0:00
Hey, Pachuco!
0:01
Adam Curry, John C.
0:03
DeVora.
0:04
It's Sunday, March 29th, 2026.
0:06
This is your award-winning Cuban Nation Media
0:07
Assassination Episode 1855.
0:10
This is no agenda.
0:13
Renaming the globe and broadcasting live from the
0:16
heart of the Texas Hill Country here in
0:18
FEMA Region No.
0:19
16 in the morning, everybody.
0:20
I'm Adam Curry.
0:22
And from the northern San Francisco Bay, Refinery
0:25
Row, where we had no kinks day.
0:28
I'm John C.
0:29
DeVora.
0:30
It's Craig Vaughn and Buzzkill.
0:32
In the morning!
0:34
You guys always have kinks day in San
0:37
Francisco.
0:38
No kinks.
0:39
No kinks, no kinks.
0:41
This was, this was...
0:44
It's so interesting.
0:45
I was just trying to read through, like,
0:48
people who were writing about it.
0:50
Of course, we have clips.
0:52
We do.
0:52
Yeah.
0:53
The big thing that the M5M was trying
0:57
to emphasize was this line.
1:00
These events, supported by 500 groups, with combined
1:04
revenues of $3 billion.
1:07
This is, you know, what is the point
1:10
of that?
1:12
They're trying to message something, like, this is
1:16
scary, powerful.
1:19
You know?
1:20
Did $2 billion go to Bruce Springsteen?
1:25
I, I, I don't, I have no clue.
1:29
It's good to have you here, John.
1:31
Well, thank you.
1:33
How are you feeling?
1:34
Terrible.
1:35
I feel terrible.
1:36
It's a miracle I could do this show.
1:37
Well, I'm, I'm actually quite surprised.
1:40
Are you sleeping at all, or is that
1:42
not...
1:43
Well, the sleeping is a problem, because you
1:45
kind of just doze off when you feel
1:47
like it.
1:48
But I will say this.
1:49
Like during the donation segment?
1:51
Yeah, that could happen.
1:53
It could happen.
1:54
Yeah, you will say this.
1:55
I will say this.
1:56
David Letterman had a quintuple.
1:58
Yes.
1:59
And he was on the stage five weeks
2:00
later.
2:01
Yeah.
2:02
Well, he is...
2:03
That ain't happening here.
2:04
He's a superstar.
2:05
In the past five weeks already.
2:07
No, no, he, that was five weeks after
2:10
the operation.
2:10
You've only had, the operation was 10 days
2:12
ago.
2:14
No, it was on the 6th.
2:16
Oh, wow.
2:16
Well, hurry up, will you?
2:18
Get your spark, man.
2:20
Here's a little overview of, this is from
2:23
Euronews.
2:24
Here's how the Europeans viewed our No King's
2:26
Day.
2:26
Millions of people took to the streets across
2:28
the United States to participate in the more
2:31
than 3,100 protests taking place against US
2:34
President Donald Trump.
2:36
The rallies denounced what they described as an
2:38
authoritarian style of governance by the incumbent administration,
2:42
their immigration stance, climate change denial, isolationist foreign
2:46
policy, and now, the war in Iran.
2:50
In New York, thousands gathered to protest against
2:53
sweeping immigration raids carried out by ICE and
2:56
called for their abolition.
2:58
The rallies even featured a surprise cameo from
3:00
New York native and Hollywood giant Robert De
3:03
Niro.
3:04
De Niro?
3:05
Protests also took place in the capital, Washington,
3:07
D.C., where hundreds gathered near the White
3:09
House demanding Trump's ouster.
3:11
It's the third time in less than a
3:13
year these protests, part of a US grassroots
3:16
movement called No Kings, take place.
3:19
The demonstrations spread across the pond where thousands
3:22
of Americans abroad and locals took part in
3:24
rallies across Europe.
3:26
They were protesting in London, No Kings, oops.
3:29
In Paris, protesters called for an end to
3:32
Trump's, quote, reckless, irresponsible, and endless wars.
3:36
And in the Italian capital, thousands marched calling
3:39
for a respective international law and demanding a
3:42
world free from wars.
3:43
Yeah.
3:44
I think the branding is off.
3:47
No Kings.
3:48
Just hate Trump.
3:49
That's all that it is.
3:51
Hate Trump.
3:52
Did you see the segment of the New
3:54
York protest that was literally communists with the
4:00
red flag?
4:02
No.
4:03
Yeah.
4:04
It must have been a couple thousand people.
4:06
Oh.
4:07
They had the flags, they had, you know,
4:09
and they had a bunch of jingles that
4:11
they would say about communism taking over.
4:14
And, you know, it's all kind of a
4:16
mixed bag of Zeds and maybe some millennials.
4:22
Well, I think the Zeds that are in
4:24
New York, and I have one, you know,
4:28
they all were promised a bunch of stuff
4:30
and they probably aren't paying attention that it's
4:33
kind of not happening.
4:35
It's like, well, we got to raise your
4:36
taxes, you know, raise taxes on property.
4:39
So you're probably, you know, probably not going
4:42
to freeze the rents.
4:43
So they haven't, they just haven't felt the
4:46
pain yet.
4:47
But, you know, the kids are happy.
4:49
They like their red flags.
4:51
Let them wave them for a little bit.
4:52
I'm not so bothered by it.
4:54
New York has always been New York.
4:57
They'll figure it out.
4:59
Were you shocked?
5:02
No, not at all.
5:04
I'm just surprised they came out so, so
5:07
blatantly.
5:08
Oh, no.
5:09
No, this is, but this has always been
5:11
the case.
5:12
We used to arrest people over it in
5:14
Hollywood.
5:14
And then we gave up that gambit.
5:17
I wasn't so cool to be calling people
5:19
communists and arresting them.
5:21
And so now they're rampant.
5:23
It doesn't, it doesn't work.
5:26
I did, I watched a fair bit of
5:28
it, the Minneapolis stuff, which was, oh man,
5:32
they had one crappy band after another.
5:35
It's like everybody who has a guitar and
5:38
has written a song was allowed to go
5:40
up on stage.
5:41
Like, oh, it was insufferable.
5:44
And then, of course, the great New Jersey
5:47
icon, Bruce Springsteen, takes the stage to confirm
5:53
all the lies.
5:54
Hello, Minnesota.
5:55
Woo!
5:58
All right.
6:00
Hey.
6:00
Hey.
6:01
It's turning into a beautiful day.
6:09
Well, this past winter, federal troops brought death
6:13
and terror to the streets of Minneapolis.
6:16
I just, this past winter, federal troops brought
6:20
death to the streets of Minnesota.
6:23
Well, they picked the wrong city.
6:26
Yeah.
6:26
Should have gone to Tom's River.
6:30
The power and the solidarity of the people
6:33
of Minneapolis and of Minnesota was an inspiration
6:37
to the entire country.
6:39
Your strength and your commitment told us that
6:42
this is still America.
6:46
Just not this little piece here, Bruce.
6:49
And this reactionary nightmare.
6:51
Oh.
6:52
And these invasions of American cities.
6:54
Invasions of America.
6:55
Bruce Springsteen, who has several hundred million dollars.
7:02
What happened to the guy?
7:04
I'd like to know myself.
7:06
Do you think it's toxoplasmosis?
7:11
It very well could be.
7:12
Something is going on here.
7:14
You will not stand.
7:16
You gave us hope.
7:18
You gave us courage.
7:19
And for those who gave their lives, Rene
7:24
Good, mother of three, brutally murdered.
7:27
Murdered.
7:27
Alex Pretty, VA nurse, executed by ICE.
7:31
Executed.
7:32
Shot in the back and left to die
7:34
in the street without even the decency of
7:37
our lawless government investigating their deaths.
7:41
What?
7:43
Their bravery, their sacrifice, and their names will
7:48
not be forgotten.
7:50
You just can't.
7:50
It's like the Howard Stern sickness.
7:54
Yeah.
7:55
And it's bizarre.
7:57
They could be cats.
7:59
It's got to be cats.
8:01
It's just, it makes no sense.
8:05
He's off the rails.
8:08
Well, he's not even on rails.
8:10
It's just like, Bruce, come on, man.
8:12
I think he's done.
8:16
Well, he's been done for a while.
8:18
It's just so disappointing.
8:20
I mean, I'm from Jersey.
8:21
This is not the guy we used to
8:23
know.
8:24
Well, New Jersey's turned blue, so that kind
8:26
of makes sense.
8:28
But the craziest was Jane Fonda.
8:31
And she's, I mean, what is No King's
8:33
supposed to be about?
8:36
I mean, was it even about ICE initially?
8:39
I can't remember.
8:40
But the first No King's was about nothing
8:42
except Trump.
8:43
Right, Trump.
8:44
And then it became, this was kind of
8:45
the Minneapolis.
8:46
So it's about federal troops invading our cities.
8:50
Invading, yeah.
8:51
Invading our cities.
8:52
And then Jane Fonda.
8:54
I'd really like to just like her because,
8:58
you know, here's an elderly woman.
9:02
She's 87, 88.
9:04
All the work that she's done on herself
9:07
looks just mind-bogglingly good.
9:11
But she makes it so hard for me
9:14
to like her.
9:15
And now she's waffling over this.
9:17
I want to say that the First Amendment
9:19
suffers greatly in times of war.
9:22
As the government works to crush internal dissent.
9:25
What?
9:26
Our parents, our forefathers fought and died for
9:31
these rights, for these freedoms.
9:33
We must not sit by quietly and watch
9:37
them taken away.
9:38
If we wait to act, if we hesitate
9:42
out of fear or the feeling that it
9:45
doesn't affect us, it may be too late.
9:50
So this is America?
9:51
What's she talking about?
9:53
Well, exactly.
9:54
This is the land of the podcast where
9:56
everybody can say whatever they want about anything
9:59
or nothing.
10:01
And so I had to figure out what
10:03
is she talking about?
10:04
It made no sense.
10:06
So I find, luckily, although it was kind
10:10
of hard to watch, she goes on Mrs.
10:12
Now with Jen Psaki.
10:14
And Jen Psaki is fawning over her.
10:17
And she explains because she has a group.
10:19
She has a First Amendment group because your
10:22
First Amendment rights are under attack and being
10:25
removed here in America.
10:27
And I should note for the audience, you
10:29
were in Washington, D.C. today speaking outside
10:31
the Kennedy Center for an event.
10:33
That's what I'm referring to in defense of
10:35
free expression.
10:36
So tell us about the event and the
10:37
message you were really trying to get across
10:39
to people watching.
10:40
Yeah, because we don't understand.
10:42
Well, the attacks on the arts, on literature,
10:46
on film, on museums, the National Endowment of
10:50
the Arts.
10:50
What attack on museums?
10:54
What attack on films?
10:56
This can only be.
10:58
Tell that to Netflix.
11:00
Exactly.
11:01
This can only be that Trump put his
11:03
name on the Kennedy Center.
11:04
I can't imagine it's about anything else.
11:06
But she does slip in.
11:07
I'm sure that's what it is.
11:09
She said gold.
11:10
Everybody's so much.
11:11
She slips in the National Endowment for the
11:13
Arts.
11:14
OK, all of these are under attack right
11:16
now.
11:16
They're being defunded.
11:18
They're being censored.
11:19
They're being censored.
11:21
Nobody's censoring anything.
11:23
Well, she she kind of twists herself in
11:25
a knot in this short appearance.
11:27
Removed history, a special, especially racial history.
11:32
The history of slavery is all being erased.
11:35
What?
11:37
It's being erased.
11:39
Have I missed something?
11:42
Yeah.
11:43
OK.
11:44
And we wanted it.
11:45
We were we've been we've been deluged with
11:50
the history of race deluged.
11:53
I think we got it.
11:55
It's all being erased.
11:57
And we wanted it because it's kind of
11:59
like here and there.
12:01
Here and there.
12:02
We worried that people and the press don't
12:07
see clearly enough the breadth and depth of
12:11
these attacks.
12:13
And we have to understand what's happening.
12:16
This is not normal.
12:17
This does not happen in a democracy.
12:19
And we have to call it what it
12:22
is.
12:22
And we have to end it with a
12:24
committee for the First Amendment.
12:25
It's the First Amendment for.
12:27
She's the committee for the First Amendment.
12:29
Now, hold on, Jen Psaki.
12:33
I didn't see this, but Jen Psaki, I'm
12:35
guessing.
12:37
Goes right to the juggler and askers for
12:39
specifics.
12:42
Yeah, no, yeah, no, no, no, no.
12:46
It's just listen, she's on the committee for
12:49
the First Amendment.
12:51
Oh, and we have to end it with
12:54
a committee for the First Amendment.
12:56
It's the First Amendment for a reason.
12:58
It's the most important.
12:59
It's the cornerstone of all democracies.
13:02
It's freedom of speech.
13:04
Freedom of the First Amendment.
13:06
It's the cornerstone of all democracy.
13:09
All democracy.
13:10
First Amendment for a reason.
13:12
It's the most important.
13:13
It's the cornerstone of all democracies.
13:16
It's freedom of speech.
13:17
Okay.
13:18
Freedom of press.
13:19
Freedom of religion.
13:21
Freedom of assembly.
13:22
And freedom to protest, including the right to.
13:25
Is that in there?
13:26
Let me go take a look and see
13:28
if it says freedom to protest, I'm not
13:31
sure it's actually in there that way.
13:33
Freedom of assembly and freedom to protest.
13:35
For someone who's on the committee, she could
13:36
at least just cite it verbatim.
13:39
Including the right to criticize our president if
13:42
we choose.
13:43
This is under attack.
13:45
Yes, yes, that's under attack.
13:51
So yeah.
13:52
And gee, nobody's ever criticized Trump.
13:56
It's the oddest thing.
14:00
Maybe I'm wrong about her, but I never
14:02
thought that she felt the need to be
14:05
relevant.
14:07
A lot of Hollywood people do that.
14:09
I never really pegged her that way.
14:12
But I guess I can't come up with
14:14
any other reason for her to be like
14:16
this.
14:17
She, you know, once you invest some money
14:20
and make some independent films and, you know,
14:23
do some theater productions, I don't think anyone's
14:26
going to stop you.
14:28
But it's somehow, maybe there's a defunding of
14:32
certain things.
14:33
Maybe that's what she's upset about.
14:35
But that's not the First Amendment.
14:39
First Amendment doesn't say, oh, you shall get
14:41
free money for your theater productions.
14:45
So I was a little confused.
14:47
What do you have on No King's?
14:49
Do you have anything?
14:50
Nothing.
14:50
I got no clips.
14:51
I wasn't going to really talk about it.
14:52
Well, what's this No King's rap NPR then?
14:55
Well, this is the NPR rap of No
14:57
King's Day.
15:00
See, you're being censored.
15:01
Your clips are being obfuscated.
15:03
No King's protests against President Trump and his
15:05
policies, including the war on Iran, immigration, voting
15:09
rights, and the rising cost of living, are
15:11
taking place around the country today.
15:13
Organizers say more than 3,000 rallies are
15:15
being held and millions of people are expected
15:18
to attend.
15:20
Sarah Ferguson from Minnesota Public Radio has more
15:23
from a massive rally in St. Paul.
15:26
There's been a lot of cheering as people,
15:29
especially non-Minnesotans, have lifted up the people
15:32
of Minnesota for the way that they reacted
15:35
to Operation Metro Surge and really encouraged others
15:39
around the country who are watching to take
15:42
steps to follow up on the things that
15:44
Minnesotans have done, respecting one another, trying to
15:48
support their neighbors, and just a lot of
15:50
cheers here as some of the speakers say
15:53
that the country does not want a king
15:55
and they want to make sure that the
15:57
people are empowered.
15:59
Is this all about the ID, about the
16:03
SAVE Act?
16:03
Do you think that's part of it?
16:04
I don't know.
16:05
I didn't see much talk about it.
16:07
But, I mean, it just, it makes no
16:10
sense.
16:10
It seems like protests just to protest.
16:14
People with nothing better to do.
16:16
I have no idea.
16:18
It's silly.
16:20
I'm going to say it.
16:21
It's silly.
16:22
Yes.
16:23
Wow.
16:23
And you pointed it out right at the
16:25
beginning, which is the silliest part.
16:27
You know, all these international versions of this,
16:30
including one in England.
16:31
No king's day.
16:33
Where they have a king.
16:34
Where they have a king.
16:37
You know, I've been trying to figure out
16:38
the backlash against Cesar Chavez.
16:42
I think you were back on that.
16:44
Yeah, well, it's related, I think.
16:46
I think it's related.
16:47
You think?
16:47
Yeah, I think it is.
16:51
In February, RFK Jr. was on Rogan, and
16:55
he explained what happened.
16:58
You know, throughout American history, there's always talk,
17:01
well, the Republican Party and the Democrat Party,
17:04
they flipped.
17:04
They flipped over.
17:06
They flipped.
17:06
Yeah, bullshit.
17:07
Well, but this is a kind of a
17:10
flip that sounds correct.
17:13
Why don't you ask me about immigration?
17:14
Because I know that that's something that's disturbed
17:16
you.
17:17
Well, what are your thoughts on immigration?
17:21
On what's going on?
17:23
Well, you know, here's a background on my
17:25
kind of assumptions.
17:27
During the last 10 years of his life,
17:30
I worked very closely with Cesar Chavez, and
17:33
I worked with him.
17:34
He had two issues.
17:35
He had the pesticides, which were a huge
17:37
issue with him, and that's what I worked
17:39
with him on, on the dangers that, you
17:41
know, his workers were experiencing from pesticides.
17:46
And the other issue he had was immigration.
17:48
He wanted to shut down the border because
17:51
he saw the way that it was impairing
17:55
this huge influx of illegal immigration across the
18:00
border was impairing his ability to get, to
18:05
bargain, to leverage good wages and conditions for
18:07
his workers.
18:09
And when I grew up, the Democratic Party
18:11
was against immigration, and it was the Republican
18:14
Party who wanted it because the big corporations
18:16
wanted cheap labor.
18:18
The Chamber of Commerce was firmly embedded in
18:22
the Republican Party, and they were all about
18:24
open borders.
18:25
Today, the Chamber of Commerce is with the
18:27
Democratic Party.
18:29
And so it's one of these switches that
18:31
is kind of inexplicable to me.
18:33
But I think, again, it happened because President
18:37
Trump said, I'm going to fix it with
18:38
a wall, and that became, you know, and
18:40
that suddenly became open borders, suddenly became a
18:44
calling card for the Democratic Party.
18:47
So there was this flip, which really only
18:50
had to do with- Well, yeah, a
18:50
lot of things.
18:51
Well, I mean- Yeah.
18:53
Yeah.
18:54
The two sides, and this is recent, this
18:57
one, because you can get clips from Schumer.
18:59
I don't have any on today's show, but,
19:02
you know, talking and moaning and groaning about
19:04
immigration.
19:05
You can get clips from Hillary moaning and
19:07
groaning about immigration.
19:09
You can get all these clips, even up
19:11
to Obama.
19:12
And now they say just the opposite.
19:15
Yeah.
19:15
But you could call it a flip.
19:18
But what specifically do you think- Is
19:22
the reason for this?
19:23
Is the reason.
19:24
Three documentaries, American Pachuco, the legend of Luis
19:30
Valdez, American Agitators, which I think may be
19:36
out already, and A Song for Caesar.
19:39
American Pachuco?
19:41
Yeah.
19:41
I have no idea what that means.
19:44
I do.
19:45
What does it mean?
19:46
Well, it's kind of like a punk, a
19:48
bad guy.
19:52
You'd call it, when I was a kid,
19:55
I was raised in largely Hispanic areas, and
19:58
these guys would call me, hey, Pachuco.
20:03
Hey, Pachuco.
20:05
And Vato.
20:06
Vato is the other one.
20:07
Would they call you Pachuco?
20:08
No, I was a white guy.
20:10
Nobody even talked to me much.
20:12
You were just hanging around, me and Julio
20:14
down by the schoolyard?
20:15
No, I had a lot of friends.
20:17
When I was in high school- Hey,
20:19
Pachuco.
20:20
Before they opened up our white high school,
20:26
I went to a pretty much Latino high
20:32
school.
20:32
Wait a minute.
20:34
You were a minority?
20:36
Did you get beat up?
20:37
Did they take your lunch money?
20:38
Not at all.
20:39
In fact, it was just the opposite.
20:40
Oh, you were Gringo.
20:41
Would they call you, hey, Gringo?
20:42
No, they just said, hey, man, that guy's
20:44
really white.
20:47
That's what they'd say.
20:49
Everybody hung out with their own little crowd,
20:52
but just as an aside, to this day,
20:56
and I've talked about this with everybody I
20:57
know, I'm still impressed with the natural marketing
21:01
capabilities of some of these kids.
21:06
At the time, we called them Chicanos.
21:08
When we were running for, I think it
21:11
was, sophomore class president, we already knew who
21:16
was going to win and who might not
21:17
win, but this one kid came up with
21:19
these giant posters.
21:21
He'd make these long banners, and he won
21:25
with the phrase, Hernandez is gooder.
21:32
It was so catchy.
21:34
You look at it, you go, Hernandez is
21:37
gooder, and you say, wow, I don't know
21:40
what kind of genius came up with that
21:42
one, but it was a gem, and he
21:44
just kicked ass in the voting.
21:46
So I'm looking at this.
21:47
This is from Hawaii Public Radio.
21:50
They have a report here.
21:52
This America Pachuco premiered at Sundance in January.
21:57
It's slated for release, a PBS release in
21:59
fall.
22:00
Interesting.
22:01
And here's the line.
22:02
Recent screenings have become safe spaces for audiences
22:06
to process the new allegations as the film
22:10
contains significant footage of Chavez.
22:15
Oh, that's funny.
22:17
There's an oops.
22:19
Maybe the whole idea was to ruin that
22:21
film.
22:22
Could be.
22:24
But that RFK Jr. is talking about on
22:27
Rogan in February, the timing is interesting, and
22:36
maybe there's something afoot, and they're like, oh,
22:38
crap.
22:39
They're going to use Hugo Chavez.
22:41
They're going to use him.
22:42
We got to do something quick.
22:44
We got to cancel this guy.
22:47
Maybe it's exactly what you talk.
22:49
Maybe it's the gooder guys.
22:50
Maybe they're going after the Chicanos.
22:53
Like, we can't have the Chicanos voting for
22:55
Trump.
22:57
Oh, that's got to be some angle there.
22:58
Yeah, I'm thinking it has something to do
23:00
with it.
23:04
Yeah, could be.
23:05
Well, we keep looking.
23:07
We keep looking.
23:08
All right.
23:08
What do you where do you want to
23:09
go?
23:09
What you got?
23:10
Well, I got a couple of interesting little
23:11
side.
23:12
If you want to hear something off the
23:14
wall, you haven't even touched upon.
23:16
OK, we have.
23:17
I didn't hear about it.
23:18
I have to say Canada's got, you know,
23:22
B.C.'s going broke.
23:23
Oh, are they now?
23:25
Well, B.C.'s credit rating has been downgraded
23:27
again.
23:28
The official opposition says it signals to investors
23:31
that the province is going broke.
23:34
Huh?
23:35
Yeah, B.C.'s going broken.
23:38
And in fact, the whole country might be
23:39
going broke.
23:40
Let's play this clip.
23:41
Canada bank fees.
23:43
New survey now.
23:45
CTV puts out a new survey.
23:47
Nearly half of Canadians living paycheck to paycheck.
23:49
You know, you have another slow clap for
23:51
all these policies here.
23:53
Half of Canadians in this rich, rich nation.
23:56
And then you're going to have Francois-Philippe
23:58
Champagne is bragging that they're cutting the NSF
24:01
fees from 50 bucks to 10 bucks because
24:02
one in three Canadians now writing bad checks
24:04
without realizing what he's saying.
24:06
He thinks you're that stupid.
24:08
One in three Canadians writing bad checks.
24:10
Half of Canadians living paycheck to paycheck in
24:12
a nation as rich as this.
24:14
You squandered riches.
24:17
You've impoverished a nation.
24:18
And you're bragging on there like he must
24:20
have done that, took them all day too
24:21
because we saw the hard cuts in there
24:23
too.
24:24
They couldn't even stitch together like a moment.
24:26
It was just full of like hard cuts
24:28
as Francois-Philippe Champagne was telling you that
24:31
you're going to get a grocery credit and
24:32
you're going to get the $40 off NSF
24:35
fees in a nation where the Canadian banking
24:39
oligopoly books record profits year after year and
24:43
they won't let the competition in.
24:45
They should try a No King's Day.
24:48
You got problems up there that we're not
24:50
carefully looking at.
24:52
Well, our producers, and we have a lot
24:55
of them in Canada, pretty much all of
24:57
them want to come live here.
24:59
I remember during COVID like, hey man, can
25:01
I stay in your attic?
25:05
Got any space?
25:07
And then also, which I think is coming
25:10
to a boil up in Canada, but not
25:12
so much here.
25:14
I want to play these clips.
25:16
This is Land Act 1, China Deals UN.
25:22
A new measure was announced this week to
25:24
try and help stimulate the housing market.
25:26
And it marks the third one that came
25:28
out just this month.
25:30
We ultimately may hear of even more of
25:32
these to come as the pre-sale market
25:34
continues to struggle immensely.
25:37
Plus, we saw another major project go insolvent.
25:41
I also have updates on where markets are
25:43
pricing in potential Bank of Canada rate hikes.
25:47
Plus, there is an incredible theory that has
25:50
emerged this week as to why the government
25:53
is making these land agreements with indigenous groups.
25:57
Okay.
25:58
All right.
25:59
Something's going on.
26:01
Yeah, there's a bunch of weird stuff going
26:03
on with these indigenous groups.
26:05
I like the way they call them.
26:06
The Indians.
26:07
Yeah.
26:08
Play Land Act China Deals.
26:11
Oh, that's the one.
26:12
No, wait, wait, wait.
26:12
That's the one I just played.
26:14
No, you played.
26:14
Oh, no, I see.
26:15
I got it.
26:15
I see it.
26:16
Yeah.
26:16
The UN?
26:18
Correct.
26:19
They look the same.
26:20
The one that looks the same that doesn't
26:22
have one.
26:23
Yeah.
26:23
Land.
26:24
Okay.
26:24
Here we go.
26:25
The strategy focuses on joint ventures and equity
26:28
positions.
26:29
In these models, the First Nations retain its
26:32
right.
26:33
First Nations.
26:33
That's what they are.
26:34
First Nations.
26:35
You got it.
26:35
First Nations.
26:36
In these models, the First Nations retain its
26:39
rights and title while the Chinese partner provides
26:42
the capital and expertise to develop the resource
26:45
under a profit sharing or lease agreement.
26:47
So, while China already remains a bit of
26:49
a dominant force within the global mineral supply
26:51
chain, recent and somewhat new Canadian federal policies
26:55
on March 26, a report came out that
26:58
kind of supports this theory.
27:00
The provincial government's implementation of the United Nations
27:05
Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act
27:07
or DRIPA combined with a series of landmark
27:10
court decisions confirming Aboriginal title over specific territories
27:14
has rapidly altered the legal landscape governing resource
27:18
extraction in Western Canada.
27:20
More land is now subject to Indigenous control.
27:23
More projects require Indigenous consent.
27:27
These are, in principle, corrections to historical wrongs.
27:30
But also mean that the pathways to Canada's
27:33
most strategically valuable resources, lithium, cobalt, rare earth
27:37
elements, timber, and LNG, now runs, in many
27:40
cases, directly through First Nations governments.
27:44
Okay.
27:45
So, they are selling...
27:49
By the way, with Chinese financing.
27:53
Well, yeah.
27:54
What the yellow man once...
27:56
What the white man once took, now they're
27:58
giving to the yellow man.
28:00
And it's the minerals.
28:01
And it's the...
28:03
Oh, man.
28:05
So, are they liquoring them up first before
28:08
they put these deals in front of them?
28:09
This is going on in Washington state also.
28:14
They're giving property back to the local Indian
28:20
tribes who already sold the land to the
28:24
state or the local governments.
28:26
And then they're pulling the plug on taxes.
28:30
They don't have to pay taxes.
28:31
They get the...
28:33
There's no regulations that don't count.
28:38
It's very fishy.
28:40
The Chinese seem to be behind it.
28:41
And this UN resolution, which requires people to...
28:47
They're the ones behind the land acknowledgements.
28:49
And I have a whole bunch of them
28:50
here.
28:52
In fact, the land acknowledgements seems to be
28:58
a way of softening us up.
29:00
Play this clip from this woman who tried
29:02
to pass a bill.
29:04
And she's a conservative in BC.
29:07
And this is the BC mess land acknowledgement
29:12
story from the CBC.
29:14
One BC leader, Dallas Brody, says that land
29:17
acknowledgements, which are often what you hear when
29:20
a public official starts an event.
29:22
They'll say, we're standing on the traditional territories
29:24
of the Songhees and Esquimalt First Nation.
29:26
She says that that is teaching our children
29:29
that they live on stolen land, that they
29:31
should be ashamed of their history.
29:33
And for that reason, that those land acknowledgements
29:35
should be banned among public employees.
29:39
Here's a bit of what Dallas Brody had
29:40
to say.
29:41
Land acknowledgements are the anthem of a suicidal
29:44
nation.
29:45
They tell our children that we stand on
29:48
stolen land.
29:50
So now this private member's bill was voted
29:52
down on first reading.
29:54
That is quite rare because even MLAs, when
29:57
they disagree with a private member's bill, they'll
29:59
still vote it through first reading to have
30:01
a debate on it.
30:01
Not so with bills put forward so far
30:05
by One BC.
30:06
I will note that the entire BC Conservative
30:10
Caucus voted against the bill except for two,
30:13
Harman Bangu and Heather Moss.
30:15
So this was an unwhipped vote, but showing
30:18
a little bit of, you know, fissures within
30:21
the BC Conservatives on how to approach this
30:23
bill.
30:23
And Katie, what do First Nations leaders say
30:26
about this proposed bill?
30:27
Well, I spoke with Robert Phillips.
30:29
He sits on the First Nations Political Summit,
30:32
or a political executive of the First Nations
30:35
Summit.
30:36
And he says that land acknowledgements are just
30:39
acknowledging our history and are an important part
30:41
of reconciliation.
30:43
We also spoke to BC Conservative House Leader
30:46
Alia Warbas, who is from the Stolo First
30:48
Nation.
30:49
And, you know, she's quite disappointed with the
30:51
spirit of this bill.
30:53
And here's a bit of what she had
30:54
to say.
30:55
I've lived with racism all of my life.
30:57
Hong Kong, no more to stand with China.
31:02
It shouldn't be playing anymore, is it?
31:04
No, it's not playing.
31:05
So it sounds to me, just listening to
31:08
it, it sounds like they gave this land
31:13
to the First Nations, you know, tax free
31:15
land.
31:16
It's all gooder.
31:18
And now they're like, well, you know, we're
31:20
going to acknowledge this, but we're going to
31:22
have China buy it for the minerals and
31:24
probably people are on the inside making a
31:27
killing off of it.
31:29
Yep.
31:30
Do you have any clips that confirm this?
31:33
Not that part, but I'm going to get
31:35
some because this is this is a big
31:37
deal.
31:37
And it's going to kill BC and probably
31:40
Washington state because they're all suckered into it.
31:43
And it all stems from this 2016 UN
31:47
resolution.
31:47
And I think there was one previous in
31:50
2007 that encourages people to do these land
31:56
acknowledgements, which is only applicable to the United
32:00
States and Canada.
32:01
Nobody else does it.
32:03
The South Americans don't do it.
32:04
And they stepped all over Amazonians.
32:07
And, you know, it's ludicrous.
32:09
And which brings me to three clips I
32:11
have of classic land acknowledgements that I thought
32:15
were funny enough to play.
32:16
Okay.
32:18
So let's start with Paul's boat, Washington, which
32:22
is a little town that is a little
32:25
Norwegian copy of a little Norwegian town in
32:28
Washington state.
32:29
That is a tourist attraction.
32:31
Norwegian all the way.
32:33
And here's they have a city council meeting.
32:35
They do this.
32:36
Paul's boat is located on the ancestral lands
32:39
of the indigenous people for whom this place
32:42
was known as Tuk Tuk lot or the
32:45
land of the vine maples.
32:47
And here's a quote by Chief Seattle.
32:49
Every part of the soil is sacred.
32:52
And the estimation of my people, every hillside,
32:55
every, every valley, every plain and grove has
32:58
been hollowed by some sad or happy event
33:01
in days long vanish.
33:08
You've acknowledged the land.
33:10
Very good.
33:10
Unbelievable.
33:10
And, and we don't know it.
33:12
Most of us don't that the Los Angeles
33:14
city council pulls this stunt.
33:17
The city of Los Angeles recognizes that we
33:19
occupy land originally and still inhabited and cared
33:23
for by the quiche Tongva Tatavian and Chumash
33:27
peoples.
33:28
We honor and pay respect to their elders
33:30
and descendants past, present, and emerging as they
33:34
continue their stewardship of these lands and waters.
33:37
We acknowledge that settler colonization resulted in land
33:43
seizure, disease, subjugation, slavery, relocation, broken promises, genocide,
33:50
multigenerational trauma, disruption of cultural practices, trade, and
33:54
tribal relations.
33:56
This acknowledgement demonstrates our responsibility and commitment to
33:59
truth, healing, and reconciliation and to elevating the
34:04
stories, culture, and community of the original inhabitants
34:08
of the city of Los Angeles.
34:11
We are grateful to have the opportunity to
34:13
live and work on these ancestral lands.
34:16
Wow.
34:17
This is, this is like Obama time.
34:21
We've gone back to this acknowledgement.
34:24
Yeah.
34:25
And here's the DNC, the latest guy that
34:26
runs the DNC.
34:29
When they introduced, when they opened up a
34:31
meeting at the DNC, these Democrats, by the
34:34
way, this is what it sounds like.
34:37
Good morning, DNC members, friends, and relatives.
34:40
Let's talk about the land for a second.
34:42
The DNC acknowledges and honors the Dakota Oyate,
34:45
the Dakota people, who are the original stewards
34:48
of the lands and waters of Minneapolis.
34:50
Dakota cared for the lands, lakes, and the
34:52
Wahpetonka, the Great River, the Mississippi River, for
34:55
thousands of years before colonization.
34:57
This land was not claimed or traded.
34:59
It's a part of a history of broken
35:00
treaties and promises.
35:02
And in many ways, we still live in
35:04
a system built to suppress indigenous peoples' cultural
35:07
and spiritual history.
35:09
As Democrats, I ask of every one of
35:11
you to not allow land acknowledgments like these
35:14
to simply be the checking of a box.
35:17
Be curious, ask questions, ensure our native neighbors
35:21
are heard, and work in partnership with your
35:24
indigenous communities.
35:25
Honor the legacy of this land and its
35:28
people by engaging today with each other with
35:30
honesty, humility, respect, and compassion.
35:34
Yeah.
35:35
So much talk, talk, talk.
35:38
Here in Fredericksburg, we are actually bringing Comanche
35:41
Nation back.
35:42
I hadn't told you about this.
35:44
No.
35:44
Yeah.
35:44
Well, the story goes that Fredericksburg had a
35:49
treaty with Comanche Nation, the Comanche Treaty of
35:52
1847, which we never broke.
35:55
I'm not quite sure what the treaty was,
35:58
but I've had no flaming arrows.
36:01
So I guess it's still in case, in
36:03
effect.
36:04
So, but we're bringing them back to the
36:05
Hill Country for the, actually it was the
36:09
Meusebach Comanche Treaty of 1847.
36:13
The Meusebach, Meuse is one of the original
36:16
founders of Fredericksburg.
36:17
And wouldn't you know, we're opening up this
36:19
huge retail hotel space.
36:24
It's actually not far from our house.
36:27
It's on the west side of town, which
36:28
is going to do a lot to the
36:30
west side of town.
36:32
So it's all commercial.
36:33
And we're bringing them back in for commercial
36:35
stuff.
36:36
We're going to do the Frontier Fest at
36:38
Fort Scott, Comanche Nation.
36:41
You're bringing the Comanches back to add to
36:43
the tourist attraction list?
36:45
Yes, yes, exactly.
36:46
But we're going to pay them.
36:49
Whomp them.
36:50
They're going to get paid.
36:51
It's going to be good.
36:52
Pay and whomp them?
36:52
Yeah, I think so.
36:53
I think so.
36:55
Yeah, we're friendly to the Indian, to our
36:57
Comanche Nation.
36:58
Yeah, let's see how that goes.
37:00
So we'll have the, we had the Hill
37:01
Country Indian Artifacts Show.
37:03
That was just last week.
37:05
The Comanche Nation meeting took place earlier this
37:09
week.
37:09
And then Frontier Fest.
37:11
Where, I don't know, I think we'll build
37:13
totem poles and stuff.
37:14
Yeah.
37:14
Well, it's better than this stuff.
37:16
Totem poles, not Comanche.
37:17
What are totem poles?
37:20
All those poles are in the Pacific.
37:22
Haida.
37:23
H-A-I-D-A type Indians up
37:26
in the Pacific Northwest in Canada.
37:28
Oh, really?
37:29
Yeah.
37:30
Oh, I thought all Indians had totem poles.
37:32
No, there's just this group.
37:34
I don't think there's any other outside the
37:36
state of Washington and B.C. All right,
37:42
shifting gears from the First Nations.
37:48
The President had another fabulous Cabinet meeting.
37:52
I don't know if you had a chance
37:53
to see any of it.
37:55
Yeah, I watched it.
37:55
Some of it was, I thought, entertaining.
37:57
I thought our future President Rubio, because, man,
38:00
he's pushing.
38:01
He's pushing for it.
38:03
He did his little mic drop Iran speech.
38:07
The most important job any President has is
38:10
to keep the American people safe.
38:11
And every President says it, but we have
38:13
a President that means it and does something
38:15
about it.
38:15
As the President outlined very clearly to the
38:17
world on the night this operation began, Iran
38:20
has been at war with the United States
38:22
for 47 years.
38:24
For 47 years, Iran has been killing Americans
38:26
and attacking Americans across this planet.
38:28
And now the President's had an opportunity to
38:30
do something about it.
38:31
And they all warned about how Iran was
38:33
dangerous, but they refused to act.
38:34
And this President's not someone that's going to
38:36
refuse to act.
38:36
He's not going to leave a danger like
38:38
this in place.
38:39
He's going to address it, and that is
38:41
what he is doing.
38:42
From the very first night of this operation,
38:44
the President made it very clear.
38:46
People like this, and now what I'm talking
38:47
about is not the people of Iran.
38:49
The people that run this country are radical
38:51
Shia clerics.
38:52
These are religious fanatics.
38:54
Look what they are doing now at their
38:55
weakest point.
38:56
This is the weakest Iran has ever been,
38:58
and look at what they're doing.
38:59
They're attacking embassies.
39:01
They're embassies.
39:02
They're attacking hotels.
39:03
Imagine what these people would do if they
39:06
had a nuclear weapon.
39:07
That is an unacceptable risk for the world.
39:10
By the way, the President's not just doing
39:11
a favor to the United States and to
39:12
our people.
39:13
Favor?
39:13
This is for the world.
39:15
He defined very clearly on the first night
39:17
of this operation what the goal was.
39:19
We were going to destroy Iran's navy, and
39:21
that is happening.
39:22
We were going to, if it hasn't already
39:23
happened, I'll let Pete speak to the specifics
39:25
of it.
39:26
We were going to destroy their missile-launching
39:28
capabilities.
39:29
We're well on our way to achieving that
39:31
goal.
39:31
We were going to destroy the factory so
39:33
they couldn't make more missiles and more drones,
39:35
and that is moving forward.
39:36
Every single objective the President clearly laid out
39:39
on the first night of this operation is
39:41
being effectuated.
39:42
Again, Pete will speak to the specifics of
39:44
it.
39:44
This has been an incredibly successful operation.
39:47
Every day.
39:48
It may not get covered because, you know,
39:49
unlike them, we're not bombing embassies and hotels.
39:53
We're hitting military targets.
39:54
What I like about Rubio and these cabinet
39:56
meetings is he speaks to the press.
39:59
Everyone else is like, oh, Mr. President.
40:01
Oh, under your leadership.
40:03
Oh, Mr. President.
40:05
And Rubio just goes for it.
40:07
He's like, no, no.
40:07
Let me just tell you press people what
40:09
I think.
40:10
So our gay General Patton, Scott Besant, I
40:17
thought he was the most interesting of the
40:18
meeting.
40:19
Did you see any of what he said?
40:21
No, I can't think of anything.
40:23
Well, here's his here's his intro where he
40:26
I think he's saying that my job is
40:29
important because economic security and financial security is
40:33
national security.
40:34
Your economic leadership has made our military mission
40:38
possible.
40:39
Mr. President, national security, as you always say,
40:42
is economic security.
40:44
Your leadership has shown the American people that
40:47
there is no prosperity without security.
40:50
Our mighty military on one side, but the
40:55
U.S. economic strength is fighting off this
40:59
evil regime.
41:01
The Iranians believe they are fighting a two
41:03
front war.
41:04
It is the military war that our great
41:07
warriors are prosecuting.
41:09
But on the other side, they are trying
41:11
to take control of the global economy through
41:14
a choke point that we believe does not
41:17
exist and that we will overcome.
41:19
The historic operation at Epic Fury seized a
41:23
generational opportunity to demolish a regime that has
41:26
coordinated over four decades of global terror and
41:29
claimed thousands of American lives.
41:32
Many people, especially the Democrats, underestimate the will
41:37
of the American people for short term volatility
41:40
for 50 years of safety that we are
41:43
going to have on the other side of
41:44
this.
41:45
And I believe energy prices will be lower.
41:49
Inflation will be lower.
41:51
Before we had the appearance of security, which
41:55
is not real security.
41:57
Now the American people and the world will
42:00
have absolute security.
42:03
I've been talking to the oil baron a
42:04
lot lately, you know, for obvious reasons, because
42:07
he's right in the middle of this.
42:08
So he bought $77 puts and $115 calls
42:16
on his oil.
42:17
I thought, you know, I'm not quite sure
42:19
what that means.
42:20
It's arbitrage.
42:21
Yeah.
42:21
Oh, it's complete arbitrage.
42:22
But that's his risk spread is, hey, we
42:26
can't lose if it goes below $77 and
42:29
we're not going to win above $115.
42:31
But he too, he says, I am surprised.
42:34
And I thought a Texas oil man would
42:36
know because I'm surprised how impacted the world
42:40
is by the Iranian regime, by the straight.
42:47
I had no idea.
42:49
I'm getting here.
42:50
I'm getting notes from one of our producers.
42:53
Now, somebody in the cabinet or in the
42:58
Department of War or somebody in the CIA
43:02
or somebody, they had to know that this
43:07
was going to happen.
43:08
Oh, they must have known.
43:10
And I think it's.
43:12
I mean, what if they didn't?
43:13
Well, the next clip tells me I think
43:16
they did.
43:17
But it makes a lot more sense now
43:19
that Obama sent hundreds of millions of dollars
43:21
on pallets over to Iran because everyone was
43:24
afraid of this.
43:25
Like, oh, I don't want this on my
43:27
watch.
43:28
I don't want this nonsense happening.
43:30
Maybe.
43:31
But Besant, what he says in this.
43:34
This thing was planned for a long time.
43:37
This could be him saying it after the
43:39
fact, but I'm going to take it at
43:41
face value.
43:41
They were planning this for over a year.
43:44
Through your maximum pressure campaign, Treasury has worked
43:47
to uncover all financial lifelines to the regime
43:50
and cut them off.
43:52
You gave that order last March.
43:55
This was not the this was not something
43:58
that happened overnight.
43:59
This is something that has been contemplated for
44:01
almost a year.
44:03
Their find that the Iranian financial system collapsed
44:06
in December.
44:07
We have systematically weakened Iran's ability to fund
44:11
operations and procure weapons.
44:14
And that required months of preparations.
44:17
Threats to American national security have no place
44:20
in the global economic system.
44:22
The oil market is well supplied.
44:25
We have taken actions to ensure oil supplies
44:27
stranded at sea are made available to the
44:30
global market.
44:30
Your bold actions, like the Development Finance Corporation's
44:35
Maritime Reinsurance Program, in conjunction with Central Command,
44:40
will soon provide shippers through the Gulf region
44:42
with a level of security we had never
44:45
seen before.
44:46
Mr. President, we are starting to see more
44:49
and more movement in and out of the
44:50
Gulf today.
44:52
And this is more than yesterday.
44:54
And this is the beginning.
44:55
I am confident that shipping traffic will continue
44:59
to increase on a daily basis, even before
45:03
we secure the Straits.
45:05
So it sounds like they they were on
45:07
this cutting off their financial lines, making sure
45:10
that they were depleted some of their capabilities
45:13
and then struck once Netanyahu told them to,
45:17
of course.
45:20
So, you know, it sounds like they had
45:22
a plan here.
45:23
Well, I'm sure they did.
45:24
I'm not sure that they expected it to
45:26
go this way.
45:27
I guess Rubio has some comment.
45:29
That's going to last another four weeks.
45:32
Yeah, I think I have that here.
45:34
Hold on.
45:34
John Kennedy also said that why don't we
45:36
just get out?
45:37
We won by approach.
45:40
Where's the where's my Rubio?
45:42
I had another.
45:43
Here we go.
45:44
This was on the tarmac.
45:45
This is not going to be a full
45:46
on conflict.
45:48
The objectives I've outlined to you again, I
45:50
repeat them because I see these reports of
45:52
like other users not clear on what objectives
45:53
are.
45:53
We've been as clear as you can possibly
45:55
be from the very first night of what
45:57
the objectives of this mission are.
45:58
We're going to destroy their factories to make
46:00
missiles and rockets and drones.
46:02
We're going to destroy their Navy.
46:03
We're going to destroy their Air Force.
46:05
And we are going to significantly destroy their
46:07
missile launchers so they can never hide behind
46:09
these things to get a nuclear weapon.
46:11
We can achieve.
46:12
We are achieving all those objectives.
46:13
We are ahead of schedule on most of
46:15
them and we can achieve them without any
46:17
ground troops, without any.
46:18
Now, in terms of why there's deployments, number
46:22
one, the president has to be prepared for
46:25
multiple contingencies, which I'm not going to discuss
46:27
in the media.
46:28
And again, I refer you to the Department
46:29
of War who will probably tell you the
46:31
exact same thing.
46:32
But we can achieve all of our objectives
46:34
with our ground troops.
46:35
But we are always going to be prepared
46:36
to give the president maximum optionality and maximum
46:39
opportunity to adjust to contingencies should they emerge.
46:44
Optionality needs some options.
46:45
So just back to the cabinet meeting for
46:47
a moment.
46:47
So after Besson does his whole thing and
46:50
then he says how great everything here is
46:52
at home, which I think most people who
46:54
are listening would dispute, without a doubt, Europe,
46:58
UK, Asia, I mean, they're talking about going
47:02
back to work from home.
47:05
It's like we got no gas.
47:07
It's going to be the worst since the
47:09
70s.
47:10
Yeah, we're paying more, but I don't think
47:13
we have those types of problems.
47:14
So, no, I'm sure that we can ride
47:17
that out a lot longer.
47:18
So he goes through this whole thing.
47:20
And then here's what the president says.
47:22
I just want to ask you a question.
47:25
Is this guy central?
47:28
I'm looking at him.
47:29
I'm in Treasury.
47:30
He might not be so good for war.
47:32
I don't know.
47:33
No, I'm looking pretty good.
47:35
I'm looking at this guy.
47:36
He's central casting.
47:38
Even the glasses are perfect.
47:40
I think I'm going to get glasses.
47:44
That's beautiful.
47:46
Great job.
47:47
That's really good.
47:48
No, he's done a great job.
47:49
And you all have proud of you all.
47:52
Proud of you all.
47:53
Proud of you all.
47:53
Well, at least it sounds like he has
47:55
a plan.
47:56
It's not written down anywhere on paper that
47:58
we can read.
47:59
But I'm sure it's written down somewhere.
48:00
Why do you think we need to get
48:02
out so quickly?
48:03
I mean, besides the fact that war sucks.
48:08
Well, if we've done it, here's my problem.
48:11
The stuff that Trump says that we've done.
48:14
Which is take out their Navy, the Army,
48:15
their guys, this guy, that guy.
48:17
There's no Air Force.
48:18
There's no command and control.
48:20
There's nothing.
48:21
Has left a vacuum of these IRG renegades.
48:29
I think they're all acting independently.
48:31
And they're all over the place.
48:34
And each one of them might be wanting
48:36
to vie for power at some point.
48:38
And you've got to let this thing settle
48:40
out.
48:41
Otherwise, you're never going to get the streets
48:43
open again.
48:43
Because one nut ball or another or any
48:47
number of them.
48:48
Some place with some of those Shaheed drones,
48:51
for example.
48:52
Can keep the thing shut down forever.
48:55
The problem with the Shaheed drone, which has
48:56
always fascinated me.
48:58
And I don't understand how this happened.
49:01
Those things cost $75,000 to make.
49:06
They have wooden props.
49:07
And they go slow.
49:08
And they get the big bomb in them.
49:10
And they blow stuff up.
49:11
And they're not that great.
49:12
They're basically modern V1s.
49:16
Yeah, kind of.
49:19
With a less advanced propulsion system.
49:22
Yeah.
49:23
And so, the 75, it costs us.
49:26
They shoot them down unless you can get
49:28
a jet up in the air.
49:29
Which is not cheap.
49:30
Yeah, it costs us a million bucks to
49:31
shoot one down.
49:32
Well, $330,000 for a missile.
49:35
So, it costs $300,000 to $75,000.
49:40
I mean, you go broke.
49:41
They have enough of these things.
49:44
So, get out.
49:46
Let things settle down.
49:48
Let the streets get reopened.
49:50
So, people don't freak out.
49:51
And see what happens.
49:54
But that doesn't seem to be the idea.
49:57
The idea seems to be.
49:58
No, no.
49:58
It's definitely not the idea.
49:59
No, the idea seems.
50:01
Take Karg Island and be in control of
50:04
everything.
50:05
And they still want to get rid of
50:07
some of these IRGC guys.
50:11
But here's General Frank McKenzie.
50:14
Retired.
50:15
On with Margaret from this morning.
50:18
One of the things that Iran had been
50:20
waiting to do was activate its militias.
50:23
The militias it supports in Yemen.
50:25
The Houthis.
50:25
Over the weekend, they jumped into the fight.
50:28
Yeah.
50:29
We were missing those guys.
50:31
They hadn't shown up.
50:32
And all of a sudden, right on cue.
50:34
And fired on Israel.
50:35
Do you think that this is a game
50:38
changer, given that they could not just disrupt
50:41
the Strait of Hormuz, but another passageway through
50:43
the Red Sea?
50:46
Margaret, I don't think it will be a
50:48
game changer.
50:49
Their ability to attack Israel is quite limited.
50:52
Yes, they will have the ability to further
50:54
stop slow traffic through the Bab El Mandeb
50:56
going up into the Suez Canal.
50:58
We have the ability to go down there
50:59
and prevent that.
51:00
It will require additional resources.
51:02
But we have those resources, and we can
51:04
certainly do it if that becomes necessary.
51:06
Well, the president has made clear that he
51:10
needs to reopen the Strait of Hormuz.
51:11
His language has been contradictory on some of
51:14
these points as to who's going to do
51:15
it and when.
51:16
What's the military reality of making it passable?
51:21
We're on our way to doing that now,
51:23
Margaret.
51:24
This is part of a plan that's been
51:26
in existence for many years.
51:27
What we're doing right now is we're reducing
51:30
Iranian ability to target ships in the Strait
51:32
through their short-range missiles, their drones, and
51:35
other activities.
51:36
We do that by maintaining air superiority over
51:39
southern Iran on a 24-7 basis, looking
51:41
for where these missiles are and striking them
51:43
relentlessly.
51:44
Once we reduce those to a very low
51:46
level, then you'll be able to go in.
51:48
If necessary, sweep for mines.
51:49
I'm not certain they've put mines in the
51:51
water yet.
51:51
I predict eventually they will.
51:53
It's their nature.
51:54
But we have the ability to do this.
51:56
We're on plan.
51:58
I'll be honest with you, Margaret.
51:59
I've simulated this many years in many positions
52:01
at Central Command.
52:02
We're a little further along than we would
52:04
have expected to be at this point in
52:06
all the simulations that I've seen.
52:08
All right.
52:08
So they were ready for this.
52:10
It's been a plan for years.
52:11
Everybody says we're further along.
52:13
Well, let's go to the next question.
52:15
So the president had posted he's postponed the
52:18
deadline to open the Strait of Hormuz as
52:20
a result of the Iranian government asking for
52:23
it.
52:23
He says he's shifted that to April 6th
52:25
at 8 p.m. We also hear from
52:29
the secretary of state that he's talking to
52:32
the allies about a post-conflict necessity of
52:35
having other countries help to essentially police the
52:39
strait.
52:40
And he said that you will need tankers
52:43
to have military escorts.
52:46
So this doesn't sound like this is a
52:48
short-term project.
52:51
This sounds like even if combat ends, we're
52:54
going to be talking about a military presence
52:57
in the region for some time.
52:59
Am I wrong?
53:02
Margaret, you could be right.
53:04
Let's see what happens.
53:05
I think a negotiated—there are two ways the
53:07
Strait of Hormuz can be opened.
53:09
It can be opened if the Iranians negotiate
53:11
with us to open it.
53:12
And, of course, that's the desired solution.
53:13
The other solution would be if they don't
53:15
and they decide to fight, we can open
53:16
the strait under that condition, too.
53:18
The second condition is obviously a lot more
53:20
intensive in terms of ships and equipment they
53:23
would have to bring into the region.
53:24
And, yes, help from our allies would certainly
53:26
be very useful in that case.
53:29
We have the ability to open the Strait
53:31
of Hormuz under any condition that the Iranians
53:33
choose to exist under.
53:36
Yeah, so we're maybe keeping it artificially closed.
53:39
Final clip is boots on the ground.
53:42
Does it appear to you that one of
53:43
the contingencies that the White House is planning
53:46
for, given that they're continuing to move troops
53:48
into the region, and you have these Marines
53:50
who are moving into the area as well,
53:55
are they preparing for a ground troop presence?
53:59
And what does that look like?
54:03
Margaret, for many years we've considered options along
54:06
the southern coast of Iran, seizing islands, seizing
54:11
small bases, typically raids.
54:13
And a raid is an operation with a
54:14
planned withdrawal.
54:15
You're not going to stay.
54:17
But some of those islands you could seize
54:18
and hold.
54:19
That would have a couple effects.
54:20
First of all, it would be profoundly humiliating
54:22
for Iran and would give us great weight
54:25
in negotiations.
54:26
The second, the example of Karg Island, which
54:28
everyone talks about, if you seize Karg Island,
54:30
you really can shut down the Iranian oil
54:32
economy completely.
54:34
And the beauty of seizing it is you're
54:35
not destroying it.
54:36
You're retaining it for further use by the
54:38
global economy and possibly for return to Iran
54:42
under certain conditions.
54:43
So all of these things, these are not
54:45
back-of-the-envelope calculations.
54:48
These are things we've been working on for
54:49
many years, and I think we're right to
54:52
threaten the entire littoral to hold all these
54:54
options out there.
54:55
And I think the President's message is spot
54:56
on when he talks about all these alternatives.
54:59
So seize and hold is the— That brings
55:03
me to this screwy clip I picked up
55:05
off of a recording done at like 4
55:07
in the morning on one of the networks.
55:10
Was that one of your, oh my God,
55:12
I can't sleep mornings?
55:14
No, it was just running.
55:17
This is a Navy intel guy, and we
55:20
know Navy intelligence is the progenitor of all
55:23
these people.
55:23
Yeah, they typically do podcasts.
55:25
And he's like, yeah, this guy would be
55:27
one of them.
55:27
They're on X and do podcasts.
55:29
And he is X, of course, X Navy
55:32
intel.
55:33
And the funny thing is he's got all
55:35
this up-to-date information for some unknown
55:37
reason, I don't know.
55:38
And I thought this was because this kind
55:40
of ties in with what the other guy
55:42
just said.
55:43
So let's bring in former Naval intelligence officer
55:46
Captain Todd Sawhill.
55:48
Captain, thank you for joining us.
55:49
Help square for us the fact that we
55:52
just heard Secretary of State Marco Rubio saying
55:55
that this is about two to four weeks
55:57
left, but yet reports of 10,000 more
56:00
troops being sent to the region after we
56:03
already know the 82nd Airborne on their way.
56:06
And then, of course, that Marine 31st MEU
56:09
is on its way.
56:10
So I think the movement of the ground
56:12
forces and the enablers and, as you mentioned,
56:14
particularly the Boxer and the Tripoli Amphibious Ready
56:17
Groups and the Marine Expedition Units, plus the
56:20
elements of the 82nd really center around making
56:22
sure the president has maximum options.
56:25
Optionality.
56:26
Ground operations in any part of Iran are
56:28
necessary.
56:29
And before I just list off all the
56:31
key islands, I don't necessarily want to focus
56:33
on that because I don't want to telegraph
56:35
what we may or may not do because,
56:37
really, that's the decision-making level for the
56:39
president and the secretary of defense.
56:41
But beyond holding territory at risk, those forces
56:44
could also be used for internal security in
56:47
and around the bases in the region, as
56:49
well as potentially raids for the nuclear materials
56:52
should the president determine that's the only way
56:53
to retrieve it because we're currently at such
56:56
loggerheads on the conditions for cessation between the
56:59
U.S. and Iran.
56:59
So, ultimately, it's all about options as we
57:03
continue to really set the conditions with rolling
57:05
back the missile, drone, and air-to-ground
57:07
forces that have been significantly degraded over the
57:09
last three weeks.
57:10
Right.
57:11
So that fits in with Rubio's optionality.
57:14
Everything's an optionality.
57:15
So we have options.
57:17
Here's the boots-on-the-ground update from
57:19
our producer in the region, which I thought
57:21
was interesting.
57:23
Wild morning, still alive, been up since 2
57:25
a.m., followed by the most aggressive five
57:27
hours in Bahrain, 20 ballistic missiles and 37
57:30
drones.
57:31
The trend seems that they are aggressively swarming
57:34
the skies to overcome the good interception rates.
57:39
The problem here is that the country is
57:40
just too small for that kind of action.
57:42
The overall size of the whole island is
57:44
the size of San Diego or Austin, and
57:46
the economy is too small for such a
57:48
beating.
57:48
Each interception is a Patriot missile, which he
57:51
says costs a couple million.
57:53
We are still trying our best to build
57:55
a tourism economy, and that is really hurting
57:57
our strained economy.
57:58
So our good friend Netanyahu decided to aggressively
58:01
bomb three steel plants across Iran.
58:04
For some reason, unlike all other targets, Israeli
58:07
press explicitly stated steel plants were hit, although
58:11
they don't usually reveal this type of target
58:13
in most cases.
58:13
In return, our good neighbors, Iran, decided to
58:17
attack five steel and aluminum plants in the
58:19
GCC, stating to punish the enemy for attacking
58:23
civilian infrastructure.
58:25
The guy was crazy enough to bomb near
58:27
Bushehr Nuclear Facility, an active nuclear power plant
58:31
which triggered an alarmed response from the whole
58:33
region on potential nuclear meltdown, and Putin himself,
58:37
as the plant is operated by Russia's state
58:39
atomic energy corporation, Rosatom.
58:42
The U.S. seems to be building a
58:44
massive set of ground troops as a deterrent
58:46
to push the negotiation under extreme pressure, and
58:49
the Israelis are trying every possible way to
58:51
expand and complicate the conflict.
58:54
A ground invasion is nearly impossible, taking away
58:56
islands within the effective shooting range of Iran
58:59
may result in high casualties among the best
59:01
marine units the U.S. has to offer.
59:04
Let's hope Trump can retain him further because
59:06
he causes a bigger mess, he's talking about
59:08
Netanyahu, and maybe manage to get J.D.
59:11
to the front to build his peacemaker legacy
59:13
and secure the GOP vote for the next
59:15
10 years.
59:17
So that's how they're thinking in the region,
59:20
which sounds about right.
59:23
Sounds about right.
59:25
So we had CPAC, which this is the
59:30
first time President Trump has not attended CPAC
59:32
due to the war and other things.
59:37
He's busy.
59:39
But they had some interesting speakers.
59:42
Reverend Franklin Graham came out, pretty unimpressive speech.
59:46
I didn't pull any clips from it, mainly
59:49
because he started off with, you know, Iran,
59:51
we had a weak president, Jimmy Carter, and
59:53
they had our people in the embassy for
59:55
400 days.
59:56
And the minute President Reagan came in, they
59:59
let them all out because they were afraid
1:00:01
of him.
1:00:01
I'm like, no, I don't think so, Rev.
1:00:03
I don't think so, Reverend.
1:00:06
That was a different deal at the time.
1:00:09
But also invited was the crown prince, Reza
1:00:13
Pahlavi, which, I don't know, well, it seemed
1:00:20
like CPAC was almost the conservative Persian action
1:00:23
Congress, or whatever they call it, convention, because
1:00:28
the Persians came out like crazy for this
1:00:31
guy.
1:00:31
The only thing that the remnants of this
1:00:33
regime can be relied on to do is
1:00:35
to buy time, to cheat, and to steal.
1:00:39
They will never be honest or true partners
1:00:42
for peace.
1:00:43
President Trump was right when he said, we
1:00:46
don't want to come back every two years.
1:00:49
But if a faction of the regime is
1:00:51
left in power, that is exactly what will
1:00:54
happen.
1:00:54
It will buy time.
1:00:56
It will pretend to negotiate.
1:00:59
And then it will return to its old
1:01:01
jihadist ways of threatening America, its security, and
1:01:05
its interests.
1:01:11
They might promise a short period of artificial
1:01:14
calm, but it would inevitably be followed by
1:01:17
the same terrorism, the same nuclear blackmail, and
1:01:21
the same cries of death to America.
1:01:24
Because the truth is simple.
1:01:27
The Islamic Republic cannot reform itself.
1:01:35
You cannot reform a snake.
1:01:39
Venom is in its DNA.
1:01:46
This extends to the corrupt and brutal thugs
1:01:50
of the IRGC.
1:01:52
Because the IRGC is not Iran's national army.
1:01:55
Indeed, it does not even have the word
1:01:58
Iran in its name.
1:02:00
It is the Islamic Revolution Guard Corps.
1:02:04
It serves its own poisonous ideology of terror
1:02:07
and not Iran's national interests.
1:02:10
So it can certainly never be a partner
1:02:12
to serve America's interests.
1:02:15
So I cut all of those applauses.
1:02:18
I had to cut out 15 seconds.
1:02:19
Oh, I'm sure they went on forever.
1:02:20
And then they started chanting.
1:02:22
Thank you.
1:02:28
Thank you so much.
1:02:31
Thank you so much.
1:02:34
I have four minutes left.
1:02:35
I'm halfway through my speech.
1:02:38
I'll tell you.
1:02:39
Huh?
1:02:40
You know, when I was a student at
1:02:43
Berkeley, it's the same Iranian students who promoted
1:02:47
the getting rid of the Shah, the Shah
1:02:50
must go.
1:02:51
Yeah.
1:02:51
It was the American Persians that pretty much
1:02:55
created this monstrosity that they're stuck with.
1:02:59
And now this, you know, these kids, these
1:03:02
kids, they just don't get it right.
1:03:04
I don't know if they're going to get
1:03:05
it right ever.
1:03:06
You're saying it wrong.
1:03:07
These kids.
1:03:08
These kids.
1:03:09
I can't quite do it.
1:03:10
These kids.
1:03:12
So I'll just finish up with him.
1:03:14
30 seconds of President Trump rocks.
1:03:17
The only path to lasting peace and stability
1:03:19
runs through a clean break with this regime.
1:03:23
For the first time in 47 years, President
1:03:26
Trump's strategy has given us a real chance
1:03:28
to achieve that outcome.
1:03:31
For decades, every American president since Jimmy Carter
1:03:34
chose to try to manage this looming threat
1:03:37
rather than resolve it.
1:03:39
Each of them has failed.
1:03:42
They have only made the problem worse.
1:03:44
The result has been more dead Iranians and
1:03:47
more dead Americans.
1:03:49
So the mullahs operated on the assumption that
1:03:53
America didn't have the stomach to confront them
1:03:55
decisively.
1:03:57
That assumption began to collapse when President Trump
1:04:01
ordered the strike on Qassem Soleimani.
1:04:05
Yeah.
1:04:06
So plan or no plan.
1:04:08
Well, you know, Carter didn't have the stomach
1:04:10
to stop it.
1:04:11
Stop it.
1:04:12
Reagan didn't have the stomach.
1:04:14
Once after the barracks were blowed up, he
1:04:16
took off.
1:04:18
Nobody wanted to do anything about this.
1:04:21
Yes.
1:04:22
And then we had Bush.
1:04:25
He was too busy protecting his oil fields
1:04:29
in Iraq or daddy's oil fields in Kuwait.
1:04:35
And Obama went, let me just hang out
1:04:38
with the Muslim Brotherhood and I'll pay you
1:04:40
guys.
1:04:40
Yeah, I'll pay you guys off.
1:04:41
And yeah, calm down here.
1:04:44
And so Trump, this is his legacy move.
1:04:48
That seems clear.
1:04:50
And well, I hope he pulls it off.
1:04:53
It's war is not not my favorite thing.
1:04:57
Well, we'll see.
1:04:58
Anyway, he goes, I think I have a
1:05:01
clip about some of this.
1:05:05
Where's my analysis clips?
1:05:09
You're back to full strength.
1:05:10
You're you're titling them anal.
1:05:12
So you must be on the mend.
1:05:14
What?
1:05:14
Oh, that means analysis.
1:05:17
I know.
1:05:18
No.
1:05:20
Yes, I'm aware.
1:05:22
I've been around.
1:05:23
Well, there's one about the we might as
1:05:24
well bring the Lebanese stuff in and then
1:05:26
we can look for the other one.
1:05:29
Lebanese.
1:05:29
Lebanese vicinity stuff.
1:05:31
This is a overview of what the Israelis
1:05:33
are doing where we're trying to take over
1:05:35
Iran.
1:05:35
Connected to this is fighting that's happening in
1:05:38
Lebanon.
1:05:39
That's where Israel has launched an invasion of
1:05:41
the south of the country.
1:05:42
And Iran backed Hezbollah has been firing back.
1:05:46
Can you just update us on what's happening
1:05:48
there?
1:05:49
Absolutely.
1:05:49
There have been more than a million Lebanese
1:05:52
displaced, and that's like 20 percent of the
1:05:54
population as Israel depopulates entire towns and Beirut's
1:05:58
huge southern suburbs.
1:06:00
And the impact of that invasion and the
1:06:03
fighting between Israel and Hezbollah is becoming increasingly
1:06:06
dangerous to document.
1:06:09
Israel today killed three journalists in an airstrike
1:06:12
on their vehicle.
1:06:13
One of them was a correspondent for Hezbollah's
1:06:15
television channel who has been reporting from the
1:06:17
south for almost 30 years.
1:06:20
Israel claimed without evidence, claimed without evidence, claimed
1:06:24
without evidence.
1:06:25
He was a Hezbollah operative, in fact, a
1:06:27
member of one of their elite forces.
1:06:29
But the actions that Israel described, identifying where
1:06:33
Israeli forces were and contacts with Hezbollah, are
1:06:37
actually normal journalistic practices.
1:06:40
Israel didn't comment on the other two journalists
1:06:42
killed with him.
1:06:44
We've talked so far about the latest developments
1:06:46
in this now month-long war, but are
1:06:49
there other repercussions worth pointing to right now
1:06:53
for other countries?
1:06:54
Absolutely.
1:06:55
This war is so different because it's really
1:06:58
difficult to find any country untouched by this
1:07:00
in the region.
1:07:01
You know, one of the effects is that
1:07:02
some of the busiest airports in the region
1:07:04
have shut down, leaving people stranded.
1:07:07
Israel has restricted outgoing flights, and this week
1:07:10
the U.S. Embassy in Israel announced it
1:07:12
was arranging buses from Israel to the Amman
1:07:16
airport in Jordan to fly people out of
1:07:18
here.
1:07:20
Kuwait announced that its airport radar had been
1:07:22
damaged.
1:07:23
Its airport has been closed for almost a
1:07:25
month.
1:07:26
I love how she portrays the beautiful suburbs
1:07:32
of southern Lebanon.
1:07:34
Lebanon has been a mess since I was
1:07:37
a kid.
1:07:39
At one time it was the Paris of
1:07:41
the Middle East.
1:07:42
Yeah, in the 60s, late 60s.
1:07:46
Probably late 60s.
1:07:49
Iran was cool then too.
1:07:52
Here's the clips.
1:07:53
This is the Iran Houthis update in PR.
1:07:58
Iranian-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen have entered
1:08:01
the U.S.-Israeli war in Iran, firing a
1:08:03
missile at Israel, which Israel says was intercepted.
1:08:07
It's the first time Israel faced fire from
1:08:09
that country since the war began, and it
1:08:11
opens a new front in the two-month
1:08:12
-old conflict.
1:08:14
Meanwhile, the Pentagon says around 3,500 sailors
1:08:16
and Marines have arrived in the Middle East.
1:08:19
Imperial Chandelier Duster has more.
1:08:21
U.S. Central Command said Saturday in a
1:08:23
social media post that about 3,500 sailors
1:08:26
and Marines arrived in the Middle East aboard
1:08:28
the USS Tripoli.
1:08:30
The 31st Marine Expeditionary Unit, based in Okinawa,
1:08:34
Japan, arrived in the Middle East on Friday,
1:08:36
the post said.
1:08:37
The unit also has transport and strike fighter
1:08:40
aircraft, as well as amphibious assault and tactical
1:08:42
assets.
1:08:44
U.S. Central Command did not say what
1:08:46
mission the unit will be carrying out.
1:08:48
At least 2,000 additional soldiers have been
1:08:50
ordered to deploy to the Middle East, where
1:08:53
the U.S. already has 40,000 to
1:08:55
50,000 troops.
1:08:57
People always leave out the fact that you
1:08:59
already have 50,000 troops there.
1:09:01
Oh, yeah.
1:09:02
Scattered around.
1:09:03
Yeah.
1:09:05
So here's the analysis.
1:09:08
We're joined by NPR's Jane Araf, who's following
1:09:10
events from Amman, Jordan.
1:09:12
Jane, thanks for taking the time.
1:09:13
Thank you.
1:09:14
Can you start with telling us what happened
1:09:17
in Saudi Arabia?
1:09:17
Well, this was an attack on the Prince
1:09:19
Sultan Air Base.
1:09:21
And that's a Saudi base, but it's also
1:09:23
a regional U.S. military hub that focuses
1:09:27
on aerial refueling and missile defense systems.
1:09:31
At least six missiles and more than two
1:09:34
dozen drones were fired by Iran, according to
1:09:37
U.S. officials who requested anonymity.
1:09:39
And military experts are calling it a serious
1:09:43
breach of U.S. air defenses.
1:09:46
Several of those wounded service people were reported
1:09:49
to be seriously wounded.
1:09:51
The attacks also damaged refueling tankers.
1:09:54
Iran released Chinese satellite images that appear to
1:09:58
show burning aircraft, and it said it had
1:10:00
destroyed two of the airborne tankers.
1:10:03
They refueled fighter jets in the air and
1:10:05
damaged others.
1:10:06
That's after Israel struck three Iranian steel plants
1:10:10
and a nuclear facility.
1:10:13
The International Nuclear Watchdog said there was no
1:10:15
risk of radiation leak from that strike.
1:10:20
Yeah.
1:10:21
There's a lot of action.
1:10:22
There's definitely a lot of action.
1:10:24
The GCC, the Gulf, is it the Gulf
1:10:27
Commonwealth?
1:10:28
What do they call that, GCC?
1:10:30
I'm not sure.
1:10:31
GCC, well, they call them the GCC states.
1:10:33
So, they have also filed with United Nations,
1:10:38
just like the U.S. did, under Article
1:10:42
51, saying, hey, we are reaffirming our full
1:10:46
and inherent right to self-defense, and we're
1:10:49
going to start striking back.
1:10:51
So, it looks like we've got them on
1:10:52
our side.
1:10:54
Although, I still get a lot of military
1:10:56
commentary saying, no, everyone hates us.
1:11:00
They want us out of our bases.
1:11:01
I don't know.
1:11:03
You're right, a lot of action.
1:11:04
We don't actually know anything.
1:11:06
Breaking news, nobody knows nothing.
1:11:08
Right.
1:11:09
So, President Trump had a Saudi investor summit,
1:11:15
which is all money coming into America, and
1:11:20
he had some interesting commentary.
1:11:23
They are negotiating.
1:11:24
They're begging to make a deal.
1:11:26
They're begging to make a deal.
1:11:27
It turned out I was right.
1:11:28
They were negotiating, which they admitted two days
1:11:30
later.
1:11:31
And in order to make up for their
1:11:34
misstatement, they said, we're going to send you
1:11:36
eight ships of oil.
1:11:38
And the following day, I saw on, this
1:11:40
is two days ago, I saw on one
1:11:41
of the networks.
1:11:43
Very strange.
1:11:44
There were eight ships of oil coming out
1:11:46
of Iran.
1:11:47
And then they actually said, we're going to
1:11:48
add an extra two.
1:11:50
And they added an extra two.
1:11:51
So, we had ten ships.
1:11:52
And then people realized we were actually negotiating.
1:11:54
We're negotiating now.
1:11:56
And it would be great if we could
1:11:57
do something.
1:11:58
But they have to open it up.
1:11:59
They have to open up the Strait of
1:12:02
Trump.
1:12:03
I mean, Hormuz.
1:12:07
Excuse me.
1:12:09
I'm so sorry.
1:12:10
Such a terrible mistake.
1:12:12
The fake news will say, he accidentally said.
1:12:15
There's no accidents with me.
1:12:16
Not too many.
1:12:18
If there were, we'd have a major story.
1:12:21
Well, we had that with the Gulf of
1:12:22
Mexico.
1:12:23
Remember the Gulf of Mexico?
1:12:25
And then he goes into this whole Gulf
1:12:26
of America thing.
1:12:28
The Strait of Trump.
1:12:30
Okay.
1:12:32
By the way, there's no evidence that there
1:12:38
was any eight to ten ships that went
1:12:41
through.
1:12:41
None.
1:12:42
I've seen, if anything, two.
1:12:45
Yeah.
1:12:46
One guy has a video show on YouTube.
1:12:52
Yeah, yeah.
1:12:53
I've seen that guy.
1:12:53
He's like, yeah.
1:12:54
He beat tracks every single ship.
1:12:56
I don't see it, he says.
1:12:58
He said, what is he talking about?
1:13:01
There's zero ships.
1:13:03
But he also said, well, there's a lot
1:13:05
of GPS spoofing.
1:13:07
And that ship is over there.
1:13:09
But I think it's over here.
1:13:11
So nobody really knows anything.
1:13:14
Well, there's, again, no evidence.
1:13:16
No evidence.
1:13:17
I think Trump's full of it.
1:13:19
Well, that wouldn't be the first time.
1:13:22
But you don't know.
1:13:24
No, you don't.
1:13:25
It's a problem.
1:13:25
Besson says that there's oil at sea.
1:13:28
That we do know.
1:13:29
Yeah, tons.
1:13:30
And he's allowing that to be offloaded.
1:13:33
So that's probably helping somebody somewhere.
1:13:36
And NATO is still very much in the
1:13:39
crosshairs.
1:13:40
This is NATO.
1:13:41
And I've always said NATO's a paper tiger.
1:13:44
And I always said we help NATO, but
1:13:47
they'll never help us.
1:13:48
And if the big one ever happened, and
1:13:51
I don't think it will, but if the
1:13:53
big one ever happened, I guarantee you they
1:13:55
wouldn't be there.
1:13:57
And we learned from that.
1:13:58
And remember what I said.
1:14:00
Because they made a big mistake.
1:14:02
They were not there.
1:14:04
The chancellor of Germany.
1:14:05
These are old friends of mine.
1:14:06
Friederich, the chancellor of Germany.
1:14:09
He said, this is not our war.
1:14:10
We have nothing to do.
1:14:11
Well, Ukraine's not our war.
1:14:13
But we help them.
1:14:16
He keeps slamming NATO.
1:14:19
I'm not sure what the plan is.
1:14:21
But he keeps talking about it.
1:14:23
Like, oh, they weren't here to help us.
1:14:27
And this was quite telling.
1:14:30
And this is regarding our own economy here.
1:14:34
And the fabulous AI hype that we're in.
1:14:38
This is kind of telling the way he
1:14:40
answered this question.
1:14:41
We'll take some questions.
1:14:42
Thank you.
1:14:44
Thank you very much, Mr. President.
1:14:46
Thank you so much.
1:14:47
And thank you for accepting to take five
1:14:49
questions.
1:14:50
We don't want to take too much of
1:14:51
your time.
1:14:52
So let's talk about business.
1:14:54
In one sentence, where should the world invest
1:14:58
in America right now?
1:15:00
Well, look, the one that they're going crazy
1:15:02
about is AI.
1:15:04
Now, sometimes you'll say, let's go the opposite.
1:15:05
Because I've seen it.
1:15:06
You know, everyone goes, but AI is going
1:15:08
crazy.
1:15:09
AI.
1:15:10
So my family, we made Don.
1:15:14
The whole family.
1:15:15
Eric is doing a good job.
1:15:17
All of us, Ivanka.
1:15:19
We liked real estate.
1:15:20
When you can make money in real estate,
1:15:22
it's a great business.
1:15:23
But I see some of these guys come
1:15:25
into my office.
1:15:26
They're wearing a T-shirt and they're 24
1:15:28
years old.
1:15:29
Dad, he's got a net worth of $24
1:15:31
billion.
1:15:31
I said, you've got to be kidding.
1:15:33
Off a little contraption.
1:15:35
So, but the money seems to be.
1:15:39
I just got to stop.
1:15:41
Off a little contraption.
1:15:43
Yeah, it's contraptions.
1:15:45
His contraptions are doing it.
1:15:46
Dad, he's got a net worth of $24
1:15:48
billion.
1:15:49
I said, you've got to be kidding.
1:15:51
Off a little contraption.
1:15:53
So, but the money seems to be right
1:15:57
now, AI.
1:15:59
And also, if you're in school, like you're
1:16:01
going to the Wharton School or the Stern
1:16:03
School or any of these great schools, I
1:16:05
mean, the numbers that they're paying to go
1:16:09
into that business is incredible, where you see
1:16:13
people getting a $10 million bonus to sign.
1:16:16
Like baseball players or football players, we're giving
1:16:19
you a $10 million.
1:16:20
I mean, I hate to say it cuz
1:16:21
it sounds ridiculous, but there have been some
1:16:24
$100 million bonuses paid to sign.
1:16:27
So I think probably if you're gonna say
1:16:29
one thing, AI, and just hope that it
1:16:32
works, right?
1:16:36
You better hope.
1:16:39
He's like, but I hope it works.
1:16:43
It seems like we have this interesting race
1:16:46
now between open AI and Anthropic, who's going
1:16:49
to come out first, who's gonna go public
1:16:52
first.
1:16:53
Yeah, this is funny.
1:16:54
And Anthropic is, for all I can see,
1:16:57
they're killing it.
1:16:59
Because those guys focus on one thing and
1:17:01
one thing only, code.
1:17:03
Make sure the thing can code.
1:17:05
And all the developers I know have now
1:17:07
moved over to Claude.
1:17:09
Everybody's using Claude to code.
1:17:11
It's not a chat, but like, you know,
1:17:14
it's not like...
1:17:15
Open AI, they focused on kind of general
1:17:18
chat, entertainment, answering questions.
1:17:23
They don't seem to have the coding part
1:17:27
down as much, but they certainly have the
1:17:31
user base.
1:17:33
And then we got a boots on the
1:17:34
ground, because I'm always wondering how they're paying
1:17:39
for all of this.
1:17:40
This is from...
1:17:42
What is this?
1:17:43
Natalie, I think.
1:17:45
I was at the playground the other day
1:17:47
and started talking to one of the dads
1:17:48
there.
1:17:49
Hitting up the dads at the playground.
1:17:51
He mentioned he worked in the finance department
1:17:53
of Google for the Gemini group.
1:17:56
I mentioned I was curious about the profitability
1:17:59
of AI, because I heard a lot of
1:18:01
companies are bleeding money.
1:18:03
A big grin popped up on his face.
1:18:05
He told me that Gemini was profitable because
1:18:07
they've integrated the entire supply chain.
1:18:10
Google doesn't have to rent out data centers.
1:18:13
They already have them.
1:18:14
Or buy chips from Nvidia.
1:18:16
They developed their own, I think.
1:18:17
Yeah.
1:18:18
We wanted to discuss more, but his little
1:18:20
girl started to get upset, so he had
1:18:21
to move to a different part of the
1:18:23
playground.
1:18:27
Gemini, they have an interesting...
1:18:29
For search, they've got a great advantage.
1:18:32
They've got all the YouTube stuff, and they've
1:18:35
got Google.
1:18:37
And now they say, well, who are the
1:18:39
winners going to be?
1:18:40
And Rick Beto, our boy, Rick Beto over
1:18:43
there, the music guy.
1:18:46
He's come to the same conclusion I have
1:18:48
about using local models at home.
1:18:52
And this is what I think is going
1:18:54
to happen with these AI companies.
1:18:56
The data centers, they're going to be sitting
1:18:59
there unused.
1:19:00
Many of them will not be built when
1:19:02
people start using AI locally, meaning on their
1:19:05
computer.
1:19:06
And the same thing to happen to the
1:19:08
music business and recording is going to happen
1:19:11
to these AI companies.
1:19:13
Because people are going to realize, oh, I
1:19:15
can do this at my house.
1:19:17
I don't need to be paying these companies.
1:19:19
If a 64-year-old guy like me
1:19:21
can figure this out last night and show
1:19:23
you today, how hard can this stuff be?
1:19:26
People are using these things, Suno and UDO
1:19:29
and everything for music creation.
1:19:30
People are taking their business contracts and everything.
1:19:34
They're feeding it into ChatGPT.
1:19:36
People are taking their...
1:19:37
Any of their business things or financial information,
1:19:40
they're feeding it into these things and they're
1:19:41
training off your data that you own yourself,
1:19:45
your own personal information, your own intellectual properties.
1:19:50
And why is that?
1:19:51
Because you and me are the product.
1:19:54
So who are the winners and losers of
1:19:56
this?
1:19:57
Well, the companies that make hardware like Apple,
1:20:01
Google, NVIDIA, any company that makes computers, computer
1:20:06
chips, things like that, those are the ones
1:20:08
that are going to be the winners.
1:20:09
Unfortunately, the ones that are going to be
1:20:11
the losers, in my opinion, are the companies
1:20:14
that make these AI programs.
1:20:17
For most people's needs, individuals and businesses, even
1:20:21
good-sized businesses, you can do these things
1:20:24
on your own computers offline.
1:20:27
What are you doing with your mic?
1:20:29
I got my foot tangled up in the
1:20:31
cord.
1:20:34
Careful.
1:20:38
You know, Apple may have a really interesting
1:20:42
advantage here.
1:20:44
They have that, the M4...
1:20:47
What is it called?
1:20:48
It's not...
1:20:49
Yeah, I don't know what it's called.
1:20:51
But let me...
1:20:52
While you're mentioning that, I should mention something
1:20:53
JC talked about.
1:20:55
He says that new Apple laptop, $595, finally
1:21:02
has a touchscreen.
1:21:04
And he says it's a killer.
1:21:07
Yeah, that really got underplayed or downplayed.
1:21:10
It didn't get played at all.
1:21:11
I didn't even know anything about it.
1:21:13
But I know that it's colorful.
1:21:15
Well, I know that the Mac minis are
1:21:17
sold out for months.
1:21:19
Everybody's got a Mac mini.
1:21:21
Yeah.
1:21:21
But it's the...
1:21:22
What is the...
1:21:23
They have a special...
1:21:24
So they use their RAM, their regular RAM,
1:21:28
and you can load it up with RAM.
1:21:30
You can load it up with 256 gigabytes
1:21:33
or more.
1:21:34
I think...
1:21:34
I don't know about the Mac mini.
1:21:36
And it can automatically allocate some of that
1:21:40
RAM instead of a GPU like an NVIDIA
1:21:44
card.
1:21:45
So they may accidentally have done something really,
1:21:48
really smart.
1:21:50
We'll see.
1:21:51
Yeah.
1:21:52
Obviously, we'll see.
1:21:53
We don't know...
1:21:54
Nobody knows anything, John.
1:21:55
We'll see.
1:21:56
And then, this is the best.
1:21:58
I'd love to hear your opinion on this.
1:22:00
Ignition and liftoff.
1:22:03
I have the clip.
1:22:05
What is the clip?
1:22:06
You don't know what my clip is yet.
1:22:08
Yeah, there's Artemis.
1:22:10
No!
1:22:10
No!
1:22:11
Wrong!
1:22:12
The sky-high valuation.
1:22:14
Elon Musk's SpaceX is suiting up to launch
1:22:16
its IPO, a public share sale that would
1:22:20
value the rocket company at an eye-watering
1:22:22
$1.5 trillion.
1:22:24
First reported by the tech site, The Information,
1:22:27
the sale is expected to float some 5
1:22:29
% of the company's equity, aiming to raise
1:22:32
around $75 billion, which would make it the
1:22:34
largest IPO in history.
1:22:36
Unlike many tech firms seeking investor funding on
1:22:39
public markets, SpaceX already has significant cash flow,
1:22:43
largely thanks to the lucrative government contracts it
1:22:46
receives and its major profit generator, Starlink.
1:22:49
The satellite internet provider is estimated to have
1:22:52
generated $8 billion in 2025, accounting for 50
1:22:56
to 80% of SpaceX's total revenue.
1:22:59
So why go public?
1:23:01
The SpaceX acquisition of XAI in February saddled
1:23:04
it with a cash-hungry subsidiary that is
1:23:06
reportedly burning through $1 billion per month, as
1:23:10
it uses to catch up with rivals like
1:23:11
OpenAI and Anthropic, both of which are also
1:23:14
planning to go public.
1:23:16
IPO proceeds would also fund further development of
1:23:19
the Starship rocket and more aspirational projects like
1:23:22
AI data centers in space and Moonbase Alpha,
1:23:25
a self-reliant lunar city.
1:23:27
The move comes with potential downsides for the
1:23:29
notoriously regulation-averse Musk, like requirements for public
1:23:33
performance reports and having to answer to Wall
1:23:36
Street analysts.
1:23:57
I don't think investors are buying his bullcrap
1:24:01
anymore.
1:24:02
We'll see.
1:24:03
Obviously, it sells out.
1:24:05
You think?
1:24:06
Really?
1:24:07
Yeah, it's only a small part of the
1:24:09
company.
1:24:10
They're not unloading everything.
1:24:13
No, but still, the valuation is high.
1:24:16
It's ridiculous.
1:24:17
And XAI is junk.
1:24:20
It's junk.
1:24:22
Because it was trained on junk.
1:24:24
It's just junk.
1:24:26
Yeah, and all he ever touts on X
1:24:28
is, oh, look at this.
1:24:30
Oh, look at this animation of this pixie
1:24:32
girl flying around a clock.
1:24:33
Looks great.
1:24:35
Okay, who's going to pay for that?
1:24:40
No, my money...
1:24:42
All these IPOs are going to be the
1:24:44
death knell of the market.
1:24:45
Well, everyone has to get out.
1:24:47
They won't make it.
1:24:49
The early investors will get out.
1:24:52
No, maybe.
1:24:53
No, no, no.
1:24:54
I'm reminded of that game company back in
1:24:56
the 80s that waited one day too long
1:24:59
to do the IPO and the market crashed.
1:25:02
Oh, what was that?
1:25:04
Sega?
1:25:05
No, no, Sega was...
1:25:06
No, Sega is different.
1:25:08
No, it was specifically a cartridge company that
1:25:12
made cartridges for the Atari 2600.
1:25:17
I thought you might be bringing this up,
1:25:21
which was my astronaut clip, which is very
1:25:24
disappointing, if true.
1:25:26
I know.
1:25:27
We're all disappointed, John.
1:25:29
The NASA astronaut who suffered that medical scare
1:25:31
offering new insight tonight, Mike Fink, says he
1:25:33
suddenly could not speak for 20 minutes on
1:25:36
the International Space Station.
1:25:37
His crew, of course, noticing him in distress,
1:25:39
it prompted that first medical evacuation for NASA.
1:25:42
Fink now saying doctors believe it was not
1:25:44
choking or a heart attack, but he's still
1:25:46
undergoing tests to determine what it really was.
1:25:49
Yeah, yeah, that was not...
1:25:51
If true, that was not your prediction, I
1:25:54
should say, your prediction of a pregnancy in
1:25:57
space.
1:25:59
And notice something like that, where you can't
1:26:01
talk for 20 minutes, never happens to a
1:26:03
female astronaut, just saying.
1:26:06
Yeah, there it is.
1:26:07
Took me a minute to get it out,
1:26:08
but there it is.
1:26:11
I've got an offbeat clip if you want
1:26:12
to hear it.
1:26:13
Sure.
1:26:15
Alex Jones has a new sidekick.
1:26:18
He does?
1:26:19
The guy's name is Bashing or something, but
1:26:22
no, he didn't know Bashing is the name
1:26:23
of the clip.
1:26:25
He's introduced in here.
1:26:26
This guy...
1:26:28
Alex has always had this second, you know,
1:26:31
these secondary guys that come in and could
1:26:33
fill in and do a show themselves.
1:26:36
Yeah, and they eventually run off and do
1:26:37
their own shows.
1:26:38
Yeah, like that British kid and there's a
1:26:41
whole bunch.
1:26:41
You could have become one of them.
1:26:43
Yeah, but I already had a partner who
1:26:45
I love and cherish.
1:26:46
Yeah, well, although I'm noticing my voice is
1:26:51
starting to sound like him today.
1:26:52
You know what I'm saying?
1:26:54
Try this.
1:26:55
I've read the documents.
1:26:57
I've read the documents.
1:26:58
I know their plan.
1:27:00
I know their plans.
1:27:03
Maybe.
1:27:04
So here he is bashing, he hates the
1:27:07
Zeds for some reason.
1:27:09
Here he is with his buddy, his new
1:27:11
buddy, bashing the Zeds.
1:27:13
And I just an eye roller.
1:27:16
For Burma's good to see.
1:27:17
I've been loving you hosting the show.
1:27:19
What a crazy time to be alive here.
1:27:21
It certainly is, Alex.
1:27:23
And just to kind of piggyback on what
1:27:24
you were talking about via this generation and
1:27:28
being just addicted to the scroll box.
1:27:33
And it's not just this idea of track
1:27:37
trace database.
1:27:39
It's not just this idea of totally and
1:27:42
completely taking away their attention.
1:27:45
The studies are now out.
1:27:47
You know, this was going to be part
1:27:48
of me talking about AGI, what's going on
1:27:52
right now with these data centers.
1:27:54
But we're talking about a generation right now.
1:27:57
Generation Z, quote unquote.
1:28:00
That is not interested in the real world.
1:28:02
They don't want a date.
1:28:02
They don't want jobs.
1:28:03
They don't want a car because it's their
1:28:05
own little comfortable world.
1:28:06
Well, they're 40% less cognizant in both
1:28:10
speech and writing, period, full stop.
1:28:14
I mean, it's not just that they-
1:28:15
Put that back up.
1:28:16
Major studies, 40% less cognizant in speech
1:28:20
and thought, literally retarded.
1:28:22
So bottom line, studies prove it, plus you
1:28:23
see it.
1:28:24
iPhones and smartphones and games have literally made
1:28:28
the younger generations retarded.
1:28:31
Well, look at it this way, Alex.
1:28:33
You know, my generation, your generation, we're only
1:28:36
about five years apart.
1:28:37
I would argue maybe the people 10, 15
1:28:39
years younger than us are really what created
1:28:43
this idea of a podcast.
1:28:45
I mean, you're a pioneer outside of the
1:28:48
mainstream media, aka long form content.
1:28:52
Yet when we started seeing these video platforms
1:28:56
ever emerging, you just mentioned Meta, well, they
1:28:58
own Instagram.
1:29:00
This is a bunch of bullcrap.
1:29:03
I thought so too.
1:29:05
So come on.
1:29:05
I stopped it at that point where he
1:29:08
brings up the obviosity that Meta- You
1:29:12
say something like, you know what?
1:29:13
Hey, Adam, you there?
1:29:15
Yeah, I'm here, what?
1:29:16
You know what, Adam?
1:29:17
What?
1:29:18
Meta owns Instagram.
1:29:20
No, get out of town.
1:29:22
Next, you're going to tell me they own
1:29:24
WhatsApp.
1:29:24
No, no, no, you can't be telling me
1:29:26
that.
1:29:27
Yeah, this is bad for Alex.
1:29:30
I don't know why he's chosen this particular
1:29:33
- I've seen this sidekick.
1:29:35
I don't know the guy's name.
1:29:36
The guy's interesting.
1:29:38
He's also a UFC guy.
1:29:40
He's like a Rogan.
1:29:41
Oh, okay.
1:29:42
And I think that's the reason.
1:29:43
That's the hook.
1:29:44
Now, this is because Alex is on the
1:29:47
wrong side of this.
1:29:49
40% of the Zeds are exactly the
1:29:52
audience he can pull in because they don't
1:29:55
want the phones.
1:29:57
They're going way more conservative.
1:29:59
They want to date.
1:30:01
I know, they want vinyl discs.
1:30:02
They want vinyl discs.
1:30:04
They want cassette tapes.
1:30:05
And this whole contingent that wants cassette tape.
1:30:08
Yeah, and look at Brunetti's kid.
1:30:11
They want Bibles.
1:30:13
I'm telling you.
1:30:16
He's wrong about this.
1:30:17
The people who are addicted are Gen X.
1:30:23
Yeah, I agree.
1:30:24
They're the ones that are completely sucked into
1:30:26
this stuff.
1:30:27
Man, the women here in Fredericksburg- Older
1:30:30
millennials too.
1:30:31
Older millennials.
1:30:31
Yeah, yeah.
1:30:34
I mean, and they're watching Candace Owens.
1:30:37
They're on the edge of their seat every
1:30:39
day at four o'clock.
1:30:40
Oh, Candace is coming.
1:30:41
That Erica Kirk, I'm telling you, she's no
1:30:43
good.
1:30:44
She's no good.
1:30:45
And the short form videos, they're doom scrolling
1:30:49
their butts off.
1:30:51
The only saving grace for them is that
1:30:53
GLP-1 will help stop their addiction.
1:30:56
This is coming.
1:30:57
Maybe.
1:30:58
This is my new prediction.
1:30:59
After erectile dysfunction, GLP-1 Ozempic will help
1:31:05
you stop your doom scrolling addiction.
1:31:07
It already does for cocaine and alcohol, you
1:31:09
know.
1:31:09
Supposedly.
1:31:10
It wouldn't surprise me.
1:31:12
So that's coming.
1:31:14
Since you mentioned Candace.
1:31:17
Uh-oh.
1:31:18
I have a supercut that was done by
1:31:20
Milk Bar TV.
1:31:22
Every comment she's made about getting to the
1:31:26
bottom of the Charlie Kirk assassination.
1:31:30
Yeah.
1:31:30
Over the last two and a half years.
1:31:33
How long is this thing?
1:31:34
Is it 15 minutes long?
1:31:37
It could have been, but I think it
1:31:39
did.
1:31:39
What is the length?
1:31:40
Oh, 114.
1:31:41
Okay.
1:31:42
Yeah, 114.
1:31:42
It's not bad.
1:31:43
Here we go.
1:31:43
Going and we are definitively getting closer to
1:31:46
what took place on that day.
1:31:48
And we are getting closer.
1:31:49
I think we're close.
1:31:50
We are definitively getting closer.
1:31:52
We're getting close.
1:31:53
We're getting close.
1:31:54
Very close.
1:31:55
We're inching ever closer.
1:31:57
We are now, I believe, extremely close to
1:32:00
solving this thing.
1:32:01
As I get inch closer and closer to
1:32:04
discovering the truth.
1:32:05
I've got a feeling about that.
1:32:06
Where we're close.
1:32:07
We're getting closer to something and that something
1:32:09
is pretty big.
1:32:11
I just sense that we're getting close.
1:32:13
I sense that we are getting very close.
1:32:15
And we are getting closer.
1:32:18
Getting very close to something.
1:32:21
We're getting closer because we are getting close.
1:32:23
We are definitely getting closer.
1:32:25
Very close.
1:32:26
We are very close.
1:32:27
We are close.
1:32:27
We are dangerously close to something.
1:32:30
We are dead close to something.
1:32:32
And I think every day we are inching
1:32:33
closer.
1:32:34
Who killed Charlie Kirk?
1:32:36
You know we're getting close.
1:32:38
We're inching ever closer.
1:32:39
We are inching closer.
1:32:40
A little closer to solving the Charlie Kirk
1:32:42
murder.
1:32:43
And I'm getting very close.
1:32:44
And we are getting very close.
1:32:46
But I'm getting closer.
1:32:47
I'm getting real close.
1:32:50
My prayers are with you, Candace.
1:32:51
You are close.
1:32:52
We are close.
1:32:53
And we're getting closer to the truth.
1:32:55
We get closer.
1:32:57
We are getting close.
1:33:00
She's very close now.
1:33:01
Jason Burmess is the name of the guy.
1:33:03
Yeah.
1:33:04
The sidekick.
1:33:04
He also, I think he was one of
1:33:06
the producers of the Loose Change.
1:33:10
That, remember that?
1:33:12
The doc is quote unquote documentary about 9
1:33:15
-11.
1:33:17
No.
1:33:18
Yeah.
1:33:18
Loose Change, 9-11, and American coup.
1:33:21
That's what it was.
1:33:22
It came out around 2009, 2010.
1:33:26
Yeah.
1:33:27
There's something about, and I feel there's a
1:33:30
backlash growing against Candace.
1:33:34
Just the whole group, because it's so annoying.
1:33:38
It's so much infighting.
1:33:41
And you've got Megyn Kelly fighting with Mark
1:33:44
Levin online.
1:33:45
You have a micro penis.
1:33:48
It's like, what are we doing?
1:33:51
I should forbid them from calling their shows
1:33:54
podcasts.
1:33:56
I think I have the right to do
1:33:58
that.
1:33:59
You do.
1:33:59
They should stop doing that.
1:34:02
Now we have two podcasters in our administration,
1:34:05
which was, I just have to play this
1:34:08
for the presentation of it.
1:34:11
This is the announcement of a federal healthcare
1:34:13
advisory committee.
1:34:15
And this is your HHS secretary, RFK Jr.
1:34:20
And Dr. Oz.
1:34:22
They're like doing a podcast now.
1:34:24
It's the presentation was just, it was all
1:34:29
inspiring, really.
1:34:30
Hi, I'm Robert F.
1:34:31
Kennedy Jr. You're HHS secretary.
1:34:33
And I'm Dr. Mehmet Oz, CMS administrator.
1:34:36
Hey, Code Bongino.
1:34:37
The health policy seems like everybody's a pessimist.
1:34:40
The system's too broken.
1:34:41
The interest groups are too powerful.
1:34:43
The incentives, they're malaligned.
1:34:45
The whole thing's too complicated.
1:34:46
Did Dr. Oz ever offer some products on
1:34:48
TV?
1:34:49
Was he only a doctor doctor, or did
1:34:52
he ever have some gambit to sell?
1:34:55
He was, he had a syndicated TV show.
1:35:01
And there was some product that he sold
1:35:03
that was one of these scammish, you know,
1:35:06
wellness things that does this, that and the
1:35:09
other.
1:35:09
A wellness thing.
1:35:10
And does nothing.
1:35:11
And he got called before Congress and was
1:35:13
berated.
1:35:15
Well, it's, this is what the problem here
1:35:17
is, it sounds like these guys are selling
1:35:19
me something that I don't want.
1:35:21
This administration rejects that mindset.
1:35:24
We take on the broken systems.
1:35:26
We challenge the entrenched interests.
1:35:29
And we fix misaligned incentives to deliver real
1:35:31
results.
1:35:32
Real results.
1:35:32
While bringing together the top talent to take
1:35:35
on the toughest challenges head on.
1:35:37
And that's why today we are announcing the
1:35:40
members of our new Healthcare Advisory Committee, which
1:35:43
will develop recommendations for how Secretary Kennedy and
1:35:46
I can improve Medicare, Medicaid, the Children's Health
1:35:49
Insurance Program, and the health insurance marketplaces.
1:35:52
Yeah, it was, that's right.
1:35:53
I think it was the Dr. Oz green
1:35:55
coffee beans.
1:35:57
This just sounds like an infomercial.
1:35:59
Their insights will help us cut costs, slash
1:36:01
red tape, improve quality of care, keep programs
1:36:04
solvent and refocus.
1:36:05
Crazy Eddie's prices are insane.
1:36:08
Healthcare and the people it is meant to
1:36:10
serve.
1:36:10
The patients.
1:36:11
I'm so proud of the team that we've
1:36:13
assembled.
1:36:13
We reviewed more than 400 candidates from all
1:36:16
across the country.
1:36:17
And we selected just 18.
1:36:19
These individuals bring extensive experience from state and
1:36:23
federal government, from health system management, from nonprofits
1:36:26
and health technology innovation.
1:36:29
Even RFK Jr. is doing better with his
1:36:31
voice.
1:36:32
These guys, they're pitching.
1:36:33
They're pitching hard.
1:36:35
I know there's something about it that just
1:36:37
doesn't feel right.
1:36:40
You know, back to my hospital experience.
1:36:44
Ah, here we go.
1:36:47
Is I don't think these hospitals, and I
1:36:50
would say specifically the, the, the cafeteria where
1:36:54
the people that's the dinners they serve you.
1:36:56
This is all stuff from the 1940s.
1:36:59
You know, the Jell-O and everything's pre
1:37:01
-packaged horrible puddings, a bunch of everything's aspartame,
1:37:07
it's loaded with artificial sweeteners.
1:37:10
It's like nobody ever heard of Kennedy.
1:37:13
And I see no influence or impact whatsoever.
1:37:17
Oh, from Kennedy.
1:37:18
Interesting point.
1:37:19
Yeah.
1:37:19
Well, but the, the Jell-O that's contracts.
1:37:22
And those contracts have been around since, since
1:37:24
Bill.
1:37:25
And it's not even Jell-O.
1:37:27
It's some other off brand of gelatin dessert
1:37:30
that is unedible.
1:37:32
It's a gelatin product.
1:37:35
It's a gelatin product.
1:37:36
I mean, you have no idea how bad
1:37:38
the food is.
1:37:39
I lost like 10 pounds.
1:37:41
It was like, and then they had these
1:37:45
dietitians that the one that was at the
1:37:49
hospital, I've got another one that's better, but
1:37:51
the one from the hospital, she's, she might
1:37:54
as well been from 1963.
1:37:57
It's old, old ideas, the old pyramids.
1:38:00
And really, you know, lots of carbs.
1:38:02
Oh, you got more carbs.
1:38:04
So, I mean, did you, what was the
1:38:07
typical dinner?
1:38:11
They'd have something like a, like a chick.
1:38:13
Well, just an example of something that was
1:38:15
borderline.
1:38:16
It wasn't even borderline edible, actually.
1:38:19
It would be a piece of chicken, a
1:38:20
chicken thigh, uh, with some, you know, phony
1:38:24
baloney name, some gravy, the chicken thigh was
1:38:26
so overcooked that you could literally, you could,
1:38:30
you could pick it up and you could,
1:38:32
you could pound a nail with it.
1:38:33
It was unbelievable.
1:38:37
All right.
1:38:38
So did they have a potato product, a
1:38:40
starch product?
1:38:41
They did have like mashed potatoes, uh, no
1:38:45
salt.
1:38:46
And so it was like tasteless and, and
1:38:48
the texture wasn't quite right.
1:38:50
And then string beans, string beans.
1:38:51
Yeah.
1:38:52
Always some string beans.
1:38:53
Yep.
1:38:54
And then a gelatin product of unknown origin
1:38:58
and manufacture date.
1:39:00
Yeah.
1:39:01
Wow.
1:39:02
In a, in a prepackaged thing that was
1:39:04
obviously came off in assembly line.
1:39:08
Yeah.
1:39:08
So is Jano taking care of you or
1:39:11
is she feeding you?
1:39:12
I mean, how, what's this?
1:39:13
I can cook now.
1:39:14
What's the situation?
1:39:15
Are you in bed most of the day?
1:39:17
No, God, no.
1:39:18
Well, that's the last thing.
1:39:19
That's why I had to get out of
1:39:21
the hospital because they keep you in bed
1:39:22
all day.
1:39:23
Now I got to be up.
1:39:24
And so, uh, back to these meals, it
1:39:29
was like, you couldn't eat any of it.
1:39:31
They examined the percentage of what you ate
1:39:35
and it would go in your file.
1:39:37
Uh, you only ate, you know, we can't
1:39:38
eat any more than that.
1:39:40
And what did you say?
1:39:41
It sucks.
1:39:42
Yeah.
1:39:43
And I complained bitterly the whole time and
1:39:45
everybody agreed with me and it was one
1:39:47
nurse and PA every million of these different
1:39:51
titles coming up and down.
1:39:52
Well, yeah, we, we just too bad.
1:39:54
We can't have food that's edible.
1:39:56
And one nurse comes in and I'm bitching
1:39:59
as usual about the food and, and do,
1:40:04
do other one nurses nodding.
1:40:05
And the other one says, I think the
1:40:07
food here is great.
1:40:09
And I said, what?
1:40:10
How could you say that?
1:40:12
She says, I used to work at the
1:40:13
VA.
1:40:14
Oh, you have no idea what bad food
1:40:17
is.
1:40:18
You're clueless.
1:40:20
It's kind of sad.
1:40:21
Have you gotten any, have you received the
1:40:22
bills yet?
1:40:23
This is what everyone's waiting for.
1:40:24
Oh, it's going to be like the fortune,
1:40:26
but nothing yet.
1:40:27
Right.
1:40:27
We don't, we don't have any, they're late.
1:40:30
What are they, why are they waiting?
1:40:32
I have no idea.
1:40:33
We'll, we'll find out soon enough.
1:40:35
So, okay.
1:40:36
If you don't mind me just asking, cause
1:40:37
people want to know, we're all generally concerned
1:40:39
for your health and people have to understand.
1:40:41
It is amazing that you're even doing a
1:40:44
podcast.
1:40:45
Yeah.
1:40:45
This, this quickly after you're, I mean, you're
1:40:47
no letterman.
1:40:49
Uh, no letterman went on stage.
1:40:51
Yes.
1:40:52
Well, now are you, are you going to
1:40:54
make the meetup on the 11th?
1:40:55
No, probably not.
1:40:56
I'm going to try to make it.
1:40:58
Oh man.
1:41:00
You know what, you know what you need?
1:41:01
You need like Stephen Hawking.
1:41:02
Remember when I met, well, I didn't really
1:41:03
meet him, but I had dinner in the
1:41:05
same restaurant as Stephen Hawking in Los Angeles.
1:41:08
And he had this babes, like super hot.
1:41:11
He apparently attracted a lot of babes.
1:41:13
Super hot nurse babes.
1:41:14
We can get you some hot nurse babes
1:41:16
just for the meetup.
1:41:18
You know, just when you're.
1:41:19
I think the bill's too high already.
1:41:21
No, but the media, I'd be, I have
1:41:22
a couple of hot nurses.
1:41:23
Yeah.
1:41:24
Yeah.
1:41:24
But a little elaborate.
1:41:25
I did pull that stunt before something similar
1:41:28
to that in a competition, but a cooking
1:41:30
competition in Vegas.
1:41:32
I'm pretty sure that we can get a
1:41:34
couple of our female producers to dress up
1:41:36
as, you know, hot nurses just for the
1:41:39
photo op.
1:41:41
That'd be a good photo.
1:41:42
Yeah.
1:41:43
You're not into it.
1:41:44
Okay.
1:41:44
I'm just trying to cheer you up over
1:41:46
the hill for these sorts of, of, uh,
1:41:49
publicity stunts.
1:41:50
Have you gotten any calls from any of
1:41:52
your peers?
1:41:54
Like, I don't know the Lib Joe's.
1:41:55
Has anyone called?
1:41:56
The Lib Joe's are clueless.
1:41:58
They have no idea.
1:42:00
Uh, I mean, people I talk to a
1:42:02
lot, they'll, we all talk to each other
1:42:04
and, um.
1:42:05
Has Leo Laporte called?
1:42:07
No, he hasn't even said anything about it.
1:42:10
Oh, wow.
1:42:10
He has to know.
1:42:12
Oh, you were on pod news.
1:42:15
I was?
1:42:16
Yeah, you were on pod news.
1:42:19
John C.
1:42:20
Dvorak, 18 year co-host of the No
1:42:23
Agenda podcast has had a double bypass.
1:42:27
We wish him well.
1:42:30
Yeah.
1:42:30
You were on pod news, man.
1:42:31
You made the pod news.
1:42:33
Well, it's about time I got some publicity.
1:42:37
Okay.
1:42:39
So, but you're a genius.
1:42:41
I'll bring these stories in and out.
1:42:42
All right.
1:42:43
Well, we just want to know, it's like,
1:42:45
do you go, do you walk outside?
1:42:47
Are you only walking in the house?
1:42:48
Well, when I'm outside, because here's the problem.
1:42:52
And this is a two month problem.
1:42:54
It's a huge problem.
1:42:57
Uh, you have limited use of your arms,
1:43:00
uh, because if you start doing anything.
1:43:03
Oh, it hurts.
1:43:03
No, it's not, it hurts.
1:43:06
It, it, it's the, because as you're cut
1:43:09
down the middle of your chest, you have
1:43:11
your, uh, that bone there that's kind of
1:43:15
stapled back together.
1:43:16
With a hammer and nail, some, some gaffer
1:43:19
tape.
1:43:20
And it takes like two months before it's
1:43:22
sealed enough that you can take a chance
1:43:24
on doing anything.
1:43:25
And they, they, like, for example, if you,
1:43:28
they say, they tell you this, which makes
1:43:31
it tough to walk around.
1:43:32
So I, so they, the hospital gave me
1:43:34
this role, this kind of rolly Walker, which
1:43:38
I use when I go outside, because if
1:43:40
you fall down in this two month period,
1:43:44
oh, you're screwed.
1:43:46
It cracks this thing.
1:43:48
And then the, and the word is if
1:43:50
you fall down, you don't have anybody try
1:43:52
to get you up.
1:43:53
You call nine one, one.
1:43:56
Wow.
1:43:57
Who needs that aggravation?
1:44:00
Yeah.
1:44:00
So you're very careful about things when you're
1:44:03
wandering around.
1:44:04
And so when you're outside this rolling Walker
1:44:07
thing, which has got four wheels and handlebars
1:44:10
and you can walk like a bat out
1:44:11
of hell, uh, you use it because you
1:44:14
can't take a chance of stumbling or falling
1:44:17
because who the hell needs to start the
1:44:19
process over?
1:44:20
No, no, no.
1:44:21
I didn't.
1:44:21
And what did they have to rebreak you?
1:44:23
They have to cut you open again.
1:44:24
I don't know what they do.
1:44:25
I have no idea.
1:44:26
I don't want to know.
1:44:26
I want to find out.
1:44:27
And does your Walker have handbrakes?
1:44:30
Yeah.
1:44:31
Cool.
1:44:32
And a little seat.
1:44:34
It's cute.
1:44:35
It's the cutest thing, but it's like, you
1:44:38
can go, you can, you feel very confident
1:44:40
with it, but yeah.
1:44:42
Okay.
1:44:42
No, this is a, not a thing I
1:44:43
would recommend anyone who want to go through.
1:44:45
But the thing is, Mimi has a friend,
1:44:48
Richard, who had a quadruple and he called
1:44:53
me up the other day, uh, ex police
1:44:56
guy from LA who's a whistleblower.
1:44:59
It made a couple million bucks turning in
1:45:01
some mobsters.
1:45:03
So I don't know.
1:45:03
He had to run up to Washington.
1:45:04
He's in the witness protection program up in
1:45:06
Washington state.
1:45:07
Now he's just hiding out.
1:45:09
And so, uh, he had a quadruple and
1:45:13
he told me, told me the whole thing,
1:45:15
everything that I'm doing now is exactly what
1:45:18
happens.
1:45:19
And you come out the other end when
1:45:21
you're done with the process, which is a
1:45:23
good four months, uh, for the whole thing
1:45:26
to blow over and you, it's okay.
1:45:31
It's okay.
1:45:33
If you feel better than you did before.
1:45:36
And there's a lot of benefits, uh, except,
1:45:39
you know, you go and you get these
1:45:40
scars, you can show off, uh, yeah, meetups.
1:45:43
Yeah, exactly.
1:45:44
Hey, look, no, no, wait a minute.
1:45:46
We already discussed this.
1:45:47
The first rule of group is you don't
1:45:49
show your scar.
1:45:51
That's what the guy said.
1:45:53
I told you, I mentioned that story with
1:45:55
the guy comes in.
1:45:56
Yeah, no, we, yeah, we all think you
1:45:58
should go to group.
1:45:58
I didn't do the kicker.
1:46:00
Oh, what's the kicker?
1:46:01
He lifts up his shirt and shows me
1:46:03
the scar.
1:46:07
I'm thinking you should go to one of
1:46:08
these just for the experience.
1:46:10
Go to group.
1:46:11
Yeah, I just might.
1:46:12
Yeah.
1:46:13
How could it hurt?
1:46:15
Well, you might, there might be a couple
1:46:17
of guys with great stories.
1:46:18
That's what I'm thinking.
1:46:20
Like, Hey, here's what the babes like.
1:46:23
There's got to be some kind of contingency
1:46:27
of, of women who just love.
1:46:29
Oh, can you imagine?
1:46:31
Cause you know, it's like groupies, you know,
1:46:33
collectors.
1:46:36
Yeah, I'm sure there is, to be honest
1:46:38
about it.
1:46:39
Far out with your scar out, baby.
1:46:41
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
1:46:42
All right.
1:46:43
A couple more clips here before we take
1:46:44
a break.
1:46:45
I do have the, the Artemis clip, but
1:46:48
this is not the one you had.
1:46:50
This is about the ever delayed moon launch.
1:46:54
For the first time in more than 50
1:46:55
years, NASA is about to launch four astronauts
1:46:58
near the moon.
1:46:59
Artemis two, the more than $55 billion investment
1:47:03
is a 10 day mission.
1:47:05
Its goal is to fly astronauts around the
1:47:07
moon and back exploring the feasibility of building
1:47:10
a lasting site on the moon for lunar
1:47:12
exploration and future missions to Mars.
1:47:15
But this step in science comes with a
1:47:17
cost and missed deadlines.
1:47:19
As those interested in this mission are looking
1:47:21
at it with a microscope.
1:47:23
Will it be another delayed expensive NASA failure
1:47:26
or will this mission be one to impress?
1:47:28
I mean, NASA does have a history.
1:47:30
You can look at a lot of our
1:47:31
OIG reports where we are way over budget
1:47:34
and substantially behind schedule.
1:47:37
NASA's administrator, Jared Isaacson admitted to what we
1:47:40
all know on Tuesday, but added.
1:47:42
At some point you have to, you know,
1:47:44
course correct and get things back on track.
1:47:46
Back on track after a report from the
1:47:48
government accountability office discovered last July that the
1:47:52
mission was already close to $7 billion over
1:47:55
budget.
1:47:56
We have to do some things differently.
1:47:57
I think you're seeing it in some of
1:47:59
the public support.
1:48:00
You're seeing it in, you know, the new
1:48:02
authorization bill.
1:48:03
And this is what it takes.
1:48:04
If we're going to get the job done
1:48:06
to go to the moon, do so before
1:48:08
our rivals.
1:48:09
Isaacson speaking on the mounting pressure of the
1:48:11
international space race, a big part of NASA's
1:48:14
reputation and what's at stake for this upcoming
1:48:17
mission.
1:48:17
Right now, he says the agency's priority is
1:48:20
developing technology to explore the moon.
1:48:23
But this sentiment is also a major focus
1:48:25
point for those watching from the outside.
1:48:27
People expressed skepticism on NASA's focus on the
1:48:30
moon, as it seems to be distracting from
1:48:33
building a replacement international space station, something that's
1:48:36
been deemed completely necessary by experts.
1:48:39
NASA announced this week that it will invest
1:48:41
$20 billion to build a base on the
1:48:44
moon, shelving plans to deploy a space station
1:48:47
in lunar orbit.
1:48:48
We're trying, we're trying to get back into
1:48:51
a rhythm.
1:48:52
We're being very transparent.
1:48:53
The idea is to make the transition the
1:48:56
right way.
1:48:56
And we have to put everything out on
1:48:58
the table.
1:48:59
People will be watching closely to see how
1:49:01
things play out on the moon, with Artemis
1:49:03
2 expected to launch on April 1st.
1:49:06
I just love that date.
1:49:07
If someone, if we were in charge of
1:49:10
stuff, which we'll never be, and someone came
1:49:14
in and said, oh, hey, hey, bosses, Curry,
1:49:17
Dvorak, we're going to launch this thing on
1:49:20
April 1st.
1:49:20
I think both you and I would be
1:49:22
like, no, you're not.
1:49:23
Right.
1:49:24
You're going to choose a different date.
1:49:26
Yeah, this is, this is, it's, it would
1:49:28
be too stupid if you can't make it.
1:49:32
Yeah.
1:49:33
It's an embarrassment.
1:49:35
Yeah.
1:49:35
Well, we'll have to see.
1:49:41
Well, this might be a good one for
1:49:43
the predictive betting market.
1:49:46
Yeah.
1:49:47
How much longer is that thing going to
1:49:48
last?
1:49:49
Will they let this go on forever?
1:49:51
Well, since this is kind of para-mutual,
1:49:54
they don't lose money.
1:49:55
It's like the bets come in from one
1:49:58
side and then they change the odds, come
1:49:59
in from the other side, they change the
1:50:01
odds.
1:50:01
And then they take the money from the
1:50:03
one side and give it to the other
1:50:04
side and take a piece of the action
1:50:06
in the middle and go on forever.
1:50:08
Right.
1:50:08
That's why they're just calling it an exchange.
1:50:11
Yeah, it's an exchange.
1:50:16
The greater, I mean, it should be illegal,
1:50:18
period.
1:50:19
Para-mutual.
1:50:20
Why should it be illegal?
1:50:23
It's encouraging people to gamble.
1:50:25
Well, yeah.
1:50:26
This is not healthy for the society.
1:50:30
Says the man who can barely talk.
1:50:32
Yeah, well, it's beside the point.
1:50:34
It's not healthy for society.
1:50:36
No, it's not healthy for society.
1:50:38
Play this Cash Patel clip.
1:50:40
Oh, yeah, this was a good story.
1:50:43
Classic.
1:50:43
Where is Cash?
1:50:45
Here we go.
1:50:45
Tonight, cyber warfare unleashed with an Iranian-lead
1:50:49
group hacking FBI Director Cash Patel's personal email
1:50:53
and posting private messages involving Patel's family and
1:50:57
photographs of him at a time before he
1:50:58
became director.
1:51:00
As this war continues and as the regime
1:51:02
is under tremendous pressure, it wouldn't surprise me
1:51:04
to hear that the Iranians are potentially trying
1:51:08
to take things to an even higher level
1:51:11
than what they've done already.
1:51:12
The hack and posting apparently in direct retaliation
1:51:15
for the Justice Department taking down several websites
1:51:18
associated with the group known as Handala earlier
1:51:21
this month.
1:51:22
Tonight, Handala bluntly describing why they targeted Patel,
1:51:26
quote, while the FBI proudly seized our domains,
1:51:29
we decided to respond to this ridiculous show
1:51:32
in a way that will be remembered forever.
1:51:34
The group claims to have emails, conversations, documents
1:51:37
and even classified files.
1:51:40
David, the FBI says the hacked material is
1:51:43
historical in nature and involves no government information.
1:51:46
And the FBI says the US is offering
1:51:48
a $10 million reward for information about the
1:51:52
Handala hackers.
1:51:53
Yeah, this is a marketing of these Handala
1:51:56
hackers.
1:51:58
This sounds like, I don't know.
1:52:01
I mean, what is the point?
1:52:03
It's an old Gmail, isn't it?
1:52:06
I don't know.
1:52:06
Yeah, well, I have a clip and it
1:52:08
includes our boy Brennan.
1:52:10
15 past with the breaking news.
1:52:11
Breaking news, 15 past with the breaking news.
1:52:13
Now reporting Iran linked hackers are claiming they
1:52:17
have breached the personal email inbox of FBI
1:52:19
Director Kash Patel.
1:52:21
Breached.
1:52:22
Those hackers have published photographs of Patel along
1:52:25
with his purported resume.
1:52:27
And what appears to be personal.
1:52:29
I love the pictures, goofy pictures, goofy, stupid
1:52:33
selfies.
1:52:33
Correspondence dating between 2010 and 2019.
1:52:37
But MSNL has not confirmed that any of
1:52:40
those documents are legitimate.
1:52:41
And DOJ tells our Carol Lennig they do
1:52:44
not know the details of this apparent hack.
1:52:47
Joining us now, former CIA director and MSNL
1:52:49
senior national security and intelligence analyst John Brennan.
1:52:53
How concerning is this report?
1:52:55
And we want to point out the hack
1:52:56
does not cover his time as FBI director,
1:52:59
but it does allegedly cover.
1:53:00
Allegedly.
1:53:01
The time he worked in national security and
1:53:03
counterterrorism at DOJ.
1:53:05
And depending on how far into 2019, possibly
1:53:08
his time on the National Security Council.
1:53:10
Well, Alex, the Iranians have very, very sophisticated
1:53:13
cyber capabilities, both from the standpoint of collection
1:53:17
as well as disruption.
1:53:19
And I'm sure that the war ongoing right
1:53:21
now with Iran has led to an increase
1:53:24
in their efforts and determination to target a
1:53:27
number of individuals with their cyber hacks and
1:53:31
capabilities.
1:53:32
So, again, I'm unsurprised that the Iranians are
1:53:37
engaged in such activities.
1:53:38
We've had to face it for the past
1:53:40
10 or 15 years in terms of what
1:53:42
the Iranians have been able to do.
1:53:44
And given that, you know, the FBI director
1:53:46
is a high profile target.
1:53:48
And it's, again, not surprising that the Iranians
1:53:52
would do something like this.
1:53:53
But again, I have to underscore just how
1:53:54
sophisticated the Iranians have become and their ability
1:53:58
to do things like this.
1:54:01
He's not wrong about that.
1:54:03
No, but Brennan's a dud.
1:54:05
I mean, is anyone watching Ms. Now?
1:54:07
Have you seen any ratings?
1:54:09
Does that thing work?
1:54:11
It can't be good.
1:54:13
I don't think so either.
1:54:14
They're going after...
1:54:15
They're trying to buy the Vox podcast network.
1:54:19
Ooh, that'll do it.
1:54:21
Well, what I think is kind of fun
1:54:24
about that is we had Prof. G., Scott
1:54:29
Galloway, touting with Karen...
1:54:33
Karen.
1:54:34
What's her new name?
1:54:38
With Karen Swisher.
1:54:40
No, no, we're going to sell this show.
1:54:42
We're going to, you know, they were in
1:54:44
negotiations, I think, with Vox.
1:54:48
How do you sell a show like that?
1:54:50
Well, they didn't.
1:54:51
That was the whole point.
1:54:52
It was like, this is hundreds...
1:54:53
This is kind of back a little bit
1:54:54
after the Spotify days.
1:54:56
And Rogan, like, oh, we're going to be
1:54:58
100 millionaires from this show.
1:55:00
He was showing charts where he could make
1:55:01
a billion dollars on advertising.
1:55:03
And he hired 35 people for the Prof.
1:55:07
G.
1:55:08
experience for all of his podcasts.
1:55:10
And now they're getting wrapped up in a
1:55:13
sale to...
1:55:16
Gosh, who was it?
1:55:17
Who was it that was going to buy
1:55:19
this?
1:55:21
Are they part of a network?
1:55:26
Yeah, they're part of the Vox Media Network.
1:55:31
Oh, I did not know that.
1:55:33
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
1:55:33
Let me see.
1:55:34
It was...
1:55:35
Oh, so you're going to get nothing.
1:55:37
No, of course not.
1:55:40
And how can you even sell it?
1:55:42
We know what a podcast network is worth.
1:55:44
It's nothing.
1:55:46
So, okay.
1:55:47
So, Vox Media.
1:55:49
Oh, this is it.
1:55:50
Yeah.
1:55:51
So, Vox Media.
1:55:52
Initially, they had said, okay, we're putting it
1:55:54
up for sale.
1:55:57
And then they said, no, no, no, we're
1:55:59
not selling anything.
1:56:01
But then Versant comes along.
1:56:02
Do you know what...
1:56:03
Do you remember Versant?
1:56:05
Yep.
1:56:06
That's the spin-off company that includes MSNOW
1:56:14
and CNBC.
1:56:15
And they want...
1:56:16
Versant is saying, we want to have at
1:56:18
least 40% non-traditional content within the
1:56:22
next two years that they're going to buy.
1:56:25
That's a dud.
1:56:28
You can't make money off of a podcast
1:56:30
network.
1:56:31
Spotify put a billion dollars into it and
1:56:34
failed.
1:56:36
You know who they didn't call?
1:56:39
Just for advice.
1:56:41
Yeah.
1:56:42
The Curry Divorce Consulting Group.
1:56:43
Yeah.
1:56:44
You never get called for anything.
1:56:47
I never get called for anything.
1:56:49
We're outliers with experience and good judgment, but...
1:56:56
And we're handsome.
1:56:58
We're quite handsome.
1:57:02
And nobody cares.
1:57:03
Nobody cares.
1:57:04
Well, those who are last will be first.
1:57:06
The least will get the most.
1:57:07
That is what I've always understood.
1:57:09
And with that, I want to thank you
1:57:10
for your courage.
1:57:11
Say in the morning to you, the man
1:57:12
who put the sea and cut down the
1:57:13
middle.
1:57:14
Say hello to my friend on the other
1:57:15
end.
1:57:16
He's still alive.
1:57:16
Mr. John C.
1:57:19
DeMorais.
1:57:20
Well, in the morning, Mr. Adam Curry.
1:57:21
Also, in the morning, all ships and sea
1:57:23
boots on the ground, feet in the air.
1:57:25
Subs in the water and all the dames
1:57:26
and knights out there.
1:57:28
In the morning to the trolls in the
1:57:29
troll room.
1:57:30
Oh, there we go.
1:57:33
That's better.
1:57:34
18.06 today at the peak of our
1:57:36
trollage, which is much better for a Sunday.
1:57:39
I think people thought you were dead.
1:57:42
And like, well, we're going to give up.
1:57:43
Who wants to hear Curry?
1:57:44
Give a crap about Curry.
1:57:48
Oh, he's back.
1:57:49
Okay.
1:57:50
Well, we might as well tune in again.
1:57:53
Well, you're getting you're getting a product, which
1:57:57
we find to be a quite outstanding product
1:57:59
from people who are not swayed by popular
1:58:02
opinion, are not captured by an audience who
1:58:05
tells them that you better, you better be
1:58:07
criticizing people more.
1:58:10
We've identified this is we have to wait.
1:58:12
There's another guy besides the one you're talking
1:58:15
about.
1:58:15
So, you know, you're not critical enough.
1:58:17
He should just be grousing about everything.
1:58:19
I mean, you don't think I grouse enough.
1:58:21
Okay.
1:58:22
No, but you have to be more of
1:58:23
an activist.
1:58:24
That's what he said.
1:58:25
And the other one is activism.
1:58:27
Yeah, activist.
1:58:30
Let's push some some, you know, people don't
1:58:33
realize we we don't have an agenda in
1:58:36
regards to pushing these things, but we're not
1:58:39
pushing.
1:58:40
We don't push anything.
1:58:41
But here's what here's the problem.
1:58:44
It's for some reason always focuses on me,
1:58:47
which I don't know, maybe it's the right
1:58:49
thing.
1:58:50
I can't spell my name.
1:58:51
Well, no, but when we analyze something that
1:58:56
President Trump does, then we're licking his ass
1:59:00
because we say, well, I think he's right.
1:59:02
Oh, you what?
1:59:03
You're not critical.
1:59:05
You're all in.
1:59:06
How many shekels did you get for that?
1:59:09
You know, so when we're not because we
1:59:11
just don't agree with the the narrative and
1:59:15
there's pushback coming on all these podcasters, people
1:59:19
are getting tired of it.
1:59:21
They're tired of it.
1:59:22
They want they want they want just the
1:59:25
just an actual opinion from somebody and not.
1:59:29
All right.
1:59:29
Yeah, I bought it.
1:59:30
Let me go on your podcast.
1:59:33
Even I guess even Joe Rogan's kind of
1:59:35
falling forward now a little bit.
1:59:40
Yeah, I mean, he's but he doesn't go
1:59:42
on everybody's podcast.
1:59:44
No, no, no, no.
1:59:45
These these merry go round podcasts.
1:59:49
You go on mine.
1:59:50
I go on yours.
1:59:51
You're on his.
1:59:52
And then he goes on mine.
1:59:53
And I go on yours.
1:59:53
And you around, around, around they go.
1:59:55
Yeah, where they stop.
1:59:57
Yeah, nobody knows.
1:59:59
We're not part of any of these clicks.
2:00:02
No, we're not.
2:00:03
That's how I should have clipped that.
2:00:06
Reverend Franklin Graham said podcasts are a problem.
2:00:10
I got to get that clip.
2:00:13
He was complaining about the was he referring
2:00:15
to?
2:00:16
Oh, the podcast that are saying that that
2:00:18
Israel is bad and the Jews are to
2:00:20
blame for everything.
2:00:21
Oh, yeah, they do.
2:00:22
Yeah, exactly.
2:00:24
Yeah.
2:00:24
And, you know, now Tucker is he's got
2:00:26
a documentary and I've got Bibi Netanyahu and
2:00:30
his wife and they're horrible and they're corrupt,
2:00:32
which is probably true.
2:00:33
But who cares?
2:00:36
Like, OK, maybe 15 minutes of discussion.
2:00:42
Yeah, who cares?
2:00:43
It's true.
2:00:44
Who cares?
2:00:46
Anyway, the trolls are listening at no agenda
2:00:49
stream dot com.
2:00:51
That's I will say, and I've actually talked
2:00:53
with, you know, Dave Jones, my buddy, who
2:00:55
is this nicest, calmest guy?
2:00:58
They call him the pod sage.
2:01:00
And we do the like a board meeting
2:01:03
every Friday.
2:01:04
We talk about podcasting 2.0 and, you
2:01:07
know, we have developers on the audience is
2:01:09
like 500 people.
2:01:11
It's it's it's not meant for any other
2:01:13
consumption outside of what we're doing.
2:01:15
And out of that group comes, you know,
2:01:18
new features like transcripts and chapters and all
2:01:21
this stuff that you're seeing now.
2:01:23
The big boys are implementing, which is the
2:01:25
whole that was the whole point.
2:01:27
Podcasting had stagnated for a decade.
2:01:29
We get we started we started up and
2:01:31
things are working.
2:01:32
OK, so great.
2:01:34
And even he is getting snark.
2:01:38
People just and it's.
2:01:40
It's older millennials.
2:01:43
Maybe some Gen X, there's something going on
2:01:46
and and people feel like they can just
2:01:50
lash out and and say whatever they want
2:01:53
to a podcaster.
2:01:56
You haven't noticed this because no one knows
2:01:58
where to find you.
2:01:59
You're in hiding.
2:02:00
But.
2:02:04
There's something going, there's something in the air
2:02:07
where people just they just want to say,
2:02:09
you suck.
2:02:11
You know, people want to say you suck.
2:02:13
That's pretty much it.
2:02:15
You suck.
2:02:16
Yeah.
2:02:17
So the troll room, there's a lot of
2:02:18
that.
2:02:19
But actually, today has not been too bad.
2:02:21
Now they are trolls.
2:02:22
So it's to be expected here.
2:02:24
Obviously, no agenda stream dot com.
2:02:26
And of course, we have the modern podcast
2:02:28
apps.
2:02:28
We're just talking about it.
2:02:29
One of the great features they have is
2:02:31
live live podcasts.
2:02:32
When you go live and you're recording live,
2:02:35
the podcast app that you use to listen
2:02:37
to your your podcast whenever whenever you feel
2:02:40
like it will give you an alert.
2:02:42
So if you want to, you can join
2:02:44
in live and listen to it.
2:02:45
And these things also have pod ping technology.
2:02:49
So within 90 seconds of updating the podcast
2:02:52
and releasing it, you'll get notified.
2:02:54
We are a value for value podcast.
2:02:56
And that means that there's no subscriptions.
2:03:02
There's no advertising.
2:03:04
There's no paywall.
2:03:05
No, we we give you everything up front
2:03:07
and center.
2:03:08
What you see is what you get.
2:03:10
And if you get value out of it,
2:03:11
then we would like to hear back from
2:03:13
you.
2:03:13
And you can do that with your time,
2:03:15
your talent or your treasure.
2:03:16
And one of the ways people help us
2:03:18
is by its production, because everyone who listens
2:03:21
to the show is by definition a producer.
2:03:25
So let me take a look here.
2:03:27
We had episode 1854.
2:03:31
Rackout was the title of that.
2:03:32
You really had.
2:03:33
Oh, we use the the art, which was
2:03:35
kind of cool by Nessworks.
2:03:39
And he had a gas pump premium podcast
2:03:42
only man.
2:03:45
It doesn't happen often that you get a
2:03:47
lot of email about one topic that you
2:03:49
don't expect.
2:03:51
Premium versus regular was the one.
2:03:54
Did you get emails about this?
2:03:57
I also have a mea culpa.
2:04:00
Oh, well, let me explain.
2:04:01
First, we were talking about the difference between
2:04:04
premium and regular.
2:04:06
So high octane, lower octane.
2:04:09
And I asked, I said, well, is this
2:04:11
a scam?
2:04:12
Am I just paying for this stuff when
2:04:14
I don't have to?
2:04:16
And a lot of people said, oh, yeah,
2:04:19
you're crazy.
2:04:19
Unless you have a high end, high compression
2:04:22
automobile, there's no need for it.
2:04:26
I'm generalizing, but that's kind of what I
2:04:28
got back.
2:04:28
And of course, the tip of the day
2:04:30
was always fill up your rental car with
2:04:34
the lowest octane possible when you return it.
2:04:36
That to me was the tip of the
2:04:38
day.
2:04:38
Like, ah, obviously, that's what we got to
2:04:40
do there.
2:04:44
Well, a couple of things.
2:04:47
I'll defend the petroleum industry and say these
2:04:50
things are all based on knock engines in
2:04:52
your engine.
2:04:53
If you want to use lower grade fuel
2:04:55
and let your engine knock once in a
2:04:56
while, OK, good for you.
2:04:59
It's going to hurt and damage the engine
2:05:01
over time.
2:05:02
But I use premium fuel because I drive
2:05:06
a Lexus.
2:05:07
Old one, 20 year old, but still.
2:05:11
The second thing is, this is my fault.
2:05:15
I talked about the low sulfur diesel and
2:05:19
I kind of conflated it with the stupid
2:05:21
blend that we have in California for gasoline,
2:05:23
which is special to California.
2:05:25
And I said it's going to take over
2:05:26
the whole country, blah, blah, blah.
2:05:28
No, it's a federal low sulfur diesel.
2:05:31
As one of the producers pointed out, it's
2:05:33
the diesels, the diesel everywhere.
2:05:36
And it's really expensive.
2:05:38
So that can be changed at a federal
2:05:39
level.
2:05:39
How come President Trump doesn't change this?
2:05:42
What's he going to do?
2:05:43
Just tell him to stop, let the sulfur
2:05:46
free.
2:05:47
No, I think they've gotten used to this
2:05:50
blend.
2:05:51
It's better.
2:05:53
The high sulfur diesels make a mess.
2:05:56
It's probably a better product.
2:05:58
Well, we got the farm diesel here.
2:06:00
All the good old boys.
2:06:01
They put that farm diesel in their pickup
2:06:04
trucks and they roll coal along the road.
2:06:07
You can always tell like, oh, you got
2:06:10
farm diesel.
2:06:10
So thanks to Nestworks for bringing us that
2:06:14
artwork.
2:06:15
There were a couple other things that we
2:06:17
looked at.
2:06:20
I think we can kind of move past
2:06:22
the hospital art.
2:06:23
I think John is no longer in the
2:06:25
hospital.
2:06:28
You kind of liked Dan OBGYN 4's slot
2:06:31
machine.
2:06:33
Yeah, I did.
2:06:34
I think it's an evergreen.
2:06:35
I might use it.
2:06:36
Possible evergreen.
2:06:39
Scaramanga's homemade missile on the surfboard was kind
2:06:41
of cute.
2:06:44
A lot of ship stuff.
2:06:48
So I think Nestworks kind of nailed it.
2:06:51
Premium podcast only.
2:06:52
It was good.
2:06:52
We liked it.
2:06:53
You actually liked it a lot because you
2:06:54
felt that it was not, you know, a
2:06:56
big AI effort.
2:06:58
Well, Nestworks is not necessarily an AI effort
2:07:01
type of guy.
2:07:02
So yeah, I did like that.
2:07:04
I thought that was good.
2:07:06
So we thank you for your courage, Nestworks.
2:07:11
And we thank everybody who participates at noagendaartgenerator
2:07:13
.com.
2:07:14
So it is time, talent, and treasure.
2:07:16
Again, the idea is you get value out
2:07:18
of this show.
2:07:19
You like the analysis.
2:07:20
You thought it was worthwhile.
2:07:21
You'd like it to continue.
2:07:23
You've got one man on his deathbed.
2:07:25
He's dialing in from his deathbed.
2:07:27
You might, that might be valuable to you
2:07:29
to have your show.
2:07:31
All you have to do is send that
2:07:33
value back to us.
2:07:34
We can't determine what that is.
2:07:35
That's up to you.
2:07:36
We don't know what value, what is valuable
2:07:38
to you.
2:07:39
So you go to noagendadonations.com and you
2:07:41
send us some value.
2:07:44
Now we're going to thank everybody $50 and
2:07:46
above in one segment.
2:07:47
And we start with our executive and associate
2:07:49
executive producers.
2:07:50
These are people who get an extra benefit
2:07:52
because they are able to support us with
2:07:55
$200 or more.
2:07:57
And that means not only do you read
2:07:59
your note guaranteed, but we also give you
2:08:01
an associate executive producer credit, which is good
2:08:04
anywhere Hollywood credits are recognized.
2:08:06
And it's a real one because you did
2:08:07
exactly what executive and associate executive producers do,
2:08:10
which is help finance the product.
2:08:12
$300 or above.
2:08:14
And it's the same deal.
2:08:15
Only then you become an executive producer.
2:08:17
And both of these can be used at
2:08:18
imdb.com.
2:08:21
Are we going to do this Knight of
2:08:23
the Heart order?
2:08:24
What is the deal there?
2:08:26
Yeah, I got Paul Couture working on the
2:08:27
art for a pin, a special pin.
2:08:31
Yeah.
2:08:32
That you put on your lapel.
2:08:33
Yeah, it's going to be.
2:08:34
Yeah, it's going to be the red knight
2:08:35
and we're going to roll it out on
2:08:37
my birthday.
2:08:38
It's the order of the red knight.
2:08:41
It's no, you're, you are a red knight.
2:08:43
It's the order of the red of the
2:08:45
order of the heart or the red heart.
2:08:47
Okay.
2:08:47
And, and wait a minute, your birthday is
2:08:49
when, isn't that coming up soon?
2:08:50
Like next week?
2:08:51
Yeah.
2:08:51
Like the 5th.
2:08:52
The 5th of April.
2:08:56
He said, I don't know what happened there.
2:08:59
Well, coming in as, sorry about that.
2:09:02
Coming in as our top executive producer for
2:09:05
today, saving the entire show.
2:09:08
Yes.
2:09:08
Yes.
2:09:09
It was a very poor showing today, except
2:09:11
for a couple of checks that came in.
2:09:13
Well, Dame Catherine, she is the crypto granny
2:09:17
of Bangkok, came in with a, in, in
2:09:21
Bitcoin, a whopping $5,000.
2:09:25
And she says, John, thank you for not
2:09:29
dying.
2:09:30
We need you.
2:09:31
I think you got to pull this gambit
2:09:33
more often.
2:09:33
What can you do next?
2:09:34
Like I don't think I believe it's not
2:09:36
worth the trouble.
2:09:37
Kidney stones do something.
2:09:41
Uh, Adam, you're a rock.
2:09:43
You kept your head about you and, uh,
2:09:47
hold on one.
2:09:47
Let me expand this.
2:09:49
Uh, and soldiered on Bravo Mimi.
2:09:52
Thank you for filling in during John's medical
2:09:54
adventure.
2:09:55
Hope this helps with the medical bills.
2:09:57
It will.
2:09:58
I'm grateful to be a hodler since the
2:10:00
early days.
2:10:01
I must give thanks to Max Kaiser to
2:10:04
the moon.
2:10:05
And she ends up by saying, being rich
2:10:07
is having enough to share with others.
2:10:09
She is Dame Catherine, the crypto granny of
2:10:11
Bangkok.
2:10:12
And we thank you so much, Dame Catherine.
2:10:14
That was whatever happened to Max Kaiser.
2:10:16
They're all living in El Salvador now.
2:10:19
Oh, really?
2:10:20
You know who else is moving to El
2:10:21
Salvador?
2:10:23
Texas Slim.
2:10:25
He is now, he is a fish by
2:10:27
presidential appointment in charge of all beef agriculture
2:10:31
of El Salvador.
2:10:35
Wow.
2:10:36
You know, I had an El Salvadorian, uh,
2:10:38
that I met with the, in the hospital.
2:10:42
He was just one of the, one of
2:10:44
the guys who, uh, they called, uh, transport.
2:10:48
They drag you around and you need to
2:10:49
keep you in your bed and they roll
2:10:51
you all over the place.
2:10:53
And, uh, I had a long chat with
2:10:54
him.
2:10:55
He says, he says, El Salvador has become
2:10:57
the greatest place ever.
2:10:58
When he was a kid that you couldn't
2:11:01
go outside.
2:11:01
They'd shoot you.
2:11:02
Yeah.
2:11:02
You got rousted or kills.
2:11:04
I know.
2:11:05
Well, this, that's the, uh, that's Bukele.
2:11:08
And he says that the guy, this president,
2:11:10
the guy's running it.
2:11:11
He doesn't need any money.
2:11:12
He's loaded.
2:11:14
And you know, it's, it's not, there's no
2:11:16
way of going corrupt.
2:11:17
That's Bukele.
2:11:18
He says it's a terrific place.
2:11:20
Yeah.
2:11:20
And you know what they did?
2:11:21
They made Bitcoin the money of the country.
2:11:24
Currency.
2:11:25
Yeah.
2:11:25
It's the currency.
2:11:26
And a lot of people have moved there.
2:11:29
Max and Stacy are there.
2:11:30
I'm pretty much full time now.
2:11:32
I think it's only what two and a
2:11:34
half hour flight from Texas.
2:11:35
I'm going to go visit when Slim is
2:11:36
there.
2:11:37
Oh yeah.
2:11:38
So he's in charge.
2:11:39
He's going to, uh, I think he has
2:11:40
a, a press conference with the president Bukele
2:11:43
on the 14th of April.
2:11:45
And, uh, yeah, he, so he's going to
2:11:48
do everything from the regenerative farming to the
2:11:51
processing.
2:11:53
And he has beef.com.
2:11:55
Somehow we got beef.com.
2:11:57
Little old Texas Slim, man.
2:11:59
He's doing good.
2:12:00
I'm so, so happy for him.
2:12:01
He says, Adam, I'm going to be the
2:12:03
Jimmy Dean of beef and I don't doubt
2:12:06
him.
2:12:07
So that's what's going on in El Salvador.
2:12:10
Well, thanks to Dame Catherine.
2:12:12
Uh, Matthew lambs up.
2:12:13
He's in Johnson city, Tennessee, 500 bucks.
2:12:16
This, I just, I believe it's just a
2:12:18
check that showed up in an envelope with
2:12:21
no, no, no, nothing.
2:12:22
It made no sense, but I'm sure if
2:12:24
he wants to communicate, he will, but he'll
2:12:27
get a double up karma.
2:12:28
In the meantime, you've got karma.
2:12:34
All right.
2:12:35
Then we have a valuable account.
2:12:39
Indeed.
2:12:40
This is a great name, uh, from Plains,
2:12:44
Pennsylvania, $500 with a handwritten note.
2:12:47
Looks like, uh, uh, some paper from a
2:12:50
high school notebook.
2:12:52
Dear John Adam plus Mimi.
2:12:54
My cousin also named John also had a
2:12:57
heart attack this week.
2:12:58
Sadly, he passed away leaving behind his wife,
2:13:01
children, and one grandchild.
2:13:03
He was a great guy and will be
2:13:04
missed.
2:13:05
Please count your blessings.
2:13:06
John get way, get, get well, stay healthy
2:13:10
and four more years.
2:13:12
Sincerely a valuable account accountant.
2:13:15
Indeed.
2:13:15
Not account accountant.
2:13:16
Indeed.
2:13:17
Uh, and he breaks it down.
2:13:19
Three 33, 33 value for value, a boob
2:13:21
donation for Mimi.
2:13:23
She's a lovely woman and a eight Oh
2:13:25
boob for John, a reason to live and
2:13:27
$6 and 51 cents for JC covering DH
2:13:31
unplugged.
2:13:32
He's great.
2:13:32
Plus prayers for Adam and pastor Jimmy, a
2:13:35
wonderful show.
2:13:36
They do.
2:13:36
There are three types of accountants, the kind
2:13:38
that you can count on and the kind
2:13:40
that can't that can't.
2:13:41
Okay.
2:13:43
Uh, uh, yeah, I get it.
2:13:45
The kind, the kind that can count and
2:13:47
the kind that can't.
2:13:48
There you go.
2:13:49
Well, this is a valuable accountant indeed.
2:13:51
And we thank you very much for your
2:13:53
support of the show.
2:13:55
No, the joke was there's three types.
2:13:58
I know, but there's no third.
2:14:00
Then you get it.
2:14:01
Yeah.
2:14:01
Okay.
2:14:01
Ron Camacho, Comcho, Ron Comcho, Comcho sugar Island,
2:14:07
Texas three, three, three, three, three foremost.
2:14:10
I want to thank John or thank you,
2:14:11
John, for not dying.
2:14:13
You're welcome.
2:14:14
I started listening in March 2, 2026.
2:14:17
Recent listener, huh?
2:14:19
First time donor.
2:14:20
I need a D douching.
2:14:23
You've been D douched.
2:14:25
My Spicewood, Texas daughter.
2:14:27
Turn me on to you guys.
2:14:28
Thank you for your enlightenment.
2:14:31
It's appreciated.
2:14:32
I apologize.
2:14:33
You're not donating sooner.
2:14:34
I leave with this in the spirit of
2:14:38
Texas and in the words of Sam Houston,
2:14:42
Texas will again lift his head and stand
2:14:47
among the nations.
2:14:48
It ought to do so for no country
2:14:51
upon the globe can compare with it in
2:14:54
a natural advantages.
2:14:56
God bless you.
2:14:57
The no agenda show and God bless Texas.
2:15:00
Amen.
2:15:01
That's right.
2:15:01
One of those guys.
2:15:02
Yeah.
2:15:03
Well, there's a lot of them here and
2:15:04
I'm one of them calling Westerhouse in Chiribusco,
2:15:09
Indiana.
2:15:09
I think it's Chiribusco.
2:15:11
Someone gave me crap.
2:15:12
Me and my sister-in-law gave me
2:15:14
crap the other day because I said Portage,
2:15:17
Indiana.
2:15:18
She called me up, says it's Portage.
2:15:22
We're Midwesterners.
2:15:23
Stop with the French stuff.
2:15:24
So I don't know if you pronounce this
2:15:26
Chiribusco or Chiribusco, but it's in Indiana.
2:15:30
RoveDocs222.22. No note that I could find
2:15:32
from Colleen.
2:15:33
So we'll give her a double up karma.
2:15:35
You've got karma.
2:15:42
Christopher Graves in Somerset, California.
2:15:45
Now we know Christopher.
2:15:47
Christopher.
2:15:48
2329.
2:15:49
This is a note.
2:15:50
So thank you to Eli, the coffee guy.
2:15:51
When Eli reached out and asked if Little
2:15:53
John's could make chocolate with coffee.
2:15:56
By the way, we got some of these
2:15:58
things.
2:15:59
You got some already?
2:16:00
I haven't received any.
2:16:01
Well, I think so because Jay is talking
2:16:03
about you eat one and you go to
2:16:05
the moon.
2:16:07
I got to get to the P.O.
2:16:09
box.
2:16:10
Make chocolate with coffee.
2:16:12
I jumped at the chance to co-brand
2:16:13
with another like-minded business owner.
2:16:16
Getting the chance to collab with two of
2:16:20
my favorite things, chocolate and coffee, and then
2:16:22
promote it to the best podcast in the
2:16:24
universe is an honor.
2:16:26
Yes.
2:16:26
Thank you, Eli, for making me a better
2:16:29
businessman and a better candy maker.
2:16:32
Connection is protection.
2:16:34
Try our limited edition chocolate bars at littlejohnscoffee
2:16:37
.com or gigawattcoffeeroasters.com.
2:16:40
203-29.
2:16:42
Yeah, it's littlejohnscandies.com.
2:16:45
What did I say?
2:16:45
You said Little John's Coffee.
2:16:49
That's what a collab will do to you.
2:16:50
No, that's from the drugs.
2:16:53
What drugs are you on?
2:16:55
Nothing.
2:16:55
What?
2:16:56
Nothing for pain?
2:16:58
No, I don't have any pain.
2:17:00
I have aches and I have like sore
2:17:03
back and neck and things like that.
2:17:07
And I asked about this, by the way,
2:17:09
not to go on about these ailments, but
2:17:12
because everyone would come in, well, we're going
2:17:15
to do this and that, and then somebody
2:17:16
else comes in, we're going to do this
2:17:17
and that.
2:17:18
And then they always say, do you have
2:17:20
any pain?
2:17:21
Oh, and do you?
2:17:22
And I said, no.
2:17:23
The little chart with the, where on this
2:17:25
chart is your pain level at?
2:17:27
And I said, no, you got pain from
2:17:29
zero to 10.
2:17:30
I don't have any pain.
2:17:31
He's got no pain.
2:17:33
And so this went on and on and
2:17:34
on.
2:17:35
And so somebody comes in once and I
2:17:37
said, okay, I don't have any pain.
2:17:40
But why, what, you know, I can't seem
2:17:43
to make it clear.
2:17:45
And so what is the pain that people
2:17:48
have?
2:17:50
Because after, you know, you have your while
2:17:52
you wonder what the hell's this horrible pain,
2:17:54
because they keep asking.
2:17:55
And I guess one of the doctors described,
2:17:59
it feels like you're being stabbed.
2:18:05
Wow.
2:18:06
I'm glad I don't have that.
2:18:07
Well, at least there's one thing I avoided.
2:18:10
You're doing so well to over two hours
2:18:13
and your energy went up.
2:18:14
It's amazing.
2:18:15
Yeah, well.
2:18:16
Hey, we've got Gert Lunkar in Breda in
2:18:20
the Netherlands.
2:18:21
$200 and 88 cents.
2:18:22
That's a give John a reason to live
2:18:24
donation.
2:18:25
And he has a note with his associate
2:18:26
executive producer, John and Adam.
2:18:29
ITM, I've been listening since COVID and I've
2:18:31
never missed a show since.
2:18:32
Thank you for bringing sanity in the world
2:18:34
of news and media.
2:18:36
This donation of $200 and 88 cents is
2:18:39
a shout out to my brother, Hans, who
2:18:41
has moved from the Netherlands to Phoenix, Arizona.
2:18:43
Did that a while ago.
2:18:44
He's a mechanical engineer, independent product developer, who's
2:18:47
a total beast at 3D and CAD design.
2:18:51
And he's looking to get more clients in
2:18:53
the US.
2:18:53
He is fully authorized to work in the
2:18:55
US.
2:18:56
He's got a green card and he's ready
2:18:57
to take on your 3D design needs for
2:18:59
mechanical engineering.
2:19:01
You can look him up on smartinnoventions.com.
2:19:04
That's smartinnoventions.com.
2:19:09
That's smartinnoventions.com.
2:19:11
Or contact him info at cad-downloads.com.
2:19:16
Kindly play the jingle for him.
2:19:18
Jobs, jobs, jobs.
2:19:20
We vote for jobs.
2:19:22
Keep up the great work and thank you
2:19:24
for your attention to this matter, says Gert
2:19:26
Lunkar from Breda in the Netherlands.
2:19:28
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:19:32
Let's vote for jobs.
2:19:34
Karma.
2:19:37
And there's Linda Lupatkin in Castle Rock, Colorado.
2:19:41
200 bucks.
2:19:42
Jobs, Karma, your resume has about 10 seconds
2:19:45
to make an impression.
2:19:47
And most don't.
2:19:50
For a resume, I think I have that.
2:19:55
Nice, nice one.
2:19:58
Linda helps professionals and ex-executives turn their
2:20:02
experience into a clear story of leadership results
2:20:07
and impact.
2:20:08
That's Image Makers, Inc.
2:20:10
with Kay.
2:20:11
And Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer
2:20:13
of winning resumes.
2:20:15
Best, Linda.
2:20:16
Jobs, jobs, jobs and jobs.
2:20:20
Let's vote for jobs.
2:20:24
By the way, when you're back at home
2:20:26
base, I don't know, it's going to take
2:20:27
a couple months.
2:20:28
Whenever you get to go back, you must
2:20:30
be ready to go back home already.
2:20:31
I know you.
2:20:32
You're like, I want to be home.
2:20:34
What's it like living with your kid?
2:20:37
Well, you know, Brennan is a chatty guy.
2:20:40
So it's fun to talk with him.
2:20:43
And it's good to work with Jay.
2:20:47
And it's just interesting.
2:20:49
I gotta tell you, Jay.
2:20:50
I think it's annoying to them.
2:20:52
I can't.
2:20:52
No, first of all, she loves you so
2:20:55
much.
2:20:56
I try to slow her down.
2:20:57
Like, easy does it.
2:20:58
He'll disappoint you somewhere along the way.
2:21:00
Just don't.
2:21:00
Let's hope so.
2:21:02
But she is a, she's a rock star.
2:21:05
She really is.
2:21:06
She didn't skip a beat.
2:21:09
You know, maybe, maybe she didn't care.
2:21:11
Oh, the old guys and then I gotta
2:21:13
live in my house.
2:21:14
But she is so good.
2:21:15
She just keeps on.
2:21:16
She could, had she ever done a podcast?
2:21:19
She, she doesn't enunciate.
2:21:22
Oh, I just remember her when she was
2:21:24
14 or 15.
2:21:26
That's the last time I saw her.
2:21:27
She's all grown up and married and, and
2:21:30
doing stuff.
2:21:31
She's cool.
2:21:34
Everybody loves Jay.
2:21:35
Yes.
2:21:36
So we could do the rest of these
2:21:38
because this is the shortest list we've ever
2:21:40
had.
2:21:40
Yeah, I'm going to, I'm going to go
2:21:42
right through it.
2:21:42
I'll do them all.
2:21:43
Never wait.
2:21:43
Let me stop you.
2:21:45
This is the shortest list of donations we've
2:21:51
ever had.
2:21:53
A total count with the, with the crypto
2:21:55
granny and all the rest thrown in of
2:21:57
19 people.
2:21:59
Now, is it that bad?
2:22:01
Part of this is the newsletter is, is
2:22:05
has to be redeveloped because it's just not
2:22:10
getting to anybody.
2:22:11
It's, you mean they're not actually receiving it
2:22:14
or it's not, it doesn't have impact.
2:22:15
They're not receiving it.
2:22:17
They're not receiving it.
2:22:18
Oh, what changed besides you almost dying?
2:22:21
No, this changed about, uh, six to nine
2:22:25
months ago.
2:22:26
And I noticed it then.
2:22:27
And I have, I was slow to act.
2:22:32
Yeah.
2:22:32
Now I'm slower.
2:22:33
So it's going to be a nightmare to
2:22:34
get this thing back on track.
2:22:36
Void zero is ready to help.
2:22:37
I mean, I know I want to talk
2:22:39
to him.
2:22:39
Okay.
2:22:39
Well talk to him.
2:22:41
Talk to your friend.
2:22:42
He has ideas.
2:22:43
He, if anyone knows email, it's void zero.
2:22:47
No, he's, he's, he's a borderline genius.
2:22:49
He is.
2:22:51
Except when he's like, it's Wednesday afternoon.
2:22:54
I'm doing show prep.
2:22:55
He's like, I'm just upgrading the mail server.
2:22:58
Yeah, that would be him.
2:23:00
I need some email to be able to
2:23:03
do my prep.
2:23:04
No, he, he is not borderline.
2:23:06
He is a certified genius.
2:23:08
So we'll thank these few people.
2:23:10
Larry Alar in Cochran, uh, Minnesota, 88, 88.
2:23:14
I came for Adam, but stay because of
2:23:16
John.
2:23:17
Be well, my friend.
2:23:18
Sir Nubbin Indianapolis, Indiana, 88, 88.
2:23:21
And he says there's evidence of promotion to
2:23:24
Baron.
2:23:25
Dear Adam on show 1839.
2:23:27
You credited to Chris Moore instead of certain
2:23:29
Nubbin has requested several times in notes and
2:23:31
emails.
2:23:32
Thank you for your attention to this matter.
2:23:34
I believe we are correcting that today, sir.
2:23:37
Michael Biscagli, Biscagli, Biscagli is from Staten Island.
2:23:42
And he sent in, oh, this is a
2:23:44
get well note.
2:23:44
It was a very nice card that he
2:23:46
sent.
2:23:46
Let me see.
2:23:47
Yes.
2:23:48
Um, it said bringing you the strength you
2:23:51
need today and every day.
2:23:53
Get well soon.
2:23:54
I'm happy you're out of the hospital and
2:23:55
on the men says Michael with his 88,
2:23:58
88.
2:23:59
That's nice.
2:23:59
And nice when people send cards like that.
2:24:01
So old school and with $80 and 8
2:24:05
cents, he's there every single show.
2:24:07
Sometimes twice, uh, sir, Kevin McLaughlin.
2:24:10
He is the Archduke of Luke, a lover
2:24:12
of America and boobs.
2:24:13
And as always, he says, God bless America
2:24:16
and boobs.
2:24:18
Lane Lamoureux, $55 from the middle of Mesopotamia.
2:24:21
Rockets, drones, and missiles.
2:24:23
Oh, my proving.
2:24:25
Not all Americans have gone bonkers from a
2:24:27
university in Baghdad.
2:24:28
Thanks for your thanks to your deconstruction.
2:24:31
So it says San Francisco, but I guess
2:24:34
he's in Iraq.
2:24:36
Sounds like it.
2:24:37
Yeah, well, stay safe.
2:24:39
Surprise of he's the knight of astonishment, 54
2:24:42
and 44 from Yukon, Oklahoma.
2:24:44
Tyler, the mailman, Arlington, Washington, 51, 11.
2:24:49
I love you guys.
2:24:50
Keep going on five ever.
2:24:52
That's more than forever.
2:24:54
Bobby Bow in Bluegrass, Iowa, 50.
2:24:57
Nathan Knoll in Nederland, Texas, 50.
2:25:00
Terrence Clark in Jacksonville Beach, 50.
2:25:02
And finally, our last 50 is Joshua Johnson
2:25:05
from Omaha, Nebraska.
2:25:07
And these make up our executive and associate
2:25:10
executive producers.
2:25:11
And our $50 and above producers for episode
2:25:14
1855.
2:25:16
Thank you all very much for those who
2:25:17
supported us.
2:25:18
And consider supporting us by going to knowagenthedonations
2:25:21
.com.
2:25:22
You will not regret supporting the best podcast
2:25:24
in the universe, because that means we'll keep
2:25:26
going even when people are on their deathbed.
2:25:29
I'm telling you, knowagenthedonations.com.
2:25:37
Also a short list on the birthdays, but
2:25:40
they are here.
2:25:41
Evan Mackey celebrates a birthday.
2:25:44
And let me see.
2:25:46
Layaway Night, Sir Exiled Maniac.
2:25:49
I don't have any dates for these guys,
2:25:51
but I'll just take it as it's their
2:25:53
birthday.
2:25:53
So happy birthday from everybody here at the
2:25:55
best podcast in the universe.
2:26:06
Well, I'm very sorry, Sir Nubbin.
2:26:10
I'm not sure exactly what went wrong, but
2:26:12
there was no malice intended.
2:26:13
So today you receive your long overdue and
2:26:17
deserved title change.
2:26:19
You now become a baron.
2:26:20
And we thank you for your courage and
2:26:22
for your support of the best podcast in
2:26:24
the universe.
2:26:25
So we do have one night.
2:26:27
It is a layaway night.
2:26:29
And I believe I have a note here.
2:26:32
This is from A.
2:26:35
Jackson Pollock.
2:26:37
And he will become Sir Exiled Maniac.
2:26:40
He says, John Adam marches donation of 30.
2:26:42
Oh, this is a long time layaway.
2:26:44
3333 should leave me a penny short of
2:26:46
knighthood.
2:26:47
So if you can spare a penny, do
2:26:48
I have my pennies?
2:26:49
Ever since I went to Linux, I think
2:26:51
I lost my pennies.
2:26:56
You know, the Linux machine sucked up the
2:26:59
pennies.
2:26:59
Do I have it?
2:27:04
Nope.
2:27:04
I'm going to have to look for it.
2:27:05
I owe you.
2:27:06
Yes, it'll be.
2:27:07
I owe you is right.
2:27:09
There you go.
2:27:11
I think the ROI will be worth it.
2:27:13
I've also sent an additional 3333 this month
2:27:15
in order to sponsor a douchebag.
2:27:17
Save a podcaster.
2:27:18
I hope this concept catches on.
2:27:20
JCD's life and the show may depend on
2:27:22
it.
2:27:23
Please knight me Sir Exiled Maniac kennel master
2:27:25
of the Dutch Shepherds and Belgian Malinois.
2:27:28
Malinois.
2:27:29
Malinois.
2:27:30
You know who has Malinois?
2:27:32
Laura Logan.
2:27:33
She got five of them.
2:27:35
I had one.
2:27:36
Yeah, but these, these are the ones that
2:27:38
bit Luke Coffey and he had to get
2:27:39
plastic surgery on his face.
2:27:42
No, that's not good.
2:27:43
No, she has five of them and they
2:27:44
get out all the time and they're on
2:27:46
the street roaming around.
2:27:47
Like they are killers.
2:27:50
They can, I had one that was gentle.
2:27:53
Yeah.
2:27:53
But this dog, nothing could contain him.
2:27:59
He would get his escape.
2:28:00
He was an escape artist.
2:28:02
You know, one time we dropped him off
2:28:03
at a kennel.
2:28:04
Then we said, this dog will escape.
2:28:09
And don't worry about it.
2:28:11
We got to secure his facilities.
2:28:13
And so then we see the guy the
2:28:14
next time and he says, so I locked
2:28:16
the dog up and I'm walking down the
2:28:19
hall and I hear something clicking behind me.
2:28:21
The dog is walking right behind me.
2:28:25
They are escape artists.
2:28:29
Let me say that was actually pretty funny.
2:28:31
Let me save that one.
2:28:32
So I need to read some of this
2:28:34
note.
2:28:34
I don't know if you saw, if you
2:28:36
saw this note, but this is a hilarious
2:28:38
note.
2:28:39
Okay.
2:28:40
He says, so I've been having this recurring
2:28:41
dream and I'm starting to think it may
2:28:44
have something to do with the best podcast
2:28:45
in the universe.
2:28:46
It goes something like this.
2:28:48
Since the pandemic, I've been down on my
2:28:50
luck and financially strapped.
2:28:52
So I started directing gay porn movies out
2:28:55
of my house, unbeknownst to my wife while
2:28:57
she's at work.
2:28:58
I'm working with my associate executive producer, Dana
2:29:01
Brunetti and our biggest star, Eli, the coffee
2:29:05
guy.
2:29:05
We are discussing the next scene, which involves
2:29:08
little John's candied beads and a gigawatt coffee
2:29:11
enema followed up with good old fashioned La
2:29:13
Jolla salt rub and tug.
2:29:15
Suddenly the front door flies open and my
2:29:17
wife, Linda Lou, Duchess of Jobs and writer
2:29:19
of winning resumes unexpectedly comes home and cries
2:29:22
out in horror.
2:29:23
Mr. Timothy, what in the world?
2:29:25
What have you been shopping at?
2:29:26
Bad idea supply again.
2:29:28
Then she starts yakking at me something about
2:29:30
it.
2:29:30
If I don't change my wicked ways, find
2:29:32
Jesus and go to imagemakersinc.com.
2:29:35
That's image makers inc with a K.
2:29:37
She's always repeating herself and get myself a
2:29:39
winning resume that gets results.
2:29:40
And there's no doubt in her mind that
2:29:42
I would end up working at Martel hardware
2:29:44
for the rest of my life.
2:29:46
About this time, the alarm clock goes off
2:29:48
and from the radio, I hear the spooky
2:29:49
voice of a washed up VJ exclaiming in
2:29:53
the morning, followed by his geriatric handler sidekick,
2:29:56
bitching and moaning for three hours about low
2:29:58
donations.
2:29:59
What can all of this madness mean?
2:30:01
When will this sigh up end?
2:30:02
Four more years is what my conspiracy therapist
2:30:05
keeps telling me, but he says it may
2:30:06
end a whole lot sooner unless all the
2:30:09
douchebags in the universe donate at least once,
2:30:11
no matter the amount, although 3333 is the
2:30:14
magic number.
2:30:15
Ball is in your court, douchebags.
2:30:17
Stay safe and donate.
2:30:19
That's a Jackson Pollock plus no agenda is
2:30:21
a Picasso.
2:30:22
And that means that we need to ignite
2:30:25
this guy.
2:30:25
So if you can grab that little tiny
2:30:27
heart right here, that's beautiful.
2:30:34
Jason, come on up here.
2:30:35
He has the exiled maniac and you now
2:30:38
officially will become Sir Exiled Maniac, kennel master
2:30:42
of the Dutch Shepherds and Belgian Malinois.
2:30:45
And for you, we have, as always, hookers
2:30:48
and blow red boys and Chardonnay.
2:30:49
We got Harlan's and how dull we've got
2:30:52
red heads and rise, beers and blunts, cowgirls
2:30:54
and coffee.
2:30:55
Varnish Ruben has women and rosé, geishas and
2:30:58
sake, vodka, manila, bong hits and bourbon, sparkling
2:31:00
cider and escorts, ginger ale and gerbils, breast
2:31:03
milk and pablum.
2:31:04
And as always, the roundtable, especially for people
2:31:07
who write funny notes like that, we've got
2:31:09
mutton and me, you sir, head over to
2:31:12
no agenda rings dot com and give us
2:31:14
your ring size so we can send that
2:31:16
off to you.
2:31:17
And they always come with a certificate of
2:31:20
authenticity and a couple of sticks of wax,
2:31:23
so you can add those to your gay
2:31:25
porn movie.
2:31:26
Danny Brunetti will help you for sure.
2:31:28
And welcome to the roundtable, the No Agenda
2:31:30
Nights and Dames.
2:31:31
No Agenda Meetup.
2:31:36
Well, you heard it earlier.
2:31:38
Collabs happen, businessmen get together and all kinds
2:31:42
of beautiful things take place.
2:31:43
Connection is protection at the No Agenda Meetup.
2:31:45
These people will be your first responders in
2:31:47
any emergency or in business venture for that
2:31:50
matter.
2:31:50
And you can find them all at no
2:31:51
agenda meetups dot com.
2:31:53
Today there is a meetup and that is
2:31:55
at six o'clock.
2:31:56
The Northern Wake No Agenda Counter North Sea
2:31:59
Nexus Planning Committee Meetup.
2:32:01
And that'll be in North Carolina at Saints
2:32:03
and Scholars.
2:32:04
So make sure you check that out.
2:32:06
Coming up this month, this coming month, April
2:32:08
4th, Osaka, Japan.
2:32:10
I know that's going to be a good
2:32:11
meetup.
2:32:11
We've got a lot of people in Osaka
2:32:12
Eagle on the 11th.
2:32:14
This is a big day for the meetups.
2:32:15
Eagle, Idaho.
2:32:17
Albany, California.
2:32:18
Sounds like John just might make it.
2:32:19
Ladies, get your hot sexy nurse outfits on
2:32:22
for the photo op.
2:32:23
Lafayette, Louisiana and Fredericksburg, Texas.
2:32:26
Also on the 11th.
2:32:27
I will be there with the keeper.
2:32:28
Pastor Jimmy coming.
2:32:29
Well, we've got Matt Long.
2:32:31
It's going to be a hootenanny.
2:32:33
The 16th, Charlotte, North Carolina.
2:32:35
The 18th, Fort Wayne, Indiana.
2:32:37
Franklin, Tennessee.
2:32:37
Always a good meetup over there on the
2:32:39
18th.
2:32:39
Vancouver, BC.
2:32:41
The most broke place in Canada.
2:32:43
But they'll be doing a meetup on the
2:32:44
19th.
2:32:44
April 25th, Scheveningen in the Netherlands.
2:32:47
The 26th, Brighton in Michigan.
2:32:49
And Leipzig in Germany on April 30th.
2:32:53
No agenda meetups.
2:32:54
You will not regret going to these at
2:32:55
least once in your life.
2:32:57
Go to noagendameetups.com.
2:32:58
If you can't find one near you, no
2:33:01
worries.
2:33:01
All you got to do is start one
2:33:02
yourself.
2:33:03
It's easy and always guaranteed a party.
2:33:06
noagendameetups.com.
2:33:27
All right.
2:33:28
I got time for some ISOs here.
2:33:31
You only have two.
2:33:33
I see you got two ISOs.
2:33:34
All right.
2:33:34
I'll play mine first and we'll see how
2:33:37
we do.
2:33:42
That apparently was real.
2:33:46
Although that, well, maybe I'm wrong.
2:33:49
It came, I thought it came from the
2:33:51
Sean Hannity show.
2:33:53
But I could be wrong.
2:33:57
But I think it's AI.
2:33:59
Here's another one.
2:34:03
All right.
2:34:04
Okay.
2:34:05
All right.
2:34:05
I got two.
2:34:06
Yes.
2:34:07
See ya.
2:34:08
See ya.
2:34:09
Catch you later.
2:34:10
Take it easy.
2:34:12
Okay.
2:34:12
Not bad.
2:34:14
And then impressive.
2:34:16
That's impressive.
2:34:18
Hmm.
2:34:19
I think I like see ya the best.
2:34:21
I kind of see ya.
2:34:22
Catch you later.
2:34:23
Take it easy.
2:34:24
I think we should leave it with see
2:34:25
ya.
2:34:26
Okay.
2:34:27
All right.
2:34:27
We'll do that.
2:34:28
Hey, everybody.
2:34:28
Before we go anywhere, it is time for
2:34:31
John's tip of the day.
2:34:35
You and me, just a tip with JCD
2:34:39
and sometimes Adam.
2:34:44
Well, not being out and about and the
2:34:49
last tip we picked, I've decided what obvious
2:34:54
things should people have that would be a
2:34:56
tip of the day?
2:34:58
And I got another one.
2:35:01
Okay.
2:35:01
It's not on the list.
2:35:02
I don't know why we haven't picked it
2:35:03
before.
2:35:04
But everybody should have one of these.
2:35:07
A carbon monoxide monitor.
2:35:10
Oh, yes.
2:35:11
I actually have one.
2:35:13
You have one?
2:35:14
Yes.
2:35:14
For when I fly.
2:35:15
I haven't used it in a while.
2:35:16
But yes, I have one for in the
2:35:18
cockpit.
2:35:19
Well, there's a lot of them.
2:35:20
There's tons of them out there.
2:35:22
They're about the two I'll recommend is the
2:35:25
first alert, which is 23 bucks.
2:35:29
And then there's the Kitty, K-I-T
2:35:33
-T-E, 27 bucks.
2:35:36
These are brands that are known.
2:35:39
And they're not expensive.
2:35:41
And they're valuable protection that everyone should have,
2:35:44
especially in and around the kitchen.
2:35:46
If you have gas appliances.
2:35:48
Now, are these just simple ones that beep
2:35:51
or make a noise?
2:35:53
Or can you get them that connect to
2:35:55
an app?
2:35:56
So your app will alert you?
2:35:58
No, but there's plenty that do.
2:35:59
And you can look for those.
2:36:01
In that, you know, in planes, we have
2:36:02
a very cheap one, which is a little
2:36:05
disc.
2:36:06
And the disc changes color.
2:36:10
And then you know that there's a lot
2:36:11
of carbon monoxide.
2:36:13
Yeah, I'd rather have something beeping at me.
2:36:15
Yeah.
2:36:15
And excuse me, I've had them go off
2:36:21
like false positive.
2:36:23
And here's what the pilots do.
2:36:25
How do you feel?
2:36:25
You feel okay?
2:36:26
Yeah.
2:36:26
You feel funny?
2:36:27
No, I feel good.
2:36:27
All right.
2:36:28
Feel good.
2:36:28
You sure?
2:36:28
Okay.
2:36:29
All right.
2:36:29
Feel good.
2:36:29
All right.
2:36:30
That's your check.
2:36:34
Because if you feel funny, then you know,
2:36:36
I am.
2:36:37
If you feel funny, you're in trouble.
2:36:38
Open the window.
2:36:39
I want to do something like that.
2:36:41
There it is, everybody.
2:36:41
If you want to find more of these
2:36:42
tips of the day, go to knowagentifun.com,
2:36:44
tipoftheday.net.
2:36:46
Great advice from you and me.
2:36:49
Just the tip of JCD.
2:36:53
And sometimes Adam.
2:36:55
Created by Dana Brunetti.
2:36:56
There it is.
2:36:57
Dana Brunetti, known for the gay porn, apparently
2:37:00
now.
2:37:01
In only a...
2:37:02
I appreciate giving you grief for that.
2:37:04
Well, hey, he needs to do some kind
2:37:06
of project.
2:37:08
Might as well be in somebody's dreams.
2:37:11
End of show mixes.
2:37:12
MVP is back on.
2:37:14
And Molly Berry comes in.
2:37:16
Molly Berry did the Order of the Heart.
2:37:18
End of show mix.
2:37:20
Yep.
2:37:20
I am your sloperator.
2:37:22
Playing those tunes for you.
2:37:24
You know, these mixes today are pretty good.
2:37:26
They are.
2:37:26
Well, they have good lyrics.
2:37:27
People are figuring out how to, you know,
2:37:29
use good lyrics.
2:37:30
And then it's...
2:37:31
It's not as offensive that it's AI.
2:37:36
But you know, according to Rick Beto, we'll
2:37:38
all be making them ourselves on our Mac
2:37:40
minis at home.
2:37:42
And for more media deconstruction and more on
2:37:45
the war, we'll be back on Thursday.
2:37:48
And we hope you will join us.
2:37:51
Coming to you from the heart of the
2:37:52
Texas Hill Country right here in Fredericksburg, Texas,
2:37:55
where we love the Comanches.
2:37:57
In the morning, everybody.
2:37:58
I'm Adam Curry.
2:37:59
And from northern...
2:38:00
Oops, I'm sorry.
2:38:01
Northern San Francisco Bay Refinery Row.
2:38:05
I'm John C.
2:38:06
Dvorak.
2:38:06
We'll be back on Thursday.
2:38:08
Please remember us at noagendadonations.com.
2:38:12
And stay tuned for the Millennial Media Offensive
2:38:14
next on noagendastream.com.
2:38:16
Until Thursday, adios, mofos, a-hooey-hooey, and
2:38:20
such.
2:38:38
A real treasure for you.
2:38:40
It's B4B and make a donation now.
2:38:43
Who'll start the bidding for me at a
2:38:46
five?
2:38:48
Got a five and now a tenner.
2:38:50
Who'll give me tenner now?
2:38:52
Ten, ten dollar bid now.
2:38:54
Fifteen, who's it?
2:38:56
Fifteen dollar, I got it now.
2:38:58
Twenty, twenty, twenty.
2:39:01
Make it twenty, twenty dollars now.
2:39:03
Twenty-five, got to keep this show alive.
2:39:08
Twenty-five, I got it.
2:39:10
Who'll give me thirty?
2:39:11
Come on, folks, don't do me dirty.
2:39:14
Got thirty, now thirty-five.
2:39:16
Thirty-five, will you give me five?
2:39:23
Thirty-five dollars from the lady in the
2:39:25
shack.
2:39:25
Now forty, forty, get on track.
2:39:29
Forty bucks now, forty-five.
2:39:31
Get the showmanship man alive.
2:39:35
Forty-five, I hear it now.
2:39:37
Fifty-fifty, come on, be thrifty.
2:39:42
B4B, what a deal.
2:39:44
This best podcast for real.
2:39:48
Fifty bucks, gonna do it now.
2:39:50
Fifty bucks, take a bow.
2:39:53
Fifty bucks, every show.
2:39:57
Anyone for this fine golden flow?
2:40:00
Going twice, are you sure?
2:40:04
It's really nice.
2:40:07
Fifty-five, I got fifty-five.
2:40:09
Hold a no-agenda show.
2:40:10
Sixty, sixty, sixty.
2:40:11
Gonna do it twice a week, you know.
2:40:13
Got sixty now, five.
2:40:15
Sixty-five, eighty.
2:40:16
Eighty and sold for eighty.
2:40:18
To the man with the lady.
2:40:32
I felt the cold night air in the
2:40:34
borrowed breath.
2:40:36
I felt the shadow creeping like a second
2:40:40
death.
2:40:40
Hand on my heart, felt the spark ignite.
2:40:44
In the dark, I was marked by the
2:40:47
red night.
2:40:49
In the grip of death, couldn't feel my
2:40:52
veins.
2:40:53
But if I came back when I spoke
2:40:56
his name.
2:40:57
We are the knights that won't give in.
2:41:00
The order of the heart begins.
2:41:02
No agenda, just stay alive.
2:41:04
Through the dark, we'll learn to fight.
2:41:06
Out of the black, into the light.
2:41:10
I ride with the flame of the red
2:41:13
night.
2:41:15
No fear left, no compromise.
2:41:19
I saw the edge and I chose to
2:41:22
rise.
2:41:23
Pulled my breath back from the edge.
2:41:28
Took my life back from the very ledge.
2:41:32
We are the knights that won't give in.
2:41:35
The order of the heart begins.
2:41:37
In the morning, I'm still alive.
2:41:39
I survive the grip of the night.
2:41:41
Out of the dark, into the light.
2:41:45
With the red night, I survive.
2:41:49
The best podcast in the universe!
2:41:56
Adios, mofo.
2:41:58
Dvorak.org slash N-A.
2:42:02
See ya.
2:42:03
Catch you later.
2:42:04
Take it easy.