Cover for No Agenda Show 1874: Kennel Index
June 4th • 2h 58m

1874: Kennel Index

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0:00
You need to smile more. Adam Curry. John C. DeVore.
0:04
It's Thursday, June 4th, 2026. It's your award-winning Kibonation Media
0:08
Assassination Episode 1874. This is no agenda. Broadcasting live from
0:17
the heart of the Texas New Country here in FEMA,
0:19
Reno. Number six. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry.
0:24
And in California, it doesn't look like Tom Steyer's going
0:28
to be governor. I'm John C. Dvorak. *BuzzGames intro* In
0:32
the morning. Yeah, I don't think I won my dollar
0:36
yet. but it's looking pretty good. What's your dollar about?
0:42
The mayor of Los Angeles. Oh, you, what? What was
0:47
the bet again? You, I'm glad it wasn't for a
0:50
thousand dollars. If it was $1,000, I would have sent
0:53
an email out and had somebody sign the document. It's
0:57
different. I said that... Um... Pratt would not become mayor
1:03
and that it would be Karen Bass. Yeah, that's what
1:05
you said. And you said, no, because I said California's
1:08
rigged. And you said, no, no, they can't rig it.
1:10
They have to let them win. You had a whole
1:12
theory about it. I do, and I'm sticking with the
1:15
theory that that's got nothing to do with Tom Steyer.
1:17
No, I know that, but you're kind of avoiding the
1:20
bet. I'm not avoiding the bet. I'm good. I'm good
1:23
for the bet. We didn't talk about Stoyer, Steyer, Stoney.
1:28
We talked about Pratt. Pratt is the interesting one. Not
1:33
to me. So what is the deal? I'm not a-
1:36
I don't live in LA. I'm telling you, Todd, this
1:39
Steyer thing is more important. You're like- Pratt is going
1:41
to take it. Pratt has the best campaign ever. He's
1:44
not going to take it. He's going to take it
1:47
easy. Who the heck voted for this Karen Bass? It's
1:52
rigged. Double or nothing? Want to go two bucks? Want
1:55
to double down? Want to double down, big man? Okay,
1:58
two bucks. So tell me about this. Well, Steyer, here's
2:02
the guy. This guy is a, you know, he's a...
2:04
I don't even know what he does. He's like a
2:06
hedge fund guy or something. Anyway, he spent $300 million
2:11
on his campaign for president, which got him nowhere. And
2:14
then he drops another $200 million on his own campaign
2:18
for governor. And nobody liked it. Wait a minute. He's
2:21
not likeable. This makes no sense. We've been told over
2:26
and over again. Whenever it's Jewish money, it always wins
2:31
because they have a lot of it. Yeah, he put
2:34
the most money in and came in third. Well, this
2:36
makes no sense. I agree. It makes no sense because
2:42
based on what everybody's been telling us, you put the
2:45
money in, you win. Yeah, that's how it works. I
2:48
don't understand this at all. This is crazy. I get
2:52
it now. He's not Jewish. That's the problem. Oh, is
2:54
that what it is? Oh, man. Sean Ryan and Megan
3:03
Kelly. They were saying exactly this. By the way, what
3:09
a great idea. Let's all go on each other's podcasts.
3:13
See, we had the right idea. For 18 years, we've
3:17
been going on each other's podcast. *laughs* That's how you
3:21
do it! No, Megan had to go on Sean Ryan's
3:24
podcast, and I'm sure Sean will go on Megan's podcast.
3:28
This podcast circle jerk is kind of getting annoying. It's
3:33
very annoying. Podcast circle jerk. That'd be a great title
3:39
for the show. I don't know about that. Um... So
3:44
they're lamenting about this very thing that California just proved
3:48
is not true. And here they are talking about Thomas
3:52
Massey and how Israel bought the election. So what does
3:55
this all mean? I mean, I thought he was going
3:58
to win. I thought for sure he was going to
4:00
win. done he didn't and Israel bought it. They bought
4:05
the election. Do we even vote anymore? What's the fucking
4:10
point? Legitimately, what's the point? It's very hard for me
4:14
to argue against your cynicism. I think a lot of
4:18
us... We have a duty to vote, but... Like, why?
4:22
Yeah, for what? What? If they're just going to, I
4:26
mean. I mean. Ideally, a candidate will come along who
4:30
will represent. an antidote to the system. Tucker! Tucker! They
4:36
should have said it. Come on, say it. Tucker. Antidote
4:41
it has to be the end. Oh they went on
4:43
man and because This is not going to work anymore,
4:47
this Israel buying elections. I just feel stuck. I mean,
4:52
they're. buying our elections. How do we get out from
4:57
under this shit? What? Is it almost over? Is it
5:01
going to die with the baby boomer generation? I mean,
5:03
Gen Z is 85% against Israel. These are all the
5:07
hopeful things. What's going on? These are all good things.
5:11
I have nothing against Israel as a country. I don't
5:15
have anything against the people. But the government has definitely
5:17
been taking advantage of us. And we've been allowing it.
5:20
Really. And sometimes I do worry, like we shouldn't use
5:23
Israel as a proxy to hide our anger at Trump.
5:28
Oh, okay. Here's some truth coming out. What? You know,
5:32
President Trump's the one who made the call. He made
5:34
the call. Netanyahu... This has been going on for a
5:36
long fucking time. I agree, but I'm just saying, like,
5:39
Netanyahu made an argument... that he thought was in favor
5:41
of his country. They go on and on about this.
5:44
Here's Megan. Like, it's really... you know, realizing that Israel
5:49
owns the entire U.S. government and the president. and the
5:53
Treasury. And the Department of Education and the EPA and
5:58
the DHS. In anything else... Department of War. I forgot
6:03
that one. It's actually good news. Because realizing this is
6:08
like getting a cancer diagnosis. But hold that point. Hold
6:12
that thought because I do want to come back to
6:13
that. All the stuff you just said is why we
6:17
should feel optimistic. If you go to the doctor tomorrow
6:20
and you find out You have cancer. You might feel
6:24
sad. But it's actually a good day because you found
6:28
out. about cancer. And it's better to know, so you
6:32
can do something about it. The reality was the same
6:35
yesterday, today, and tomorrow. You have cancer. I mean, this
6:39
is what we call black... They are depressed? They're angry.
6:45
They're mad. Actually, I don't believe any of that. I
6:48
think they're just following the likes, the clicks, and the
6:50
views. Because Megyn Kelly hated Trump. Then she loved Trump.
6:53
Now she hates Trump. She's a fair-weather friend. She doesn't
6:56
care. But Ryan... Don't forget when she was at NBC,
7:00
she had all these trans... people on. Oh, the trans
7:04
is so particularly great. And then she gets another show.
7:08
Yeah, I hate the trans. Don't make up your mind.
7:12
But Sean Ryan, he's really depressed. How do we be
7:17
correct? How do we get on the right course? How
7:20
do we get out from Israel's thumb? How do we
7:23
stop this? How do we stop the forever wars? How
7:27
do we get the pulse back to where it needs
7:29
to be? Nothing's on the right track. That's why I
7:32
think voting for, I mean, get them in in onesies
7:35
and twosies, I just don't feel like they're going to
7:37
last. I feel like it needs to be a new
7:40
party, but that's already been tried. Oh, yeah. So now
7:44
I'm telling you, they are just an inch away from
7:47
saying Tucker's our guy. He's got to be our guy.
7:51
They didn't say it. Well, it keeps coming up in
7:53
the conversation. We've got clip after clip of people, including
7:56
Cenk. Yes. Saying Tucker should be president. Well, that's insane.
8:03
I'm trying to think which, was it this clip maybe?
8:06
Answers on those questions are going to be very clear
8:09
deal breakers in the next election. No one who starts
8:13
talking about their commitment to Israel has a chance in
8:17
hell of getting elected. They just don't. So don't you
8:21
think Israel would just pay him to die? talk about
8:23
it until they win oh yeah oh yeah okay you
8:27
got you got stealth candidates Man, this is so crazy
8:33
I think, where was it she was talking about Cenk
8:36
here? Israel had over American politics. I think this is
8:38
it here. That's how I see this whole problem with
8:41
Israel. We didn't... Understand this. on the left or the
8:44
right. about how much influence Israel had over American politics.
8:50
Some did. Glenn Greenwald has been, like, sounding the alarm
8:54
on this forever. As have people like Anna Kasparian, but,
8:57
like, Cenk Uygur, but... It's been a smaller group. This
9:01
wasn't something that was either known. Cenk Uygur, Anna Kasparian,
9:05
now she's all on their side? This is pretty nuts.
9:10
especially. when you take into account the phone call the
9:15
president had with bb netanyahu finally i've been telling i've
9:20
been telling the president You've got to do something about
9:22
this Israel hate. So this is how it played out
9:26
in the... Uh... in the M5M. This, literally this short
9:31
of a little blurb from Pooper. The president also acknowledged
9:35
the phone call he recently had with Israeli Prime Minister
9:37
Netanyahu during which he reportedly called him effing crazy. asked
9:41
him regarding Lebanon, quote, what the F are you doing?
9:45
Did you speak to him in those times? I did.
9:47
I always say angry. I was a little bit... perturbed
9:51
at his Constantly fighting with Lebanon. You know, at some
9:58
point that should be me. We gotta stop this. You
10:01
gotta stop it. The Prime Minister was also asked about
10:06
the call and the President's characterization of it. President confirmed
10:10
that he said you're effing crazy. How did you react
10:14
to that? What really happened in that call? I told
10:16
him I'm going to pull him out of office. I'm
10:18
in control of him. Well, I'm not going to. to
10:20
details of our conversations. We've had thousands of them. A
10:24
lot. A lot of them. What's that? Thousands, really? I
10:28
guess. And if you think this is a crisis, you
10:30
should be in some other conversations. But we've always found
10:33
a way. Well, one other item on Israel and Lebanon.
10:37
Shortly before airtime, the two countries announced that they have
10:39
agreed to what they're calling the... implementation of a ceasefire.
10:42
Okay, so maybe the call works. But Pooper can't make
10:46
that conclusion. But the thing that was interesting about this
10:49
is it was Axios who broke the story. And immediately...
10:53
Everywhere on Axios, well, Axios is bought and paid for
10:56
by the Jews. You know that, right? Like, make up
10:59
your mind. Please, here's part one of the story about
11:03
Axios. And there's two parts. The second part, which has
11:06
not been discussed anywhere in M5M. We won't get into
11:10
the precise vulgarisms in the conversation. Oh, vulgarisms. Oh, we
11:14
can't say the F word or the S word. The
11:17
President of the United States and the Israeli Prime Minister.
11:20
But summarize them for us, Mark, and when this happened
11:23
and why. On Monday, Donald Trump got steamed with Prime
11:26
Minister Netanyahu because Netanyahu had launched this invasion and this
11:30
attack on Lebanon and southern Lebanon. It had led the
11:33
Iranians to say, we're done with peace talks. And Trump
11:38
got him on the horn and really lit into him,
11:40
said you're... You're effing crazy. What the eff are you
11:42
doing? I'm keeping your behind out of prison. Oh, we
11:47
can't say ass. And basically, you need to know when
11:50
to stop. And the description that we were given of
11:54
this is Donald Trump was really steamed. He subsequently came
11:57
out on a New York Post podcast and said that.
12:00
Well, I wasn't really angry. I was perturbed. But he
12:02
confirmed he indeed did say that to Netanyahu. And very
12:05
quickly, to remind the audience, Hezbollah is operating in Lebanon.
12:09
They're a terrorist proxy of Iran. So what no one
12:14
reported on is Miranda Devine. Actually, it's worth hearing the
12:19
whole. first part and second part of her interview with
12:24
him. So this is the first part about the phone
12:26
call. Now, Axios reported that you had a phone call
12:29
with Bibi Netanyahu, the prime minister of Israel, in which
12:32
you were angry with him. You said, are you effing
12:35
crazy? What are you effing doing? I helped you stay
12:40
out of jail. Is that true? Did you speak to
12:42
him in those two years? I would say angry. I
12:45
was a little bit perturbed at his... constantly fighting with
12:51
Lebanon. You know, at some point I said, "Bee, Bee."
12:55
We gotta stop this. We gotta stop it. But I
12:58
have a very good relationship. We've done well. done well
13:01
together. He always says we could never have done it,
13:05
but everybody knows that we could have never done it
13:07
without the United States. But I've worked very well together.
13:11
I like Bibi a lot. And I worked very well
13:14
with him. We had a... You know where he, I'm
13:16
a wartime president, he's a wartime prime minister. very important
13:20
part of the world. And I think we've done very
13:24
well. We've gotten along very well together. Okay, so fine.
13:29
And then she asked a little bit about, you know,
13:31
just on and on and on. There was a second
13:34
part of the phone call, which Axios reported on, but
13:37
Miranda Devine didn't ask about, and which was... I think
13:41
for obvious reasons, not asked about or reported everywhere else.
13:45
And this is the part. There's another thing the president
13:47
in your piece with Barack Ravid said to the Israeli
13:51
prime minister that strikes me as interesting. He said. The
13:54
world hates Israel. and hates you for doing this. Sort
13:59
of saying that... It's not just between you and I.
14:03
Prime Minister Netanyahu, you have an image problem. Right, and
14:07
that's really important to Donald Trump, who pays attention to
14:09
that sort of thing. And it also means that Trump
14:11
himself... I mean, to verbalize it, though, that way. Right,
14:14
well, he's not only said that to Netanyahu there, he's
14:18
privately said that as well. There are... I need to
14:22
phrase this properly and carefully. Why? Just say it. There
14:25
are people in the Trump administration who are gravely concerned
14:28
that Netanyahu has been, in the words of one of
14:31
them, too bloodthirsty in the way in which he's prosecuted
14:33
the war in Gaza against Hamas and now against Hezbollah,
14:39
and that it has led to this. circumstance. Now, Netanyahu's
14:42
defenders, let's be clear, say that's completely unfair. He needs
14:45
to do this. Otherwise, they were encircled by a, quote,
14:48
ring of fire. So I think Trump has done this
14:51
in a very interesting way by because this was clearly
14:54
leaked. No one at Axios heard the call. This was
14:58
purposely leaked. by two people familiar with the matter. And
15:03
the second part. I think was critical to say, it's
15:06
not Israel, it's Bibi Netanyahu. You're the reason why everybody
15:10
hates Israel. Channeling all of that negative black-pilled energy from
15:16
Sean Ryan and Megyn Kelly and Tucker Carlson and everybody
15:19
towards Netanyahu. And then... Unfortunately, Divine didn't ask about that.
15:26
But then he says something very interesting about the, well,
15:30
you know, clearly they tricked you into this war, right?
15:33
They tricked you. What do you say to people who
15:36
claim that Bibi Netanyahu tricked you into going into Iran?
15:40
Well, they're just... you know, the enemy. They're just, you
15:42
know, the Democrats. These are Democrats. These are people that
15:46
don't know what they're doing. They want men playing in
15:49
women's sports and they want open borders so the world
15:52
can pour into our country and they want transgender for
15:54
everybody, surgery, and they want transgender utilization of our children.
16:01
No, these are just words, you know, that's all they
16:03
do, that's all they're good for is words, like... I
16:06
heard that the other day for the first time. I
16:07
said, he tricked me. I mean, I'm the one that
16:10
started it because, again, I don't want to bore anybody,
16:13
but I started it because we can't let them have
16:16
a nuclear weapon. So do you think, it can't be
16:19
that the president is not aware. of the podcast circle
16:22
jerk circuit. He must know that Tucker and all these
16:27
people are saying this, but he universally just says, oh,
16:30
they're all Democrats, or Democrats is his new word. Do
16:33
you think this is purposeful or do you think he
16:35
really doesn't know? I think he doesn't know, really. Well,
16:39
the reason I say that is because when I talk...
16:41
to people who are on the left and there's plenty
16:44
of them around and I'm in California next door unlike
16:46
you that's right so I have the different perspective in
16:51
that regard and you kid they don't know shit They
16:56
don't know anything that's going on on the other side
16:58
of the fence, and I don't see why Trump would
17:00
be. although he's not a Democrat. ignoring the right. He's
17:05
a right winger ignoring the left. Yeah, but Tucker and
17:09
those guys were his team. quote unquote. Yeah, but his...
17:13
but... No, I'm... I can honestly believe that he doesn't
17:17
know that the circle jerk... Because we follow it closely.
17:20
He's got a... He's got other things to worry about
17:23
besides who's on whose podcast. Not like Biden, who apparently,
17:27
according to Jill, watched Fox News all the time. I
17:31
believe. You read the book. Oh, man. Well, I just
17:37
thought that was very interesting. Yeah, I think so too.
17:40
I'd like to figure out who was the leakers. Yeah.
17:44
Because you can't be, like you can't, if you're an
17:47
Axios, the nature of the Axios news operation is, I
17:51
think, as follows. If somebody's leaking to you, you have
17:55
to assume there's ulterior motives. And so you want to
18:00
get leaks. from somebody who's like slipping you cool information
18:04
that you can write on without feeling that you've been
18:07
used. Right, right. So the leaker can't be Rubio, for
18:11
example. Right. um well he says how do i be
18:15
a designated leaker well if you if you listen to
18:18
what the axios guy said in that report he says
18:20
um How do I put this carefully? Because he was
18:24
talking about the leakers. Yeah, he was trying to make
18:27
sure that the leaker wasn't revealed. Right. And it was
18:30
people who feel that Netanyahu is bloodthirsty. Yeah, well, I
18:36
can see a lot of people feeling that way. I
18:39
think we feel that way. I think he is. Yeah.
18:43
I just thought that was interesting. You know, they kill
18:46
presidents, they kill JFK. So, you know, Trump just even
18:49
saying that, you know, I kept your ass out of
18:51
jail and what the F are you doing? I mean,
18:53
this is going to be assassinated now. According to the
18:58
same people. He's all dumb. Well, it's funny, though. Yeah.
19:04
So I was having a conversation with one of my
19:06
friends in Los Angeles who's... Wait, you have a friend
19:08
in Los Angeles? Yeah. You have a friend? Wait, stop.
19:12
I do. I have a couple of friends. A couple
19:14
of friends. Still left. He was like, he's got a
19:19
depressed attitude, typical of the- Angelinos. And he's going on
19:23
about how everyone's, they've all fallen for the Candace Owens,
19:28
Megan, what you're talking about, how you started it off.
19:32
These people have captured. a huge number of Otherwise, conservatives
19:39
down in Southern California, he's surrounded by them. It's everywhere.
19:42
And he's freaked out about it. He's like, you know,
19:44
he's of the mind. Mimi's kind of of this mind,
19:47
too. That we have a civil war brewing. Oh, okay.
19:51
Yeah. And I'm not, you know, I'm completely. Laugh at
19:56
that. We're going to blow up each other's podcasts. What
20:00
are you going to do? Civil war. The Civil War
20:02
of 2026 in America played out on the battlefield of
20:06
podcasts. That's all that's happening. That's the way I see
20:11
it. Yeah. Yeah. It's, uh, it is. Well, there is
20:16
some stuff happening in the house, which was... Just so
20:19
pathetic. This was... the House resolution. Remember, the House has
20:42
now passed it. It would be up to the Senate
20:44
to pass it, to send it to President Trump's desk.
20:46
There's a very good chance that he would veto this
20:49
if it made it to his desk. Oh, really? Or
20:50
possibly argue that the war with Iran has ended, something
20:53
that his administration has already tried to argue in the
20:57
past. It's worth noting that there were four Republicans who
20:59
voted with all Democrats. to end this Iran war. And
21:03
who are they? Say what? I'm asking the reporter because
21:08
it's coming, right? He's going to tell you exactly who
21:10
the four Republicans are. Yes, he is, obviously. To reporters
21:14
in the chamber, Politico reporting that was Congressman Brian Fitzpatrick,
21:18
the Republican from Pennsylvania, a swing district Republican. Congressman Tom
21:22
Barrett, Congressman Warren Davidson of Ohio, someone who's been quite
21:25
vocal on war powers, and also worth noting Congressman Thomas
21:28
Massey, the Republican from Kentucky who just lost his primary
21:32
to a Trump-backed challenger just in the last couple weeks,
21:35
now clearly taking that strong step on the House floor.
21:39
The vast majority of Republicans, though, allowing this... war to
21:41
continue voting against this war powers resolution, but certainly a
21:45
banner moment for critics of this ongoing war with Iran.
21:48
No, it's not. Now I have a question. How is
21:51
it a banner moment? It's not going to go anywhere.
21:53
No, of course not. I mean, we've already discussed that
21:55
every president. Democrat or Republican considers the War Powers Resolution
22:01
to be unconstitutional. And if they were really serious, the
22:06
House, they would pass a bill to block funding. That
22:11
is their... mandate. They have the purse. So they're not
22:16
really serious about it. This is just grandstanding. But here's
22:21
a question I have about Massey. Revenge is a dish
22:24
best served cold, according to Thomas Massey of Kentucky. Explain
22:29
why his vote might have been the deal breaker on
22:31
this. Well, look, Congressman Massey is someone who has in
22:34
the past raised questions about the U.S.' 's involvement overseas.
22:38
So certainly his decision, you know, to vote in favor
22:42
of the War Powers Act, Notable on that front, but
22:45
also notable because of the fact that this could be
22:47
viewed in some circles as retaliation against President Trump for
22:51
endorsing against him in his latest primary. Massey and Trump
22:55
have had this kind of rocky back and forth relationship
22:58
for many months now. In fact, stretching back to the
23:00
president's first term, there were times where Congressman Massey. Trump's
23:05
will and incurred his wrath. The president, though, had in
23:08
the past endorsed Congressman Massey, of course, choosing a different
23:11
direction this time, Congressman Massey ultimately losing that primary. But
23:15
again, notable, in fact, because of Congressman Massey's decision today,
23:19
whether he would have made the same exact decision had
23:23
a he not lost his primary? That, of course, is
23:25
somewhat of an open question. So if Massey is such
23:29
a diehard on the Constitution, the Constitutional edition that. Why
23:34
would he vote for something that he should know? is
23:38
inherently unconstitutional. Congress doesn't get to I think you've misstated
23:44
it. I don't think he's a constitutional nut like you
23:47
said. Oh, that's his brand. That's what the tuckers of
23:51
the world and all things. Well, they're full of shit.
23:55
Thank you. Lady Vox in the troll room says, reality,
23:59
colon. the show, and indeed the whole community. as illustrated
24:04
in No Agenda's rejection of No Agenda Social, has split
24:08
over Israel, Zionists, and Jews. Right or wrong, Jews have
24:13
divided podcasting and audiences. But let me say something. There
24:18
were 3,000 accounts on No Agenda Social. They left. And
24:26
so let's say a thousand of those were bogus. And
24:31
in 2000, there are left people who didn't really care.
24:33
All they did is troll. They didn't donate. Eh, Aaroner.
24:36
I mean, he provided his time and talent. That's not
24:39
a split. That's a fractioning. It's not a split. Fractioning.
24:48
It's a fractioning. I like it. It's not a crazy
24:51
argument. But it's true. Yeah, I know, but it's funny
24:55
you come up with that word. I'm impressed. Oh, goodness,
25:00
thank you. Play some clips so I can be impressed
25:02
by you two. I feel good about it. Well, you're
25:05
talking about the stuff going on in Congress. There's a
25:08
big meeting about some detransitioner and the action going on
25:12
there about trying to get some laws passed. I thought
25:15
this was worth playing. This changes the subject a little
25:18
bit. Well, before we do that, let's get some of...
25:23
the Iranian clips out of the way. I got Iran
25:25
Deal 1 from NTD. President Trump saying that ongoing talks
25:30
with Iran are going, quote, very well, and that if
25:33
a deal does happen, it'll be over the weekend. NTD's
25:36
White House correspondent, Murray Otsu, brings us the latest from
25:38
the North Lawn. They're pretty close to signing a paper.
25:42
gotten along with them very well and you know what
25:44
you saw for the last few nights It takes two
25:47
to tango, you understand that. We hit them very hard
25:50
on something else unrelated. And so they were responding. I
25:54
mean, if it happens, it might not happen. Who knows?
25:57
But if it happens, it could happen like over the
25:59
weekend. President Trump declaring that no boots. on the ground
26:02
will be needed in Iran, citing the military successes of
26:05
Operations Midnight Hammer and Epic Fury. That's as he announces
26:09
that the Iranian regime has agreed to no nuclear weapon.
26:12
I can tell you this. We defined victory. We defined
26:15
victory as destroying their defense industrial base, significantly reducing the
26:20
number of missile launchers that they possess. their stockpile of
26:23
drones, and we achieved all of those, in addition to
26:26
destroying what they had left of an air force and
26:28
wiping out their entire conventional navy. Those are all gone.
26:31
So I consider that victory, and we did too, and
26:33
that was the purpose of Epic Fury. And as President
26:36
Trump continues to weigh whether the U.S. will resume its
26:39
strikes inside Iran, the U.S. naval blockade on Iranian ports...
26:42
is holding strong with Central Command announcing that 125 commercial
26:46
vessels have now been redirected from either entering or exiting
26:49
Iranian ports in the Strait of Hormuz. The president saying
26:52
that the U.S. has been clearing mines in the Strait
26:54
in anticipation of its opening when a deal is signed.
26:57
I did not hear anything about us clearing mines. Well,
27:01
you just did. Well, yeah. He had a talk with
27:05
a reporter from CNBC. It wasn't recorded. The reporter gave
27:10
his report of the conversation. And the president said, well,
27:15
just blow him to kingdom come. But no one picked
27:18
up on it. If he doesn't say it and it's
27:21
not on audio tape. is not good enough. I, well,
27:24
I like that. You're right. play the second half of
27:28
this. The Homo Strait will open immediately upon signing. Now,
27:33
that's subject to a couple of areas being cleaned out
27:35
also of mines, which we don't think there are any.
27:39
So it'll happen very quickly. We'll take the southern route
27:41
anyway. But immediately upon signing, we open up the Harmoid
27:46
Strait. Oh, see, just so everyone realizes, as I've said
27:49
ad nauseum, we control the straits, not Iran. Meanwhile, just
27:54
about a month ahead of America's 250th birthday, President Trump
27:58
is highlighting various construction and beautification projects that he's... spearheaded
28:02
throughout the Capitol, including fixing 28 fountains in D.C., personally
28:06
contributing to renovating Lafayette Park in front of the White
28:09
House, which had been in terrible condition and used as
28:11
a protest site, and notably completing the final coat of
28:14
protection on the Lincoln reflecting pool, writing, quote, this will
28:18
be the first time since the day it was built
28:20
in 1922. that it has worked and worked wonderfully indeed.
28:24
And you're going to have something you're going to be
28:26
very proud of and it'll last forever. 50 to 100
28:30
years before you have to do anything with it. It's
28:32
a very strong, powerful substance that we use. And we
28:36
picked a color called American Flag Blue. So it's going
28:39
to be really special. I thought you'd like to see
28:42
it. This new announcement coming as President Trump has tied
28:45
in his beautification efforts with matters of national security. His
28:49
third assassination attempt at the White House Correspondents Dinner, renewing
28:52
a push for a secure event space found in the
28:55
White House Ballroom. Reporting from the White House, Mario Tsu,
28:58
NTD News. Before we go to trans... Well before we
29:02
go to Chance, I also have one more clip in
29:03
the Iran series. All right. I just want to play.
29:06
This is from the hearings they had Rubio up there.
29:09
Yes, that's what I wanted. A snippet from Rubio being,
29:12
our next president, Rubio. Lubio. Lubio. He's a wiseass. He
29:19
is. And he loves being a wiseass. but he does
29:23
it he could be he has different styles of comedy
29:27
but the style he likes to use i think the
29:29
most in public now after his earlier kind of experimentation
29:35
with the small hands jokes and things like that. Yeah.
29:39
More standard comic fare. He likes it. understate things and
29:44
be kind of a deadpan. He likes a deadpan wiseass.
29:48
And this is right in the middle of the hearings.
29:50
And I think this is a perfect example. Some Democrats
29:53
are making the laughable claim that Iran is stronger today
29:56
than they were before Epic Fury. Can you set the
30:00
record straight? They have no Navy. They have no Air
30:02
Force. force, they have no air defenses, they have substantial,
30:05
they have massive destruction to the defense industrial base, they've
30:09
lost a substantial percentage of their missile launchers and of
30:14
their drone launchers as well. They're not benefiting from the
30:17
straits being closed because the blockade is keeping them from
30:20
hundreds of millions of dollars a day in revenue. They've
30:22
had their ship seized in the Indo-Pacific. Their leadership is
30:26
fractured. They have hyperinflation. Their currency is worthless. And they're
30:30
having trouble making payroll. I guess other than that, they're
30:32
doing well. The Boston Whaler thing was kind of cute
30:40
too. Yeah, Boston Whalers. I have that here. Hold on
30:42
a second. Iran's desire to build a nuclear weapon was
30:46
going to be built, was going to be effectuated behind
30:49
a conventional shield. They were going to build for themselves
30:52
so many missiles, so many drones, so many conventional weapons.
30:57
including a navy. that at that point, there's nothing you
31:00
could do about it. What they tried to do is
31:02
they were going to try to... and hide behind that
31:05
conventional shield and basically say to the world, "If you
31:08
come and do anything about our nuclear program, we will
31:10
overwhelm you with missiles, we will overwhelm you with drones,
31:13
and we will overwhelm you with our Navy, and you
31:16
will not win. You will not be able to do
31:17
anything about it." They were seeking that point of immunity,
31:20
which is why the president chose to act to deny
31:22
them that point of immunity. Operation Epic Fury, some of
31:26
you didn't like it, some of you did. We loved
31:28
it. It was highly successful in achieving its military objectives,
31:31
which is dramatically reducing the defense industrial base of Iran,
31:35
the ability to build these missiles and to build these
31:38
drones, especially the missiles program, substantially degraded. A substantial percentage,
31:42
and I'll leave the exact numbers. to the Department of
31:44
War because I'm not a general and I'm not here
31:46
to speak as a military planner. I love that. I'm
31:48
not a general. But a substantial degradation in the number
31:51
of launchers that they have as well. They still have
31:53
a lot of drones because these are easy to make.
31:55
We all know it's not an Iran challenge. This is
31:57
a global challenge. And it's playing out every single day
31:59
around the world. I mean, Mexican cartels are using UAVs.
32:03
against each other. We should imagine at some point may
32:05
even use it against our own, against our interests. So
32:09
this is a pervasive problem around the world. The economics
32:12
of it is something we have to solve for. But
32:14
nonetheless, even their drone building capability has been eroded. Today,
32:18
there is no Iranian Navy. There is no such thing.
32:21
There's a bunch of Boston whalers with machine guns on
32:23
them. But there is no navy. There is no Iranian
32:25
navy. It lies at the bottom of the ocean and
32:28
will soon, within a number of years, be prime fishing
32:31
spots because they'll turn into reefs. I wonder if he's
32:34
a boat guy. But he's from Florida. Yeah, I mean,
32:38
Boston Whaler. And, you know, that's not talking about some
32:42
old ship. with sails. I mean a Boston Whaler is
32:45
an actual type of small boat. Yeah. I think Andrew
32:48
Horowitz has one of those, doesn't he? Doesn't he have
32:50
a Boston Whaler? No, he's got a more conventional fishing
32:54
boat. Oh, oh. The best, though. was uh Just before
32:59
you get to the trans clips, because these Senate hearings
33:02
were fantastic. General Scott Besant on the down low. Man,
33:08
that guy impresses me. Is this where he rails against
33:11
Wyden? Yeah. Yeah, this was good. And Wyden, I hadn't
33:15
seen Wyden in a long time. Guy looks like he's
33:18
got one foot in the grave. No, the guy's looked
33:21
like that for the last two or three years. Yeah.
33:23
Super pale. He's got, you know... Ozempic face, kind of.
33:28
Looks dead. Yes, looks dead. Looks dead. I'm looking for
33:34
Mr. Wyden. The guy looks dead. You'll find him. Treasury
33:38
Secretary is simply out of step with the American people.
33:42
There's no better example than the fact that there's been
33:45
a cover-up of the massive file of Epstein's financial records
33:48
for a year and a half. This is part of
33:51
the effort I've made. It's the only one to follow
33:55
the money in the Epstein situation, and yet there's been
33:58
a denial of access to committee investigators and lying in
34:02
public about it. their significance. That subject alone deserves its
34:06
own hearing. Senate investigators are trying to figure out who
34:11
paid Epstein for girls. And unfortunately, Secretary Besson, this is
34:16
interesting what he just says here. Who paid Epstein for
34:20
girls? That is, in fact... Precisely your theory. It's not
34:27
really the Epstein... Conspiracy Theory There's a bunch of kids
34:32
and kiddie porn and pedophiles and children and adrenochrome, you
34:38
know. You know what I mean? Yeah, no, it's just
34:41
a prostitution. Yeah, but he kind of gives that away.
34:45
Who paid Epstein for girls? And unfortunately, Secretary Besant is
34:51
involved in preventing that from happening. The bottom line in
34:55
this administration is the machinery of government works to the
35:00
benefit of Donald Trump. before all else. That's the corrupt
35:05
framework that produces instructions, protects pedophiles, and dismisses the concerns
35:12
of people who are worried about being able to make
35:15
rent and to feed their families. And General Scott Besson
35:19
comes back slow but strong. Thank you. And I do
35:23
want, I had hoped to keep this in terms of
35:28
the economy. He's almost choked. He's like, calm down, calm
35:32
down. He chokes. He's a choker. He's a choker, all
35:35
right. If he didn't have this... habit of choking Instead
35:42
of calming down and then delivering the goods, I mean,
35:45
he'd be twice as effective, but he's effective enough with
35:48
this little blast. In terms of the economy, Senator Wyden
35:54
has mendaciously slandered the Treasury building in an attempt to
35:59
cover up his son. having an investment meeting with Jeffrey
36:04
Epstein to ask for funding. Thank you. Thank you. It's
36:11
like mic droppage. Okay. Yes. Let's be clear here. Nobody
36:19
is interested in the ramblings of a regime in American
36:25
history. We want to get some facts about this deal.
36:28
That's what we're here for. Thank you. Well, thank you.
36:31
And I will ask my questions first today. And we
36:34
would like to hear what Adam Wyden and Jeffrey Epstein
36:37
talked about. Your son's largest investment position was Rick's. cabaret.
36:43
So did your son and Jeffrey Epstein talk about pole
36:46
dancing as he begged him for money using your limited
36:50
credibility? Your limited credibility. Nice! Nice. Also, the other problem
36:57
that Besant has... He has a nervous... sound he sounds
37:03
like he's nervous when he's delivering the goods yeah he
37:06
does he doesn't have a steady voice i agree yeah
37:09
that is it he needs some coaching or something uh
37:13
well but it's part of it he gets angry and
37:16
he starts to get that voice that well yeah You
37:20
know, this kind of, it's just in there. It just
37:23
sounds like he's, it's a nervous voice. It's not good.
37:27
But he is, you know, he delivers. He delivers. He
37:32
delivers, yeah. Have you looked at his face yet and
37:35
seen the resemblance with Elizabeth Warren? No. Once you see
37:42
it, you can't unsee it. It's like they're from the
37:44
same Indian tribe, I think. There's something about it. To
37:48
me. Yeah. Anyway, I love Scott Besson, and I think
37:53
Lubio will make a great president. Vance is just, you
37:56
know. He's not showing the goods. I don't think Vance...
38:02
I don't think Vance is enjoying himself. Well, I thought
38:07
he enjoyed the whole fraud thing. He kind of liked
38:09
that. No? I don't know. Hmm. It's hard to say.
38:16
I mean, Rubio's been around forever. He's got more, he
38:19
has a better handle on it. the government. I mean,
38:22
Vance is a newbie, let's face it. You don't want
38:25
to run... I wouldn't want to run him that quickly
38:27
anyway. Let him... Yeah, get some experience. Get some experience.
38:33
Yeah. So there was another hearing that didn't get much
38:37
play, which is a detransitioner. And the whole problem there,
38:43
because they did pass, I think it was, I don't
38:46
know if it was an executive order or some legislation.
38:48
I think it was executive order. They will not allow
38:51
any more of this using... puberty blockers on kids. But
38:58
hold on a second. If you stop taking them, you
39:01
just go back to what you were. We were told
39:04
that over and over and over again by politicians and
39:08
doctors and advocates. Does this turn out to be the
39:12
case? Is it not true? Senate HELP Committee held a
39:14
critical hearing on protecting children from irreversible gender transition procedures.
39:20
With growing concerns over the sharp rise in medical interventions
39:23
on minors, the spotlight was on detransitioners and medical interventions.
39:28
Medical experts warning about those dangers. NTD's Washington correspondent Jack
39:33
Bradley has the details. The entire premise of transgenderism. is
39:37
that I will take my own life. If I don't
39:40
transition. Right. Yet here I am today. On Capitol Hill,
39:44
senators hearing testimony exposing how children are being rushed into
39:48
life-altering puberty blockers in surgeries, often with devastating and irreversible
39:54
consequences. I am what is known as a detransitioner. Chloe
39:57
Cole, a 21-year-old detransitioner from California. Yes. gave her parents
40:22
an ultimatum. Transition or your child is going to kill
40:25
themselves. Yep. We kind of pegged that one 18 years
40:29
ago. Yeah, pretty much. I'm so sad that this went
40:36
on and on. And of course, it will never... Parents
40:41
who've done this to their children, they can never admit
40:44
they were wrong. No, it's impossible. I mean, their brain
40:47
has been wired. There's no way you could ever. I
40:50
mean, what a horrible thought to think you've been suckered
40:54
into this and you've damaged your child. But multiple studies
40:59
have found that gender... do not reduce long-term mental illness
41:04
or suicide rates. The United Kingdom has banned puberty blockers,
41:11
and the National Health Services has stopped providing cross-sex hormones
41:17
for youth. I'm still suffering the consequences. I still have
41:22
chronic pain in my joints, in my back, in my
41:25
pelvis. I don't know if I'm going to be able
41:28
to have children of my own. Cole is just one
41:30
of tens of thousands who underwent such life-altering procedures when
41:34
they were children. I'm not alone. I have hundreds of
41:36
friends who have been through the same thing. An entire
41:39
generation of children were lied to. There is no such
41:42
thing as a child being born in the wrong body.
41:44
But there are physicians and medical bodies who prey on
41:47
the confusion of perfectly healthy young boys and girls. Now,
41:50
the Democrat senators present on the committee dismissed this hearing
41:54
as a waste of time and politically charged. All of
41:57
them completely avoided questioning Chloe Cole. or the medical doctor
42:01
from Do No Harm on the panel, and instead brought
42:04
their own witness, an LGBT lawyer who argued against government
42:08
intervention. It is not the place of politicians to insert
42:12
themselves into these conversations which are so unique to each
42:16
child. But they did. Over and over and- And over
42:21
again, how many politicians were crying and quitting and walking
42:25
away and storming out and yelling, think of the children.
42:30
We do not forget these things. do we? Yeah, it's
42:38
like the thing is the Democrats. wouldn't take part in
42:41
the hearing because they're all in. In fact, Tom Steyer's
42:44
last move, bringing him back into the conversation, was to
42:48
do a video with a transgender girl, a transgender... Female.
42:55
who is a male in women's sports and say, we're
43:00
gonna, we're. we're going to make sure that people like
43:03
you get to play sports. It was just like there
43:07
was the icing on the cake for this guy. But
43:10
he was sincere about it. He thought it was a
43:14
good progressive way to go. Progressives all feel this way.
43:20
they have a different perspective. Is it perspective? No, you
43:27
have a third one. But is it perspective? Or is
43:31
it... Is it a psy-op on their own party? Well,
43:35
it's hard to say. Before we played the third clip,
43:39
did I have this? The clip from Australia. But the
43:42
rest of the panel and the Senate Republicans present on
43:44
the committee said that it is the government's role to
43:47
protect children and the vulnerable. We already have legislation that
43:50
is making other forms of abuse in children illegal. This
43:53
is no different. As adults, we all have the responsibility
43:57
to look after the children around us. That is our
44:00
duty. On his first day back in office, President Trump
44:03
signed an executive order restricting federal funding for puberty blockers
44:07
and gender procedures for children and those under 19. More
44:11
than two dozen states have followed suit, already banning these
44:14
irreversible interventions for minors. My question still stands. I mean,
44:19
any... any person in their right mind but can at
44:23
least See... the physical harm that is being done The
44:32
psychological part, okay, you want to be a boy and
44:34
you're a girl, okay, well, go dress up, whatever you
44:36
want. But the mutilation part... Politicians, I'd love to know
44:44
who really was behind this. This wasn't just, it became
44:47
a milieu thing, and it became a hill they were
44:49
going to die on, as you constantly said. But how
44:54
can you as a human being, as a parent, how
44:56
can you even consider that this was okay? other than
45:00
we're going to win the election. It's more important because
45:03
Trump equals Nazi. No, I don't think that analysis is
45:11
headed in the right direction, but I don't think it
45:13
really has anything to do at all with Trump. came
45:15
around the 80s, pre-Trump. And it started to build and
45:20
build and build. And it just became kind of a,
45:24
all of a sudden became part of the litany of
45:27
the progressives because, you know, people have to, we have
45:30
to love everybody no matter what they're like. It just
45:35
got out of control. I think it just went out
45:38
of control on its own. own. And these guys painted
45:42
themselves into a corner and they can't get out of
45:44
it. And there's a logical issue. I got this clip
45:46
to one that says Oz. This is a... kind of
45:50
it's not congress because it's in australia but they there's
45:53
a hearing about uh about uh and sex and You're
46:03
cutting, you're muting yourself for some reason. Here's what happens.
46:13
My screen saver comes on. Yeah. And then when I
46:17
hit the button to turn the screensaver... to turn the
46:20
screen back on, it mutes. Okay. For some unknown reason,
46:23
it's happened twice today. Can you just minimize the clean
46:26
feed window? That might help. It might make it, yeah,
46:31
well, it... Is that... I... Okay, here's the reason. Hello,
46:36
I'm here for your technology support, hell... Give me your
46:39
password. I will log in. I will fix it. I
46:41
used the window as a cough button. Oh, yeah. Okay.
46:45
Well, that's valid. I'll just be more aware of this,
46:48
and I'll correct myself. Anyway, you were saying there was
46:51
a hearing? Yeah, they're going on about it, and I
46:55
think you get some... Understanding. Not quite a full understanding,
47:00
but an understanding of this skewed logic. that the progressives
47:06
have developed. They painted themselves into a corner and then
47:11
they have a skewed logic that they have to accept
47:14
and it's so screwy that when you hear this back
47:18
and forth between this person who is the uh who
47:21
handles it's one of the legislative people grilling somebody who
47:26
who is in charge of uh how to uh a
47:30
discrimination program and let's just play it we'll talk about
47:34
it australia has truly fallen listen to this is a
47:38
trans woman and she may be asked whether or not
47:42
she intends to have children and if she replies yes
47:47
I do and then doesn't get the job because that
47:49
employer doesn't want to employ women who may be of
47:54
childbearing age then she may have been subjected to unlawful
47:58
discrimination on the basis of potential pregnancy. A biological male
48:03
can't become pregnant. But the grounds of pregnancy includes potential
48:07
pregnancy as well as pregnancy. But if they can't become
48:11
pregnant, how can you then become potentially pregnant? It's about
48:15
the unlawful treatment by the employer. If someone is treated
48:19
unfairly on the basis of pregnancy or potential pregnancy, then
48:24
that is unlawful discrimination on the basis of pregnancy. So
48:27
if a bloke came in and they said, are you
48:29
going to have children, which is the same question really,
48:32
and he said, oh, yeah, maybe, are you saying that
48:35
he could also tame that ground? A man who is...
48:39
seeking a position, then it's not going to apply to
48:43
a man. They're both biological men. It makes no sense.
48:47
A biological man, you stated before, a biological man can't
48:50
get pregnant. Am I correct? Because if I'm not, I've
48:53
got to go back to school. I seriously do. Because
48:56
I missed that lesson in biology. But you said a
48:58
biological man can't get pregnant. That's correct, Senator. But someone
49:02
who is a trans woman may be assumed to be
49:07
pregnant or to be able to be pregnant. And to
49:11
top it all off, from the Commission's perspective, what is
49:13
a woman? An adult female human. Thank you. And includes
49:18
a transgender woman. biological man, potential pregnancy. This is beyond
49:23
insanity. Taxpayer funded institutions are now twisting sex discrimination laws
49:28
so far that biological reality itself is becoming controversial. These
49:33
laws were created to protect women, actual women. Instead, ideology
49:37
is replacing common sense. Reality is being blurred. and Australians
49:41
have been told to ignore basic biology to avoid backlash.
49:45
Enough is enough. A couple of comments. One, you could
49:51
have run that through Adobe. I would have normally when
49:57
I don't like the clip for various reasons, but When
50:01
I play it on my system, the anomalies don't appear.
50:07
No, it's just a lot of music and effects. No,
50:10
that was my mistake because there was another clip out
50:12
there I could have used. Yeah, no, it was just
50:13
bombastic. But that's okay. Back to the topic. Yes. I
50:16
think Australia should be divided in half. And the bottom
50:21
half. should be returned to penal colony. And I need
50:26
to throw those people there. I know a lot of
50:28
people in Australia who think this way. uh who are
50:32
like oh you know it's like yeah that's discrimination man
50:37
This brings to mind, I don't have the clip, It's
50:42
old. uh a Girl who transitioned to a boy. Mm-hmm.
50:49
And she was early on and she was now... probably
50:54
17 or 18. And she was told that she's... doing
51:00
a tick tock thing and it's serious i'm sure i
51:04
don't think it was fake She says, I'm pregnant. But
51:09
this is ridiculous. I can't be pregnant because I'm a
51:13
boy. Okay. I went to the doctor and I told
51:18
him, how can I? possibly be pregnant. I'm a boy.
51:21
Boys don't get pregnant. And she was, and it was
51:25
she, he was dead serious. She was a girl who
51:29
transitioned to a boy. Oh, so she actually was pregnant,
51:33
but she couldn't believe it because she believed she was
51:35
a boy. Exactly. Wow. And sincerely believe that. Look. If
51:40
I'm a boy in a girl's body and I decide
51:43
I'm going to have to transition to become a boy.
51:47
I'm a boy now, I can't get pregnant. This is,
51:52
well, it shows you the power of mind control. Exactly,
51:56
and that's what I think is going on with... the
52:00
Democrats in general and the people that wouldn't show up
52:03
to this hearing with the detransitioning person and the rest
52:07
of it and the crazy woman in Australia who said,
52:11
yeah, yeah, the trans woman can get potentially pregnant even
52:16
though she can't get pregnant. So it's really... A large
52:20
portion of our political, our body politic has been MKUltra'd.
52:26
Well, if you want to call it MKUltra, it's just
52:28
old-fashioned brainwashing. Yeah. Well, that's what MKUltra is. You know,
52:35
so we, our boy Tallarico here in Texas. Oh yeah,
52:40
your guy. Yeah, my guy. Yeah, my guy. He's walking
52:44
everything back now, now that, you know. Well, he can't,
52:47
he's getting. Yeah, but listen to how pathetic it sounds.
52:51
In 2021, in a speech during debate over transgender issues,
52:56
you said, God is non-binary. What did you mean by
52:59
that? Well, you know, I think I was being intentionally
53:03
provocative with that statement. Uh, what? I was just kidding,
53:08
man. But what it means is that God can't be
53:11
defined by human categories. The Apostle Paul, in his letter
53:15
to the Galatians, says that in Christ there is neither
53:17
male nor female. I'm always going to stand up for
53:21
Texans who are being picked on by the most powerful,
53:24
most corrupt politicians in the country. Quick deflection. Who's being
53:28
picked on. Quick deflection. And I'm going to continue doing
53:31
that in this race and hopefully in the U.S. Change
53:34
the topic. You call it intentionally provocative. Do you regret
53:37
describing it that way or talking about God that way?
53:39
There are some statements that I've made that I certainly
53:44
regret. There are statements that I've made where I've missed
53:46
the mark. I'll be the first to admit that. But
53:49
Ken Paxton is intentionally clipping my cringy comments to distract
53:55
from his career of corruption. Well, yeah, son. It's called
53:58
politics. That's exactly how it works. You're trying to pander
54:03
with this nonsense. And then the other team is going
54:06
to clip that and tell everyone you're a nut job,
54:08
which you sound like you are. Let me run one
54:10
more by you because, again, the president, other Republicans are
54:12
bringing it up again in 2021. While debating a bill
54:15
that restricted transgender student athletes, you said modern science acknowledges.
54:19
biological variations based on chromosomes to argue that sex is
54:23
a nuanced spectrum, not a strict binary. Do you still
54:27
believe there are six biological sexes? I know there are
54:31
two sexes, men and women. I also know there's a
54:34
very small percentage of people who have these chromosomal abnormalities.
54:38
And I believe they deserve to be treated with dignity
54:41
and respect. Is that what the consultants told you to
54:43
say? Wah, wah, wah. No, that's not going to work,
54:48
son. That is not going to work. What a moron.
54:54
Truly pathetic. Yeah. Wow is right. It's pathetic. That guy,
54:58
you know, what about it? Did they go after his
55:00
veganism in Texas country? Yeah, they went after that too.
55:03
I'm not a vegan. This campaign is run on barbecue.
55:06
He's now coming out. Is that what he said? Yeah.
55:09
I'll get the clip for you. Barbecued corn? What's he
55:11
talking about? Yeah. No, man, we're Texans over here. The
55:17
guy, just you look at him, he's... He's like a
55:19
Frankenstein. The haircut is like a semi-bowl cut, like he's
55:24
been put together in a lab. No, that guy's no
55:28
good. He doesn't look comfortable. No, he's no good. But,
55:31
you know, let's be honest about it. Trump is still
55:35
a misogynist. They're going back to that now. Well, you
55:40
know, back to the well. It worked before. Here it
55:42
is. I'm not asking Caitlin about this, because... She's got
55:46
actual work to do, and she doesn't need to be
55:48
answering questions about this. Hold on. Actually, I think this
55:51
is... I start with this one first. Okay, so you're...
55:53
This is going to be about Caitlin Clark and his
55:55
blast of her. Yeah, you don't like it? Good, because
55:57
I have something I've got to read. Oh, good. In
55:59
a letter justifying the firing. Hold on. Sorry. I'm all
56:02
over the map. Here we go. Before we move on,
56:04
though, I want to show you another moment from that
56:07
Q&A with the president, because the president did something completely
56:10
unwarranted. You saw some of it just now, verbally attacking
56:13
Kaitlan Collins. But I want to set the scene. He
56:15
was answering someone else's earlier question, not hers, about his
56:18
fund. She'd said nothing to him ahead of it at
56:21
this point. She was simply standing there doing her job,
56:23
listening to his remarks, defending the January Sixers. And then
56:26
I just want to play what happened. These people, their
56:30
lives have been destroyed, their families have been destroyed, many
56:33
of them. I'm not just talking about a few people,
56:36
many of them. I'm one of them. They raided my
56:41
house, Mar-a-Lago. That never happened. Nobody ever thought of anything
56:45
like that. It turned out that it was a total
56:47
fake. Everything about it was fake and corrupt. We have
56:50
all the information. If only once, you know, he was
56:53
so close to saying fake and gay, but he can't
56:55
do it. But if he did that, it would be
56:57
awesome. Nobody ever thought of anything like that. It turned
56:59
out that it was a total fake. Everything about it
57:01
was fake and corrupt. We have all the information here.
57:04
The good advantage to sitting here is we can get
57:07
information that you wouldn't get by what we have and
57:09
what we are going to be showing over the coming
57:12
weeks and months. You're not even going to believe. Some
57:15
of you will believe it, like CNN will believe it
57:17
because they knew what was going on. They're crooked as
57:19
hell. CNN's a very corrupt organization, but with a corrupt
57:25
reporter standing right there. Never smiles. You never see a
57:28
young, beautiful woman. Never smiles. I never see a smile
57:32
on her face. I see her standing there with hatred
57:34
in her eyes. She has hatred because we have borders,
57:38
because we have a strong military. because we cut our
57:41
taxes, because we do things that everybody wanted, and then
57:45
we win our election in a massive landslide. Yeah, there
57:49
was a whole bunch more. They had a whole compilation
57:51
of him being mad, but he always says, you're a
57:54
horrible person. not woman in fact i should probably play
57:58
a little bit of that just even it out. I'm
58:00
not asking more of it. This is good stuff. And
58:02
he also mentions there's, there's a whole thing that, which
58:06
I'm going to read from a little bit from, cause
58:08
it's bull crap. They, you know, Stelter is all over
58:13
this and Cooper, Pooper's all over it. Listen to the
58:18
compendium. I'm not asking. Caitlin about this because... She's got
58:22
actual work to do. Yeah, I'm not going to bring
58:23
Caitlyn into the conversation because she's working hard. Yeah, and
58:27
we know that journalists never interview other journalists. No. ...conversations
58:31
about this kind of behavior. That's the President of the
58:34
United States, a nearly 80-year-old man, who has no problem
58:38
commenting on her physical... and telling her she needs to
58:41
smile. That doesn't happen to men. No one's ever said
58:45
that to me in an office setting. You're not a
58:47
man. She was there like every other journalist doing her
58:49
job, standing around with a bunch of non-smiling men, by
58:51
the way, all behind her. I don't know if you
58:53
saw that. She gets singled out. Now, this, of course,
58:56
is not the first time the president has focused on
58:58
professional female reporters. Caitlin included. You are the worst reporter.
59:03
No one to see. CNN has no ratings because of
59:05
people like you. I don't think I've ever seen a
59:07
smile on your face. Well, I'm asking you about survivors
59:09
of Jeffrey Epstein. You are an obnoxious, a terrible, actually
59:13
a terrible reporter. Are you stupid? Are you a stupid
59:16
person? You're a terrible person and a terrible reporter. You
59:20
ought to go back and learn how to be a
59:21
reporter. No more questions from you. Are you listening? Quiet.
59:29
Now, I don't know if you want to do your
59:31
reading before. I have two clips, a buck and a
59:34
half each, where Pooper brings on the YouTuber. to talk
59:38
about this, which is. No, let me just get this
59:41
out. Yeah, go ahead. Because you played part of it
59:43
already. Go ahead. Which is a pooper going on about,
59:47
I'll read from this. This is from Brian Stelter's newsletter.
59:51
You subscribe. Oh, yeah. Is it a sub stack or
59:55
is it a pro news? No, no, it's a news
59:57
that comes right out of CNN. Oh, okay. Wait, is
1:00:00
he back at CNN? I thought he was fired. No,
1:00:02
he does a newsletter and he once in a while
1:00:04
does a spot. He does a hit. Yeah, I got
1:00:06
a hit from him later. Anderson Cooper played the clip
1:00:10
and reached out to say that's the president of the
1:00:14
United States, blah, blah, blah. This is exactly what he
1:00:16
said, telling her she needs to smile. That doesn't happen
1:00:19
to men. No one's ever said that to me in
1:00:22
an office setting. Of course, you made the comedy is
1:00:24
not a man. Okay. It's happened to me in an
1:00:29
office setting in a broadcasting environment. When I was at
1:00:32
Tech TV, we had these consultants that came in to
1:00:36
try to improve us. And I was always resistant to
1:00:39
even meet with the... this woman who took me into
1:00:44
the office to tell me about what she thought of
1:00:46
my performance. She said, do you like doing this? And
1:00:49
I said, well, I kind of like it. I mean,
1:00:51
it's fine. And she said, well, you don't look like
1:00:55
it. You don't look like you're enjoying yourself. You need
1:00:58
to smile more. Well, that is rude. And so she
1:01:04
says that to me, and here I'm reading, no one's
1:01:06
ever said that to me in an office. And no
1:01:10
one's ever said it to men in an office. Bull
1:01:12
crap. It happens all the time to men and women.
1:01:15
I had this when I was doing a lot of
1:01:17
radio. I had some guy saying, oh, you know, you'd
1:01:20
go a lot. further in radio if you had a
1:01:22
smile in your voice you know that sound how are
1:01:25
you doing did he that kind of thing i'm not
1:01:27
going to do that because it's not my stuff did
1:01:29
he follow it up by saying be careful otherwise you're
1:01:32
going to go straight from radio to podcasts well this
1:01:36
is pre-podcasting but anyway the point is this is a
1:01:39
lie Yes, of course it is. But why? Why are
1:01:43
they even doing this? Who cares? Why all of a
1:01:47
sudden is this an issue? Why are they going back
1:01:49
to the Trump rotation? I have no idea. I'd like
1:01:53
to figure it out. Well, here is, so Pooper had
1:01:56
to accentuate this with Tara Palmieri. She is... Wait for
1:02:01
it. The host of the Tara Palmieri show on YouTube.
1:02:06
She is the author and writer of the Red Letter
1:02:09
newsletter. You need to subscribe to this thing. The Red
1:02:13
Letter Newsletter. I mean, I don't know why I'm surprised
1:02:25
by this. I shouldn't be, but I just... We're surprised
1:02:30
you're spending airtime on it. I don't think guys... I
1:02:34
don't think any guy would... It's just bizarre that this
1:02:38
is something he does over and over and over again.
1:02:41
And I think people do it to women all the
1:02:43
time. Yeah, absolutely. What you are seeing is a day
1:02:47
in the life of a woman. He did this to
1:02:51
Major Garrett, if you remember, during his first term. He's
1:02:54
done it to guys, too. I don't remember that, but
1:02:57
it wouldn't surprise me. Oh, yeah, he told Major Garrett
1:02:59
he's a lousy reporter, the same exact... And he's done
1:03:03
it to other males. This is another lie. But why?
1:03:08
I don't understand. What is the point? What do they
1:03:11
have in their arsenal that they're revealing? Maybe there's something
1:03:15
coming up. They're setting this up. And to bring this
1:03:19
lady in. She's a powerful woman. Wait a minute. What?
1:03:40
I think it's the president that represents. the people of
1:03:43
the United States of America. But now somehow the woman
1:03:47
who has agency. Caitlin Collins, she represents the people of
1:03:51
the United States of America. This is an interesting twist.
1:03:54
A lot of power. She represents the people of the
1:03:56
United States of America, and she's holding him to account
1:04:00
by asking him questions in the Oval Office. And he
1:04:03
does not like that. And he does not like that
1:04:05
the vessel of a person who is asking them that...
1:04:08
The vessel of a person? The vessel? Like your body?
1:04:12
What does that mean? This is interesting. And he does
1:04:15
not like that. And he does not like that the
1:04:18
vessel of a person who is asking them those questions
1:04:22
that challenge him. is a woman because he's used to
1:04:25
women being around him that are people pleasers, who are
1:04:28
smilers, who are secretaries, who are cabinet secretaries, as we've
1:04:32
seen from the various hearings that we've actually watched on
1:04:36
TV. Okay, so secretary in the office equals now cabinet
1:04:40
secretary. And the deference that they show him. But also,
1:04:43
this is a man who owned beauty pageants, who was
1:04:46
a judge in modeling competitions, who's used to seeing women
1:04:50
have to smile and please him to advance in life.
1:04:54
Caitlyn is not that woman. She is a woman who
1:04:56
has made her way in life on her own as
1:04:59
an independent woman challenging his authority on behalf of the
1:05:02
American people. American people. I have to ask the robot
1:05:05
something here for a second because I think there's, hold
1:05:09
on one second, let me get the robot fired up.
1:05:11
Book of knowledge, did Anderson Cooper ever judge a beauty
1:05:15
pageant? I have a feeling he did. The Book of
1:05:20
Knowledge is going through all the past episodes. of all
1:05:23
beauty pageants ever. According to the Book of Knowledge, Anderson
1:05:27
Cooper spoke of reporting on beauty pageants as a way
1:05:31
to regain perspective. But he has served as a critical
1:05:34
commentator rather than a judge, hosting pageant mothers on his
1:05:38
show Anderson to examine their practices. Mm-hmm. Okay. Thus... It
1:05:43
has been written. He didn't pipe up or say anything
1:05:46
about that. Like, well, yes, I have a lot of
1:05:48
experience with beauty pageants. And this woman continues. There's a
1:05:51
Yale professor named Marianne LaFrance who studies this sort of
1:05:54
thing extensively. She wrote a book called Why Smile? The
1:05:56
Science Behind Facial Expressions. She says that men in these
1:05:59
situations laugh. She said, quote, laugh it off as though
1:06:02
it's a male. prerogative to tell a woman what to
1:06:05
do with her body. She also says, quote, females are
1:06:08
supposed to smile more than men. It's not just that
1:06:10
they do, but there is a prescriptive stereotype that they
1:06:13
should somehow. I'm wondering what you make of her assessment.
1:06:16
Could this be a setup to a Kamala Harris rerun,
1:06:19
maybe? You know, they're trying to... Condition everybody. That's lame
1:06:24
if true. Whoa, it's CNN. It's absolutely true. I mean,
1:06:29
to smile is to please the other person, unless you're
1:06:32
doing it out of pure happiness and you're feeling it
1:06:35
yourself. But when you are doing it in deference, which
1:06:38
is what he wants, he wants her to be happy.
1:06:42
about his policies. That's what he's saying to her. You
1:06:45
should be smiling for what I'm doing for you. You
1:06:48
know, he sees her as someone who cannot challenge him.
1:06:52
I think she really challenges his worldview. When he talks
1:06:55
about make America great again, he's talking about a female
1:06:58
archetype that Caitlin Collins is not. He is talking about
1:07:02
a woman from the time when he grew up in
1:07:04
the 1950s or 1960s who worked in a role as
1:07:08
a secretary or an aide to a powerful man where
1:07:11
men decided women's fate. Women couldn't even open credit cards
1:07:15
at that point in their lives. You know, you went
1:07:17
to college if you could and you immediately tried to
1:07:20
get married. Caitlyn is none of those things. And if
1:07:23
anything, President Trump keeps trying to bring back these glory
1:07:26
days when men had more power over women. And the
1:07:30
only way for them to advance was to be beautiful
1:07:33
and to smile. Maybe they could be models. Maybe they
1:07:36
could be in a beauty pageant. And maybe they could
1:07:38
have a little bit of power. during that short period
1:07:41
of time when they were beautiful and could smile. I'm
1:07:45
baffled by this whole segment because it came out of
1:07:48
the so-called slush fund. The $1.8 billion slush fund. I've
1:07:53
got a couple of clips on the slush fund going
1:07:55
down the tubes. You want to talk about Scott Pelley
1:07:58
first? Uh, I'd rather not. I don't mind talking about
1:08:05
it, but the slush fund clips are pretty decent. All
1:08:07
right, let's go to your slush fund. Start with NBC.
1:08:12
I got two of it. The NBC abandonment of the
1:08:15
$1.8 billion. And I think this, by the way, this
1:08:19
was a good idea. Well, yeah, I think we both
1:08:22
agreed on it because we know people whose lives were,
1:08:25
in fact, ruined. Who hadn't? Yeah, they could use some
1:08:29
money. Yes, they could. Tonight, the Trump administration appearing to
1:08:32
abandon plans for its $1.8 billion so-called anti-weaponization fund amid
1:08:38
stiff Republican opposition. And the judges order to halt work
1:08:42
on it. The Department of Justice is saying it, quote,
1:08:44
disagrees strongly, but will abide by the court's ruling. People
1:08:47
were destroyed. They went to jail. President Trump had defended
1:08:51
the fund created to compensate people he says were unfairly
1:08:54
prosecuted by the Biden administration. But it drew bipartisan condemnation.
1:08:59
including a closed-door clash between Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch
1:09:04
and GOP senators amid concerns it could be used to
1:09:07
pay January 6th rioters. This is just stupid on stilts.
1:09:12
Stupid on stilts? I kind of like that. You know,
1:09:15
this is stupid. The Republicans themselves are the ones who.
1:09:19
response for this thing caving in. Yeah, I don't know
1:09:22
why. Don't know why they did that. There's got to
1:09:27
be some... I don't know, I think they were thinking
1:09:30
it was going to be used as leverage against them
1:09:32
in an election or something because it... It is a
1:09:34
lot of money. Yeah. Well, that's pretty dumb. Here's the
1:09:39
Trump 1.5. This is the ABC version. uh hold on
1:09:44
trumps under trump trump's 1.8 billion Also breaking tonight, we
1:09:50
learned late today that President Trump's plan to use $1.8
1:09:53
billion in taxpayer money to potentially pay those who attack
1:09:57
the Capitol on January 6th. has now been scrapped after
1:10:00
a revolt from Republicans. But tonight, some Republicans are still
1:10:03
sounding somewhat skeptical. They want a promise on this. Rachel
1:10:07
Scott on the Hill. Tonight, faced with a growing revolt
1:10:12
from Senate Republicans, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanch arriving on
1:10:16
Capitol Hill. Announcing the administration is... scrapping the president's $1.8
1:10:21
billion so-called weaponization fund that would have been paid for
1:10:24
by taxpayers to compensate allies, including January 6th rioters. We
1:10:31
are not moving forward with the fund. Not moving forward
1:10:33
ever. Correct. It comes just 24 hours after President Trump
1:10:37
told our John Carl he would abide by a recent...
1:10:39
court ruling, putting the fund on hold, saying we are
1:10:42
subject to the courts at this moment. That's what it
1:10:45
is. But that wasn't enough to satisfy Republicans. You want
1:10:48
to see him drop it completely? Yes, I've made that
1:10:52
very clear. If he doesn't, we're back to square one.
1:10:56
Tonight, Blanche says getting rid of the fund would not
1:10:58
impact. another part of the administration's settlement with the IRS,
1:11:02
barring tax audits on President Trump and his family. Democrats
1:11:06
labeling it blanket immunity. Simply put, you just gave the
1:11:10
president and his family a tax immunity to the tune
1:11:13
of about $100 million. Not true. And so, David, tonight
1:11:17
that $1.8 billion fund... some of which could have gone
1:11:20
to January 6th rioters, has been scrapped. Republicans wanted a
1:11:24
public reversal, and tonight the acting attorney general says it
1:11:27
will not move forward. Yeah, I'm not sure why they
1:11:32
went all crazy about this either. And Kennedy? I heard
1:11:37
Kennedy in there. Yep, that was Kennedy. That was interesting.
1:11:40
You know, what's he got against it? He... I mean,
1:11:43
old grandmas were thrown in jail. I don't know. They
1:11:46
weren't even in the Capitol. There's all kinds of miscarriages
1:11:50
of justice involved with that January 6th debacle. Maybe all
1:11:54
the lawyers are like, come on, man, we've got lawsuits
1:11:57
running here. We don't want to lose our dough. That's
1:12:00
the only possible explanation. I can't think of much else.
1:12:05
And then... They rolled out the gerbil shepherd to try
1:12:11
and rile everybody up in the Democrat base. We're living
1:12:15
in the darkest moment that I've experienced on this planet.
1:12:19
Do you recognize the voice? Do you recognize the voice?
1:12:23
Is it Richard Gere? Yes it is. Who ever thought
1:12:26
America could turn like this? Whoever thought that a maniac
1:12:31
like this would be President of the United States? Maniac.
1:12:34
A dismantle. Wait, wait, no, no. I don't need to
1:12:37
applaud. This is something for us to really communicate. Oh,
1:12:40
he's got something to communicate, for us to communicate. All
1:12:44
right, this is Richard. Hey, we need someone to communicate.
1:12:47
We need a new slogan. Hey, Richard, Richard, Gerbil Shepard,
1:12:53
we need a new slogan. And we need you to
1:12:56
launch that so everybody hears about it. Can you do
1:12:59
that? Well, of course, once I'm, I gotta stop protecting
1:13:04
Tibet, but I'm on my way. I'm going to do
1:13:06
the plot. This is something for us to really communicate.
1:13:08
Dismantle all the good things. America's never been a perfect
1:13:12
place, but it has a perfect ideal that it's moving
1:13:15
towards and always has and it's been self-corrective First day,
1:13:20
this guy dismantled almost everything that was good about the
1:13:25
U.S. government and the U.S. people. How is this even
1:13:28
possible? Because we went to sleep. We went to sleep.
1:13:32
Wait, wait. What is that? Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait,
1:13:35
wait. I haven't done the slogan yet. Wait, wait, wait.
1:13:38
We went to sleep. We didn't care. We didn't vote.
1:13:42
We didn't really listen. But you see how quickly our
1:13:46
world can be taken from us. if we fall asleep.
1:13:50
And we have to see the Q's. We have to
1:13:53
see the Q's. Q? Q? Q Anon? What's this with
1:13:55
the Q? Get to the slogan, man! Sleep. And we
1:13:58
have to see the cues. We have to see the
1:14:01
cues. This... this... This dictatorship of the monsters. Nailed it.
1:14:06
How quickly it happens. We have to be vigilant. Dictatorship
1:14:10
of the monsters. Oh, Richard, that was genius. It's like
1:14:14
war of choice. That's going to go nowhere. Of course
1:14:17
not. I could just see the meeting. Yeah, I'm going
1:14:21
to come up with something that'll stick. Dictatorship of monsters,
1:14:25
guaranteed, it's gonna work. It would be great. sad. Lame.
1:14:35
Yeah. Can we pivot for a moment to... Please. Yeah.
1:14:42
Robots. Also known as... Artificial intelligence. So Jensen Wang. Put
1:14:51
on his motorcycle jacket again. And he was in Korea
1:14:55
for some big computer conference. And he went through an
1:15:00
hour and a half of, I mean, your eyes glaze
1:15:04
over. He's holding up chips. And this is for the
1:15:06
enterprise and all kinds of code names. But then at
1:15:12
the very end, like the last five minutes. He comes
1:15:17
out with something which I've been predicting. Ding. Which is,
1:15:21
we're going from as... Our friend Kyle Akana said it,
1:15:26
from the data center to the desktop. All these companies
1:15:31
with all of their data centers and all of their
1:15:34
energy needs and all of their models that need to
1:15:37
run in the cloud and your inference. on the edge.
1:15:41
It's all coming to your desktop, people. It's all coming
1:15:44
to the desktop. And he showed this. Yeah, that's a
1:15:47
thing. Hold on. But that's not all. That's not all.
1:15:51
He was trying to do a Jobs. One more thing.
1:15:53
He's doing. That's not all. Look at my motorcycle jacket.
1:15:56
But that's not all. That's not all. RTX Spark. is
1:16:00
a reinvention of laptop. of laptop. What kind of English
1:16:06
is this? This is a reinvention of laptop. Work is
1:16:10
a reinvention. of laptop. But in fact, Microsoft NVIDIA is
1:16:16
reinventing all of PC. And today we're announcing... a whole
1:16:20
new line. Three revolutionary Windows machines covering desktop, laptop, and
1:16:27
workstations, all 100% Windows compatible, 100% CUDA, 100% NVIDIA AI
1:16:35
Tensor Core. everything that runs that you see that runs
1:16:39
on nvidia and all these different platforms around the world
1:16:41
runs here. This is the first completely re-engineered, reinvented line
1:16:48
of PCs that has happened in 40 years. Now, I
1:16:52
agree that it's going to move to the desktop, to
1:16:57
laptop. But his initial rollout. with Windows is showing how
1:17:02
your agent is now controlling your Photoshop and controlling Blender
1:17:07
and is doing things just faster than you can normally
1:17:09
do it. And he has the right idea. But I
1:17:13
think your computer will build software for you that you
1:17:15
really need, not this crap that you don't need. Not
1:17:19
everyone's an architect. And then he says the most anti-Wall
1:17:24
Street stock IPO type of thing. this will be meter-free.
1:17:30
It's going to run on your own machine. You won't
1:17:31
need OpenAI. He doesn't say that, but he infers you
1:17:36
won't need OpenAI, Anthropic, or Gemini. You won't need it.
1:17:40
It's going to run at home. This agent could run
1:17:42
24-7, meter-free. And you could download your agent. You could
1:17:45
raise your lobster in here. This is your claw. It's
1:17:49
running all the time. No meter anxiety. And it's sitting
1:17:53
here. No meter anxiety. Oops. Connected to your whole house.
1:17:57
Connected to your laptop. Connected to your display. All the
1:18:00
cameras, your dryer, your water cooler, your dryer. Okay, this
1:18:07
is where he loses me. What? This is where he
1:18:14
goes, instead of just saying, hey, you know, you can
1:18:17
say, hey, I need a spreadsheet reader for my podcast.
1:18:20
Hey, I need a thing to play clips for my
1:18:22
podcast, which I have done and which my agent, my
1:18:26
claw, my lobster did for me. No, he's going to
1:18:30
the, for some idiotic reason, to your dryer. All the
1:18:34
cameras, your dryer, your water cooler, your water heater, your
1:18:40
everything. Whatever you want. Whatever I want. Yeah, my doors.
1:18:44
My water heater. Cooked to a computer for. Your security
1:18:48
system all connected to this, and this becomes your personal
1:18:52
AI, your personal AI agent. And it gets smarter and
1:18:56
smarter and smarter over time because today we have Nemotron
1:18:59
3 Ultra. Tomorrow we have Nemotron 4. What? Nemotron 5.
1:19:03
Nemotron 5. Nemotron 6. Nemotron 1000. Nemotron 6. And we
1:19:06
just keep getting it smarter and smarter and smarter. And
1:19:09
meanwhile, this is sitting at home helping you do things.
1:19:12
If you want a book of travel, no problem. I
1:19:14
want a book of travel. I want a book of
1:19:16
travel. His English is deteriorating. I call American Express and
1:19:22
say, I want a book of travel. I'm not dealing
1:19:24
with that. Okay. Helping you do things. If you want
1:19:27
a book of travel, no problem. No problem. And... If
1:19:31
you want... An incredible system. I do. I want one.
1:19:36
This is a DGX station. Four windows. compatible with Windows,
1:19:42
runs everything in Windows, and it has... 768 gigabytes of
1:19:47
memory. And so you could run a Trillium parameter model.
1:19:51
Yeah. This is unbelievable. That is literally... ruining the whole
1:19:56
business model of these IPOs that are coming. And then
1:19:59
he just does another Minute of schtick. about his vision.
1:20:04
Where I don't know if he's doing this to distract
1:20:08
from the fact that this could put office out of
1:20:10
business or any software system out of business, really. Instead,
1:20:14
he goes to this vision. Something is happening here. Something
1:20:17
is happening here. 15, 20 years ago, We used to
1:20:21
have an idea called a phone. Today, we have an
1:20:24
idea called a PC. We have an idea. We have
1:20:27
an idea. Not an idea. A phone's not an idea.
1:20:31
It's a product. We have an idea called a PC.
1:20:34
Today, when you think about your phone, the one thing
1:20:37
you don't do with it is make phone calls. You
1:20:40
do just about everything else. I do. And so that
1:20:42
phone means something very different to you than a phone
1:20:46
of the past. I am certain what's going to happen
1:20:49
here is that the PC 10 years from now and
1:20:52
the PC that you think about today, a tool, whether
1:20:55
you launch applications. Click and type. And this PC is
1:21:01
going to be completely different. Here's my theory. Now, I
1:21:05
agree with him. And your phone, the idea of a
1:21:09
phone will be different. You won't be launching apps. You
1:21:11
just tell your robot to do something and it'll do
1:21:13
a pretty good job of it. I can totally imagine.
1:21:16
Just as every house today has a home theater. where
1:21:20
many houses have home theaters, big TVs, lawnmowers. Dishwashers. I
1:21:26
could totally imagine that. Stop, stop, stop the clip. I
1:21:30
know, it's idiotic. How many, this is a classic Silicon
1:21:34
Valley kind of fuzzy. thinking that you think that everybody's
1:21:42
got a home theater do you have most people live
1:21:45
in apartments or they small houses how many people do
1:21:49
you know actually have a home i don't have a
1:21:51
home theater i have a tv i got a big
1:21:53
tv i got it with a couch i got yes
1:21:55
i have we funny we have the same we do
1:21:58
not say honey After dinner, let's go sit in the
1:22:01
home theater. No. Home theaters, I know people that have
1:22:05
a home theater. It's an actual theater. Does Brunetti have
1:22:09
a theater at the ranch? No. He does not have
1:22:11
a home theater. A Hollywood guy? A Hollywood guy does
1:22:14
not. A Hollywood guy without a home theater. Well, then
1:22:16
he's not Hollywood. arguably that's I don't think I think
1:22:21
the number of people that have home theaters is even
1:22:23
in Hollywood is a minor number. Yeah. I mean, yes.
1:22:26
Spielberg's. I mean, Lucas has got it beyond a home
1:22:30
theater. He actually has an actual theater that they built
1:22:34
just outside his house. What constitutes a home theater? Is
1:22:37
it a big screen and five? 0.1 Dolby surround with
1:22:42
a subwoofer. No, I think a home theater is a
1:22:46
separate room used only for watching movies and TV shows
1:22:51
in a theater-like environment where you have chairs set up.
1:22:55
It could be modern style with, you know, just casual
1:22:59
chairs. But it's a dedicated room. Well, everyone has one.
1:23:05
Not the family room where everyone's dicking around and there's
1:23:08
a TV set. Which is what everyone has. So this
1:23:13
is unrealistic. His view of reality is skewed by Silicon
1:23:19
Valley. craziness you think houses have home theaters big tvs
1:23:23
lawnmowers dishwashers i could totally imagine that someday there's actually
1:23:29
an ai supercomputer in your house and it's running all
1:23:33
of you and we're all going to sit there on
1:23:35
the couch looking at it is that is it the
1:23:38
analog here agents it's running all of your assistants and
1:23:41
they're doing all kinds of things for you all the
1:23:43
time. They're watching the home theater for you. That's right.
1:23:46
Like what? What is it doing? Time. And you have
1:23:50
to have it in your house just like you have
1:23:52
a home theater in your house. You have stereos in
1:23:53
your house. You have game consoles in your house. What
1:23:56
I'm missing is here's what I'm missing and I I
1:23:59
would almost wager it's coming. Your agent will know when
1:24:05
you've run out of milk. And it will come from
1:24:08
your smart fridge and it will order the milk for
1:24:12
you. Back to the early 80s. It's coming. It's coming.
1:24:14
It's coming. Do you know Ed Zitron? Ed Zitron? He
1:24:20
does a newsletter. maybe a sub stack. He also has
1:24:25
a podcast and he is the anti AI guy and
1:24:29
Bloomberg. My anti-A guy is that Marcus character. Well, this
1:24:35
guy is good, too. I like Ed Zitron. And he
1:24:38
was on Bloomberg. And he just, he said so many
1:24:41
things. I'm like, yeah, I agree. You're right. Absolutely. What
1:24:45
are we getting? I don't want to say we, what
1:24:46
are the bulls out there getting wrong about AI? Because
1:24:49
you've made no secret that you don't see any there
1:24:53
there. Yeah. So I think people are conflating a semiconductor
1:24:56
rally with an underlying successful business, which. doesn't really exist.
1:25:01
Anthropix's current revenue growth, which is deeply questionable, and the
1:25:04
fact that they leaked profitability, manipulated by Elon Musk, of
1:25:07
course, Their growth is coming because people cannot measure how
1:25:11
much an AI task actually costs. And a couple months
1:25:14
ago, Anthropic started charging their enterprise customers the actual token
1:25:17
rates. What this has led to is... suddenly businesses are
1:25:20
going, oh, how much money are we spending? Uber's, I
1:25:24
think it was Uber's COO, Andrew McDonald, said that they're
1:25:27
having trouble justifying the AI spend based on the actual
1:25:32
return that one can actually measure it. So you've got
1:25:34
a thing where you can't measure the costs, and you
1:25:36
can't measure the return on investment. What do you call
1:25:39
that? You call it a thing without an ROI. He
1:25:43
kind of nails it in that one sentence. You can't
1:25:45
measure anything. This is all fluff. Not that it's not
1:25:50
useful. And that's never happened in Silicon Valley before. Well,
1:25:54
the degree to what this is happening is what is
1:25:58
staggering. It's pretty amazing. What? The price, the memory stocks,
1:26:06
Seagate, Western Digital flying through the roof. Their stocks are
1:26:09
worth a fortune. Micron, a dead water company, has been
1:26:16
sitting there cranking out. Now there's just like. trillion dollar
1:26:19
company it's unbelievable this is this is ridiculous so here's
1:26:24
a guy from bank of america on cnbc talking about
1:26:29
the financing the financing of the data centers and i
1:26:33
had a whole set of stuff with whitmer stargate in
1:26:37
michigan i'll skip all of that groovy. It's great. Don't
1:26:40
worry about it. But listen to this. I think everybody
1:26:43
under anticipated the amount of debt financing that's needed. When
1:26:48
you start to get to a deal of this scale,
1:26:51
that's a big, there's this throat, large amount of debt
1:26:54
for the loan markets in general. And then if you
1:26:58
think about $50 billion range, which is just an incredible
1:27:23
amount of capital needs. $30 to $50 billion in debt.
1:27:28
That is truly insane. Hey, make it up in volume.
1:27:34
So I have... Two clips here, each saying something different.
1:27:39
We'll start with this dude. on CNBC. The problem we
1:27:44
face right now in the United States is that the
1:27:46
government is doing nothing on AI. The government is doing
1:27:51
nothing to stop AI from taking your jobs. The government
1:27:54
is doing nothing to stop AI from exploiting your kid,
1:27:57
is doing nothing to stop AI. from giving advice to
1:28:00
a terrorist is doing nothing to stop AI from being
1:28:04
a huge cybersecurity threat. And when you ask yourself why,
1:28:08
it's because these AI companies have funded massive super PACs.
1:28:13
They're threatening to spend over $100 million in the upcoming
1:28:16
elections. Wait a minute, are they all Jewish? in order
1:28:19
to silence people. That's wrong. We can, of course, respectfully
1:28:23
work through the specifics of what AI policy should be,
1:28:26
but we shouldn't be in a situation where AI companies
1:28:29
have silenced the people's representatives and we do nothing. And
1:28:33
that's why I'm proposing this first step, a modest AI
1:28:37
token tax to make sure... that AI does not result
1:28:40
in mass unemployment. Shoot this guy. I love the token
1:28:44
tax idea. We don't even know how much a token
1:28:46
is, but we're going to tax it. Now we have
1:28:49
David Sachs, who was the AI crypto czar until his
1:28:53
time ran out. This is from the all-in pod. All-in
1:28:57
pod. It's not a podcast. It's the all-in pod. And
1:29:00
he speaks of Jevons Paradox, which was a new one
1:29:03
to me. It's actually got a controlling belief in 2026.
1:29:06
Yes, AI will increase demand for knowledge workers, not decrease
1:29:11
it. I would refer you to Aaron Levy's post called
1:29:13
Jevons Paradox for Knowledge Workers. And the point of Jevons
1:29:17
Paradox is that as the... cost of a resource goes
1:29:21
down, the aggregate demand for it actually increases because you
1:29:25
discover more and more use cases. So I think this
1:29:27
will certainly happen with code. In the past, it's been
1:29:29
very expensive to generate code. You have to hire engineers.
1:29:32
There's not enough of them. It's an expensive resource. So
1:29:35
the amount of software generated in the economy was limited
1:29:38
by that. I think it's going to increase massively. now
1:29:40
because the cost of generating code is coming down so
1:29:42
much. But there's other examples too. You take a field
1:29:45
like radiology, that's frequently cited as a profession that AI
1:29:48
is going to put out of business. That's not what
1:29:50
the data shows. The data shows that the number of
1:29:52
radiologists is increasing. Why? Because the number of scans that
1:29:55
people want to make is increasing. And it's true that
1:29:58
AI can do some of the work, but you still
1:29:59
need a doc. to prompt the AI, to interpret the
1:30:02
AI, to validate it. So you get more efficient, the
1:30:04
cost of scans goes down, and instead of it being
1:30:07
a super speciality that happens very rarely, that you need
1:30:10
a referral on top of a referral to get, it
1:30:12
becomes something that's normalized and everyone starts doing it and
1:30:15
you start getting more and more scans that leads to
1:30:17
better and better outcomes. I think there's gonna be a
1:30:19
lot of those. examples through the economy and we're going
1:30:21
to look back and see that the job loss narrative
1:30:24
was not only wrong, but we actually got job gain.
1:30:27
I agree. I totally agree. We're going to get more
1:30:30
productivity. It's not going to be, yes, we'll have some
1:30:33
transition where coders will go away. How many coders really
1:30:37
are there in the universe? Half a million? Amelia? I
1:30:43
don't know. No, I'm- We should have that number. A
1:30:49
lot of girls. I think everyone... Learn to code, girls.
1:30:54
I mean, I'm so productive now with my robot, I
1:30:57
could do a show every day. You do a show
1:31:00
every day, damn near. Yeah, I know. But I still
1:31:03
have Mondays. You're doing a show every day before then.
1:31:05
I still have Mondays and Tuesdays open. And Saturday. Oh,
1:31:10
do a show. And Saturday. And the robot do the
1:31:12
show. No. Let's do a G-Day. That's the thing. The
1:31:16
robot can't actually do the show. That's the beauty of
1:31:19
it. The robot can't do a show. That's never going
1:31:22
to happen. You can do a deep dive. *laughs* I've
1:31:28
actually taught the robot to identify the AI YouTube videos.
1:31:33
It's pretty good now. pretty good. It figures it out.
1:31:37
Oh, this is not good. And what benefit is this
1:31:41
to you? for clipping. for clipping. Search and clip. That's
1:31:50
a great benefit to me. Go through, hey, I saw
1:31:55
something funny that Rubio said. Go find funny clips. It
1:32:00
does a pretty good job. It misses a lot of
1:32:02
good ones because it's... In essence. an intern with autism.
1:32:08
But it does okay. It has different humor than me.
1:32:12
Okay, well let's jump back to some... Current events. And
1:32:19
this I found peculiar because this is from NTD. And
1:32:23
it was like, did you know Ukraine attacked St. Petersburg?
1:32:27
No, I did not know this. This did not hit
1:32:30
my robot's purview. Yeah, how come that is? Here we
1:32:36
go. This is Ukraine. It's St. Pete. Ukraine today striking
1:32:40
Russia's second largest city, St. Petersburg. This as Russia is
1:32:44
holding a major economic forum in that city. Moscow is
1:32:47
already vowing retaliation. NTD's international correspondent, Arjen Pasdar, brings us
1:32:52
the war update. New footage shows smoke rising into the
1:32:56
air and explosions ringing out in Russia's second largest city.
1:32:59
Ukraine struck an oil terminal, a naval base and another
1:33:03
military facility in the nation's second largest city. The attacks
1:33:07
coming just hours before Russian President Vladimir Putin kicked off
1:33:11
an economic forum, an apparent Ukrainian attempt to embarrass the
1:33:15
Russian president. It's the fifth time the annual same- Petersburg
1:33:19
International Economic Forum is taking place during the Ukraine war.
1:33:23
Ukraine confirmed the attacks, releasing video footage of the drone
1:33:27
strikes on multiple targets. President Vladimir Zelenskyy saying such deep
1:33:31
strikes allow Ukraine to negotiate with Russia on equal terms.
1:33:36
Good luck. Through our mid-range and deep... Russia is facing
1:33:41
clear, clear fuel shortages. So through these... Wait, wait, wait.
1:33:47
Russia's facing fuel shortages? Well, this is news to me.
1:33:53
How does that work? They're sitting on nothing but oil.
1:33:56
fuel cell engines. except the refineries that they there's one
1:34:00
i guess around saint pete that they hit with that
1:34:02
with a drone allow ukraine to negotiate with that's an
1:34:06
act of war russia on equal terms through our mid-range
1:34:10
and deep strikes russia is facing clear clear fuel shortages
1:34:16
so Through this pressure, we are making Russia choose between
1:34:23
diplomacy and further losses. Zelenskyy added that he's ready for
1:34:29
direct peace talks with Putin. Russia, meanwhile, vowing retaliation. I'd
1:34:36
like to remind you of the statement. from the Ministry
1:34:38
of Foreign Affairs, which said that our responses will be
1:34:41
systematic in nature, and indeed, they already are. The spokesman
1:34:47
added that Russia will make sure to prevent such Ukrainian
1:34:50
attacks in the future. It sounds to me like the
1:34:54
Eurobirds. along with armor that they're going all out now.
1:34:59
And they're going to sacrifice Zelensky. This guy's going to
1:35:02
get blowed up. This is a problem. Well, you know,
1:35:07
I think we both have thought this for a while,
1:35:11
that Zelensky has a short window in his life. Mm-hmm.
1:35:16
But it do is. not happening. Yeah, but this is,
1:35:20
you know, now you're hitting where it hurts. Well, here's
1:35:24
part two. Ukraine strikes on St. Petersburg come just days
1:35:28
after Russia attacked multiple Ukrainian cities, killing over 20 civilians.
1:35:34
NATO Chief Mark Ritter visiting one of those sites on
1:35:36
Wednesday. This is a department store which has been heavily
1:35:39
hit. Hey, who is this? Who is this? That's what
1:35:43
you think it is. This is Mark Rutte. Is this
1:35:45
my boy? This is a department store which has been
1:35:48
heavily hit. A sort of shopping mall, but also a
1:35:51
subway station. And the rescue workers, they work integratively. These
1:35:56
mishaps... come in 40 minutes after each other. So here,
1:36:00
one of their colleagues has been killed because of the
1:36:03
second missile impact. you for a meeting of the NATO-Ukraine
1:36:11
Council, where different nations advocate for Ukraine to join the
1:36:15
military alliance. And past our NTD News. You know, hey,
1:36:20
Vladimir, we just, you know, this Iran war thing is
1:36:23
getting too much coverage. We've got to ramp this up
1:36:26
a little bit. You got any drones, man? Can you
1:36:27
do something a little more spectacular and then, you know,
1:36:30
just do something good? This- Yeah. Can I do a
1:36:35
little native ad for Mimi? Yes, please. Egg prices are
1:36:41
coming down fast, but not for the reasons some are
1:36:44
claiming. I'm Brandon Gomez, CNBC's food and consumer wellness reporter.
1:36:48
And yes, the egg market is still kind of a
1:36:51
scramble. After last year's birthing shock left shelves light and
1:36:54
prices high, things have now flipped. There are two Too
1:36:57
many eggs and not enough pantries to handle them. TooManyEggs.com
1:37:02
In stores, a dozen eggs is actually dropping below a
1:37:05
dollar. Good news for shoppers. Your breakfast just got cheaper.
1:37:09
Bad news for producers. Their margins are getting whisked away.
1:37:13
So what happened? Well, farmers rebuilt their flocks after the
1:37:15
outbreak. But now the... industry no not after the outbreak
1:37:19
after trump came in and the ag secretary along with
1:37:23
kennedy went hey stop vaccinating these chickens let the ones
1:37:27
you know die who need to die stop killing all
1:37:30
the chickens and let's just get back to business well
1:37:33
farmers rebuilt their flocks after the outbreak but now the
1:37:36
industry's got more eggs than demand can handle. And here's
1:37:39
the twist that really makes this bad timing for egg
1:37:42
producers. Americans are eating more eggs than before. A new
1:37:45
survey shows more than four in 10 Americans are focused
1:37:48
on protein more than they were five years ago. And
1:37:51
most say eggs are weekly go-tos. The industry should be
1:37:55
capitalizing on that demand, but input costs haven't gotten any
1:37:58
easier for the industry. So feed, fuel, and labor are
1:38:02
still eating into their profits and bottom line. It's the
1:38:04
American system at work. A buck, a buck for a
1:38:08
dozen eggs. It can't be very good. You know, Tina
1:38:14
bought these jumbo eggs. Our jumbos are the best, you
1:38:18
know, they... I'm suspicious. I'm suspicious. No, jumbo eggs, chickens,
1:38:23
sometimes when they're at the end of their life cycle,
1:38:26
chickens will start to produce jumbo eggs, and then they
1:38:29
either get egg-bound. Most of those chickens get killed and
1:38:32
eaten. The only reason I know this is because I
1:38:36
got a lecture about it. from the expert. Because I
1:38:40
love jumbo eggs because sometimes jumbo eggs even have double
1:38:43
yolks. Yes, yeah, that's freaky. It's freaky. Yeah. And so
1:38:49
I said, oh, jumbo eggs, jumbo eggs. And Mimi's telling
1:38:52
me, well, you know, if you're encouraging jumbo eggs, you're
1:38:56
encouraging the death of. chickens because chickens that produce jumbo
1:38:59
eggs have to be taken out because they can't do
1:39:02
it for long. Because it hurts. And then they get
1:39:05
egg bound and other things happen and they get slaughtered.
1:39:09
It hurts. But yeah, no, jumbo eggs are dynamite. Okay,
1:39:13
so they're not like, like factory freak- No, no, not
1:39:17
at all. It's a natural phenomenon with most chickens. Oh,
1:39:21
okay. All right. I just thought they came from really
1:39:23
big chickens. *laughs* And here is the breaking news we've
1:39:29
been waiting for for the almost two decades of this
1:39:32
podcast. The question finally posed to Gayle King. It could
1:39:37
only happen on a podcast. What is the one thing
1:39:40
we want to know about Gail and Oprah? Are they
1:39:43
gay? People literally to the point have made comments that
1:39:48
they are like, there's no way this isn't a romantic
1:39:51
relationship. I know. It used to really bother me. I
1:39:54
was recently divorced and there was a National Enquirer. story
1:39:57
about that's the reason for the divorce because they're secretly
1:39:59
gay number one if we were gay we would tell
1:40:02
you because believe me there's nothing wrong with it it's
1:40:05
just hold on If they were gay, they'd tell you
1:40:09
because we know for a fact that all gays Always
1:40:12
tell everybody that they're gay. Give me a break. We
1:40:18
were gay, we would tell you, because believe me, there's
1:40:21
nothing wrong with it. It's just, I prefer a man.
1:40:24
A man. I prefer a man. A man. So we
1:40:27
would tell you. And then I would say to her,
1:40:29
you've got to say something on your show, because it's
1:40:32
hard enough for me to get a date on a
1:40:33
Saturday night, and now people think I'm a lesbian. You've
1:40:36
got to say something. And she said, no, we should
1:40:39
just leave it be. I said, no, you've got to
1:40:40
say something. She said, no, just leave it alone. Leave
1:40:44
it alone. I said, well, that's fine for you to
1:40:46
say. You have somebody. I don't. So it used to
1:40:48
really bother me. And now, even today, there are still
1:40:51
people that say, well, you know, the truth is, I
1:40:54
don't care. But we do have a very unique. I
1:40:57
got in trouble once when I said, you know, because
1:40:59
I'm single, alert, and available. I said, if I could
1:41:01
meet a guy that was like Oprah, I'd be done.
1:41:03
And then people took that all out of context, as
1:41:06
they often do. I mean, I said, you know, when
1:41:09
I die, I'd like to come back as one of
1:41:10
her dogs. They travel very well, Alex. Kashmir, private planes,
1:41:14
sign me up. There you go. It's official. There's nothing
1:41:19
to see here. Well, I find it peculiar you'd bring
1:41:24
in this gossipy clip. I thought it was fun. This
1:41:27
is the one thing everyone's always... Come on. Gossipy clip.
1:41:32
I'm sorry, bring back the lady with the andrinochrome. Bring
1:41:37
back that four-part series, please. Here's a little clip. Who
1:41:44
is this? I don't know if Trump is doing a
1:41:48
goof or what's the deal, but why are they replacing
1:41:51
Tulsi Gabbard with this Bill Pulte character? He's got no
1:41:57
in no. Anything to do with national security, you know
1:42:00
about this. Bill Pulte replaces Gabra. I have a clip.
1:42:04
Where's Bill Pulte? He's around here someplace. He's done a
1:42:06
what a great job. Federal Housing Finance Chief Bill Pulte,
1:42:10
close confidant to the president, will now be the highest
1:42:12
ranking intelligence official in the government, despite having no experience.
1:42:16
experiences, spycraft, or national security. I see no evidence of
1:42:20
any qualifications for that job. The move sparked bipartisan concern.
1:42:24
He's ill-equipped to oversee the nation's spy agencies, including the
1:42:28
CIA. The White House, represented at the daily press briefing
1:42:31
today by Medicare chief Dr. Mehmet Oz, Good afternoon, everybody.
1:42:34
dodged questions about his qualifications. You're a heart surgeon or
1:42:38
a heart doctor? Yeah. Would you recommend a patient go
1:42:40
see someone who isn't? You're asking the question with a
1:42:43
premise that Bill Pulte is not qualified. I don't know
1:42:45
anything about his situation. Democrats note Pulte used his perch
1:42:48
at the Federal Housing Finance Agency to send criminal referrals
1:42:51
to the Justice Department, accusing President Trump's political enemies of
1:42:55
mortgage fraud. Did you know that President Trump This guy,
1:42:59
I fear. News of Pulte's appointment came as Secretary of
1:43:08
State Marco Rubio on Capitol Hill once again called for
1:43:11
the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz. Today, the U.S.
1:43:14
disabled a tanker. trying to evade the American blockade. That
1:43:18
has to open immediately. And that has to open immediately
1:43:21
in exchange, not for anything else other than us lifting
1:43:24
the blockade. But he faced a tough grilling from Democrats.
1:43:27
You keep telling us how we're winning this war. The
1:43:29
president keeps saying, well, the war's over. Completely annihilated. The
1:43:32
war is not over. And yet the American people see
1:43:35
how we're losing. the pump and with their costs, and
1:43:38
yet this thing still hasn't been resolved. On top of
1:43:41
serving as the acting intelligence chief, Bill Pulte is set
1:43:44
to continue leading the Federal Housing Finance Agency and serve
1:43:48
as chairman of the government-backed mortgage giants Fannie Mae and
1:43:51
Freddie Mac. Yeah, this is, there's a strategy behind this,
1:43:55
I think. What is it you think? Well, this is
1:43:58
Senate has to confirm this guy and they won't. So
1:44:03
then Sarah Lynn Pickett. I agree with that. Sarah Lynn
1:44:05
Pickett. And, and... And I think... I don't know. Tell
1:44:11
me about this. Well, first... as acting I think he's
1:44:17
acting now so he can do some stuff, so he
1:44:20
can go nuts. He can throw all kinds of stuff
1:44:24
out there, anything he wants to say, because whether he
1:44:27
has the job or not, they see him now as
1:44:29
the acting DNI. So he's just going to be blah,
1:44:34
blah, blah. He's going to be spewing all kinds of
1:44:36
stuff. Some of it was probably true. And so he
1:44:41
won't get confirmed. Meanwhile, Sarah Lynn Pickett. She's been the...
1:44:47
The assistant director. Is that assistant or deputy? Should we
1:44:52
have, is it deputy? Probably deputy. Let me see who,
1:44:55
let's see if it's deputy. She's been there for a
1:44:58
couple years. She was at DHS before that. She is...
1:45:04
Department of Defense, six years. She's a lawyer. So, you
1:45:09
know, you know how he always likes to have someone
1:45:11
as a backup. Yeah, then that actually does the job.
1:45:15
Yeah, let me see. Let me just check and make
1:45:18
sure deputy assistant Someone else is the robot. Yeah, I
1:45:28
could, but I'm already doing it myself. Okay, let's ask
1:45:31
the robot. Hmm. Book of Knowledge. Who is the current
1:45:36
deputy? Director of National Intelligence. All right, book of knowledge
1:45:42
is searching. Here we go. It's a tough one. According
1:45:49
to the Book of Knowledge, Aaron Paul Lucas has served
1:45:52
as the Principal Deputy Director of National Intelligence since 2025.
1:45:58
Bill Pulte has now been named as acting director of
1:46:01
national intelligence following Tulsi Gabbard's resignation. Aaron Paul Lucas. It
1:46:08
has been written. So Aaron Paul Lucas, did you look
1:46:11
him up? No, why don't you ask the robot who
1:46:14
this other woman is, what she do? Well, let me
1:46:16
find Aaron Paul Lucas. first hold on a second well
1:46:19
i think it's just we've been distracted by the robot
1:46:22
no the robot you called for the robot the robot
1:46:24
is as she is the assistant aaron paul lucas is
1:46:28
the deputy I believe deputy is above assistant, no? Yeah,
1:46:32
I would think so. Okay. So book of knowledge. Give
1:46:35
me a brief bio of Aaron Paul Lucas. Let's see
1:46:38
who this dude is. Because Trump always wants to have
1:46:41
someone in the background who's going to do the real
1:46:44
job. According to the book of knowledge, Aaron Paul Lucas
1:46:50
is an American intelligence officer, born May 18, 1971, who
1:46:55
spent more than 20 years at the CIA as an
1:46:58
analyst and operations officer. Oh, wait for it. Serving as
1:47:01
station chief for a former Soviet country, eh? Before becoming
1:47:05
intelligence aide to Richard Grinnell and deputy senior director for
1:47:09
Europe and Russia at the National Security Council. There you
1:47:12
go. Major spook. There's the real guy. That's the, that's...
1:47:16
the guy who's doing all the work in the background
1:47:18
chief yeah in the behind the iron curtain yes that's
1:47:22
yeah okay that's what you do that's the person you
1:47:25
get yeah he's just a cia stooge yeah well he
1:47:28
worked for grinnell The Gay Guy So. It's all part
1:47:33
of the cabal, man. That's a web of deceit. Yes,
1:47:38
it is a web of deceit. A little update on
1:47:44
the $250 bill. I still got my eye on it.
1:47:48
I know you're skeptical. Could President Donald Trump soon be
1:47:50
featured on a $250 bill? Well, the Washington Post says
1:47:53
U.S. Treasurer Brandon Beach has pushed. the Bureau of Engraving
1:47:57
and Printing to expedite the process that would place the
1:48:01
president's portrait on a new $250 bill. According to a
1:48:04
mock-up design obtained by the Post, the bill would also
1:48:07
feature Trump's signature and a logo commemorating America's 250th anniversary.
1:48:12
But even with Trump's backing, the bill would technically be
1:48:15
illegal. So current law forbids anyone living to be featured
1:48:19
on U.S. currency, and that law goes back to 1866.
1:48:22
Another law stipulates which denominations of U.S. bills can be
1:48:25
produced, and a $250 bill is not one of them.
1:48:29
Trump allies on Capitol Hill are pushing legislation that would
1:48:32
clear the way for the bill, but that effort has
1:48:34
stalled in Congress. reportedly called for the bill's design in
1:48:38
anticipation of that legislation passing. Treasury Secretary Scott Besant echoed
1:48:42
that at the White House briefing this week. So we
1:48:45
have to prepare in advance. You can't draw something up
1:48:48
the day before. But even if the legislation does pass,
1:48:51
it takes years for bills to be designed, requiring coordination
1:48:54
with the Federal Reserve, the CBO, and the Treasury. Secret
1:48:56
Service, and other partners. Well, it seems like they already
1:48:59
designed it. It's already designed. I don't think so. Yeah,
1:49:04
they just said that. They obtained a design. I said
1:49:08
it in the report! Hmm. PBS has really obtained a
1:49:11
design that has Trump's signature on his face. So I
1:49:15
think they've designed it. It would be great. Going nowhere.
1:49:19
It doesn't matter. Trillion dollar loan, interest-free loan to America.
1:49:23
It's a good idea. It's a good idea. Okay, you're
1:49:31
up. Okay, let's do a little rant here from John
1:49:36
Turley on free speech. I was kind of unaware. I
1:49:39
mean. John Turley, the professor at Georgetown who's on Fox
1:49:43
a lot. Very smart guy. He's a podcaster, too. He's
1:49:47
a podcaster. Oh, he's a podcaster? So what? Everyone's a
1:49:51
podcaster. Hey, hey, hey, hey, hey. Don't diminish our vocation,
1:49:55
man. Well, no, but... I'm not. But still. Okay. Well,
1:50:01
we're in good company. Yeah. Yeah. John Trilley is one
1:50:03
of us. All right. Yeah, so here he is talking
1:50:06
about free speech. I found this to be an interesting
1:50:10
little lecture. There are two anti-free speech movements that have
1:50:13
coalesced. One is in Europe where it has laid waste
1:50:17
to free speech. speech, Germany, France, England, free speech has
1:50:20
been eviscerated, and also places like Canada. The U.S. anti-free
1:50:26
speech movement began in higher education, then metastasized throughout the
1:50:30
government. But this has all reached our shores now. The
1:50:35
Berlin World Forum followed... the remarks of Vice President Vance
1:50:40
on free speech, and the EU was red hot. They
1:50:43
gathered in Berlin, and it was the most anti-free speech
1:50:47
gathering I've ever been part of. There's only two of
1:50:49
us from the free speech community. And they are committed.
1:50:54
And, you know, Hillary Clinton was there, and she... really
1:50:57
fueled the anger. I mean, when Twitter was purchased by
1:51:01
Elon Musk, she called on the EU to use the
1:51:05
infamous Digital Services Act, which is one of the most
1:51:08
anti-free speech pieces of legislation in decades. And she called
1:51:14
upon the EU to use the DSA. to force the
1:51:17
censorship of American citizens, force people like Musk to censor.
1:51:21
It's an extraordinary act by someone who was once a
1:51:24
presidential candidate in the United States. But they are committed
1:51:28
to it. And after the World Forum, they further globalized
1:51:33
this effort. And they are threatening companies like Axe. with
1:51:37
ruinous fines unless they resume censoring American citizens. Yeah, I
1:51:43
think this is a little rant he did about a
1:51:45
year ago or so. Yeah, well, he's been ranting about
1:51:49
this for a while. Yeah, what I'm kind of... I
1:51:52
didn't know about the Hillary thing. I didn't realize she
1:51:55
was such a bad actor. What I'm curious about is
1:51:58
what is this free speech community he speaks of? How
1:52:01
come we're not members of the free speech community? We
1:52:04
are. But it sounds like there's a club. nah well
1:52:09
it's a cell it's like it's a set up like
1:52:12
communist party along those lines here's what the EU is
1:52:16
doing. Say hello to Quant. Move over Google. Hello Quant.
1:52:21
Quant. It's the European Parliament's new default search engine, replacing
1:52:26
a tool so ubiquitous it's become a verb. Never mind
1:52:30
that the French service has a modest 6 million monthly
1:52:32
users, it's a symbolic part of the EU's push. for
1:52:36
tech sovereignty. Today, we simply rely on non-EU providers for
1:52:42
over than 80% of our digital products, services and infrastructure.
1:52:48
And this is a huge problem for Europe's security of
1:52:50
supply. And this has to change. The long-awaited Texan. Yeah.
1:52:56
Linux! energy sector that powers data centers. We need to
1:53:19
integrate digital infrastructure in our energy system in a sustainable
1:53:24
way because there can be no digital sovereignty without energy.
1:53:29
Yeah, okay. So they're pushing the new search engine quant.
1:53:36
Which when you say it in Dutch sounds "Kunt". Doesn't
1:53:39
quite sound as good. "Kunt". Uhhhh, this is dumb. I
1:53:47
don't think this is a very smart thing. And all
1:53:49
the parliament has to use this search engine, which, gee.
1:53:53
They have to use this. They can't use Google. No,
1:53:55
no. They have to use quant. Why? Because it's your...
1:53:59
I would use some of the AI systems. You're helping
1:54:02
the enemy. No, no, no. They have to use European
1:54:06
stuff. Quant. Quant. Hey, I got a great name. Because
1:54:11
it sounds futuristic. I'm going to start doing some searches
1:54:13
on it and see what it gets me. Can you
1:54:15
get on to Quant? Can you even use quant? I
1:54:18
could get on the quant, I'm sure. Get on the
1:54:20
quant. Well, here's something as we start to get a
1:54:24
little closer to wrapping here. That we knew, we knew
1:54:28
this five years ago. In fact, it's the whole reason
1:54:32
I'm not dead. And, uh... Theo Vaughn had... McCullough on.
1:54:39
We hold McCullough in high regard. I'm a little weirded
1:54:43
out by his... Commercialization of himself? His pharmaceutical business. Hi,
1:54:48
people. You should buy my pills. I have the Quack
1:54:51
Incorporated pills. You take these pills and all your ills
1:54:55
are gone. Yeah, I'm a little weirded out by that.
1:54:58
But here's Theo Vaughn. I think what Theo Vaughn is
1:55:01
trying to do... He's trying to get McCullough to tell
1:55:06
him. that COVID was bioengineered. So that it would kill
1:55:11
everybody except the Jews. Was anybody who was immune to...
1:55:16
Like any genetics or demographics or cultures that were immune
1:55:21
to COVID-19? There were a few papers indicating that children
1:55:26
were largely immune, that they had a lot of cross-exposure
1:55:29
with other coronaviruses, almost no serious cases in children. There
1:55:33
was an occasional child with cystic fibrosis or some problem
1:55:35
who got really sick. but children are largely immune. School
1:55:38
teachers, because they have so much, there was no significant
1:55:43
spread of serious illness from children to the school teachers.
1:55:46
But no, was there any like, was there any like
1:55:48
a Norwegian person couldn't get it? Or was there like
1:55:51
somebody from Zimbabwe? Like, was there any like a... Stop
1:55:55
the clip for a second. Yeah. If you recall when
1:55:57
this thing first broke. There was a thesis that the
1:56:01
Han Chinese in particular... We're either not going to get
1:56:06
COVID-19 because the thing was designed so they wouldn't. it
1:56:10
wouldn't attack them or on the other hand it was
1:56:13
designed to kill all the Han Chinese. And it would
1:56:17
attack them and that's the reason that the Chinese shuttered
1:56:21
the country pretty much. Remember that? The Han Chinese rumor?
1:56:25
Yes. And I also remember that. Well, that's what this
1:56:29
is just. This is just an extension of that. Well,
1:56:32
I think what he's. What he's going for is... when
1:56:37
Kennedy said... RFK Jr., that is. He was saying that
1:56:42
Ashkenazi Jews couldn't get it. You remember that? Oh, I
1:56:46
remember that. Yeah, that was another, which was an extension
1:56:49
of the same thinking, yeah. So when I hear Theo
1:56:53
Vaughn, who we know is... out of his gourd about
1:56:56
Israel being the fault of everything and controlling everything. And
1:57:00
he's saying, well, how about Norwegians? Or how about Zimbabweans?
1:57:03
Or how about, there's got to be, huh, huh, huh,
1:57:06
huh. I don't want to say it, but you know
1:57:07
what I'm going for, McCullough. But no, was there any
1:57:10
like, was there any like a Norwegian person couldn't get
1:57:13
it? Or was there like somebody from Zimbabwe? Like, was
1:57:16
there? any like uh there's one adult group you're gonna
1:57:19
laugh but there's one adult group no specific ethnicity or
1:57:22
culture Do you know what group it was? Bookers? You're
1:57:29
going to laugh. Smokers. Smokers can get it. They got
1:57:34
it very mild cases. And they don't get long COVID.
1:57:38
Yes. Nicotine, baby. Smokers maintain a level of nicotine in
1:57:44
the bloodstream. They actually smoke frequently enough. Blood nicotine blocks
1:57:48
the spike protein as it's interfacing with the nicotinic acetylcholine
1:57:54
receptor. Smoking blocks the spike protein. It's amazing. I thought
1:57:58
smokers were going to go down. Well, who knows now
1:58:00
then all those years of this, all those smoking advertisements
1:58:03
ended up probably saving people's lives 40 years later. Well,
1:58:06
you know what we use now use, we use a
1:58:09
nicotine patch, seven milligram patch, even in non-smokers to help
1:58:14
them through long COVID. We use it in addition to
1:58:16
the McCullough protocol. Yes, which you can get at McCullochProtocol.com.
1:58:21
Get your 7-milligram patch, everybody. It's only $25. Yeah. What
1:58:27
bothers me about the McCulloch Protocol and Dr. Drew and
1:58:31
the wellness company is that whatever they're selling, if you
1:58:36
do the proper search, where there's a parasite cleanse or
1:58:41
whatever it is. There are alternative companies with the exact
1:58:45
same product, exact same. There's one, I forget the one
1:58:49
that Bongina was pushing, which was an alternative product. But
1:58:55
they're half the price. The wellness company. and Dr. McCullough
1:59:00
and Dr. Drew, they're rip-off artists. It bothers me to
1:59:05
an extreme that they're overpriced. Well, this is, I think
1:59:08
the Wellness Company, which a lot, they sponsor a lot
1:59:12
of podcasts. um And they seem, to me, they just
1:59:17
feel a little sketchy. Well, they're sketchy. It's not unusual
1:59:22
what they're doing because there's other people doing it, except
1:59:25
for the fact that they're, because they got all these
1:59:28
brand name characters working there, the prices are 2x. It's
1:59:34
ridiculous. You know, do some research on these things and
1:59:38
then. find the alternative that's cheaper. You know, I got
1:59:42
a lot of emails about that pill you talked about
1:59:45
on the last show. You must have received some emails
1:59:47
about it. Retrobruchion, whatever it was. Retribution. Yeah, everyone's emailing
1:59:58
me saying... Oh, well, you know, that's just the peptide
2:00:01
and you can get that, you know. Oh, the peptide
2:00:04
nuts. My son is one of them. We got a
2:00:07
lot of peptide people out there. Yeah. I'm skeptical about
2:00:12
the peptides. Well, you might as well be. Ret- ret-
2:00:17
ret-a-trutide. My son again. is the peptide expert in the
2:00:31
family. So I'll defer to him if I have a
2:00:33
question, but no. He claims there's a good facial cream
2:00:37
that's got a lot of peptides in it. It keeps
2:00:40
you younger looking and you can take various peptide pills
2:00:44
or do this and that and the other thing. But,
2:00:46
you know. Isn't the GOP1, isn't that a peptide? I
2:00:51
don't know. You're asking the wrong guy. I defer to
2:00:53
my son. I'm pretty sure it is. I think that
2:00:55
you... Well, ask the robot. Okay. You always give me
2:01:01
a big sigh when I ask for your robot to
2:01:05
get involved with the show, and it's your robot that
2:01:08
you put on the show on purpose. The sigh and
2:01:11
the eye roll that you can't see is because I
2:01:14
was hoping that you would have the answer. I'm not
2:01:17
a peptide expert. I'm not Clavicus or whatever that guy
2:01:21
is. Clavicus? That guy. Iclaudius. Book of Knowledge. Is GLP-1
2:01:28
a peptide? All right, here we go. Answer me. According
2:01:38
to the Book of Knowledge, GLP-1 is indeed a peptide
2:01:41
of 30 amino acids, produced by the differential processing of
2:01:46
proglucagon. Okay, thus... What? It has been written... What? You
2:01:51
want to... Progluca... What did he call it? Proglucagon. P-R-O-G-L-U-C-A-G-O-N.
2:02:00
And okay, since we're discussing that, I think, yes, I
2:02:05
have a clip about that. The Washington Post has an
2:02:08
interesting look at scientists examining the impact of GLP-1s on
2:02:12
the brain. The University of Colorado study that looked at
2:02:14
brain scans of women who had taken GLP-1s found an
2:02:17
increase in brain regions. that are involved in attention and
2:02:20
processing important stimuli. One leading theory as to how and
2:02:24
why this is happening is that the drugs might target
2:02:27
inflammation in the brain. No, I know what this is.
2:02:31
You take the GLP-1, you vote Democrat. I know what's
2:02:35
going on. That would make sense. Well, I'd love to
2:02:40
have some information about peptides on the next show. If
2:02:44
you happen to see JC and he feels like it.
2:02:46
Oh, okay. You talk your head off. It's like a
2:02:50
whole show of discussions about peptides. But let's both do,
2:02:55
I'll tell you what. Let's both do a deep dive.
2:02:58
dive on the peptides and then give it two shows
2:03:02
so we can spend some time letting it you know
2:03:06
simmer and we'll get some input from some of our
2:03:08
we have people out there who are peptide nuts peptide
2:03:12
people that will send us give us links to to
2:03:15
clips that may be useful yes and then we'll roll
2:03:18
out and we've got to find some peptide skeptics. Yes,
2:03:22
peptide people, now is your chance. This is what makes
2:03:25
you great. This is what makes the No Agenda show
2:03:27
great because we have more producers and they are, in
2:03:31
fact, the best producers. We have a... I talked to
2:03:35
people about it. We have about just around a million...
2:03:39
under a million people that listen. This is a population
2:03:42
of a very large city. This is larger than the
2:03:46
cities that Trump's going to be giving money to. And
2:03:49
cities have, they have people who die, people who are
2:03:52
born. We have all these things. And we have doctors,
2:03:55
lawyers, firemen. We have everything. This is a city. And
2:03:59
so when we ask for peptide people, there's got to
2:04:03
be 25 people out there that are peptide nuts. Well,
2:04:06
20 have already emailed me about this one peptide that
2:04:10
you brought up. And I would say 95% are like,
2:04:14
it's the best thing ever. And you need to get
2:04:18
on this peptide. Meanwhile, I'm taking... I don't even remember
2:04:22
the clip. It was your Eli Lilly clip. Oh, about
2:04:27
the new weight loss product, yeah. Yeah, yeah. Lily, let
2:04:32
me see. Next, yeah, the next gen. Here it is.
2:04:35
The next generation of obesity medication is getting closer to
2:04:38
reality. Eli Lilly is studying a new drug. Test results
2:04:41
show it's more powerful, even more powerful, than the obesity
2:04:45
shots and pills already on the market. NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent
2:04:49
Sydney Lupkin is here to tell us about it. Good
2:04:51
morning. Good morning. I'm so glad you're the one who's
2:04:53
going to pronounce the name of this new drug. What
2:04:56
is it? The new drug is... called retatrutide. So it's
2:05:00
a weekly injection just like Wegovy and Zetbound, but it's
2:05:03
a little different. Wegovy and Zetbound target the GLP-1 hormone.
2:05:08
This new drug works on three hormones, GLP-1, GIP, and
2:05:12
glucagon, and that makes it more powerful. When you say
2:05:15
more powerful, you got to sell me because I have
2:05:17
seen the results. in human beings of the existing drugs.
2:05:20
How powerful is it? Yeah, so Eli Lilly, the company
2:05:23
that makes Reta-Truetide, says that in the clinical trial, people
2:05:26
taking it for 80 weeks lost an average of more
2:05:29
than 70 pounds. Because they were just a bag of
2:05:32
bones. Highest dose. For comparison, patients taking the placebo over
2:05:36
the same period, they lost 5 pounds. Those were the
2:05:38
latest findings from its phase three clinical study. I asked
2:05:42
Dr. Carolyn Frank. Right. So everyone that emailed me was
2:05:45
saying, this is bull crap. They're just taking something that's
2:05:48
already available. You can get it. It's a peptide. You
2:05:50
can get it from the peptide dealer. Maybe we should
2:05:52
become peptide dealers. This is the last thing in the
2:05:57
world I want to be. is a peptide dealer. That's
2:06:00
right. Can you imagine the freaks who keep the peptide
2:06:03
freaks? Hey man, you got any, you know, the. Whack-a-mole
2:06:08
peptide, you know, it makes your dick fall off, that
2:06:11
one. I mean, what is it? That's the one I
2:06:14
want. I don't know if there's a peptide for that.
2:06:20
Well, there's a peptide for everything. Rogan's into peptides. He's
2:06:23
big into that. Oh, what a shocker. Yeah. This is
2:06:27
a young, middle-aged guy who's loaded on... Peptides. No, he's
2:06:33
loaded on testosterone, which is like he's a little young.
2:06:37
for that it seems to me but okay joe is
2:06:40
about he's about 58 now i think Meanwhile, you know,
2:06:46
I agreed. to uh because you know we had the
2:06:50
blood test like oh your testosterone is 300 it should
2:06:53
be between 400 and 1200 i'm like okay i got
2:06:56
low t whatever all of my friends you you you
2:07:00
won't even know how good you can feel i didn't
2:07:03
know how good i could feel until i started taking
2:07:06
testosterone i said okay i'm game but i'm not going
2:07:09
to inject anything okay i'm not i'm just not going
2:07:12
to do it there's two ways you can go with
2:07:13
the testosterone One is you're right. There's an injection. And
2:07:18
you have to go every week and you gotta get
2:07:20
a shot. That's no good. Then there's the various things
2:07:23
you can rub on. Yeah, I have the rub on.
2:07:25
So I got the rub on. You got some? Yes,
2:07:28
and I got the rub. Listen to this. Which one?
2:07:30
What was the percentage? It's compound. Oh, I'd have to
2:07:33
look at it. But just listen to the results. So
2:07:36
after... uh six weeks or eight weeks i go and
2:07:41
i'm not i do not like blood draws but okay
2:07:44
i do the blood draw My testosterone went from 300...
2:07:49
to 200. It went down. It went down. It went
2:07:54
down. I'm like, oh, poor thing. Yeah. And then. All
2:07:58
right, so we'll do it. We'll do another six weeks.
2:08:01
It went from 200 to 168. I said, stop. First
2:08:06
of all. Your dick's going to fall off. I said,
2:08:08
first of all, I don't feel any better. I don't
2:08:11
feel any worse. You know what I got? Pimples. I
2:08:15
had a pimple on my forehead, got one on my
2:08:17
chin. So this is crap And it was like, you
2:08:22
know, I'm still an animal. I think it's whatever. Who?
2:08:28
Is this a commercial product or something somebody blended for
2:08:31
you? It's compounded. With a warring blender. It's compounded. Or
2:08:36
an osterizer. Here, drink this. It's from a compound. compounding
2:08:39
pharmacy here in town. No, no, no. What do you
2:08:42
mean no, no, no? You gotta get androgel or one
2:08:45
of the pure... No, no, that's what the lesbians use.
2:08:48
I don't want androgel. The lesbians are on to it.
2:08:54
They know what they're doing. I even said, well, shouldn't
2:08:57
I use... Andro Joe? No, no, no, no, no. We're
2:08:59
going to compound something for you. Oh, well, they're compounding.
2:09:03
Out of a... I can't keep using the same gag
2:09:08
over and over, so they're compounding out of something that
2:09:10
you're not going to like. What do you mean? That
2:09:15
sounds like they don't know what they're doing. If your
2:09:18
numbers keep going down, how does that make any sense?
2:09:21
But here's my question. Why would my numbers go down
2:09:25
by 50% anyway within five months? Am I dying? Am
2:09:33
I wilting away? Is my manhood diminishing before my very
2:09:37
eyes? Am I becoming a girl? Well, that's beside the
2:09:41
point. I don't believe in any of this stuff. Peptides,
2:09:46
testosterone, all of this. Your testosterone is going to naturally
2:09:49
drop through the floor as you get older, period, whether
2:09:52
you like it or not. I've turned the corner. Now,
2:09:54
if you're a heavy-duty exerciser and you're trying to build
2:09:57
bulk. Your testosterone will naturally go up. You can do
2:10:01
that to get it back up. How is it possible?
2:10:04
that somehow Tina, who I think is taking estrogen, that
2:10:09
that's rubbing off on me and is counteracting it? Am
2:10:11
I, is this an estrogen versus tetanus? No, you'd have
2:10:15
both. Why do my boobs hurt? What's going on? you
2:10:20
Sensitive nipples? Is that what's going on? Yes, I'm telling
2:10:23
you, something is wrong. You're going to have to reconsider.
2:10:25
It's all a scam, all of it. Well, it's medicine.
2:10:30
It's medicine. I'm rubbing this stuff on my balls twice
2:10:36
a day. This is bullcrap. You're not supposed to do
2:10:37
that. what I was specifically told. What? Where are you
2:10:42
supposed to rub it? I'm telling you, this is what
2:10:45
I would... Somebody's playing a gag on you. I'm telling
2:10:48
you. You're being punked. Let's see if he rea- Hey,
2:10:52
I have an idea, Bill. I betcha I can get
2:10:54
this numbnuts to rub some of this shit on his
2:10:56
balls. Let's see what happens. Literally. You're telling me this
2:11:02
is wrong? Yeah. What do you mean? With the testosterone
2:11:07
therapy, that's the last place you're supposed to put it.
2:11:11
Well, this is literally what I was told. I'm the
2:11:13
testes. Wow. Yeah, where did you rub it? - Well,
2:11:20
you rub it. One place got nothing to do with
2:11:22
the testosterone and rubbing it. Now, hey-o. So, no, the
2:11:28
Androgel is rubbed on the forearm. Yeah, the forearms and
2:11:34
the biceps. Yeah. And then across the stomach. maybe and
2:11:40
and it's and it just it's absorbed uh through the
2:11:43
skin but you're spo you're definitely not supposed to put
2:11:47
it on your face no or your balls it's even
2:11:52
on the label Yeah, but the label's a phony label.
2:11:56
It's not like a commercial. It says rub on your
2:11:59
balls. It says it right there. R-O-Y-B. I'm telling you,
2:12:03
you're being punked. Okay. Well, you know what? I believe
2:12:07
you. I mean, I'd like to hear from some doctor
2:12:10
out there who does hormone replacement therapy about rubbing testosterone
2:12:17
treatments on the... balls my whole email inbox this is
2:12:21
by the way the height of our show we're reaching
2:12:23
a peak here with this discussion all right everybody with
2:12:30
that with that you should get some donations for this
2:12:33
vet this vast knowledge we are in fact feeding the
2:12:37
book of knowledge with what we've got here. I want
2:12:40
to thank you for your courage, say in the morning
2:12:42
to you, the man who put the C in the,
2:12:45
what do we have? The freedom, the free speech community.
2:12:49
Everybody say hello to my friend on the other end,
2:12:51
the one, the only, Mr. John C. Well, in the
2:12:55
morning, you, Mr. Adam Curry, in the morning, I should
2:12:57
see you boosting around feet in the air. in the
2:12:59
water and dames nights out there in the morning you
2:13:00
trolls in the troll room 13:15 which has no bearing
2:13:08
on donations and no donations were nice today. I saw
2:13:11
that thank you all for thinking of us Did you
2:13:13
throw out a sad puppy? I didn't see a sad
2:13:15
puppy. No, there was no sad puppy. Oh, that was
2:13:16
good. But you know... But, but, but. Just banging the
2:13:21
mic. Yeah, I know. So, no, but Mimi had a
2:13:24
theory. Okay. So we had lousy donations last show. They
2:13:29
were total, I think, of 25 above 50. 23 above
2:13:33
50, very low number. Yeah. And she says that she's
2:13:36
noticed. that The Kennel. in Port Angeles is full to
2:13:43
the rim with a waiting list when we have bad
2:13:47
donations. So it's a vacation thing. And it turns out
2:13:52
that that last show was when everyone started to go
2:13:55
on their vacations. The school was out. Graduation was over.
2:13:58
And people put their dogs in the kennel. Yes. Well,
2:14:02
that makes sense. So there's a kennel index that will
2:14:07
predict our donations. How about this? These coincident indexes are
2:14:12
very famous for working. Yes, but how about this? How
2:14:16
about we use the kennel index and when the kennel
2:14:18
is full, we take a day off. How about that?
2:14:21
That's just a thought. I mean, come on. And we're
2:14:23
working our butts off here. I'm exposing my inner secrets.
2:14:28
I'm telling you what I do. Yeah, it's embarrassing. It's
2:14:33
embarrassing that it's not working. That's what's embarrassing. Anyway... Hopefully
2:14:40
you are listening to us if you're streaming us live
2:14:43
in a modern podcast app. You want to get one
2:14:45
of these, stop with that legacy stuff. It's going to
2:14:47
catch you eventually. We publish the show within 90 seconds.
2:14:51
It's in your modern podcast app. And when we go
2:14:53
live, the bat signal is sent. You hear it. Boom,
2:14:56
little notification. You tap on that. You're listening live. If
2:14:58
you can't. And we are value for value. Yes. We
2:15:03
don't sell you. We're not selling you any peptides. We're
2:15:07
not selling you any. Not yet. Not yet. It's still
2:15:11
an option, but we're not selling them yet. Exactly. No,
2:15:15
instead, we decided a long time ago that the best
2:15:18
way. to stay honest and stay in the game and
2:15:21
stay on our toes and never get lazy is to
2:15:24
use a system we call the value for value system
2:15:27
or value for value model. It's very simple. And work
2:15:29
on holidays. Yeah, we work whenever we can. We're on
2:15:32
holidays. We're on vacation trips. Whenever we're always working, we
2:15:35
read a couple of shows. Well, I mean, you. You
2:15:39
cowardly took several shows off. We had to bring Mimi
2:15:42
in because, you know. had some kind of heart thing
2:15:45
going on. But otherwise, you know, if you physically... I
2:15:48
tried to broadcast from the hospital, but they didn't have
2:15:50
a good Wi-Fi connection. I know that if you could
2:15:53
have, you would have. I know enough about you. Yeah,
2:15:56
it would have been quite interesting. But you also didn't
2:15:59
have your voice back and everything. But as a part
2:16:03
of that, this roller coaster international lifestyle. All we do
2:16:07
is we just give you the best possible value that
2:16:10
we can in our show every single time we do
2:16:13
a podcast, which is twice a week, Thursdays and Sundays.
2:16:16
Then all we say is, "Hey!" at the point where
2:16:19
you're thinking, hey, this is funny, I learned something, here's
2:16:22
an important thing you learned, don't rub the stuff on
2:16:26
your balls because it doesn't work. I mean, that by
2:16:28
itself is worth the price of admission. And the fact
2:16:32
that we have thousands of producers who can also contribute
2:16:35
value back to us. With their time, their talent, their
2:16:39
information, their skills, this is what makes us the best
2:16:41
podcast in the universe. And we appreciate all kinds of
2:16:44
things that people do. For instance, one thing people do
2:16:47
is they prompt their guts out by making artwork for
2:16:53
us. which we then use for art. in our mp3
2:16:58
file and in the podcast apps and this was a
2:17:02
nice one that we chose last time by capitalist agenda
2:17:05
I'm pretty sure this was a combo platter. Minimum, at
2:17:11
minimum, a combo platter of AI and Photoshop. Great piece.
2:17:18
With the Curry Dvorak Consulting Group door, big pull sign
2:17:23
on it, and there's a little robot with AI in
2:17:25
his back trying to push it open. A lot of
2:17:28
people who don't even listen to our show thought it
2:17:30
was fantastic. Like, yeah, that's it. That is exactly what
2:17:34
AI is. And we loved it. We thought it was
2:17:36
a great piece. There were some other contenders, I think,
2:17:39
not much. Do you remember? Any of the other containers?
2:17:44
Let me take a look. I like the one that
2:17:47
I used for the newsletter, which is the Mechagodzilla or
2:17:50
whatever the hell it was. Oh, yeah, I used that
2:17:51
for the bat signal this morning. That was good. But
2:17:53
that was... That was something that came in after the
2:17:57
show, I think. Yeah, we had... It could be. Let's
2:18:01
see what we had. There's a lot of lizards. I
2:18:04
kind of like the sumo, but... Yeah, you like the
2:18:07
sumo, but I didn't like it. No. You said you
2:18:10
couldn't read. The Korean Dvorak's too small. You always bitch
2:18:14
about things being too small. It didn't look too small
2:18:16
to me. It looks too small to me. Well, and
2:18:19
that's why we didn't argue about it. What else was
2:18:23
there? I kind of like the debit card a little
2:18:25
bit. Yeah, talk about Curry Dvorak being small. Yeah, no,
2:18:29
I agree. I just said I liked that. I didn't
2:18:31
say I wanted to use it. We like our name
2:18:33
up front. A lot of people have been tweeting about
2:18:37
this. Dvorak microdosing stuff. You familiar with this? Oh, Dvorak,
2:18:42
there's a company that makes Dvorak gummies. Yeah. Is that
2:18:47
weed gummies? Yeah. I was going to send some to
2:18:51
Brunetti. Are you getting a piece of that? No, I
2:18:54
said somebody named Dvorak. The name is not. you know
2:18:58
unusual what is unusual but it's not uncommon and it's
2:19:02
uh in Tennessee or someplace I don't know I get
2:19:04
I've gotten two or three people saying you you got
2:19:06
you got any piece of this yeah that's not my
2:19:10
exact question yeah no I got I wish Yeah, sounds
2:19:14
like a good deal. Well, we could have Dvorak peptides.
2:19:17
It's not too late to do that. So yeah, I
2:19:20
think that was pretty much it. There wasn't much else
2:19:24
that we thought was really great. So thank you very
2:19:27
much, Blue Acorn. Good piece. We enjoyed it very much.
2:19:31
We also, as always, are very happy to thank our
2:19:34
executive and associate executive producers. These are the people who...
2:19:37
Support us with the third and final T, perhaps the
2:19:40
most important one, the treasure. We thank everybody, $50 and
2:19:44
above. And we have a number of people who came
2:19:47
in strong today. Probably wanting to get in on that
2:19:50
red knight pin. which means you not only become an
2:19:55
instanite, but you also... receive a handsome order of the
2:19:59
heart pin, which is a nice pin. And it comes
2:20:01
in a dynamite packaging. It has a certificate of authenticity,
2:20:06
of course. And today that goes to right off the
2:20:09
top, Sir Lauren, who is already a knight. He is
2:20:13
in Bruno, Minnesota. Comes in with $1,000 and $33 and
2:20:18
said, oh, this is, he's already, no, I, has he
2:20:20
already, no, he says, first donation. So he wasn't a
2:20:23
knight, yet he calls himself Sir Lauren already. All right,
2:20:26
Sir Lauren, de-douching in place. Oh, sorry. You've been dedouched.
2:20:35
and says, first donation, my pal Adam hit me in
2:20:40
the mouth during the scam-demic. I used to be so
2:20:43
angry. Now I laugh a lot more. Thanks to you.
2:20:46
Jingles, Mac and Cheese, Screw Your Freedom, WTC7, At the
2:20:52
Roundtable, Muffins and Moxie Soda. Thank you for your courage,
2:20:56
says Sir Lauren. You slaves can get used to mac
2:21:01
and cheese. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Macaroni and
2:21:04
cheap cheddar melted together. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese.
2:21:08
Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Hey, everybody. Screw your
2:21:13
other podcasts. This is the best. WTC7 won't go away.
2:21:20
Your freedom there we go. I got punked by your
2:21:24
fake Arnold clip So, have you ever had Moxie soda?
2:21:29
No, I have no idea what it is. Yeah, it's
2:21:31
a soda, very localized. I think it's from New England
2:21:34
or someplace. I've had it. This actually has a very
2:21:38
distinctive flavor. Okay. It's good. Is it like kvass? A
2:21:45
little bit. Because I like kvass. I like kvass. A
2:21:48
little bit. I mean, I think it has certain kinds
2:21:52
of malty taste. Well, we have it here at the
2:21:54
round table. so we can both have a red Solo
2:21:56
cup full of it. Beryl Nagel. in Hempstead. Hempstead? Hempstead,
2:22:05
North Carolina. I'm sure it's pronounced funny. Hampsteed. North Carolina,
2:22:11
103026, ITM. Please name me, sir. Crazy Carl of the
2:22:17
Great Carolina Pine Forest. Karma for all. NASCAR hot wife
2:22:22
jingle, please. *music* You've got karma. ♪ Oh, boy. Now
2:22:37
we have, oh, this is always nice. A very long
2:22:40
note from Caddy Bones in Rio Rancho, New Mexico. $1,030.26.
2:22:46
So this must be with the fees. And Caddy Bones
2:22:50
says, I recently wrote and made my husband, Jim, Sir
2:22:52
J. Bones. posthumous red knight ah yes remember here's my
2:22:56
donation to make me his red dame oh this is
2:22:59
lovely Since this is my first donation, I could really
2:23:03
use a de-douching. Yes, you can. You've been de-douched. She
2:23:11
continues, Jim and I started listening to your show. together
2:23:14
in 2014 we learned so much more from listening to
2:23:17
you both than we ever learned from the m5m i'm
2:23:19
not exactly sure how we first discovered your show but
2:23:23
once he started listening i quickly glommed on and it
2:23:25
became our thing every week yeah the word glom is
2:23:29
a good word it's a good word Jim and I
2:23:32
started listening to your show together in... I'm sorry. Every
2:23:35
week, I counted down the days until Thursday and Sunday
2:23:38
nights. It was our time to hang out with each
2:23:40
other, you guys, and all of No Agenda Nation. We
2:23:43
learned so much from listening to you. Thank you both
2:23:45
for making our lives better and for keeping our amygdalas
2:23:48
in good shape. Now, as I tune in by myself,
2:23:51
it reminds me of those good times. Not only... You
2:23:54
not only teach me something new every week, but you
2:23:56
also bring comfort to a grieving heart. As I listen,
2:24:00
I can still imagine him sitting here right beside me,
2:24:02
and each week I will continue to be out here
2:24:05
missing him and listening for the both of us. Sincerely,
2:24:08
Sir Jane Bone's loving wife and future dame, Caddy Bones.
2:24:12
She would like to be... Her dame name to be
2:24:15
Dame Caddy Bones. And for Jingles, she wants Climate Gate
2:24:18
and Fear is Freedom. And for the Roundtable, she would
2:24:22
love Dion's Pizza, which comes from Albuquerque, New Mexico. We
2:24:26
have ordered that for you. It's here. And some yellow
2:24:29
Sobe Energy to wash it all down. And we thank
2:24:32
you very much, Caddy. See you at the round table.
2:24:37
To the gate, to the gate, to the gate. you
2:24:43
you you will I hadn't heard that one in a
2:25:03
while. Walter Ostler. Ostler. Ostler. In Jerome, Idaho, $1,000. And
2:25:12
he sent a note? Notes on a sheet of paper.
2:25:17
You can tell it's a sheet of paper by the
2:25:19
noise. Dear John and Adam, I've been a listener to
2:25:22
the show since episode 728, and I've always enjoyed your
2:25:26
analysis. With this donation, I become a Red Knight of
2:25:29
the No Agenda Roundtable. I wish to be knighted as
2:25:32
Sir Zeppelin of the Snake River Plain. No requests for
2:25:36
the round table, as the selections are more than enough
2:25:40
to satisfy. John, have you seen the Pathfinder 1 airship
2:25:44
flying over the bay this past year? No. No. If
2:25:51
so, could I get a Zeppelin report to replace the
2:25:54
old Zephyr report? I have not seen a Zeppelin flying
2:25:58
over the bay this year. No. I haven't seen one
2:26:01
in a long time myself, actually. Plug, if anyone in
2:26:04
Gitmo Nation needs the services of a cartoonist or illustrator,
2:26:09
please visit my website. Walker, Walker, Walker. W-A-L-K-E-R-S, what is
2:26:15
it? Did I say Walter? Yeah. Walker. Austler, O-S-T-L-E-R, W-A-L-K-E-R-O-S-T-L-E-R.com.
2:26:25
I have a traditional style that eschews. All caps. The
2:26:30
use of artificial intelligence. Oh, all right. Call out Mark
2:26:34
Ward for hitting me in the mouth. but never donating.
2:26:37
He's a douchebag. Douchebag. End of show request. A full
2:26:41
version of the Russia Connection sent in during Trump's first
2:26:45
term and sung by yours truly. He did the Russian
2:26:48
Connection song. jingle the original karma. Keep up the good
2:26:54
work, Walker. You've got karma. I'll have to dig that
2:27:01
one up. Might have to be for the next show.
2:27:03
It's about time, though. Thank you, Walker. Sir Cliffy is
2:27:08
in Morganfield, Kentucky, $547.45 and also sent in a note.
2:27:16
Dear John and Adam, in the morning, you two are
2:27:19
the best. Thanks for all you do. Please find the
2:27:21
enclosed donation because John loves checks. Four more years. Please
2:27:29
play mac and cheese. Sorry, I didn't have... Mac and
2:27:34
cheese and, uh... Maybe should we do a different one?
2:27:39
I'll do a different one. We'll do an Obama one.
2:27:42
And a little girl yay. Okay, we'll do those two.
2:27:45
When it comes to the holidays every year. Well, I'm
2:27:48
the hostess in chief. We host a number of... Ah,
2:27:51
that's no good. I don't like that one. Where's my
2:27:54
other mac and cheese? mac and cheese. Yeah, but we
2:27:59
have a different one. We have... What's the mac and
2:28:02
cheese life? Mac. She's life. Don't we have the live
2:28:08
in? Yeah, there we go. Mac and Cheese. There you
2:28:15
go. I knew I could do it. Thank you, Sir
2:28:18
Cliffy. He says thank you for your courage. David Chapman
2:28:22
in Holly Springs, North Carolina 500. Thanks for the insights
2:28:26
in deconstruction in a world where independent thought has become
2:28:29
a controlled substance. Keep the signal coming as some of
2:28:33
us still prefer thinking for ourselves. Consider this my act
2:28:38
of non-compliance. Dennis Cato, Tampa, Florida, 333.33. Oh, yes. So
2:28:46
Ashley Slater sent me a note. We know Ashley. And
2:28:51
she said that she often gets this tension headache. Which
2:28:55
is, like I had. Goes down the side of her
2:28:58
neck. For years, she has tried to everything. To get
2:29:02
rid of it, she says, I didn't believe it, but
2:29:05
I got some Manuka Gold, and it went away, and
2:29:08
she's a happy customer. And this is from Dennis Cato
2:29:11
of Manuka Gold, manukagold.com. And they are happy to continue
2:29:14
to support No Agenda. As they say, We'd rather put
2:29:17
our money towards a cause we believe in. Right now,
2:29:20
we're giving away a free $25 jar of our relief
2:29:23
gel with every purchase over $49. Also exclusive for NOAA
2:29:28
agenda listeners, we're extending the 20% discount at ManukaGold.com with
2:29:32
the code ADAM20 through the end of June. So you
2:29:36
can get both the discounts. and the free gift. That's
2:29:39
something we're only doing for no agenda out of tremendous
2:29:42
gratitude for all the support. Dennis Cato, Tampa, Florida. Love
2:29:47
your product. Need a smaller jar to take with me
2:29:49
on the road. Just a product suggestion. Right, redux. You've
2:29:55
done that a couple times now. Oh, I'm sorry. No,
2:29:58
I think it's good. You can remind him three times
2:30:00
and see what happens. Yeah. And it's not a bad
2:30:04
idea to have travel sizes. Yes. So you don't get
2:30:08
stopped at the airport. And shaken down. Yep. With the
2:30:12
goo. It looks like C3 or whatever that explosive is.
2:30:16
C4. C4. I'm always getting the number wrong. It doesn't
2:30:20
look like C4. Well, if you don't know what C4
2:30:25
looks like, it could. Yeah, that's true. And don't name
2:30:27
your product C4. No, this is not a product suggestion.
2:30:32
Sir Michael of the Midwest and Doctor of Philosophy in
2:30:36
Cedar Rapids, Iowa. 31415. ITM dude's name, Ben. 2-pi-fi. 2-pi-fi?
2:30:47
2-pi-fi? 2-pi-fi. No, 2-pi-fi. 2-pi-fi is an authorized star language.
2:30:51
No, no, he has a pronunciation guide. 2-pi-fi. At the
2:30:57
bottom. Where is it? Oh, it's pronounced two, put it
2:31:01
at the top. 2PiFi. Okay, 2PiFi is an authorized Starlink
2:31:06
reseller. Offering we should be a Starlink reseller. Yeah, you
2:31:10
have Starlink it works well. We should have to be
2:31:13
reselling Starlink, Androgel, Mooseheads, Junk Jewelry. All kinds of opportunities.
2:31:20
Peptides. Peptides. Peptides. Offering turnkey installations, public static IPs, 24-7,
2:31:27
100% U.S. based support, headquartered in Iowa. Specializing. Or no,
2:31:33
my name is Jim. Yes, I am in Iowa. specializing
2:31:39
in fixed wireless of all wavelengths, as well as managed
2:31:43
broadband. Wow, this is an RF guy. Yeah, the guy
2:31:50
knows what he's doing here. And, uh... Carrier grade dedicated
2:31:56
solution. It's a dedicated solution. It's a carrier grade. Check
2:32:01
out our page at... Get to Pi Phi. That's the
2:32:06
number two with a Pi Phi.com slash no agenda. Sir
2:32:11
Michael of the Midwest and Doctor of Philosophy. Ah, P.S.
2:32:15
is pronounced 2-pi-fi. 2-pi-fi radians. is a circle plus fidelity.
2:32:20
Ah, all right. Nice, nice. Well, thank you very much.
2:32:26
And now we move to our associate executive producers, kicking
2:32:29
it right off with $206.04, because he always adds the
2:32:33
date to his $200 donation. It is from Bensonville, Illinois,
2:32:37
Eli the Coffee Guy, and he says... SpaceX is going
2:32:39
public on June 12th, valued at nearly $2 trillion. Overvalued
2:32:44
IPO, likely. Elon's pitching Mars in a market that doesn't
2:32:49
even exist yet. Gotta hand it to him. Best salesman
2:32:52
alive. Selling a dream priced like it already came true.
2:32:55
Pump and dump or moonshot, we'll soon know enough. Either
2:32:58
way, somebody's going to make money. But... If you want
2:33:02
a sound investment that's fairly valued, visit gigawattcoffeeroasters.com and use
2:33:08
code ITM20 for 20% off your order. A good cup
2:33:12
of coffee pays dividends. May I just say... Best copy
2:33:16
ever. Eli is... always always working on his copy. I
2:33:22
have to give it to him. And he says, stay
2:33:24
caffeinated. Eli, the coffee guy. Yeah, he has his own,
2:33:30
uh... roasting curves and everything in between. He knows what
2:33:34
he's doing, man. Guy knows what he's doing. Stefan Trockels.
2:33:39
in Sust, Deutschland, $200. Jingle No conflict. No conflict. Reverend
2:33:50
L. Sharpton, please. You two are... Debestin. There's no real
2:33:56
conflict! And there's Linda Lupatkin from Castle Rock, Colorado. She
2:34:01
comes in with $200 as always. And we thank her
2:34:03
as well. Jobs, karma, she's aren't and she wants. And
2:34:06
she says your resume has about 10 seconds to make
2:34:08
an impression and most don't. For a resume that gets
2:34:12
results, go to ImageMakersInc.com. Linda helps professionals and executives turn
2:34:17
their experience into a reality. clear story of leadership results
2:34:20
and impact that's image makers ink with a k and
2:34:23
linda lou she is the duchess of jobs and writer
2:34:25
of winning resumes jobs jobs jobs and jobs let's vote
2:34:31
for job you And last on our list here is
2:34:37
Bob. It was just old Bob. Bob, hello, Bob. Hey,
2:34:42
Bob. Hey, Bob. Monmouth, Oregon. Monmouth. $200. Ah, you pronounce
2:34:48
it monmouth. Okay. Monmouth. Monmouth. He just has a little
2:34:54
saying here, I'll quote it up. From Bob, he says...
2:34:57
We used to have kingdoms that were ruled by kings.
2:35:01
Then we had empires that were ruled by emperors. Now
2:35:06
we live in countries. Took me a second. I like
2:35:13
that one. I think he's talking about the UK. Yes.
2:35:16
Okay. Correct. Correct. Thank you, Bob, and thank you to
2:35:19
these executive and associate executive producers. As always, it works
2:35:23
like this. You can donate any amount, any time you
2:35:26
want to know a gender. Only you can determine what
2:35:28
value is. If you're able to support us with $200
2:35:31
or more, not only do we guarantee to read your
2:35:33
note, but we also give you the elusive title of
2:35:36
associate executive. Thank you in both categories, associates and executive
2:35:47
producers, for your courage. The formula is this. We hit
2:36:01
people in the mouth. The rest of our list, $50
2:36:16
and above at the 100. $100 level. We have Baron
2:36:19
Lattiken from Houston, Texas. Thank you very much. John Fitzpatrick,
2:36:22
also $100 from Heber Springs, Arkansas. He says, did y'all
2:36:27
forget the 50 to 199 producers Sunday? What? Did I?
2:36:31
No, we almost had none. What is he talking about?
2:36:36
I don't know what he's talking about. Countess Knight, Edmonds
2:36:38
Washington, 100, and John Buell from Vista, California, also $100.
2:36:43
$90 from Goonie in the Boonies, Tennessee. Thank you, Goonie.
2:36:47
Jason Shepherd, Trinidad, Colorado, 80 and 76 cents. That's interesting.
2:36:52
Didn't quite make the boob donation, which is 8-0-0-8. And
2:36:56
Sir Fast Eddie of Alameda. The Island of Boobs came
2:36:59
in with that, and he had a peerage update. After
2:37:01
two years of boobs, I've become a baronet. I'd like
2:37:04
to retain the title of Sir Fast Eddie of Alameda,
2:37:06
the Island of Boobs. I'd like the F-35 guy played
2:37:09
after my title, and tacos at the round table. Well,
2:37:12
you're already a knight. We'll add the tacos. But I
2:37:16
don't know how that 35 guy fits in. I'll see
2:37:19
if I can find him. Actually, I probably can. Hold
2:37:21
on. Where's the... Where's the F-35 guy? uh the f-35
2:37:27
karma i think i can add for you Uh-huh. There
2:37:32
we go. I have 35 karma. You know what? Why
2:37:34
don't I play that for you now? You've got... Karma.
2:37:44
And the OG boob man, Kevin McLaughlin. He is the
2:37:46
Archduke of Luna, lover of America and boobs. He's in
2:37:48
Concord, North Carolina. 8008. Donation. God bless America and melons.
2:37:53
Teresa Andrews in Camarillo, California. 7533. Nico in Vlissingen in
2:37:59
the Netherlands, 57. Thank you very much. Bit of value
2:38:02
back to you from tipoftheday.net. I was Nico Sime. Thank
2:38:04
you, Nico. Dame Rita, Sparks, Nevada. She's there almost every
2:38:08
single show. 5533 ITM to you. Brian Furley, Parts Unknown,
2:38:13
Double Nickels on the Dine, $55.10. Sir John, Omaha, Nebraska.
2:38:17
Also, double nickels on the dime. 55 from your favorite
2:38:21
pool guy, Austin in Roseville, California. Andy J. Holly Springs,
2:38:26
North Carolina, 51 and 50 cents. He's donating on behalf
2:38:30
of his beautiful wife, Sarah. It's our 17th anniversary, and
2:38:33
I would like to give her the gift of dedouching.
2:38:36
Love you, baby! You've been de-douched. Sir Kubalpedia in Wesata,
2:38:45
Minnesota. $50.12. His eldest daughter begged him to donate for
2:38:50
her 12th birthday back on May 23rd. Don't tell her
2:38:53
I missed the donation day by a few. Love you,
2:38:55
Gwen. Sir Kubo-pedia. Better late than never. Daniel LaBoy, Bath,
2:39:01
Michigan, $50. Oh, we're hitting the 50s here. James Sharometta,
2:39:04
Napanoc, New York. Joe from Syracuse, New York. Long-time listener.
2:39:08
Hit my son in the mouth years ago. Now he's
2:39:10
a huge fan. So glad Adam has seen the light,
2:39:12
and I'm praying for John's health. God bless. Foster Birch,
2:39:15
New York, New York. Alex, Sir Alex Zavala from Kyle,
2:39:19
Texas, now has an important job there in Kyle, the
2:39:24
school district. Leslie Walker, Roseburg, Oregon. Eichi Kitagawa in San
2:39:29
Francisco rounds out our $50 donors. We don't mention anything
2:39:33
under $50 for reasons of anonymity. We see the $49.99.
2:39:36
and we thank you very much. Every single donation is
2:39:38
appreciated. All you have to do is go to noagendadonations.com.
2:39:42
You can determine all by yourself what you want the
2:39:45
donation to be because that is value for value. We
2:39:48
can't determine what value something is to you. Only you
2:39:51
can determine that. You can even set up a recurring
2:39:53
donation, any amount, any frequency. See noagendadonations.com. Hey! At least
2:40:04
we have two today. It's been kind of sparse on
2:40:06
the birthday list. Sir Koobalpedia, happy birthday to his daughter
2:40:09
Gwen. She turned 12 years old on the 23rd. Happy
2:40:12
birthday. And Henry Mackey. Oh, Henry! He celebrates on June
2:40:17
1st. So happy birthday in advance and happy birthday from
2:40:19
everybody here at the best podcast in the universe. Changes
2:40:30
♪ DJ ♪ And there he is, Sir Fast Eddie
2:40:35
of Alameda, the island of boobs. He has continued to
2:40:38
donate his boobs off and he becomes a baronet today
2:40:42
and we say thank you very much and congratulations, sir.
2:40:46
Welcome to another step on your peerage ladder. Behold Right
2:40:55
now. We have special night rings. Red Heart pins for
2:41:11
Sir Lauren, Carl Nagel, Catty Bones. Congratulations to all of
2:41:18
you. You are now official knights and dames of the
2:41:21
Order of the Hearts. ♪ This ♪ We got, well,
2:41:39
we have a knight to bring up. Well, actually, a
2:41:42
knight and a dame. So there's the blade. If you
2:41:44
can grab yours, John, then we can get this. Yeah,
2:41:46
here you go. Get that party going. That's right, catty
2:41:48
bones. Hop on up here, girl. And Carl Nagel, both
2:41:54
of you, have Report of the No Agenda show in
2:41:56
the amount of $1,000 or more, and that means you
2:41:58
join the very exclusive club of No Agenda nights and
2:42:01
days. What about Walker? I don't, what, uh, I don't,
2:42:04
where's Walker? Well, Walker became an order of the heart.
2:42:08
Yeah, so did Carl and Caddy. Well, I'm just looking
2:42:11
at what I was given. It doesn't have it, because
2:42:14
on mine it has two knights. Well, uh, so walk-
2:42:18
Okay, stop. Stop, stop. Stop, stop. You didn't get the
2:42:23
same note I got? I guess not. Let me double
2:42:26
check. Wow, that's unusual. Let me double check. Hold on
2:42:29
a second. Oh, you don't have the note up. Well,
2:42:33
no, because I put it in. Oh, okay. That's right.
2:42:35
You have the robots. do all the work. No, I
2:42:37
put it in, no, I hand-paste, copy-paste. And, oh, she
2:42:42
sent, oh, tricky dicky. She sent two. Notes to me.
2:42:49
And the first one. Didn't have Walker there. That's odd.
2:42:55
Hold on a second. I put Walker. All right. There
2:43:00
we go everybody! I'll edit that out, no one will
2:43:03
ever notice the difference. Never, no one will ever notice.
2:43:05
No one ever notices. Ah, they call me the blade
2:43:08
for nothing. Yes! Hop on up here. Carl Nagel, Walker,
2:43:13
Osler, and Catty Bones. There we go. I'm very proud.
2:43:16
as Dame Cady Bones, Sir Crazy Carl of the Great
2:43:21
Carolina Pine Forest, and Sir Zeppelin of the Snake River
2:43:25
Plain. Suburban, sparkling cider, Nesquik, ginger oil, and gerbils, breast
2:43:40
milk, and pavlo. And of course, we have the mutton
2:43:42
and the meat. The three of you, enjoy yourselves here
2:43:45
at the round table. It's a good group. It's a
2:43:47
fun group to be with. And why don't you grab
2:43:51
your phone, go to noagendaring.com, and select the wonderful ring
2:43:56
that we have. for you, Knight and Dame Ring. And
2:43:59
when you get that, after you tell us the address
2:44:02
and your ring size, there's a ring sizing guide on
2:44:04
the website. It will be accompanied by a certificate of
2:44:08
authenticity and, of course, a couple of sticks of wax.
2:44:10
Because they're Signet rings, you can use it for your
2:44:13
official correspondence. It looks great. It's a conversation starter. every
2:44:17
single party. Thank you very much. And welcome once again
2:44:20
to the roundtable, our brand new dame and brand new
2:44:22
knights. No agenda! The meetups is where you get the
2:44:33
connection that always brings you protection. The people you meet
2:44:36
at the meetups will be your... first responders in any
2:44:38
emergency. Today there is a meetup in Raleigh, North Carolina.
2:44:42
It is the Northern Wake June Fun Times meetup. Kicks
2:44:45
off at 6 o'clock in Saints and Scholars on Saturday.
2:44:49
The first Ukrainian clogs on the ground meetup. This will
2:44:52
be at 6 o'clock at the Fat Moose and this
2:44:55
is in Bilats. "Cerkva Kyiv Oblast, Ukraine" I suggest you
2:45:02
get there before Vladimir Putin obliterates the entire country. So,
2:45:07
and please, please, I don't care if it's just one
2:45:09
person, send us a meter per port from Ukraine. We
2:45:12
desperately want to hear how many people showed up, want
2:45:14
to hear that you had fun and get. your server
2:45:17
on that recording as well. Coming up this month, Boise,
2:45:20
Idaho on the 13th, Franklin, Tennessee also on the 13th,
2:45:23
Indianapolis, Indiana on the 14th, Charlotte, North Carolina the 18th,
2:45:26
Rotterdam, the Netherlands on the 26th, Fort Wayne, Indiana 27th,
2:45:30
the 28th is Longview, Texas. And then we go into
2:45:32
July and wow, we have August, September. October. This stuff
2:45:37
is filling up. You can find all of them at
2:45:40
noagendameetups.com. This is where you can just enter in your
2:45:44
zip code or country, wherever you live, and you will
2:45:48
find out where the closest meetup is taking place. But
2:45:51
you can also start one. It's very simple. All you
2:45:54
do is just say, hey, I'm doing a meetup. and
2:45:56
you select the place, you fill out the information, it
2:45:58
gets put up on the website. Thank you, Sir Daniel.
2:46:00
Thank you, Mimi, for always managing that. And get that.
2:46:04
Meetup going. They're fun. guarantee it. Noagendameetups.com. Always fun, always
2:46:11
a party. We still have John's tip of the day
2:46:33
coming up along with our end of show mixes. first
2:46:36
it's time for some isos i have four today i'm
2:46:39
loaded for bear i'm ready to go you want to
2:46:41
hear all my all my four because you've got oh
2:46:43
you have the the celebrity ones i see which are
2:46:47
holdovers from the last show. I don't think you can
2:46:49
beat mine today. I've got a lot of really good
2:46:51
ones. Well, I can hold these over one other show.
2:46:53
Well, here we go. Let's listen to number one. Excellent
2:46:55
job. Okay. Yeah. No, I enjoy that. I think it's
2:46:59
great. Come on, come on. They're getting better. We got
2:47:04
way too many eggs. Subtle, subtle. And I think this
2:47:09
one, actually. This production utterly blew me away. A little
2:47:14
bit of Heather from the Dark Horse pod. Any of
2:47:16
those you like or do you think yours are better?
2:47:19
I didn't like any of them, except the eggs one,
2:47:22
maybe. Maybe. Well, let's try mine. Let's start with Joe
2:47:25
Biden. All right. If I was still president, no agenda
2:47:29
would be required listening. That's pretty good, man. That's pretty
2:47:33
good. Can Obama top it? Let's find out. Wow, I
2:47:37
wish I knew about the No Agenda podcast back in
2:47:40
the day. Wow, the back in the day is almost
2:47:43
perfect. It's hard. You shouldn't have done these two in
2:47:47
one go. You should have thrown in like a loser.
2:47:49
And you could have had two winners. If I was
2:47:51
still president, no agenda would be required listening. Wow. I
2:47:56
wish I knew about the No Agenda podcast back in
2:47:59
the day. Which one do you prefer? Because they're both
2:48:02
dynamite. I think the Obama one is a little better.
2:48:08
Really? Because I kind of like... I like them both.
2:48:10
I agree with you. They're both... Why don't you run
2:48:12
them back to back? No, that's lame. I'm just saying.
2:48:17
It's a suggestion. Well, pick one. I want to pick
2:48:21
Biden. Okay, Biden wins. Because, you know, Biden will be
2:48:24
dead soon and we'll still have Obama. Right. It'll be
2:48:27
better. All right, everybody, stand by. It's time for John's
2:48:30
tip of the day. JCB Sometimes. my office in anticipation
2:48:43
of having to take a picture of it for the
2:48:46
newsletter. I ran into a product I forgot about. This
2:48:52
is something the Eastern Europeans use a lot of. There
2:48:56
used to be an era when we used to use
2:48:58
iodine for cuts and bruises and gashes. And then we
2:49:03
moved to mercurochrome, which was poisoning the public because it's
2:49:07
mercury-based. Uh, when I was a kid, my mom, you
2:49:11
gotta put some mercurochrome on it. Mercurochrome. I think I
2:49:15
probably... If anybody should have mercury poisoning, it's me. Use
2:49:19
mercurochrome. I have fillings with a lot of mercury in
2:49:24
them because that's what they used to do it. Yeah.
2:49:28
And also, I used to play with mercury and turn
2:49:32
pennies into dimes. As a kid, you just played with
2:49:35
mercury? Yeah. Yeah, you'd rub it on a penny, it'd
2:49:39
go right into the penny. And how did you get
2:49:41
a hold of this? And how can you still be
2:49:44
alive, is the question, really. I think it must be
2:49:46
bogus. Mm-hmm. So. The thing they used instead of methylate,
2:49:53
methylate would take over. And now it's either Neosporin or...
2:50:01
Yeah, Neosporin is what I use. Bactine, I think, first
2:50:04
came in, and then Neosporin. So what they use in
2:50:07
Eastern Europe, commonly, and a good friend of mine who
2:50:11
was visiting there says, yeah, you go in with your...
2:50:15
get a cut, a big gash on you. And they
2:50:18
said, just put some of the green stuff on it.
2:50:20
Just use the green stuff. The green stuff. you And
2:50:25
that was the green stuff? The green stuff is a
2:50:29
product. You can get it on Amazon. You can get
2:50:31
it all over the place. It's ca- and it's a
2:50:34
dye, it's a dye. called Brilliant Green. You should Wikipedia
2:50:39
it. You can ask about it. It kills all gram-positive
2:50:44
bacteria and funguses. Wow. It has a drawback. I have
2:50:51
used it. I wonder what the drawback is. The drawback
2:50:56
is it's a green dye. It takes about a month
2:51:02
for it to go away. Created by Dana Burnetti. There
2:51:14
you go. noagendafun.com, tipsoftheday.net. Go get some green stuff. Yeah,
2:51:21
Brilliant Green is the name of it. Brilliant Green. Oh,
2:51:24
man. And don't play with mercury, kids. This is not
2:51:28
a good idea. No, don't. Do yourself a favor. Don't
2:51:31
play with mercury. End of show mixes. We have some
2:51:35
just... Baker, some MVP, and Oisteen Berge with an original
2:51:39
tune, which he played and recorded himself. It's dynamite. Wow.
2:51:45
Yeah, he did. Next up on your Noah Jenner stream,
2:51:48
that Larry show. Oh, this is episode 500. It's a
2:51:52
big one for Larry. And he'll be ran. America's biggest
2:51:58
threat. And we will return to your airwaves, your earbuds,
2:52:07
your speakers, your car system on Sunday for another edition
2:52:12
of your biweekly media deconstruction on the No Agenda Show.
2:52:16
Until then, coming to you from the heart of the
2:52:19
Texas Hill Country, where, man, the Super El Nino is
2:52:23
turning us into the new Napa Valley. In the morning,
2:52:26
everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Refinery Row, where the
2:52:30
No Agenda Podcast Instagram account is now an official Amazon
2:52:35
info. Fluencer, I'm John C. Navarro. We'll see you on
2:52:37
Sunday. Remember us at noagendadonations.com. Until then, adios, mofos, or
2:52:42
hooey, hooey, and such. Over Syria, green lights in the
2:53:04
sky. Trump saying, very interesting. While the normies asking why.
2:53:08
Spielberg got the disclosure day dropping June the 12th. Looking
2:53:13
friendly, but we know it's narrative. We'll see you next
2:53:19
time. Getting bold pigeons now is weather. Typical crowd. No
2:53:37
agenda. Family stay sharp. I've never fought for the script.
2:53:40
We see the synergy baby. It's a full on disclosure
2:53:44
trip. UAP's in the files. Spielberg on the screen. Full
2:53:49
disclosure coming. Or is it ♪ This value for value
2:53:59
keeping ♪ Don't let the aliens down. On this farm
2:54:38
he had some servers, A-I-A-I-O ♪ CPUs, CPUs, cables everywhere,
2:54:53
oh, Mackey Lom ♪ you this far some ♪ Ay
2:55:06
ay ay ay oh ♪ Here I grok, here I
2:55:14
veyra Bye. ♪ Go by the computer globe ♪ Watching
2:55:39
prompted art start to show. Just longing for that cool,
2:55:46
clear day. Data, data, cool, clear data. We're the problem.
2:55:56
I shaped the scene just right. But each iteration shifts
2:56:02
all the magic that I left and screws up what
2:56:05
was tied. I'm just longing for that cool, clear day.
2:56:11
♪ Data, data ♪ data. Keep on prompting. and friction
2:56:20
♪ Brings frustration that the R-Generator's headed for slaughter, Lord
2:56:25
I'm tired ♪ changes The strangeness, I'm just longing Data.
2:56:36
day Be a d- Don't aim- Most people know us
2:56:59
from our podcast. The No Agenda Show. We are more
2:57:04
than just podcasters. No agenda is a community of people
2:57:10
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2:57:17
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2:57:23
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2:57:28
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