell, what
36:51
that turned into when Trump came along was
36:54
here's the guy you want to vote for.
36:56
But I'm pretty sure that this was a
36:59
faith organization.
37:01
Well, you can say that, but the fact
37:03
that the Trump administration and the Trump people
37:05
themselves say if it wasn't for Charlie Kirk,
37:07
they wouldn't have gotten the youth vote.
37:10
And Charlie Kirk was a big part of
37:11
their campaign.
37:12
Yes.
37:13
But that seems political to me.
37:15
But that's not what the organization was.
37:18
I'm not I'm not disagreeing.
37:20
No, you asked me if what you asked
37:22
me and I answered what I answered.
37:23
OK, and I know you like to see
37:25
it as just purely a church type of
37:28
thing.
37:28
I don't see that.
37:29
No, not a church type of thing.
37:31
Although the outreach they had was to faith
37:34
leaders everywhere.
37:35
That's really what they did.
37:36
And yes.
37:38
They also tried to install people everywhere in
37:41
politics that had the same message, the same
37:44
meaning, the same belief, for sure, which I
37:48
think was a very good idea.
37:51
But to call this purely political?
37:54
No, no, I disagree.
37:57
Here's the actress AOC telling us what really
38:01
is going on.
38:02
What one congresswoman was saying was yelling a
38:04
Republican said there was Democrats fault.
38:07
Democrats did this.
38:08
That's what we heard her say on the
38:09
House floor.
38:09
I mean, people can finger point all they
38:13
want.
38:14
Look at the record.
38:16
Look at the actions of what we are
38:18
doing.
38:18
I don't think a single person who has
38:20
dedicated their entire career to preventing gun safety
38:24
legislation from getting passed in the House has
38:27
any right to blame anybody else but themselves
38:30
for what is happening.
38:31
We have to stop this.
38:34
We can stop this.
38:35
And why don't we start by by acknowledging
38:38
that basic common sense gun safety legislation is
38:42
not taking away a gun, is not attacking
38:45
the Second Amendment, but it is about ensuring
38:47
the safety of our children, of women, of
38:51
people across this country to ensure that guns
38:54
and firearms do not get in the hands
38:56
of people who are going to use them
38:58
against human beings.
39:00
Period.
39:01
Domestic violence is one of the highest indicators
39:05
of whether a person is going to to
39:08
kill someone else with a gun or not.
39:10
There are so many other indicators, you know,
39:12
and I think it is so deeply important
39:15
that when when a politician tries to blame
39:20
words for an action, they need to look
39:24
at their action and their record.
39:27
We like enough of this.
39:28
This is horrific.
39:30
This is awful.
39:31
And the assassination of Charlie Kirk risks an
39:35
uncorking of political chaos and violence that we
39:39
cannot risk in America.
39:40
We cannot risk it.
39:42
It's amazing where she wasn't anywhere talking about
39:45
the nut job who stabbed that girl, that
39:47
young woman to death on the train.
39:49
Yeah, with a pen knife.
39:51
One of the highest indicators is not domestic
39:54
violence.
39:55
It's someone who's been in jail 14 times
39:57
and thought voices were talking to him.
40:02
From what I understand, the court records show
40:04
they arrested that guy for repeatedly misusing 9
40:10
-11.
40:11
And in January, his January arrest record states
40:14
he responded to officers during a welfare check
40:17
that he believed someone gave him man-made
40:18
material that was inside his body, controlling what
40:21
he ate, walked and talked.
40:23
Yeah, that's the latest.
40:24
That's an indicator of someone who's off the
40:27
rails.
40:27
That we do need to reopen some of
40:29
these insane asylums.
40:32
Yes, definitely.
40:34
We have one in Kerrville.
40:35
Stack it.
40:37
Here's Chicago, Illinois Governor JB Pritzker, who, of
40:40
course, blames this on Trump.
40:42
My sympathy to Charlie Kirk's family and to
40:45
Charlie Kirk, who obviously has become a target
40:52
for somebody.
40:53
I don't know whether it's political violence because
40:55
I don't know who did it.
40:56
I know they seem to have somebody in
40:58
custody.
40:59
But I will say that political violence, unfortunately,
41:02
has been ratcheting up in this country.
41:05
We saw the shootings, the killings in Minnesota.
41:08
We've seen other political violence occur in other
41:12
states.
41:13
And I would just say it's got to
41:15
stop.
41:16
And I think there are people who are
41:18
fomenting it in this country.
41:20
I think the president's rhetoric often foments it.
41:23
We've seen the January 6th rioters who clearly,
41:28
you know, have tripped a new era of
41:33
political violence.
41:34
Oh, yeah.
41:35
OK, this is another one for the list.
41:37
Put that guy on the list.
41:41
Anyway, in conclusion, this seemed way too professional
41:44
to me.
41:45
Neck shot from the roof, bolt action sniper
41:48
rifle, no trace of the perpetrator.
41:51
OK, we have a picture.
41:53
Boo hoo.
41:55
Now we have transgender anti-fascist markings on
41:59
the shell casings, it says.
42:02
And so we're told.
42:03
I only heard, yes.
42:04
But that's my point.
42:05
We found the hijacker's passport.
42:09
This smells.
42:10
This smells of some, not just some transgender
42:13
nut job.
42:14
No, that doesn't just, no.
42:20
Nothing about that feels right.
42:25
So anyway, well, the guy could have been
42:27
hired.
42:28
Yeah.
42:28
I mean, the job was follow the money
42:30
and follow the money.
42:31
Exactly what that guy said.
42:33
Yeah, I think following the money is the
42:35
only way to go.
42:35
And they're going to have to.
42:36
They're going to have to.
42:37
This and it's.
42:39
Yeah.
42:41
They got to.
42:41
They got to try to follow the money.
42:44
This is being orchestrated.
42:45
We've noticed this before, but it's worldwide.
42:48
Oh, yeah.
42:50
Yeah, it is.
42:51
And what you want to do is you
42:53
want to take this group of people that
42:55
didn't even exist 10 years ago, not the
42:59
way it exists today.
43:01
And you want to blame it on them.
43:02
It's almost like, like most prophecy of I'll
43:05
blame it all on the black women.
43:07
You know, it's like hype them up and
43:09
we'll blame it on them.
43:11
That's what it feels like.
43:13
It's always a distinct possibility.
43:16
Of course, now we have you brought up
43:19
the.
43:21
The issues of like where Europe is subject
43:25
to this.
43:26
What's the what is you think is going
43:28
on with France?
43:30
Oh, well, I know what's going on with
43:32
France.
43:34
I have two clips.
43:35
What's going on with France is they are
43:38
sick of of their government talking about sending
43:43
them to war against Russia and and taking
43:45
that money to arm up the country and
43:49
the European Union and not give them the
43:51
socialist stuff they want.
43:53
And they're 38 hour work week.
43:55
That's why they're mad.
43:59
France falls.
44:01
100,000 people were expected to join the
44:03
demonstrations, which aimed to block highways and parts
44:06
of France's public infrastructure.
44:08
Outgoing interior minister Bruno Retailleau said 80,000
44:11
security forces had been deployed across the country.
44:14
In Paris, a fire broke out in a
44:16
building and several firefighters were sent to the
44:18
scene.
44:19
Demonstrators voiced frustration after President Macron appointed a
44:22
new prime minister on Monday, the fifth since
44:24
his second term began in 2022.
44:28
Mr. Macron doesn't seem to understand that this
44:31
is not just a clash of heads.
44:33
We have them.
44:34
But that's what politics is.
44:36
We want it to be said clearly.
44:38
His agenda is against France, against the French,
44:40
against the people.
44:41
For example, look at the situation in the
44:44
hospitals.
44:45
They can't cope anymore.
44:46
Many people are losing their jobs.
44:48
I work in education.
44:50
I see teachers losing their jobs, something I've
44:52
never witnessed before.
44:53
We can't take it anymore.
44:57
We are facing a very deep social crisis.
45:01
I believe that today there is enormous anger
45:04
among the people.
45:06
I spoke with a nursery worker who is
45:08
furious.
45:09
She earns 1,600 euros but pays 800
45:13
euros in rent.
45:15
She is raising her daughter alone.
45:17
I've made some research about what's happening.
45:19
To me, I realized that our future is
45:22
at stake.
45:22
I had to come out to defend my
45:24
future, to defend this society and to defend
45:26
my homeland.
45:27
If it continues like this, I honestly hope
45:30
things change before I turn 40.
45:32
Is that an AI voiceover that I'm hearing
45:34
there?
45:35
I can't tell.
45:36
This protest was scheduled in July and was
45:38
highly anticipated in the country.
45:41
The prime minister decided to pull a confidence
45:43
vote two days before the demonstration in a
45:46
move to reaffirm the French people's trust in
45:48
his policies.
45:49
The move backfired against him and led to
45:51
the fall of the government last Monday.
45:53
So the way they start off the report
45:55
is like, well, he put in a new
45:56
prime minister they don't like.
45:58
That's the way it sounded to me.
46:00
Who did this report?
46:02
This was, uh, I think this was NTD.
46:08
Yeah, I think it was.
46:10
I don't have it.
46:10
I didn't make a note.
46:11
I'm sorry.
46:12
Let's play part two.
46:13
However, the protest itself is dividing the French
46:15
people.
46:16
The original goal to demonstrate it came from
46:18
grassroots movements, much like the yellow vest movement,
46:21
demanding lower taxes, but was later claimed by
46:24
leftist political figures, which then turned it into
46:27
a nationwide blockade led by unions and leftist
46:30
groups.
46:30
The protest where I'm standing at the moment
46:32
in Paris is the main protest that has
46:34
been organized under the slogan anti-fascism and
46:37
anti-racism block, which has little to do
46:40
with the original poll to demonstrate.
46:42
So while the protest shows a strong challenge
46:44
to the government, it also reveals fractures among
46:47
the French people.
46:48
The president appointed a close ally as his
46:50
new prime minister, Sébastien Lecornu, who took office
46:53
on Wednesday, facing the same challenge to rein
46:56
in France's ballooning debt as his predecessor.
46:58
David Vives, NTD News, Paris.
47:01
Oh, that's interesting.
47:03
So he said, oh, well, the leftists are
47:05
doing it, which is their word for Democrats.
47:08
But CBC had a short, very clear report
47:12
on what the problem is.
47:13
Protesters and police clashed in cities across France
47:16
today.
47:23
Police in Montpellier used water cannons and tear
47:26
gas to clear demonstrators.
47:27
Protesters, angry about austerity measures, obstructed highways, set
47:32
fires and barred access to some schools and
47:35
offices.
47:36
They're part of a massive online movement called
47:39
Block Everything.
47:41
Demonstrators say defense policies eat up public funds
47:44
that should be used for hospitals and schools.
47:47
Nearly 300 protesters were arrested.
47:50
Ah, Block Everything.
47:52
Where have I heard this before?
47:55
The French are kick-ass when it comes
47:58
to protests.
47:59
I mean, I still remember some years ago
48:01
during this show era where the farmers were
48:05
perked about something and they backed up these
48:07
giant combines and had these things that would
48:12
spray manure onto the...
48:15
Well, they've been doing that with the farmer
48:16
protests.
48:18
Yeah, they spray manure onto the parliament building
48:21
from a distance.
48:23
Well, this is quite creative.
48:25
This sounds a lot like Blackout the System.
48:29
Have you heard of this?
48:29
Yeah, which is coming on the 17th, which
48:31
I think is going to be a huge
48:32
dud.
48:33
Oh, no, it'll be nothing.
48:34
But nice web page they put together with
48:37
absolutely no information about who they are.
48:41
We're not asking, we're shutting it down.
48:43
The largest economic blackout protest in US history.
48:48
Blackoutthesystem.com.
48:51
And so they have, so it's speaking out
48:55
against injustice, that would be minorities, unity and
48:59
the power of the people, that would be
49:01
Marxist-Socialist, winning together.
49:03
Well, you know what that means.
49:06
Why we blackout the system?
49:08
We are done funding our own oppression.
49:10
We are done being silent while the system
49:13
exploits us.
49:14
They're funding it?
49:14
I didn't realize they were funding it.
49:17
Divides us and works against us.
49:19
This movement is peaceful, but it's powerful.
49:21
We are using the greatest leverage we have,
49:23
our unity and economic power.
49:26
They say they have no money, but.
49:28
To bring the system down to its knees.
49:30
No to dictatorship.
49:31
No to corporate greed.
49:33
No to blind obedience.
49:34
No to racism and oppression.
49:36
And no to fascism.
49:38
They forgot, no to Trump.
49:41
And no to everything America stands for.
49:45
But there's no, there's no, here, here's what
49:49
you should do.
49:50
Adjust your W-4.
49:52
Check your taxes.
49:53
Every paycheck they take more than you owe,
49:55
then give it back without interest at tax
49:57
time.
49:57
Adjust your W-4 so you keep more
49:59
in your pocket now, instead of letting them
50:01
use it all year.
50:03
Okay.
50:04
Starve the corporations.
50:06
Remove and withdraw your money from the banks.
50:09
Banks lend your money to corporations.
50:11
What do they want?
50:15
I'm looking at this website.
50:17
By the way, it's got a lot of
50:18
JavaScript.
50:19
These things are flying around.
50:20
It's pretty well done.
50:22
I told you.
50:22
Banks lend your money to corporations that purchase
50:25
politicians who make policies against the people.
50:28
Regional credit unions are a better option.
50:30
Well, we've been for that.
50:32
Cancel subscriptions.
50:36
Anything unnecessary, cut it.
50:38
Put your money back in your pockets and
50:39
drive a wedge between your resources and their
50:42
products.
50:43
And spread the word.
50:45
Shit.
50:45
This is from the, this, I mean, why
50:47
didn't they just put it on their Socialist
50:49
Party of America?
50:51
Oh, this is definitely a Socialist Party thing.
50:54
But then, but there's nothing.
50:56
And become a partner.
50:58
Become a partner.
50:58
There's no, no donation place, no donation thing,
51:02
which is odd.
51:03
Usually, you know.
51:04
Yeah.
51:05
Act blue on something there.
51:08
So this is something out of the blackout
51:10
pledge.
51:11
Okay.
51:12
But yeah, so that's a move.
51:13
And I'd say that's a global socialist move.
51:17
Well, yeah, it's global because right at the
51:19
bottom it says 50 states participating, 28 countries.
51:23
Oh, there you go.
51:24
Supporting.
51:25
So what's, what's, what 28 countries?
51:27
What are we talking about here?
51:28
Why?
51:29
Well, they have a handyman.
51:30
10 million engagement activity, 100% committed team,
51:33
which we don't even see.
51:34
Who is this team?
51:34
We don't know.
51:35
We don't know who the team is.
51:36
Isn't there a link to the team?
51:38
Oh, link to the wall of stolen wages.
51:42
Welcome to the wall of stolen wages.
51:46
We're stealing.
51:47
Oh, okay.
51:48
We're somehow, they're being stolen.
51:51
I get it.
51:52
A lot of unhappy people.
51:54
No, these people aren't unhappy.
51:56
They're happy.
51:57
I don't know if they're happy.
51:59
I really don't.
52:00
I think they're happy.
52:01
I don't think so.
52:02
Yeah.
52:04
All right.
52:04
So I think you have a couple of
52:05
clips as well.
52:06
This, uh, Israel targeting Hamas in Qatar.
52:12
Demanding an end to Israel's war in Gaza,
52:15
demonstrators shouted angrily at Israeli prime minister, Benjamin
52:18
Netanyahu, as his vehicle made its way through
52:21
a crowd north of Tel Aviv.
52:24
Netanyahu making clear today, nothing has changed in
52:27
his mind after yesterday's stunning Israeli strike into
52:31
Qatar, targeting the leadership of Hamas.
52:34
And I say to Qatar and all nations
52:36
who harbor terrorism.
52:37
What?
52:39
Targeting and missing.
52:41
In his mind after yesterday's stunning Israeli strike
52:44
into Qatar, targeting the leadership of Hamas.
52:48
And I say to Qatar and all nations
52:50
who harbor terrorists, you either expel them or
52:54
you bring them to justice.
52:56
Because if you don't, we will.
53:02
Yesterday's strike, which caught even the United States
53:05
off guard, left a number of Hamas members
53:08
dead, though Hamas says its leadership survived.
53:11
But the attack has upended attempts at a
53:14
ceasefire to the nearly two-year war and
53:17
its reinvigorated pushback against Israel.
53:21
Europe needs to do more.
53:24
In Strasbourg, France today, European Union Commission President
53:27
Ursula von der Leyen.
53:29
We will propose sanctions on the extremist ministers
53:33
and on violent settlers.
53:35
And we will also propose a partial suspension
53:38
of the Association Agreement on Trade-Related Matters.
53:43
Straight condemnation for the strike into Qatar, meanwhile,
53:47
continued on a number of other fronts, meanwhile,
53:50
in Saudi Arabia.
53:52
We reject and condemn Israel's aggressions on Qatar,
53:56
said Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, adding,
54:00
this attack requires an Arab, Islamic, and international
54:04
response to confront such aggression.
54:07
We stand with Qatar.
54:11
Very.
54:11
They don't even like Qatar.
54:13
What's that?
54:14
The Saudis don't even like Qatar.
54:17
Do we know that Trump didn't give the
54:21
go-ahead behind the scenes?
54:24
Well, he said he didn't.
54:25
Implausible deniability.
54:26
It has nothing to do with this.
54:28
I didn't know.
54:28
I don't know what this guy's...
54:29
This guy's nuts.
54:31
Well, President Trump said he did not know
54:34
about it until briefly before and then told
54:37
the Qataris that it was coming.
54:40
That's the official word.
54:43
From boots on the ground in Doha, local
54:46
concern about this was about sovereignty, not about
54:51
Hamas leadership.
54:51
Nobody here cares or likes Hamas.
54:55
Qatar just agreed...
54:56
This is boots on the ground.
54:57
Just agreed to try to mediate knowing Hamas
55:00
is insincere in all talks.
55:03
And also note that not one country has
55:05
suggested pulling out of the Abram Accords with
55:07
Israel since the war began, nor do they
55:09
care about the attack on Iran.
55:11
So this is, again, from Qatar.
55:13
Separately, a significant number of those reported killed
55:15
in Gaza are Hamas fighters and family members.
55:18
In general, there's indifference towards death outside the
55:23
Western world.
55:26
That's probably true.
55:27
Maybe they look at death differently than we
55:29
do.
55:30
We see it as kind of crappy.
55:35
Well, you know, there wasn't a great...
55:37
The reason Trump has to stay completely beyond
55:42
plausible deniability position, he needs to be in
55:46
that position because the United States is the
55:49
one who set up Qatar to be the
55:51
Doha, you know, where you have...
55:54
Hamas can be there so we can do
55:55
negotiations with them and they can be safe.
55:58
Well, right.
55:58
It looks pretty bad.
55:59
But they haven't done any negotiations.
56:02
So let's bomb the hell out of them
56:03
or kill them while they're there.
56:06
This whole thing is very suspect.
56:09
Oh, so you think Trump knew?
56:11
I do think he knew.
56:13
Because I stick with the thing that we're
56:15
running Israel.
56:16
They're not running us.
56:17
No, I don't think they're running.
56:19
If anything, I think they...
56:21
This is why I think they may have
56:22
gone too far.
56:24
I just don't see it.
56:28
Let's see.
56:28
This France 24 report has, I think, something
56:31
about it.
56:31
A show of solidarity from regional leaders, the
56:34
president of the United Arab Emirates and Crown
56:37
Prince of Jordan are in Qatar Wednesday, a
56:39
day after Israel's attack on its soil.
56:41
The Qatari prime minister said Tuesday it would
56:44
not be put off in its efforts to
56:45
mediate a deal between Israel and Hamas, but
56:48
didn't let Israel off the hook.
56:51
Mediation in Qatari diplomacy is part of our
56:54
identity and will continue.
56:56
Nothing will deter us from carrying out this
56:59
role.
56:59
Does the world need a clearer message than
57:01
this?
57:02
Who is closing the door to peace?
57:04
Does the international community need a louder signal?
57:06
Who is the bully in this region?
57:08
Hamas, who were discussing the Trump administration's latest
57:11
ceasefire proposal in Doha when they were struck,
57:14
said their targeting showed Israel didn't want to
57:16
reach an agreement.
57:17
Meanwhile, Israeli hostage family members expressed alarm that
57:20
the attack sabotaged any hope for those still
57:23
being held by Hamas.
57:24
President Trump, meanwhile, attempted damage control, issuing a
57:28
rare rebuke to Israel and calling Qatar, which
57:30
is home to the largest American military base
57:33
in the Middle East, a strong US ally
57:34
and friend.
57:35
Arab countries are increasingly concerned about Israel's belligerence,
57:39
and the attack risks undermining US credibility in
57:42
the region.
57:42
I think this is the final nail in
57:45
the coffin of any kind of negotiations that
57:48
is taking place between Israel and Hamas, as
57:50
far as it is mediated by Qatar.
57:53
Qatar has always been the diplomatic channel of
57:56
these negotiations, and it does not intend to
58:00
pay a direct price by playing this role.
58:03
And that is obviously the kind of consequence
58:06
that also Netanyahu and the Israeli government probably
58:08
expect to happen.
58:09
On Wednesday, Israel warned that its enemies were
58:11
not safe anywhere and that if it hadn't
58:14
succeeded in killing Hamas leaders this time, it
58:16
would the next.
58:18
Yeah, it just seems like it's our negotiators,
58:22
it's our idea, it's our proposal.
58:24
We've got a base there.
58:26
And then Trump's going to go, yeah, OK,
58:28
go ahead, kill him.
58:29
And then they don't kill him.
58:31
Well, that's the thing that probably irked Trump.
58:35
And Trump didn't go ahead and say that.
58:37
Like I said, he's in a position of
58:39
plausible deniability.
58:40
No, he didn't.
58:41
No, he's got nothing to do with it.
58:43
Trump is a politician at this point in
58:47
his life.
58:48
And this sort of thing can go on.
58:50
So what was the end game?
58:52
What was the benefit?
58:53
Well, we've given up.
58:55
The end game is that we've given up
58:57
on dealing with Hamas.
59:00
Hamas has to be completely wiped out.
59:02
It's just an impasse.
59:04
They won't negotiate with good faith.
59:06
And the negotiations they do, and they lie.
59:10
They're just a terrible group of people.
59:12
And the Palestinians support them.
59:14
There's nothing.
59:15
They're just going to have to let this
59:17
play out.
59:17
I don't know.
59:18
It's beyond me.
59:19
I think it's beyond Trump.
59:20
It's beyond everybody.
59:24
Well, for sure, they kept Iran out of
59:26
it.
59:26
And maybe that'll, maybe that'll help.
59:31
Yeah, maybe.
59:34
You got anything?
59:36
I did.
59:36
I think I may have.
59:37
Yes, you have ICC rebuke.
59:40
Oh, well, this is different.
59:41
This is from, this is actually a clip.
59:43
This started a while ago.
59:45
The ICC is going after Netanyahu, which is
59:49
maybe something here that, that applies.
59:51
Let's play this clip.
59:52
Israel released footage on Wednesday of terrorists fleeing
59:56
as an Israeli tank approached them in the
59:58
Gaza Strip.
59:59
Many of them attempted to take cover in
1:00:01
this tunnel entrance, but Israel struck the area
1:00:04
before one of the terrorists was able to
1:00:06
make it inside.
1:00:07
Israel also released an infographic showing where they
1:00:11
established security zones along the Gaza Strip border.
1:00:14
And after Operation Gideon's chariots, they increased that
1:00:18
security zone.
1:00:19
And Israel now controls about 75% of
1:00:22
the Gaza Strip.
1:00:23
A spokesman for the Israel Defense Forces said
1:00:25
that Operation Gideon's chariots enabled them to increase
1:00:29
operations in Gaza's largest city.
1:00:33
We will deepen the damage to Hamas in
1:00:35
Gaza City.
1:00:35
A stronghold of governmental and military terror for
1:00:39
the terrorist organization.
1:00:40
We are not waiting.
1:00:41
We have begun the preliminary actions.
1:00:44
And already now, IDF troops are holding the
1:00:46
outskirts of Gaza City.
1:00:48
On Wednesday, Israel said they were calling up
1:00:50
60,000 reservists to report for duty and
1:00:54
that they were extending current orders for 20
1:00:57
,000 reservists who were already deployed.
1:00:59
Meanwhile, the Israeli government gave the final approval
1:01:03
for plans to begin construction of a new
1:01:05
settlement east of Jerusalem.
1:01:07
Thousands of homes are expected to be built
1:01:10
in an area that would nearly divide the
1:01:12
West Bank into two parts.
1:01:14
An Israeli official said the new settlement would,
1:01:17
quote, bury the idea of a Palestinian state.
1:01:20
A representative of the Bedouin community in the
1:01:23
West Bank said they received demolition orders for
1:01:26
buildings in the area about a week ago.
1:01:28
And he called on the international community to
1:01:31
prevent Israel from establishing the new settlement in
1:01:34
the West Bank.
1:01:35
And in another development, the U.S. Department
1:01:37
of State issued further sanctions against two judges
1:01:40
and two deputy prosecutors belonging to the International
1:01:44
Criminal Court, which is supported by the United
1:01:46
Nations.
1:01:47
What a waste of money that thing is.
1:01:49
No one cares.
1:01:51
No one adheres to your stupid court.
1:01:54
International Criminal Court.
1:01:58
Well, they're always hoping it takes hold.
1:02:00
How long has that been?
1:02:01
30 years they've been trying for.
1:02:03
Forever.
1:02:04
No one cares.
1:02:05
There's a part.
1:02:05
There's a second part to this.
1:02:07
Secretary of State Marco Rubio said, quote, The
1:02:10
court is a national security threat that has
1:02:12
been an instrument for lawfare against the United
1:02:15
States and for our close ally Israel.
1:02:18
The decision comes after the court issued arrest
1:02:21
warrants for Israeli officials over the war in
1:02:24
the Gaza Strip.
1:02:25
And Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu in a
1:02:28
post on X praised the U.S. decision
1:02:30
and accused the court of conducting a smear
1:02:33
campaign against Israel and the Israel Defense Forces.
1:02:36
On the other hand, the United Nations said
1:02:39
the sanctions, quote, undermine the foundation of international
1:02:43
justice.
1:02:44
Oh, international justice.
1:02:46
Yeah, there's international justice.
1:02:48
The international part is the problem.
1:02:50
Yeah, there's no international nothing.
1:02:53
It's all men, everyone for himself at the
1:02:56
end of the day.
1:02:59
So I've been.
1:03:00
That's not this.
1:03:00
That's not the plan.
1:03:01
No, that's not the plan.
1:03:03
But the New World Order is not coming
1:03:05
to fruition the way they ever wanted it
1:03:07
to.
1:03:07
They've been trying that all my life, too.
1:03:09
Oh, the New World Order.
1:03:10
Here comes.
1:03:12
Yes.
1:03:13
And the Antichrist is arising.
1:03:15
Yes.
1:03:17
So I've been following this story in Germany,
1:03:20
and there was really no no clips or
1:03:24
anything on it.
1:03:25
This is about the sudden deaths of many
1:03:28
of the AFD alternative for Deutschland.
1:03:31
Oh, yes.
1:03:32
This is a story.
1:03:33
Then there's got to be some clips on
1:03:35
this.
1:03:35
Yes.
1:03:36
All of a sudden.
1:03:37
All of a sudden.
1:03:38
Well, all of a sudden is not entirely
1:03:39
true.
1:03:40
But yeah.
1:03:40
OK.
1:03:41
Well, all of a sudden, kind of.
1:03:43
But, you know, over time, they've been taking
1:03:47
out these AFD guys.
1:03:49
Yeah.
1:03:50
Well, one after the other.
1:03:51
What do you think?
1:03:52
Well, let's listen to the Euronews verify, verifies
1:03:55
without evidence, verify.
1:03:57
As many as six candidates for the far
1:04:00
right alternative for Germany party have died in
1:04:03
recent weeks ahead of local elections in the
1:04:06
state of North Rhine-Westphalia, and it's prompted
1:04:09
unfounded suspicions on social media.
1:04:12
On September the 14th, district, municipal and city
1:04:15
councils, as well as some mayors will be
1:04:17
elected in the western German state, with a
1:04:20
reported 20,000 candidates running for office.
1:04:23
Police have ruled out any foul play in
1:04:26
relation to these six deaths.
1:04:29
The causes range from serious pre-existing conditions
1:04:32
to suicide.
1:04:33
A senior official from Alternative for Germany itself
1:04:36
has also dismissed speculation that these deaths were
1:04:39
in any way intentional.
1:04:41
But there have also been clear attempts to
1:04:44
sow conspiracy and suspicions.
1:04:46
The party's leader, Alice Vidal, shared a post
1:04:49
on X where another user describes the death
1:04:52
toll as statistically almost impossible.
1:04:55
This theory has been amplified on social media
1:04:58
and by controversial public figures.
1:05:01
Here, British far right activist Tommy Robinson asks,
1:05:05
what's going on?
1:05:06
And the billionaire owner of X, Elon Musk,
1:05:09
comments, weird.
1:05:11
Conservative publications have also misleadingly described the deaths
1:05:15
as mysterious or unexpected.
1:05:18
The North Rhine-Westphalia Ministry of the Interior
1:05:20
has said that candidates from other parties have
1:05:23
also died in the electoral campaign, but that
1:05:25
these deaths have not sparked the same unfounded
1:05:28
suspicions.
1:05:29
The deaths do mean that ballot papers issued
1:05:32
in certain constituencies, as well as some mail
1:05:34
-in votes, are now invalid.
1:05:36
It also means the party will have to
1:05:38
nominate new candidates to replace the deceased.
1:05:41
So my takeaway from this in the most
1:05:45
vaccinated country in Europe, pretty much locked down
1:05:48
like dogs forever, 20,000 candidates that, you
1:05:54
know, this is it's not like the the
1:05:55
national parliament elections here.
1:05:58
This is this is all small elections all
1:06:02
over the country.
1:06:03
I mean, the suicide one I'd like to
1:06:06
know more about.
1:06:07
But, you know, 20,000 people die.
1:06:13
I'm a little less suspicious than I was.
1:06:16
Oh, so you think it's just a bunch
1:06:17
of vax deaths?
1:06:19
Yeah, probably.
1:06:21
And, you know, it's clickbait.
1:06:23
It's good clickbait.
1:06:24
Elon Musk, weird, weird, weird.
1:06:27
Stay on X, stay on X.
1:06:29
It's weird.
1:06:30
Yes, it's very, very weird.
1:06:33
And we also got a this was this
1:06:35
was kind of fun.
1:06:36
This is about the GPS jamming of Queen
1:06:38
Ursula's jet, which I think we pretty much
1:06:41
pulled apart for you on the last show.
1:06:44
They do the same here, but yeah, they
1:06:47
got to leave some doubt in the verify
1:06:48
segment from Euronews reports that European Commission President
1:06:52
Ursula von der Leyen's plane was targeted by
1:06:55
Russian GPS jamming as she traveled to the
1:06:57
Bulgarian city of Plovdiv on the 31st of
1:07:00
August have sparked major speculation.
1:07:03
The Financial Times first broke the story on
1:07:05
the 1st of September, reporting that von der
1:07:07
Leyen's plane circled Plovdiv airport for an hour
1:07:10
using paper maps to land.
1:07:12
We have received information from the Bulgarian authorities
1:07:16
that they suspect that this was due to
1:07:20
blatant interference by Russia.
1:07:24
But days later, on the 4th of September,
1:07:26
Bulgaria's Deputy Prime Minister Gorzhan Karazhov denied that
1:07:30
the government has submitted any information about Russian
1:07:32
interference to the European Commission.
1:07:35
In an apparent attempt to backpedal on those
1:07:37
initial claims, the country's Prime Minister Rozhan Zelenskov
1:07:41
said there was no evidence of prolonged interference
1:07:44
or jamming of the GPS signal around Plovdiv
1:07:47
airport.
1:07:48
The Prime Minister later said that although no
1:07:50
jamming had been detected by ground instruments, this
1:07:52
didn't exclude the possibility of on-board devices
1:07:55
detecting jamming.
1:07:56
Analysts from Flightradar24 told Euroverify that according to
1:08:00
their data, the aircraft maintained a good GPS
1:08:03
signal throughout the flight.
1:08:05
Their data also contradicted the Financial Times' assertion
1:08:08
that the aircraft circled Plovdiv for an hour,
1:08:11
as flight records reveal that the aircraft landed
1:08:13
only a few minutes late.
1:08:16
Although there are a plethora of doubts surrounding
1:08:18
this incident, Moscow has intensified GPS jamming tactics
1:08:22
in planes and ships since it launched its
1:08:24
full-scale invasion of Ukraine in February 2022,
1:08:28
primarily targeting the area surrounding the Baltic Sea.
1:08:31
Right, so I play these back-to-back
1:08:33
because if I don't believe one, why would
1:08:35
I believe the other?
1:08:36
What horse crap that is, Verify.
1:08:40
Well, you know, there's no evidence and the
1:08:42
GPS data shows through ADS-B that there's
1:08:44
no evidence but, you know, Russia's been doing
1:08:46
this.
1:08:47
They want war so bad.
1:08:50
Please give us war.
1:08:51
Whatever you do.
1:08:53
Well, it'll straighten out the French economy.
1:08:56
Oh, they need it for that very reason.
1:09:01
Germany has, everything's kaput, to speak in a
1:09:04
good German word.
1:09:04
Kaput.
1:09:05
Es ist kaput.
1:09:07
They've got no energy, they've got no industry,
1:09:10
they've turned the car factories into building tanks
1:09:13
and planes and other stuff.
1:09:15
They need this war, and which of course
1:09:18
puts this Russian drones in Poland into a
1:09:21
suspicious light.
1:09:23
And Nathan, we have more geopolitical news this
1:09:25
morning related to the war in Ukraine.
1:09:27
Poland has shot down drones that crossed into
1:09:30
its territory during a Russian airstrike on Ukraine.
1:09:33
The Polish military calling it an act of
1:09:35
aggression and the country's premier is asking NATO
1:09:38
allies for support.
1:09:39
Bloomberg Daybreak Europe anchor Stephen Carroll is in
1:09:42
Brussels and joins us live with the details.
1:09:44
Good morning, Stephen.
1:09:45
Good morning, Karen and Nathan.
1:09:46
Poland's Prime Minister Donald Tusk says his country's
1:09:49
airspace was violated by a huge number of
1:09:52
Russian drones in the early hours of this
1:09:54
morning.
1:09:54
Airports were closed for several hours while citizens
1:09:57
in the east were told to stay indoors.
1:09:59
It's the first time the NATO member has
1:10:01
shot down military aircraft that have strayed into
1:10:03
its airspace since the start of Russia's full
1:10:05
-scale invasion of Ukraine.
1:10:07
The EU's foreign affairs chief Kaya Kalas says
1:10:10
the incursion appears to be intentional.
1:10:12
The Polish Prime Minister has asked NATO to
1:10:14
invoke Article 4 of its treaty, which triggers
1:10:16
consultations on a military response.
1:10:18
Oh no.
1:10:19
Article 4?
1:10:20
We're at DEFCON 4.
1:10:21
Oh boy.
1:10:22
What does Queen Ursula have to say?
1:10:24
We have seen a reckless and unprecedented violation
1:10:27
of Poland and Europe's airspace by more than
1:10:31
10 Russian Shaheed drones.
1:10:34
Europe stands in full solidarity with Poland.
1:10:37
Yeah, war!
1:10:38
Woo!
1:10:39
We can do it!
1:10:40
Come on, everybody!
1:10:41
We got Article 4.
1:10:43
Article 4.
1:10:44
We're just one away from 5.
1:10:47
One away.
1:10:47
One away.
1:10:48
Which means they'll drag us, our ass, into
1:10:51
the whole thing.
1:10:52
Well, that's what they want, for sure.
1:10:54
I have a drones in Poland clip, too,
1:10:56
to see if there's anything different.
1:10:57
Okay.
1:10:58
Drones in Poland.
1:11:00
Russian drones reportedly entered Polish airspace on Wednesday.
1:11:04
Poland says it shot them down with the
1:11:06
backing of military aircraft from its NATO allies.
1:11:09
Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk says it's the
1:11:11
closest the country has been to open conflict
1:11:14
since World War II.
1:11:17
We are most likely dealing with a large
1:11:19
-scale provocation, but at the same time, we
1:11:22
are in consultation with our allies.
1:11:24
I am in constant contact with the NATO
1:11:26
Secretary General.
1:11:27
Prime Minister activated Article 4 of NATO's treaty,
1:11:31
under which— Wow, nice one.
1:11:32
He activated Article 4.
1:11:35
Is there a button that he has to
1:11:37
push?
1:11:39
Hello, everybody.
1:11:40
I am Mark Grzyta.
1:11:41
I'm activating Article 4.
1:11:43
Contact with the NATO Secretary General.
1:11:45
Prime Minister activated Article 4 of NATO's treaty,
1:11:48
under which Alliance members can demand consultation with
1:11:51
their allies.
1:11:52
The head of NATO says the organization is
1:11:54
still assessing the situation.
1:11:57
A full assessment of the incident is ongoing.
1:12:00
What is clear is that the violation last
1:12:03
night is not an isolated incident.
1:12:06
Russia, meanwhile, denies the allegations.
1:12:08
What?
1:12:08
It's not isolated because of that other drone
1:12:11
that the Ukrainians actually said was not from
1:12:16
Russia.
1:12:17
Remember that?
1:12:18
That was just two weeks ago.
1:12:19
Yeah.
1:12:20
Even the Ukrainians say, no, it wasn't from
1:12:22
Russia, but it's ongoing.
1:12:25
Engage Article 4.
1:12:27
What is clear is that the violation last
1:12:30
night is not an isolated incident.
1:12:32
Russia, meanwhile, denies the allegations.
1:12:35
The country's defense ministry issued a statement saying
1:12:38
its drones carried out a major attack on
1:12:40
military facilities in Western Ukraine, adding that it
1:12:43
had not planned to hit any targets in
1:12:45
Poland.
1:12:46
But Poland's Minister of Foreign Affairs says he
1:12:49
doesn't believe that, warning of possible escalation.
1:12:52
Even though NATO is not at war, Russian
1:12:55
aggression strikes beyond Ukraine.
1:12:58
The United Nations is now warning of a
1:13:00
possible wider conflict.
1:13:02
The regional impact and real risk of expansion
1:13:05
of this devastating conflict.
1:13:08
The incident comes just a few days after
1:13:10
a meeting between President Trump and the president
1:13:13
of Poland.
1:13:14
Some U.S. troops are stationed in Poland.
1:13:16
During the meeting, Trump was asked if the
1:13:18
soldiers are scheduled to stay there.
1:13:20
If anything, we'll put more there if they
1:13:22
want, but they've long wanted to have a
1:13:25
larger presence.
1:13:26
We have some countries that have more, not
1:13:29
too many, but no, they'll be staying in
1:13:31
Poland.
1:13:31
We're very much aligned with Poland.
1:13:35
The report goes on, but wasn't Trump the
1:13:39
guy who wanted to get all these guys
1:13:40
out of the world?
1:13:41
You know, we had these bases everywhere.
1:13:43
What happened to that?
1:13:45
Well, he's selling all the stuff now.
1:13:47
That's what he's doing.
1:13:50
I have, I have a couple of clips
1:13:52
from our guy analyzing this.
1:13:55
Oh, your buddy.
1:13:56
Yes, right.
1:13:57
Canadian guy.
1:13:58
The Canadian Andrew Soules.
1:14:00
What do you make of Russia's actions?
1:14:02
Do you believe that this was intentional or,
1:14:05
as Belarus says, it was all an accident?
1:14:08
It could be a combination of the two,
1:14:09
really.
1:14:10
I think we have to look at what's
1:14:11
happening strategically.
1:14:13
The Russians are mounting the beginning of their
1:14:16
fall offensive.
1:14:17
They have decided that they will not be
1:14:20
able to reach a compromise deal or a
1:14:22
deal that is in their favor with the
1:14:24
Ukrainians through any kind of negotiation at present.
1:14:27
So they are now on a war path.
1:14:30
They are now increasing their war effort against
1:14:32
Ukraine, both on the ground and in the
1:14:34
air.
1:14:35
And this was a continual range of large
1:14:38
scale attacks against Ukraine.
1:14:40
Now, the question is, were these missiles, which
1:14:42
sometimes do fly close to the Polish border
1:14:45
in order to hit Western Ukraine, was this,
1:14:49
as the Belarusians are saying, a jamming exercise?
1:14:52
Because they would be, the Ukrainians would be
1:14:53
jamming them.
1:14:54
So that's a possibility.
1:14:56
We'll have to see what the investigations are.
1:14:57
The other one, you know, if we want
1:14:59
to speculate, is the Russians are continuing to
1:15:03
signal to NATO and Western countries that, you
1:15:07
know, don't think about putting boots on the
1:15:09
ground in Ukraine because we're prepared to take
1:15:11
you on.
1:15:12
So that's a more aggressive interpretation.
1:15:14
I'm not saying that's what it is, but
1:15:16
it could be to show, look, we're going
1:15:18
to test your air defenses in case one
1:15:20
day we may have to fight you if
1:15:22
you put your boots on the ground, which
1:15:23
we've told you not to do.
1:15:24
So this is, I think, what's going on
1:15:26
here.
1:15:26
We don't know the ground truth yet, but
1:15:28
the investigations hopefully will reveal that.
1:15:30
I find the coincidence of Ursula clearly lying
1:15:34
about GPS jamming and now, well, the Ukrainians
1:15:39
might have been.
1:15:39
It's just there's too much jamming talk going
1:15:41
on, you know?
1:15:45
I agree.
1:15:46
And the thing that might also be going
1:15:49
on, because it's doable, is that you can,
1:15:52
if you can figure out what these signals
1:15:54
are that are controlling, take control of the
1:15:58
drones and then drive them over to Poland
1:16:00
and drop them in a bunch of fields,
1:16:02
which is basically what happened.
1:16:04
Yeah, well, here's he's talking about Article 4.
1:16:07
We've engaged Article 4.
1:16:08
So tell us more then about NATO's actions
1:16:12
moving forward.
1:16:13
As we mentioned, Poland is on high alert.
1:16:16
They have triggered now Article 4, which means
1:16:19
an emergency meeting of NATO allies, which of
1:16:23
course includes the United States, President Trump.
1:16:27
What will happen, do you think, next?
1:16:29
Well, this is all about firming up NATO's
1:16:33
eastern defense of its territories, the eastern flank,
1:16:37
which of course includes Canada.
1:16:39
Canada has the brigade in Latvia, for example,
1:16:42
very close to all of this.
1:16:44
So this means that NATO is taking now
1:16:46
whatever steps are necessary to beef up its
1:16:49
air defenses and its ground defenses as well.
1:16:52
But really, now we're talking air defense systems
1:16:54
in case there are any further incursions.
1:16:57
So it's a bit of a ramp up.
1:16:58
This is not a panic.
1:17:00
But this is Article 4, which has now
1:17:02
been activated, is a consultative mechanism.
1:17:05
It's been activated a few times before.
1:17:07
It is a logical stepstone, part of a
1:17:10
controlled escalation or counter-escalation, if you will.
1:17:14
And so we'll have to wait and see.
1:17:16
But everything is under control right now.
1:17:18
It's interesting.
1:17:19
It's tense, but under control.
1:17:22
I feel so much more comfortable when he
1:17:23
says that.
1:17:24
Everything's OK.
1:17:26
Article 4 is just a Zoom meeting, people.
1:17:28
Don't get your panties in a bunch.
1:17:30
We're just going to have a little call.
1:17:30
That's basically what he said.
1:17:32
But he also said it's been implemented before.
1:17:36
I'd like to know when.
1:17:38
Oh, that's a good question.
1:17:40
I mean, that's the first thing I'd ask.
1:17:42
Oh, it's been implemented before.
1:17:43
Under what circumstances?
1:17:44
I think in 2022.
1:17:46
What do you think?
1:17:48
No, I'm pretty sure 2022, Article 4.
1:17:52
I'm pretty sure just before.
1:17:54
Ask your friend, your buddy there, your heiress.
1:17:57
She would probably know if you asked her.
1:17:59
I would say the question would be, how
1:18:01
many times has Article 4 been implemented by
1:18:03
NATO and when?
1:18:08
How many times has Article 4 been implemented?
1:18:11
Oh, voice connection lost.
1:18:12
Hold on.
1:18:13
OK.
1:18:14
How many times has Article 4 been implemented
1:18:17
by NATO and when?
1:18:21
NATO's Article 4 has been invoked eight times
1:18:23
total since 1949.
1:18:26
Here's the rundown.
1:18:27
First, in 2003, over Iraq security concerns, then
1:18:31
Turkey in 2003 for Cyprus, again, Turkey in
1:18:34
2006 amid Israeli-Lebanon tensions, Romania and others
1:18:39
in 2008 after Russia's Georgia invasion, Poland in
1:18:43
2014 during Ukraine's crisis, multiple allies like Bulgaria,
1:18:48
Estonia, Latvia, Lithuania, Poland, Romania, Slovakia in February
1:18:54
2022 post-Russia's Ukraine attack, and most recently,
1:18:59
Poland yesterday, September 10th, 2025, over those Russian
1:19:03
drone incursions.
1:19:04
Each one's basically a heads up for talks,
1:19:07
not full-on action.
1:19:09
What's with the breathiness?
1:19:11
Boy, that was a good report.
1:19:14
I'm going to give her a 10.
1:19:15
You can moan and grunt about her breathiness,
1:19:17
but I ain't giving her 10 points for
1:19:18
that.
1:19:19
That took care of it.
1:19:21
But she didn't say 2022.
1:19:23
Did she?
1:19:24
I didn't hear her say it.
1:19:24
Yes, she did.
1:19:26
Oh, she did?
1:19:27
I mean, she did get covered.
1:19:28
It was great.
1:19:30
Oh, no.
1:19:30
Oh, no.
1:19:31
I'm impressed.
1:19:32
Oh, no.
1:19:36
Here's the final clip.
1:19:37
So the question is, of course, what are
1:19:39
the options if it was intentional?
1:19:41
If it is determined through an investigation that
1:19:45
this was intentional, then what does NATO do?
1:19:49
And actually, Andrew, can that be determined?
1:19:52
I'm not an expert on these systems and
1:19:57
how they look at their guidance systems, but
1:19:59
they have the pieces in Poland.
1:20:01
So the experts will look at it and
1:20:03
they will make some kind of determination.
1:20:06
There's also radar, the flight plans.
1:20:08
You can say these systems, the Russians are
1:20:11
saying systems were not long range, they couldn't
1:20:13
have reached Ukrainian territory, they had to be
1:20:16
like the way they were going, so they
1:20:18
were deflected.
1:20:19
I mean, that's an argument, right?
1:20:20
So the experts will look at flight plans.
1:20:23
They will look at the actual substance of
1:20:25
the drones that they have found in Poland
1:20:27
and try to put together a piece.
1:20:29
So I will not stay away from the
1:20:31
technical analysis, but on a military, political, military
1:20:34
point of view, NATO will take this as
1:20:37
a need to strengthen its defenses and remain
1:20:40
on guard.
1:20:42
But this is.
1:20:42
Huh?
1:20:44
Strengthen its defenses by spending money.
1:20:47
Oh, well, of course, this is that's what
1:20:49
it's always about.
1:20:50
So I will not stay away from the
1:20:52
technical analysis, but on a military, political, military
1:20:55
point of view, NATO will take this as
1:20:57
a need to strengthen its defenses and remain
1:21:01
on guard.
1:21:02
But this is not to go to war
1:21:04
with Russia, because Russia clearly at this point
1:21:07
for sure is not going to war with
1:21:08
Poland and NATO.
1:21:10
So we're not at that level at all.
1:21:12
But we are playing aggressive because of the
1:21:14
war in Ukraine.
1:21:15
We come back.
1:21:15
This is all about Russia trying to defeat
1:21:18
the Ukrainians in a substantial way to get
1:21:21
what they want from Ukraine.
1:21:23
Presumably, I think by 2025, the end of
1:21:26
the year, the Russians are really putting on
1:21:27
the pressure now.
1:21:28
Putin is not serious all about a ceasefire.
1:21:31
And he actually made that point to to
1:21:33
Trump in Alaska.
1:21:35
He wanted a peace settlement first before a
1:21:37
ceasefire.
1:21:38
That's very clear from the Russian position.
1:21:40
Now, what does that mean?
1:21:41
That means the Russians want a peace settlement
1:21:43
on terms favorable to their objectives.
1:21:46
And until they get that, Ukrainians are saying
1:21:48
no.
1:21:49
So the Russians are saying, well, then more
1:21:50
war until we can convince you, the Ukrainians,
1:21:53
through military action to come our way.
1:21:56
That's it's a it's a knock them, sock
1:21:58
them war right now to see who prevails.
1:22:01
Knock them, sock them, rock them, sock them
1:22:03
robots, everybody.
1:22:05
Yeah.
1:22:06
Well, the significance of Poland is not lost
1:22:08
on me, historically speaking.
1:22:11
You know, when Germany invaded Poland.
1:22:14
Oh, yeah.
1:22:15
That started World War Two, in essence.
1:22:19
Well, of course, what would always be good
1:22:21
is we could have a nice little World
1:22:23
War One assassination of some Duke somewhere.
1:22:28
Something they don't need much.
1:22:30
They really don't need much.
1:22:33
And America always enters late into these things.
1:22:36
We weren't there at the beginning of World
1:22:38
War One, World War Two.
1:22:39
No, we were late on both.
1:22:42
Now, in this case, you know, be careful
1:22:44
of the be wary of the military industrial
1:22:46
complex.
1:22:47
Follow that money.
1:22:49
Especially with drones, Eric Schmidt.
1:22:52
You know, who's controlling the drone?
1:22:57
Who knows how to control other people's drones?
1:22:59
This whole drone thing.
1:23:00
I think the drone warfare with it, with
1:23:02
the taking control of other people's drones through
1:23:06
espionage, you can find out what their codes
1:23:08
are, I'm sure.
1:23:10
You could get in.
1:23:12
I think that's a bigger threat than the
1:23:15
drones themselves.
1:23:17
Yes.
1:23:18
Well, the whole drone thing is just no
1:23:19
good.
1:23:21
But can you imagine just even a one
1:23:24
of these air shows where you have all
1:23:26
the drones that make this designs in the
1:23:28
sky?
1:23:29
They're pretty spectacular.
1:23:31
And taking control of that and then driving
1:23:33
those, you know, 10 or 20 or 30
1:23:36
,000 drones into the crowd.
1:23:40
Yes, this is what you're imagining.
1:23:42
And also what is never really well explained
1:23:45
is these drones.
1:23:48
I mean, what size are they?
1:23:51
Are these like reaper drones?
1:23:54
Yes.
1:23:54
Well, they said they were, they said there
1:23:56
was Shaheeds in the report.
1:24:01
That's Iranian drone?
1:24:03
Yes.
1:24:03
An Iranian drone.
1:24:05
So let me see what that looks like.
1:24:06
That's what it said.
1:24:07
Right.
1:24:07
Well, of course.
1:24:09
We have to emphasize.
1:24:10
Oh, that's one of those Delta Wing deals.
1:24:15
That's the Shaheed drone.
1:24:16
Oh, that's the good looking one.
1:24:17
It's a very handsome drone.
1:24:20
Handsome drone.
1:24:21
And the other report I heard about these
1:24:24
drones was that they don't know that they
1:24:25
were armed.
1:24:26
They said they may have not been armed,
1:24:28
which would lead credence to the analysis that
1:24:31
the Russians were just testing them, which leads
1:24:34
credence to the Russians did it on purpose
1:24:36
just to test the air defenses.
1:24:39
That's a possibility.
1:24:40
Man, what kind of world war do you
1:24:42
have when everyone's just using drones on each
1:24:44
other?
1:24:45
Oh, it's not going to be.
1:24:46
It's going to be every war that there's
1:24:49
been so far.
1:24:50
The big ones, all of them.
1:24:51
Well, they've all been unpleasant.
1:24:52
None of them.
1:24:53
Well, they've all been unpleasant.
1:24:54
But they've all, you know, they've gone from
1:24:55
the, you know, these things that the catapults
1:24:57
to crossbows to one different kinds of, you
1:25:03
know, a phalanx designed attacks, horses with, you
1:25:12
know, stirrups.
1:25:13
I mean, every little increase in technology, how
1:25:17
minor it might be, always results in a
1:25:20
war to test it out.
1:25:21
Exactly.
1:25:22
There it is.
1:25:24
Yeah.
1:25:24
It's a show.
1:25:25
It's basically an air show.
1:25:27
Well, it takes care of a number of
1:25:29
problems when you get rid of a bunch
1:25:30
of people because you want to do population
1:25:33
control because you're duds.
1:25:35
And the other thing is that it improves
1:25:37
your economy.
1:25:39
It gets everybody on the same page.
1:25:41
It creates nationalism, which you need to keep
1:25:43
your society going.
1:25:46
It's a plus.
1:25:47
It's a win win.
1:25:50
Hmm.
1:25:51
Yeah.
1:25:52
Well, isn't it?
1:25:52
I mean, from that's why I say that
1:25:54
facetiously, the win win part, because it's not
1:25:57
a win win at all, but it's a
1:26:00
win win.
1:26:02
Aren't all wars basically banker wars?
1:26:05
Whenever we're in financial problems globally, isn't that
1:26:09
when the wars usually start?
1:26:10
Well, I think if you go back in
1:26:12
history, the banker aspect was minor.
1:26:15
I think the bankers benefit.
1:26:17
Modern, not modern history.
1:26:18
I mean, there is a lot of discussion
1:26:22
in the left when I was going to
1:26:24
a left wing school at Berkeley.
1:26:25
Yes.
1:26:26
They would discuss the World War One is
1:26:31
a war that we should have not gotten
1:26:32
involved in because it was a banker's war.
1:26:35
It was the bankers of England that got
1:26:38
us to join them to this, to turn
1:26:41
the tide of the war, to pay for
1:26:43
it, to pay for it and help finance
1:26:47
it.
1:26:47
We're good at that.
1:26:49
And sure, that element was in play.
1:26:52
Right.
1:26:52
But if you just look at the financial
1:26:54
situation of the world where every every all
1:26:56
money is fake and phony, all of it,
1:26:59
it's all fake.
1:27:00
It's all just made up of derivatives of
1:27:03
debt, debt, debt, debt or credit, no matter
1:27:05
which way, which is whatever side you're on.
1:27:08
I mean, how else can everybody get out
1:27:10
of this hole?
1:27:11
We need a war reset.
1:27:12
That's your great reset right there.
1:27:16
Well, that would definitely take care of the
1:27:18
deficit.
1:27:18
Yeah.
1:27:21
Sadly, but yeah.
1:27:24
Hmm.
1:27:26
Well, that's that's a good I'll take stablecoin
1:27:28
over war any day.
1:27:31
Yeah, well, it may be part of in
1:27:33
fact, stablecoin may be part of the mechanism
1:27:36
that creates the war.
1:27:38
Very possible, but I'm hopeful it isn't.
1:27:41
Yeah, well, yeah, well, exactly.
1:27:44
Hey, by the way, another thing that is
1:27:46
poorly covered, I can only get one of
1:27:48
my favorite Indian voices to talk about it,
1:27:51
is the uprising in Nepal.
1:27:54
Have you seen the mess that's going on
1:27:56
there?
1:27:57
No, not this one.
1:27:58
You got me.
1:27:59
Oh, yes.
1:28:00
Well, she pronounces it funny, but here we
1:28:01
go.
1:28:02
It's chaos in the Himalayas, the tiny Himalayas,
1:28:05
Himalayas, Himalayas, Himalayas, chaos in the Himalayas.
1:28:09
It's chaos in the Himalayas.
1:28:10
The tiny country of Nepal has been gripped
1:28:13
by violence.
1:28:14
The parliament was on fire.
1:28:16
Ministers were thrashed on the streets.
1:28:18
The Supreme Court was torched and the capital
1:28:20
of Kathmandu was overrun.
1:28:22
What?
1:28:23
This wasn't just a protest.
1:28:24
It was a total upheaval.
1:28:27
The biggest exit came around noon today.
1:28:31
Prime Minister KP Sharma only announced his resignation.
1:28:34
He simply couldn't hang on.
1:28:36
Only had unleashed a crackdown on Monday.
1:28:39
It was the worst in Nepal's recent history.
1:28:42
Nineteen protesters were killed, plus at least 100
1:28:45
were injured.
1:28:46
And today the backlash was evident.
1:28:49
Thousands of protesters hit the streets of Nepal.
1:28:52
Only his own private residence was torched.
1:28:54
The prime minister had no choice.
1:28:56
He announced his resignation later in the day.
1:28:58
He said he was quitting to allow a
1:29:00
political solution to the crisis.
1:29:03
Soon afterwards, an army helicopter was seen over
1:29:05
his house.
1:29:06
It ferried only away from the chaos to
1:29:08
where?
1:29:09
Well, nobody knows yet.
1:29:11
But what exactly is the root of this
1:29:13
crisis and how did it escalate so fast?
1:29:16
The trigger was a social media ban.
1:29:20
Last week, Kathmandu blocked 26 online platforms, including
1:29:24
Instagram and Facebook.
1:29:26
In response, thousands of young Nepalese hit the
1:29:28
streets.
1:29:29
Now, Nepal, as you would know, is a
1:29:30
young country.
1:29:32
Around 43 percent of the population is below
1:29:34
40 years of age.
1:29:35
So the protesters were largely Gen Z.
1:29:38
There you go.
1:29:39
It's I'm looking at the headlines here.
1:29:41
Why Gen Z has taken over the streets
1:29:44
in Nepal.
1:29:45
Yeah, Nepal protests that Gen Z protests in
1:29:48
Nepal urgent or is organic or a deep
1:29:51
state regime change.
1:29:53
Oh, well, there were a lot of professionally
1:29:56
printed signs.
1:29:58
So that that to me was like, uh
1:30:00
huh, OK.
1:30:03
But blocking 26 social media sites, that's when
1:30:07
people lose their crap, that's what I keep
1:30:09
telling if you really want to upset Americans,
1:30:11
you know.
1:30:13
Well, that's why Trump couldn't follow through with
1:30:15
banning Tick-Tock.
1:30:16
Yes.
1:30:17
Either kill their dogs.
1:30:19
That's how Trump won back in 2019.
1:30:22
He was going to ban Tick-Tock.
1:30:24
Now, almost 10 years later.
1:30:26
No, you can't do that.
1:30:28
You can't do that.
1:30:29
Americans care about two things.
1:30:32
You win the election by saying they're eating
1:30:34
the dog.
1:30:35
That's how you win an election.
1:30:37
You lose if you take away their Tick
1:30:38
-Tock or anything for that matter.
1:30:40
Right in time for the brand new Apple
1:30:45
iPhones.
1:30:46
Apple unveiled new iPhones, AirPods and watches today.
1:30:50
The new iPhone 17 has a faster chip,
1:30:53
better scratch resistance, a smoother screen and comes
1:30:56
in new colors and it starts at $799.
1:31:00
The pro version has a new design, a
1:31:02
better zoom and a bigger battery.
1:31:05
And it's the most expensive at $1,099.
1:31:08
And the new brand new iPhone, iPhone Air
1:31:12
is a thinner version of the flagship iPhone.
1:31:15
It starts at $999.
1:31:17
The new Apple Watch Series 11 will be
1:31:20
able to alert users to possible high blood
1:31:22
pressure and new AirPods Pro 3 include heart
1:31:26
rate sensing and improved noise cancellation.
1:31:29
All the new products will be available September
1:31:31
19th.
1:31:32
Yeah.
1:31:32
Hello.
1:31:33
2015 called Apple.
1:31:34
They want their new iPhones back.
1:31:37
This company, are they are they crazy?
1:31:40
They promised AI for a whole year and
1:31:43
a half.
1:31:43
Oh, that's not coming.
1:31:44
We're not going to do that.
1:31:46
Well, it's thin.
1:31:47
It's thin.
1:31:49
Yeah, it's the actual weight of the of
1:31:52
the iPhone.
1:31:53
17 Air is the same weight as the
1:31:56
iPhone 11.
1:31:58
Is that right?
1:31:59
Yeah.
1:31:59
They've just packed more crap and made them
1:32:01
big.
1:32:02
These phones are also huge.
1:32:04
They're huge.
1:32:06
Women can barely hold them in their hands
1:32:07
anymore.
1:32:08
Well, the bigger they are, the easier they
1:32:10
are to steal.
1:32:11
Yeah, well, that's that's true.
1:32:15
But things things are going crazy in technology.
1:32:19
This this how crazy are they going?
1:32:22
Well, I'm glad you ask.
1:32:23
I have a two parter about Oracle.
1:32:26
And let's get a business update now with
1:32:28
Shroud Pellegrin, beginning with Elon Musk briefly losing
1:32:31
his position as the world's richest person.
1:32:34
That's right, Oliver was brief, but it did
1:32:36
happen on Wednesday.
1:32:37
Tech billionaire Larry Ellison overtook overtook Musk in
1:32:41
the Bloomberg Billionaires Index after Oracle business software
1:32:44
company.
1:32:45
He has a 41 percent stake in saw
1:32:47
its shares surge after better than expected financial
1:32:51
forecasts.
1:32:52
At one point, those shares rose more than
1:32:54
40 percent before closing the session up almost
1:32:57
36 percent at over 328 dollars a share.
1:33:00
So that meant the 81 year old shot
1:33:03
up to the top of the rankings for
1:33:05
a bit with a net worth much larger
1:33:08
than the entire GDP of Nigeria this year,
1:33:11
for instance.
1:33:12
But this Thursday, Musk, the CEO of Tesla
1:33:15
and SpaceX, took his place back at the
1:33:18
top of the rankings, dominated by the men
1:33:21
that control the largest U.S. tech firms,
1:33:23
as you can see, like Mark Zuckerberg at
1:33:25
Meta and third place Bezos at Amazon or
1:33:29
Larry Page, one of the founders at Google.
1:33:31
Worth noting that Ellison and Musk have a
1:33:34
close relationship.
1:33:36
Some saying Ellison was a bit of a
1:33:37
mentor to Musk, sitting on the board at
1:33:40
Tesla for four years and providing financial assistance
1:33:43
for Musk to buy Twitter in 2022.
1:33:46
They also they also share similar politics.
1:33:50
So first of all, the robber barons, a
1:33:53
clear list.
1:33:54
There you go.
1:33:54
It's all tech guys.
1:33:57
But but this Oracle's shares surging was mania.
1:34:03
Yeah, it's pretty funny.
1:34:04
This is the second part of the report.
1:34:06
So what was behind this sudden surge in
1:34:08
Oracle's shares and in Ellison's net worth?
1:34:12
Well, an earnings call with analysts that left
1:34:14
all of Wall Street slack jawed using words
1:34:17
like blown away, blown away, momentous or in
1:34:20
shock.
1:34:21
The software company said it actually missed its
1:34:24
earnings and revenue targets for the quarter.
1:34:27
But it was its forecast, which really wowed
1:34:30
everyone, specifically on its cloud infrastructure business.
1:34:34
Oracle said it had signed four multibillion dollar
1:34:36
contracts in that sector with three different customers
1:34:39
this quarter, one of which were with Chad
1:34:42
GPT maker OpenAI to develop to develop over
1:34:44
four gigawatts of U.S. data center capacity.
1:34:48
It's predicting that its cloud business will boom
1:34:50
over the next four years, generating 18 billion
1:34:54
dollars in revenue this year and reaching, as
1:34:56
you can see there, one hundred and forty
1:34:57
four billion dollars in fiscal 2030.
1:35:00
Nevertheless, there is some risk there, notably with
1:35:04
the OpenAI deal.
1:35:05
The startup might be a huge name and
1:35:07
generating a lot of excitement, but it's not
1:35:09
expected to generate any profit before 2029.
1:35:13
Dude, this is Pets.com level.
1:35:16
Miss their earnings.
1:35:17
Miss miss the revenue.
1:35:19
Not even close.
1:35:20
It's way beyond Pets.com.
1:35:23
It's not even close to Pets.com, Pets
1:35:25
.com was a short term flash in the
1:35:28
pan.
1:35:28
Interesting idea, which actually probably wasn't a bad
1:35:31
idea.
1:35:31
I could have made money, but this is
1:35:34
ridiculous.
1:35:35
And the thing about pushing it out to
1:35:37
twenty twenty nine is the thing that's a
1:35:39
real it's just hilarious.
1:35:42
But all I mean, I can't wait.
1:35:43
And the amount of money they're talking about,
1:35:46
the hundred and forty nine billion.
1:35:49
Yeah, we're talking about, you know, Defense Department
1:35:52
levels.
1:35:54
Yes.
1:35:55
Yeah.
1:35:57
But no product is no.
1:35:59
And all that Ellison has ever said is,
1:36:01
well, just imagine that Larry, there's a bunch
1:36:06
of pictures of him floating around.
1:36:08
You know, you guys like eighty two now.
1:36:09
He's he's got a Cheshire cat gray.
1:36:12
It doesn't even look like him anymore.
1:36:14
It's like he's just got.
1:36:16
Well, I did it because Larry's thing back
1:36:19
in the 80s when Bill Gates was the
1:36:22
was the richest man in the world.
1:36:24
Yeah, he was always this was known in
1:36:28
the valley.
1:36:28
Kind of if you knew there was in
1:36:31
this this milieu.
1:36:34
Ellison was irked as hell that Bill Gates,
1:36:38
who he thought was an idiot, was the
1:36:40
richest man in the world, and he thought
1:36:43
he should be the richest man in the
1:36:45
world.
1:36:45
And he was mocked by a lot of
1:36:48
the locals for being.
1:36:49
He wants to be the richest man in
1:36:50
the world.
1:36:51
That's all he cares about.
1:36:53
He's the he'll never do it because Bill
1:36:55
Gates will always outpace him because Gates is
1:36:57
really smarter.
1:36:59
And he finally made it.
1:37:02
So let's just go back and listen to
1:37:04
this is from when was this?
1:37:06
This is from July when we when the
1:37:09
whole Stargate thing was announced.
1:37:12
I think this is it.
1:37:13
Thank you, Mr. President.
1:37:15
One of the most exciting things we're working
1:37:17
on.
1:37:18
You again, using the tools that Sam and
1:37:20
Masa are providing is our cancer vaccine.
1:37:25
It's very interesting.
1:37:27
Early diet, it turns out, I'll be quick.
1:37:29
All of our cancers, cancer tumors, little fragments
1:37:34
of those tumors float around in your blood.
1:37:38
So you can do early cancer detection if
1:37:40
you can do it using a you can
1:37:42
do early cancer detection with a blood test
1:37:46
and using it from what's that lady?
1:37:49
The blood test from what's her name?
1:37:52
Holmes, Elizabeth Holmes.
1:37:55
And we're using a eye to look at
1:37:59
the blood test.
1:38:00
You can find the cancers that are actually
1:38:03
seriously threatening the person.
1:38:04
Then beyond that, here we go.
1:38:07
Once we gene sequence, once we gene sequence
1:38:10
that cancer tumor, you can then vaccinate the
1:38:14
person to design a vaccine for every individual
1:38:19
person to vaccinate them against that cancer.
1:38:22
And you can make that vaccine that MRNA
1:38:26
vaccine.
1:38:28
You can make that robotically again using AI
1:38:31
and about 48 hours.
1:38:33
So imagine early cancer detection, the development of
1:38:36
a cancer vaccine for your particular cancer aimed
1:38:39
at you and have have that vaccine available
1:38:42
in 48 hours.
1:38:43
This is the promise of AI and the
1:38:45
promise of the future.
1:38:47
So he's predicting 10 X what he's doing
1:38:49
now, missing the revenue and and profit targets
1:38:55
by 2029.
1:38:56
Does that mean we'll have 10 X the
1:38:58
cancer?
1:39:01
Because clearly, if you're doing all this, people
1:39:04
have cancer.
1:39:06
Or is this all just in case?
1:39:11
Well, I I'm confused because I don't know
1:39:14
that they're doing this at all.
1:39:16
Well, this was this was this was during
1:39:17
the Stargate launch.
1:39:20
This was what Oracle is doing with their
1:39:22
AI.
1:39:23
Yeah.
1:39:23
But where's the evidence that is actually being
1:39:26
implemented?
1:39:27
None.
1:39:27
There's none of it.
1:39:28
And then he had this little ditty about
1:39:30
Stargate.
1:39:30
This this this is great because we'll not
1:39:32
we'll we all have cancer.
1:39:34
We'll also all be hunted down by the
1:39:36
cops.
1:39:37
The police will be on their best behavior
1:39:40
because we we're constantly recording, watching and recording
1:39:43
everything that's going on.
1:39:45
Citizens will be on their best behavior because
1:39:48
we're constantly recording and reporting everything that's going
1:39:51
on.
1:39:51
This is like Black Mirror.
1:39:54
And it's a good clip.
1:39:56
Impeachable.
1:39:57
The cars, the cars have cameras, you know,
1:39:59
cameras on them.
1:40:00
Everything is cameras.
1:40:01
We have a squad car here somewhere.
1:40:02
Yeah.
1:40:03
But those kind of applications using a if
1:40:08
we can use a and we're using a
1:40:09
to monitor the video.
1:40:11
Yeah.
1:40:11
So if that altercation had occurred, it occurred
1:40:13
in Memphis.
1:40:15
The chief of police would be immediately notified.
1:40:17
And where was the monitoring of Epstein's cell
1:40:19
with your AI, Larry?
1:40:21
It's not people that are looking at those
1:40:22
cameras.
1:40:22
It's AI that's looking at the camera.
1:40:24
No, no, no, no, no, no.
1:40:26
This would be like a shooting.
1:40:27
That's going to be immediately.
1:40:28
That's going to be an event.
1:40:29
It's immediately an alarm is going to go
1:40:32
off.
1:40:33
It's going to be and we have a
1:40:34
shooting.
1:40:35
We have a shooting.
1:40:36
Have supervision.
1:40:37
And there was every police officer supervised at
1:40:41
all times.
1:40:42
And the supervision will.
1:40:44
And if there's a problem, I will report
1:40:47
the problem and report it to the appropriate
1:40:49
person, whether it's the sheriff or the chief
1:40:52
or whomever we need to take control of
1:40:56
the situation.
1:40:57
We have described he's describing a bad Simpsons
1:41:01
episode.
1:41:02
So we'll all be safe, but we'll all
1:41:05
have cancer.
1:41:06
I mean, come on, Larry, you can't have
1:41:08
it both ways.
1:41:11
MIT just came out with their report, the
1:41:14
state of AI in business.
1:41:16
Twenty twenty five.
1:41:17
We'll just take MIT.
1:41:18
I mean, you would you trust an MIT
1:41:20
report?
1:41:22
It depends on how they document it, I
1:41:24
probably would.
1:41:26
Executive summary.
1:41:28
Despite 30 to 40 billion dollars in enterprise
1:41:30
investment into Gen AI, which I think I'm
1:41:34
not sure what that means anymore.
1:41:36
This report, Jen, Jen, Jen, OK.
1:41:39
Was it generative?
1:41:40
Is it general?
1:41:41
General means generative.
1:41:42
Making songs on Suno.
1:41:45
Is that generally an art making art making
1:41:47
art?
1:41:48
So they spend 30 billion dollars in enterprise
1:41:51
investments and we've got art.
1:41:53
Yeah, well, we got 30 billion dollars with
1:41:56
art for free.
1:41:59
Thirty billion dollars.
1:42:01
Come on.
1:42:01
Almost a good deal.
1:42:03
This report uncovers a surprising result in that
1:42:06
95 percent of organizations are getting zero return.
1:42:11
What this was.
1:42:12
We talked about this about three or four
1:42:13
shows ago when I went.
1:42:14
JC, who's the AI expert in the family?
1:42:18
Yes.
1:42:18
Discuss the fact that a major AI company
1:42:21
that makes a product that is important to
1:42:26
the AI world.
1:42:28
They did a deep dive into this and
1:42:32
found that one thousand out of one thousand
1:42:34
examples, they could not find any benefits from
1:42:37
using AI.
1:42:38
The outcomes are so starkly divided across both
1:42:41
buyers, enterprises, mid-market, small, medium businesses and
1:42:45
builders, startups, vendors, consultancies that we call it
1:42:49
the Gen A divide.
1:42:52
Just five percent of integrated AI pilots were
1:42:56
extracting millions in value, while the vast majority
1:42:59
remain stuck with no measurable P&L impact.
1:43:04
That's your balance sheet.
1:43:06
This divide does not seem to be driven
1:43:08
by model quality or regulation, but seems to
1:43:11
be determined by approach.
1:43:13
Tools like chat, GPT and copilot are widely
1:43:16
adopted.
1:43:17
Over 80 percent of organizations have explored or
1:43:19
piloted them and nearly 40 percent report deployment.
1:43:23
But these tools primarily enhance individual productivity, like
1:43:26
making art for the no agenda show when
1:43:28
you should be working for your boss.
1:43:30
Or asking error about the about World War
1:43:33
Two.
1:43:33
About what?
1:43:34
About Article 4.
1:43:35
He gave us that information.
1:43:37
It was a benefit to the show.
1:43:39
Productivity right there.
1:43:41
But no P&L performance.
1:43:43
Meanwhile, enterprise grade systems, custom or vendor sold,
1:43:47
are being quietly rejected.
1:43:49
60 percent of organizations evaluated such tools, but
1:43:52
only 20 percent reached pilot stage and just
1:43:55
5 percent reached production.
1:43:57
Most failed due to brittle workflows, lack of
1:44:00
contextual learning and misalignment with day to day
1:44:03
operations.
1:44:05
I think that's MIT speak for it sucks.
1:44:08
From my interview, surveys and analysts and analysis
1:44:11
of 300 public implementations, four patterns emerged to
1:44:15
define the define the Gen A divide.
1:44:18
Limited disruption.
1:44:19
Only two of eight major sectors show meaningful
1:44:22
structural change.
1:44:23
Enterprise paradox is a good one.
1:44:27
Big firms lead in pilot volume, but lag
1:44:29
in scale up.
1:44:31
Investment bias.
1:44:32
Budgets favor visible top line functions over high
1:44:35
ROI back office and implementation advantage.
1:44:39
External partnerships see twice the success rate of
1:44:41
internal builds.
1:44:42
This is a very damning report.
1:44:45
But I'd say what was that paradox phrase?
1:44:49
That's a good one, isn't it?
1:44:50
Enterprise paradox.
1:44:52
That's that's a show title.
1:44:54
I know I'm writing it down.
1:44:56
Enterprise paradox.
1:44:59
Yeah, but don't worry about it.
1:45:01
You know, it's making cool art.
1:45:03
Yeah, but by 2029, it'll shake out.
1:45:06
10X.
1:45:08
What's the time, Larry?
1:45:09
It's going to be 10X.
1:45:10
It's going to be beautiful.
1:45:11
Larry does it.
1:45:12
Hey, Larry got what he really wanted.
1:45:15
He doesn't.
1:45:16
Now he doesn't care.
1:45:17
Oh, he just wants to be the richest
1:45:18
man briefly.
1:45:20
He just wants to be the richest man
1:45:22
in the world for a moment in time.
1:45:24
Yeah.
1:45:24
And he's achieved that.
1:45:26
And so now we can just forget about
1:45:27
it.
1:45:31
Yeah.
1:45:31
Gen AI divide.
1:45:33
Gen AI.
1:45:35
Is that we're going to see that as
1:45:36
the next after Gen Alpha, we have Gen
1:45:38
AI.
1:45:40
Well, it's not it doesn't mean generation.
1:45:42
So no, not yet.
1:45:45
They'll be drinking Gatorade for the electrolytes.
1:45:49
No, he's using it to grow crops, to
1:45:52
grow because it has electrolytes.
1:45:55
Exactly.
1:45:55
Yes, I did get a boots on the
1:45:57
ground from Carson, who is Gen Z and
1:46:02
works at a college bookstore that sells textbooks,
1:46:05
including digital books.
1:46:06
A Gen Z customer came in the semester
1:46:08
and said the digital book we sold her
1:46:10
didn't work.
1:46:14
It gets better.
1:46:16
She then explained that.
1:46:18
And I've seen this myself.
1:46:19
She then explained that she wasn't able to
1:46:21
log into the website that the book is
1:46:23
hosted on.
1:46:24
Quote, I can't remember my password, she tells
1:46:27
me.
1:46:27
I guess I need to make a new
1:46:29
account.
1:46:30
Now, I've heard this myself.
1:46:32
I asked her if she'd clicked on the
1:46:34
forgotten password button and she stared at me
1:46:37
as if I'd just spoken in tongues.
1:46:40
She clicks on the reset password link and
1:46:42
stares at me again like I'm the only
1:46:45
one who can do it.
1:46:46
Just put your email in there so you
1:46:48
can reset your password.
1:46:49
I instruct.
1:46:50
She had absolutely no concept of what I
1:46:53
was explaining, and I had to handhold her
1:46:55
through the entire thing.
1:46:57
Being a member of Gen Z myself, I'm
1:46:59
ashamed of my contemporaries for not even being
1:47:01
able to complete a basic task such as
1:47:03
this.
1:47:04
However, I place the blame primarily on the
1:47:06
parents, of course.
1:47:08
Wow.
1:47:09
Can we add that to this?
1:47:12
Don't know how to reset passwords.
1:47:14
What would you call it, though?
1:47:15
What do what what categories go into?
1:47:17
It's not simple enough to it's it's like.
1:47:21
But what I what I have heard is
1:47:23
basically a version of stupid.
1:47:26
I have heard this.
1:47:27
Oh, I guess I have to make a
1:47:28
new account.
1:47:29
I've heard this.
1:47:31
It's like not understanding what passwords do or
1:47:34
what they're for.
1:47:36
Or how they function, I am really baffled.
1:47:40
Yeah.
1:47:41
How they function.
1:47:43
I mean, for one thing, you know, it's
1:47:46
always assumed that the different generations have a
1:47:48
different relationship with computers, not technology in general,
1:47:54
but just computers.
1:47:56
Yeah.
1:47:56
Phones, phones, phones.
1:47:58
And well, phones, which are computers in your
1:48:02
pocket.
1:48:04
Not in yours.
1:48:05
Nope.
1:48:06
It's in the drawer.
1:48:07
And I don't need to be hooked to
1:48:08
a computer 24 seven.
1:48:10
So.
1:48:11
So they have a different relationship because there's
1:48:14
kids.
1:48:15
Oh, they were brought up.
1:48:16
They never knew an era when there was
1:48:17
no Internet.
1:48:19
They never knew an era when there was
1:48:21
no computers.
1:48:21
They never knew this.
1:48:22
They never knew that because they were you
1:48:24
know, there was an Internet when they were
1:48:26
born, all this sort of thing.
1:48:28
And so so the Zed's, which I'm going
1:48:32
to now call them because I like it,
1:48:34
Zed, Zed, Gen Zed, Gen Zed.
1:48:37
So there's just Zed's to me.
1:48:40
The Zed's, OK.
1:48:43
The Zed's are brought with what circumstance?
1:48:46
Everything was there.
1:48:49
And they were raised with computers, with the
1:48:51
network, with the Internet, with networks, with Wi
1:48:53
-Fi, with with with cell phones, with everything,
1:48:57
every single thing that's available out there.
1:49:00
And and they don't know how to use
1:49:02
it.
1:49:03
I think in this particular case, what's happening
1:49:06
is because of the phones.
1:49:08
Once you sign into Apple or Google, that's
1:49:13
it.
1:49:13
You just click sign up.
1:49:16
You don't do a password anymore.
1:49:20
You know, well, you may not know this,
1:49:21
but that's how most phones work these days.
1:49:23
If you're on Android, you sign into your
1:49:25
Google and everything just works.
1:49:28
And if it's a new app or a
1:49:30
new website, sign in with Google, click.
1:49:33
And Apple kind of has the same thing,
1:49:35
but not to that extent.
1:49:36
But I think everybody has a Google and
1:49:38
just, oh, just sign in with Google, just
1:49:40
sign in with Google.
1:49:40
They don't understand what's happening in the background
1:49:44
and that all your information is being sucked
1:49:46
up by Google.
1:49:47
Isn't this taught in high school?
1:49:48
Oh, please.
1:49:49
Don't they teach kids in high school how
1:49:50
to use a computer?
1:49:51
No.
1:49:52
Yeah.
1:49:54
Well, sure, they do.
1:49:55
How to stick a paperclip in it to
1:49:56
make it blow up in class in your
1:49:58
Chromebook.
1:49:58
That's what they're teaching them.
1:50:01
No, no, there's no there's no computer, no
1:50:04
knowledge like that.
1:50:05
It's called computer literacy.
1:50:07
They used to have a class in some
1:50:08
schools.
1:50:10
You're presuming computer literacy.
1:50:12
Have you ever have you ever seen today's
1:50:15
typical middle school teacher?
1:50:17
They're not that literate on computers either.
1:50:20
Doesn't work.
1:50:23
My computer doesn't work.
1:50:25
How many dude named dudes named Ben do
1:50:27
we have who've heard this?
1:50:29
My password doesn't work.
1:50:30
Well, why don't you take the caps lock
1:50:31
off?
1:50:33
This happens all the time.
1:50:35
Yeah, that's that is nine tenths of the
1:50:37
problem right there.
1:50:38
Caps lock.
1:50:41
All right.
1:50:41
I got to go back to Ursula, because
1:50:43
did we know this or did we not
1:50:45
know this?
1:50:46
We are on the brink, if not even
1:50:49
at the start of another global health crisis.
1:50:53
And as a now a global health crisis.
1:50:59
Now we know that, of course, we're on
1:51:01
the brink of a global health crisis because
1:51:03
people aren't vaccinating anymore.
1:51:05
But this next piece, I'm not so sure
1:51:06
I knew this.
1:51:07
Of another global health crisis.
1:51:10
And as a as as a medical doctor
1:51:15
by training.
1:51:16
What did we know this?
1:51:18
Did we know that she's a medical doctor
1:51:20
by training?
1:51:23
Why did why did I not know this?
1:51:25
Well, I didn't know it either.
1:51:27
Let's let me look her up.
1:51:28
What's what's wrong?
1:51:29
Hold on a second.
1:51:31
Error.
1:51:31
Is Ursula von der Leyen a medical doctor
1:51:34
by training?
1:51:39
Yes.
1:51:39
Ursula von der Leyen trained as a medical
1:51:41
doctor.
1:51:42
She studied at Hanover Medical School, earned her
1:51:45
MD in 1987 and even worked as an
1:51:48
assistant physician before jumping into politics.
1:51:50
Oh, a nurse assistant physician.
1:51:54
Well, she got an MD, apparently.
1:51:56
Well, I was unaware.
1:51:58
No wonder she was on in the cahoots
1:52:00
with Burla and the whole pharma industry.
1:52:03
I'm not saying all doctors are like this,
1:52:06
but wow, I didn't know this.
1:52:08
As a medical doctor by training, I'm appalled
1:52:12
by the disinformation that threatens global progress on
1:52:16
everything from measles to polio.
1:52:20
Vaccines, stop it now.
1:52:27
We can't have that.
1:52:31
And this is why today I can announce
1:52:34
that the European Union will head a new
1:52:37
global health resilience initiative.
1:52:41
That's sure to make everyone sick.
1:52:44
Yeah.
1:52:44
Global Health Resilience Initiative.
1:52:47
Oh, please.
1:52:49
Well, here is the global health initiative in
1:52:53
the United States from Maha Maha Maha from
1:52:56
Maha RFK Jr. The Make America Healthy Again
1:52:59
Commission released recommendations yesterday to improve children's health.
1:53:03
They're calling it, quote, make our children healthy
1:53:06
again.
1:53:07
OK, marketing mistake.
1:53:09
Marketing mistake.
1:53:11
Mark, make our children healthy again.
1:53:13
What's that?
1:53:15
Mocha.
1:53:17
Bojica.
1:53:19
No, make our children healthy.
1:53:20
Get mocha.
1:53:21
It's mocha.
1:53:22
Make our children mocha.
1:53:24
No.
1:53:25
How about what was this official?
1:53:28
Is this something the media dream?
1:53:29
Oh, who knows?
1:53:31
The commission is planning to start new studies
1:53:33
and improve collaboration between health agencies.
1:53:37
Some specific things they will work on will
1:53:39
be improving air and water quality, limiting microplastics,
1:53:43
removing chemical additives from food and increasing breastfeeding
1:53:47
rates.
1:53:48
Oh, no.
1:53:48
Health Secretary Robert F.
1:53:49
Kennedy Jr. is the chair of this commission.
1:53:52
A lot of these 128 recommendations are things
1:53:57
that I've been dreaming about my whole life.
1:53:59
I've been working for and congressional campaigns and
1:54:02
presidential campaigns for other candidates.
1:54:05
And they get into office and they say,
1:54:07
well, we can't we just can't do it.
1:54:10
Kennedy says some of the ideas came from
1:54:12
discussions with farmers, teachers and doctors.
1:54:16
The report also focuses on harm from vaccines,
1:54:19
electromagnetic radiation and fluoride.
1:54:22
But medical experts have said those ideals are
1:54:24
not based in factual information.
1:54:28
It's not factual, people.
1:54:31
Just go to sleep.
1:54:32
Everything's OK.
1:54:33
Pay no attention to the guy with the
1:54:35
gravelly voice.
1:54:37
But this one has our attention because this
1:54:39
is the next step.
1:54:40
Next step.
1:54:41
Not quite the final nail in the coffin,
1:54:44
but it's a good start.
1:54:45
This is about the executive order.
1:54:47
The president just signed an executive order making
1:54:50
some news here when it comes to pharmaceutical
1:54:52
ads.
1:54:53
The president just signed an executive order that's
1:54:56
an historic change in the way that pharmaceutical
1:55:00
advertising is done on television.
1:55:03
And the order basically reinstates or gives us
1:55:06
now the opportunity to reinstate the 1997 rules.
1:55:12
Prior to 1997, pharmaceutical advertisers were required to
1:55:16
put all the side effects on their ads.
1:55:18
Many of them didn't advertise because it lengthened
1:55:22
because of what it did to the length
1:55:24
of the advertising and that the removal of
1:55:28
that requirement in 1997, FDA changed the rule
1:55:34
to allow them to report the side effects
1:55:36
on a website or on a telephone.
1:55:39
And they know they only had to report
1:55:41
a few of them on television and that
1:55:43
triggered a proliferation of these ads.
1:55:45
There's only two countries in the world that
1:55:47
allowed to direct the consumer advertising by pharmaceutical
1:55:51
companies on television or one of those countries.
1:55:54
New Zealand is the other.
1:55:56
It's had a disastrous impact on human health,
1:56:00
on people's relationships with their doctors and really
1:56:03
on the entire gestalt where Americans are led
1:56:08
to believe that there's a pill for every
1:56:09
ill and that you don't have to exercise,
1:56:13
you don't have to pay attention to your
1:56:14
diet, whatever goes wrong with you, you can
1:56:16
fix with a drug.
1:56:17
So how much does this change the dynamic
1:56:19
for pharmaceutical companies that have been advertising on
1:56:23
all kinds of channels, even online?
1:56:26
They're going to have to do a lot
1:56:26
more.
1:56:27
They're going to have to they're going to
1:56:29
have to report all their side effects.
1:56:32
In some cases, I might create an advertisement
1:56:34
that's four minutes long.
1:56:37
Back prior to 1997, advertising in magazines had
1:56:42
page after page after side effects reported.
1:56:46
And so we don't know exactly what we'll
1:56:48
do, what it will do.
1:56:49
But we we know it's going to be
1:56:51
better for for health, for the health of
1:56:54
America.
1:56:55
Now, I don't know about you, but I
1:56:57
think this is a genius idea.
1:57:01
Because it only benefits cable news.
1:57:06
If pharmaceutical ads will be longer, that shortens
1:57:09
the availability on a 24 hour, 60 minute
1:57:12
time clock, raising the prices to get in
1:57:16
with any advertisement.
1:57:18
It also informs the public about all the
1:57:21
stuff it's going to give you, which, as
1:57:22
we know, is not good.
1:57:26
I think this is a good move.
1:57:28
I think this is just a step.
1:57:31
In the right direction.
1:57:34
But a good move, nonetheless.
1:57:35
Yeah, it's not a bad move, but I
1:57:39
still think what happened to you, they decided
1:57:41
this memo came out.
1:57:42
We played this bunch of clips recently and
1:57:44
they're going after Kennedy.
1:57:45
They did it with the hearings.
1:57:47
They're yelling and screaming at him.
1:57:49
And you would then walking out the Elizabeth
1:57:51
Warren being the best example.
1:57:54
And we didn't play too many of those
1:57:56
clips, but it was pretty ridiculous.
1:57:58
And it was part of a concerted effort.
1:58:00
This is the cell.
1:58:01
That was the salvo.
1:58:02
This was the retort.
1:58:04
This was the response.
1:58:07
And I think it's always been in his
1:58:08
back pocket.
1:58:09
He says, you go after me.
1:58:10
You'd make my life miserable.
1:58:12
I'm going to take away your TV advertising.
1:58:15
So I think this is one step.
1:58:17
And but he wants to keep something in
1:58:19
his pocket.
1:58:19
So he still has the complete ban, which
1:58:23
I think is the long term goal.
1:58:24
And what should happen is a complete ban
1:58:27
of these ads.
1:58:28
Let's hope so.
1:58:30
So I think this was just this is
1:58:31
a this is political.
1:58:33
Well, yes, but it's but it keeps the
1:58:35
cable news companies in business for a bit
1:58:37
longer.
1:58:38
I think that may have been just to
1:58:39
assuage them.
1:58:40
Look, you're going to make a lot of
1:58:41
money with these extended ads.
1:58:43
No way they're going to do 30 seconds.
1:58:45
They can't do 30 seconds.
1:58:47
It's at least a two minute ad, maybe
1:58:49
longer.
1:58:50
So you're going to make a bunch of
1:58:51
money, but get ready for it.
1:58:52
You're going to get this going to get
1:58:54
cut off eventually.
1:58:55
They have to know that.
1:58:57
Meanwhile, in Sweden, a media conference in Sweden
1:59:01
was brought to a dramatic halt after their
1:59:03
newly appointed health minister collapsed.
1:59:06
Elizabeth Lahn was standing next to the country's
1:59:08
prime minister and other officials when she suddenly
1:59:11
fell over and hit her head.
1:59:13
Thankfully, she did return a short time later
1:59:15
with no apparent injuries, saying this is what
1:59:18
can happen when you have a blood sugar
1:59:20
drop.
1:59:21
Yeah, OK.
1:59:22
Did you see?
1:59:23
I don't think so.
1:59:24
Did you see the video?
1:59:26
No.
1:59:26
Oh, man, she did.
1:59:27
She did one of those covid drops.
1:59:30
I just dropped, fell forward.
1:59:32
The lectern went forward.
1:59:33
She banged her head on the lectern, just
1:59:35
complete out.
1:59:37
Yeah, blood sugar dropped.
1:59:39
OK, sure.
1:59:42
It had been pretty abrupt.
1:59:43
Yeah.
1:59:44
And my, my, my, how things change.
1:59:47
Here's the money, honey, with the latest.
1:59:49
We learned this morning that the FDA is
1:59:52
now saying that it's OK to take ivermectin
1:59:56
if you have covid.
1:59:58
I mean, Senator, I remember talking with you
2:00:01
repeatedly during covid about your upset that you
2:00:07
were they were trying to cancel you because
2:00:09
you were talking to doctors to try to
2:00:11
find out the right ways to treat covid
2:00:15
without having to get too many boosters and
2:00:18
covid shots.
2:00:20
My covid was gone in a day when
2:00:22
I took ivermectin.
2:00:23
And now three years later, the FDA says,
2:00:26
oh, yeah, that's fine.
2:00:27
Take ivermectin.
2:00:28
What?
2:00:28
What?
2:00:29
What?
2:00:30
What?
2:00:31
What?
2:00:32
Oh, money, honey, please.
2:00:34
She's just discovering that there's a new sheriff
2:00:36
in town.
2:00:36
What?
2:00:37
How can this be?
2:00:39
Because it was always like that.
2:00:41
It was always like that.
2:00:42
It was always like that.
2:00:43
But I like you can't have the emergency
2:00:44
use authorization if there's a treatment for the
2:00:47
product or for the disease.
2:00:49
I'm sorry for the disease.
2:00:51
So you can't get to you.
2:00:52
You said it right.
2:00:53
You know, you said it right.
2:00:55
A treatment for the product.
2:00:56
Yeah, treatment for the product.
2:00:58
You said it right the first time.
2:00:59
I did.
2:00:59
And the truth has to come out.
2:01:01
And so because of that one aspect alone,
2:01:06
not to mention hydroxychloroquine, they had to banish
2:01:12
it.
2:01:13
No, no, no.
2:01:13
You can't take this.
2:01:14
No good.
2:01:15
And just remember, we found the passport from
2:01:17
the terrorist right there on the ground.
2:01:19
I mean, the world is a scam, people.
2:01:22
Gen Z-ers, you're being scammed all the
2:01:24
time, except on this show.
2:01:25
And with that, I want to thank you
2:01:26
for your courage and say in the morning
2:01:28
to you, the man who put the C
2:01:29
in the mocha.
2:01:30
Say hello to my friend on the other
2:01:31
end.
2:01:32
The one, the only Mr. John C.
2:01:34
DeMora.
2:01:41
Good morning to you, Mr. Adam Curry.
2:01:42
My ship's sea boots to the ground.
2:01:44
Feet in the air, subs in the water,
2:01:46
and the dames and knights out there.
2:01:47
And the morning to the trolls in the
2:01:50
troll room.
2:01:51
Now, all right.
2:01:52
What do you think the peak was on
2:01:54
today's show?
2:01:56
Today is a Thursday.
2:01:58
I would say that maybe 1900.
2:02:02
2834.
2:02:04
Yeah, well, that's because of the news.
2:02:06
Yes.
2:02:06
The news drives the show.
2:02:08
That's right.
2:02:10
That's right.
2:02:11
And those people have discovered that, yes, it
2:02:13
does actually work.
2:02:14
You can listen again.
2:02:15
Welcome back, everybody.
2:02:16
We're glad to have you here.
2:02:18
But for how long?
2:02:20
How long will we be here?
2:02:22
It depends on what happens next week.
2:02:24
Well, probably nothing unless they find the shooter.
2:02:27
I'll tell you why I say this.
2:02:29
Big news in the podcasting industry.
2:02:32
Big, big news.
2:02:34
Inception Point AI, a new, well-funded company.
2:02:40
CEO is Janine Wright.
2:02:42
I think she was at Wondercraft or what
2:02:44
was she?
2:02:46
She was at some other company.
2:02:47
She made some money, punched out.
2:02:50
She has made a new company.
2:02:53
Inception Point AI.
2:02:55
And they are betting on flooding the zone
2:02:58
with audio content.
2:03:01
All AI generated.
2:03:03
All AI generated.
2:03:04
5,000 podcasts, 3,000 episodes a week.
2:03:12
Well, 5,000 podcasts.
2:03:14
You know, the funny thing is she thinks
2:03:16
that's a lot.
2:03:16
But there are 4.5 million podcasts and
2:03:22
over, what did you say?
2:03:23
100 or 200,000 active podcasts.
2:03:26
It's about 400,000 on a monthly basis.
2:03:29
Okay, there's 400,000 on a monthly basis
2:03:31
of people that are podcasting and continuing to
2:03:35
podcast, not just one offs or these casual
2:03:37
ones like you run into with the bigger
2:03:39
number, which is the 4.5 million total.
2:03:42
Yeah.
2:03:43
So there's a spit in the bucket.
2:03:46
Well, the thing is, they are looking at
2:03:49
the money and the way the money works.
2:03:53
So all she's going to do is ruin
2:03:55
it for everybody.
2:03:56
Correct.
2:03:58
She's saying, I'm doing this at a cost
2:04:01
of $1 per episode.
2:04:06
And so if you listen to, let's see,
2:04:08
we're going to.
2:04:09
Wait, does that include server time?
2:04:12
Did that include downloads?
2:04:14
Does that include the overhead?
2:04:16
You can't do it for $1 an episode.
2:04:19
Well, that depends on how popular.
2:04:20
See, she's looking at it across.
2:04:22
I don't think these podcasts will be.
2:04:26
Well, what she says here is you can.
2:04:27
Yeah, if there's nobody listening and you send
2:04:30
out one download.
2:04:31
Yeah, I guess you could do it for
2:04:32
a buck.
2:04:32
Well, she says we make money at 20
2:04:34
downloads a week.
2:04:37
It seems a little.
2:04:40
Well, listen to listen to this is the
2:04:44
tape.
2:04:45
The title of this podcast is the garden
2:04:46
podcast, and it's hosted by Nigel Thistledown.
2:04:52
Have a listen.
2:04:54
Nigel Thistledown, everybody.
2:04:57
What's going on, Texas?
2:04:57
It's Bluff here.
2:04:58
Oh, wait, I'm sorry.
2:04:59
First, we have to get two ads in
2:05:01
a row.
2:05:02
Let me see if I can skip and
2:05:03
tumbleweeds off your driveway.
2:05:04
This is how they're going to make money.
2:05:06
Whether you're looking for.
2:05:07
And I must garden disasters.
2:05:09
I possess something intelligence for get inspired.
2:05:12
Go to Sierra Classic.
2:05:16
Good evening, fellow garden survivors and connoisseurs of
2:05:19
delightful disasters.
2:05:20
I'm your host, Nigel Thistledown.
2:05:23
And I must once again reveal that I
2:05:24
am an artificial intelligence, which proves absolutely invaluable
2:05:28
for tonight's celebration of spectacular garden failures.
2:05:31
You see, while I may never personally experience
2:05:33
the crushing disappointment of watching three years of
2:05:36
careful planning collapse in a single afternoon thunderstorm,
2:05:39
I possess something rather remarkable.
2:05:42
Access to centuries of documented garden disasters, meteorological
2:05:46
catastrophes and horticultural mishaps from around the globe.
2:05:49
Welcome to garden and our final episode, the
2:05:53
great garden disasters.
2:05:56
What do you think?
2:05:58
I think people will listen to it.
2:06:00
No, they won't.
2:06:01
Oh, yes, the people are already listening.
2:06:03
They're like, well, that was a very interesting
2:06:04
episode.
2:06:05
This is his final episode.
2:06:07
No, I don't.
2:06:07
That's just the AI glitch.
2:06:09
It's not the final episode.
2:06:14
Oh, and there's a knitting podcast.
2:06:18
But a knitting podcast with it's not going
2:06:21
to make any sense.
2:06:22
Well, here she says the company is able
2:06:25
to produce each episode for one dollar or
2:06:27
less, depending on length and complexity and attach
2:06:30
programmatic advertising to it.
2:06:31
Do they have a scrimshaw podcast?
2:06:34
A scrimshaw?
2:06:35
What is scrimshaw?
2:06:37
That's where you carve little that you take
2:06:39
a tusk and you start carving on it,
2:06:42
you know, while you're on the boat.
2:06:44
Yeah, like the white, the white whale.
2:06:47
Was it a tusk?
2:06:51
Is that it?
2:06:51
White whale tusk?
2:06:53
No, you know what I mean?
2:06:54
Scrimshaw.
2:06:55
No, I don't.
2:06:55
But they're pipes.
2:06:56
Don't they have scrimshaw pipes?
2:06:58
Oh, yes, scrimshaw.
2:06:59
But yeah, it'd be something like that.
2:07:03
Anyway, the sound of slop.
2:07:05
It's here.
2:07:05
It's here.
2:07:06
Well, I have a here.
2:07:08
You got to play this.
2:07:09
Now that you bring this up.
2:07:12
There's counter programming already.
2:07:14
Oh, oh, here we go.
2:07:16
Do you ever open up social media, see
2:07:17
a post and wonder, is this even real?
2:07:20
You're not alone.
2:07:22
AI slop.
2:07:23
This mass produced low quality content is clogging
2:07:26
the Internet.
2:07:27
How about that xylophone in the background is
2:07:29
making me want to clog you.
2:07:31
You cannot trust that the news report you're
2:07:34
seeing on TikTok is real footage.
2:07:36
You cannot trust that the reviews you're reading
2:07:38
of, like, the sneakers you want to buy
2:07:40
are written by a human.
2:07:42
The Internet becomes less useful because you can't,
2:07:45
like, get information from it in the same
2:07:47
way that you used to be able to.
2:07:49
I'm Brittany Luce.
2:07:50
And on this episode of It's Been a
2:07:52
Minute, I'm getting into how AI slop is
2:07:55
clogging the Internet and your brain and what
2:07:58
you can do to get away from it.
2:08:00
Hit the button below to listen now.
2:08:08
Whoever thought that was a good idea?
2:08:13
Yeah, that's good.
2:08:15
That's dynamite.
2:08:16
Yeah, that's NPR for you.
2:08:18
That's NPR.
2:08:20
Here's the dilemma, though.
2:08:21
Here's the dilemma.
2:08:23
So, podcast index.
2:08:25
Do we ingest these 5000 AI slop podcasts?
2:08:30
Do we ban them?
2:08:32
No, you can't ban them.
2:08:33
Well, we can.
2:08:34
We have all the power.
2:08:35
I have all the power.
2:08:36
You have the power to ban, but you
2:08:37
can't.
2:08:38
You can't do it.
2:08:39
Do we mark them?
2:08:40
Should we mark them as lame?
2:08:42
No.
2:08:42
Or slop?
2:08:44
No.
2:08:45
No.
2:08:46
Why would I bother?
2:08:48
They're just index.
2:08:50
They're just, you know, you yourself.
2:08:51
That would ruin the whole podcasting 2.0
2:08:55
idea.
2:08:56
Because the idea was freedom, freedom, freedom.
2:08:58
I know.
2:08:59
Yuck, yuck, yuck.
2:09:00
And then this comes out.
2:09:01
And oh, we could have more freedom.
2:09:03
Hold on.
2:09:05
That's not my position.
2:09:07
But there are many in the podcast industrial
2:09:09
complex who are calling for this, who are
2:09:13
calling for marking it as AI, who are
2:09:16
calling for banning it outright.
2:09:18
I'm not saying...
2:09:19
Dave Jones and I are very clear.
2:09:21
As long as you've got an enclosure, you
2:09:24
could podcast a PDF.
2:09:25
I don't really care.
2:09:28
But this is a real conversation.
2:09:31
People who make their money with ads.
2:09:34
That's because they're under...
2:09:35
I don't care what system you set up.
2:09:37
There's an underbelly of people that want things
2:09:41
censored.
2:09:42
Yes, that's correct.
2:09:43
And you yourself with the Charlie Kirk stuff
2:09:44
at the beginning of the show where you're
2:09:46
upset about it.
2:09:48
You could throw that right back at him.
2:09:50
What about Charlie Kirk?
2:09:51
You think we should be shot because we're
2:09:54
going to let this go in?
2:09:56
They registered as a podcast.
2:09:59
They follow the rules.
2:10:00
They have the enclosure.
2:10:02
They put it in the 2.0 system.
2:10:04
So what are you going to do about
2:10:06
it?
2:10:06
Interestingly enough, the same people who want this
2:10:08
AI stuff banned would also love to see
2:10:11
Charlie Kirk banned.
2:10:13
Yeah, of course.
2:10:14
It's the same people.
2:10:15
It's the underbelly.
2:10:16
Same people.
2:10:17
Yep.
2:10:17
Same people.
2:10:18
The same people who say...
2:10:20
Tell them to set up their own podcasting
2:10:22
2.0 index.
2:10:23
Same people who say, oh, I hope Homeland
2:10:27
Security will let me into the country for
2:10:29
the conference.
2:10:31
So much of that.
2:10:33
So much of that.
2:10:34
My own sister did that.
2:10:36
She's in New York for a wedding.
2:10:39
Willow has an American passport.
2:10:40
Her husband doesn't.
2:10:42
And she said, it's been a good trip.
2:10:44
We didn't get stopped by Border Patrol.
2:10:47
What is this?
2:10:48
Has everybody...
2:10:50
Somehow everyone's afraid that America rousts you the
2:10:53
minute you come into the country.
2:10:56
Does she listen to the show?
2:10:58
No.
2:10:58
No one...
2:10:59
There's not a single person in my family
2:11:01
who listens to the show.
2:11:05
How about you?
2:11:06
I think the last person to listen to
2:11:07
the show was Don's wife.
2:11:09
How about you?
2:11:10
Oh, yeah.
2:11:11
Does she...
2:11:11
But you listen to it once, not knowing
2:11:14
she was a spook.
2:11:16
And she took...
2:11:16
That should have been a clue.
2:11:17
She had notes on a piece of paper.
2:11:20
Well, I think you guys are very patriotic.
2:11:22
I think you're right.
2:11:23
Fareed Zakaria is anti-constitutional.
2:11:26
And a very interesting program.
2:11:28
I had no idea.
2:11:29
I'm like, wow, Meg, thanks.
2:11:30
I had no idea.
2:11:31
She ran the Russia desk.
2:11:33
What did I know?
2:11:34
That's how good she was.
2:11:36
Should have been a clue.
2:11:40
Hey, you can get these podcasts, this podcast,
2:11:43
specifically on a modern podcast app, which is
2:11:46
connected to the podcast index, which is important
2:11:49
because when someone de-platforms your favorite podcast,
2:11:53
and it happens all the time, episodes specifically,
2:11:57
episodes on Spotify get removed all the time.
2:12:02
Certainly if you play...
2:12:03
We're not on Spotify because we won't sign
2:12:06
their agreements.
2:12:08
You know, you have to sign agreements so
2:12:09
they can put ads in whenever they want.
2:12:12
If you play any music in a podcast
2:12:14
episode that the algorithms identify as possibly copyrighted
2:12:19
music, which let's be honest, is 80%
2:12:23
of all of the fair use, end of
2:12:28
show mixes, fair use because it's parody and
2:12:32
relatable to the news that we are discussing.
2:12:34
Parodies are all legal.
2:12:36
Your episode just gets deleted.
2:12:38
No questions asked.
2:12:40
Yeah.
2:12:41
And no recourse.
2:12:42
Right.
2:12:43
So you don't want that.
2:12:44
You want to get a modern podcast.
2:12:46
Nobody wants that.
2:12:47
But people accept it like, oh, well, I
2:12:49
guess I got de-platformed, okay.
2:12:51
So you want to get something for podcastapps
2:12:53
.com and go look at the podcast index.
2:12:55
All the information is there.
2:12:56
There's a little apps tab there as well.
2:12:58
You can see how it works and what's
2:12:59
in there.
2:13:00
And it's all on the up and up.
2:13:01
And even the AI slop will be in
2:13:03
there without any censorship or de-platforming.
2:13:08
And value for value, almost 18 years, almost
2:13:11
1800 episodes.
2:13:13
We still get to do this every single
2:13:15
Thursday and Sunday.
2:13:16
It's amazing that you have allowed us to
2:13:18
do that.
2:13:18
We are so excited every single time to
2:13:20
perform this as a public service for you.
2:13:23
Time, talent and treasure is how we've kept
2:13:29
it rolling.
2:13:30
You hear the boots on the ground.
2:13:31
I mean, I didn't just find the report
2:13:34
on MIT.
2:13:35
No, we have someone who actually works in
2:13:36
the business that look, I got this report
2:13:38
fresh off the press.
2:13:39
Here it is for you.
2:13:40
That is very valuable.
2:13:42
And we also have $40 billion worth of
2:13:47
artwork machinery at our disposal.
2:13:49
And I could not be happier about it.
2:13:52
You put this in a new light for
2:13:53
me.
2:13:54
This is great.
2:13:56
$40 to $60 billion worth of investment is
2:13:59
made so that we can have cover art
2:14:01
for every single show.
2:14:03
However, the artwork for episode 1797, which is
2:14:07
titled Death Buses, was done by a professional
2:14:10
who knows what he's doing.
2:14:12
And this was Sir Shug, a.k.a.
2:14:15
Pho Diddley, who deconstructed the Austin, the new
2:14:19
$1.2 million Austin logo to create a
2:14:23
new No Agenda logo.
2:14:25
Do you think this was AI deconstructed or
2:14:27
did he do this in Photoshop?
2:14:29
What do you think?
2:14:30
This has to be a Photoshop job.
2:14:31
I think so too.
2:14:32
It just didn't feel like, AI is not.
2:14:35
I can see where you could take and
2:14:37
cut out that Austin thing and move things
2:14:40
around a little bit and drop the No
2:14:43
Agenda label and Curry Dvorak and easier.
2:14:48
There's no way that AI could work that,
2:14:50
do that.
2:14:51
He'd be prompting all day.
2:14:53
We're not near professor level intelligence?
2:14:56
What?
2:14:58
There's no way.
2:14:59
There's no way.
2:15:02
It was good.
2:15:03
And everyone who saw it immediately said, oh,
2:15:06
that's great.
2:15:07
That's what makes a great piece of art.
2:15:09
Well, that's if they all noticed that what
2:15:11
the logo looked like.
2:15:13
Well, I only care about my friends.
2:15:15
I don't care about anybody else.
2:15:18
Of course, I don't care about anybody else.
2:15:20
There were other pieces of art that we
2:15:23
looked at.
2:15:26
By the way, if Sir Shug is listening,
2:15:29
which he probably is.
2:15:30
Yes.
2:15:30
And he did that using AI in any
2:15:33
way.
2:15:34
Which system did you use?
2:15:36
Unless he said, the AI gave me a
2:15:37
yellow background, except for that.
2:15:40
Maybe that, maybe that.
2:15:41
I would like to know if AI was
2:15:44
involved.
2:15:45
And I am absolutely convinced there's no chance.
2:15:50
It's really amazing what AI is doing.
2:15:53
And it's really with things that there was
2:15:56
already.
2:15:56
I mean, is there really a business for
2:15:58
graphic designers anymore?
2:16:00
I mean, really?
2:16:03
Unless you're working for the city of Austin
2:16:05
and you just overcharge him and you say,
2:16:07
look, here's what I did.
2:16:09
Well, I have some friends who are professionals
2:16:11
at the highest level.
2:16:12
And how are they doing?
2:16:13
And they've long since given up.
2:16:14
But they gave up on the business.
2:16:16
That's exactly my point.
2:16:18
They've given up on it.
2:16:19
No, but they gave up before AI.
2:16:21
Why did they give up?
2:16:23
Because of all the free clip art that's
2:16:26
available and spot art that is, they're just
2:16:29
libraries and libraries full of it.
2:16:32
And it was too hard to compete with
2:16:34
it.
2:16:35
Well, in other words, you can compete with
2:16:37
it, but you couldn't compete at the price
2:16:38
levels.
2:16:39
You couldn't get the top dollar you used
2:16:41
to be able to get 30 years ago
2:16:43
for your spot art.
2:16:45
One of our producers is a songwriter in
2:16:47
Nashville.
2:16:48
And he sent me, he said, look, this
2:16:50
is a song idea I had.
2:16:54
And he sent a demo.
2:16:56
You know how demos used to sound on
2:16:57
a cassette tape?
2:17:03
Someone's singing along, you know, kind of off
2:17:05
key.
2:17:05
It's okay.
2:17:05
Maybe you got a good singer to come
2:17:07
in.
2:17:07
It's never really, it doesn't really sound professional,
2:17:10
but it's okay.
2:17:11
And then you give that to the label
2:17:12
and the label then takes it and gets
2:17:16
an artist to record it.
2:17:17
And boom, Bob's your uncle.
2:17:19
You got some money.
2:17:19
If it's a big name artist, it's great.
2:17:22
This songwriter said, I just threw this into
2:17:25
AI myself and listen to this.
2:17:26
And it was like completely done.
2:17:27
Like a Nashville song, completely done, right, like
2:17:30
it came out of the studio.
2:17:32
I mean, that is just over.
2:17:34
Now you'll always have, you'll always have, you
2:17:40
know, something special, someone new, someone that does
2:17:43
something that the AI has not yet done.
2:17:45
That's always going to happen.
2:17:47
That will always be the case and people
2:17:50
will take note of it and it will
2:17:51
be successful.
2:17:52
But still, even then with streaming and Spotify,
2:17:55
there's no money in it.
2:17:57
So we're just going to have to deal
2:17:58
with it, I think.
2:18:00
And now they're trying to do that with
2:18:01
podcasters.
2:18:04
But can anyone really replicate what we do?
2:18:07
Is that really possible?
2:18:08
Eventually.
2:18:09
I don't think so.
2:18:11
Yeah, but probably the whole thing will collapse
2:18:15
before that happens.
2:18:16
But when I say eventually, I mean eventually,
2:18:19
like within a hundred years.
2:18:22
Oh, okay.
2:18:23
Well, we'll go to the moon within a
2:18:25
hundred years.
2:18:26
I'm sure that'll happen.
2:18:28
Maybe.
2:18:29
Until then, no $40 to $60 billion invested
2:18:33
here.
2:18:33
Instead, we depend on your support of the
2:18:37
program.
2:18:37
This is unique in podcasting.
2:18:39
There's not a lot of people who have
2:18:41
done this successfully and certainly not for 18
2:18:43
years.
2:18:44
And we believe it's because it's an outstanding
2:18:46
product.
2:18:47
There's no other way to do value for
2:18:48
value.
2:18:50
Or as some say, I work for tips.
2:18:52
No, no, no, we don't.
2:18:54
And people have supported us and we are
2:18:56
eternally grateful for the opportunity to do this
2:18:59
for you and for the value you return
2:19:01
for whatever you receive from the program.
2:19:04
And today we have one of those examples
2:19:06
of someone who has the means and the
2:19:08
love for the show.
2:19:09
Seronomous of Dogpatch and Lower Slobovia comes in
2:19:12
once again with his mysterious number, not ending
2:19:16
in a two, I might add.
2:19:19
So I don't know if he had $2
2:19:20
bills, but today he sends in- He
2:19:22
always has $2 bills.
2:19:24
You don't have to keep wondering.
2:19:25
He had six of them in this donation.
2:19:28
$3,141, which we are so grateful for.
2:19:35
And you have a note I have on
2:19:36
my thing right here.
2:19:37
You have a note.
2:19:38
I have a note.
2:19:39
In fact, I didn't get a copy of
2:19:42
said notes.
2:19:42
Usually I get a scanned copy of the
2:19:45
note.
2:19:45
You do.
2:19:47
But why not today?
2:19:48
Because Jay's in Seattle.
2:19:51
Oh, so she didn't have the note.
2:19:53
No, I had the note.
2:19:54
Okay, all right.
2:19:56
You don't have a scanner.
2:19:57
You got printers all over the house, no
2:19:58
scanner.
2:20:00
I have a scanner.
2:20:01
Well, you should have scanned it for me.
2:20:03
It's easier to write, John has note, which
2:20:07
is three words, on a memo to Jay
2:20:10
directly.
2:20:11
Okay, as long as they don't have to
2:20:12
copy down any information, it's good.
2:20:14
Then, oh, you mean, oh, what?
2:20:17
Yeah, it's funny because this is the first
2:20:18
time Onimus asked for about eight clips.
2:20:22
I doubt it.
2:20:23
It's interesting.
2:20:24
I doubt it.
2:20:25
He did.
2:20:26
No, he didn't.
2:20:27
Okay, here we go.
2:20:29
It's too much travel again, causing delays in
2:20:31
producership, he writes.
2:20:33
This donation includes any cash processing fee.
2:20:38
Cash.
2:20:40
I'm going to read this, but I can
2:20:42
assure you that we don't do this.
2:20:44
And I'm sorry to say, personally, I recommend
2:20:47
not depositing cash, but adding it to your
2:20:50
pallet of cash for future use.
2:20:52
No, your pallet.
2:20:54
We don't have a pallet of cash.
2:20:56
We put it in the bank so we
2:20:57
can split it at the end of the
2:21:00
year, but at the same time, make sure
2:21:02
that it's documented so the IRS doesn't say,
2:21:04
hey, these guys are taking cash money and
2:21:06
putting it aside.
2:21:07
We don't do that.
2:21:08
No.
2:21:09
A note for travelers on the EU currency
2:21:11
restrictions.
2:21:13
Oh, this now, here we go.
2:21:14
Here we go.
2:21:16
Take up to the limit of $10,000
2:21:19
and exchange US dollars cash at different currency
2:21:22
exchanges.
2:21:24
In time, they may develop a method to
2:21:27
capture passport numbers across different networks.
2:21:30
But for now, it allows you to have
2:21:32
more than the currency limit and helps keep
2:21:35
credit cards in your pocket, reducing future fraud
2:21:39
risk and offers the added benefit of annoying
2:21:43
retailer checks that can't, retailer clerks that can't
2:21:47
count change.
2:21:48
So we're talking about those areas that we've
2:21:51
talked about on the show where you can't
2:21:52
have more than $300.
2:21:55
Yes.
2:21:56
He says, hell with it.
2:21:58
Take your 10 grand across the border and
2:22:00
then go do a bunch of it.
2:22:01
You get a lot of $300, $200, $300
2:22:03
here and there.
2:22:05
So he says, so it's just like.
2:22:07
All right, this is a little tip.
2:22:09
A little tip for the travelers.
2:22:11
Adam.
2:22:11
Yes.
2:22:12
Your view that some of our challenges is
2:22:15
the devil at work has merit, but recall
2:22:19
that life is a human endeavor and there
2:22:22
has always been profound evil in the world.
2:22:25
Amen.
2:22:26
We are in total agreement.
2:22:29
Small note, last month's shekels were from my
2:22:33
visit to the West Bank.
2:22:34
Yes, he sent some shekels.
2:22:36
He visited the West Bank.
2:22:37
That's interesting.
2:22:38
Yeah, we're figuring it out.
2:22:40
We're getting close.
2:22:42
My visit to the West Bank, you know
2:22:43
the place.
2:22:48
P-I-S-A-A-K-A-J
2:22:50
-E-S-U-S was born P-B
2:22:51
-U-H, which is a piece be above
2:22:54
me.
2:22:54
He's talking about Allah or about Muhammad.
2:22:58
That's P-B-A-H refers to.
2:23:01
No jingles, no karma.
2:23:02
John, 175 words.
2:23:06
He's well within his budget.
2:23:09
Well done.
2:23:10
And I believe he, although.
2:23:12
Am I the only one that complains about
2:23:13
long notes?
2:23:14
Is that what he's implying?
2:23:17
That's the reputation that you have.
2:23:20
Yes, that's your reputation.
2:23:22
It doesn't mean it's correct, but reputation is
2:23:24
just a fact.
2:23:25
You can't deal with it any other way.
2:23:27
You got to rep and that's it.
2:23:30
So you might as well say it.
2:23:33
Okay.
2:23:35
Say what?
2:23:36
Well, if you're being accused of the crime,
2:23:38
you might as well commit the crime.
2:23:40
And tell people.
2:23:41
It's not a crime to bitch about the
2:23:42
people writing long notes that are too long
2:23:44
for the show.
2:23:45
Yeah, exactly.
2:23:46
What kind of a crime is that to
2:23:48
complain?
2:23:48
It's like now you can't complain.
2:23:50
It's a crime figure of speech.
2:23:56
Thank you, Sir.
2:23:56
Animus.
2:23:57
Now he receives a secretary generalship.
2:24:01
I believe he never wants anything.
2:24:04
Well, but it's he got on the list.
2:24:07
Okay.
2:24:08
Let me just check.
2:24:09
Because Jay just puts people on the list.
2:24:10
She just wants to send stuff out.
2:24:12
Let me see.
2:24:13
But no, she doesn't.
2:24:14
She's like, I can't wait to send.
2:24:16
Yeah.
2:24:16
She put him on the list.
2:24:17
And I don't know what I'm going to
2:24:18
do.
2:24:19
So I got it.
2:24:19
The package in the mail.
2:24:21
It doesn't have anybody's name on it.
2:24:23
I have no idea where it came from.
2:24:25
It's from one of those plays that printing
2:24:28
operation.
2:24:29
The big one print for less or whatever
2:24:31
it's called.
2:24:33
And it's two envelopes.
2:24:35
And each one of them had a very
2:24:38
elaborate set of small, no agenda stickers.
2:24:42
Oh, that's cool.
2:24:44
Little silver stickers are about very small, like
2:24:47
half inch round stickers with a logo on
2:24:50
them and no agenda.
2:24:52
And I got two sheets and two different
2:24:53
envelopes within the package.
2:24:56
I would like to know who sent those
2:24:57
to me and what they want us to
2:24:59
use them for.
2:25:00
Are they handsome stickers?
2:25:02
Yeah, they're cute.
2:25:03
It's pretty because it's a silver little silver
2:25:06
sticker.
2:25:08
I'll take a couple and put them on
2:25:10
some trucks out here.
2:25:12
No, it's too small.
2:25:14
We're talking a little bitty things.
2:25:16
They're like on a sheet of paper at
2:25:18
the bottom, maybe, or it's a stamp for
2:25:20
the back of an envelope there.
2:25:21
No, this wouldn't do any good on your
2:25:23
laptop cover.
2:25:24
Can we put on the no, it's too
2:25:26
small for that.
2:25:26
It's their small little stamp size stickers.
2:25:30
Sir Scovey is up next from Charlotte, North
2:25:32
Carolina, and he comes in with nine nine
2:25:35
nine nine nine.
2:25:36
Nine nine nine nine matching donations alert in
2:25:41
the morning to Alexander Wenta, Sir Sam and
2:25:43
Charlotte in San Francisco for their donations of
2:25:46
333 dot 33 to show 1797.
2:25:50
Thank you for your courage.
2:25:52
All six donations have been matched.
2:25:54
But wait, there's more.
2:25:56
A seventh was matched because Charlotte in San
2:25:58
Francisco not only mentioned the matching donation offer,
2:26:01
but did so on a handwritten note.
2:26:03
That's worthy of a match to the best
2:26:05
podcast in the universe.
2:26:07
Goat karma for the seven producers who made
2:26:09
the matching donations possible.
2:26:11
Love and light from Sir Scovey in Charlotte,
2:26:14
North Carolina.
2:26:15
And this concludes the matching donations.
2:26:17
And we thank you all very much.
2:26:19
Producers who match.
2:26:20
And of course, Sir Scovey, thank you for
2:26:22
your courage.
2:26:23
You've got karma.
2:26:26
It was nice of him to give that
2:26:27
last extra one.
2:26:28
That's very, that's very kind.
2:26:30
Yes.
2:26:31
Sir, your honest mechanic.
2:26:35
And he is in.
2:26:38
Easley, South Carolina.
2:26:40
Easley, yeah.
2:26:41
Easley, Easley.
2:26:43
Easley there is also known as Kevin Fusco
2:26:48
526 36 ITM fellas.
2:26:52
This is Sir, your honest mechanic.
2:26:54
I'm back probably a month back in episode
2:26:59
or I'm back.
2:27:01
And this is probably a month back in
2:27:04
episode.
2:27:05
So you're, you've probably already, they spell it
2:27:08
right.
2:27:08
That time already talked about this.
2:27:11
Okay.
2:27:11
One of my employees came to me and
2:27:14
said, our insurance sucks.
2:27:18
The doctor prescribed my wife Zep bound for
2:27:21
her sleep.
2:27:22
No, no.
2:27:24
He said the FDI just recently approved it.
2:27:28
I had a great laugh when he said
2:27:30
that.
2:27:31
And I thought it's only a matter of
2:27:32
time before these are good for erectile dysfunction.
2:27:37
Like Adam keeps predicting.
2:27:39
It's coming.
2:27:41
I thought it already happened.
2:27:42
Well, thank you.
2:27:43
No jingles.
2:27:44
Just karma for everyone.
2:27:46
Thank you, Kevin.
2:27:47
Yes, well, it kind of said it, but
2:27:50
they haven't actually advertised it as erectile dysfunction.
2:27:55
So not quite, but we're getting close.
2:27:57
You've got karma.
2:28:01
Matt Stevens, Nahunta.
2:28:02
Nahunta.
2:28:03
I'm probably mispronouncing that in Georgia.
2:28:07
Nahunta.
2:28:09
350, Nahunta.
2:28:10
350.93. That's 333 plus 33 fees.
2:28:14
Thank you.
2:28:15
Plus fees.
2:28:16
Thank you both for your work in ceremony
2:28:18
of Charlie Kirk.
2:28:19
Please knight me, sir.
2:28:20
Matthew of the lower memory.
2:28:23
In memory of Charlie Kirk.
2:28:24
Please knight me, sir.
2:28:25
Matthew of the lower coastal plain.
2:28:28
Matt Stevens in Nahunta, Georgia.
2:28:31
So he'll be the Sir Matthew of the
2:28:34
lower coastal plains today.
2:28:35
And thank you, Matt.
2:28:37
Appreciate it.
2:28:38
You can get the next one after I
2:28:40
read Sir Joseph's note.
2:28:42
And he's in Ewing, New Jersey.
2:28:45
This is the other note that came in.
2:28:47
Well, there's two notes here.
2:28:49
Two notes in a row.
2:28:50
And I don't have, I only have one
2:28:52
note.
2:28:52
So I don't know what note you're about
2:28:53
to read.
2:28:54
Oh, wait, this is, no, this is Sir
2:28:56
Joseph.
2:28:56
I have the note, the sheet from, I
2:28:59
don't know where that other note is.
2:29:01
I have.
2:29:01
No, yeah, I think that's the one that
2:29:03
attaches to the PDF.
2:29:04
I have Beth, Beth Elliott or Chad Elliott.
2:29:07
What do I have?
2:29:08
I have Beth Elliott.
2:29:09
That's the one I have.
2:29:09
Yeah, that's the note.
2:29:11
So you have Sir Joseph, no, but there's
2:29:12
Sir Joseph before that.
2:29:13
Yeah, I have Sir Joseph in my, right
2:29:14
in my poem.
2:29:15
Well, why don't I just read this one
2:29:16
then?
2:29:17
And you can do that, which is what
2:29:18
you originally suggested.
2:29:19
Well, because then we're skipping Sir Lucas.
2:29:24
Why don't you read Sir Luca and then
2:29:26
we'll go from there.
2:29:27
From Switzerland.
2:29:29
There are two kinds of people in the
2:29:30
world, those who use the metric system and
2:29:32
those who still use body parts and kitchen
2:29:34
utensils as units of measurement and fake the
2:29:37
moon landings.
2:29:38
This would be typical of a Swiss guy.
2:29:42
And they fake the moon landings.
2:29:44
Please, I would appreciate if you gave a
2:29:45
cancer karma, an F cancer karma, I'm sure,
2:29:48
for my father who was fighting a prostate
2:29:49
cancer comeback with ivermectin, a dog dewormer and
2:29:53
supplements.
2:29:54
Yes, we're familiar with this and very good
2:29:56
results I've heard.
2:29:57
Please keep us informed.
2:29:59
In October, we will know if it worked.
2:30:01
Lastly, happy 51st birthday to me on September
2:30:04
11th.
2:30:04
Thank you for your attention to this matter,
2:30:06
says Sir Luca.
2:30:07
Stop it!
2:30:12
You've got karma.
2:30:16
So this is Sir Joseph of Ewing, New
2:30:21
Jersey.
2:30:21
He came with 333 and he was plugging
2:30:25
something on his check, but I don't have
2:30:27
a check here.
2:30:29
But he says, and he also has a
2:30:32
funny letterhead of gumbo boombas.
2:30:35
Anyway, he's a character, the Sir Joseph.
2:30:38
He's the lord of the central Jersey swamp.
2:30:43
If someone told me that I would someday
2:30:45
donate $1,000 to a podcast, I would
2:30:49
have told them that they needed their head
2:30:51
examined.
2:30:52
Well, I need my head examined because this
2:30:55
is the third donation.
2:30:56
333.34 puts me into the knighthood category.
2:31:00
I couldn't possibly ask you to kick in
2:31:04
the penny considering, oh, he added it, how
2:31:07
much bitching John does about the lackluster donations
2:31:16
of late.
2:31:16
I complain a lot.
2:31:19
Please knight me, Sir Joseph, lord of the
2:31:21
central Jersey swamps.
2:31:23
And if you would, if you'd be so
2:31:25
kind to provide, by the way, this is
2:31:27
in 4-point type.
2:31:30
So I'm struggling.
2:31:32
If you'd provide some gumbo parmesan and albata,
2:31:38
albata beer.
2:31:39
See, this is exactly why you need to
2:31:41
scan the notes, because now I have to
2:31:43
go into the system.
2:31:45
I've got to go into the show notes.
2:31:47
I've got to say, can you repeat that
2:31:49
again?
2:31:50
Yeah.
2:31:51
What is it?
2:31:52
Yeah, well, I would have scanned the note
2:31:54
if I'd known this was in there, but
2:31:55
I didn't read the note.
2:31:56
Oh, very good.
2:31:57
Please mention my band, the Gumbo Goombas, who
2:32:02
can be found on my digital platform, and
2:32:04
I will be able to deduct the offering
2:32:07
as an advertising expense on my taxes.
2:32:10
Okay.
2:32:11
You know, it's between you and the IRS,
2:32:14
but it sounds like an ad to me
2:32:15
for the gum.
2:32:16
I said it already twice.
2:32:18
Gumbo Goombas.
2:32:19
That's three.
2:32:19
P.S. I recently celebrated my 68th.
2:32:22
Ah, I bet she's not on the birthday
2:32:23
list.
2:32:24
No, another thing I got to add.
2:32:26
Okay, well, gee, I'm sorry.
2:32:28
You're going to have to do some work.
2:32:29
I'm struggling trying to read this note.
2:32:32
My 68th revolution, that was my fault, because
2:32:35
normally when I send these to Jay, when
2:32:37
she's floating around someplace else, I will put
2:32:40
the birthday call out on this.
2:32:42
It would have been on the thing, and
2:32:44
it would have been taken care of, but
2:32:45
that was my fault.
2:32:47
Sir Joseph, and he turned 68 when?
2:32:51
Uh, I'm looking.
2:32:53
He doesn't say.
2:32:54
And can you, again, give me what he
2:32:56
wants for the roundtable?
2:32:57
Because you still didn't tell me.
2:32:59
Yeah, he wants for the roundtable.
2:33:00
He wants Gumbo Parmesan, which I have no
2:33:06
idea what that is, and Elata, Elata, AL,
2:33:10
oh, I'm sorry, Elbata, A-L-B-I
2:33:14
-T-A, beer.
2:33:19
Elbata, Elbita, A-L-B-I-T-A?
2:33:22
Yeah, that's what it says.
2:33:23
A-L-B-I-T-A, Elbita.
2:33:28
Well, let me look close.
2:33:31
Yeah.
2:33:31
Okay, that's not Elbata, it's Elbita.
2:33:38
Well, again, it's a four-point type, so.
2:33:40
Okay.
2:33:41
When you get in your 70s, even with
2:33:43
the cataract operation, you can't read four-point
2:33:46
type.
2:33:47
I recently celebrated my 68th revolution.
2:33:49
He goes on about that.
2:33:50
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
2:33:53
Soon-to-be-Joseph, Lord of the Central
2:33:55
Jersey Swamps.
2:33:56
All right, we've got it all.
2:33:59
Then we have Beth Elliot, who says, in
2:34:03
the morning, John and Adam, a written note,
2:34:05
and this I also have not just a
2:34:07
note, but I have a, for some reason,
2:34:09
a scan of the check.
2:34:11
It's a pretty check.
2:34:13
Assuming this arrives in time, can you please
2:34:15
read this on Thursday, September 11th?
2:34:16
Show switcheroo for my smoking hot hubby of
2:34:19
31 years, Chad, who hit me in the
2:34:21
mouth during COVID.
2:34:22
Thank you for that, and congrats.
2:34:24
You are no longer a douchebag.
2:34:28
You've been de-douched.
2:34:30
Happy anniversary, sexy ass, she says.
2:34:33
For jingles, may I have their eating the
2:34:35
dogs, I got hairy legs, and little girl
2:34:37
yay.
2:34:37
Thank you, gentlemen, for your courage.
2:34:39
In all uppercase, for your attention to this
2:34:42
matter.
2:34:43
Yours truly, Beth.
2:34:45
P.S., Chad says, I listen to y
2:34:47
'all too much.
2:34:48
They're eating the dogs.
2:34:49
I got hairy legs.
2:34:52
All right.
2:34:54
Now we have Sir Cal of Lavender Blossoms,
2:34:57
our buddy in Northville, Michigan, 2772.
2:35:00
And he says, even though this is not
2:35:03
true, I think it's about time I show
2:35:06
my appreciation for all you do.
2:35:08
He does all that constantly.
2:35:10
Thank you.
2:35:10
Happy birthday, Adam, which is a little late,
2:35:13
but there it is.
2:35:14
And R-I-P-C-K, Sir Cal.
2:35:18
Sir Cal, you've been around for a long
2:35:19
time and have supported us a lot.
2:35:21
So thank you very much.
2:35:23
Yeah.
2:35:24
Hey, Eli the Coffee Guy is about to
2:35:26
round it out.
2:35:27
We have a couple more.
2:35:28
He's from Bensonville, Illinois, 20911.
2:35:30
There it is.
2:35:31
He's always with the date, 9-11.
2:35:33
Normally, I would try to write something witty
2:35:35
along with a plug for Gigawatt Coffee, but
2:35:37
I was in the middle of drafting my
2:35:38
donation dote when I received a text that
2:35:40
Charlie Kirk had been shot.
2:35:42
Although I didn't listen to him much, I
2:35:44
just want to express my sorrow.
2:35:46
Any political killing tears at the fabric of
2:35:48
our nation.
2:35:49
I mourn the death of Kirk.
2:35:50
I also mourn the last 25 years since
2:35:52
the fateful morning in September that sent planes
2:35:55
crashing into buildings.
2:35:56
I miss the world before that future generations
2:35:59
will never know.
2:36:00
I'm concerned of what they shall inherit.
2:36:02
I'm sure this event and the following media
2:36:04
circus will help usher in new security measures
2:36:07
and even greater loss of freedoms.
2:36:09
Thank you for pointing out the BS, says
2:36:11
Eli the Coffee Guy.
2:36:15
Linda Lou Patkins up and she's in Lakewood,
2:36:18
Colorado.
2:36:18
Two hundred bucks is once jobs, Carmen.
2:36:20
She says worried about AI for resume that
2:36:23
gets results.
2:36:24
Tell your tells your unique story and highlights
2:36:27
the value you bring.
2:36:28
Go to ImageMakersInc.com.
2:36:30
That's ImageMakersInc with a K and work with
2:36:33
Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of
2:36:35
resumes.
2:36:36
And then I want to continue with winning
2:36:38
winning resumes.
2:36:40
And she needs what I say.
2:36:41
Just you just you just actually you phoned
2:36:44
it in.
2:36:46
Yeah, I probably did.
2:36:47
You should have read it.
2:36:49
Jobs, Karma, worried about AI for a resume
2:36:52
that gets results, tells your unique story and
2:36:54
highlights the value you bring.
2:36:56
Go to ImageMakersInc.com.
2:36:58
That's ImageMakersInc with a K and work with
2:37:00
Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer of
2:37:02
winning resumes.
2:37:03
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:37:07
Let's vote for jobs.
2:37:09
Hey, at least we're honest.
2:37:12
So you so will you do this that
2:37:15
you're so damn good?
2:37:16
Can you do the voiceovers for Mimi's ads
2:37:20
as she runs for city council in Port
2:37:21
Angeles?
2:37:22
Oh, I'd be delighted to.
2:37:23
I told her exactly that.
2:37:25
I said she I said, I don't even
2:37:27
have to ask him if you asked him.
2:37:29
Have you asked him?
2:37:29
I said, no, I haven't asked him.
2:37:31
He'll just do it.
2:37:32
He's an egomaniac.
2:37:34
He'd be glad.
2:37:35
Oh, what?
2:37:35
Oh, hold on.
2:37:36
I just I mean, I'm sorry.
2:37:38
I was going to do it until John
2:37:40
called me an egomaniac.
2:37:42
I'm no longer doing it.
2:37:44
Nope.
2:37:44
You can blame John.
2:37:45
Nope.
2:37:45
That's it.
2:37:46
I'm done.
2:37:46
Nope.
2:37:47
Sorry.
2:37:47
It's all over.
2:37:49
So anonymous.
2:37:50
And by the way, so apparently she and
2:37:54
one of our producers did a meetup promo
2:37:58
for the for the meetup in Oakland.
2:38:02
No, no, that's it.
2:38:03
No, they're doing a meetup in Port Angeles,
2:38:06
Port Angeles.
2:38:07
But they're doing a meetup.
2:38:08
So they send me a meetup promo with
2:38:10
Mimi.
2:38:11
But they send me an audacity file.
2:38:15
Like, I can't open this.
2:38:17
I mean, I could.
2:38:18
Oh, they didn't send an audacity.
2:38:20
Yes.
2:38:21
Yes, they did.
2:38:21
Oh, that's embarrassing.
2:38:23
The audacity project file.
2:38:25
And I'm like, she says to me, here
2:38:29
we go.
2:38:29
Here we go.
2:38:31
Yeah, we decided.
2:38:33
I forget the guy's name.
2:38:34
Now, does your wife talk like that?
2:38:39
I agreed to I agreed to make her
2:38:41
voice talking like this, which is hard for
2:38:45
me to do.
2:38:46
So I don't do it.
2:38:47
But she said that they had they've got
2:38:49
the that device.
2:38:51
You have the road test and they recorded
2:38:55
it.
2:38:55
And they say, how do we get it
2:38:56
off of here?
2:38:58
And they couldn't figure out how to get.
2:38:59
I said, let's just take the memory out.
2:39:01
You know, we finally worked it out.
2:39:02
Send me the memory card.
2:39:04
So they finally worked it out.
2:39:06
They didn't do the memory.
2:39:07
The easiest thing to do is take the
2:39:08
memory card, stick in a computer, boom, you're
2:39:10
done.
2:39:10
Yeah.
2:39:11
But so they took it and I guess
2:39:14
they put in audacity and then they sent
2:39:16
you the audacity.
2:39:17
They went to say with audacity, if you
2:39:19
go to save project, it saves it as
2:39:23
this crazy format that is not audio.
2:39:25
It's just their format.
2:39:27
Yeah.
2:39:27
Instead of exporting it, they didn't know to
2:39:29
export it.
2:39:30
Yes.
2:39:30
Is this the podcast studio they're running up
2:39:32
there?
2:39:33
Yeah.
2:39:35
Don't get it down.
2:39:36
Well, and to be honest, I got it
2:39:38
and I have audacity.
2:39:39
But then it opened up.
2:39:40
And first of all, audacity, which is now
2:39:42
a commercial company, gives you all kinds of
2:39:44
great offers.
2:39:45
And then it says, yeah, this is no
2:39:47
longer compatible with this version of audacity.
2:39:49
It was close to showtime.
2:39:51
Like, OK, I'm sorry, you got to send
2:39:53
me an MP3.
2:39:53
And so it's not going to be when
2:39:55
is that?
2:39:55
When is the meetup?
2:39:56
It's next.
2:39:57
It's this coming Saturday.
2:39:58
Oh, crap.
2:39:59
So we can't even play their their jingle.
2:40:01
They're they're.
2:40:02
Well, the day you know, you have to
2:40:04
go to the source.
2:40:05
They screwed it up.
2:40:07
And I didn't export the file.
2:40:09
Instead, they send you that.
2:40:10
And audacity being what it is, because I've
2:40:13
noticed this, too.
2:40:14
It's horrible.
2:40:15
It's changed so much over the last couple
2:40:18
of iterations.
2:40:19
It's because it became a commercial company all
2:40:21
of a sudden from open source to someone
2:40:23
buying it somehow.
2:40:24
Yeah.
2:40:25
Yeah.
2:40:25
Why doesn't that happen to podcast index for
2:40:28
a couple of million?
2:40:29
We can go from open, open source to
2:40:31
be bought.
2:40:32
We got no problem to be bought.
2:40:34
I know.
2:40:34
I know your style.
2:40:37
Yeah, that's OK.
2:40:39
So, OK, they're having they're having the meetup
2:40:40
coincident with the Oakland meetup, which I'll be
2:40:42
at.
2:40:44
And but it'll be listed in the Port
2:40:46
Angeles is having a meetup on Saturday.
2:40:50
And there is going to jail be up
2:40:52
there.
2:40:52
Oh, nice.
2:40:53
Oh, that's and Brennan.
2:40:54
So they'll have to be up there.
2:40:56
They would normally be at the Oakland.
2:40:57
You mean Brennan, the deadbeat with no job,
2:41:00
that guy?
2:41:02
He still gets checks.
2:41:04
So he he'll be there with Jay and
2:41:08
they'll have I don't know where they're doing
2:41:09
it, but it was listed.
2:41:11
And I'll be at the Oakland meetup, which
2:41:13
is going to be at the pizza place
2:41:14
in Oakland again, Violetas.
2:41:16
So the producers are saying, post the file
2:41:20
to the chat and we'll we'll take care
2:41:23
of it for you.
2:41:24
And I'm like, they will.
2:41:26
Yeah, but I think it's it's like raw
2:41:29
audio, like 15 gigs or something for for
2:41:32
these things.
2:41:33
You know what I mean?
2:41:35
It sends something weird, send something weird out.
2:41:38
Could be wrong.
2:41:39
Let's see if you can post it.
2:41:40
Anyway, last donation is from anonymous.
2:41:42
I wanted to mention this game is his
2:41:44
check is two hundred dollars.
2:41:45
The person was adamant about not mentioning who
2:41:48
it is, but did say that she.
2:41:54
Now, this is discovered, just discovered you can
2:41:57
send in a check and couldn't do anything
2:42:01
because you didn't want to do anything else
2:42:02
and realize that this is great.
2:42:05
I can send in money now because I
2:42:07
didn't realize how easy it is to send
2:42:09
in a check.
2:42:10
Oh, it's so easy.
2:42:11
It's a box three, three, nine El Cerrito,
2:42:14
California, nine, four, five, three.
2:42:16
It's just beyond me while everybody doesn't send
2:42:19
in a check.
2:42:19
It costs 15 cents to process.
2:42:21
Oh, yeah, I can't post it to the
2:42:24
chat because it's 31 megs.
2:42:28
I can only upload 15 megs.
2:42:30
I'm sorry, people.
2:42:32
Sorry.
2:42:33
All right.
2:42:34
Wow.
2:42:35
Yeah, here we go.
2:42:38
OK, was that it?
2:42:40
Was that the last?
2:42:41
That was it.
2:42:41
We're done.
2:42:42
All right.
2:42:42
Right here.
2:42:43
Thank you to these executive and associate executive
2:42:45
producers for episode 1798.
2:42:48
Two more to go until the big 1800.
2:42:50
Will they survive 18 years?
2:42:52
The best podcast in the universe.
2:42:54
That's up to you if you want us
2:42:56
to continue with this open source, open funding,
2:42:58
completely transparent system we have put up where
2:43:01
we thank everybody who supports us.
2:43:03
Fifty dollars and above.
2:43:05
And of course, these executive and associate executive
2:43:07
producers, they receive these credits, which are official
2:43:10
show business credits, and they receive them because
2:43:13
they came in with 200 or 300 dollars.
2:43:16
But any amount matters to us.
2:43:17
Anything that you want to send back as
2:43:19
value is value for value for us.
2:43:22
And we'll be thanking $50 and above in
2:43:25
our second segment.
2:43:26
Thanks again.
2:43:26
Our formula is this.
2:43:28
We go out, we hit people in the
2:43:31
mouth.
2:43:43
I just had an idea here.
2:43:45
Let me see.
2:43:46
I can probably post this.
2:43:49
You know, I got an idea here.
2:43:50
I think I can get this on a
2:43:51
server and get them to it.
2:43:53
Oh, yeah.
2:43:53
I got everything, baby.
2:43:55
Let me see if this works.
2:43:58
You're going to post it somewhere and have
2:44:00
them pick it up?
2:44:01
Yep.
2:44:01
Yep.
2:44:01
Here it is.
2:44:02
It's an AUP3 file.
2:44:07
AUP3?
2:44:07
Because I don't even know what that is.
2:44:08
I've never even seen that.
2:44:09
All the files I have that are backed
2:44:11
up like that are AUPs.
2:44:13
Well, this says AUP3.
2:44:15
So they export it as something special.
2:44:20
Good luck, boys.
2:44:22
Yeah.
2:44:22
Well, the chat has it.
2:44:24
So the trolls will go to work.
2:44:25
I mean, it's really just I ran out
2:44:27
of time.
2:44:27
First thing, everyone always assumes, well, don't you
2:44:30
have a Google account connected to adamantcurry.com?
2:44:34
Like, no.
2:44:35
No, I have a Google account, which is
2:44:37
not adamantcurry.com.
2:44:39
And so I always have to request access,
2:44:43
which usually, you know, an hour later, people
2:44:46
go like, oh, okay, here you go.
2:44:48
Here's your access.
2:44:50
Oh, sorry, I got the access.
2:44:53
And then they send it back.
2:44:55
And it's like, okay.
2:44:57
Anyway, the trolls are going to take care
2:44:59
of it.
2:44:59
We might get it done.
2:44:59
We need to get it done, which is
2:45:00
later in the show.
2:45:01
The trolls are going to do it.
2:45:02
The trolls are going to do it.
2:45:03
They're going to do it.
2:45:04
Yeah, we'll see.
2:45:05
Yeah, they're going to do it.
2:45:05
There's a lot of trolls today, and they're
2:45:07
bored.
2:45:07
We have great trolls.
2:45:09
Now, speaking of one of the best trolls
2:45:11
in the universe.
2:45:12
Wow, this came in this morning on the
2:45:14
Transom.
2:45:15
Bye-bye, Mandelson.
2:45:16
Breaking news this hour.
2:45:19
Let's go live to Westminster.
2:45:20
Our political correspondent, Sreena Barkasinghe.
2:45:22
Sreena, we're hearing in the last few moments
2:45:24
that Peter Mandelson has been asked to withdraw
2:45:26
as ambassador by the prime minister.
2:45:29
Yes, exactly.
2:45:29
Withdraw from being the ambassador, or essentially he's
2:45:33
been sacked by the prime minister.
2:45:35
And you heard from the foreign minister there,
2:45:37
Stephen Doughty, who was drawn out by the
2:45:41
Conservatives' urgent questions today to make that announcement.
2:45:45
It's not a surprise.
2:45:47
We were talking this morning about how long
2:45:49
could Peter Mandelson sustain this drip feed of
2:45:52
information, these very embarrassing photos, that one of
2:45:56
him in a bathrobe at one of Jeffrey
2:45:59
Epstein's residencies.
2:46:02
But it seems to be these emails that
2:46:04
are the most damning.
2:46:05
And the foreign office has said these are
2:46:09
the new information that emerged.
2:46:12
This sacking has gone down, whether he was
2:46:15
told personally, whether he was summoned in.
2:46:18
But it was clearly becoming untenable that Peter
2:46:21
Mandelson could sustain his position.
2:46:24
And remember, the government has a commitment to
2:46:27
women and girls, and halving violence against women
2:46:30
and girls was optically not looking very good.
2:46:33
But it seems like those emails were the
2:46:35
most damning things.
2:46:36
And that's why the prime minister has said
2:46:38
today, via his foreign minister, that the U
2:46:42
.S. ambassador now has been sacked.
2:46:45
So these emails, as I was reading through
2:46:48
them, it's like, haven't we seen these?
2:46:50
It's been around for a long time.
2:46:55
This whole thing is blowed up again.
2:46:58
And they had the latest Trump no to
2:47:02
his birthday party or something, which I thought
2:47:05
was actually pretty funny.
2:47:07
Well, the thing that is poorly reported on
2:47:10
is it looks like a script, a script
2:47:14
with a voiceover.
2:47:15
And it literally looks like a side from
2:47:18
a script.
2:47:18
And no one ever comments on that.
2:47:20
I'm not sure what script was it from.
2:47:23
Was it from a TV show, a reality
2:47:25
show?
2:47:25
Was it from a movie?
2:47:27
Why is it a script at the top?
2:47:29
It has voice voiceover.
2:47:31
If you really look at it, it's very
2:47:35
confusing.
2:47:36
And of course, we know it's a Democrat
2:47:38
hoax, everybody.
2:47:40
This is the birthday message allegedly crafted by
2:47:42
Donald Trump for Jeffrey Epstein in 2003.
2:47:46
We have certain things in common, it says,
2:47:48
inside a drawing of a naked female form.
2:47:51
May every day be another wonderful secret, it
2:47:53
adds, above what appears to be Trump's signature.
2:47:56
You know, it actually, that drawing, it looks
2:47:59
like, remember as kids, we would draw that
2:48:02
and then we'd cover up a part of
2:48:04
it and people like, oh man, I can't
2:48:05
believe you drew that.
2:48:06
And you take your hands off.
2:48:07
And it was actually a horse's head.
2:48:10
Do you remember that joke?
2:48:11
Remember that joke we used to play?
2:48:12
No, that was a joke that I've never
2:48:14
heard of.
2:48:14
Looks a bit like that.
2:48:15
Signature.
2:48:16
I don't even know what they're talking about.
2:48:18
Now, somebody could have written a letter and
2:48:20
used my name, but that's happened a lot.
2:48:22
I'm not a drawing person.
2:48:23
I don't do drawings of women, that I
2:48:26
can tell you.
2:48:26
Despite White House denials, the signature appears to
2:48:29
match Trump's on other letters sent during the
2:48:32
same time period.
2:48:33
The president did not write this letter.
2:48:35
He did not sign this letter.
2:48:37
The drawing was contained in a birthday book,
2:48:39
prepared for Epstein's 50th birthday, before he was
2:48:42
convicted of soliciting prostitution from a minor.
2:48:45
The book also included a message, allegedly from
2:48:48
former U.S. President Bill Clinton.
2:48:50
And this photo, that appears to be a
2:48:52
joke about Epstein selling a woman to Trump
2:48:54
for $22,000.
2:48:56
This is a Democrat hoax that never ends.
2:49:00
The material was obtained by Democrats on the
2:49:03
House Oversight Committee, along with other records from
2:49:06
Epstein's estate.
2:49:07
Part of a broader push for the release
2:49:09
of the full Epstein files, after the Trump
2:49:11
administration backtracked on a promise to make them
2:49:14
public.
2:49:15
If Republicans don't want to engage in a
2:49:17
cover-up of pedophilia and this pedophilia ring,
2:49:20
they should go sign this discharge petition.
2:49:22
Trump and his allies keep trying to change
2:49:25
the channel.
2:49:26
At one point, even claiming Trump was secretly
2:49:28
working against his longtime friend.
2:49:30
It was an FBI informant to try to
2:49:32
take this stuff down.
2:49:35
I can affirm that is not true.
2:49:36
The shifting explanations and increasingly damning evidence have
2:49:40
done little to quell the questions about Trump's
2:49:42
involvement with the notorious sex offender.
2:49:45
A story that seems unlikely to go away
2:49:47
anytime soon.
2:49:49
Well, so that's the rundown.
2:49:51
You have the latest.
2:49:52
The check is pretty funny.
2:49:55
Somehow, I think I'd seen that book.
2:49:56
Am I just imagining that we've seen all
2:49:58
these things before?
2:50:00
Well, I know you haven't seen the Clinton
2:50:01
cartoon.
2:50:03
Oh, no, that's new.
2:50:04
Yeah.
2:50:05
Well, I don't remember this drawing being that.
2:50:11
But maybe there's a couple of them.
2:50:15
No, I remember the check, the picture with
2:50:17
the check.
2:50:17
I remember that somehow.
2:50:19
Anyway, I don't remember that.
2:50:21
An unlikely response from an unlikely, quote unquote,
2:50:25
ally.
2:50:26
The Senator John Fetterman was asked about this.
2:50:29
Senator, on the findings from the House Oversight
2:50:31
Committee on this alleged birthday book, this note
2:50:34
that the president allegedly wrote to Jeffrey Epstein
2:50:36
for his birthday.
2:50:37
Do you have any comment on that and
2:50:38
the drawing that goes with that?
2:50:40
Again, I don't think the Epstein thing is
2:50:43
the big thing.
2:50:44
I don't know.
2:50:45
Release it.
2:50:45
I don't care.
2:50:46
But it's strange.
2:50:47
The Democrats, we've had that for four years.
2:50:49
We didn't release that.
2:50:50
I don't know why we didn't do that.
2:50:52
So for now, release it.
2:50:54
But I don't think that's going to.
2:50:56
It's this idea that suddenly that's going to
2:50:58
be the one thing that's going to take
2:51:00
out Trump.
2:51:01
You know, I don't believe that that is.
2:51:03
He'll still be here.
2:51:05
I don't think it's just a distraction, honestly.
2:51:08
But go ahead and release whatever that is.
2:51:10
But it's not important.
2:51:13
Fetterman.
2:51:15
He's all in with the with the president
2:51:17
on this.
2:51:17
Yeah, it's just a distraction.
2:51:19
It's quite the distraction.
2:51:21
Yeah, I don't know why.
2:51:23
Well, again, if I go back to my
2:51:24
own thesis, it's meant to be a distraction.
2:51:28
It's meant to be.
2:51:29
Well, they forced me to do it.
2:51:30
And here's the here it is.
2:51:31
And then some people get burned and Trump
2:51:34
can be again.
2:51:35
So far, aimless.
2:51:36
I said not to do it.
2:51:38
I'm sorry, boys, that this happened to you.
2:51:40
But this is nothing I get any control
2:51:42
over.
2:51:42
The Democrats is them.
2:51:44
Well, so Mandelson got burned.
2:51:46
And this is just what a week before
2:51:47
President Trump goes to the U.K. for
2:51:49
a state visit.
2:51:50
That's rather embarrassing.
2:51:53
Yeah, I say.
2:51:55
Mandelson.
2:51:55
Do you see the pictures?
2:51:56
He's in his bathrobe and he's like, hey,
2:51:58
my best friend.
2:52:00
My goodness.
2:52:02
Men are so, men are so disgusted for
2:52:05
getting burned like this.
2:52:06
Yeah.
2:52:07
Wow.
2:52:07
It's always a sex scandal there.
2:52:09
Yeah.
2:52:09
What was that dude's name?
2:52:11
No, I don't.
2:52:13
I can almost come on.
2:52:14
I know who would know.
2:52:17
It's amazing how you forget this guy.
2:52:19
The necrophiliac.
2:52:20
Remember that guy?
2:52:22
Oh, something.
2:52:24
Jim.
2:52:25
Jim.
2:52:25
Jim will fix it.
2:52:27
I don't remember that.
2:52:28
Yeah, yeah.
2:52:29
No, of course you do.
2:52:30
The guy with the hat.
2:52:31
Ask Irvine there what she thinks.
2:52:34
Irvine.
2:52:37
Let's ask Irvine.
2:52:38
Hey, Irvine.
2:52:40
Who was the famous British pedophile that got
2:52:44
arrested, never got arrested, but then eventually died?
2:52:47
Jim will fix it, dude.
2:52:51
That'd be Jimmy Savile.
2:52:52
Ah, Jimmy Savile.
2:52:53
Oh, yeah.
2:52:54
Jimmy Savile.
2:52:55
Sure.
2:52:55
Jimmy Savile.
2:52:56
There you go.
2:52:57
That was.
2:52:58
Duh.
2:52:58
How would a creep that guy was.
2:53:00
All happened during the course of this show,
2:53:02
I might add.
2:53:03
And boy, they did.
2:53:04
They covered that up, didn't they?
2:53:06
Whoa.
2:53:07
Shh.
2:53:09
Yeah, the entire BBC was the BBC.
2:53:12
Didn't didn't they kill the journalist over that
2:53:14
woman who got killed outside her house?
2:53:17
I don't know.
2:53:18
Ask the robot.
2:53:19
I'm not going to ask the robot everything.
2:53:21
I'm not going to do that.
2:53:22
I'm not going to do that.
2:53:24
Adam and the robot.
2:53:25
There's your title.
2:53:27
Adam and the robot.
2:53:28
Hey, stick with me, baby.
2:53:31
Adam and the robot.
2:53:32
It's a possible exit strategy.
2:53:34
Think of it.
2:53:35
I can have twice the money.
2:53:37
Adam and the robot.
2:53:39
For 20 bucks a month.
2:53:41
You didn't have the money because when you
2:53:42
have the robot won't complain enough.
2:53:45
I'll teach the robot to complain.
2:53:47
It'll cost me 20 bucks a month.
2:53:49
Adam and the robot.
2:53:50
Everybody, it's Adam and the robot.
2:53:52
Hey, robot, how you doing?
2:53:53
Robot, say hello.
2:53:54
Adam and the robot, everybody.
2:53:55
Woohoo!
2:53:55
In the morning.
2:53:57
Yep.
2:53:57
Yeah, it's going to happen.
2:54:00
I'm talking about whining.
2:54:01
I had to get this clip, by the
2:54:03
way.
2:54:03
This BBC clip about the Voice of America
2:54:06
complaining.
2:54:08
OK.
2:54:10
I'm sorry.
2:54:11
Yeah, I got it.
2:54:12
The Trump administration is moving to fire most
2:54:14
remaining journalists at the federally funded broadcaster, Voice
2:54:17
of America.
2:54:18
The move is likely to be challenged in
2:54:19
the courts.
2:54:20
More than 500 termination notices have been sent
2:54:23
out, including one to Patsy Wikus-Wara, who
2:54:26
until now was the Voice of America White
2:54:28
House Bureau chief.
2:54:29
I think it's quite clear that press freedom
2:54:32
in the United States is under attack, not
2:54:34
just what's happening with us, with Voice of
2:54:36
America, but also our colleagues, public broadcasters such
2:54:40
as public radio, NPR, and then PBS, as
2:54:43
well as private stations.
2:54:45
They're also under attack from the White House.
2:54:47
And if you just look at any White
2:54:49
House briefing, you see a lot of very
2:54:51
right wing influencers.
2:54:53
Oh, yeah.
2:54:53
BBC News.
2:54:55
Of course.
2:54:57
Oh, there's right wingers there.
2:54:58
All right wingers on those podcasters.
2:55:02
Podcasters in the White House.
2:55:03
What are we going to do?
2:55:04
This is no good.
2:55:07
Can't have the podcast.
2:55:08
We never get invited to something cool.
2:55:11
Invite us to the White House.
2:55:13
No one's going to invite us to anything.
2:55:15
When you didn't get invited, because I still
2:55:18
think we're a fairly neutral show about politics.
2:55:21
But when you but you did come out
2:55:23
for Trump in 2015, 2016.
2:55:26
Well, you came out for Trump.
2:55:28
You said, I want Trump.
2:55:29
That's not what I...
2:55:30
You made a big fight.
2:55:30
No, you lie.
2:55:32
No, well, let me finish.
2:55:34
You thought Trump would be the...
2:55:37
You were backing Trump.
2:55:39
You predicted he was going to win.
2:55:40
You lie.
2:55:41
I said, this guy can go all the
2:55:44
way.
2:55:44
And you said, no, man, it's Marco Rubio.
2:55:48
That's how that went down.
2:55:51
You made a point of endorsing Trump and
2:55:54
you never got invited to the inauguration.
2:55:58
That's the way I see it.
2:55:59
Remember?
2:55:59
I endorsed him.
2:56:00
OK, all right.
2:56:01
And you never got invited.
2:56:04
No, because I never endorsed him.
2:56:05
If I had said, yeah, go, man.
2:56:07
Go, go, go.
2:56:08
People, somebody go dig this up and do
2:56:11
some research.
2:56:11
Yeah, please do send it to me.
2:56:13
I'll gladly play it.
2:56:14
I find it very annoying that you didn't
2:56:15
get invited to the inauguration.
2:56:17
Yeah, I'm not surprised.
2:56:18
Joe Rogan went.
2:56:19
He represented all podcasts.
2:56:22
He went to...
2:56:23
He didn't go to the inauguration in 2016.
2:56:25
No, that's right.
2:56:26
He went to the second one.
2:56:28
You're right.
2:56:31
He hated...
2:56:31
I hate it.
2:56:32
He was not a Trump fan.
2:56:34
He was a...
2:56:34
Yeah.
2:56:35
He was a Bernie fan.
2:56:36
He was a Bernie Sanders fan.
2:56:37
Right.
2:56:38
He was a Bernie boy.
2:56:38
You and Rogan, Bernie and Marco.
2:56:42
Sure.
2:56:44
Way to go.
2:56:44
Marco's got a better chance of still making
2:56:46
it.
2:56:46
Way to go, 8-Ball.
2:56:47
OK.
2:56:48
Magic 8-Ball.
2:56:52
Here's a funny...
2:56:53
I have a wow clip, one of these
2:56:54
clips that is not getting much coverage.
2:56:58
This is just too funny.
2:57:00
The South Africa court has sentenced seven Chinese
2:57:03
nationals to prison.
2:57:04
They were convicted of trafficking dozens of Africans
2:57:07
and forcing them to work in a factory.
2:57:10
NGD's David Lam reports.
2:57:12
A court in Johannesburg, South Africa, has sentenced
2:57:15
seven Chinese nationals to 20 years in prison.
2:57:22
They were convicted of trafficking 91 individuals from
2:57:25
Malawi and forcing them to work at a
2:57:27
cotton fabric factory in South Africa.
2:57:30
The group was convicted in February for crimes
2:57:33
committed from 2017 to 2019.
2:57:36
Police raided the factory and arrested the defendants
2:57:39
in November 2019.
2:57:40
Authorities said they found the Malawian victims confined
2:57:44
in inhumane conditions with armed guards controlling their
2:57:48
movements.
2:57:49
The factory had a high wall and razor
2:57:51
fence.
2:57:53
But I want to say to our people
2:57:54
as well, they must know that we're taking
2:57:56
these issues very serious.
2:57:58
Government is working every day towards rooting out
2:58:01
all these issues.
2:58:02
Prosecutors said the victims were forced to work
2:58:04
11-hour shifts, seven days a week, without
2:58:07
safety equipment.
2:58:08
The South African Department of Labor expressed support
2:58:12
for the sentence and urged greater collaboration among
2:58:15
government agencies to help end human trafficking.
2:58:20
Slavery.
2:58:22
In Africa.
2:58:25
No.
2:58:26
Gambling?
2:58:28
Of course.
2:58:30
Well, I thought that was an interesting story.
2:58:32
No one's gonna...
2:58:33
You know, by the way, we have rapid
2:58:35
developments.
2:58:37
Rapid.
2:58:37
Oh, you're looking at the quad box.
2:58:40
The quad screen says rapid developments.
2:58:43
It looks like this, the guy who they
2:58:45
have been posting the picture all morning, like
2:58:47
he was one of those people that Charlie...
2:58:54
What's the term you used?
2:58:57
With a P?
2:59:00
Prolemicists.
2:59:03
He polemicized that guy.
2:59:07
Yeah, because he always made people look foolish.
2:59:10
Yeah, well...
2:59:11
He looks like one of those guys.
2:59:13
Could be.
2:59:14
Yeah.
2:59:14
I mean, you know, I could imagine somebody
2:59:16
getting irked and being made a fool of.
2:59:21
But I always thought it was...
2:59:23
There were the people that were...
2:59:26
Some of the dumb stuff people came up
2:59:28
with with him is just ridiculous.
2:59:30
He was easy.
2:59:31
It was easy pickings.
2:59:32
Well, what do you mean?
2:59:34
You think they caught the guy?
2:59:35
I don't think so.
2:59:37
Soon, new Trump comments on Charlie Kirk.
2:59:40
I don't know.
2:59:41
By the way, it's the same people that
2:59:44
you love bringing on TikTok to the show.
2:59:46
It's the same people.
2:59:48
No, different people.
2:59:49
Okay, same category, same level, same caliber.
2:59:54
Well, I don't have anybody on the show.
2:59:56
I don't have one TikTok clip on this
2:59:58
show.
2:59:59
Well, you have an EBT complainer woman.
3:00:04
Oh, wait a second.
3:00:06
Here we go.
3:00:07
Oh, good Lord.
3:00:10
Good Lord.
3:00:11
Okay, we'll play that.
3:00:13
I had to cancel my vacation with my
3:00:14
family because where we were going to go
3:00:17
and vacation at, they have already stopped certain
3:00:22
things of being able to be purchased with
3:00:24
EBT.
3:00:25
Well, because of this, that would mean I
3:00:28
would have to buy the majority of my
3:00:30
family's food out of pocket.
3:00:32
And that would dig into my money I
3:00:35
have for fun things.
3:00:37
So I had no other choice but to
3:00:40
cancel the trip.
3:00:42
My family is so sad about this, and
3:00:44
so am I.
3:00:46
I don't understand why people want to control
3:00:48
what other people buy with their EBT.
3:00:52
Like, how is it your business what I
3:00:54
buy with my EBT?
3:00:55
And there it is.
3:00:56
There's the problem in America in a nutshell.
3:00:59
Right there.
3:01:00
Right there.
3:01:00
I can't use my EBT on vacation for
3:01:03
whatever I want to buy.
3:01:05
Isn't that emergency benefits?
3:01:07
Isn't that what that is?
3:01:08
Emergency?
3:01:10
It's a food stamps program.
3:01:12
For people who are in dire straits and...
3:01:14
Who need to eat food.
3:01:15
Who need food, yes.
3:01:17
But there it is.
3:01:19
Enough said.
3:01:34
Now, the people who support the No Agenda
3:01:36
show, of course, they're very, very different.
3:01:39
They understand how we all have to work
3:01:41
together.
3:01:42
And we would like to thank the people
3:01:43
who've supported us with their value for value.
3:01:46
$50 and above.
3:01:47
John has the list.
3:01:49
I do have the list.
3:01:50
It starts with our regular Dame Rita, who
3:01:53
came in with 109.11. She's in Sparks,
3:01:55
Nevada.
3:01:56
She's probably a Viscountess, we believe.
3:01:59
Christopher Ebert in Spartanburg, South Carolina.
3:02:04
105.35. Kate in Boise.
3:02:08
$100 and she says, I love you guys.
3:02:11
I love you too.
3:02:12
Thank you, Kate.
3:02:13
Love you too.
3:02:14
Scott Van Gelder in Barnstable, Massachusetts.
3:02:19
Nuts.
3:02:20
100.
3:02:21
Love every episode.
3:02:23
Kevin McLaughlin comes in with 8008.
3:02:25
He's the Archduke of Luna, lover of America,
3:02:27
lover of melons.
3:02:28
And that's the boob donation.
3:02:30
Along with Anonymous in Mount Airy, Maryland.
3:02:32
He came in with 8008.
3:02:35
Sir Doherty in Stephen City, Virginia.
3:02:37
68.68. And that's a happy birthday call
3:02:41
out to Sir Nick somebody.
3:02:45
Josh Buford in Midlothian, Virginia.
3:02:48
64.30. George Souza in Turlock, California.
3:02:52
61.
3:02:53
Michael Natrin in Newark, Delaware.
3:02:58
61.
3:03:00
Well, these 61s, these are your birthday calls.
3:03:02
These are the last three birthday call outs.
3:03:04
I know.
3:03:04
It's beautiful.
3:03:05
Thank you all so much.
3:03:06
And there's Troy Sprague who comes in from
3:03:07
Lapeer, Michigan with a $61 happy birthday, which
3:03:12
was sent to Jay and I put happy
3:03:19
birthday.
3:03:20
What are you laughing about?
3:03:22
Well, it's happy birthday to you, but because
3:03:25
I guess looking back on it, I think
3:03:27
she thought it was him wishing himself happy
3:03:29
birthday.
3:03:30
So he's probably on the birthday list.
3:03:33
Well, he's going to be congratulated regardless.
3:03:39
That's pretty funny.
3:03:42
Jason Shepherd in Trinidad, Colorado.
3:03:44
606 small boobs and along with Les Tarkowski
3:03:47
in Kingman, Arizona.
3:03:49
Sam Williams.
3:03:51
He's 6006 also.
3:03:52
Sam Williams in Davenport, Iowa.
3:03:55
55.
3:03:57
He's sending me and you a Chavette with
3:04:02
some real cool shaving, shaving shroop.
3:04:06
Oh, oh, that's cool.
3:04:08
Women tell me it smells great.
3:04:13
Okay.
3:04:15
I don't know what a Chavette is even.
3:04:18
Look it up.
3:04:19
Okay.
3:04:20
Kevin Ritchie, 5370.
3:04:23
This is a nighting that's coming up.
3:04:25
Yes.
3:04:25
I will read it.
3:04:27
In the morning, John and Adam, with this
3:04:28
$53.77 donation, I'm celebrating both my birthday
3:04:32
on September 11th, a show day, and the
3:04:34
completion of my knighthood.
3:04:36
Please dub me Sir 11 of 9 at
3:04:38
the round table where I'll just need a
3:04:40
Coke Slurpee.
3:04:42
For the longest time, I thought I was
3:04:44
the only one noticing the bias around us
3:04:46
every day until 2016 when I found you
3:04:49
too.
3:04:51
Thank you for keeping me sane and entertained.
3:04:53
Keep up the good work.
3:04:54
Please remember, everyone's got an agenda.
3:04:57
Kevin Ritchie, how right you are, brother.
3:05:04
Angela Kettle Hut in Rock Hill, South Carolina,
3:05:09
5377.
3:05:11
There's a birthday to Brian coming up beyond
3:05:13
the list.
3:05:14
Brittany Miller in Trinidad, Colorado, 5272.
3:05:21
These are actually $52 donors that are jacked
3:05:25
it up a little bit.
3:05:27
Bente, what?
3:05:28
Bente Heft Edlich.
3:05:31
Bente Heft Edlich.
3:05:33
And he's in Switzerland.
3:05:36
She, she, she, she, she.
3:05:37
She, Bente.
3:05:38
Oh, she's a she, yeah.
3:05:39
This is a police break for Dame Dane.
3:05:44
My mother has a cancer growth on her
3:05:46
liver and would very much like to survive
3:05:48
the operation and have full recovery.
3:05:50
She needs an F-cancer.
3:05:51
We're going to give her the $252.72
3:05:53
donation for the Swiss.
3:05:55
This is our second Swiss person today.
3:05:57
The Swiss are in demand.
3:05:59
Let me do that F-cancer for her
3:06:00
right now.
3:06:05
You've got Carla.
3:06:07
Of course we break for Dames.
3:06:08
Of course we do.
3:06:11
Eric Jirao, you think?
3:06:13
Jirao, Jirao, Jirao.
3:06:16
Jirao in Crestview, Florida, 5272.
3:06:20
Sean Veneman, Veneman, Veneman, I think, in Genoa,
3:06:25
Illinois, which they probably pronounce it Genoa, I'm
3:06:29
guessing, 5272.
3:06:31
But they do.
3:06:32
Stephen Trockets, or Trockels, Trockels in Sust, Deutschland.
3:06:39
Ah, 5112.
3:06:42
My family freaked out over drones entering Poland.
3:06:46
Wow.
3:06:46
Sister taking fast flight out.
3:06:50
Huh, interesting.
3:06:51
Hmm, bad, oh, bad idea, supply is back.
3:06:58
Bad idea, look them up on the internet,
3:07:00
5005, 5050.
3:07:02
Douglas Monk, and now we got the $50
3:07:04
donors.
3:07:04
This is a very short list today, actually.
3:07:06
Douglas Monk in Conkrington, Pennsylvania.
3:07:13
Roderick Brown in Mermaid, Prince Edward Island, Canada.
3:07:21
Oh, oh.
3:07:21
Rene Knig in Ultrescht.
3:07:25
Knigge.
3:07:26
Knigge.
3:07:27
Knigge.
3:07:28
Knigge.
3:07:30
Stephen Shoemake in Xenia, Ohio.
3:07:33
And last on the list is Tom, Tim,
3:07:35
Tim, not Tom, Tim Delvecchio in Blandon, Pennsylvania.
3:07:41
I want to thank these people for making
3:07:42
show.
3:07:43
We're two shows away from show 1800.
3:07:45
We're getting very, very close.
3:07:47
And remember- Wow.
3:07:49
How many podcasts have gone that long?
3:07:52
Well, there's more who have done more episodes,
3:07:55
like Omega Man.
3:07:56
I think he has- Yeah, well, you
3:07:57
do a daily, you can get it up
3:07:59
there quick.
3:08:00
I think Omega Man has literally done over
3:08:01
5,000 episodes.
3:08:04
Omega Man, who he donates to the show.
3:08:05
Omega Man is out of his mind.
3:08:07
He does, he's done 5,000 episodes.
3:08:09
I don't know if he's been around as
3:08:10
long as we have.
3:08:10
How long does he do a show for?
3:08:12
How long does the show run?
3:08:13
Three minutes, let's just say.
3:08:16
I think they're pretty long, actually.
3:08:18
Thank you very much to these donors, $50
3:08:20
and above.
3:08:20
And again, thank you to our executive and
3:08:22
associate executive producers for episode 1798.
3:08:26
Two more to go until 1800.
3:08:27
We appreciate you so much.
3:08:28
Thank you for participating in the grand experiment
3:08:30
known as Value for Value.
3:08:32
Noah Jenner Donations.com.
3:08:38
Sir Lucas celebrates today, as does Kevin Ritchie.
3:08:41
Sir Joseph turns 68.
3:08:44
Sir Doherty wishes Sir Not Jake a very
3:08:46
happy one for the 13th.
3:08:47
Angela Kettlehut, happy birthday to her.
3:08:50
Her husband, Brian Kettlehut, who apparently sometimes she
3:08:54
annoys him, I guess, but he loves her
3:08:56
anyway.
3:08:56
And Troy Sirag, no birthday for you, but
3:08:59
I'll take it anyway.
3:09:00
Happy birthday from everybody at the best podcast
3:09:02
in the universe.
3:09:05
And now it is time once again to
3:09:07
welcome brand new Secretary Generals to the No
3:09:10
Agenda Show.
3:09:20
All hail to the Secretary Generals on the
3:09:24
No Agenda Show.
3:09:27
Whether he wants it or not, Sir Animas
3:09:29
of Dogpatch in Lower Slobovia becomes a Secretary
3:09:31
General today, as well as Sir Scobie.
3:09:34
Thank you again for all of your matching
3:09:35
donations.
3:09:37
And Sir, your honest mechanic also joins those
3:09:40
exclusive ranks of No Agenda Secretary Generals.
3:09:44
Congratulations.
3:09:46
All hail to the Secretary Generals, cause they
3:09:50
are the ones who need hailing.
3:09:54
All hail to the Secretary Generals on the
3:09:58
No Agenda Show.
3:10:01
And can they go to NoAgendaRings.com yet
3:10:04
to see their fine Secretary General certifications?
3:10:07
They can go.
3:10:08
I think you can fill out the form.
3:10:10
Yeah, OK.
3:10:11
Let us know what you want exactly on
3:10:13
it.
3:10:13
And these are going to be beautiful.
3:10:15
This is going to be some of the
3:10:16
best we've ever done.
3:10:17
We do have two knights to bring up
3:10:19
into the roundtable spectacular here.
3:10:23
If you could give us a blade.
3:10:24
Here you go.
3:10:25
There you go.
3:10:25
We need blades for this because these are
3:10:27
knightings that are official.
3:10:30
The queens and the kings, they do it.
3:10:32
So can we.
3:10:33
Matt Stevens, Kevin Ritchie, hop on up here
3:10:35
onto the podium.
3:10:36
Both of you have become knights of the
3:10:37
No Agenda Roundtable thanks to your support of
3:10:39
the best podcast in the universe in the
3:10:41
amount of $1,000 or more.
3:10:43
And I'm proud to pronounce the KD as
3:10:45
Sir Matthew of the Lower Coastal Plain and
3:10:48
Sir Eleven of Nine.
3:10:50
For you, gentlemen, we have Gumbo, Parmesan, Albita,
3:10:53
Gumbo, Parmesan and Albita, and a Coke Slurpee.
3:10:56
Does it get any easier than that?
3:10:58
Along with that, we've got Gases and Sake,
3:11:00
Vodka and Vanilla, Bong, Hits and Bourbon, Sparkling
3:11:02
Cider and Escorts, Jim, Gerald and Gerbils.
3:11:05
We've got Breast Milk and Papelmen.
3:11:06
Of course, we have the Mutton and the
3:11:08
Mead.
3:11:08
Welcome to the roundtable.
3:11:10
You also should go to NoAgendaRings.com.
3:11:14
Take a look at those fine knight and
3:11:16
dame rings.
3:11:18
We'll send you out one that fits your
3:11:20
size.
3:11:21
There is a handy ring sizing guide right
3:11:23
there on the website and let us know.
3:11:25
We can send it to you.
3:11:26
And thank you for supporting the show and
3:11:27
welcome to the roundtable.
3:11:29
No Agenda Knights and Dames.
3:11:30
No Agenda Meetups!
3:11:39
Well, we do have the big meetup coming
3:11:41
up on Saturday.
3:11:42
The North Olympic Peninsula Last Minute Meetup.
3:11:45
It's a last minute meetup.
3:11:46
Why is it a last minute meetup?
3:11:47
Why?
3:11:48
Why is it a last minute?
3:11:49
Did they just decide they're going to do
3:11:50
something?
3:11:52
Exactly.
3:11:53
It'll be at 3.33 p.m. at
3:11:55
Bar Hop Brewing in Port Angeles, Washington.
3:11:58
Attending Mimi, Jay, and Brennan.
3:12:03
Sir Tim from the Squim will be organizing
3:12:06
this.
3:12:06
And thanks to the outstanding work of the
3:12:08
producers on the No Agenda show, I have
3:12:11
a copy balance, no less, of their promo.
3:12:15
In the morning, this is T.
3:12:16
Ryan Everett.
3:12:17
Wow, what a lead-in for this.
3:12:18
Oh my goodness.
3:12:20
Wow.
3:12:21
Wow.
3:12:21
All right.
3:12:22
Sir Tim from Squim, Commodore of the Port
3:12:24
of Angels.
3:12:26
And this is Mimi Smith-Dvorak.
3:12:29
No, that's fake news.
3:12:31
She doesn't sound like that.
3:12:33
It should be...
3:12:34
She does when she works the mic.
3:12:37
And this is Mimi Smith-Dvorak.
3:12:40
Behold is the Smith-Dvorak.
3:12:43
What is that?
3:12:44
A little like...
3:12:45
Well, you know, at any minute she'd go
3:12:46
back to just Mimi Smith.
3:12:48
If you don't put your cards right.
3:12:49
You know what she should run for office
3:12:50
with Smith is a better name.
3:12:51
Oh, okay.
3:12:51
And this is Mimi Smith-Dvorak, inviting you
3:12:55
to the first in a long, long time,
3:12:58
North Olympic no agenda meetup on Saturday, September
3:13:03
13th, which is just a couple of days
3:13:05
away.
3:13:06
So set your sat nav.
3:13:09
Or Google it.
3:13:14
I guess for you boomers, you can use
3:13:16
your phone book.
3:13:16
And join us at Barhop in Port Angeles,
3:13:20
not the one in Swim, but the one
3:13:21
in Port Angeles this Saturday at 333 p
3:13:25
.m. That's Saturday the 13th at 333 p
3:13:29
.m. at Barhop in Port Angeles, where protection
3:13:34
is connection or connection is protection.
3:13:36
One of the two.
3:13:37
I don't know.
3:13:38
Just don't get it on me.
3:13:39
Okay.
3:13:43
Hi, I'm Adam Curry, and I love listening
3:13:45
to Millennial Media Offensive.
3:13:53
I got punked.
3:13:58
So Eric PP, now we talked about this
3:14:02
audacity file.
3:14:03
So I posted in the chat, Eric PP
3:14:05
gets back to me.
3:14:07
I save it.
3:14:08
I don't listen to it.
3:14:09
Obviously.
3:14:10
Otherwise, I wouldn't have time.
3:14:11
I would have banned it outright.
3:14:13
That was probably the worst promo I've ever
3:14:15
heard.
3:14:16
And then No Agenda Millennial posts me a
3:14:20
copy and says, oh, I balanced it for
3:14:22
you.
3:14:22
And I know Eric PP very well.
3:14:25
I'm like, oh, well, maybe Eric PP didn't
3:14:28
have time.
3:14:28
So that's very kind of you, No Agenda
3:14:31
Millennial.
3:14:32
And punked me with a little No Agenda
3:14:34
Millennial promo right at the end of that.
3:14:37
Yeah, that was pretty good.
3:14:39
Outstanding work.
3:14:40
Outstanding.
3:14:41
That actually made that whole minute bearable.
3:14:46
Also on Saturday, the New Jersey Central Meetup,
3:14:49
We Drink and We Know Things Spooky Season
3:14:51
Edition, 2 o'clock at 3BR Distillery in
3:14:53
Keyport, New Jersey and the Northern Silicon Valley.
3:14:56
Get John out of the house meetup on
3:14:58
the 13th, which, of course, will be without
3:15:01
Jay, without Mimi, without Brennan, because they're all
3:15:04
doing a competing meetup.
3:15:06
That'll be meetup number 8333 P.M. Pacific.
3:15:09
Same time at Pizzeria Violetta in Oakland, California.
3:15:14
Go say hi to John, everybody.
3:15:15
And on Thursday, our next show day, Charlotte's
3:15:17
Thirsty Third Thursday Monthly.
3:15:19
I don't know how many they've done.
3:15:20
They've been doing this forever.
3:15:22
7 o'clock at Edge Tavern in Charlotte,
3:15:24
North Carolina.
3:15:25
Thank you all very much for your meetup
3:15:29
courage.
3:15:30
And you can always go to noagendameetups.com
3:15:32
to find out where all of them are
3:15:33
taking place.
3:15:34
Connection is protection.
3:15:35
Yes, you can get some of it on
3:15:37
you, Mimi.
3:15:37
Don't worry about it.
3:15:38
These are the people who will be your
3:15:39
first responders in an emergency.
3:15:41
If you can't find Whitney, you go to
3:15:43
noagendameetups.com and start one yourself.
3:15:45
It's easy and always a party.
3:16:00
Man, you're going to have to have a
3:16:09
phone call after the show.
3:16:12
With Mimi.
3:16:14
About the promo.
3:16:16
Well, you know, they don't listen to enough
3:16:18
promos.
3:16:20
Do they listen to the show at all?
3:16:22
Well, she does, but I don't know how
3:16:24
much she pays.
3:16:25
It was Tim that decided to do the
3:16:27
promo.
3:16:28
Oh, wait a minute.
3:16:29
You mean Tim?
3:16:29
The guy who's talking in the background like
3:16:31
that?
3:16:31
Yeah, that's him.
3:16:32
That's very good.
3:16:33
Yeah.
3:16:34
Okay.
3:16:36
Man.
3:16:38
Oh!
3:16:40
That's great.
3:16:41
All right.
3:16:42
They'll love you for that.
3:16:43
Oh, yeah.
3:16:43
Just ragging on these poor people.
3:16:45
Hey, that's what we do.
3:16:47
Two ISOs.
3:16:48
She's my first.
3:16:49
I don't know what else to tell you.
3:16:52
And I have this one.
3:16:54
I mean, this is, this is balderdash.
3:16:57
Balderdash?
3:16:58
Oh, brother.
3:16:59
You got a better one?
3:17:00
I think so.
3:17:02
Yup.
3:17:02
That podcast was a humdinger.
3:17:05
Well, how can I compete with AI?
3:17:07
I'm all in now.
3:17:08
It's $40 billion worth of AI.
3:17:21
All right.
3:17:22
I'm going to do something that's a little
3:17:23
food and wine related.
3:17:25
Ah, we always love the fine and wood,
3:17:27
wood and fine.
3:17:28
The what?
3:17:29
The wood and fine tips of the day.
3:17:31
Wood and fine.
3:17:32
Yes.
3:17:32
I got to write that one down.
3:17:33
Wood and fine.
3:17:35
Sake.
3:17:36
Oh, oh.
3:17:38
Most people don't know how to buy sake.
3:17:39
In fact, I'm very happy you're doing this
3:17:42
because when we went out in Austin with
3:17:45
the former Hollywood executive, we went to a
3:17:51
very upscale sushi restaurant.
3:17:54
I think it's a neighborhood sushi restaurant, that's
3:17:56
what it's called.
3:17:57
And I ordered sake.
3:17:58
And there was a list that was so
3:17:59
long.
3:17:59
I'm like, just give me the Winter Warrior.
3:18:02
I had no idea what I was doing.
3:18:05
Yeah.
3:18:05
That would be normal.
3:18:07
Not for you, for everybody.
3:18:09
Yes.
3:18:11
Okay.
3:18:11
So what you're looking for when you buy
3:18:13
a sake, there's a couple of things that
3:18:14
I didn't have an obscure.
3:18:16
The tip is actually the obscure ending to
3:18:18
this little lecture.
3:18:19
You want to always get a ginjo, a
3:18:21
ginjo sake.
3:18:23
Ginjo is a G-I-N-J-O,
3:18:25
G-I-N-G-O, gingo?
3:18:27
A J-O.
3:18:28
You got it right the first time.
3:18:29
G-I-N-G-O.
3:18:30
Okay.
3:18:30
Yeah.
3:18:31
And if there's variations like daijin, a ginjo,
3:18:35
or there's other ginjos, it has to be,
3:18:37
any of those variations are fine.
3:18:40
They get better.
3:18:41
There's some better ginjos that are really elaborate,
3:18:44
but they're incredibly expensive.
3:18:46
But ginjo is your baseline.
3:18:47
You want to get a ginjo.
3:18:49
That means that's a sake that ensures it's
3:18:53
100% rice.
3:18:54
They don't put neutral spirits in like they
3:18:56
do the cheaper grades of sake.
3:18:57
A lot of them have that in there.
3:18:59
If it doesn't say ginjo, you're going to
3:19:01
get neutral spirits watering it down.
3:19:04
Just crap.
3:19:05
Okay, you want ginjo.
3:19:06
Now, the funny thing is, and I've only
3:19:08
noticed this over the years, and this is
3:19:10
an observation that has not been documented, but
3:19:14
it's an observation I made, and I made
3:19:15
it initially about 30 years ago when I
3:19:19
was at some event, and a Japanese guy
3:19:21
was there, and he gifted me a bottle
3:19:24
of sake.
3:19:25
And it was terrific, one of the best
3:19:27
bottles I've ever had.
3:19:28
I don't remember exactly what it was, but
3:19:29
I do remember one characteristic, and I've noticed
3:19:32
this over and over and over and over
3:19:35
again.
3:19:36
When I buy sake from Costco or I
3:19:39
buy, as long as it's ginjo, I buy
3:19:41
sake from Costco and I buy sake from
3:19:43
our local Tokyo fish market, if it's in
3:19:47
a blue bottle, it's always good.
3:19:53
I know this has not been documented by
3:19:56
anybody.
3:19:56
It's completely undocumented.
3:19:58
But I have observed this over and over
3:20:00
and over again over the years, and you'll
3:20:02
see there's a whole bunch of sakes up
3:20:04
on the wall, and one of them is
3:20:05
in a blue bottle.
3:20:07
And that's the one.
3:20:08
Just buy that and see what happens.
3:20:10
It's going to be good.
3:20:12
I have no idea if a Japanese sake
3:20:15
expert can come and back me up on
3:20:17
this, but I've always noticed that the blue
3:20:20
bottle sakes are always the best.
3:20:24
I don't know.
3:20:24
Well, I would love for Sir Mark and
3:20:27
Dave Astrid to chime in on this, but
3:20:29
I do not doubt you, and I'm always
3:20:31
going to say, excuse me, can I see
3:20:33
the bottle for this?
3:20:35
Can I see all the bottles?
3:20:35
Well, now when you're at a restaurant, they
3:20:38
usually, okay, when you're at a restaurant, the
3:20:41
sakes are generally in the big giant bottles.
3:20:45
Yes.
3:20:45
And the big giant bottles, which are, I
3:20:47
don't know, a liter and a half, or
3:20:49
no, they're like two liters, are huge.
3:20:50
And that's where they usually, most of the
3:20:53
sake, you get a lot of sake in
3:20:55
these big huge bottles.
3:20:57
Blue bottles are delicate.
3:20:59
So you won't find a big giant blue
3:21:02
bottle because the nature of it, I think
3:21:04
it's boron.
3:21:05
Oh, I've learned another tip.
3:21:07
Blue bottles are delicate.
3:21:09
This is another tip of the day.
3:21:10
Blue bottles are delicate, and that's why you
3:21:12
don't see too many blue bottles because they're
3:21:15
hard to make.
3:21:16
When I was inspecting the glass factory at
3:21:18
Pittsburgh Plate Glass, it used to be in
3:21:20
Oakland.
3:21:21
I got this lecture about, oh, we can't
3:21:23
do blue.
3:21:24
Oh, it's a pain in the ass.
3:21:26
They're brittle.
3:21:28
They're crappy.
3:21:29
We don't like making blue because it's a
3:21:32
boron or something that goes in there and
3:21:34
makes them brittle.
3:21:35
And so I've never seen a giant bottle
3:21:39
of even the same brand of sake in
3:21:41
a blue bottle.
3:21:41
They're always the brown bottle.
3:21:43
So you can't necessarily look at the bottle
3:21:46
in a restaurant because they're always going to
3:21:49
be these giant bottles that they use typically.
3:21:52
So you're going to have to just go
3:21:53
with Ginjo.
3:21:54
Ginjo it is.
3:21:55
There it is, his tip of the day.
3:21:57
A very handy one.
3:21:58
Look out for the blue bottle, everybody.
3:22:01
Green flies for you and me.
3:22:03
Just a tip with JCD.
3:22:07
And sometimes Atom.
3:22:09
Created by Dana Brunetti.
3:22:10
Well, there you go.
3:22:11
We conclude our broadcast day as we put
3:22:14
this genie back in the blue bottle until
3:22:16
Sunday when we return.
3:22:19
I'm sure there'll be something else to look
3:22:21
forward to or not.
3:22:23
Something will happen.
3:22:25
We'll know something.
3:22:26
Something always happens.
3:22:28
Something always happens.
3:22:30
Usually on a show day, but sometimes not
3:22:32
on a show day.
3:22:34
Be kind to each other and stay tuned
3:22:37
to the No Agenda stream.
3:22:38
We have, oh, this is a good one.
3:22:40
Who are these broadcasters?
3:22:42
It's episode 110.
3:22:43
Howard Stern speaks, but who's listening?
3:22:46
Well, that's a good question.
3:22:48
That'll be next on the stream or in
3:22:49
your modern podcast app.
3:22:51
We will be igniting the bat signal again
3:22:53
on Sunday.
3:22:54
End of show mixes from Kevin Drinker and
3:22:56
Jeffrey Crocker, who makes excellent use of that
3:22:59
$60 billion investment in AI with his own
3:23:02
lyrics.
3:23:03
And I am coming to you from the
3:23:05
heart of the Texas Hill Country.
3:23:06
In the morning, everybody.
3:23:07
I'm Adam Curry.
3:23:08
And from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain,
3:23:11
I'm John C.
3:23:11
Dvorak.
3:23:12
Please remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:23:15
Keep the value for value going.
3:23:17
1,800 episodes coming up and 18 years
3:23:21
in the can.
3:23:22
Until Sunday, remember us at noagendadonations.com.
3:23:26
Until then, adios, mofos.
3:23:28
Ahoy, ahoy, and such.
3:23:31
He has got to pull the plug on
3:23:34
TV advertising immediately.
3:23:36
Let's start with the science.
3:23:37
Vaccination.
3:23:38
It is a chaotic situation.
3:23:40
He has got to pull the plug on
3:23:42
TV advertising immediately.
3:23:44
I remember the freezer trucks behind Lenox Hill
3:23:46
Hospital where I work.
3:23:48
George, it feels like right now it is
3:23:50
a chaotic situation.
3:23:51
I'm right here on board.
3:23:52
There is no captain steering the ship.
3:23:55
And I know there's a lot of misinformation
3:23:56
and mistrust.
3:23:57
Well, one thing that should not be under
3:23:58
fire is vaccination and the public health story
3:24:02
success that vaccination has been in this country.
3:24:04
We know that it has saved millions of
3:24:06
lives.
3:24:06
We know that it prevents disability from disease.
3:24:08
We forget that polio can cause paralysis, measles
3:24:12
can cause brain inflammation.
3:24:13
So, if you get sick, it can result
3:24:15
in complications.
3:24:16
If you have vaccines for cancer, HIV, and
3:24:19
hepatitis, it could force advertising on the market.
3:24:22
It's a chaotic situation.
3:24:24
I remember the freezer trucks behind Lenox Hill
3:24:26
Hospital.
3:24:27
He has got to pull the plug on
3:24:30
TV advertising immediately.
3:24:32
I remember the freezer trucks behind Lenox Hill
3:24:34
Hospital where I work.
3:24:58
Building it new, affordable light shining through.
3:25:03
Freeze that rent, let the people all stay.
3:25:07
Buses free to ride every day.
3:25:11
Groceries run by the city's hand.
3:25:14
A fair New York across the land.
3:25:31
Mom, darling.
3:25:35
Whoa.
3:25:38
And darling.
3:25:42
Whoa.
3:25:46
With child care.
3:25:50
Whoa.
3:25:51
And wages that rise.
3:25:54
We're reaching for bluer skies.
3:25:59
Whoa.
3:26:03
Stay strong for the working class pride.
3:26:06
Tax the rich, take the greed for a
3:26:09
ride.
3:26:10
Union jobs with a future to share.
3:26:13
A city that's truly fair.
3:26:24
The best podcast in the universe.
3:26:28
Adios, mofo.
3:26:29
Dvorak.org slash N-A.
3:26:33
Yup, that podcast was a humdinger.