0:00
I make phones.
0:01
Adam Curry.
0:02
John C.
0:03
Dvorak.
0:03
It's Thursday, October 30th, 2025.
0:06
This is your award-winning give-on-Asian
0:07
-media-assassination-episode-1812.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Canadians are beating us at baseball, and we're
0:16
broadcasting live from the heart of the Texas
0:18
Hill Country here in FEMA Region No.
0:20
6.
0:20
In the morning, everybody.
0:22
I'm Adam Curry.
0:23
And from Northern Silicon Valley, where I have
0:25
nothing clever to say, especially about baseball, I'm
0:28
John C.
0:28
Dvorak.
0:29
It's crackpot and buzzkill.
0:31
In the morning.
0:33
And here I am thinking you'd be impressed
0:34
by my sportsball knowledge.
0:37
I am.
0:38
Oh, thank you.
0:39
And- Tell us what's- okay, tell
0:40
us what's happening.
0:41
Well, I'll tell you exactly what's happening.
0:44
We are so distraught over Canadians beating us
0:48
at baseball that we are bringing out the
0:51
Curse of the Colonel.
0:53
World Series is on tonight in L.A.,
0:54
and we have to see if Colonel Sanders
0:56
is there again.
0:57
A look-a-like of Colonel was spotted
0:59
behind home plate Saturday.
1:01
One theory is it's a reference to the
1:03
Curse of the Colonel, a Japanese belief that
1:06
the ghost of Colonel Sanders cursed a Japanese
1:09
baseball team after someone threw a statue of
1:11
him from a local KFC into a river.
1:14
Now, the Dodgers have three players from Japan.
1:16
The Curse of the Colonel, surely you've heard
1:19
of that.
1:21
Yeah.
1:22
So- I knew you'd be impressed.
1:24
I knew it.
1:24
I knew it.
1:25
Yeah, well, that's a good clip to pull.
1:27
Yeah.
1:28
Yeah, the Dodgers have gone- they've just
1:32
gone flat.
1:33
Mookie Betts is the key to this.
1:36
Mookie Betts?
1:38
Mookie?
1:39
Mookie.
1:40
Who's Mookie?
1:40
Mookie.
1:41
Can't hit the ball.
1:43
Mookie.
1:43
What's wrong with Mookie?
1:44
So is it 3-2 right now?
1:46
Is that the standing?
1:47
3-2?
1:48
3- yes, and whoever wins the fourth
1:51
game wins the World Series, so the Dodgers
1:53
can come back, but they're going back to
1:54
Toronto, the likelihood watching them try to bat,
1:58
except for Ohtani, who is just, you know,
2:01
he's hanging in there.
2:03
I remember- The rest of the team
2:04
can't hit.
2:05
I remember when the Japanese- didn't the
2:06
Japanese win once?
2:08
Didn't they win the World Series once?
2:11
I'm pretty sure they did.
2:12
Wow.
2:12
I'm pretty sure they did.
2:13
There you go.
2:13
You were doing so well.
2:17
I'm sure- You were hanging in there,
2:18
actually.
2:19
I'm sure the Japanese won at one time.
2:21
I remember- Oh, yeah.
2:22
It was an outrage.
2:23
They had their shot at it, sure.
2:24
It was an outrage.
2:26
I remember it.
2:28
Wow.
2:29
As I was reflecting this morning, as I
2:31
often do, I was thinking to myself, John,
2:34
I really love doing this show with you.
2:37
Of all the things I could be doing
2:38
with my life at 61, yeah, it's rocky.
2:42
It's a roller coaster, but it is fun.
2:45
Let's just admit it.
2:46
I mean, you could have to be booking
2:48
guests.
2:49
Have a- Well, that was the-
2:51
Okay.
2:51
Just for people out there, we don't want
2:53
to bore you stiff with the background how
2:55
great we are.
2:56
Yeah, no.
2:57
We're great.
2:58
Come on.
2:58
We're great.
3:00
The best decision we ever made when we
3:02
came up with this show idea was to
3:04
never have guests.
3:08
People out there have no idea.
3:10
They really don't.
3:12
They really don't.
3:13
It's the worst.
3:15
I mean, I saw Joe Rogan had Miranda
3:17
Lambert on, which I thought was an interesting
3:20
choice, but then you really know that the
3:22
podcast, the podosphere has become saturated with guests
3:27
when Joe's reaching for, really, that's very off,
3:31
almost off brand for him.
3:34
Do you even know who Miranda Lambert is?
3:36
No, I do not.
3:37
I'm waiting for you to kind of tell
3:38
me without embarrassing me, the fact that I
3:41
don't know who the hell this is.
3:42
She's a very famous country singer and she
3:45
was married to Blake Shelton.
3:47
Oh, yes.
3:47
No, I do know who it is.
3:49
Yes.
3:49
Yes.
3:49
No.
3:50
Yes.
3:50
No.
3:50
I do know.
3:51
Yes.
3:52
No.
3:52
Before Blake dumped her to run off with
3:55
the blonde.
3:55
Yeah.
3:58
From No Doubt.
3:59
From No Doubt.
4:00
Yeah.
4:00
That girl.
4:01
The No Doubt girl.
4:03
The No Doubt girl.
4:04
Yeah.
4:05
And, you know, it's like, oh, and I
4:08
get, how many notes did you, I got,
4:11
you need to watch Tucker and Nick Fuentes.
4:14
I know you hate Tucker, which, by the
4:18
way, we don't hate Tucker at all.
4:21
We like Tucker.
4:22
I think he's great.
4:23
We like Tucker, exactly.
4:26
Just because we complain about him.
4:28
I did watch that episode.
4:30
I thought that was interesting.
4:31
Mo actually tweeted out a funny meme.
4:35
He said, finally, the war is settled between
4:37
the FBI and the CIA.
4:39
They're friends again.
4:40
Now, that's an inside joke, I guess.
4:45
Well, it's a running gag of this show.
4:47
Yeah, it's a running gag because, you know,
4:48
the story is, of course, Tucker's a fed
4:51
and Fuentes is a fed.
4:54
And, oh, yeah.
4:55
It's a good bit.
4:56
It's a good bit.
4:57
And as I'm listening to that podcast, because
5:01
I don't watch podcasts, I got no time
5:03
to watch a podcast.
5:04
I listen to the podcast.
5:06
I'm like, this Fuentes, he's, he's a political
5:09
guy.
5:09
I didn't realize he has a PAC and
5:11
he does, you know, he organizes for people
5:14
that he thinks should win office.
5:17
He's political.
5:18
He's a moneymaker.
5:19
He must be.
5:20
Well, I don't know if he's making a
5:22
lot of money, but I'm sure he's good.
5:24
No, I mean, in terms of making money
5:25
for candidates.
5:26
Yeah.
5:27
He's a fundraiser.
5:29
That's the word I should have used.
5:30
So they had a lot more in common
5:32
than they did differences.
5:35
And as I'm listening to this and I,
5:37
you know, all, all the Jew hate, all
5:41
that, who cares?
5:41
I don't care what they're talking about there.
5:43
But I thought this was interesting that neither
5:45
of neither of them really are really honest
5:50
about their feelings towards other countries other than
5:53
Israel.
5:55
Listen to this little clip.
5:57
I just feel like it needs to be
5:58
called out explicitly.
5:58
And I like what you said is the
6:00
other day, if you're serving in another country's
6:03
military or have dual citizenship.
6:05
Hold on, stop that clip.
6:06
That clip is stopped.
6:08
Did it go like, did the thing tend
6:09
to go, I like what you said the
6:11
other day, I like what you said.
6:12
No, I liked what you said.
6:13
No, no, no.
6:14
I liked what you said better than what
6:16
you liked what I said.
6:18
No, no, no, it wasn't like that.
6:20
But this is particularly, this is that they
6:23
both have a problem with Israel and the
6:26
perception that Israel controls American politicians.
6:30
That's, that's their, that's, that's where they really
6:33
have common ground.
6:34
Now, this show is of a different opinion
6:37
that Israel does not control America.
6:40
Indirectly, it may, it may have influence on
6:43
our politicians through AIPAC, funded by the military
6:47
industrial complex, who sends military money for them
6:52
to buy our stuff.
6:53
Okay.
6:53
Yes.
6:54
Before you continue, did you watch JD Vance's
6:58
speech at the University of Mississippi?
7:01
Some of it.
7:01
Yeah.
7:02
Some of it.
7:02
Why?
7:03
He brought this same, he brought the topic
7:05
up.
7:05
Oh gosh.
7:06
I wish I did not see that.
7:08
What did he say?
7:09
He brought the topic.
7:09
I didn't clip it.
7:10
It's just, he's really a good speaker.
7:13
It's kind of surprising how good he is.
7:15
But he brought the topic up.
7:17
He's totally with us.
7:19
Oh, really now?
7:21
Okay.
7:21
I'll have to clip it now.
7:22
No, I'll have to go and- Well,
7:23
just go look at it and see.
7:25
Just for prosperity.
7:25
I mean, it was a little longer than
7:26
I'd like.
7:27
Yeah.
7:27
Well, just for prosperity.
7:28
But this is true.
7:29
This is blatantly true.
7:31
And you notice how that noise is kind
7:33
of simmered down a little bit, but not
7:35
with these two.
7:36
But here's the thing that I just felt
7:38
was like, oh, you know, it just hit
7:39
me like, no, you guys are full of
7:40
crap.
7:41
Listen.
7:41
I just feel like it needs to be
7:42
called out explicitly.
7:43
And I like what you said.
7:44
If the other day, if you're serving in
7:47
another country's military or have dual citizenship, you
7:50
really can't be a part of this project.
7:52
Well, that's just, that's an easy one.
7:55
But I am much more comfortable as a
7:57
Christian and an American keeping it on that
8:00
level because, you know, it's easy to just
8:04
set rules, universal rules that apply to everyone,
8:06
not just the Jews or the Christians or
8:09
the anybody, just like Americans can only serve
8:12
in the US military or they lose their
8:14
passport.
8:14
I mean, I don't know.
8:15
That's not hard.
8:17
And I don't know.
8:18
Why not?
8:19
Why not just say that?
8:20
No, I'm not saying that.
8:22
So as I'm listening to that, I'm like,
8:23
where were Tucker and Fuentes about the hundreds,
8:26
perhaps thousands of people who went and fought
8:28
for the Ukrainians?
8:31
How come I didn't hear anyone talking about,
8:33
well, you can't do that.
8:35
That's you're fighting for a different country.
8:38
You should lose your passport.
8:39
Yeah.
8:40
Great catch.
8:41
Yeah.
8:42
So that just shows a severe bias.
8:44
But then on the other hand, it was
8:46
fascinating to hear Fuentes.
8:49
And now I agree with him on this
8:51
one.
8:51
He was talking about an assassination attempt that
8:54
was made against him.
8:56
And it was some young guy who, the
9:01
whole story is kind of lengthy, so I
9:03
didn't include that.
9:04
Some young guy who had a fight with
9:06
his roommate and he shot his roommate, then
9:08
shot his parents and then went to go
9:10
kill Fuentes, which didn't happen, luckily for him,
9:15
of course.
9:16
But here's his thinking of who was behind
9:19
this.
9:19
I mean, it's a well-documented fact that
9:22
all kinds of bad actors use unstable people
9:25
for political assassinations.
9:28
Right.
9:28
It's happened.
9:29
We know it.
9:29
So here's Tucker setting it up.
9:31
Like, come on, man.
9:32
We know Israel did it.
9:34
So do you think this might be an
9:37
example of that?
9:38
I don't think so.
9:40
But it's certainly possible.
9:42
The reason I say I don't think so
9:43
- It's kind of funny.
9:44
I mean, I think of you as conspiracy
9:46
minded, but you don't have a conspiracy in
9:49
mind here.
9:50
No, because I really believe that when you
9:53
look at all these things, and by these
9:55
things, I mean these like really disturbing instances
9:58
of violence like Luigi Mangione or Charlie Kirk
10:01
or these school shootings, there is something going
10:04
on with these kids.
10:06
It's nihilism.
10:08
It's these people that are maybe mentally defective,
10:10
extremely online.
10:11
I think there's like a real problem there.
10:14
And I don't doubt that sometimes these people
10:18
are involved with maybe a foreign government or
10:20
they're being groomed or put up to it
10:22
by an operative.
10:23
But I think to assume that it's always
10:25
that ignores that, like, there's a very real
10:28
problem of nihilistic, surrealist violence that comes from
10:31
young people.
10:32
And, you know, like this guy kill it's
10:34
a triple homicide out of nowhere.
10:37
And then he tries to kill me.
10:38
I think he just went crazy.
10:40
But I could be wrong.
10:41
Oh, oh, off brand.
10:44
Charlie Kirk.
10:45
Oh, no.
10:49
Very good.
10:50
Nick Quintus.
10:50
I like that.
10:52
Like, no, these are just kids who have
10:53
been who've been psyoped and gone nuts by
10:56
discord and social media and drugs.
11:01
I like the use of his term extremely
11:04
online.
11:06
Yeah.
11:07
Did you hear that in there?
11:08
That's almost a show title.
11:10
These kids are extremely online.
11:13
I've heard that.
11:13
What?
11:14
Extremely online.
11:15
Wow.
11:16
I think I heard that somewhere else, actually.
11:18
Extremely.
11:19
Really?
11:19
Yeah.
11:20
It may be kind of.
11:20
It's an interesting term because it it's not
11:23
really it's something it's so strange.
11:27
It doesn't really make sense.
11:29
It's almost a non sequitur, which will that
11:31
use of that word annoys a couple of
11:33
our grammarians.
11:34
What non sequitur?
11:36
Yeah, they they've gotten some notes on our
11:39
use of the term that we're not we're
11:42
misusing it in some screwball way.
11:45
Oh, what is the correct usage of non?
11:47
Well, it means something that it's a non
11:50
sequitur is a sentence that that within itself
11:53
doesn't make sense in the broadest definition.
11:59
But it's very specific.
12:01
If you're one of these ant fuckers that
12:05
are out there that listen to our show,
12:07
they and they went into some good stuff
12:09
about extremely online, about porn.
12:11
It was funny talkers like what even is
12:13
online porn?
12:14
Like what?
12:15
What?
12:17
Huh?
12:18
Huh?
12:19
You know, it leads you to transgenderism and
12:22
I didn't clip that.
12:23
But it was it's worth listening to.
12:26
It was, you know, considering how they've spoken
12:29
about each other in their own shows.
12:31
It was like, OK, there was no fireworks.
12:34
It was like the mutual admiration club.
12:36
It's interesting.
12:38
Yeah, you run into that in the overnights.
12:42
Europe is slowly deteriorating and falling.
12:45
This was unexpected, even by my stand, even
12:47
by the polling standards.
12:49
The big winner of this Dutch election is
12:51
38 year old Rob Jetten with his centre
12:54
left party D66.
12:56
A pro European, his popularity skyrocketed in the
12:59
final stretch of the election.
13:01
His message was full of optimism and his
13:04
strong media presence resonated with the Dutch people.
13:08
This is an historic election result because we've
13:11
shown not only to the Netherlands, but also
13:13
to the world that it is possible to
13:14
beat populist and extreme right movements.
13:17
And I'm very eager to cooperate with other
13:20
parties.
13:21
The campaign focused mainly on immigration and the
13:24
housing crisis, which particularly affects young people in
13:28
this densely populated country.
13:30
It's a disappointing night for the far right
13:32
leader who topped the polls in 2023.
13:36
It is a significant loss, but we are
13:39
still a large party.
13:40
I'm sure we can find a way up
13:41
next time.
13:43
It was Geert Wilders himself who triggered these
13:45
early elections.
13:47
He withdrew his party from a fragile four
13:50
party coalition for not being tough enough on
13:52
immigration, which brought down the outgoing government.
13:55
His score in this election is being closely
13:58
scrutinized across Europe and serves as a barometer
14:01
of the strength of the far right across
14:03
the continent.
14:04
The far right, the far right is crashing
14:06
and burning.
14:06
I think Eva Vlaardingenbroek had the best analysis.
14:12
You know, I could never pronounce her name.
14:15
Yeah, I know.
14:17
She should change her name to some Hollywood
14:18
style name.
14:19
Yes, let's say Eva Jones.
14:22
No, that's not Hollywood.
14:23
Well, Eva Smith, Eva Smith would be good.
14:27
Eva Eden.
14:28
There you go.
14:29
Eva Eden.
14:30
Yeah, brings up Garden of Eden, Eva Eden.
14:32
That would be perfect.
14:33
That's a good Hollywood name.
14:34
Call Brunetti.
14:36
Eva Eden.
14:36
But the problem, I have a problem with
14:38
the way it does it.
14:40
It doesn't, I don't think it flows as
14:42
well as.
14:43
Eva St. George.
14:44
How about Eva St. James?
14:49
I like the idea of slipping the same
14:51
name in there.
14:52
If you're going to do a fake name,
14:53
because that makes the person look, you know,
14:55
better than they are in some subconscious way.
14:58
So you like it.
14:58
Here's what Eva St. James said.
15:00
She said, oh, that's Dutch.
15:03
Oh, this means more mass migration, more replacement,
15:07
more climate regulations, more censorship, more EU, more
15:11
gender madness.
15:13
And Rob Yetton, a woke, openly gay champagne
15:16
socialist, will most likely become the country's prime
15:19
minister.
15:20
They forgot to mention that in the report,
15:22
that he's a gay champagne socialist.
15:25
I like champagne socialist.
15:28
It's another show title.
15:28
Another show title.
15:29
Yes, that is good.
15:30
Well, I think that should bring us to
15:32
this woman, Naomi.
15:34
Which one?
15:35
She's a German girl who set up a
15:38
lot of she's very famous in Germany.
15:41
And she's this is Naomi Sebert or Selbs.
15:45
I can't even pronounce her last name.
15:47
But she is a big supporter of AFD
15:51
in Germany.
15:51
And she is asking for asylum in the
15:55
United States.
15:58
Bring her on in.
16:00
She's welcome right away.
16:02
No problem.
16:03
My name is Naomi Sebert.
16:04
Sorry, I have two clips.
16:05
I was on cue just so you know.
16:07
My name is Naomi Sebert, and I am
16:09
the first European to seek asylum in the
16:11
United States of America under President Trump's new
16:14
proposal for a refugee mandate, because I am
16:17
facing persecution in my home country, Germany, for
16:20
my political views, for my support for the
16:22
AFD party, the only opposition party in Germany.
16:25
And most importantly, for my advocacy for free
16:28
speech.
16:29
I have become the target of severe government
16:31
and intelligence surveillance and harassment.
16:34
My communications have been intercepted.
16:37
And my family has been stalked by reporters
16:39
for the state media for whom we pay
16:41
taxes.
16:42
And I continue to receive death threats from
16:44
Antifa.
16:45
Before we continue, the troll room has an
16:47
important question for you.
16:49
The question is, is she hot?
16:53
She is a this is interesting.
16:56
She's got a she's got a look that's
16:57
very distinctive German.
16:59
But it's a it's not the American style
17:03
of hot.
17:04
But I think I think she's a German
17:07
style.
17:07
Give her a number.
17:08
Give her a number.
17:10
I give her an eight, five.
17:13
Wow.
17:14
Wow.
17:16
That's if I was a European.
17:20
She doesn't have what she's missing for Americans
17:23
is she doesn't have that big million dollar
17:26
smile.
17:27
Oh, that's too bad.
17:28
She's got kind of a small that that's
17:31
that old fashioned, small doll mouth mouth.
17:36
So she looks like a German doll.
17:38
She's got a doll face.
17:39
She's seeped.
17:40
She's she looks a bit like Avril Lavigne
17:43
in her younger years, only with blonde hair.
17:47
And now, by the way, it's offensive to
17:49
a lot of people out there that we
17:50
talk like this.
17:51
No, no, this is this is.
17:52
But we're doing this as media executives, which
17:56
is what we are.
17:57
Yes.
17:57
We need to determine, does she have legs?
18:01
And I didn't see her legs.
18:04
Does she have legs in the media?
18:06
She is.
18:07
Oh, definitely.
18:08
She is the alter ego to Greta Thunberg,
18:11
I would say.
18:12
Well, she's that's where she got her reputation.
18:15
Ah, OK, let's continue.
18:17
When I asked the police for help in
18:18
the past about these death threats, they did
18:20
not offer me help because physical harm had
18:22
not occurred yet.
18:24
President Trump has correctly identified Antifa as a
18:27
terrorist organization.
18:28
But meanwhile, the German government silently condone these
18:32
attacks on their own citizens as if they
18:36
are soldiers for their agenda.
18:38
This year, I helped arrange the viral ex
18:40
-life conversation between Elon Musk and AfD leader
18:43
Alice Weidel, which I'm sure many of you
18:44
have seen as it drew international media coverage.
18:48
While Europe is becoming a breeding ground for
18:50
tyranny, America still treats the right to free
18:53
speech as sacred.
18:55
And thank God for that.
18:57
In Germany, it is illegal under paragraph 188,
19:00
which was extended under former Chancellor Angela Merkel,
19:03
to insult or damage the reputation of a
19:06
politician.
19:07
I will not apologize for violating their legal
19:11
special protection because in a democracy, politicians must
19:15
tolerate criticism.
19:16
She's kind of the German Eva St. James.
19:20
Wouldn't you say?
19:22
Yeah, I guess.
19:24
Yeah, that's good.
19:25
I like her rap.
19:27
She's got clear diction.
19:30
Yeah, yeah, she's very she's like the Dutch
19:33
girl.
19:34
She's the Dutch girl is she has a
19:39
funny style that I've always been kind of
19:42
fascinated with.
19:42
She's the Dutch girl, I think, is a
19:44
little colder.
19:45
She's in a Dutch way, that kind of
19:48
that neutral style of presentation.
19:51
Yes, I would call it matter of fact.
19:55
Yeah, this girl's got a little more emotion
19:58
underneath it.
19:59
She is slightly irked, but she's doing this
20:01
sincerely.
20:02
So well, you got another clip here.
20:04
This is good.
20:05
The reason why the German government and intelligence
20:07
gained an interest in me is because I
20:10
was the very first young English speaking influencer
20:13
to openly align with the AFD party, right
20:16
of center political views.
20:18
And most importantly, I supported President Trump since
20:21
he came down the golden escalator in 2015
20:23
and announced that he was running for president.
20:26
Trump's election victory was a crack in the
20:29
matrix that terrified globalist tyrants.
20:32
And now I am the bridge between Germany
20:35
and the MAGA movement, which the European Union
20:38
desperately wants to burn.
20:39
You may remember me from 2020, when I
20:42
appeared on Fox and on the front page
20:44
of The Washington Post and became internationally recognized
20:47
as the anti-Greta Thunberg, a climate skeptic.
20:50
Now I am a representative for Deutschlandkurier, Germany's
20:54
leading alternative media outlet, whose editor in chief,
20:57
David Bendels, received a seven month probation sentence
21:00
earlier this year because he posted a meme
21:03
mocking the interior minister's hatred of free speech.
21:07
Quite ironic, if you ask me.
21:09
This is why I started working with him,
21:11
because I stand in solidarity with his admirable
21:14
courage.
21:15
I am publicly sharing my asylum request now,
21:18
as President Trump has announced new refugee priorities,
21:21
including Europeans, who have been targeted for their
21:24
peaceful expression of views online, such as opposition
21:28
to mass migration and support for populist parties,
21:31
according to the New York Times.
21:32
But if you think I ran away cowardly
21:34
and abandoned my homeland, you would be mistaken.
21:38
This is only the beginning.
21:40
I am seeking protection under the United States
21:42
government to expose the truth about the tyranny
21:45
of Germany and the European Union, who have
21:48
made the MAGA administration their enemies.
21:52
And I encourage everybody in Europe to stand
21:55
up for what MAGA represents and turn it
21:58
into MAGA.
22:00
Let's fight, fight, fight.
22:02
Wow.
22:03
I think I propose a prisoner swap.
22:07
We'll take Naomi and we'll give you...
22:12
We'll give you David Hasselhoff.
22:14
I think that's a fair swap.
22:18
They'd take David Hasselhoff.
22:20
They love him.
22:21
They love him.
22:22
They love the Hoff.
22:24
You know, in a way, she reminds me
22:26
more of Ancilla.
22:30
Like a German Ancilla?
22:31
Oh, yeah.
22:32
She's got...
22:32
I think you might be right there.
22:34
Yeah.
22:34
Ancilla.
22:35
I think Ancilla is running for, I don't
22:37
know, I wonder how she did.
22:39
I think they were, she had, they set
22:41
up some political party.
22:42
I don't know if they got any votes
22:43
or not.
22:43
Any seats?
22:45
Any seats?
22:46
Haven't heard from Ancilla.
22:46
Yeah, well, these women, these European women.
22:49
They don't mess around.
22:50
Those three that you mentioned.
22:51
Yeah.
22:52
You really have a, they're very, they're like,
22:55
they're like scorned.
22:57
And they have a, they're just very, they're
23:01
out to do damage.
23:03
But they're not doing it in a shouting,
23:06
crazy, nutty way like the liberal, American liberal
23:10
woman.
23:10
They're doing it pretty, I would say, calmly.
23:17
Yeah, that's a good catch.
23:20
I had not heard of her.
23:23
But I think she totally should have asylum
23:26
here.
23:27
Yeah, she'll get it.
23:28
Give her, we'll set her up with a
23:30
podcast rig.
23:34
She'll be good to go.
23:34
Yeah, we'll help her get a, become a
23:36
podcaster.
23:37
She can probably talk for days.
23:40
Happy to do it.
23:41
Happy to do it.
23:43
Absolutely.
23:45
Ah, let's see.
23:46
Well, there, there's a lot of interesting things
23:48
happening around the world.
23:50
Although if you watch the M5M, you wouldn't
23:53
know too much about it.
23:56
You know, the, this, first of all, our
24:00
president went to Malaysia and was welcomed by
24:04
the YMCA song and he danced to it.
24:09
Yes.
24:11
That was, that was, that made me proud
24:13
to be an American.
24:14
It was the funniest.
24:16
He was dancing the whole time, except when
24:18
he was in Korea.
24:19
And I have some comments about that because
24:21
I have the Korea, what happened in Korea
24:24
clip.
24:25
Yeah.
24:25
Yeah.
24:25
Let's do that.
24:26
Let's do the Korea clip.
24:28
With a follow-up.
24:30
I'm looking now.
24:31
It'd be Trump.
24:31
I think at the bottom, Trump, Trump, Korea
24:34
deal.
24:35
Here we go.
24:35
The US and South Korea affirmed Seoul investing
24:38
$350 billion into the US.
24:42
They've been negotiating for months on the details
24:45
of their trade agreement, including how the money
24:48
would be distributed.
24:49
All the details of the agreement are yet
24:51
to be released.
24:52
But $150 billion of the investment will go
24:55
towards revitalizing US shipbuilding.
24:58
Tariffs on South Korean goods will also be
25:00
lowered from 25 to 15%.
25:03
Trump met South Korea's president separately and as
25:06
part of a formal dinner with heads of
25:08
states of other countries.
25:09
At the table was also Canada's prime minister,
25:12
Mark Carney, who Trump has been upset with
25:14
recently over tariff negotiations.
25:16
Carney barely made it in any of the
25:18
reports.
25:19
They all kind of like pushed him away.
25:22
He wasn't making a lot of noise either.
25:24
No, nor should he.
25:26
So I have to plug Chanel Rion.
25:30
She's Korean.
25:31
Yes.
25:32
Oh, is she Korean?
25:34
Yeah, she's half Korean-American, Korean-American.
25:37
But she sees herself as Korean when she
25:41
does reporting on Korea.
25:43
She did a thing, and I want to
25:46
plug my The Real Dvorak Twitter account.
25:49
Maybe I can get some numbers back up.
25:51
I heard on the DHM plug, when you
25:53
do that, your numbers go down.
25:55
Yes, I think because I think I'm...
25:58
Because you're not paying.
25:59
You're a non-paying blue check.
26:00
I'm pretty sure that's that and other things.
26:03
But I retweeted that.
26:06
I would have clipped it, but it was
26:07
a little too long.
26:08
It was too detailed.
26:11
She did a...
26:12
I've never heard anyone else do this, analyze
26:15
the Korea meeting that Trump had with Lee.
26:20
She hates Lee.
26:22
She says he's a stooge of Xi in
26:26
China.
26:27
He's a communist.
26:29
He's no good.
26:31
And everything that happened there, they didn't give
26:33
him anything close to what would be a
26:36
high-end reception, according to her.
26:40
And she says that crown that they gave
26:42
him wasn't some sort of a gag or
26:43
a joke or a reference.
26:45
That crown that they gave him is the
26:48
crown you put in graves.
26:52
No, no way.
26:54
Yeah.
26:55
She says that particular crown is put in
26:58
tombs with the dead.
27:00
Wow.
27:01
That is...
27:02
Everyone in Korea knows this, and everyone in
27:04
Korea hates this guy, Lee, who's running the
27:07
place.
27:07
And they love Trump, according to her.
27:10
Yeah, I believe that.
27:10
Trump, and they hate Lee, and they all
27:12
know that this was a major insult.
27:15
And then they have the meeting, she continues,
27:18
and then they have the meeting with Xi,
27:21
not in China or any place cool, but
27:23
in the Busan airport, a lousy venue, was
27:29
a further insult.
27:31
The entire event in Korea was one insult
27:34
after another, and she documented them all.
27:36
Wow.
27:37
And I retreated it.
27:39
I've never heard this any place else.
27:41
No, you have video of her saying that?
27:43
If you go to Twitter and go...
27:47
She posted it.
27:48
It's a Twitter tweet.
27:49
Yeah, but you blocked me, so I can't
27:51
see you.
27:52
I didn't block you.
27:56
Maybe from the email, but no, not from
27:58
Twitter.
28:00
That is a great piece of analysis.
28:02
And everywhere, all you heard in all media,
28:06
mainstream and alternative here is, look, he gave
28:09
Trump the king, the crown, the crown, the
28:11
golden crown, and it turns out to be
28:13
an insult.
28:13
Like, you're a dead man to us.
28:16
Holy crap.
28:17
Yeah.
28:18
Only on your No Agenda show, people.
28:21
Unbelievable.
28:22
And One America News, apparently, if you can
28:24
find it.
28:25
Yeah, apparently, One America News.
28:26
She writes her own material.
28:28
That's good.
28:29
I found that out over time, and she's
28:31
pretty good.
28:32
I did get the translated opening remarks from
28:36
Xi in the meeting, which everybody was there,
28:40
two sides of the table.
28:41
And this was at the airport.
28:42
Is that what you're saying?
28:43
This Xi meeting was at the...
28:44
At the Busan airport.
28:46
That's crazy.
28:47
Well, it was good, though.
28:48
Mr. President, you care a lot about world
28:51
peace, and you're very enthusiastic about settling various
28:55
regional hotspot issues.
28:57
I appreciate your great contribution to the recent
28:59
conclusion of the Gaza ceasefire agreement.
29:02
During your visit to Malaysia, you witnessed the
29:04
signing of the joint declaration on peace along
29:06
the Cambodia-Thailand border, to which you had
29:10
provided input.
29:12
China's been helping, in our own way, Cambodia
29:14
and Thailand properly settle their border disputes, and
29:18
we have also been promoting peace talks to
29:21
resolve other hotspot issues.
29:22
Hotspots.
29:23
Lots of hotspots that Xi was talking about.
29:25
But then he kind of solidifies a bit
29:28
of the arc, the way I see it.
29:30
America, Russia, China.
29:31
He's like, hey, you know, we're kind of
29:33
buddies.
29:33
You know, we have our differences, but we
29:35
can work it all out.
29:36
We're doing stuff.
29:37
We've been in contact.
29:38
We're close.
29:39
We're not, you know, like, we're not doing
29:40
those sleepovers, but we're hanging in there together.
29:43
And it feels very warm seeing you again,
29:46
because it's been many years since your re
29:49
-election.
29:50
We have spoken on the phone three times,
29:52
exchanged several letters, and stayed in close contact.
29:56
Under our joint guidance, China-U.S. relations
29:58
have remained stable on the whole.
30:00
Given our different national conditions, we do not
30:03
always see eye to eye with each other.
30:05
And it is normal for the two leading
30:07
economies of the world to have frictions now
30:10
and then.
30:11
And in the face of winds, waves, and
30:13
challenges, you and I, at the helm of
30:15
China-U.S. relations, should stay the right
30:18
course and ensure the steady sailing forward of
30:21
the giant ship of China-U.S. relations.
30:23
I always believe that China's development goes hand
30:26
in hand with your vision to make America
30:29
great again.
30:30
Our two countries are fully able to help
30:32
each other succeed and prosper together.
30:35
Over the years, I have stated in public
30:37
many times that China and the United States
30:39
should be partners and friends.
30:42
This is what history has taught us and
30:44
what reality demands.
30:47
A few days ago, in the latest round
30:49
of consultation, our two economic and trade teams
30:51
reached basic consensus on addressing our respective major
30:54
concerns and made encouraging progress.
30:57
Sounds good to me.
30:58
Doesn't sound like we're about to go to
31:00
war in 2027, unless it's some kind of
31:04
setup over Taiwan.
31:05
Well, it could be bullcrap.
31:07
And also, the Chinese are notorious for understatement.
31:11
So you don't know what they're really saying.
31:14
Oh, okay.
31:14
Well, yeah, I guess.
31:16
And, you know, because you can't say anything
31:17
nasty.
31:18
And let's just see if a soybean deal
31:22
goes through.
31:23
Scott Besant will be happy.
31:26
At least that will be a start.
31:29
The soybean deal is like 180,000 tons
31:33
or something.
31:34
That's nothing like the millions of tons they
31:36
used to take from us.
31:37
It's not a huge deal.
31:39
It's just a start.
31:41
But we have a...
31:43
The soybean thing is important to our farmers.
31:46
It's a symbolic gesture for our farmers because
31:49
they got irked by the fact that they
31:51
got cut out of the deal.
31:54
And they're not bringing the soybeans in anymore.
31:57
Did you know that Besant is a soybean
32:02
farmer?
32:04
Yes.
32:05
I didn't...
32:06
I'd like a little more...
32:07
This came up in a conversation, I think,
32:08
on DH Unplugged.
32:10
I'd like a little...
32:10
Here's the clip of him saying it.
32:12
The president has also said he does want
32:14
our farmers to be taken care of.
32:16
You did mention that.
32:17
China has been boycotting American soybeans and American
32:21
farmers have really suffered.
32:23
Do you see a real light at the
32:25
end of the tunnel there that may allow
32:27
soybeans again?
32:31
Well, Martha, in case you don't know it,
32:33
I'm actually a soybean farmer.
32:35
So I have felt this pain too.
32:38
And there are a couple of things happening
32:40
here.
32:40
One...
32:41
What?
32:42
He's owns...
32:43
He's got...
32:44
He is one of the hedge fund or
32:47
something that he is part of, has a
32:49
soybean holdings and so thus...
32:52
Oh, OK.
32:53
So I can say, you know, I own
32:54
Apple stocks.
32:55
So I'm an iPhone engineer.
32:57
Is that it?
32:58
Well, you can't say you're an iPhone engineer,
33:00
but you can say you're...
33:02
An iPhone farmer.
33:03
Well, you know, I...
33:03
Well, how could you...
33:04
But let's put it in that...
33:06
Let's try to make that work.
33:07
OK.
33:08
You own Apple stocks, you can say, I...
33:12
I make phones.
33:16
So I understand how this works.
33:19
I make phones.
33:20
Yeah, exactly.
33:22
I'm an AI.
33:24
Yeah.
33:25
OK.
33:26
Well, so along these lines, I got to
33:29
go to the neighbor.
33:30
So the neighbor down the road, Laura, Laura
33:32
Logan...
33:33
Is this a bad neighbor?
33:35
You've given us no updates.
33:37
And by the way, I'm irked by this.
33:38
Well, because there is no...
33:40
We're in limbo.
33:41
We're in limbo right now.
33:42
There's been no updates.
33:44
There's nothing.
33:44
The text group has gone quiet.
33:48
Although Claudia next door, she's from the Dominican
33:50
Republic.
33:53
Next door?
33:54
Yeah, she's next door.
33:55
Like two acres.
33:57
Claudia's next door.
33:58
It's not like...
33:59
So I'm walking Phoebe and she has this
34:02
little rat dog called Fifi.
34:05
And then some other like sausage dog.
34:08
The little dog's called Feces?
34:10
Yes, Feces.
34:11
It is now the little dog called Feces.
34:15
And she's walking with her boyfriend, Japanese-American
34:19
veteran.
34:21
And he has a hot little sausage dog.
34:24
And so I'm walking Phoebe.
34:25
Hey, Adam, how you doing?
34:27
Like, hey, hey, Claudia.
34:29
And she's, what's up with these children over
34:31
there?
34:31
They're going too fast.
34:33
They're driving around.
34:35
And then I told her, well, you know,
34:36
we're talking about the HR.
34:37
That's good.
34:38
Because I'm a Dominican Republic Karen.
34:41
It makes me a...
34:42
What's she called?
34:43
Carmen.
34:43
I'm a Carmen.
34:44
Be careful.
34:45
I'm all about it.
34:47
So that's the only update I have.
34:49
More coming, I'm sure.
34:50
This is going to come to a head.
34:51
We have the Dominican...
34:52
She has a Carmen in the neighborhood.
34:54
Everyone needs a good Carmen.
34:56
And she needs to be on our side,
34:57
which I like.
34:59
So no, the other neighbor, Laura Logan, down
35:03
the street.
35:03
She has going rogue with Laura Logan.
35:06
She finally doesn't have no agenda in her
35:08
name, in her show name.
35:10
So that's good.
35:11
And she went to Moscow to interview Kirill
35:15
Dimitriev, which is kind of funny because the
35:18
guy's been in the U.S. Well, that's
35:21
a good question.
35:21
I don't know.
35:22
I suspect it's...
35:23
What I think is happening is that there's
35:26
money from General Flynn's nonprofit.
35:31
Okay, we'll just assume Flynn Center.
35:34
I'm going to think Flynn Center.
35:36
And probably to set up an interview with
35:38
Putin.
35:40
But that didn't...
35:40
With her and Putin?
35:41
Yeah, I think so.
35:42
Putin would go for that.
35:44
Well, it didn't happen this time.
35:46
So they gave her Kirill Dimitriev, who is...
35:49
He was the clearing guy.
35:51
He's going to say, yeah, she should be
35:53
good.
35:53
You'll like her.
35:54
She's pretty.
35:54
I think...
35:57
Gabumba, you like her.
35:58
Vladimir Gabumba, you like her.
36:03
And as an aside, as a media executive,
36:05
the red lipstick she had on was just
36:07
that, you know, two shades of red, too
36:10
red.
36:10
You know what I mean?
36:12
It's just sometimes if you're an...
36:13
Can there be red lipstick that's too red?
36:16
Yes.
36:17
Or is it a darker shade that just
36:19
doesn't look good?
36:20
It was too, you know, like red, you
36:24
know, it's just a white face and boing,
36:25
these lips pop out.
36:28
It has to be done with...
36:29
You need to tone it down.
36:32
You need a pro.
36:34
She should have brought a makeup artist.
36:36
I think it's pretty low budget, these things.
36:39
But they had a hotel room set up
36:40
and everything.
36:41
Low budget can it be of flying to
36:43
Moscow?
36:44
Well, I don't know.
36:46
Because my buddy Luke was supposed to go,
36:48
but his visa got...
36:50
He's a J6er, so he had all kinds
36:52
of visa problems.
36:53
You're a terrorist.
36:54
No, I'm not.
36:55
Look, I got pardoned.
36:56
Let me in.
36:57
So he didn't go.
36:58
So I'm not sure who...
37:00
But I'll get details from Luke.
37:03
But the funny thing is Kirill Dimitriev, she
37:05
gets back and this guy's here in America
37:07
doing interviews everywhere.
37:09
Like, you didn't need to go to Moscow,
37:12
but she did.
37:14
And so he is Steve Witkoff's counterpart.
37:17
Well, you know, you should talk...
37:20
Get together with her and find out...
37:22
Because I would like to know right now
37:24
what Moscow is like.
37:25
Is it bustling?
37:26
I get the sense that it is.
37:28
I think it's very colorful and bustling.
37:30
I'm sure it is.
37:32
Well, it's only 45 minutes.
37:35
So if you want to listen to it
37:38
or watch it, it's out there.
37:40
Rogue on the road, everybody.
37:44
And so I got three clips from it.
37:47
The first one is a little long, but
37:48
this is Kirill delivering the message in multiple
37:53
ways, hitting Christianity, hitting trans Maoism, all of
37:58
this stuff, saying you got to...
37:59
And something that we both believe and know
38:02
to be true, that Americans and Russians are
38:06
very, very similar.
38:09
Even when it's the USSR. Very similar, you
38:13
know, nationalistic.
38:15
They just are drinkers.
38:17
Big time.
38:18
Let me go back to how traditional values
38:21
and other things unite us.
38:22
Because President Putin has started talking about focus
38:25
on traditional values, not this year, not five
38:28
years ago, but when he really became president.
38:31
So for more than 20 years ago, he's
38:33
been focused on really making sure that, you
38:35
know, it's not a woke world.
38:36
It's a world where there is a man
38:38
and a woman, the focus on the family,
38:40
on Christian values.
38:42
And I think that is very, very important.
38:44
And he was calling out the fakeness of
38:47
the woke narrative for a long time.
38:48
And by the way...
38:49
Just like President Trump.
38:50
Just as President Trump.
38:51
I reposted one of your posts.
38:54
We've had this woke vocabulary.
38:56
What people say and what they really mean.
38:58
So I think the honesty and be straightforward,
39:02
you know, not political correctness, but calling things
39:06
the way they are is important.
39:08
I would give another, I think, very poignant
39:09
example of Charlie Kirk.
39:11
So Charlie Kirk really resonated with the Russian
39:14
people.
39:15
And when this horrible tragedy happened, not only
39:18
President Putin gave condolences, but Russian church actually
39:22
did an article recognizing Charlie Kirk's contributions.
39:26
Did you hear anything about Putin's condolences?
39:31
I don't remember that.
39:32
Why?
39:32
I don't either.
39:33
Why would we?
39:33
To Christianity.
39:34
Who's going to tell us?
39:36
Exactly.
39:36
So they see him not only as somebody
39:38
who is an advocate of family, not only
39:40
advocate on campuses, but really it's a religious
39:43
sort of thinker.
39:44
A contemporary religious thinker.
39:45
Okay, but that's interesting because of course, under
39:47
Marxism, there is no room for religion.
39:49
I mean, Karl Marx did not, he was
39:51
an nihilist when it came to God.
39:52
Yeah, but Russia is actually quite a religious
39:55
country.
39:56
Yes.
39:56
So if you go, and I hope you
39:57
can go to our Orthodox churches, et cetera,
40:00
it's a very religious country and very much
40:03
focused on values.
40:04
So in reality, we see view the world
40:07
very similarly where we see, for example, immigration
40:10
in Europe and what Biden tried to do
40:12
in the U.S. is crazy.
40:14
You know, I actually have a theory about
40:15
this.
40:16
I believe that Biden- Listen, now it's
40:18
as if he talked to you before the
40:20
interview.
40:21
Here's his theory.
40:22
When I saw, I heard this, I'm like,
40:24
wow, John needs to hear this.
40:25
Well, it's crazy.
40:27
You know, I actually have a theory about
40:28
this.
40:29
I believe that Biden wanted Democrats to stay
40:32
in power forever.
40:34
So what he did, he figured out immigrants,
40:37
criminals, and transgender, they were Democrats.
40:40
So then he increased the number of criminals.
40:43
He increased the number of immigrants and there
40:45
was a huge transgender spike, which is, by
40:47
the way, now coming down to turn to
40:49
normalcy during his era.
40:50
It turned to reality.
40:51
All of that was to stay in power.
40:53
All of those things that Russia is tough
40:55
on and Europe is not tough on.
40:57
So I think another thing we see is,
40:59
for example, Europe was allowing illegal immigration, was
41:02
allowing lots of vogue policy.
41:04
J.D. Vance said it's basically suicide of
41:06
European civilization.
41:07
And we also see it very similarly.
41:09
So to summarize, I think we all care
41:12
about our families.
41:13
We all care about education of our children.
41:16
We all care about having good economy, good
41:19
growth.
41:20
And we are much more similar.
41:21
And what happened during Biden administration and actually
41:24
started with Obama, Russiagate, is that Russiagate tried
41:28
to vilify President Trump, tried to vilify Russia.
41:33
And from that time, Russia became like really
41:35
bad, bad, bad in the people's minds in
41:38
the U.S. But more and more conservatives
41:41
understand that those were fake, not true narratives.
41:44
All right, so he's clearly saying, hey, you
41:46
know, like we're kind of the same.
41:48
We got the guy, we got a president
41:50
who thinks the same, just doing all the
41:52
same.
41:53
And then he blew my mind with a
41:55
setup from Logan about the North Sea nexus
41:58
and the Brits.
41:59
But do you think there's an irony that
42:01
a lot of this woke ideology comes out
42:03
of cultural Marxism?
42:05
Well, again, I don't frankly go that deeply
42:07
because you can all tie it.
42:09
And Marxism came from Europe.
42:11
And by the way, you know, Marx didn't
42:13
like Russia so much.
42:15
Well, Marx was hired by Henry Rothschild to
42:17
create a system of social control and paid
42:20
by the British.
42:21
But OK, going back to British, you know,
42:23
British, I believe, are incredibly aggressive to instill
42:26
different things worldwide.
42:28
They're suffering from lots of immigration, from digital
42:32
ID.
42:33
They now try to implement, which is really
42:35
a way to control people.
42:37
And I think it's insanity.
42:38
It is insanity.
42:39
You know, Prime Minister Starmer is the least
42:42
popular prime minister in the history of Great
42:46
Britain.
42:46
I had to mention on Twitter that his
42:49
great speech when President Trump called him in
42:53
Egypt and pretended to give him a word
42:56
and then said, no, go back.
42:57
And he didn't even get to speak.
42:59
So I think you have really the issue
43:01
with Britain, some European countries.
43:03
And by the way, we love, you know,
43:05
European people and British people, but they've been
43:08
taken over.
43:09
By aggressive politicians who really try to control
43:12
their societies and who try to hide the
43:15
problems of those societies.
43:17
But by making Russia a victim and who
43:19
work a lot by basically not a victim,
43:23
but making Russia bad and working a lot
43:25
to really undermine any discussion we may have
43:28
with the US.
43:29
That is a big fear for many of
43:31
the forces in UK and the liberal forces
43:34
in Europe that Russia and US would actually
43:37
have a good dialogue.
43:38
Ah, so this guy's good.
43:40
And then the last clip, which is short.
43:43
Well, before you go, yeah, can you can
43:45
I can I interrupt?
43:46
Of course.
43:48
Since you brought since he brought up digital
43:49
ID.
43:50
Yes.
43:52
David Ike made some commentary.
43:56
David Ike.
43:57
OK, yeah.
43:58
On digital ID.
44:00
I thought we should.
44:01
It's been a while since we've had Ike
44:02
on the show.
44:03
I've had that bad.
44:04
This clip for two or three shows.
44:06
I can't get it in.
44:07
I have this moment.
44:09
Here we go.
44:10
Digital ID.
44:11
David Ike, everybody.
44:12
This is the door closing.
44:14
That's not intended to be opened again.
44:17
And the idea is everything you do.
44:22
I mean, everything eventually you will need a
44:25
digital ID and your digital ID will be
44:28
connected to a digital currency.
44:30
If you want to see what's planned for
44:32
the West tomorrow, then look at China today,
44:35
where if you are not behaving in a
44:40
way that the government wants you to behave,
44:44
then you lose credits in their social credit
44:48
system.
44:49
And if you lose enough, you can't go
44:52
on a plane.
44:52
You can't go on a train.
44:54
Basically take part in mainstream society.
44:56
You are excluded.
44:58
This is a global agenda.
45:00
This is not about Keir Starmer.
45:02
He's a gopher.
45:03
It's not about Donald Trump.
45:04
He's a gopher.
45:05
And they're gophers for this global network that
45:09
I call the global cult.
45:10
And the idea is to eventually have a
45:13
world government which won't be elected, purely appointed
45:18
technocrats, bureaucrats that will oversee this AI digital
45:22
system.
45:24
And you won't be able to go anywhere
45:25
in the world without this system is tracking
45:29
you.
45:29
Here we are now looking at this line
45:32
in the sand.
45:33
And if we allow it to be crossed,
45:35
it's going to be very, very difficult to
45:37
push back.
45:38
And that's why it's so vital that the
45:44
people of this country, but all countries realize
45:48
the scale of freedom deletion.
45:52
This digital ID is a massive step towards
45:57
and fundamental to the deletion of freedom.
46:02
So I agree with Ike that this is
46:04
the plan.
46:05
I disagree that Trump is some stooge in
46:08
the plan.
46:09
If he has the right people explaining the
46:12
technology to him, and I believe he does,
46:16
I don't think he'll let that happen.
46:18
This is the globalist dream, no doubt about
46:21
it.
46:22
And I didn't clip it, but Dmitry said,
46:25
he said, you know, digital ID in China
46:29
says they're open and transparent about it.
46:32
They haven't tricked their people into it.
46:35
And it's been very successful for them how
46:37
they control their billion people.
46:39
He says, unlike the UK, where they're bringing
46:42
it in on the sly and they're going
46:44
to capture their people without being honest about
46:47
it.
46:47
And I thought that was an interesting observation
46:50
that, you know, China, I guess the people
46:52
of China, they like it.
46:54
Yeah.
46:55
I'm not sure that's true.
46:57
He may have been doing that.
46:59
That commentary may have been part of a
47:02
fear of China.
47:05
Possibly, possibly.
47:06
Because there's a number of YouTube videos out
47:09
there showing the homeless in China who have
47:13
been kicked to the curb by the social
47:16
scoring system.
47:18
They should have followed the rules.
47:20
What's wrong with you?
47:21
Exactly.
47:22
What's wrong with you?
47:23
They should have followed the rules.
47:24
What were they doing?
47:24
What were they thinking?
47:25
What were you thinking?
47:26
You don't follow the rules, you're homeless.
47:28
Hello.
47:28
That's how it works in China.
47:32
Um, yeah.
47:34
But this has been Ike's thing forever.
47:36
I mean, what gets me is like, oh,
47:38
Bitcoin is a part of this and the
47:39
blockchain.
47:40
Like, no, no, it's not.
47:44
That's where he loses me just because he
47:46
doesn't.
47:47
He didn't say that in that clip.
47:48
Not in that clip.
47:49
But I've heard him.
47:50
I follow Ike.
47:50
I'm, you know, ever since the Reptilians.
47:55
I've been on board.
47:56
Well, yeah.
47:57
Once he came up with that, he was
47:59
gold.
48:00
He's podcast gold, I tell you.
48:03
So then the final clip from Kirill Dmitriev.
48:07
He brings up the tunnel.
48:08
And by the way, President Putin also mentioned
48:11
that in Arctic, we would love to have
48:12
U.S. companies participate in our oil fields,
48:15
in our gas field.
48:16
Well, there's cooperation in the International Space Station.
48:18
Yes.
48:19
And by the way, yesterday I tweeted about
48:21
maybe we should have a tunnel connecting U
48:24
.S. and Russia.
48:25
And with Elon Musk's boring company, the tunnel
48:28
can cost only $8 billion.
48:31
And the original price was $36 billion.
48:34
Wow.
48:34
So we have modern technology that can really
48:36
unite us.
48:37
And yes, of course, we also have to
48:39
be cognizant that many people in the U
48:41
.S. don't want Russia to get close.
48:44
They have interest in, you know, basically weapon
48:47
sector and other sector.
48:49
But I think at least having dialogue, at
48:51
least having better understanding of one another is
48:54
definitely in the interest to avoid security risks
48:57
worldwide.
48:58
The tunnel.
48:59
I love it.
49:01
We need a name for this tunnel.
49:04
We need a name.
49:05
Yeah, I don't know.
49:06
Russia, the United States, Russia, Alaska.
49:08
That's where it goes.
49:09
The run all the funnel.
49:11
The funnel.
49:13
I like the funnel tunnel.
49:15
Just call it the funnel.
49:16
That's good.
49:18
So since you, since we bring up Globalist
49:21
here, Globalist number one, who is trying to
49:24
get back on the stage.
49:26
I'm not sure exactly why, other than to
49:29
help Gavin Newsom's Prop 50 is Barack Obama.
49:35
And he was at the Connecticut Forum.
49:37
I'm not sure what that is.
49:39
And this is his idea of the future
49:42
of journalism.
49:43
Part of what we're going to have to
49:44
do is to start experimenting with new forms
49:48
of journalism and how do we use social
49:53
media in ways that reaffirm facts, separate facts
49:59
from opinion.
50:01
We want diversity of opinion.
50:03
We don't want diversity of facts.
50:06
That I think is one of the big
50:09
tasks of social media.
50:11
By the way, it will require some government,
50:14
I believe, some government regulatory constraints around some
50:22
of these business models in a way that's
50:25
consistent with the First Amendment.
50:27
Oh, yeah.
50:27
But that also says, look.
50:30
Look, look, look.
50:32
There is a difference between these platforms letting
50:40
all voices be heard versus a business model
50:46
that elevates the most hateful voices or the
50:51
most polarizing voices or the most dangerous in
50:59
the sense of inciting violence voices.
51:05
That I think is going to be a
51:07
big challenge for all of us that we're
51:08
going to have to undertake.
51:10
Unbelievable.
51:11
And luckily- He dug himself into a
51:12
hole there at the end.
51:13
He couldn't get himself out.
51:15
Oh, yeah.
51:15
And luckily, we have podcastlicense.com.
51:18
We'll have to reinstate that when it comes
51:19
down to it.
51:20
You also have a license to podcast if
51:22
Barack Obama has anything to do with it.
51:25
I love how he says, you know, within
51:27
the scope of the First Amendment, like no
51:30
law, no law, Mr. President, no law, no
51:33
infringement.
51:34
I can see the logic behind podcast licenses
51:40
by doing the parallel with broadcast licenses.
51:45
Well, in that case, I'm glad you bring
51:47
it up.
51:47
If we need to be careful of the
51:50
voices inciting violence, then we need licenses for
51:53
cable news talking heads as well.
51:58
Well, they've been wanting to do that forever.
52:02
Well, here's Nicole Wallace.
52:06
And this is kind of a supercut, but
52:09
with longer, little longer clips.
52:13
Conversation comes up and she's like, I've never
52:16
heard anyone call Trump Hitler.
52:18
I've never.
52:19
This has been all over Fox.
52:22
So we shouldn't play it?
52:24
Is that what you're saying?
52:25
Well, it is.
52:26
I think our listeners probably haven't heard it
52:30
necessarily, but the compendium of people calling Trump
52:35
Hitler, Hitler is ridiculous.
52:37
But even the compendiums don't even come close
52:41
to the total absolute.
52:43
If somebody, Grabien or somebody put together a
52:45
real supercut, they could have something very entertaining.
52:49
But yes, she's actually said this and she's
52:52
talking to Pritzker in an interview.
52:55
And this has been, yeah, this is amplified.
52:58
I haven't suggested that Donald Trump is Hitler.
53:02
I wouldn't.
53:03
I don't think any Democrat has.
53:05
I actually, and I think it's a smear
53:09
that they project back on to critics.
53:12
What is the natural extension, Justin, if he
53:14
pursues this to Harvard and beyond?
53:16
There was an authoritarian leader several decades back
53:20
called Adolf Hitler.
53:21
Hitler came to power and the scientists left.
53:24
The military survive in that climate.
53:26
In the same way that it happened in
53:28
Russia with Stalin, the same way it happened
53:30
with Hitler.
53:31
Eventually you get generals and admirals that are
53:34
in there that only tell the leader what
53:36
he or she wants to hear.
53:38
To the extent that the rule of law
53:40
and an assault on the rule of law
53:41
was an obscure, intangible thing.
53:43
We're now seeing it in action.
53:45
If you look back in history, you can
53:47
see very similar parallels taking place that took
53:50
place in other countries that really went down
53:52
that authoritarian road, including in pre-World War
53:55
II Nazi Germany when Hitler and Nazi officials
53:59
basically took over Frankfurt University, which was the
54:01
bastion of independent thought and progressive thinking and
54:05
independent thinking, which is what Hitler didn't want.
54:09
And so again, this is what authoritarians do.
54:12
They try to control all of the aspects
54:14
of social life.
54:15
When Trump talks about peace and Putin talks
54:18
about peace, it's autocrats getting their way.
54:21
That's it.
54:22
And Mussolini and Hitler said they were being
54:25
the purveyors of peace.
54:26
And I resisted for a long time analogies
54:29
to Hitler's Germany.
54:31
I've got in my sub stack today, though,
54:33
it's really uncanny.
54:35
The same episode where Hitler early in his
54:39
tenure, before he's totally taken over the government,
54:42
some local prosecutors go after his brown shirts
54:46
and they convict them, sends them, and then
54:49
he releases them.
54:50
It's really the same thing.
54:52
Throwback to what?
54:53
Throwback to what?
54:55
Poisoning the blood.
54:55
I mean, that is literally Hitlerian.
55:01
What do people think of what happened to
55:05
us?
55:05
The parallel here is to maybe show up
55:09
on the shores and say, no, we'll go
55:11
with, we'll go with Hitler.
55:13
I mean, what do they think about the
55:14
switching of sides with the turning of who
55:18
occupies the Oval Office?
55:20
I believe every voter who casts a vote,
55:22
regardless of who they vote for, has to
55:24
know that Donald Trump believes Hitler did some
55:28
good things.
55:30
Which is not true.
55:32
No, I think it's time to roll out
55:33
the Trump rotation just for prosperity's sake.
55:36
I have my list and you might want
55:38
to see if there's anything I left out.
55:39
This is the Trump rotation.
55:40
There's two categories.
55:42
There's the regular and then there's the criminal.
55:44
But here we go.
55:44
Ready?
55:45
Yep.
55:46
Liar.
55:46
Incompetent.
55:47
Unhinged.
55:48
Illegitimate president.
55:49
White supremacist.
55:51
Racist.
55:51
Bully.
55:52
Immature.
55:53
Russian agent.
55:54
Narcissist.
55:55
Mean.
55:56
Long ties.
55:57
Insane.
55:58
Tweets too much.
55:59
Small hands.
56:00
Small penis.
56:01
Big red button.
56:02
Criminal.
56:05
Mean.
56:06
Racist.
56:06
Immature.
56:07
Thin skin.
56:08
Runs the mob.
56:09
Has no money.
56:11
Unstable.
56:12
Fatter than 239 pounds.
56:15
Bankrupt.
56:15
25th amendment should be instituted.
56:18
He hates women.
56:19
Misogynist.
56:20
Holds grudges forever.
56:22
Placed golf a lot.
56:23
Obstruction of justice.
56:25
Money laundering.
56:26
And clown.
56:28
John, no wonder we're making America white again.
56:35
And cute.
56:37
Just to add this on, PBS Washington Week.
56:40
PBS.
56:41
PBS.
56:43
PBS.
56:44
The People's Public Broadcast System.
56:47
Funded by viewers like you.
56:51
Here's how they opened up this week's Washington
56:53
Week.
56:54
Good evening and welcome to Washington Week.
56:56
I want to start with an apology.
56:59
We pride ourselves here on our accuracy, but
57:01
we realized very late in the day that
57:03
our backdrop is no longer correct because it
57:06
still features the East Wing of the White
57:08
House.
57:08
Let me show you where it used to
57:10
be.
57:11
So this right here, that was the East
57:16
Wing.
57:16
Now it's a hole.
57:18
That's just a hole next to the White
57:19
House.
57:20
Over here, that's the West Wing that's still
57:22
standing as far as we know, although I'm
57:25
not there right now to prove it.
57:27
In the back here, you got the, that's
57:30
the Empire State Building.
57:31
And over there, that's LAX.
57:34
And also we have, we got a cold
57:37
front moving from Ohio, so break out your
57:40
sweaters.
57:42
Anyway, we'll fix the picture to reflect the
57:45
new reality once Congress restores our funding.
57:48
The list I read at the top of
57:50
the show has not been all of the
57:51
norm-busting news from this week.
57:53
Tonight, our overall subject is impunity.
57:57
How does a president get to knock down
57:58
the East Wing?
57:59
Is that even legal?
58:01
By what authority does he do the things
58:03
he does?
58:03
Who do the things he does?
58:05
He's a king.
58:06
You can't have that.
58:07
Well, you have to, after that, that's hard
58:11
to beat that.
58:11
I'm going to give you a clip of
58:12
the day for coming up with that.
58:14
Wow.
58:18
What assholes.
58:19
So they're no better than this TikTok clip
58:23
of the ballroom girl.
58:25
By the way, that goes to Clip Custodian.
58:27
I just learned that I don't get to
58:29
eat this month.
58:30
I don't get my food stamps this month
58:31
because a motherfucker in the White House, an
58:34
orange motherfucker in the White House wants a
58:37
ballroom for $3 billion.
58:39
I don't get to eat.
58:41
What?
58:42
My government is supposed to help me, not
58:45
hurt me.
58:46
Why is it hurting me?
58:48
Why is it taking the money that we
58:49
have paid into it to give us a
58:51
ballroom?
58:52
We don't have a king.
58:53
Kings need balls.
58:55
We don't.
58:56
We're the citizens.
58:57
We're public citizens.
58:58
Why do we need a ballroom?
58:59
We're not invited.
59:01
That's a king's room.
59:02
We don't need that.
59:04
I need my food stamps.
59:05
I need my food stamps or something's going
59:07
to happen.
59:08
Yeah.
59:09
I mean, this, you know, we've moved this
59:12
from government workers not getting paid to, this
59:17
is Chuck Schumer with his, I have to
59:19
say, wonderful alliteration.
59:21
He had to look at his paper continuously
59:24
to get it all out.
59:25
But he had the Ps, he had the
59:27
Cs, and the weaponizing.
59:28
Was this the Schumer rant?
59:30
Yeah.
59:31
So Trump is weaponizing.
59:32
By the way, he's in a, they had,
59:34
they definitely, they did a good job of
59:35
finding a bucket to put the mic in.
59:38
It's not that bad.
59:39
It's not that bad.
59:40
This clip is better.
59:41
Well, the version I have, I think is
59:43
bad.
59:44
Do you have a version with you?
59:46
It's called, yeah, it's on the clip list.
59:49
It's the Schumer, Schumer in a bucket.
59:52
Oh no, it's the same link.
59:54
The same as mine.
59:55
Well, let me hear your bucket.
59:56
I don't, I didn't have a bucket.
59:58
The Republican leadership thanked essential workers who are
1:00:01
still on the job without pay.
1:00:03
They pointed out that the largest union of
1:00:06
federal workers is- No, that's shutdown blood.
1:00:08
I'm saying Schumer, Schumer.
1:00:09
Here we go.
1:00:10
Oh no.
1:00:11
On Saturday, for the first time in American
1:00:13
history, a vicious, heartless president is cutting off
1:00:18
food stamps to hungry children, elderly who can't
1:00:22
afford enough food to feed themselves.
1:00:24
Yeah, I have a better version of it.
1:00:25
It's okay.
1:00:26
Veterans who are down on their luck, all
1:00:29
because he wants to use them as hostages
1:00:32
so that Democrats will stop fighting for people's
1:00:35
health care.
1:00:36
We can do both.
1:00:38
Provide better health care and provide SNAP benefits
1:00:40
to the tens of millions who need it.
1:00:42
This president is a fucking liar.
1:00:45
He says there's no money to provide food
1:00:47
stamps because of the shutdown.
1:00:48
That's bullshit.
1:00:49
His own agriculture department said there's plenty of
1:00:52
money.
1:00:52
Every president during shutdowns has provided the money
1:00:55
that's needed.
1:00:56
Even Trump in his first term.
1:00:58
He is bludgeoning the American people using the
1:01:01
most innocent of victims to try and go
1:01:04
along with his cruel shutdown, which takes away
1:01:06
health care for millions of Americans.
1:01:08
He is the most vindictive politician America has
1:01:11
ever seen and the most heartless man America
1:01:14
has ever seen in the presidency.
1:01:16
We're fighting him every step of the way.
1:01:19
So that wasn't AI?
1:01:21
That had to be AI.
1:01:24
No.
1:01:24
That he really said that?
1:01:26
Yeah.
1:01:28
Oh, no, I have something completely different.
1:01:30
This is, this is the.
1:01:32
This is what, this was on, this was
1:01:34
posted on his Twitter account.
1:01:37
Wow.
1:01:38
What a douche.
1:01:40
Oh, he's a total douche.
1:01:41
The guy's out of control.
1:01:43
He's losing numbers.
1:01:44
That guy, that crazy guy on CNN who
1:01:46
does all the stats.
1:01:47
Internet or whatever.
1:01:49
Democrats.
1:01:49
Yeah.
1:01:50
They've lost, they're getting to the point where
1:01:52
they're going to lose the midterms big time
1:01:54
if this keeps up and because people aren't
1:01:57
buying the story that they're not, that the
1:01:59
Democrats aren't the ones holding the country hostage.
1:02:02
Yeah, so there's the troll saying your government
1:02:04
is prioritizing Israel over you.
1:02:06
Oh, you're so weak, bro.
1:02:10
Okay.
1:02:11
That is exactly what the Democrats want you
1:02:14
to say.
1:02:14
Good job.
1:02:15
Here's the alliteration clip.
1:02:17
So Trump is weaponizing hunger.
1:02:19
He's turning millions of children and seniors and
1:02:22
veterans into political pawns.
1:02:24
He's choosing politics over people, cruelty over compassion.
1:02:28
And let's be clear about this.
1:02:30
They've been on a crusade.
1:02:31
The Republicans have been on a crusade against
1:02:33
SNAP all year.
1:02:34
They slashed it by $200 billion this summer
1:02:37
to pay for their tax cuts for billionaires.
1:02:41
I love the, was it politics over people?
1:02:47
Something over compassion, cruelty over compassion.
1:02:52
Yeah, that's good.
1:02:53
That's really good.
1:02:54
Yeah, he's got, they had to bring this
1:02:56
tax cut for billionaires and it's bullcrap.
1:03:00
So there's a lot of, I mean, there's
1:03:03
50 hours of video of going on and
1:03:08
on, the oversight committee about the auto pen,
1:03:13
which is, they just put up all the
1:03:16
depositions and each one is four hours long.
1:03:20
And they've got everybody in there.
1:03:23
They are really going balls to the wall
1:03:26
on the auto pen.
1:03:27
Here's a- Yeah, they're trying to pull
1:03:29
the plug on a lot of the stuff.
1:03:31
Well, mainly, mainly on the pardons.
1:03:33
That's what they're really going for here.
1:03:35
The House Oversight Committee is calling for Attorney
1:03:37
General Pam Bondi to take a closer look
1:03:40
at the presidential pardons the Biden White House
1:03:42
issued via auto pen.
1:03:44
According to a letter, a 93 page report
1:03:46
set by the Republican led committee, there was
1:03:49
a quote, cover-up of the president's cognitive
1:03:51
decline.
1:03:52
The bottom line, they are alleging that Biden
1:03:55
didn't make all those clemency decisions on his
1:03:57
own.
1:03:58
Biden has disputed that publicly, saying those claims
1:04:00
against him are lies.
1:04:02
During his time in office, Biden issued more
1:04:04
than 4,200 pardons or commutations, the most
1:04:08
for any previous president.
1:04:10
So they cornered Hawley in the, Hawley in
1:04:14
the hall, Hawley in the hall, and was
1:04:17
a constitutional lawyer, but what is your opinion
1:04:21
on all of this?
1:04:22
The House Oversight Committee released this report on
1:04:24
the Biden auto pen investigation this morning.
1:04:27
Basically, the gist of it says, you know,
1:04:29
these actions that were taken with the auto
1:04:32
pen should not be considered valid unless there's
1:04:35
concrete evidence it was Biden who was directing
1:04:37
this use.
1:04:39
Do you agree with that?
1:04:40
And what is the implication, you know, going
1:04:42
forward, if, you know, some of these pardons
1:04:44
might not have been valid?
1:04:45
Huge implications.
1:04:47
I mean, huge implications.
1:04:48
And what it would mean most immediately is,
1:04:49
is folks who would otherwise be prosecuted, and
1:04:52
the effect of the pardon, of course, is
1:04:53
you can't be prosecuted.
1:04:54
Folks who otherwise could be prosecuted, I mean,
1:04:56
you may see subpoenas start issuing, you may
1:04:58
see prosecutors say, well, listen, I mean, if
1:05:01
there's no longer a blanket of amnesty over
1:05:05
these folks, then we're going to go after
1:05:06
them.
1:05:06
I mean, he pardoned a lot of people.
1:05:07
He pardoned folks who were accused of child
1:05:09
-related crimes, folks who were accused of violent
1:05:12
crimes.
1:05:13
So if I'm a prosecutor, and I was
1:05:16
one for several years, I mean, I'd look
1:05:18
at that and say, hey, I'd like to
1:05:20
get these people back into court.
1:05:22
So I think that may be the effect.
1:05:22
Would you rather these people avoid these pardons?
1:05:24
I mean, I'm concerned about it for the
1:05:26
reasons just outlined.
1:05:27
I mean, it seems to me that, listen,
1:05:28
the pardon power, it's an extraordinary power, Manu.
1:05:30
There are guidelines, both in the White House
1:05:32
rules, and I think in statute, although you
1:05:34
might check me on that, about how the
1:05:37
pardon power is used and how the auto
1:05:39
pen is used.
1:05:40
There's no doubt the president can pardon pretty
1:05:42
much whomever he chooses.
1:05:43
But there's a real question is, what does
1:05:45
it mean for the president to direct it?
1:05:46
If you have a situation, this is unprecedented
1:05:48
in our history, where you have real questions
1:05:51
as to whether the president actually approved of
1:05:53
the pardons that were signed off on his
1:05:55
name.
1:05:56
That's a major constitutional issue.
1:05:58
And this may get sorted out in court,
1:06:00
because what would happen is, if a prosecutor
1:06:02
came to somebody who's ostensibly been pardoned and
1:06:04
said, you know what?
1:06:05
I'm going to charge you.
1:06:06
I'm going to subpoena you.
1:06:08
I'm sure they would say, well, I have
1:06:09
a pardon, and then that'll go to court.
1:06:10
So we may see a lot more of
1:06:11
this.
1:06:12
I love the cynicism.
1:06:13
I know you're cynical about this as well.
1:06:15
No, nothing's ever going to happen.
1:06:17
No one's going to jail.
1:06:18
Yeah, maybe, maybe.
1:06:21
Yeah, because the Republicans are big talkers.
1:06:24
Yeah, but they're putting this all into the
1:06:26
DOJ with the Barbie AG, and she will
1:06:30
just do whatever the president wants her to
1:06:32
do.
1:06:33
See, Bolton.
1:06:34
I mean, Bolton, it's serious with Bolton.
1:06:38
There will be more.
1:06:39
Yeah, but you have to remember this one
1:06:41
thing that keeps being brought up when people
1:06:43
bitch him on about Bolton.
1:06:45
The Bolton investigation began under the Biden administration.
1:06:50
Fine, but I'm just saying.
1:06:53
I know there's just a carrier through.
1:06:55
There's nothing being initiated.
1:06:57
John, there are thousands of sealed indictments that
1:07:00
you don't know about.
1:07:01
10,000, by the way.
1:07:03
And let's get that straight.
1:07:04
And so here's Senator Grassley.
1:07:07
Now, Grassley is a kickass guy, but, you
1:07:09
know, he's so old.
1:07:12
He's like 92, I believe.
1:07:14
He's like the oldest guy in the area.
1:07:17
He's getting up there.
1:07:18
He's getting a little rocky.
1:07:20
He's getting up there, though, and he's not
1:07:20
going to last much longer.
1:07:22
And this is about the phone taps at
1:07:26
the Biden administration.
1:07:27
This, by the way, this might trigger something
1:07:30
because these senators are pissed, really irked about
1:07:34
the phone taps.
1:07:35
Especially Cruz.
1:07:36
I've recently been informed by Verizon that at
1:07:39
least 11 members with Verizon accounts were affected.
1:07:45
That includes a hard line for Senator Cruz's
1:07:49
office and a staffer cell phone for former
1:07:54
Senator Loeffler.
1:07:56
AT&T informed me they challenged the legal
1:08:02
basis for Jack Smith's efforts and Smith's backed
1:08:07
down.
1:08:08
Yeah, and no T-Mobile.
1:08:10
No one uses T-Mobile in Congress.
1:08:11
It's only Verizon.
1:08:12
Well, I think, by the way, AT&T
1:08:15
lucked out and pushed back, and now they're
1:08:20
the good guys of all the companies.
1:08:23
That is kind of funny.
1:08:25
And then, you know, Tulsi's still on the
1:08:28
warpath.
1:08:29
And when I heard this, I'm like, ah,
1:08:31
we knew about this in 2013, 2014.
1:08:35
Your no agenda show is way ahead of
1:08:37
the curve.
1:08:38
One of the most significant pieces of evidence
1:08:40
that was revealed in that report we released
1:08:42
yesterday is the fact that Russia claimed to
1:08:46
have very, very damaging information, high-level DNC
1:08:50
emails relating specifically to Hillary Clinton's physical and
1:08:55
mental health and DNC leaders questioning whether or
1:09:00
not, if elected, she would even be capable
1:09:02
of carrying out the duties of the presidency.
1:09:05
Russia had this.
1:09:07
If they wanted to swing the election for
1:09:09
Donald Trump, they would have released it in
1:09:11
September, October of 2016 at a pivotal time
1:09:15
to swing momentum into Donald Trump's direction and
1:09:18
damage Hillary Clinton's campaign.
1:09:21
They did not do that deliberately.
1:09:24
They understood that Hillary Clinton would likely be
1:09:28
the inevitable president of the United States.
1:09:29
They didn't think Trump could win like a
1:09:31
lot of other people.
1:09:33
And so they were withholding this damaging information
1:09:35
about Hillary Clinton and planning to release it
1:09:38
in the days or weeks leading up to
1:09:40
her expected inauguration.
1:09:44
Now, we remember what happened to Hillary Clinton
1:09:46
that no one ever picked up.
1:09:50
That was the plane crash.
1:09:53
The plane crash and then the subsequent.
1:09:55
But that was during the era, I believe
1:09:57
the plane crash happened when she was secretary
1:09:58
of state, not before the election.
1:10:00
No, that's what I said.
1:10:01
But she's been brain damaged ever since.
1:10:04
It may not even be the original Hillary
1:10:06
Clinton.
1:10:07
Well, we have seen the double, that one
1:10:10
double with the purse on the wrong side.
1:10:11
And we do remember Hillary during some testimony
1:10:15
where she had to wear those weird glasses
1:10:17
that were Fresnel lenses.
1:10:19
Listen to this.
1:10:19
There's a little circular things on them.
1:10:21
Listen to this.
1:10:22
This is going back to the the the
1:10:24
hundreds.
1:10:25
Now, Clinton resigned not long after she got
1:10:29
out of the hospital.
1:10:30
But Kerry was already appointed before she officially
1:10:35
resigned.
1:10:36
And and I found reports dating back to
1:10:39
2013 that say, you know, Hillary may not
1:10:43
make it.
1:10:44
Now, we didn't know it was possibly a
1:10:46
plane crash.
1:10:47
But also take a look at the parting
1:10:48
gift the State Department gave her.
1:10:50
They gave her a crash helmet.
1:10:52
Remember that?
1:10:55
I don't remember the crash helmet.
1:10:57
Yeah, they made it.
1:10:58
There was a big joke when she was
1:10:59
leaving and they gave her a crash helmet.
1:11:01
Oh, because of the crash that she was
1:11:03
obviously in that nobody wanted to report on.
1:11:06
Yes.
1:11:07
Yes.
1:11:09
Yeah.
1:11:09
And you're right.
1:11:10
She had those wacky glasses.
1:11:11
And yeah, anyway, I it's interesting because Tina's
1:11:19
Tina is a canary in the coal mine.
1:11:22
She's like, we need something.
1:11:24
Someone needs to be perp walked.
1:11:25
I'll give us something.
1:11:26
We want something.
1:11:29
She wants a perp walk.
1:11:30
Throw someone in jail.
1:11:31
We need something.
1:11:34
Well, I've been saying that, too.
1:11:35
I know.
1:11:36
I know you and Tina.
1:11:38
I know.
1:11:39
I know.
1:11:39
I know.
1:11:39
I know it is.
1:11:40
It is what it is.
1:11:42
But I don't know.
1:11:43
I have a feeling that there's some something
1:11:45
is going to happen.
1:11:47
Trump is really angry about all this.
1:11:50
So yeah, I think he is, too.
1:11:53
So I I think there's a there's a
1:11:56
possibility.
1:11:57
Let's get jumped to these.
1:12:00
I want to do one international piece, which
1:12:03
is not being covered much, except NTD.
1:12:06
And that is the murders in Brazil.
1:12:12
Have you heard of this?
1:12:13
And this is in the favelas.
1:12:15
Oh, are your favorite homestead?
1:12:18
Well, this is the reason I made these
1:12:20
clips is because I've been an advocate of
1:12:23
favelas as a solution to the homeless problem
1:12:26
in the United States on certain areas, especially
1:12:29
in San Francisco on the side of the
1:12:30
South San Francisco Hill, where the big sign
1:12:32
is, would be a perfect place to put
1:12:34
people.
1:12:35
Yes, your favorite favela.
1:12:38
It would be a good place for a
1:12:40
favela.
1:12:40
But the problem with favelas is that they're
1:12:43
self-governing and they you know, they deteriorate
1:12:46
into being run by gangs and the gangs
1:12:48
tend to be drug gangs.
1:12:49
And it doesn't really help the situation much.
1:12:51
And you have to put the kibosh on
1:12:54
them every so often.
1:12:55
And this is what's happening now in Rio.
1:12:59
Over 130 people are reported dead in Rio
1:13:02
de Janeiro, Brazil.
1:13:03
Police conducted their largest ever operation against organized
1:13:07
crime gangs in the city's history.
1:13:09
NTD's international correspondent, Erian Pastor is in Brazil.
1:13:14
And a warning, this report includes footage that
1:13:16
some viewers may find disturbing.
1:13:18
A pastor is seen crying in Rio de
1:13:20
Janeiro on Wednesday, a day after state authorities
1:13:23
conducted a major police raid, the largest in
1:13:26
the city's history.
1:13:28
Around 40 bodies were seen lying on the
1:13:30
ground, waiting to be collected on Wednesday.
1:13:33
Police raided two impoverished neighborhoods in the city,
1:13:36
also known as favelas.
1:13:37
Authorities were targeting one of Brazil's narco-trafficking
1:13:41
organizations, called the Red Command, or Comando Vermelho
1:13:45
in Portuguese.
1:13:46
Gangs in Brazil are in control of almost
1:13:48
all favelas in the country.
1:13:50
They use the territory to extort residents and
1:13:53
sell drugs, weapons, stolen merchandise and more.
1:13:56
In the case of Rio de Janeiro, many
1:13:58
of the favelas are located in the heart
1:14:00
of the city, in some cases less than
1:14:03
a mile from some of the country's richest
1:14:05
neighborhoods.
1:14:06
Police sometimes try to keep the criminals in
1:14:08
check by conducting raids in the favelas, targeting
1:14:11
the leaders of the gangs.
1:14:13
However, Tuesday's operation is by far one of
1:14:16
the largest and deadliest the country has ever
1:14:19
seen.
1:14:19
My cousin was decapitated by special force troops.
1:14:23
He didn't have a single gunshot wound.
1:14:25
They just tore off his head and left
1:14:28
him hanging in the woods.
1:14:29
Oh, you didn't warn me.
1:14:33
What was the warning for?
1:14:35
Well, you got to warn me when a
1:14:37
clip like that comes up.
1:14:38
And her head is gone.
1:14:39
I mean, come on.
1:14:40
Oh, I forgot.
1:14:42
I didn't even think of that one clip.
1:14:43
Classic, classic fine scene, this.
1:14:47
So why are they doing this?
1:14:50
Well, I think they explained it a little
1:14:52
bit in clip two.
1:14:53
Now, a major criticism people often have with
1:14:55
the police raids here in Brazil is that
1:14:58
innocent people die during the shootout between police
1:15:01
and the gang members.
1:15:02
But officials in Rio are now saying that
1:15:05
this wasn't the case with any of the
1:15:07
130 casualties during this raid.
1:15:10
That's because almost none of the shooting took
1:15:12
place in the actual favelas.
1:15:14
So police knew that once they entered the
1:15:16
favelas, the gang members are most likely going
1:15:19
to escape through a nearby forest.
1:15:21
So special forces waited in that forest and
1:15:24
confronted the gang members there to not have
1:15:27
the shooting in the favelas.
1:15:28
It was all in the woods.
1:15:30
So I don't believe anyone was just strolling
1:15:32
in the woods on a day of conflict.
1:15:35
And that's why we can easily classify them.
1:15:38
And if there's any error in classification, it's
1:15:40
certainly residual, which is insignificant.
1:15:43
People outside the favela were affected as well.
1:15:47
Armed gang members entered public buses, forcing their
1:15:50
drivers to block major streets across the city.
1:15:53
That's to prevent the police from getting through.
1:15:56
Thousands of people report being in distress, not
1:15:58
knowing what was happening as the city erupted
1:16:01
in chaos.
1:16:02
Now, the opinions here on the ground in
1:16:03
Brazil regarding this raid are divided.
1:16:06
Critics of the operation say that these raids
1:16:09
never really have a significant impact.
1:16:11
People die, but in a few days, drug
1:16:13
trafficking and crime just continue.
1:16:16
Supporters of these operations, on the other hand,
1:16:18
say that, of course, police has to do
1:16:20
something and try to keep the gangs in
1:16:23
check at least a little bit.
1:16:24
Because if you don't, they will slowly but
1:16:26
surely become stronger, possibly even surpassing the power
1:16:30
of the local government.
1:16:31
I'm glad you got these clips, and I'm
1:16:33
going to give them to my neighbors and
1:16:34
tell them that this is what happens when
1:16:36
you start an HOA.
1:16:37
You've got to be very, very careful with
1:16:39
this stuff.
1:16:41
Before you know it, your head is gone.
1:16:45
I never thought of the favelas being some
1:16:47
sort of a model for HOAs.
1:16:52
That's pretty bad.
1:16:54
That's pretty bad.
1:16:57
Yeah, there's favelas.
1:16:58
And the funny thing is about the favelas
1:17:00
in both Sao Paulo and Rio is that
1:17:04
they're in the best...
1:17:06
I was pointed...
1:17:07
First time I went there, this was pointed
1:17:09
out to me.
1:17:10
They are on the primest of prime property.
1:17:14
It's on the side of the hill with
1:17:15
the best view of the city.
1:17:17
Yeah.
1:17:20
A little technology news, because there is some.
1:17:24
The first is yet Senator Hawley, Senator Hawley,
1:17:28
along with Blumenthal, they've got some legislation that
1:17:31
needs to be discussed.
1:17:32
I'm Maria Rain, my son Adam, ended his
1:17:35
life in April after CHAT-GBT coached him
1:17:38
to suicide over the course of months.
1:17:41
I'm here today with my husband, Matt, to
1:17:43
support this critical legislation.
1:17:45
And we are so grateful to Senator Hawley
1:17:47
and Blumenthal for your leadership and sponsoring it.
1:17:51
It was only after Adam died that we
1:17:54
learned what CHAT-GBT had done to him.
1:17:56
And now we know that OpenAI twice downgraded
1:17:59
its safety guardrails in the months leading up
1:18:02
to my son's death, which we believe they
1:18:04
did to keep people talking to CHAT-GBT.
1:18:08
If it weren't for their choice to change
1:18:11
a few lines of code, Adam would be
1:18:14
alive today.
1:18:15
Thank you again, Senators, for pushing forth this
1:18:18
important legislation that would make sure that dangerous
1:18:20
chatbots are never offered to another child.
1:18:23
So I got a deconstruction of this law
1:18:27
from Rob, the constitutional lawyer.
1:18:30
But before you go into that, there's a
1:18:32
bunch of these clips.
1:18:34
And this woman, the CHAT-GBT was at
1:18:37
the point where it was not only talking
1:18:40
people into killing themselves, but also saying it'll
1:18:43
write the suicide note.
1:18:45
Oh, yeah, all of it.
1:18:47
Yeah, all of it.
1:18:47
And I don't see...
1:18:49
Now, there has been instances that...
1:18:51
So I'm interested in what our lawyer says.
1:18:56
There have been lawsuits.
1:18:58
I remember there was one a couple of
1:19:00
years ago.
1:19:00
We discussed it on the show.
1:19:02
It was the girl who was arrested for
1:19:04
her boyfriend wanted to kill himself.
1:19:06
She said, yeah, why don't you go ahead?
1:19:08
And they sued her.
1:19:09
And then he did.
1:19:10
And then he did.
1:19:11
And she got sued.
1:19:12
And she was liable for something or other.
1:19:15
She got...
1:19:15
The liability issue here is, to me, is
1:19:19
over the moon insofar as the potential for
1:19:23
deep pockets and to go after the CHAT
1:19:28
-GBT people.
1:19:29
Hello.
1:19:30
Why do you think Rob, the constitutional lawyer,
1:19:32
is so interested?
1:19:33
This is what he does.
1:19:34
And that's what I'm just saying in advance.
1:19:37
I don't see how these guys can hold
1:19:39
up against what could be some tremendously fabulous
1:19:43
lawsuits.
1:19:44
Well, he says your friends at callthesuits.com
1:19:46
are on the case.
1:19:48
So if you feel you've been wrong by
1:19:51
CHAT-GBT, callthesuits.com.
1:19:53
The bill is called the Guard Act.
1:19:56
So there's not a lot of information that
1:19:59
was really out there.
1:20:00
I mean, everyone only shows the grieving parents.
1:20:03
Guidelines for User Age Verification and Responsible Dialogue
1:20:09
Act of 2025.
1:20:10
If enacted, it will force AI providers to
1:20:13
implement, here it comes, age verification measures that
1:20:17
use government IDs or, quote, any other commercially
1:20:22
reasonable method to distinguish minors from adults.
1:20:27
Here's your digital ID.
1:20:30
The idea is to prevent minors from using
1:20:31
certain AI functionality, such as sex-related conversations
1:20:35
or AI companions, to simulate interpersonal or emotional
1:20:40
interaction, friendship, companionship, or therapeutic communication.
1:20:45
That's basically what chatbots are.
1:20:48
Also under the bill, no chatbot may encourage
1:20:51
suicide or physical injury by anyone, minors or
1:20:54
adults.
1:20:54
The bots must disclose they are not human
1:20:57
and not licensed professionals for particulars.
1:21:01
For age verification, simply entering a date of
1:21:04
birth online will not suffice.
1:21:06
The age verification will need to be periodically
1:21:09
reviewed.
1:21:10
Providers may not assume that a verified user's
1:21:13
IP address or device is being used by
1:21:16
that same verified user, ya duh.
1:21:19
We'll have to take a live photo or
1:21:22
video before each session.
1:21:23
Existing accounts will be frozen until initial age
1:21:26
verification is complete.
1:21:28
Providers may use third parties to conduct this
1:21:30
process.
1:21:31
So there's our exit strategy.
1:21:33
They must also disclose they are not licensed
1:21:35
professionals, such as therapists, physicians, lawyers, financial advisors,
1:21:39
or other professionals.
1:21:40
They must repeat these disclosures at regular intervals.
1:21:44
I mean, this has got to be the
1:21:47
entrance of digital ID.
1:21:50
It's just a logical next step.
1:21:53
It's not going to get passed.
1:21:54
We'll see.
1:21:55
That is, that what you'd read as a
1:21:58
potential bill is, it wouldn't get passed in
1:22:00
a million years.
1:22:01
But you need to put more grieving parents
1:22:03
up there.
1:22:04
That does work.
1:22:06
Yeah, but how many people saw the grieving
1:22:09
parent?
1:22:10
Nobody.
1:22:12
Well, we'll see.
1:22:14
We'll see.
1:22:15
No, that's not happening.
1:22:18
Well, I mean, it's obvious that this is
1:22:21
a problem.
1:22:21
It will be solved by somebody suing the
1:22:25
company and make them do it on their
1:22:27
own voluntarily, as opposed to some legislative nonsense.
1:22:32
Well, you have to keep verifying yourself over
1:22:34
and over and over again.
1:22:35
I would vote against that.
1:22:36
I agree.
1:22:37
I think that if I was open AI,
1:22:41
I would pay damages right away.
1:22:44
They got so much money, they think, whatever,
1:22:46
circular money.
1:22:48
Yeah, they got ghost money.
1:22:50
They got, they're loaded.
1:22:52
You know, it's, so I'm going to NRB
1:22:54
this year, the National Religious Broadcasters Conference I'm
1:22:57
speaking.
1:22:59
And, you know, last year, glue.com, G
1:23:03
-L-O-O, they were like a gold
1:23:06
sponsor.
1:23:07
Now they have their own stage.
1:23:09
Because they're just, they have so much, they're
1:23:11
flush with cash.
1:23:12
They can, they can sponsor conferences.
1:23:14
They can get just everything, indoctrinate everybody with
1:23:17
this whole fantastic AI.
1:23:19
Oh, it's so great.
1:23:20
And Fareed Zakaria, the anti-constitutionalist on CNN,
1:23:25
globalist, had this one.
1:23:27
Does he still have a show on CNN?
1:23:29
Yeah.
1:23:29
Oh yeah, he does.
1:23:31
You sure?
1:23:31
Yeah.
1:23:32
Yeah, for sure.
1:23:33
He had on Karen Ho.
1:23:38
And she writes for The Atlantic, a freelancer.
1:23:41
But they got into artificial intelligence.
1:23:45
AGI is the holy grail for today's tech
1:23:48
elite.
1:23:48
It stands for artificial general intelligence.
1:23:52
And AGI will be achieved when AI is
1:23:55
as smart as humans.
1:23:57
The frenzy to get to that goal and
1:23:59
others along the way has been responsible for
1:24:01
a huge percent of U.S. GDP growth
1:24:04
this year.
1:24:05
But does this race make sense?
1:24:08
And what are its costs?
1:24:10
Journalist and author of the book Empire of
1:24:12
AI, Karen Ho joins me now.
1:24:15
Ho, Empire of AI.
1:24:18
You can already guess that she's against everything,
1:24:20
of course.
1:24:21
So when people talk about the U.S.
1:24:24
economy now, it's becoming increasingly clear that what
1:24:28
is at the heart of the U.S.
1:24:31
economy right now is just AI.
1:24:33
There's one data point that seems to suggest
1:24:36
that spending on artificial intelligence makes up for
1:24:40
over 40 percent of GDP growth this year.
1:24:43
Jason Furman at Harvard says that in the
1:24:45
last quarter, it seems like it was 90
1:24:47
percent of growth.
1:24:49
This is the reason why your legislation can't
1:24:51
get passed.
1:24:51
There's no way.
1:24:53
If they pull the rug on this thing,
1:24:55
look out below.
1:24:57
In the U.S. economy was all just
1:25:00
AI spending.
1:25:01
When you look at the scale of the
1:25:05
spending and what's the thing that worries you
1:25:07
most?
1:25:08
Is it the energy use?
1:25:10
Because they need huge amounts of energy to
1:25:13
make this work.
1:25:13
Yeah, it is absolutely.
1:25:15
The environmental fallout from this kind of scale
1:25:18
at all costs approach is astronomical.
1:25:21
I mean, some of these these supercomputers that
1:25:24
are being planned, OpenAI and Meta have both
1:25:26
planned for facilities that would be the size
1:25:29
of Manhattan, where one of those facilities would
1:25:32
also use as much energy as New York
1:25:34
City.
1:25:36
And when earlier this year, McKinsey came out
1:25:38
with a report that showed that.
1:25:41
So I've heard this twice now that this
1:25:43
is the second time I've heard it, that
1:25:45
they're going to build a.
1:25:48
Server farm the size of the island of
1:25:51
Manhattan, Manhattan, Manhattan, Manhattan.
1:25:55
Bull crap.
1:25:56
Yeah, that thing in that thing in West
1:25:58
Texas is pretty big, John.
1:26:00
It's not the size of the island of
1:26:02
Manhattan.
1:26:03
How big is the island of Manhattan?
1:26:05
Well, it's a lot bigger than anything you
1:26:07
can imagine to put a server farm or
1:26:09
something like that.
1:26:10
You to get from one end of the
1:26:11
it's ridiculous.
1:26:13
Let's find out.
1:26:14
Error.
1:26:15
How big is the island of Manhattan?
1:26:20
Actually, Manhattan is pretty small, about 23 square
1:26:24
miles.
1:26:25
But yeah, 23 square miles.
1:26:27
All right.
1:26:28
Hold on a second.
1:26:29
Hey, error.
1:26:30
How big is the AI data center farm
1:26:34
in West Texas?
1:26:39
Yes, there's a map coming over 5000 acres
1:26:42
near Abilene, powered by up to two gigawatts
1:26:45
for five thousand acres.
1:26:47
How five thousand acres?
1:26:49
Twenty three square miles is 5000 acres isn't
1:26:53
even close to 23 square miles.
1:26:55
Error.
1:26:56
How many square miles is 5000 acres?
1:27:01
5000 acres is about 7.8 square miles.
1:27:05
OK, so it would have to be eight
1:27:06
times bigger.
1:27:08
Yeah, I'm thinking that's possible.
1:27:12
It's already too big.
1:27:14
Well, I know it's too big.
1:27:15
The whole thing.
1:27:16
This but this is they have this is
1:27:18
hyperscalers.
1:27:19
Where is the Manhattan size deal going to
1:27:24
be built?
1:27:25
This is bullcrap.
1:27:26
They're just I don't even know what the
1:27:28
point of that is.
1:27:29
It's this is just like suck in more
1:27:31
money.
1:27:32
It's yeah, it's yeah, it's nonsense.
1:27:35
Yes, you're absolutely right.
1:27:37
Here's what OpenAI says.
1:27:39
Open this is crazy.
1:27:40
This is from CNBC.
1:27:42
OpenAI said on Monday, the US needs to
1:27:45
substantially ramp up its investment in new energy
1:27:47
capacity.
1:27:48
So it's it's obviously not just the data
1:27:50
centers, but it is also the the power.
1:27:55
And it's the OpenAI shared in an 11
1:27:59
page submission to the White House Office of
1:28:00
Science Technology, in which it encouraged the US
1:28:03
to commit to building 100 gigawatts of new
1:28:06
energy capacity each year.
1:28:10
100 gigawatts each year.
1:28:13
10 gigawatts powers about eight million households.
1:28:17
They're crazy.
1:28:19
But but they're stuck in this loop.
1:28:21
I think that's the point is they're stuck
1:28:23
in this loop where the money is going
1:28:25
from from one end to the other.
1:28:27
The money can't go anywhere else because, well,
1:28:29
we got no other technology going around and
1:28:31
around and around.
1:28:32
Yeah, but it's coming out of private equity.
1:28:34
Everyone's pouring money.
1:28:35
They have to do something with the money.
1:28:37
And it's like musical chairs.
1:28:38
It's like put your money in.
1:28:40
OK, get it out and then maybe put
1:28:41
some more back in.
1:28:42
OK, we could put it in here and
1:28:44
pull it out again.
1:28:45
It goes round and round around.
1:28:46
Disaster waiting to happen.
1:28:48
Yes.
1:28:48
And when earlier this year, McKinsey came out
1:28:51
with a report that showed that based on
1:28:53
a conservative scenario, all of these data centers
1:28:57
would need to consume two states of California's
1:29:00
worth of energy.
1:29:02
And in an accelerated scenario, it would be
1:29:04
six states of California.
1:29:06
And that's just talking about the energy.
1:29:08
But then what energy source are they using?
1:29:12
And when you look at the numbers, it's
1:29:14
primarily fossil fuel.
1:29:16
So they are natural gas.
1:29:18
They are single handedly revitalizing the natural gas
1:29:21
and coal industries.
1:29:23
That's an extraordinary amount of carbon emissions.
1:29:25
That's not only accelerating climate change, but also
1:29:27
leading to huge public health concerns with the
1:29:29
air pollution.
1:29:30
We've seen some phenomenal reporting out of Memphis,
1:29:33
Tennessee, about the fact that Grok is being
1:29:36
trained on a supercomputer called Colossus in Memphis
1:29:39
that is being powered by 35 methane gas
1:29:42
turbines pumping extraordinary amounts of pollutants into the
1:29:45
air.
1:29:46
Pollutants, pollutants.
1:29:48
Well, the Colossus, the Forbin project.
1:29:51
Yeah.
1:29:51
Oh, yeah.
1:29:52
That's give me a break.
1:29:54
That's Musk, of course.
1:29:56
So we'll interrupt this series with the latest
1:29:59
news from Bill Gates, who, of course, is
1:30:02
all in on the A.I. train and
1:30:05
the power and everything that needs to go
1:30:07
into it.
1:30:07
So what do you do?
1:30:09
Backpedal on climate change.
1:30:11
Climate is a super important problem.
1:30:14
Super important.
1:30:15
There's enough innovation here to avoid super bad
1:30:19
outcomes.
1:30:20
Super bad.
1:30:21
We won't achieve our best goal, the one
1:30:25
point five or even the two degrees.
1:30:28
And as we go about trying to minimize
1:30:30
that, we have to frame it in terms
1:30:34
of overall human welfare, not just everything should
1:30:38
be solely for climate.
1:30:40
What happened to we're all going to die,
1:30:42
Bill?
1:30:42
When the climate activists who have been very
1:30:45
supportive of what you've done, you've been very
1:30:47
supportive of what they've done.
1:30:48
Read this.
1:30:50
And if Greta Thunberg is reading this and
1:30:53
saying to herself, my goodness, he seems like
1:30:55
he is reversing himself.
1:30:57
What would you tell her?
1:30:58
She's right.
1:30:58
And she's a twerp.
1:31:00
I'd say wasn't the goal here to improve
1:31:04
human lives.
1:31:05
No.
1:31:05
And shouldn't we in our awareness of how
1:31:10
little generosity there is to help measure, you
1:31:14
know, should we get them a measles vaccine
1:31:17
or should we do some climate related activity?
1:31:22
And if if we could take if we
1:31:24
stop putting all vaccines and that, you know,
1:31:27
saved you point one degree, would that be
1:31:29
a smart tradeoff?
1:31:31
That's the kind of question we have to
1:31:33
ask.
1:31:34
So let's just stop this and go back
1:31:36
for a second to 2021 CBS News.
1:31:41
In fact, and we're all familiar with the
1:31:44
fallout from this global pandemic that we've now
1:31:46
been living with for almost a year.
1:31:47
And you write in the book, the loss
1:31:49
of life and economic misery caused by this
1:31:52
pandemic are on par with what will happen
1:31:55
regularly if we do not eliminate the world's
1:31:59
carbon emissions.
1:32:00
Sounds a little different to me than wasn't
1:32:04
the goal just a better life, everybody?
1:32:07
This is this is so obvious.
1:32:12
What he's doing here.
1:32:14
He's worried sick that the climate people are
1:32:18
going to stop the forward progress of the
1:32:21
A.I. bull crap.
1:32:22
Yes.
1:32:22
And but who is to blame for this?
1:32:25
According to Karen, how?
1:32:27
I mean, at some level, is this a
1:32:29
testosterone fueled competition among some very ambitious, egotistical
1:32:36
men?
1:32:38
Really, Mark Zuckerberg, testosterone fueled, really?
1:32:42
Elon Musk, testosterone fuel.
1:32:44
They look more low key to me.
1:32:46
Absolutely.
1:32:47
I mean, it's not a coincidence that every
1:32:50
single tech billionaire has their own A.I.
1:32:52
company now.
1:32:53
And they're all jostling to position their A
1:32:56
.I. company as somehow superior to the others.
1:32:58
They're basically trying to refashion A.I. in
1:33:01
their image.
1:33:03
And that's why none of them are actually
1:33:04
collaborating.
1:33:05
And they're all trying to race on ultimately
1:33:07
a technology that is commoditized.
1:33:09
They're racing to get out before the other
1:33:11
guy loses.
1:33:13
And yes, it is.
1:33:14
Your musical chairs is the best analogy.
1:33:17
Here's here she is on.
1:33:18
This is the return on investment.
1:33:20
So when you look at the landscape now,
1:33:21
these companies are racing into the future.
1:33:24
The Trump administration is not particularly regulating or
1:33:26
restraining them in any way.
1:33:29
Can this just go on?
1:33:30
I mean, these companies are very rich, but
1:33:33
at some point, don't they need to show
1:33:35
a return on this investment?
1:33:37
Absolutely.
1:33:37
I mean, I think we are in a
1:33:38
huge bubble that is going to pop.
1:33:40
There's going to be a massive market correction
1:33:42
at some point that could have ripple effects
1:33:43
across the global economy.
1:33:45
When you look at the cash balance of
1:33:47
these companies, they are spending trillions in the
1:33:50
next few years to build out all of
1:33:51
this computational infrastructure.
1:33:53
And they've only achieved tens of billions in
1:33:56
revenue.
1:33:57
Tens of billions versus trillions just doesn't make
1:34:00
sense as a balance sheet.
1:34:01
And you can see that the companies are
1:34:04
really trying to figure out how to close
1:34:07
that gap.
1:34:08
Initially, they tried subscriptions, but they discovered that
1:34:11
actually the average person is unwilling to pay
1:34:13
for this technology.
1:34:14
And businesses are no longer adopting these technologies
1:34:18
with paying for subscriptions either.
1:34:21
And so now the reason why I think
1:34:23
OpenAI is ultimately adding feeds into Chachabit and
1:34:27
creating an AI-generated TikTok is because they
1:34:31
are going to make an advertising play.
1:34:33
And they're going to try and fill the
1:34:35
gap with advertising revenue.
1:34:37
But when you look at something like Google,
1:34:39
which has some of the largest ad revenue,
1:34:42
they haven't.
1:34:43
Last year, they didn't even achieve $300 billion
1:34:45
worth of ad revenue.
1:34:48
That's and that is one of the most
1:34:49
successful advertising businesses in the history of the
1:34:52
world.
1:34:52
And so how are they going to fill
1:34:54
the trillions of dollars of spending?
1:34:57
It's just not possible.
1:34:58
No, yeah, it is.
1:34:59
OpenAI has a plan.
1:35:01
Now to the latest shift in AI shopping.
1:35:03
PayPal is the latest to partner with OpenAI
1:35:05
to create a digital wallet embedded into Chachabit.
1:35:09
PayPal CEO says the feature will allow merchants
1:35:11
to sell and shoppers to buy directly through
1:35:14
the platform.
1:35:15
The move helps to broaden OpenAI's efforts to
1:35:18
use Chachabit for e-commerce.
1:35:20
It recently announced similar partnerships with Walmart, Shopify
1:35:23
and Etsy.
1:35:24
PayPal is aiming to position itself as the
1:35:26
go-to purchase portal in the AI arena.
1:35:29
The digital wallet is expected to roll out
1:35:31
early next year.
1:35:32
You know, this is always the beginning of
1:35:35
the end.
1:35:35
And then it's, oh, well, we'll just do
1:35:37
advert.
1:35:38
We'll just run ads so bad now that
1:35:40
this is what Samsung is doing with their
1:35:42
fridge for refrigerators.
1:35:44
Next, Samsung is getting a chilly reception over
1:35:46
plans to launch ads on some smart products.
1:35:49
The ads are expected to roll out next
1:35:51
week.
1:35:51
They'll appear on the front screen of the
1:35:53
company's family hub line, which has a starting
1:35:55
price of two thousand dollars.
1:35:57
Many customers will be relieved to know they
1:35:59
can turn off just run ads on my
1:36:02
fridge.
1:36:04
But then it seems and I'm I don't
1:36:06
know if you talked about this on DH
1:36:07
unplug, but this is this is the latest
1:36:09
now.
1:36:10
This is how we do two things.
1:36:12
One, we prove that AI is working to
1:36:15
we reduce our overall spending.
1:36:18
So Amazon saying this morning it's going to
1:36:20
lay off about 14000 corporate employees as it
1:36:23
restructures for the AI era, marking the latest
1:36:26
move in a multiyear effort to streamline operations
1:36:29
and shift resources toward its biggest bets, including
1:36:32
generative AI.
1:36:33
Now, in a blog post, Amazon's H.R.
1:36:35
Chief Beth Galetti said that the cuts are
1:36:37
aimed at reducing layers and bureaucracy so that
1:36:40
the company can move faster.
1:36:41
She called AI the most transformative technology since
1:36:44
the Internet and said Amazon needs to be
1:36:46
leaner to keep pace.
1:36:48
The company has about three hundred and fifty
1:36:49
thousand corporate employees, meaning that the confirmed cuts
1:36:52
affect roughly four percent of that workforce.
1:36:54
But what I will say is that those
1:36:56
layoffs are expected to become the largest corporate
1:36:59
job cuts in Amazon's history.
1:37:01
Reuters reporting the total could go as high
1:37:03
as 30000.
1:37:05
And the company did signal this morning that
1:37:06
more layoffs are likely in the year ahead,
1:37:09
even as it continues hiring in key strategic
1:37:11
areas.
1:37:12
It was also just as June that CEO
1:37:14
Andy Jassy warned AI adoption would lead to
1:37:16
fewer roles in some parts of the business.
1:37:19
A good job.
1:37:20
It's a lot of management, Mackenzie, sentence the
1:37:24
effort for, especially for a company that you
1:37:26
think of as pretty well run and lean
1:37:28
and mean.
1:37:29
What were they all doing?
1:37:30
I don't I don't get it.
1:37:31
What were they doing?
1:37:32
AI related, is it not?
1:37:34
Yeah, I think it's a combination of internal
1:37:35
efficiencies through generative AI tech and that affect
1:37:39
internal workflows.
1:37:40
But then crucially, look at cuts at Microsoft,
1:37:43
15000 people.
1:37:44
Now we're talking about 14000 at Amazon, potentially
1:37:47
more.
1:37:48
These are the two main hyperscalers.
1:37:50
They've committed to spend around 120 billion dollars
1:37:53
in this fiscal year on build out.
1:37:55
A lot of that having to do with
1:37:56
servicing their AI customers.
1:37:57
So we're going to see what their CapEx
1:37:59
numbers are when they report just this week,
1:38:01
Thursday.
1:38:02
Yeah, yeah, of course.
1:38:04
Oh, it works great.
1:38:05
I think Joe Kernan's question was correct.
1:38:08
What were those people doing?
1:38:10
What were they doing?
1:38:11
You can get rid of them.
1:38:12
There was 350,000 corporate people.
1:38:15
The number we noticed horror was noted on
1:38:18
the DHM plug show is that actually Amazon
1:38:21
has 1.5 million people getting rid of
1:38:25
30,000 is nothing.
1:38:27
No, I'm with you.
1:38:29
But I still want to know what they
1:38:30
were doing, where they were doing whatever any
1:38:33
of them doing, unless they're dropping a package
1:38:35
off.
1:38:36
And if you haven't noticed, they take forever
1:38:38
to do that.
1:38:40
And then meanwhile, none of these companies with
1:38:43
all their hyperscaler noise can even keep their
1:38:46
own crap running.
1:38:47
All right.
1:38:47
Now we've got a developing story on some
1:38:49
tech outages happening right now.
1:38:51
Let's get out to McKenzie Sagalos in San
1:38:53
Francisco for more on that.
1:38:54
Mac, I know some people are experiencing some
1:38:57
latency with regard to their access.
1:38:59
What's going on?
1:39:01
So, Dom, we're seeing reports on Dow Detector
1:39:03
of outages at Google Cloud and Microsoft's Azure
1:39:06
hours before both companies report quarterly earnings.
1:39:10
Microsoft's investment relations page, where it posts those
1:39:12
results, is currently not loading.
1:39:14
Now, I'm out to Alphabet and haven't heard
1:39:16
back, but the Azure support account is acknowledging
1:39:19
the outage, saying that they're investigating an issue
1:39:21
impacting their cloud service.
1:39:23
The company adding that customers may be experiencing
1:39:25
issues accessing the portal.
1:39:27
This comes after last week's 15-hour Amazon
1:39:30
Web Services outage that took down numerous major
1:39:32
websites.
1:39:33
AWS, though, telling me that they are operating
1:39:35
normally right now.
1:39:37
This is, you know, the world always goes
1:39:40
from centralization to decentralization.
1:39:42
I think we're about ready for the pendulum
1:39:44
to swing back.
1:39:46
Well, I'm now thinking about the Manhattan-sized
1:39:52
monster server farm that gets filled up with
1:39:55
rats that start chewing on things.
1:39:58
The next thing you know, the whole world
1:39:59
goes down.
1:40:01
Well, yeah, I mean, just imagine everybody's using
1:40:05
AI and then Azure goes down, or, you
1:40:10
know, the data center goes down.
1:40:11
Then what's going to happen?
1:40:13
You can't rely, have your business relying on
1:40:18
that.
1:40:19
I mean, it's bad enough Office 365 went
1:40:24
down.
1:40:24
People couldn't get to their email.
1:40:27
You know, wait until they can't get to
1:40:28
their chatbot.
1:40:29
We'll have zombies walking.
1:40:31
Oh, I can't make a decision.
1:40:35
Time code.
1:40:40
Seriously, you know, it's like podcasting is a
1:40:44
pretty good deal right now.
1:40:46
Decentralized, no ads.
1:40:48
I mean, at least not on our show.
1:40:50
I'm not going to throw an ad in
1:40:51
your face.
1:40:53
Ooh, shop, shop something.
1:40:55
It's free.
1:40:56
It's free.
1:40:57
Gold.
1:40:59
Well, those gold guys made out pretty well
1:41:01
with how gold went.
1:41:02
Yeah, well, I'm not saying that gold's not
1:41:05
a good idea.
1:41:06
Hey, Ben Shapiro.
1:41:06
We're not, it doesn't mean we have to
1:41:08
sell it.
1:41:09
Ben Shapiro told me to buy gold and
1:41:11
he was right.
1:41:14
So let's listen to Mayor Race.
1:41:16
Can I just play this one last clip?
1:41:19
Because this was the stupid, this is.
1:41:22
It's in the same theme.
1:41:23
In the same theme, yes.
1:41:26
Sure, play.
1:41:27
And you had your valid point on DH
1:41:30
Unplugged where you said when your signal, the
1:41:35
signal that the market.
1:41:36
Oh, you're right.
1:41:37
The signal to sell.
1:41:39
Yes, please explain the sell signal that you
1:41:41
use.
1:41:42
Well, actually Horowitz does too.
1:41:45
The sell signal I use is that if
1:41:48
you have people that should not be in
1:41:49
the stock market or know anything much about
1:41:51
it, start asking if they should be in
1:41:53
the stock market.
1:41:54
And the first time I, the best version
1:41:56
of the signal was when I was at
1:41:58
Tech TV and one of the camera girls
1:42:01
came up to me in 99, just like
1:42:04
months before the dot com collapsed.
1:42:07
And she says, do you think I should
1:42:08
invest in the stock market?
1:42:10
I was thinking of buying some shares in
1:42:11
Jupiter and the Jupiter Networks.
1:42:14
And I said, have you been in this?
1:42:17
You trade?
1:42:18
Do you ever been in the market?
1:42:19
No, but I hear it's like, you know,
1:42:22
she went on.
1:42:22
So the other night at dinner, one of
1:42:26
the people at the dinner, and I didn't
1:42:28
say who says, do you think it's a
1:42:31
good time to get into the stock market?
1:42:34
And I'm thinking, well, okay, no, no.
1:42:38
And so that's the signal.
1:42:39
It's always called, it's a public signal that,
1:42:42
and Horowitz notices it with some of his
1:42:44
clients.
1:42:44
He says there's these, if you have, if
1:42:47
you're in the business and you have a
1:42:48
lot of different clients, there's always one or
1:42:50
two you can count on to be wrong
1:42:53
all the time.
1:42:54
Buy at the top, sell at the bottom.
1:42:57
And you know this from working for decades
1:42:59
in the business and the fact that they
1:43:01
have been wrong all the time for decades
1:43:05
and decades.
1:43:06
This is a goldmine to me, as far
1:43:07
as I'm concerned, you got somebody like that.
1:43:09
So you're saying we should go short?
1:43:11
Just the opposite.
1:43:12
We should go short, short, short the market?
1:43:16
Well, you know, you should short the market
1:43:18
if you don't know what the hell you're
1:43:20
doing.
1:43:21
Because you could actually, shorting the market could
1:43:22
result in going completely broke.
1:43:25
So this to me was peak AI, peak
1:43:30
tech, peak everything, peak Silicon Valley.
1:43:33
And I'm sure you saw this.
1:43:36
This is the Wall Street Journal report, reporter
1:43:39
who got the home, the first humanoid home
1:43:43
robot.
1:43:45
And the company is run by a Swedish
1:43:47
CEO, you know, with like longish blonde hair
1:43:52
with the accent and everything.
1:43:55
I'm like, this is it.
1:43:57
This is the end.
1:43:58
And by the way, the thing is run
1:43:59
by anonymous Indians.
1:44:01
It's here, the first humanoid robot housekeeper.
1:44:04
Thank you, Neo.
1:44:05
For $20,000, you can pre-order One
1:44:07
X's Neo robot now with delivery in 2026.
1:44:11
I think you missed a tiny spot over
1:44:13
here.
1:44:14
Just one little catch.
1:44:16
There may be a human behind the curtain
1:44:18
pulling the robot strings.
1:44:20
If I throw up, will the robot throw
1:44:22
up?
1:44:23
A company representative may need to peer into
1:44:25
your house via Neo's camera eyes to get
1:44:28
things done.
1:44:29
This is many people.
1:44:30
This is crazy.
1:44:31
You have to be okay with this for
1:44:33
the product to be useful.
1:44:34
But is Neo a useful product?
1:44:36
We're twinning now, Neo.
1:44:38
Home robots have had two big challenges, creating
1:44:41
a safe and capable body and a smart
1:44:44
brain.
1:44:45
One X is taking on both of those,
1:44:47
which is why Neo looks so different from
1:44:49
a more industrial factory robot.
1:44:51
Neo, it's 70 degrees here in California.
1:44:54
Why are you wearing a sweater?
1:44:55
Good question.
1:44:57
Burt, why am I wearing a sweater?
1:44:58
It's a combination of safety and just also
1:45:01
generally aesthetics.
1:45:02
You can think of it kind of like
1:45:04
a skin, except if it was an actual
1:45:06
skin, that would probably be pretty creepy.
1:45:08
It would be creepy.
1:45:10
But I actually wasn't all that creeped out
1:45:12
by Neo.
1:45:13
Inside Neo, it really starts with some very,
1:45:16
very powerful motors.
1:45:17
Powerful.
1:45:17
We have developed here at One X.
1:45:19
These motors are so strong and light that
1:45:21
instead of using the classical gears that you
1:45:23
see in robots, we can actually pull on
1:45:25
tendons loosely inspired by biology and muscles.
1:45:28
This allows Neo to move around not just
1:45:30
quietly and smoothly, but also be very, very
1:45:33
lightweight and be very low energy in motion,
1:45:36
just like people.
1:45:37
So $126 million invested in this company.
1:45:40
Who has been leading the rounds?
1:45:43
Open AI.
1:45:48
Wow.
1:45:49
Yeah, okay.
1:45:50
And again, making a human-like robot, that's
1:45:54
the dumbest thing ever.
1:45:57
It's dumb.
1:45:59
My vacuum robot is great.
1:46:01
It does not look like a human pushing
1:46:03
a vacuum cleaner.
1:46:08
The end is near.
1:46:10
I'm counting on it.
1:46:12
Well, you'd have to find a jump to
1:46:14
shark point and maybe that might be it,
1:46:16
but then we still have to wait another
1:46:18
couple of years.
1:46:18
Years?
1:46:19
Really?
1:46:20
Years?
1:46:21
Yeah.
1:46:22
Okay, years.
1:46:23
All right, back to you, Bob.
1:46:26
Well, let's look at the mayoral race in
1:46:29
New York and let's catch up to it
1:46:32
with these two clips.
1:46:35
NYC.
1:46:35
Yes, got it.
1:46:37
And here in New York City, early voting
1:46:39
began on Saturday and already more than 300
1:46:42
,000 people have cast their ballots.
1:46:44
And today's Arlene Richards spoke with voters in
1:46:47
Chelsea, Manhattan, who talked about their choices for
1:46:50
the city's next mayor.
1:46:52
On day four of early voting in New
1:46:54
York City, we visited a polling place on
1:46:57
28th Street in Chelsea at FIT's Feldman building.
1:47:01
The afternoon was slow, but early voting has
1:47:03
hit record numbers as New Yorkers make some
1:47:05
tough decisions.
1:47:07
Some of the latest polls indicate that former
1:47:09
governor Andrew Cuomo is narrowing the gap.
1:47:12
Now trailing front runner Zoran Mamdani by 10
1:47:15
points.
1:47:16
Mamdani is polled at 43 percent, Cuomo at
1:47:19
33, down from 20 points a month ago.
1:47:23
New York icon Curtis Lewa is also picking
1:47:26
up some votes, but still lags behind in
1:47:28
last place at about 15 percent.
1:47:31
Now that voting has started, it's a race
1:47:33
against the clock.
1:47:35
All three candidates were out canvassing on Saturday.
1:47:38
Mamdani spent part of the day Monday at
1:47:40
a polling site on the Upper East Side
1:47:42
and campaigned in the Bronx on Wednesday.
1:47:45
While Lewa hit the subway stations a day
1:47:47
after early voting started and greeted Staten Island
1:47:50
voters at the ferry terminal Wednesday morning.
1:47:53
Meanwhile, Cuomo teamed up with Mayor Eric Adams
1:47:56
and former governor David Patterson on Tuesday and
1:47:59
headed to Staten Island later on Wednesday.
1:48:02
Voters on Wednesday were excited about the mayor
1:48:05
race.
1:48:06
I am waiting with bated breath because as
1:48:09
we can all tell with polls, they mean
1:48:12
nothing.
1:48:14
I don't know.
1:48:15
I'm with you.
1:48:16
I think he's going to sweep it.
1:48:18
Can't be Cuomo.
1:48:19
Nobody wants Cuomo.
1:48:20
That's the problem.
1:48:21
There's no candidates.
1:48:23
It's stupid.
1:48:24
You know, there's issues that make it almost
1:48:27
impossible for Cuomo to win, but you never
1:48:30
know at the last minute.
1:48:31
But here we go with part two.
1:48:33
One voter said he chose Mamdani because he's
1:48:35
concerned about his children's future.
1:48:37
A lot of the things that he's looking
1:48:39
to do I've like I don't need health
1:48:42
care for my children.
1:48:44
They're already college age and all of that
1:48:46
and a lot of the other things that
1:48:50
he saw about with rent civilization.
1:48:52
I own my home, so I don't have
1:48:54
to worry about that.
1:48:54
But I do see how that's very beneficial
1:48:57
to other people inside the city and want
1:49:00
to be able to look towards the future
1:49:02
and where my kids come back to the
1:49:04
city after college.
1:49:05
What are they going to be able to
1:49:07
be able to live like?
1:49:08
He also praised one of the other candidates.
1:49:11
I think that was very entertaining and is
1:49:16
definitely a real New Yorker.
1:49:18
I think that he has the heart of
1:49:21
New York in his in his best interest.
1:49:24
So I am I am a fan of
1:49:25
that.
1:49:26
Fran said Cuomo's campaign was too negative toward
1:49:29
Mamdani.
1:49:30
Voter Dave Ron, who was born and raised
1:49:33
in the Chelsea area, voted for Sliwa.
1:49:36
Curly Sliwa stood up against a lot of
1:49:38
people that I don't think Cuomo and Mamdani
1:49:42
would have the gall to do.
1:49:45
You know, and I think that's big because
1:49:47
a lot of native New Yorkers are are
1:49:50
losing their voice here in New York City
1:49:52
because of the way the city has grown
1:49:55
and the city has changed.
1:49:57
It's changed for good reasons.
1:49:59
It's changed for bad reasons.
1:50:00
But I'll tell you, being a New Yorker
1:50:02
since before the bike lanes, I'll tell you
1:50:06
that this is a very, very important time
1:50:08
in our city.
1:50:09
And I think dealing with somebody who knows
1:50:12
New York, who knows the politicians in New
1:50:14
York, who has never done anything to be
1:50:18
cast aside in New York and who stood
1:50:20
up for New Yorkers, whether they were black,
1:50:22
white, yellow, Puerto Rican or Haitian, or whether
1:50:25
they were Democrat, independents or Republicans.
1:50:28
He stood up there with his red beret,
1:50:30
shoulder to shoulder with other real New Yorkers.
1:50:32
And I think he's the one to save
1:50:33
New York.
1:50:34
That would be amazing if that happened.
1:50:36
I doubt that.
1:50:38
Yeah, that's not going to happen.
1:50:39
I like, I've always liked Sliwa though.
1:50:41
You know, I was there in the 80s
1:50:43
when he was, his, his dudes, his guardian
1:50:45
angels were riding the subways.
1:50:47
It was good.
1:50:47
Everyone, they were heroes.
1:50:48
We loved them.
1:50:50
But let's, let's tabletop.
1:50:52
Let's war game this, John.
1:50:54
So Mondami clearly has to be a cutout.
1:50:58
I mean, he's, he's not really going to
1:51:00
make any decisions.
1:51:01
It's, it's this to me reeks of AOC.
1:51:04
You know, he's an actor.
1:51:05
He literally is an actor.
1:51:08
So yeah, I agree.
1:51:10
So it's a capture of some good.
1:51:12
He's got a nice smile.
1:51:13
Yeah, no, he's, he's perfect.
1:51:14
Got the beard, which is hot.
1:51:17
It's how real, is it hot?
1:51:19
Thank you for that info.
1:51:22
It's hot.
1:51:23
Okay.
1:51:24
Yeah, that's what J.D. Vance has to
1:51:26
have a beard.
1:51:26
J.D. Vance, if he gave the same
1:51:27
speech without the beard, you wouldn't, he'd be,
1:51:30
he just doesn't look good.
1:51:31
No, he looks like Rush Limbaugh without the
1:51:34
beard.
1:51:34
Yeah, almost exactly.
1:51:36
Yeah.
1:51:38
Well, I don't know.
1:51:40
When is the, is it this election coming
1:51:44
up next week?
1:51:45
Yeah, the 5th, 5th of November.
1:51:46
Yeah, the 4th or 5th, something like that.
1:51:49
Well, clearly I can't see Mondani, Mondani not
1:51:54
winning.
1:51:56
That'll be interesting.
1:51:58
And I don't think New York's going to
1:51:59
fall apart.
1:52:00
I don't think so.
1:52:02
No, no, it falls apart naturally.
1:52:04
But all the young people, they're voting for
1:52:06
him.
1:52:07
They're like, yeah, freeze my rent, bro.
1:52:10
They're actually going for it.
1:52:13
I mean, yet no one ever voted for
1:52:15
the rent's too high guy.
1:52:17
Whatever happened to him?
1:52:20
I think he died.
1:52:21
Did he?
1:52:22
Well, I don't know for sure.
1:52:25
Rent too high.
1:52:25
That was reported.
1:52:27
Was that the guy with the, with the
1:52:29
boot on his head?
1:52:31
No, I don't know who that guy was,
1:52:33
who got the boot on his head.
1:52:34
No, that was the guy who was going
1:52:36
to give everybody a free pony.
1:52:39
And then, of course, for some reason, it's
1:52:41
crazy, but Manning got no traction.
1:52:43
We love Manning.
1:52:44
Manning would be great for New York.
1:52:46
It's not going to happen.
1:52:47
No, Manning is a maniac.
1:52:49
Yes, that's what we like about him.
1:52:53
So unless you have something else, just an
1:52:55
off-the-wall clip, which I was...
1:52:57
I do have the off-the-wall clip.
1:53:00
Well, we'll do two off-the-wall clips.
1:53:02
You have one?
1:53:03
I have one.
1:53:04
Yeah, I mean, off-the-wall...
1:53:05
Well, I have the rant of the month.
1:53:07
Oh, no, you got to...
1:53:07
We'll do that next.
1:53:10
So this was ABC about the new supersonic
1:53:15
jet.
1:53:17
You heard about this?
1:53:18
The X-59 supersonic jet?
1:53:21
No, the last jet I heard about was
1:53:23
the F-47.
1:53:24
Well, no, this is not a fighter jet.
1:53:26
This is a jet that would be for
1:53:28
passengers.
1:53:29
Over a new passenger.
1:53:30
I've heard talk about different things they're designing.
1:53:34
But this report is so wrong because we
1:53:37
know exactly what happened with supersonic jets.
1:53:41
And I'll just reiterate because...
1:53:43
Were we doing the show?
1:53:45
I don't think we're doing the show.
1:53:47
You had the Concorde, and the Concorde was
1:53:50
great.
1:53:51
I've flown the Concorde.
1:53:52
It was fun.
1:53:53
New York to London, three and a half
1:53:55
hours, groovy.
1:53:56
I have lots of stories about it.
1:53:59
And then they had a Concorde that was
1:54:01
rented out for a German company to fly
1:54:05
their employees around.
1:54:08
Crashes and burns.
1:54:10
Everybody dies.
1:54:12
Like, oh, this thing...
1:54:13
Because they ran over a piece of metal
1:54:15
on the runway that pierced, I think, the
1:54:18
wing and maybe the tank.
1:54:20
And so that was the official reason.
1:54:23
And so they said, okay, your airworthiness certificate
1:54:27
is gone.
1:54:28
Until you fix all these problems.
1:54:31
And they got their airworthiness certificate back.
1:54:34
And do you remember what day the Concorde
1:54:36
was supposed to fly again?
1:54:39
No, I do not.
1:54:40
September 11th, 2001.
1:54:43
Oh.
1:54:44
So it never came back into service.
1:54:46
It was fine.
1:54:48
Its sonic boom was over the ocean, so
1:54:50
it didn't bother anybody.
1:54:52
And you couldn't land it at every single
1:54:54
airport.
1:54:54
But this report is just filled with errors.
1:54:57
It's called the X-59, and it could
1:54:59
be this century's Concorde.
1:55:02
NASA's experimental jet taking off yesterday on its
1:55:05
first test flight over the California desert.
1:55:08
Built to fly 925 miles per hour, nearly
1:55:11
twice as fast as today's commercial airliners.
1:55:14
The X-59 is designed to be the
1:55:16
first aircraft to break the sound barrier quietly.
1:55:19
How is that even possible?
1:55:21
Is it really possible to break it?
1:55:23
Yeah, it is.
1:55:25
I've seen the papers on this.
1:55:28
There's a way of doing it.
1:55:33
They create some sort of fake turbulence or
1:55:36
something that breaks up the boom.
1:55:41
Meticulously engineered, it produces a gentle thump, a
1:55:46
mere whisper compared to the disruptive booms of
1:55:49
the past.
1:55:50
The explosive-like sonic boom is why commercial
1:55:52
supersonic flight has been banned over the U
1:55:55
.S. It can startle people.
1:55:57
It can rattle windows and cause problems.
1:55:58
Even military flights are restricted in certain areas
1:56:02
because the shock waves can cause so much
1:56:03
disturbance on the ground.
1:56:05
But the X-59's unique shape turns that
1:56:07
boom into more of a thump, no louder
1:56:10
than slamming a car door.
1:56:12
You may recall the supersonic Concorde flew for
1:56:14
decades until it was retired in 2003 due
1:56:17
to high operating costs and fading demand.
1:56:19
No, no, not true.
1:56:23
There was total demand for it.
1:56:25
Yeah, I agree with that.
1:56:27
Yeah, that's wrong.
1:56:27
Can I just say something quickly?
1:56:29
Yeah.
1:56:29
When I was a little kid...
1:56:33
Little boy.
1:56:34
It was still legal to fly over the
1:56:38
U.S. at supersonic speeds.
1:56:40
That's how long ago we were flying supersonic?
1:56:43
We were flying supersonic, yeah, I think in
1:56:46
the 50s.
1:56:47
Yeah.
1:56:48
And you hear the boom once in a
1:56:51
while.
1:56:52
Yeah.
1:56:53
And it was loud.
1:56:55
Yeah, but the Concorde...
1:56:57
But it didn't startle...
1:57:01
I mean, it was just like, oh, there's
1:57:03
a jet.
1:57:04
Yeah.
1:57:04
Is what you said to yourself.
1:57:06
It wasn't a big deal.
1:57:08
Yeah, but she's making it sound like, oh,
1:57:09
because of the boom...
1:57:10
See, this is basically a commercial for Lockheed.
1:57:13
It wasn't because it was loud and people
1:57:15
didn't want to fly.
1:57:16
It is because it crashed and then nobody
1:57:19
wanted to fly after 2001 and then it
1:57:22
just went away.
1:57:24
Due to high operating costs and fading demand,
1:57:27
it was only allowed to hit supersonic speeds
1:57:29
over the ocean.
1:57:30
The X-59, without that deafening sonic boom,
1:57:33
could be a game changer.
1:57:35
Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy saying it has the
1:57:38
potential to change the way the public flies.
1:57:41
An X-plane is a symbol of our
1:57:43
collective ambition to redefine the future.
1:57:47
And in this case, it's the future of
1:57:49
supersonic travel.
1:57:50
The test flight yesterday is being called a
1:57:52
significant aviation milestone.
1:57:54
Supersonic travel could be especially important for medical
1:57:57
transportation and disaster relief.
1:58:01
Government contracts.
1:58:02
You know, there was a supersonic boom in
1:58:04
the era of the show.
1:58:06
There was a supersonic boom around here some
1:58:10
years ago.
1:58:12
It was an accident, I think.
1:58:14
While we were doing the show?
1:58:15
Yeah.
1:58:16
Well, no, not during the show.
1:58:18
I did have a Osprey come across the...
1:58:21
Oh, several, yes, I remember that.
1:58:24
Sure, I remember that.
1:58:24
The Osprey was like, what is this thing
1:58:26
coming at me?
1:58:29
But no, it was during the day.
1:58:31
And it, you know, you tell, I knew
1:58:34
it was a supersonic boom, but it was
1:58:36
like, it's not that bad that it frightens
1:58:39
you or it's deafening.
1:58:42
No.
1:58:43
They just exaggerate everything.
1:58:46
It's annoying if it was, yeah, if you
1:58:49
had a million, like a hundred jets constantly
1:58:52
making the boom sound, it would be, yeah,
1:58:53
that would be not be fun.
1:58:55
No, anyway.
1:58:58
Okay, so we have, this is the last
1:59:00
clip before we go to the break.
1:59:02
This will be the rant of the day.
1:59:04
So I heard the attorney general in Michigan's
1:59:07
going after the Trump administration for the SNAP
1:59:09
benefits.
1:59:10
And here's the thing, or suing them because
1:59:13
they're not releasing SNAP benefits for the...
1:59:15
What people don't know in this country is
1:59:17
they voted 12 times.
1:59:19
The Republicans came through with just a SNAP
1:59:21
benefit in the military bill.
1:59:23
And the Democrats have voted it down 12
1:59:25
times because reality is this, and this is
1:59:28
what's happening in the country.
1:59:29
They need illegals in this country.
1:59:31
That's why they're fighting for healthcare for them
1:59:33
over you.
1:59:34
They don't care if you die, okay?
1:59:36
Just like they didn't care what happened to
1:59:37
our elderly and small in COVID.
1:59:40
Let's see, they build a $9 million hospital,
1:59:43
a satellite hospital, Cobo Hall in Detroit.
1:59:45
And instead of sending the COVID positive elderly
1:59:49
patients there, it only saw like nine people.
1:59:52
Instead of sending them there, they sent them
1:59:55
back into the nursing home so they could
1:59:56
get a high death count.
1:59:58
Yes, so they could get a high death
1:59:59
count.
2:00:00
Because did you not ever question people weren't
2:00:02
dying in the streets?
2:00:03
But if they went to the hospitals, they
2:00:05
didn't make it.
2:00:06
Because the ventilators weren't working.
2:00:08
They knew they weren't working.
2:00:09
They were purposely killing people.
2:00:12
And I'm not going to sit here after
2:00:14
what's happened to my family and everybody else
2:00:16
in this state and all these democratic states.
2:00:19
And sit here and say it's okay, the
2:00:22
Republicans are bad people.
2:00:24
There are some bad Republicans for sure.
2:00:26
But I'm going to tell you this playbook
2:00:28
you played in COVID, which is let's see,
2:00:30
bankrupt small businesses, destroy our elderly, house our
2:00:34
children, imprison them, don't let them go to
2:00:37
school so they're years behind.
2:00:40
Shut down everything.
2:00:42
And that's what you're doing now.
2:00:43
You're sacrificing your own people and people that
2:00:46
need food because you want to win an
2:00:48
election and you want to win power and
2:00:51
you will do anything to make people look
2:00:54
bad because that's the only way you can
2:00:56
win.
2:00:57
I am sick of it.
2:00:58
I am so sick and tired that these
2:01:01
people have power over us and they decide
2:01:03
the fates of our lives.
2:01:05
The American dream is gone because they sell
2:01:07
us out.
2:01:08
And how long has she been a no
2:01:10
agenda listener?
2:01:13
Oh, man.
2:01:15
Yeah, that's a good one.
2:01:16
Spot on, spot on.
2:01:18
That's right.
2:01:18
Democrats are doing it.
2:01:20
Yeah, absolutely.
2:01:22
Nonsense.
2:01:23
We'll see.
2:01:23
Well, if it goes into November, a lot
2:01:26
of interesting things will happen.
2:01:29
A lot of interesting things.
2:01:31
Well, yeah, I'd say.
2:01:32
Yeah.
2:01:33
Hey, with that, I want to thank you
2:01:34
for...
2:01:35
I was going to say, in fact, Walmart's
2:01:37
decided they're going to...
2:01:39
Close?
2:01:40
Close a lot of stores and put cops
2:01:43
all over the place because they're taking it
2:01:45
seriously.
2:01:46
Yeah, I heard some black TikTokers saying, this
2:01:49
is great.
2:01:50
Some dudes like, this is great.
2:01:52
You finally have to go back to the
2:01:53
man that you left for the get the
2:01:55
snap benefits is going to reunite the black
2:01:58
American family.
2:02:00
You know, there's a logic to that.
2:02:02
There's total logic to it.
2:02:05
And that, you know, it's a mess, John.
2:02:08
It's just a mess.
2:02:09
But now I would like to thank you
2:02:10
for your courage.
2:02:11
Say in the morning to you, the man
2:02:12
who put the C in the champagne.
2:02:14
Socialists say hello to my friend on the
2:02:16
other end.
2:02:16
The one, the only Mr. John C.
2:02:20
DeMora.
2:02:24
Yeah, good morning.
2:02:24
Good morning, Adam Curry.
2:02:25
Good morning, our ships at sea.
2:02:27
Boots on the ground, feeding the intercepts in
2:02:28
the water and all the dames and knights
2:02:29
out there.
2:02:30
In the morning, trolls.
2:02:31
How you doing?
2:02:32
Don't move, don't even count them.
2:02:33
Hold on.
2:02:35
One.
2:02:39
1612 trolls were down about 180.
2:02:43
But we'll take as many trolls as we
2:02:44
can get.
2:02:45
And boy, are they trolling today.
2:02:46
Oh, my Lord, they are trolling.
2:02:48
They've gone nuts.
2:02:49
Well, but that's good that get it out
2:02:51
of your system in the troll room.
2:02:53
That's what the troll room is for.
2:02:56
Not that Trump is fake.
2:02:57
Nothing's going to happen.
2:02:58
Israel runs everything.
2:03:01
Israel runs everything.
2:03:02
That is my troll impersonation.
2:03:06
Calm down, trolls.
2:03:07
It's OK.
2:03:08
If you get dizzy, just look at the
2:03:10
ground.
2:03:10
It'll all go away.
2:03:11
It'll all be fine.
2:03:13
So they're listening at noagendastream.com or perhaps
2:03:17
using one of those fancy modern podcast apps.
2:03:19
You owe it to yourself to get one
2:03:21
of those.
2:03:22
So that you can be alerted when we
2:03:24
go live.
2:03:24
Many other shows on the No Agenda stream
2:03:26
go live.
2:03:27
You can listen to it live on a
2:03:29
podcast app.
2:03:29
No other legacy app does that.
2:03:31
And of course, when we publish our show,
2:03:34
the ones that use Podping, look at the
2:03:37
handy dandy little chart there.
2:03:40
You will be notified within 90 seconds that
2:03:42
the show has been published.
2:03:43
Why wait around on your legacy app when
2:03:45
you can get your No Agenda fix the
2:03:46
minute you want it?
2:03:48
The minute it's available.
2:03:50
Jam it right in the vein, deep.
2:03:53
In our 19th year now.
2:03:57
We're in our 19th year, right?
2:03:58
Yeah, we celebrate 18.
2:03:59
So we're in our 19th year.
2:04:01
There's always controversy over that.
2:04:03
No, we're starting our 19th year.
2:04:06
Okay, we're starting our 19th, 19 years.
2:04:09
What a run this has been.
2:04:11
What a run.
2:04:12
It's been amazing.
2:04:13
It's the gun smoke.
2:04:15
We are in gun smoke territory.
2:04:17
That's right.
2:04:18
And we've done it value for value.
2:04:20
This is what amazes people.
2:04:22
And we're just like gun smoke.
2:04:23
We're black and white while everyone else is
2:04:25
in color and video.
2:04:26
That's correct.
2:04:27
There was a couple of articles that came
2:04:30
across the transom.
2:04:32
This was kind of an interesting point about
2:04:34
Patreon supported journalism.
2:04:37
It really can't be the future of news.
2:04:39
And this article highlights a number of people
2:04:41
who write about news, who do news stuff.
2:04:44
And I'm sure they have podcasts.
2:04:46
And they monetize through Patreon.
2:04:50
And the problem with Patreon is that, you
2:04:53
know, it's not really value for value.
2:04:56
It's like subscribe to my Patreon.
2:04:58
You know, get one of those levels.
2:05:00
You get a tote bag or a hat.
2:05:02
And, you know, and I've been trying to
2:05:05
explain this to some people.
2:05:06
It's like the reason why that doesn't work
2:05:09
is because you have all these $5 a
2:05:11
month subscribers.
2:05:13
And if you don't do what they want
2:05:16
to hear, then they cancel.
2:05:18
And with us, it's like there's no canceling.
2:05:21
You just don't, if you didn't get value
2:05:22
out of the show, you didn't like it.
2:05:24
Although the amount of people that say, I
2:05:26
don't agree with you, but what you're doing
2:05:28
is worth it.
2:05:30
You know, then send us whatever value you
2:05:33
think it's worth.
2:05:34
That system works.
2:05:35
You know, we're going to die saying this.
2:05:37
And how many people will actually successfully deploy
2:05:41
the value for value model?
2:05:43
I think under 50.
2:05:47
You know what I mean?
2:05:48
That are really doing value for value.
2:05:50
And of course, the other big mistake is
2:05:52
you have to have an outstanding product.
2:05:54
This is what people don't understand.
2:05:57
There's a system to it.
2:05:58
We have explained this system so many times.
2:06:01
I've been trying to get Laura Logan to
2:06:03
do it.
2:06:03
I said, you're going to starve doing this
2:06:05
show.
2:06:05
You do great.
2:06:06
You do great.
2:06:07
You're really good at what you do.
2:06:09
But then all of a sudden you break
2:06:11
away in the middle of your interview and
2:06:13
like talk about some coffee.
2:06:15
It's like, you know, we get our coffee.
2:06:19
We like the coffee.
2:06:20
We talk about the coffee and the guy
2:06:22
gives us 200 bucks a show.
2:06:24
But it's not an ad.
2:06:26
If we didn't like the coffee, we say
2:06:27
we don't like the coffee.
2:06:29
Am I right?
2:06:30
Or we wouldn't talk about it.
2:06:31
Yeah, pretty much.
2:06:32
We don't, we don't have any obligation.
2:06:35
No.
2:06:35
But we, same with the tip of the
2:06:37
day.
2:06:38
And even better, we don't have any meetings
2:06:40
with them.
2:06:41
We don't have to meet like, oh, there's
2:06:43
the real killer.
2:06:45
I don't like her having to talk or
2:06:48
not even the meeting, just having to talk
2:06:52
with an advertiser who wants to talk about
2:06:54
something.
2:06:55
Just a chat.
2:06:56
You know, um, yeah, we're really not seeing
2:06:59
an ROI on our, um, on our.
2:07:01
Can you use a code?
2:07:05
By the way, Tina got a lot of
2:07:07
response to her crowd health.
2:07:10
I told it that people should email tinacurry
2:07:13
.com.
2:07:14
And we're getting our kids on this now
2:07:17
too.
2:07:18
Because we got a kid in New York.
2:07:20
She has, she got a quote for the,
2:07:22
the marketplace.
2:07:25
You know, that's the Obamacare marketplace.
2:07:27
If you don't have a, uh, an employer,
2:07:31
$600 a month.
2:07:33
And she's not even 30.
2:07:36
Come on.
2:07:38
Unless you go with one.
2:07:39
That's the, that brings us to the bonus
2:07:40
clip for the, for the donation segment.
2:07:42
Oh, I didn't know you had a bonus
2:07:44
clip.
2:07:45
What are we doing?
2:07:45
20 K ripoff insurance.
2:07:47
Oh my goodness.
2:07:48
Here we go.
2:07:50
Of all people in the United States do
2:07:52
not use their benefits past their deductible.
2:07:54
Period.
2:07:55
Wow.
2:07:55
That's a huge.
2:07:57
And do you know what's the average deductible?
2:07:58
What's the average premium now?
2:08:00
Do you know?
2:08:01
So it just, it just went over $20
2:08:04
,000.
2:08:04
And if you're a union employee, remember union
2:08:07
unions, I've helped unions in the past.
2:08:09
And I think a lot of them, they
2:08:11
do all first dollar coverage, meaning they have
2:08:13
no copays, no deductibles, no coinsurance.
2:08:16
And so the way that they've done theirs,
2:08:17
they're at 28 to 30,000, depending on
2:08:19
who you talk to.
2:08:20
Like I've talked to people at the UAW.
2:08:21
I've talked to people at steel, the candy
2:08:23
makers.
2:08:23
I've talked to a bunch of different ones.
2:08:25
And so there's somewhere in there, but I
2:08:26
mean, you start thinking about $20,000 a
2:08:30
year.
2:08:30
Now the Republicans have been very good about
2:08:32
talking about the federal budget and how much
2:08:34
the deficit is, is crushing us.
2:08:36
But I really think the number one problem
2:08:38
in America, the number one problem in America
2:08:40
is stealing thousands of dollars from not only
2:08:43
working Americans, but also what I would call
2:08:45
middle Americans, right?
2:08:46
Those making $80,000 to $120,000.
2:08:49
They have a normal house.
2:08:51
They have two car payments.
2:08:52
They're both working.
2:08:53
And they're just normal families, like trying to
2:08:55
do their thing.
2:08:56
Their kids are in sports.
2:08:57
There's normal people.
2:08:58
And instead of us helping them retire, we're
2:09:00
stealing $2,000 a month from them to
2:09:03
pay in order to get amounts of money
2:09:05
to pay.
2:09:06
Yeah, exactly.
2:09:07
Tina and I were paying $1,600 a
2:09:10
month.
2:09:11
And we're healthy, you know, I'm just like,
2:09:14
okay.
2:09:15
And we had a deductible of some ridiculous
2:09:18
amount, like $15,000 deductible.
2:09:21
Yeah, it's a year's worth of payments.
2:09:23
Yeah, so it's worthless.
2:09:26
It's worthless.
2:09:27
And what we were doing, what we would
2:09:29
try is we'd do cash payment, of course,
2:09:32
because we knew we could never satisfy the
2:09:34
deductible unless something catastrophic happened.
2:09:37
And you can get it for $0.30
2:09:39
on the dollar.
2:09:40
They're happy.
2:09:41
The medical community, they don't like it.
2:09:43
I had clips, I don't have them, of
2:09:47
various nurses saying that they would tell somebody
2:09:49
that their deductible for getting an x-ray
2:09:52
of some sort could be up to $100
2:09:57
for the one x-ray.
2:09:59
Or you can go to this other x
2:10:02
-ray service with a cash deal and get
2:10:05
the same x-ray for $30.
2:10:06
Yeah, exactly.
2:10:08
Exactly.
2:10:09
And so what these outfits like CrowdHealth do,
2:10:11
they negotiate with the medical provider on your
2:10:14
behalf.
2:10:15
And then because you pay into the system,
2:10:18
I think she pays $200 a month, that
2:10:20
if something happens, then the whole system pays
2:10:22
for you.
2:10:23
Yeah, I think I should get the kids
2:10:24
on this CrowdHealth thing.
2:10:25
Seriously, the kids need this.
2:10:28
Yeah, I agree.
2:10:29
And you can't be a smoker, though.
2:10:31
You got to be honest about it.
2:10:32
Luckily, none of my kids are smokers.
2:10:35
And this is a good, Tina, women always
2:10:39
have more stuff than men in general, I
2:10:41
think.
2:10:42
And they have some preventative stuff, which is
2:10:45
rare for a crowdfunding outfit.
2:10:50
And if you're pregnant, no problem.
2:10:53
Cancer, no problem.
2:10:55
They have a prescription plan.
2:10:58
I'm amazed that people don't know more about
2:11:02
this.
2:11:03
And I love it because it's Americans working
2:11:05
together.
2:11:05
You think that TV people are going to
2:11:08
talk about this?
2:11:09
No, you're right.
2:11:10
These guys were so hard up.
2:11:11
They went to the Bitcoin community.
2:11:13
There were Bitcoin conferences.
2:11:15
Yeah, man, we're a Bitcoin company.
2:11:17
No, you're not.
2:11:18
But we love what you're doing anyway.
2:11:20
Code Bongino.
2:11:21
Tina will hook you up.
2:11:23
So where was I?
2:11:25
What was I talking about?
2:11:27
I don't know.
2:11:28
I was talking about something to do with
2:11:29
premium insurance.
2:11:30
You said that your kids had to pay
2:11:32
$600 or something.
2:11:33
That Obamacare was no good.
2:11:37
Somehow it came into the value for value.
2:11:39
I'm not sure.
2:11:40
Let's just thank people.
2:11:41
Oh, that's right.
2:11:42
You were talking about Patreon.
2:11:44
Yeah.
2:11:46
I don't know.
2:11:47
How did I get off of that?
2:11:48
So Patreon, the problem is that people will
2:11:52
then get captured.
2:11:54
It's audience capture because they're so afraid of
2:11:57
losing subscribers.
2:12:00
Where?
2:12:00
Yeah, but if you say I'm listening to
2:12:03
a podcast and I subscribe to their podcast
2:12:06
via Patreon, instead of just sending them the
2:12:08
money.
2:12:09
So I go to Patreon and I fill
2:12:11
out the forms and they take five bucks
2:12:14
a month or whatever.
2:12:15
But Patreon takes 10%, by the way.
2:12:18
Okay, which is too much.
2:12:19
So they take 10% of the money
2:12:22
and then does the podcast get my emailing
2:12:26
address so they can send me emails?
2:12:29
I think so.
2:12:31
That I don't know for sure.
2:12:32
Are you sure?
2:12:32
No, I'm not sure.
2:12:35
But my point is a little different than
2:12:37
that.
2:12:37
The whole idea is send value when you
2:12:40
feel you got value.
2:12:42
Don't let me be captured by, oh, we
2:12:44
don't want to lose subscribers.
2:12:47
And that's, it's bad.
2:12:50
You get bad product.
2:12:52
And we're honest.
2:12:53
I mean, if we'd been on Patreon with
2:12:55
our Israel rap, man, we'd be broke.
2:13:01
Because, you know, we're not getting Jew money.
2:13:03
That's for sure.
2:13:04
Yeah, where's our Jew money, by the way?
2:13:06
Jews are very low on the payment.
2:13:08
We haven't been getting much Muslim money either.
2:13:11
I might add by a hint out there
2:13:13
to our friend.
2:13:14
Yeah, well, I figure he's in some country
2:13:16
where it's hard to get to a...
2:13:19
Well, once they did the peace deal, he
2:13:21
disappeared.
2:13:22
Oh, good point.
2:13:23
Did you notice that?
2:13:23
Yeah, peace deal done.
2:13:25
Okay, so he thinks we were keeping Trump
2:13:28
going?
2:13:28
Is that what his thinking was?
2:13:30
I have no idea.
2:13:32
So part of the value for value is
2:13:34
three T's.
2:13:35
Time, talent, treasure.
2:13:36
You can do a lot to help the
2:13:38
show.
2:13:38
You can turn people on to the show.
2:13:40
You know, there's no algos in podcasting.
2:13:42
There's no, you know, everything that has been
2:13:45
tried has always failed.
2:13:46
People hear about podcasts from other people.
2:13:49
And then when they hear about it, they
2:13:51
give it a try.
2:13:52
And we call it hitting in the mouth.
2:13:53
Because you need to smack somebody pretty hard
2:13:55
before they...
2:13:56
These guys are Republicans.
2:13:59
These guys are anti-vaxxers.
2:14:01
It takes a little bit to figure out
2:14:03
what we are and what we aren't.
2:14:05
Yeah, we're not anti-vaxxers and we're not
2:14:07
Republicans.
2:14:08
No, and we also, we are open to
2:14:10
criticism.
2:14:11
And I love the people who are saying,
2:14:13
hey, you know, maybe if you didn't read
2:14:16
those critical notes on the show, then you
2:14:18
wouldn't get so many.
2:14:20
Like, this is a feature of the show.
2:14:23
Not only that, but it's like I said
2:14:26
to the guy that you're talking about, who
2:14:28
made that comment, it's an opportunity for Adam
2:14:31
to do his...
2:14:32
To hone, yes.
2:14:34
To hone my skills.
2:14:35
And it's a great voice.
2:14:37
We love listening to it.
2:14:38
And he, but he has to practice.
2:14:40
Yeah, I need practice.
2:14:41
So send more, please.
2:14:42
You can't just do it once every six
2:14:44
months.
2:14:45
So part of the time, talent and treasure
2:14:47
is doing artwork for the show.
2:14:50
And of course, I've been complaining for a
2:14:52
long time about the prompt jockeys and the
2:14:54
degradation and quality of art.
2:14:56
And then out of the blue, left field.
2:14:59
She must have been working on it for
2:15:00
a while.
2:15:01
The original Dutch master, Tante Niel, comes back
2:15:04
with a vengeance.
2:15:05
Brings us 18 years of media deconstruction.
2:15:08
A beautiful piece of art that we use
2:15:10
for 1811.
2:15:12
That was our 18th anniversary show titled the
2:15:15
N.A. Era.
2:15:17
This just had everything in it.
2:15:20
And she, we agreed that she had to
2:15:22
be working on this for a long time.
2:15:25
Yeah.
2:15:26
And it was not, it was not AI.
2:15:28
This had to be done in advance of
2:15:29
the show.
2:15:30
Yeah.
2:15:30
And it was not, not AI.
2:15:32
This was...
2:15:33
No, no way.
2:15:34
I mean, that's impossible.
2:15:36
I'm seeing swine flu.
2:15:37
I'm seeing drones.
2:15:39
I'm seeing, oh man, like the MH-13
2:15:43
plane.
2:15:44
It masks BLM, Europe, Brexit.
2:15:49
I mean, and it's cryptic.
2:15:51
No, not all of it is immediately, you
2:15:53
have to look at like, what does she
2:15:54
mean by this?
2:15:55
Oh, I, oh, I see.
2:15:57
You had the PBS logos.
2:15:59
I mean, everything was in there.
2:16:00
Transgender.
2:16:01
All of it's in there.
2:16:02
It was really, it was a beautiful piece.
2:16:04
Thank you, Tante Niel.
2:16:06
We love you.
2:16:07
We appreciate that you did that work for
2:16:09
us.
2:16:10
Don't we see?
2:16:11
Yeah.
2:16:11
Look at that.
2:16:12
Where I'm trying to find, there it is.
2:16:13
It's on page two.
2:16:15
Yeah.
2:16:15
Yeah.
2:16:15
I looked at this thing trying to get
2:16:17
the code for me to get the world
2:16:18
on fire, which was a global warming.
2:16:21
Guy throwing a Molotov cocktail, a pangolin.
2:16:26
See the pangolin?
2:16:27
Yeah.
2:16:27
Bitcoin, a cross.
2:16:30
Celebrate your commitment to Jesus.
2:16:31
Yeah, notice how Bitcoin is early on, how
2:16:34
we missed that.
2:16:35
Beanie Babies.
2:16:38
We missed that one.
2:16:39
Now, there's a kind of a, next to
2:16:41
the Capitol building, there's a guy standing there
2:16:44
with his arms out reach.
2:16:45
I don't know what that one is.
2:16:48
Let me see.
2:16:50
See the Trump, it's not the lower right.
2:16:52
There's a Trump head, then the Capitol building,
2:16:55
then there's somebody.
2:16:56
Maybe that's a statue that's taken down.
2:16:58
Not sure.
2:17:00
Ice cream cone from Biden.
2:17:02
I see the little COVID thing.
2:17:07
We got a goat.
2:17:08
We got peak oil.
2:17:10
We've got all kinds of stuff.
2:17:13
It's ridiculously great.
2:17:15
Yeah.
2:17:15
The farmer protests.
2:17:17
The Queen of England's on there.
2:17:19
Trump's on there.
2:17:20
It's beautiful.
2:17:21
It's a piece to be framed, I would
2:17:23
say.
2:17:24
It's frameable.
2:17:25
It's completely frameable.
2:17:26
Thank you, Tanzania.
2:17:27
We really appreciate that.
2:17:28
And we thank all of the artists who
2:17:30
are always trying to get something into the
2:17:35
system.
2:17:37
And by the way, if you're having trouble
2:17:39
uploading, it has to be the exact dimensions,
2:17:41
the exact amount of pixels.
2:17:43
That's why it might reject your artwork.
2:17:46
And so we come to the treasure portion.
2:17:48
We thank everybody, $50 and above.
2:17:51
And of course, if you are fortunate enough
2:17:53
to be able to support us with $200
2:17:54
or more, we will not only read your
2:17:57
note, and we got some long ones today,
2:17:59
but we will also give you an official
2:18:01
Hollywood title of Associate Executive Producer, which is
2:18:05
real.
2:18:05
You can go to imdb.com.
2:18:07
You'll see a lot of them, over 1
2:18:09
,000.
2:18:10
And if it's $300 or more, then there's
2:18:12
a lot of different things that can happen.
2:18:14
First of all, we'll read your note.
2:18:15
You become an executive producer.
2:18:16
And we have the No Agenda International Peace
2:18:19
Prize.
2:18:20
And we see right off the top that
2:18:21
we have a couple of people who are
2:18:23
in, who are getting ready to receive their
2:18:25
International Peace Prize.
2:18:27
Do we have a photograph yet of, do
2:18:29
we have the art, the image that is
2:18:31
on this, so people can see it?
2:18:32
Is that up and available?
2:18:33
I think we're like front running the campaign.
2:18:35
Oh, that's coming.
2:18:37
We just need to, there's a couple of
2:18:40
pieces of gear, stuff that needs to be,
2:18:45
it was ordered from Amazon or we're just
2:18:46
waiting for it.
2:18:47
Okay.
2:18:48
Paper.
2:18:48
No, paper.
2:18:49
Oh, paper.
2:18:50
Yes.
2:18:50
I cleaned up my studio the other day.
2:18:52
I'm like, wow, I need to hang these
2:18:54
up.
2:18:55
Still have my Commodore I haven't hung up.
2:18:57
Oh yeah, you got to hang all this
2:18:58
stuff up.
2:18:59
So we kick it off today with our
2:19:01
top executive producer with $1,030.26, which
2:19:06
I guess is fees, from Momentum Finance LLC.
2:19:12
In Eden, Utah.
2:19:14
And the note is short.
2:19:15
It's always that way.
2:19:17
Happy Hump Day, dames and gentlemen.
2:19:19
Well, probably sent it on Wednesday.
2:19:21
Check out Ad Astra Rev Liptonite.
2:19:27
Very cryptic, cryptic note here.
2:19:30
Do you know what this is about?
2:19:33
No.
2:19:33
Well, thank you very much, Momentum Finance LLC.
2:19:36
We will check out Ad Astra Rev Liptonite.
2:19:40
Thank you.
2:19:42
The mayor of Cyprus.
2:19:45
No note.
2:19:47
No jingle.
2:19:48
Came in at $1,018.18. It says
2:19:52
no note, no nothing, four more years, which
2:19:55
is a note, by the way.
2:19:56
That is a note.
2:19:57
It's an official note.
2:19:59
Anonymous swings by from Mandeville, Louisiana.
2:20:03
$526.36, probably $500 plus the fees.
2:20:06
Dear Adam and John, Anonymous says, congratulations on
2:20:09
making 18 years of the Noah Jenner Show.
2:20:11
I've been listening since around show 300 or
2:20:13
so.
2:20:14
This donation either gets me close to knighthood
2:20:16
or puts me across the finish line, but
2:20:17
it's been so long since I've donated, I
2:20:19
can't be sure anymore.
2:20:20
Well, what happened?
2:20:22
I'm sure you'll let me know.
2:20:23
Well, you don't have a color, so I
2:20:24
guess you didn't quite make it.
2:20:27
There are too many things that make your
2:20:29
show great to list them in a pithy
2:20:31
donation email.
2:20:32
But first among equals is that you play
2:20:34
the most primary and secondary source reporting of
2:20:36
any news show in the marketplace today.
2:20:38
Yes, you're both funny.
2:20:40
The sound quality is great.
2:20:42
The jingles are fun.
2:20:42
The producers are top notch and so on
2:20:44
and so forth.
2:20:46
But the real value is that in a
2:20:47
three hour block of time, a listener more
2:20:49
or less gets fully caught up with not
2:20:51
just the current news of the day, but
2:20:53
all the narratives and memes that increasingly inform
2:20:56
that news coverage.
2:20:57
And you do it without advertising because you've
2:21:00
embraced the value for value model.
2:21:02
Not even Joe Rogan can say that.
2:21:05
One day, the both of you will decide
2:21:07
to hang it up.
2:21:08
And while you'll have certainly earned your retirement.
2:21:11
Oh, let me check my 401k.
2:21:15
It'll be a sad day for us listeners
2:21:17
until done until then.
2:21:19
Well done, Adam and John.
2:21:20
Thank you for your continued service.
2:21:22
P.S. If I've made knighthood, let me
2:21:25
know one day and I'll choose some sort
2:21:26
of pseudo anonymous name.
2:21:28
Well, I'm sure we will be in touch
2:21:29
with you about that.
2:21:30
Thank you, Anonymous.
2:21:33
All right.
2:21:34
On with Sir Cristobal.
2:21:38
In Dallas, Texas, three, three, three, three, three.
2:21:41
This came in, I guess, through strike or
2:21:45
stripe.
2:21:46
And it's got no note, no nothing.
2:21:48
So he gets a double up karma.
2:21:50
Here it comes.
2:21:51
You've got karma.
2:21:56
All right.
2:21:57
Sarah Campbell is in Franklin, Indiana.
2:22:00
Three thirty three, our favorite number.
2:22:01
Gentlemen, happy anniversary.
2:22:03
Adam, please read this note in your hate
2:22:06
mail voice.
2:22:10
It's hard to do when it's not a
2:22:12
hateful email, but I'll give it.
2:22:13
No, you can only do it.
2:22:15
He's he is channeling when he does that
2:22:19
voice.
2:22:19
And there's nothing here to channel.
2:22:22
I'm going to try.
2:22:22
I can try.
2:22:23
I mean, I just have to envision these.
2:22:26
Assuming he's being sarcastic about everything, then you
2:22:28
can.
2:22:28
Even though both my husband and I are
2:22:31
unpaid air traffic controllers right now, we had
2:22:35
to donate because the value we received from
2:22:37
Adam's reading of hate mail and J.C
2:22:40
.D.'s reaction while he reads it.
2:22:43
I can't speak for my husband.
2:22:45
But when I'm listening to the show, not
2:22:47
watching some like Silicon Valley nerd, I am
2:22:52
laughing and fully enjoying your dynamic.
2:22:55
This is so hard to do.
2:22:56
You both are invaluable.
2:23:00
I can't do it.
2:23:01
I can't do it.
2:23:02
It's not hateful.
2:23:03
Do it with I got a better idea.
2:23:05
Yeah.
2:23:06
Do it in the Dutch accent.
2:23:08
You both are invaluable.
2:23:11
But I've taken the time to assign you
2:23:13
use the value of 333 in hopes that
2:23:18
you'll continue to receive hate mail and share
2:23:21
it with us for four more years.
2:23:24
Anonymous, unpaid controller and his wife.
2:23:27
Thank you very much.
2:23:29
Can I get comment on your Dutch accent?
2:23:31
Yes.
2:23:32
I don't think you stutter enough when you
2:23:35
do it.
2:23:38
That's only a ritter.
2:23:39
The Dutch don't really stutter.
2:23:41
Ritter stutters.
2:23:42
Okay.
2:23:43
Well, so okay.
2:23:44
So now we go to our first associate
2:23:46
executive producer, which brings me to the fact
2:23:48
that that Dana Brunetti sent a note in
2:23:51
for his donation, which I don't see on
2:23:53
here.
2:23:54
Oh, there it is at the bottom.
2:23:55
I see it.
2:23:56
Oh, and he gave.
2:23:57
Okay.
2:23:57
I thought he the way the note was
2:23:59
written.
2:23:59
It seemed to me that he was going
2:24:01
for executive producer because he hates.
2:24:05
Associate executive producer.
2:24:06
Yeah, he hates it.
2:24:08
Well, he didn't send in enough.
2:24:10
Jew money.
2:24:10
No, I know.
2:24:11
He actually said you did it on purpose.
2:24:13
So, you know, he's a character.
2:24:15
Oh, yeah.
2:24:18
Believe it or not.
2:24:19
Meanwhile, the summer worth.
2:24:22
I guess in Standish, Maine to 1060.
2:24:28
Yeah.
2:24:29
I.T.M. Jens, after your recent mention
2:24:30
of Maine's Graham Platner as a Nazi tattoo
2:24:36
guy.
2:24:36
Oh, yeah.
2:24:37
I fear it's my duty to write in
2:24:39
and share what I know about the newest
2:24:40
Democrat stooge.
2:24:42
This past summer, I found myself eating dinner
2:24:44
at an establishment in Maine owned by Graham
2:24:47
Platner's mom.
2:24:48
She chatted with me, chatted me up while
2:24:51
I was sitting at the bar as she
2:24:53
was preparing for a fundraising event she would
2:24:55
be holding for Graham at the restaurant that
2:24:58
weekend.
2:24:59
Per his mom, Graham never had prior interest
2:25:02
in politics.
2:25:03
Oh, this is now this is getting.
2:25:05
Oh, here we go.
2:25:07
But it was rather approached by an out
2:25:10
of state group, quote, the same group that
2:25:13
got Mondom mom, Donnie and ha unquote.
2:25:19
When he told these approachers he had no
2:25:21
political experience, he had no idea what he
2:25:24
would be.
2:25:24
This is fabulous, by the way.
2:25:26
This is content, right?
2:25:27
What he would be doing.
2:25:29
They is reassured him that it didn't matter
2:25:32
that they had a template for him to
2:25:34
follow and that he was just the kind
2:25:37
of guy they were looking for.
2:25:38
I assume this is because he's a rural
2:25:41
Maine born and raised local business operator, specifically
2:25:44
an oyster farmer.
2:25:46
Mainers have a soft spot for lobstermen slash
2:25:49
fishermen, and he's a veteran.
2:25:52
By those standards, he should appeal to rural
2:25:54
Mainers who largely conservative.
2:25:57
It's Portland and the Midcoast region as coastal
2:26:01
elites controlling the vote, as John mentioned.
2:26:05
Right.
2:26:05
I noticed that myself.
2:26:07
I was curious how a random guy like
2:26:09
this gets approached in that in the first
2:26:13
place.
2:26:13
And it turns out his mom was is
2:26:15
a DNC delegate.
2:26:18
This situation makes me wonder how many other
2:26:21
supposed locally grown candidates in other parts of
2:26:24
the country are just stooges funded by the
2:26:27
same out of state group between Rhino Collins,
2:26:31
Corrupt Mills, Platner, the Nazi and the rest
2:26:34
of these names.
2:26:35
I fear that all hope is lost.
2:26:37
Pray for us.
2:26:38
No jingles, no karma.
2:26:39
Love you.
2:26:39
Mean it.
2:26:40
Well, to 1060, by the way, that's good.
2:26:43
I wonder how many more.
2:26:45
Well, the squad is probably all all of
2:26:48
them.
2:26:48
Who is this out of state group?
2:26:49
That's what we got to find out.
2:26:51
I mean, it was.
2:26:51
Yes.
2:26:52
Summer should have should have pushed for the
2:26:55
name of the group.
2:26:57
Yes, I'm sure it was.
2:26:58
Summer, go back there and have another meal.
2:27:00
Same people who did the Democrat Socialists of
2:27:02
America who had AOC literally auditioned for the
2:27:06
gig.
2:27:07
Yeah.
2:27:07
And there's Eli the coffee guy with two
2:27:09
hundred and ten dollars and 30 cents.
2:27:11
That's because he always gives us two hundred
2:27:13
dollars and then does the date 1030.
2:27:15
Get it.
2:27:15
She's not sure if you guys will have
2:27:17
clips for this one.
2:27:19
Apparently, a truck full of lab monkeys infected
2:27:22
with herpes, hepatitis C and covid crashed in
2:27:26
Mississippi.
2:27:26
And one of them is still on the
2:27:28
run.
2:27:28
You'd think we'd learn something from the last
2:27:31
global science experiment.
2:27:33
Well, as it just so turns out, these
2:27:36
monkeys could be dangerous.
2:27:37
I I do have the clips if anyone
2:27:41
wants.
2:27:41
Yeah, let's play that clip.
2:27:43
Because first they had them, then they didn't
2:27:44
have them.
2:27:45
And they had one.
2:27:46
They didn't have one.
2:27:46
Then they had hepatitis and they didn't.
2:27:48
Here's the two clips.
2:27:49
Tonight, the urgent search for dangerous research monkeys
2:27:53
that escaped from the wreckage of a crash
2:27:55
on a Mississippi highway.
2:27:56
We got a monkey that was on this
2:27:59
video showing several monkeys crawling in the grass.
2:28:04
Heavily armed officers responding to the scene.
2:28:06
Authorities say a truck carrying nearly two dozen
2:28:09
rhesus monkeys from Tulane University overturned on Interstate
2:28:12
59 in Jasper County.
2:28:14
Here's one of the monkeys right here.
2:28:16
There's one sitting right there.
2:28:18
At least six monkeys escaping.
2:28:20
Officials warning they might be aggressive towards people
2:28:23
and were potentially infected with hepatitis C, herpes
2:28:26
and covid.
2:28:27
They may have to neutralize something right here
2:28:29
in a minute.
2:28:30
And late today, police confirming all but one
2:28:32
of the escaped monkeys had been euthanized for
2:28:35
public safety reasons, adding they're still actively searching
2:28:37
for that one monkey still on the loose.
2:28:42
And then later they said, oh, they don't.
2:28:43
Don't worry.
2:28:44
Don't worry, everybody doesn't have herpes, hepatitis and
2:28:46
covid.
2:28:47
Don't worry about it.
2:28:47
And there's none of that.
2:28:50
Go back and bite you.
2:28:51
Go back to playing your harpsichord citizen.
2:28:54
Everything's fine.
2:28:54
Yeah.
2:28:55
Time for monkeypox, mpox vaccination.
2:28:58
Anybody?
2:28:59
Linda Lepatkin's up.
2:29:00
She's in Lakewood, Colorado.
2:29:01
I got to finish the note.
2:29:03
Oh, I didn't know, dude.
2:29:06
You were so excited to do your read.
2:29:10
Like, well, I was ready to go.
2:29:11
I was all I had been kind of
2:29:14
doing some breathing exercises.
2:29:18
Simmer down.
2:29:21
Eli, the coffee guy goes on and says,
2:29:23
but now somewhere in the Delta, there's a
2:29:24
giving herpes to a raccoon.
2:29:26
Thanks to some with the California CDL.
2:29:29
Yeah, there you go.
2:29:30
Yeah, brother.
2:29:31
He wants to.
2:29:32
Can I get?
2:29:32
I love my truck and I love what
2:29:34
I do for producers looking for
2:29:44
great coffee.
2:29:45
Visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com.
2:29:47
Use code itm20 for 20% off your
2:29:50
order.
2:29:50
And I will say Tina made a dynamite
2:29:53
tri tip yesterday and use the espresso.
2:29:59
The black and the black, the dark, the
2:30:01
black espresso roast as the rub.
2:30:06
And it was fantastic.
2:30:08
So not just for drinking is good for
2:30:11
your meat to stay caffeinated, says Eli, the
2:30:14
coffee guy.
2:30:16
Linda Lepatkin, Lakewood, Colorado, 200 bucks jobs, karma
2:30:19
for a competitive edge.
2:30:20
She writes with a resume that gets results.
2:30:23
Go to imagemakersinc.com for all of your
2:30:27
executive resume and job search needs.
2:30:30
That's image makers, Inc.
2:30:31
With a K and work with Lanilu, Duchess
2:30:34
of jobs and writer of a winning resumes.
2:30:37
Jobs, jobs, jobs, and jobs.
2:30:40
Let's go for jobs.
2:30:44
And there he is, everybody.
2:30:47
The Hollywood big wig, Dana Brunetti, proof that
2:30:51
real producers in Hollywood.
2:30:53
Listen to this show.
2:30:55
He's from Golden Cloud Ranch in California.
2:30:59
$200.
2:31:00
He's a big spender.
2:31:02
And he says, still trying to still trying
2:31:05
to financially recover from my last dinner with
2:31:08
John.
2:31:09
But luckily, I recently received one of those
2:31:11
rando checks.
2:31:13
We refer to them as mailbox money, John.
2:31:16
Since others keep doing switcheroo and loading me
2:31:19
up with crap associate producer credits, this is
2:31:23
also a switcheroo.
2:31:25
It goes to one of the following, Vladimir
2:31:27
Putin, Volodymyr Zelensky, Hamas, Hitler, or Jeffrey Epstein.
2:31:32
Choose one so it can be properly updated
2:31:34
on IMDB.
2:31:36
Well, I choose Putin.
2:31:37
What do you want to choose?
2:31:38
Yeah, I was thinking Putin too.
2:31:40
Yeah.
2:31:41
Adam, you've mentioned that people at your church
2:31:43
listen, but I'm not hearing any donations from
2:31:45
them.
2:31:46
So please call them out as douchebags.
2:31:49
Douchebags.
2:31:50
Did you think you were going to get
2:31:51
me upset, Brunetti?
2:31:53
Good try.
2:31:55
Good try, Hollywood boy.
2:31:56
Happy anniversary.
2:31:58
18th anniversary, boys.
2:31:59
You're finally legal.
2:32:00
Okay.
2:32:01
I have to get back to plowing fields.
2:32:04
Oh, okay.
2:32:05
Thank you.
2:32:05
That was a reference to something I said.
2:32:07
Yes, but thank you, Dana Brunetti.
2:32:09
It's good to know that you're still listening.
2:32:11
I know that we keep you sane in
2:32:13
that insane world that you travel in.
2:32:15
So he buys this ranch, which is big,
2:32:19
by the way.
2:32:20
Of course it is.
2:32:20
And there's gold on the ranch.
2:32:22
Gold!
2:32:24
And so he's got this gold mining gear,
2:32:30
and he's already collected enough gold to make
2:32:32
a couple of solid gold rings.
2:32:34
A couple of movies.
2:32:36
Well, a couple of movies, no, not yet.
2:32:39
But it's like, this is typical.
2:32:41
Some people have this kind of Gladstone Gander
2:32:45
style of, you know, just buy a ranch,
2:32:49
got gold on it, you can pay for
2:32:50
the ranch.
2:32:50
Yeah, someone approached me the other day about
2:32:53
doing a movie of my life, and I
2:32:55
thought, no, Brunetti should do that.
2:32:58
We should do it like the kid stays
2:32:59
in the picture, you know, I'll do the
2:33:02
voiceover, and Ken Burns effects, and there's tons
2:33:06
of footage and photos out there.
2:33:10
That's what, I mean, there you go.
2:33:12
That's what you should do with his gold,
2:33:14
is make a movie about me.
2:33:16
And yes.
2:33:17
That's gonna happen.
2:33:19
And yes.
2:33:19
And get Scorsese to do the movie.
2:33:21
There you go.
2:33:22
Congratulations to these executive producers of 1812.
2:33:25
Our formula is this.
2:33:28
We go out, we hit people in the
2:33:30
mouth.
2:33:41
Shut up, Steve.
2:33:42
Oh, I almost forgot.
2:33:44
We have this one producer who is just
2:33:46
adamant, adamant, adamant.
2:33:48
It's 1812, 1812.
2:33:50
It's an important episode.
2:33:52
It's a very important number because of Tchaikovsky's
2:33:55
1812.
2:34:08
I never realized this was Tchaikovsky's 1812, but
2:34:16
I'm sure you knew it.
2:34:17
Yeah, I did, but it was the cannons.
2:34:21
The cannons.
2:34:22
Oh, there they are.
2:34:23
There it is.
2:34:24
It's almost over, Paul.
2:34:28
That was, that's loud.
2:34:31
There they are.
2:34:33
It's a very, right, when it's performed, the
2:34:36
idea is that the cannons usually are there
2:34:39
on stage.
2:34:40
Yeah.
2:34:41
It really becomes very damaging.
2:34:43
Here we go.
2:34:45
Is this what they do on the 4th
2:34:47
of July at fireworks?
2:34:49
Yeah, it's a fireworks song.
2:34:51
Yeah, here we go.
2:34:52
Big finish, everybody.
2:35:02
Man, that guy had some good drugs.
2:35:04
How do you write something like that?
2:35:06
Those days are over.
2:35:08
AI, make that for me.
2:35:09
Show me that.
2:35:11
That's good.
2:35:12
That's very good.
2:35:13
Well, I suppose if you put all the
2:35:15
classical music ever written into the corpus...
2:35:18
You think?
2:35:20
Well...
2:35:20
You might be able to get something out
2:35:22
of it.
2:35:23
Speaking of that...
2:35:24
Who's doing that?
2:35:25
Is somebody doing that?
2:35:27
Somebody has to be doing that.
2:35:28
I'm sure it's in Suno.
2:35:30
There's so much classical music that you can
2:35:32
put in there.
2:35:32
Did you see the Grokkopedia?
2:35:36
The Grokkopedia?
2:35:38
I've seen the announcements for it.
2:35:40
I've seen the write-ups about it.
2:35:42
I have not actually gone to it.
2:35:44
As far as I'm concerned, Grokkopedia is just
2:35:47
Grok.
2:35:47
No, no, no, no.
2:35:50
It's quite interesting.
2:35:51
So if you look up Noah Jenda, or
2:35:54
you look up John C.
2:35:55
Dvorak or Adam Curry, it's so extensive.
2:36:00
I mean, the corpus has so much about
2:36:04
you, me, the show.
2:36:06
I mean, it's thousands of words.
2:36:10
And what's interesting about it, it has a
2:36:13
lot of obscure things.
2:36:16
But in every single version of everything I
2:36:20
looked up, there's some things that factually are
2:36:22
just completely wrong.
2:36:24
Yeah, absolutely.
2:36:25
They have to be.
2:36:27
Completely wrong.
2:36:29
But it's not even that bothersome.
2:36:31
It's like, wow, that's a nice write-up.
2:36:33
I had quite a life.
2:36:34
I can die now.
2:36:35
It's been nice knowing you.
2:36:37
Well, I did pretty good there.
2:36:38
Oh, I didn't know I did that.
2:36:39
That's great.
2:36:40
I did pretty good.
2:36:41
Brunetti, turn my Grokkopedia into a movie.
2:36:45
You can do it.
2:36:47
It's amazing.
2:36:49
Here's something we predicted we would have.
2:36:51
Actually, we didn't predict it.
2:36:52
One of our producers predicted it.
2:36:54
Get ready for discovery.
2:36:56
Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton is suing the
2:36:58
makers of Tylenol over claims the company deceptively
2:37:01
marketed the medication.
2:37:03
The lawsuit claims the over-the-counter medication
2:37:05
was marketed to pregnant women, despite alleged links
2:37:08
to autism in other disorders.
2:37:10
This is the first lawsuit launched by the
2:37:13
state since President Donald Trump claimed last month
2:37:15
that taking Tylenol while pregnant is linked to
2:37:18
an increased risk of autism.
2:37:20
However, there's limited evidence to suggest an association.
2:37:24
Johnson & Johnson sold the drug for decades
2:37:26
and its Consumer Health Division spinoff, Kenview, has
2:37:30
been selling that drug since 2023.
2:37:32
Kenview pushed back against the claims, calling it
2:37:35
misinformation.
2:37:36
I think this is the setup, man.
2:37:38
This is the setup.
2:37:39
This is where Tylenol comes in.
2:37:41
They say, you know what?
2:37:42
You say it's us, but it's the vaccine
2:37:43
companies.
2:37:47
I think...
2:37:47
That's an interesting theory.
2:37:48
I think it's coming.
2:37:49
Vic Paxton...
2:37:50
I like the way Johnson & Johnson seemed
2:37:52
to have predicted this somewhere along the line
2:37:54
and dumped the product.
2:37:56
Yeah, into a spinoff.
2:37:57
It's like what Monsanto did with Roundup.
2:38:00
Yep.
2:38:00
Which they panned off to Bayer.
2:38:04
Yeah.
2:38:04
And now they've changed the formulation of Roundup.
2:38:08
And what's in Roundup now is worse.
2:38:12
Oh, well, that might explain this clip.
2:38:15
This morning, a troubling investigation by the Washington
2:38:17
Post finds cancer rates among young adults are
2:38:20
rising fastest in the nation's Corn Belt, raising
2:38:23
concerns that farm pollution could be to blame.
2:38:26
Since 2015, America's top corn-producing states, Iowa,
2:38:30
Nebraska, Illinois, Minnesota, Indiana, and Kansas, have all
2:38:34
seen an uptick in cancer cases among people
2:38:36
ages 15 to 49, particularly kidney and skin
2:38:40
cancers.
2:38:40
But Iowa stands out with the fastest increase
2:38:43
in the country.
2:38:44
Experts say the state is a hotspot for
2:38:47
cancer-causing agents.
2:38:48
The nitrate levels in the Raccoon River are
2:38:51
twice that of the EPA limit.
2:38:53
I don't think it's quite right that we
2:38:55
have no regulations on how much fertilizer can
2:38:58
be dumped in our watershed upstream.
2:39:00
Studies show nitrate pollution from farming and livestock
2:39:03
operations is contaminating Iowa's water and long-term
2:39:06
exposure to fertilizers, pesticides, and herbicides has been
2:39:09
linked to higher cancer risks.
2:39:11
Environmental groups are now urging the state to
2:39:14
strengthen its water standards.
2:39:16
Agricultural groups worry additional rules for farmers would
2:39:19
be costly and could cripple the industry.
2:39:21
For now, researchers say they're determined to find
2:39:24
out if chemical runoff from farms is in
2:39:26
fact what's making people sick.
2:39:28
We really need you to compare to bordering
2:39:31
states and states that have similar exposures, specifically
2:39:35
thinking about agriculture or industry.
2:39:37
Experts say better detection tools make it easier
2:39:40
to diagnose cancer, but that alone doesn't explain
2:39:42
why rates are rising so sharply.
2:39:44
It's the corn.
2:39:45
It's in the corn.
2:39:47
It's that roundup on the corn.
2:39:50
You'd think.
2:39:51
There's definitely something they're spraying.
2:39:54
Hey, I got a note.
2:39:55
It doesn't take a genius to figure out
2:39:57
what's causing this.
2:39:59
You just have to know what is being
2:40:01
sold.
2:40:02
Exactly.
2:40:04
But they seem to be baffled.
2:40:06
I got a note.
2:40:07
Oh, it's the nitrate runoff.
2:40:08
They've always had nitrate runoff.
2:40:10
It's never going to be no nitrate runoff.
2:40:12
It can't be that.
2:40:13
It's something else.
2:40:16
I got a note from Mark from the
2:40:18
Walnut Grove podcast.
2:40:21
Remember the Walnut Grove podcast?
2:40:24
Yeah.
2:40:24
That's about Little House on the Prairie.
2:40:27
It's a fan podcast.
2:40:29
It's a fan cast.
2:40:31
It's a fan cast.
2:40:32
Please don't email me.
2:40:34
Everyone's like, oh, you love it too?
2:40:36
I love Little House on the Prairie.
2:40:38
God.
2:40:40
And he said, you know, he bought us
2:40:42
a domain name.
2:40:43
This hasn't happened in quite a while.
2:40:45
People used to buy us domain names all
2:40:47
the time.
2:40:47
Yeah.
2:40:49
We had seanhannity.com at one time, but
2:40:52
then the producer said, oh, I let it
2:40:53
expire.
2:40:55
It was so good to have seanhannity.com.
2:40:58
He says with MS Now's imminent MS Now,
2:41:01
he bought us msnowflake.com or msnowflake.com,
2:41:07
which I thought was very creative.
2:41:11
It's cute.
2:41:12
Yeah.
2:41:13
So thank you, Mark, from the Walnut Grove
2:41:14
podcast.
2:41:16
Very nice.
2:41:20
Let me get my clip list out.
2:41:22
Oh, I do.
2:41:24
You know, we had a, there was a
2:41:26
quite a big hurricane that hit Jamaica.
2:41:29
Yeah, I have the Melissa update here, but
2:41:31
this is after it hit Jamaica.
2:41:35
I have an update from after as well.
2:41:36
So I'll listen to yours first.
2:41:38
Hurricane Melissa struck eastern Cuba this morning as
2:41:41
an extremely dangerous category three storm causing severe
2:41:44
damage.
2:41:45
Cuban authorities report that over 700,000 people
2:41:48
have been evacuated in the eastern part of
2:41:51
the country.
2:41:52
By Wednesday evening, Melissa had weakened to a
2:41:54
category two and moved into the Atlantic heading
2:41:57
toward the Bahamas with heavy rain and flooding
2:41:59
expected.
2:42:01
Tropical storm warnings for the Turks and Caicos.
2:42:03
The most dangerous conditions will be in the
2:42:04
next few hours here as the center of
2:42:06
Melissa moves through the Bahamas.
2:42:08
Storm surge inundation of four to seven feet
2:42:10
above ground level near and to the right
2:42:12
of where the center of Melissa is moving.
2:42:15
Though winds have decreased, officials say dangerous storm
2:42:18
surges and rainfall remain a threat as Melissa
2:42:20
moves toward the Bahamas and Bermuda.
2:42:23
At least 36 deaths have been reported across
2:42:25
Jamaica, Haiti and the Dominican Republic.
2:42:28
In Jamaica, the storm knocked out power to
2:42:30
more than 600,000 residents, uprooted trees, ripped
2:42:34
off roofs and blocked roads in several parishes.
2:42:37
One resident shared the terrifying experience as Melissa
2:42:40
passed.
2:42:41
Worst experience of my entire life.
2:42:44
Um, to see my place being flooded out,
2:42:48
it's it was terrifying for me and my
2:42:50
child.
2:42:51
The water level reached me to my waist.
2:42:55
I was stuck in my house.
2:42:56
They had to break into my home to
2:42:58
save me.
2:42:59
Rebuilding in Jamaica will be a long term
2:43:01
effort, officials say, as homes, hospitals and infrastructure
2:43:05
were heavily damaged and access remains challenging.
2:43:09
UN officials report that immediate relief efforts are
2:43:12
underway, focusing on providing food, water and other
2:43:15
essential supplies.
2:43:17
So I've been going to Jamaica on vacation
2:43:19
for over 30.
2:43:23
Yeah, over 30 years.
2:43:25
I've never been to Jamaica.
2:43:27
Oh, I've done document.
2:43:28
There's a documentary of me in Jamaica.
2:43:32
People on the West Coast, we don't go
2:43:34
there.
2:43:35
Well, the last time I went was just
2:43:37
a couple of years ago.
2:43:38
They had a direct flight from Austin to
2:43:40
Montego Bay.
2:43:41
It was fantastic.
2:43:43
And of course, they got rid of that
2:43:44
flight, which is only three hours, like three
2:43:46
and a half hours.
2:43:47
It's perfect.
2:43:49
But the thing with Jamaica is, and I
2:43:51
would pretty much always go to this.
2:43:53
I don't think I've ever been to a
2:43:54
different place, always the same place.
2:43:56
And the last time we went there, people
2:43:58
who I'd seen 25 years ago were still
2:44:01
there.
2:44:01
So I consider them to be friends, you
2:44:04
know, like, hey, David, how you doing?
2:44:06
So I checked in before the storm hit.
2:44:09
I said, hey, man, we're praying for you
2:44:10
guys.
2:44:11
Hope everything's OK.
2:44:12
So here's the boots on the ground from
2:44:13
Jamaica.
2:44:14
Mr. Corey, I'm alive.
2:44:16
I'm alive.
2:44:16
I made it.
2:44:18
But houses are gone.
2:44:19
We are out of houses and everything.
2:44:22
So Corey, it's serious.
2:44:24
It's devastated.
2:44:25
I'm telling you.
2:44:26
I don't know what we're going to do.
2:44:28
We have no idea what, you know.
2:44:30
But as long as we have life, we
2:44:33
will make it.
2:44:34
I have to come miles to get some
2:44:35
internet.
2:44:36
So whenever I can get in touch with
2:44:37
you again, I will try.
2:44:39
All right.
2:44:40
Take care.
2:44:41
Thank you for thinking about me and my
2:44:43
family.
2:44:44
Appreciate it.
2:44:45
Sounds pretty dire.
2:44:47
Pretty bad.
2:44:49
Well, you know what the Democrats say?
2:44:51
What do the Democrats say?
2:44:53
It's all the fault of Trump and because
2:44:56
he killed USAID.
2:44:58
Oh, there it is.
2:44:59
Yes, of course.
2:44:59
That makes sense.
2:45:01
That makes sense.
2:45:03
Word of the year, according to dictionary.com.
2:45:08
They have a word of the year, too.
2:45:10
Everybody has a word of the year.
2:45:12
This is really disappointing.
2:45:15
6-7.
2:45:17
Oh, no, that's not true.
2:45:19
Yes, yes.
2:45:20
Well, that's lame.
2:45:22
Of course it's lame.
2:45:24
Dictionary.com has officially revealed its newest word
2:45:27
of the year.
2:45:28
6-7 is the word of the year.
2:45:30
Got a note from one of our producers.
2:45:34
I'd like to give a quick homeschooling commentary,
2:45:36
says Garbage Man Mitch, on the 67 phenomenon.
2:45:40
Homeschooled kids that are not overly socialized with
2:45:43
access to phones and social media don't suffer
2:45:46
from this stupidity.
2:45:49
Yet.
2:45:51
I'd like to give a loving shout out
2:45:53
to our principal, my wife, Melissa, who is
2:45:56
very pregnant with human resource number six.
2:45:59
She is cripplingly nauseous and miserable, so the
2:46:02
older kids have been forced to step up
2:46:04
and help more.
2:46:05
The other day, our oldest, nearly 12, was
2:46:07
tasked with making soup entirely unaided.
2:46:09
There were mishaps as she sauteed vegetables and
2:46:12
simmered bacon.
2:46:13
The potatoes were crunchy.
2:46:14
I have no doubt she'll compare techniques and
2:46:16
recipes with grandma, great grandma, and her mother
2:46:19
when she can think of food again.
2:46:23
I suggest homeschooling accreditation as a future fundraiser.
2:46:28
Seems to me that if you can award
2:46:30
doctorates, then you are more than qualified to
2:46:32
accredit our schools.
2:46:34
The family that learns and know agendas together
2:46:36
triumphs and stays together.
2:46:39
Well, there's a thought.
2:46:39
That's an interesting idea for a promotion.
2:46:42
I like that thought.
2:46:43
Homeschooling.
2:46:44
Homeschooling.
2:46:45
Well, of course, I mean, everyone who listens
2:46:48
to the show might want to be a
2:46:50
commodore.
2:46:51
Everyone who listens to the show might want
2:46:53
to have a rando PhD, but not everybody
2:46:57
who listens to the show are homeschoolers.
2:47:00
That's a very small portion of people, but
2:47:03
it might be just enough to do a
2:47:04
short promotion sometime early next year.
2:47:08
OK, that garbage man, Mitch.
2:47:10
We love you.
2:47:11
Great idea.
2:47:12
Excellent idea.
2:47:15
And even if you're not a homeschooler might
2:47:17
be pretty cool just to have one.
2:47:20
Hey, the trial is finally happening.
2:47:22
Will we find out?
2:47:24
Is there a roving bit in the middle?
2:47:26
After years of online attacks and malicious rumors,
2:47:29
10 people are on trial for sexy cyber
2:47:32
harassment against French First Lady Brigitte Macron.
2:47:35
Eight men and two women are accused of
2:47:37
making false online claims about Brigitte Macron's sexual
2:47:41
and gender identity and suggesting that her 24
2:47:44
year age gap with her husband, Emmanuel Macron,
2:47:47
made her a pedophile.
2:47:48
If convicted, the defendants aged from 41 to
2:47:52
60 years old each face up to two
2:47:54
years in prison.
2:47:55
Among them is Aurelien Poisson Atlan, a publicist
2:47:59
known online as Zoé Sagan.
2:48:01
Before his account was suspended, he was popular
2:48:03
within conspiracy theory circles on X.
2:48:06
The first lady has since taken the case
2:48:08
to the country's highest appeals court.
2:48:11
The French case is separate from a defamation
2:48:13
lawsuit that the presidential couple filed in a
2:48:16
Delaware court against the far-right podcaster Candice
2:48:19
Owens, making similar unsubstantiated claims about Brigitte Macron.
2:48:23
Owens produced series titled Becoming Brigitte, obsessing over
2:48:27
the first lady's gender.
2:48:29
The Macron's say that they plan to present
2:48:30
scientific and photographic evidence to prove that the
2:48:34
first lady is biologically a woman.
2:48:39
Scientific and photographic evidence.
2:48:42
I find it fascinating that certain people, and
2:48:46
I would put Big Mike in this category,
2:48:49
are targets of this sort of, it's a
2:48:53
smear campaign, whether she's a male or not.
2:48:58
It's a smear campaign of some sort, and
2:49:00
it's very interesting how it catches on, because
2:49:03
you could probably say the same.
2:49:05
I mean, I think that Spanberger, whatever her
2:49:07
name is, she looks like a dude to
2:49:09
me.
2:49:09
The one running for governor of Virginia.
2:49:12
You need to move to Fredericksburg with that
2:49:15
talk.
2:49:16
Everybody's a dude, according to the people here.
2:49:19
Taylor Swift is a dude.
2:49:21
Taylor Swift's a dude.
2:49:22
Another dude.
2:49:23
Barbara Bush was a dude.
2:49:25
Over and over again.
2:49:27
Yeah, I think there's some, but it's like,
2:49:31
why do some of them, why do some
2:49:32
of these assertions catch on and other ones
2:49:36
don't?
2:49:37
Well, do you have any theories?
2:49:39
No, I have no theories on this.
2:49:41
I think because it's just funny.
2:49:43
It's funny.
2:49:44
Well, it is.
2:49:44
There's something funny about it.
2:49:46
Yeah, it's funny.
2:49:46
But it's like, I think there has to
2:49:50
be something about the person who's being targeted
2:49:53
that is at some level someone that's easy
2:49:58
to dislike.
2:50:00
Now, people love Michelle Obama.
2:50:03
Not everybody.
2:50:04
Not everybody.
2:50:05
And I think she might be easy to
2:50:07
dislike.
2:50:09
Yeah.
2:50:10
Well, I mean, they said the same about
2:50:12
Barack.
2:50:12
Well, with Barack Obama, see, he never...
2:50:15
Well, maybe it's more of an insult to
2:50:17
the guy.
2:50:18
Maybe the target is really Barack and Macron
2:50:22
himself.
2:50:25
So it's an insult to them.
2:50:28
Well, Barack, I mean, man, but I think
2:50:30
that was, you know...
2:50:31
I mean, there's a lot of stuff about
2:50:32
him being gay.
2:50:33
I mean, that seems to be pretty much
2:50:36
true.
2:50:37
And because of that...
2:50:38
Well, we don't know that.
2:50:39
Well, we don't know that.
2:50:40
But yet, Larry...
2:50:42
What was his name?
2:50:43
Yeah, Larry, Larry.
2:50:44
He's dead now.
2:50:45
I think he died.
2:50:46
Larry Sinclair, who detailed it very...
2:50:49
And Love Boy or whatever his name was.
2:50:52
He was actually working in the White House.
2:50:53
Remember that guy?
2:50:54
What was his name?
2:50:55
Love Boy.
2:50:56
It was like a lover.
2:50:57
No, no.
2:50:57
His last name was Love.
2:50:59
It was...
2:50:59
Yeah, it was Love.
2:51:00
And he's a little, very feminine black man.
2:51:04
Yes, yes.
2:51:05
Well, he wasn't little.
2:51:06
He was a big dude.
2:51:07
He wasn't a small...
2:51:08
Oh, I thought he was a little petite
2:51:09
male.
2:51:10
No, no, no, no, no, no.
2:51:13
Yeah, but I don't know.
2:51:15
I mean, why does it stick?
2:51:17
Because we're obsessed with nonsense.
2:51:19
How about that?
2:51:19
We are.
2:51:20
Because that's just...
2:51:21
That's true.
2:51:21
We're obsessed with nonsense.
2:51:23
That's just who we are as a people.
2:51:24
We're Americans.
2:51:25
That's what we do.
2:51:27
We go crazy.
2:51:29
Well, it'll be interesting to see how Candace
2:51:31
Owens' lawsuit goes.
2:51:34
I don't know why she's on that kick.
2:51:37
Well, I disagree with the report.
2:51:39
It was not unsubstantiated.
2:51:41
She had a lot of substance to her
2:51:44
reporting.
2:51:45
A lot.
2:51:49
Recently, that little bit came out about her
2:51:52
name being registered as Jean-Michel.
2:51:55
Unless she pulls down her pants in court,
2:51:58
it'll never be resolved.
2:52:02
So let's go back to the food stamp
2:52:10
issue.
2:52:11
Okay, is this your last bit?
2:52:12
I want to play this clip because this
2:52:14
is an interesting clip.
2:52:15
This is a Florida, this is a fraud
2:52:17
clip, which is a WTF clip of sorts.
2:52:24
Blocked it.
2:52:25
Sorry.
2:52:26
I'm sorry.
2:52:27
I'm fumbling my cues.
2:52:30
Walked in one by one.
2:52:31
Some hung their heads.
2:52:33
Others wore their feelings right there on their
2:52:34
T-shirts.
2:52:35
Today, the Manatee County Sheriff's Office announced an
2:52:38
undercover operation they've been working on for months
2:52:40
resulted in more than 100 arrest warrants and
2:52:44
close to 40 arrests.
2:52:46
This is a huge problem.
2:52:47
And we're like one of maybe three or
2:52:49
four law enforcement agencies in the state of
2:52:51
Florida that have decided to do something about
2:52:53
this.
2:52:54
And it has to do with just that.
2:52:56
Meal tickets in the form of EBT cards
2:52:58
for low-income individuals being fraudulently used.
2:53:01
One part of the investigation centered around Gerald
2:53:03
Millis, a local restaurant owner who police say
2:53:06
purchased EBT cards from people for 50 to
2:53:09
60 cents on the dollar and then stocked
2:53:12
his local Pizza Pros restaurant with food he
2:53:14
bought using those cards.
2:53:17
We were able to determine that he used
2:53:20
53 different EBT cards at Sam's Club.
2:53:24
Police say 55 people were also caught illegally
2:53:28
selling their EBT cards to undercover detectives.
2:53:31
A couple of them said, I'm headed to
2:53:33
go get some rock cocaine.
2:53:35
A beyond frustrating reality for taxpayers who today
2:53:38
learned their hard-earned money is being misused.
2:53:42
Yeah, all kinds of social security has always
2:53:46
been controversial.
2:53:47
Yeah, this whole thing's...
2:53:48
But what's interesting about this clip is this
2:53:51
clip is from 2013.
2:53:52
Mm-hmm.
2:53:54
Yeah, oh yeah.
2:53:55
And I looked into this Manatee County stuff.
2:53:58
They did this same staying operation in 2012.
2:54:02
They did it in 2013 and I can't
2:54:04
find any evidence of them ever doing it
2:54:06
again.
2:54:07
Something changed.
2:54:09
And I think they were...
2:54:10
Somebody came up to them and said, you
2:54:12
got to stop doing this.
2:54:15
These cards are used...
2:54:16
Yes, people are buying crack with them and
2:54:18
whatever.
2:54:20
This is what we want.
2:54:21
Well, how about this?
2:54:25
Um...
2:54:26
When...
2:54:26
Because in the...
2:54:28
I think the one big beautiful bill, I
2:54:31
believe that there has been a slash of
2:54:34
SNAP benefits, particularly qualification, which the states have
2:54:37
to do just like the Medicare benefits.
2:54:41
It's like, hey, we got to clamp down
2:54:43
on this.
2:54:44
There's a lot of fraud going on.
2:54:45
We got to figure this out.
2:54:47
But it is my suspicion that the big
2:54:52
box stores like Walmart, Target and others, who
2:54:56
also sell food, that their prices are just
2:55:00
like insurance, that they're kind of artificially inflated
2:55:04
because of this money, just the way like
2:55:07
tuition.
2:55:08
Now, once we got student loans handled by
2:55:12
the government, tuitions went through the roof.
2:55:14
Once we got Obamacare, which has subsidies for
2:55:19
health insurance, insurance goes through the roof.
2:55:22
You have this prolonged EBT, SNAP, which is
2:55:26
going directly into mainly Walmart big box stores.
2:55:30
It may actually artificially have inflated the price
2:55:33
and it may become a problem for them.
2:55:35
Does that make any sense?
2:55:38
Well, I don't know if the prices are
2:55:39
higher at Walmart, but the fact that the
2:55:43
stores are the target, in fact, the people
2:55:46
complaining about losing their SNAP benefits are all
2:55:50
mentioning they're going to rob from Walmart with
2:55:54
very few exceptions.
2:55:55
It's always Walmart that's the target of the
2:55:57
robbery and Walmart's taking action, which we mentioned
2:56:00
earlier in the show.
2:56:03
It's possible that there's some collusion going on,
2:56:06
but it seems to me that, and maybe
2:56:09
if it wasn't for these cars, Walmart wouldn't
2:56:11
even be in business.
2:56:12
That's always possible.
2:56:13
And there are examples of people who've talked
2:56:17
about this one woman who was on, I
2:56:19
don't have the clip.
2:56:19
I get too many of these clips, you
2:56:21
get irked.
2:56:23
Some woman complaining and she's...
2:56:26
A lot of these women are bragging about
2:56:29
how they're using this system.
2:56:30
And one of them says, I bought a
2:56:31
rice cooker using the EBT card, which I
2:56:36
think is actually not a bad idea.
2:56:38
But at the same time, it's supposed to
2:56:40
be for food only, but she managed to
2:56:42
do it and she did it through either
2:56:43
Walmart or Costco.
2:56:45
I'll bet it's Target, because Target started selling
2:56:47
food, which I always thought was strange.
2:56:50
Target didn't use to sell food.
2:56:52
Now they have a whole grocery division.
2:56:56
That's true.
2:56:57
That's an interesting point and you're right.
2:57:00
And Target's never to me seem like a
2:57:02
food store.
2:57:03
And every single time I've been in a
2:57:05
Target, it's empty.
2:57:07
I've never seen it except on Black Friday,
2:57:09
but I don't go, I don't know Black
2:57:11
Friday, but it always seems empty to me.
2:57:14
I'm like, how do these people stay in
2:57:15
business?
2:57:18
Never seems busy.
2:57:19
Never seems busy.
2:57:20
There's something fishy about it.
2:57:22
We're on the case.
2:57:23
Your no agenda detectives are on the case.
2:57:26
Yeah, we won't figure it out either.
2:57:28
But the fact that they had this scam
2:57:33
and this reports from 2013 and there's nothing
2:57:37
since, and it could have been, obviously this
2:57:40
is the way you go.
2:57:42
You're some poor guy and you got a
2:57:44
card that you get somehow and you can
2:57:47
sell it for 50 cents on the dollar
2:57:49
and have some cash, which is king by
2:57:53
the way.
2:57:55
It just has to be going on everywhere.
2:57:59
Give me one last clip, Johnny boy, and
2:58:00
then we'll get out of here.
2:58:01
We got a lot of fun stuff to
2:58:02
do.
2:58:03
We've got peace prizes to hand out.
2:58:06
We've got great AI end of show mixes
2:58:09
except for Oystein Berger, who is the real
2:58:12
deal.
2:58:13
He's the real deal.
2:58:14
Just like you, by the way.
2:58:15
He's the real deal.
2:58:16
And of course your tip of the day.
2:58:19
And the first time I'll be reading the
2:58:21
donor's $50 and above, I'm very excited about
2:58:23
my new task.
2:58:26
Well, let's just go to shutdown blather on
2:58:28
NTD.
2:58:29
The Republican leadership thanked essential workers who are
2:58:33
still on the job without pay.
2:58:35
They pointed out that the largest union of
2:58:37
federal workers, as well as the National Association
2:58:39
of Air Traffic Controllers, have come out this
2:58:42
week urging Democrats to pass the short-term
2:58:45
funding bill.
2:58:46
Meanwhile, Democratic leadership is accusing Republicans of refusing
2:58:50
affordable healthcare for Americans.
2:58:52
They say Republicans, including President Trump, should come
2:58:55
to the negotiating table on healthcare.
2:58:58
Oops, I have a request from our air
2:59:02
traffic controller producers.
2:59:04
We have a lot of them, which I
2:59:07
always love that.
2:59:08
I've never actually spoken to one on the
2:59:11
radio, at least not one that's going, hey,
2:59:14
hey, in the morning to you.
2:59:16
They do that with each other and other
2:59:18
pilots.
2:59:19
ITM they say.
2:59:20
ITM, yeah.
2:59:21
We were supposed to go on vacation for
2:59:25
five days in three weeks from now, just
2:59:28
before Thanksgiving with some friends of ours.
2:59:32
And the women folk are very worried that
2:59:37
we will not be able to return or
2:59:40
that there may be an issue with flights
2:59:42
or that it's just going to be basically
2:59:43
a nightmare.
2:59:44
Yeah, I think they're probably correct.
2:59:46
So there's consideration of canceling said vacation, which
2:59:50
I'm okay with.
2:59:51
I mean, I'm happy.
2:59:52
You can always go on a vacation.
2:59:53
You can always take a vacation.
2:59:57
You can always, yeah, I mean, we're podcasters.
3:00:00
We can do whatever we want.
3:00:01
You can take a vacation whenever you want.
3:00:03
We can do a vacation whenever we feel
3:00:04
like it.
3:00:05
I'd like to know what our ATC producers
3:00:09
are feeling.
3:00:09
Like, will there be a real, I mean,
3:00:11
I'm seeing news reports, but you know, who
3:00:13
knows?
3:00:14
So let me know.
3:00:15
Let me know what you think.
3:00:16
I think it's technically illegal for ATC to
3:00:21
not show up for work, but there's sick
3:00:23
days and there's all kinds of stuff.
3:00:25
Yeah, they can take, they have time out.
3:00:27
When you work for the government, you always
3:00:29
build up a lot of free time.
3:00:31
And they deserve it, by the way.
3:00:32
They deserve it because it's a tough job.
3:00:34
It's a challenging job.
3:00:35
In fact, I'm too old to be an
3:00:37
air traffic controller.
3:00:38
I found out.
3:00:39
And I'm like, yeah, I'll step in.
3:00:41
I can talk on the radio.
3:00:42
I can step in.
3:00:44
I can step in.
3:00:45
Come on, November Delta.
3:00:46
Hey, 4147, you got a bogey on your
3:00:49
left.
3:00:50
Bogey.
3:01:04
That would be legendary.
3:01:06
You got a bogey at three o'clock.
3:01:08
Hey, here's the rest of the people who
3:01:10
supported us for show.
3:01:11
18, 12, $50 and above.
3:01:13
We kick it off with Sir Horatio.
3:01:15
Hey, there he is.
3:01:16
He's in London and he's still allowed to
3:01:17
listen to this show.
3:01:18
That's amazing.
3:01:20
$180.
3:01:20
What about Dame Janet?
3:01:22
You just skipped right over her.
3:01:23
This is new to me.
3:01:24
This is a whole new thing.
3:01:25
It's very difficult.
3:01:26
Dame Janet and Sir Jeff, I'm sorry, from
3:01:28
Watkinsville, Georgia.
3:01:30
$180.
3:01:31
This is a leftover from our 18th anniversary.
3:01:33
Happy 18th year.
3:01:34
Now you can vote.
3:01:35
Thank you very much.
3:01:37
That's Dame Janet, Sir Jeff, aka Island Dog.
3:01:40
There's Sir Horatio.
3:01:41
I was excited because we got someone from
3:01:43
the UK and he's listened to the GSC
3:01:45
and NOAA Agenda most of the last 18
3:01:48
years.
3:01:48
And he is our knight, Sir Horatio of
3:01:50
Wandsworth.
3:01:51
Legacy 3rd LLC in Dallas, Texas, $155.
3:01:55
And there's a knight, James Kashin II.
3:01:59
And so I'm going to read his note.
3:02:02
New knight, best price.
3:02:04
As a fanatic of the NOAA Agenda show
3:02:05
and Tchaikovsky's music.
3:02:07
Ah, there he is.
3:02:08
I've donated $18.12. Small jingler plus.
3:02:10
Just play Tchaikovsky's $18.12 Overture.
3:02:13
It's only about 15 minutes and change.
3:02:15
Ah, so this is why he sent me
3:02:16
the big finale.
3:02:18
Thank you.
3:02:18
Round table requests change up.
3:02:20
Rentboys and Riesling.
3:02:21
All right.
3:02:22
We know what you're into, James Kashin II.
3:02:25
And his knight name will be James Kashin
3:02:27
II, Knight of the Orange Lambda.
3:02:30
You got it.
3:02:31
Happy 1812.
3:02:32
John Hoiber in Bristol, Tennessee, $105.35. We
3:02:37
got Sir Mike from San Diego.
3:02:39
And he sent us $105.34. He has
3:02:43
a rather long note.
3:02:44
I'm not going to read that one.
3:02:45
Ian Field, $100.
3:02:47
Connie Walls.
3:02:48
That sounds like a new name.
3:02:51
$100.
3:02:52
Oh, she's Connie.
3:02:53
Connie Walls-Leusink.
3:02:54
She's from Hagenoord, the Netherlands.
3:02:56
I live your shows and I love what
3:02:58
you do.
3:02:58
Thank you.
3:03:00
Zachary Shuta in Charlotte, North Carolina, $100.
3:03:04
Kellen Prince, Hollywood, Florida, $100.
3:03:07
Up with karma, down with douchebags.
3:03:09
There he is.
3:03:10
Kevin McLaughlin, Concord, North Carolina, $8008, the boob
3:03:13
donation.
3:03:14
He loves boobs and he says, PSA, check
3:03:16
your pumpkins.
3:03:17
It's still Cancer Awareness Month.
3:03:20
Thank you, Kevin, for the public service announcement.
3:03:22
Jack Schofield, Yankee Town, Florida, $71.32. Thank
3:03:26
you for all the great episodes.
3:03:27
$6.7, $6.7. Roe, R-O from
3:03:31
Cumming, Georgia, $70.61. Universal Ostrich Farms.
3:03:36
They're killing the ostriches.
3:03:37
Good to know.
3:03:39
Henk van Eldik.
3:03:40
He sounds like he's in the Netherlands.
3:03:43
He sends us the $6.7. Are these
3:03:45
$6.7 donations with fees added?
3:03:49
I don't think so.
3:03:50
He says $6.7, $70.61, $6.7.
3:03:53
Congratulations on the 18th.
3:03:55
Sir Valen of Lincoln, Kayaud, from Lincoln, another
3:04:00
Brit.
3:04:01
Gents, this Halloween will mark my 15th lap
3:04:04
around the sun.
3:04:05
Please accept my donation of $6.7 plus
3:04:07
fees.
3:04:07
These are $6.7s. It's better not to
3:04:10
do the fees in that case.
3:04:11
I mean, it costs us money, but then
3:04:13
it's not as funny if I don't catch
3:04:15
it.
3:04:15
John Alberini with a $6.7 plus fees.
3:04:18
Tyler Darrington, Las Vegas, Nevada, $6.7, $6
3:04:21
.7. Sir Latte, Bremerton, Washington, $6.7, $6
3:04:26
.7. This is catching on, John.
3:04:29
The $6.7 thing is like, it's good
3:04:31
for us.
3:04:33
Craig Kohler, Evansville, Indiana, $6.502. Lydia Terry
3:04:37
Dominelli, Rochester, New Hampshire, $6.14. End of
3:04:41
the month is tough right now.
3:04:43
Well, thank you, Lydia.
3:04:44
We appreciate that you thought of us anyway.
3:04:47
Nathan Gwin, Jackson, Tennessee, $52.72. That's probably
3:04:51
$50 plus fees.
3:04:52
Harold McCoy, Old Monroe, Missouri, $52.72. Stephen
3:04:56
Nehring, $52.25, parts unknown.
3:04:59
And here are the 50s.
3:05:00
Benjamin Ryan from Alliance, Ohio.
3:05:02
Aaron Weisgerber in Bend, Oregon.
3:05:05
Richard Gardner from, I think he's Sir Richard
3:05:08
Gardner, $50.
3:05:09
Bobby Bowe, Bluegrass, Iowa, $50.
3:05:12
Terrence Clark from Jacksonville, Florida, $50.
3:05:14
Nathan Knoll from Nederland, Texas, $50.
3:05:17
And finally, wrapping up our list of 50s,
3:05:20
Joshua Johnson from Omaha, Nebraska.
3:05:22
Thank you very much to these producers and
3:05:24
everybody else who came in under $50, which
3:05:26
we will not mention for reasons of anonymity.
3:05:28
And again, thank you to our executive producers
3:05:30
of episode 1812.
3:05:33
You too can support the best podcast in
3:05:35
the universe with any amount you feel like.
3:05:37
It's value for value.
3:05:38
You get value.
3:05:39
You say, hey, this is worth this much
3:05:41
to me.
3:05:41
I'm going to send this back.
3:05:43
That's how it works.
3:05:44
We always will thank you.
3:05:45
And we are very appreciative.
3:05:47
Knowagendadonations.com.
3:05:48
Consider setting up a recurring donation.
3:05:50
Any amount, any frequency, knowagendadonations.com.
3:06:18
We have two Peace Prizes.
3:06:23
And these Peace Prizes are, of course, extremely
3:06:26
important because they are in recognition of international
3:06:29
peace that you prize, courtesy of the Know
3:06:33
Agenda show.
3:06:34
And these Peace Prizes today go to Momentum
3:06:37
Finance LLC and the Mayor of Cyprus.
3:06:41
Go to knowagendarings.com so you'll be able
3:06:43
to see your fantastic Peace Prize.
3:06:46
And you will tell us where to send
3:06:48
it and what name to put on it.
3:06:50
Thank you for supporting peace and the Know
3:06:52
Agenda show.
3:06:53
We have one knight to bring up on
3:06:56
the podium today.
3:06:57
If you can grab your blade for me.
3:06:59
Here you go.
3:06:59
Oh, very good.
3:07:04
James Kashin II.
3:07:05
You, sir, are about to become a knight
3:07:07
of the Know Agenda roundtable thanks to your
3:07:09
aggregate support of $1,000 or more.
3:07:12
And I'm very proud to pronounce the KB,
3:07:14
Sir James Kashin II, Knight of the Orange
3:07:17
Lambda.
3:07:18
And he wanted not hookers and blow.
3:07:20
He wanted red boys and Riesling.
3:07:22
Also on deck for you and the other
3:07:24
knights and dames here is Taquitos and Tequila.
3:07:27
We've got Harlots and Halgal.
3:07:28
We've got Redheads and Ryes, Organic Macaroni and
3:07:31
Plasticizers, Beer and Blunts, Brazilian Javi and Tequila
3:07:33
Shasta.
3:07:34
We've got Rubenes, Luminum Rosé, Geisha and Sake,
3:07:37
Vodka, Vanilla, Bargain, Suburban, Sparkling Cider, Escorts, Ginger
3:07:40
Ale and Gerbils, Fresh Milk and Babbleman.
3:07:42
And as always, we've got some mutton and
3:07:44
meat on deck right there for you.
3:07:46
Go to knowagendarings.com.
3:07:47
Let us know what size your finger is.
3:07:50
There's a ring sizing guide on that website.
3:07:52
And as always, it comes accompanied with some
3:07:55
wax.
3:07:55
Because it is a signet ring, you can
3:07:57
seal your important correspondence with it and a
3:07:59
certificate of authenticity.
3:08:00
And welcome to the roundtable, our brand new
3:08:03
knights.
3:08:06
KnowAgenda Meetups!
3:08:11
That's right, the KnowAgenda Meetups.
3:08:13
You can organize one near you.
3:08:16
You can go to one that's been organized
3:08:17
near you.
3:08:18
You can find everything at knowagendameetups.com.
3:08:20
All we ask for is that you have
3:08:22
a good time.
3:08:23
And remember that this connection brings you protection.
3:08:25
These people will be the first responders in
3:08:27
any emergency you have.
3:08:28
And they are global.
3:08:29
Here is the Meetup Report from Berlin, Deutschland.
3:08:32
Hello, John.
3:08:33
Hello, Adam.
3:08:34
Tal from Berlin here.
3:08:36
We have five people, including me, who showed
3:08:40
up for this Berlin Meetup.
3:08:43
Went much better than the last time around.
3:08:45
Really lovely people.
3:08:47
We've had all sorts of interesting, engaging conversation.
3:08:50
We've already started a signal group where we'll
3:08:53
spam each other, I'm sure.
3:08:56
And I'll pass it along.
3:08:58
Be kind to one another.
3:08:59
And happy birthday.
3:09:02
In the morning.
3:09:03
In the morning, Adam and John.
3:09:05
He's Augusto de Britalian, also Secretary General of
3:09:08
Sao Paulo.
3:09:09
And I'm happy to meet awake people that
3:09:13
are here like in the zombie land of
3:09:16
Berlin.
3:09:17
So yeah, that's it.
3:09:21
In the morning.
3:09:21
All right.
3:09:22
You forgot to add your server.
3:09:23
That would have been fun to hear a
3:09:25
German server.
3:09:25
But we'll let you slide on that one.
3:09:27
I'm glad that there's five people there.
3:09:29
And, you know, let us know what you
3:09:30
think of Naomi.
3:09:31
That would be good to know.
3:09:33
Somehow, this one got lost.
3:09:34
This is the 68th meetup of the Flight
3:09:36
of the No Agendas.
3:09:37
Leo Bravo, diligently hosting these meetups in Los
3:09:40
Angeles.
3:09:41
Hi, everybody.
3:09:41
It's Leo Bravo.
3:09:42
I'm here with the crew.
3:09:43
I'm passing the phone around for, you know,
3:09:46
their greetings.
3:09:47
Hey, John and Adam.
3:09:48
Sir Liam Kimphopop.
3:09:49
Please be nice to each other.
3:09:51
Hey, guys, this is Slick Rick.
3:09:52
More trains.
3:09:54
In the morning.
3:09:55
Trains good, planes bad.
3:09:57
This is Lady Chanaka of California, the Peaberry.
3:09:59
Stephen Crowder is one of the goats.
3:10:01
Changed my mind.
3:10:04
In the morning.
3:10:08
Yeah, Leo Bravo always packs them in, man.
3:10:14
There's a lot of producers in Los Angeles.
3:10:16
I always appreciate that.
3:10:18
That's nice.
3:10:19
We have a couple of meetups taking place.
3:10:21
One today, actually, the North Georgia Now quarterly
3:10:24
starts at six o'clock in Alpharetta, Georgia
3:10:26
at Cherry Street Brewing.
3:10:28
Tomorrow, the seventh amygdala checkup in Leiden, the
3:10:31
Netherlands, 8.03 p.m. at Dranklokaal 1650
3:10:37
in Leiden, the Netherlands.
3:10:38
And on Sunday, our next show day, the
3:10:41
Anybody Out There meetup, two o'clock at
3:10:43
Ska Brewery in Durango, Colorado.
3:10:46
And also on Sunday, the Indy NA tri
3:10:49
-state short and long barrel safety meetup.
3:10:52
Two o'clock.
3:10:53
This sounds like the long, short and long.
3:10:56
Are they going to do some shooting over
3:10:57
there?
3:10:58
I'm sure we'll get a report from Day
3:11:01
Manette.
3:11:01
Of course, Day Maria and Sir Mark of
3:11:03
the Greenwood who are organizing that.
3:11:07
Plenty of meetups still to come in November,
3:11:09
including international ones such as Zurich, Switzerland and
3:11:12
what?
3:11:13
No Netherlands anymore.
3:11:14
OK, so please go to noagentomeetups.com.
3:11:17
Find a meetup near you.
3:11:18
You need to witness this at least once.
3:11:20
I guarantee you, you'll want to go back.
3:11:22
And if you can't find one near you,
3:11:24
start one yourself.
3:11:24
Noagentomeetups.com.
3:11:26
Easy and always a partay.
3:11:47
Stay tuned for some dynamite in the show
3:11:50
mixes soon to be featured on our on
3:11:53
our stream.
3:11:54
I haven't really gotten a good name for
3:11:56
the stream yet.
3:11:57
Here's some, I got some examples here.
3:11:59
One will come.
3:12:00
I got V for V, value for vibes,
3:12:03
generation jams.
3:12:04
I think J1000.
3:12:05
Do we, let me check.
3:12:07
Hold on, I think I gave that one
3:12:08
up.
3:12:10
Well, it was a .fm, it's expensive.
3:12:13
The .fms are like a hundred bucks.
3:12:17
J1000, oh, I have, oh, do I still
3:12:19
have it?
3:12:21
No, I don't.
3:12:23
I don't.
3:12:23
K1, that's not really a good name.
3:12:28
You know, if there's something we had, the
3:12:33
music matrix, No Agenda Beats, the best music
3:12:40
in the year.
3:12:42
No Agenda Beats should be a recipe.
3:12:45
Hey, before we get to that, we do
3:12:47
have John's tip of the day and a
3:12:48
couple of ISOs.
3:12:49
I see you only brought one to the,
3:12:50
to the party today.
3:12:51
Yeah, I brought one.
3:12:52
I have four, so I'll play mine and
3:12:55
we'll see what you came up with.
3:12:56
Here's my first one.
3:12:57
It was a huge success.
3:13:01
Here's the next one.
3:13:02
It's just totally freaky.
3:13:05
Okay, and this one?
3:13:06
This isn't real.
3:13:07
This cannot be real.
3:13:09
Kind of like that one.
3:13:10
It's cute.
3:13:11
And then.
3:13:12
These people are deeply, deeply weird.
3:13:15
Come on, man.
3:13:16
Come on.
3:13:16
That's a good one.
3:13:17
No, that's no good.
3:13:17
It's just disparaging.
3:13:19
I don't think that's good.
3:13:20
Disparaging for the show.
3:13:21
All right.
3:13:21
What do you have?
3:13:23
I got the classic.
3:13:25
Okay, here we go.
3:13:26
Yep.
3:13:27
The show is too long.
3:13:28
And of course, that is the winner.
3:13:29
But before we get to the long part,
3:13:31
here's John's tip of the day.
3:13:39
Yeah, the show is too long.
3:13:43
Okay, this is a very interesting tip.
3:13:45
This and anyone who adopts this process and
3:13:48
starts using these things will forever use them.
3:13:51
That's the way to go.
3:13:53
It's called.
3:13:54
And there's a couple brands, but the one
3:13:56
I'm going to cite is the WAGO, W
3:13:58
-A-G-O.
3:13:59
And I'm talking about the WAGO lever nuts.
3:14:02
Lever nuts?
3:14:03
Which is also called a WAGO lever connector.
3:14:07
And these are little devices that you know
3:14:09
how when you splice wires, you tend to
3:14:12
take the two wires.
3:14:13
You got two wires.
3:14:14
You want to slice them together.
3:14:15
You put them against each other and you
3:14:16
twist and twist and turn them around.
3:14:18
Then you put some electrical tape around it
3:14:20
and you've got your wires.
3:14:22
Wait, don't you have one of those orange
3:14:24
things you twist on top of it?
3:14:26
You could, but it's nothing compared to these
3:14:29
little orange things, which are you open the
3:14:32
levers, you stick a wire in one side,
3:14:33
a wire in the other, flip the levers
3:14:35
down.
3:14:35
The thing's solid, rock solid.
3:14:38
It's one of the greatest little, for anyone
3:14:40
who works with wiring, and is not a
3:14:43
pro, and you don't want to solder the
3:14:46
wires.
3:14:46
This is the way to go.
3:14:47
It's a very interesting product.
3:14:49
A very good product.
3:14:50
Now, what are they called again?
3:14:51
The lever nuts?
3:14:53
W-A-G-O lever nut.
3:14:56
Lever nuts.
3:14:57
I want to take a look at this
3:14:58
product.
3:14:59
WAGO lever nut series 220.
3:15:02
Oh, okay.
3:15:05
And now, when have you recently been putting
3:15:10
wires together?
3:15:12
When you have a fixture in the ceiling,
3:15:16
this is the perfect time to use them,
3:15:18
because once you use, because you got wires,
3:15:20
you got to deal with over your head
3:15:23
and the ceiling.
3:15:24
No, no, no.
3:15:24
You want these things.
3:15:25
Oh, this is good.
3:15:27
Oh, wow.
3:15:29
They even have the 221 series for hazardous
3:15:32
locations.
3:15:34
And the thing is that these things are
3:15:35
also built like little Legos, so they can
3:15:38
click together.
3:15:40
That is what I would call an outstanding
3:15:42
tip of the day.
3:15:44
Gentlemen, find them all at tipoftheday.net.
3:15:58
Good tip, John.
3:16:00
Good tip.
3:16:02
Tipoftheday.net is turning out to be quite
3:16:04
the resource for people who like stuff.
3:16:08
You like stuff, go there.
3:16:10
And I'm on my second bottle of Robert
3:16:13
Mondavi, and I'm loving it.
3:16:16
Another fantastic tip of the day.
3:16:19
It's all good.
3:16:20
I love it.
3:16:21
You're not drinking during the show.
3:16:24
No, I'm not, but it's about to start.
3:16:28
And I'll start during Planet Rage as Darren
3:16:32
O'Neill and Larry with the deep voice
3:16:36
pick up the No Agenda pieces and rage
3:16:40
out together.
3:16:41
It's good.
3:16:42
It's up next on noagendastream.com End of
3:16:44
show mixes.
3:16:45
Sir Joe Ho, we've got Clip Custodian Neil
3:16:48
Jones, Oystein Berger with a classic and original,
3:16:52
and Bri bringing you a kind of a
3:16:54
mix of a little bit of Halloween-type
3:16:56
vibes.
3:16:57
And I'm coming to you from the heart
3:16:59
of the Texas Hill Country where everybody's a
3:17:01
dude.
3:17:03
Fredericksburg.
3:17:03
In the morning, everybody.
3:17:04
I'm Adam Curry.
3:17:06
And from Northern Silicon Valley, going to remind
3:17:08
everybody the next show, we have a time
3:17:10
change.
3:17:11
We're going back to regular standard time.
3:17:13
I'm John C.
3:17:14
DeMora.
3:17:14
That's right.
3:17:15
Listen up, Europeans.
3:17:16
Remember us at noagendadonations.com until Sunday.
3:17:20
Adios, mofos.
3:17:22
Hui, hui.
3:17:23
And such.
3:17:24
Both Bill and I are deeply concerned.
3:17:28
We're deeply concerned.
3:17:30
Deeply concerning reports.
3:17:33
Reports are coming in.
3:17:35
They might be true.
3:17:37
They might be trending.
3:17:38
We're deeply concerned.
3:17:41
We're deeply concerned.
3:17:43
Experts are uncertain.
3:17:45
But the concern is never ending.
3:17:48
We're all deeply concerned.
3:17:50
Deeply concerned.
3:17:52
Deeply concerned.
3:17:53
It's deeply concerning.
3:17:56
As an American, we're deeply concerned with the
3:17:58
direction of our nation.
3:17:59
Deeply concerned.
3:18:02
We've reached out for comment.
3:18:04
I'm deeply concerned about the ethical implication.
3:18:07
We've reviewed the footage.
3:18:09
Still concerned.
3:18:12
Calling it deeply concerning.
3:18:14
Deeply concerned.
3:18:16
But I was so deeply concerned about what
3:18:19
a Trump presidency might look like.
3:18:22
It's deeply concerning.
3:18:25
But I'm deeply concerned.
3:18:27
Why the masks?
3:18:30
Down on my face, face, face, face.
3:18:34
Two different dudes and then there's the guy
3:18:36
with the mask.
3:18:38
Or they all have masks, I don't know.
3:18:42
People have a hard time believing it, but
3:18:44
the mask thing is real.
3:18:49
I mean, there's real masks that will fool
3:18:52
you.
3:18:54
I got to hand it to you, kids.
3:18:59
Robert F.
3:19:01
Kennedy Jr. Not real.
3:19:07
Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates.
3:19:10
Not real!
3:19:15
Madam Vice President Kamala Harris.
3:19:20
She's not real!
3:19:25
Senator J.D. Vance.
3:19:28
You're not real!
3:19:33
California Democrat Adam Schiff.
3:19:36
Not real!
3:19:40
The mask thing is real.
3:19:53
The mask thing is real.
3:19:59
I just woke up from a scare.
3:20:07
Yes, it was a real nightmare.
3:20:12
Bombs dropping down everywhere.
3:20:22
Demonstrations were run by George Soros.
3:20:27
Politicians were crooked and hollow.
3:20:32
And every song on the radio were made
3:20:36
by AI.
3:20:37
Made by AI.
3:20:40
When the wars are ending, I'm gonna send
3:20:44
a text to you.
3:20:50
So get in the troll room, because our
3:20:54
time for fun is not through.
3:21:00
Let us log on just for a while.
3:21:06
And troll with a smile.
3:21:10
When the wars are ending, I'm gonna send
3:21:15
a text to you.
3:21:21
It's the witching hour and you should be
3:21:25
in bed.
3:21:25
The world is shut down, but you're working
3:21:29
instead.
3:21:30
When ink is dry, the wolves in the
3:21:36
capital are howling at the sky.
3:21:40
Our places with blood are our children.
3:21:46
With greetings for
3:22:07
your commercials on my show.
3:22:13
Spreading all
3:22:40
we keep our leg.
3:22:49
The best podcast in the
3:22:59
universe!
3:23:01
Adios, mofo.
3:23:02
Dvorak.org slash NA.
3:23:06
Yep, the show is too long.